Friday, January 6, 2023

 

Prince Harry saw ‘red mist’ in William during brother’s alleged attack

Prince Harry has said he saw “the red mist” in his brother, Prince William, when his older sibling allegedly attacked him during a confrontation over the younger duke’s relationship with Meghan Markle.

In a newly released clip from ITV’s forthcoming interview with Harry, the Duke of Sussex said his brother, William, was so frustrated during the 2019 incident he saw “the red mist in him”.

“He wanted me to hit him back, but I chose not to,” he says of his brother, who he earlier claimed in his book had physically attacked him – as was first reported by the Guardian.

The book’s revelations are spread across front pages of almost every national newspaper in the UK and are likely to reduce the possibility of a reconciliation between the Sussexes and the rest of the British royal family.

In the clip, released early on Friday morning, Harry tells the interviewer, Tom Bradby: “What was different here was the level of frustration, and I talk about the red mist that I had for so many years, and I saw this red mist in him.”

The duke first recounted the confrontation in his autobiography Spare – an extract from which was reported by the Guardian on Thursday. In the book, it is claimed the Prince of Wales grabbed Harry’s collar and knocked him to the floor, ripping his necklace and shattering a dog bowl under his back.

The duke also states he wants to reconcile with his family – something he says cannot happen without “some accountability”.

“I want reconciliation,” he says, “but, first, there needs to be some accountability.”

In a clip from another forthcoming interview, Harry admits he was “probably bigoted” before his relationship with Markle.

In a new teaser for a CBS News interview that is due to air this Sunday, Harry tells the interviewer Anderson Cooper he was “incredibly naive” about how the British media would treat his relationship with the American actor.

“The race element” to the couple’s relationship had been “jumped on straight away” by the British press, he tells the programme, adding that he had no idea how “bigoted” the UK media was until his wife and their relationship were thrust into the spotlight.

What Meghan had to go through was similar in some part to what Kate and what Camilla went through – very different circumstances,” the duke says in the 30-second clip released on Thursday. “But then you add in the race element, which was what the press – (the) British press jumped on straight away.

“I went into this incredibly naive. I had no idea the British press were so bigoted. Hell, I was probably bigoted before the relationship with Meghan.”

Cooper responds by asking the duke: “You think you were bigoted before the relationship with Meghan?”

Harry replies: “I don’t know. Put it this way, I didn’t see what I now see.”

Kensington Palace and Buckingham Palace have declined to comment.

Elsewhere in the Brady interview clip, Harry addresses the drug use detailed in the book, Spare. Bradby tells the duke: “There’s a fair amount of drugs (in the book). Marijuana, magic mushrooms, cocaine. I mean, that’s going to surprise people.”


The duke appears to agree and says it was “important to acknowledge”.

The show, called Harry: The Interview, will be broadcast on ITV1 and ITVX at 9pm on 8 January.






Thursday, January 5, 2023

 


The hardest part was the poop’: An oral history of Babylon’s explosive elephant opening


Why a gross-out gag took an artistic army to pull off

After an early New York screening of his new film, Babylon, director Damien Chazelle admitted that his jazzy ode to the depraved underbelly of early 20th-century filmmaking was ultimately a “hate letter to Hollywood.” Obviously, he loved cinema — no one gets into movies without passion — but a decade of research into show business’s turbulent transition from silents to talkies left him seething.

There’s a lot of shit that goes into the industry, into the making [of a movie], and the lives wrecked in order to make this thing,” Chazelle said at the Q&A, “but something comes out of the other end that is undeniable and that humanity will always have to show for itself.”

Chazelle’s interest in “shit that goes into the industry” and “something that comes out of the other end” isn’t just metaphorical. Though Babylon weaves together the lives of glamorous movie star types played by Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt, the movie’s focus is on Manny (Narcos: Mexico’s Diego Calva), an immigrant with big-screen dreams who, in the film’s increasingly notorious opening, is dragging an elephant up a hill to a cocaine-fueled party hidden away in the desert hills of Los Angeles. Moving an elephant in a flimsy 1920s-era truck proves difficult, and more so when the animal unleashes fecal hell on Manny and his wrangler accomplice. Chazelle, working somewhere between There Will Be Blood and Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls, sends his camera right into the spew. Seriously, it is a tremendous amount of dung. Everywhere. This is minute four of a 189-minute run time.

The elephant scene sets the tone for Babylon, a roller-coaster ride that zips through zany set pieces and around dark turns as it interrogates what we really know of the “golden age” of Hollywood. And despite all the work that went into realizing the world of his film, Chazelle couldn’t have imagined what it would take to get the largest-known land animal to spray poop on the camera and cast. This is how it happened, safely, and how the gag left one courageous stuntman soaked in the name of art.

I started with the idea of an elephant at a party. It felt appropriate as the type of thing that they would sometimes do at parties of this time, with everyone trying to top each other in how outsize and elephantine (excuse the pun) they could make their soirées.

Then it was this funny thing of working backward from that and actually asking, practically speaking, how do you transport an elephant to a party? Especially if it’s in one of the big castlelike houses at the time, out in the middle of nowhere, up on a hill — it’s as impractical as possible for getting an elephant there. And what if everything that could go wrong does go wrong? The truck driver for some reason wasn’t aware that he’s transporting an elephant, refuses to, then has to be bribed. Then they get the elephant going, but then they have to go up an insanely steep hill. Will they be able to make it? Then when it feels like things couldn’t possibly get any worse, well, that’s when the elephant suddenly has a bout of diarrhea.

Linus Sandgren, director of photography: Damien wanted the movie to feel like something between Whiplash and La La Land in the style. That had to do with the energy. We mixed the styles quite a bit in regard to movement and stuff, where you had both handheld and long sorts of moves, as well as the frenetic editing from Whiplash.

Jimmy Ortega, “elephant wrangler”: I was booked on the job for a month, and then one day, a buddy of mine called me and said, “Hey, Jimmy, your scenes are coming up. What do you know about elephants?” I said, “Well, they’re big... I’ve seen them at the circus...” And he goes, “OK, let me talk to the director.” And then he calls me back like a half hour later and goes, “You’re the guy.” So I start doing everything, watching documentaries about elephants, trying to prepare for it, and then I get one more call: “Hey, man, I forgot to tell you, but the elephant’s just gonna shit on you.”

Chazelle: Everyone for some reason thinks of the past as gentler, quieter, less vivid colors, sepia, and that the wildest thing people did was maybe have too many sips of champagne or someone dances the Charleston and a bunch of people go, Ooh! It’s a quaintness that has really warped our perception of what was actually a really transgressive, radical, wild, filthy, insane time. So to put the audience at ease in the beginning, then really deliberately pull the rug out from under their feet and have the elephant literally shit into the camera... We had to go for that sort of hard collision.

Sandgren: Some people may leave the theater at that point. We had that discussion. In the first 15 minutes, we give everyone a lot of what they’re going to get. We establish the comedy of the film.

Florencia Martin, production designer: That elephant we used was so incredibly specific, and for Damien, it needed to look 100% real.

Chazelle: We couldn’t shoot with an elephant. We did things to this elephant on screen that should never be done to any elephant.

Martin: So, first thing we did, the most important thing we did, was cast an elephant. We looked at many elephants in sanctuaries across the United States to find an elephant that had features that were a good fit. We found one who had a little spot in front, was the right scale — this was supposed to be a circus elephant; they weren’t African — and it was great casting. Then we worked with [Industrial Light and Magic] and the incredible [visual effects supervisor] Jay Cooper, who really understood how important this was to Damien, to photograph the elephant and build him in 3D.

But we had to resolve the volume of the elephant in the space. We didn’t want to have a void there; we wanted something for the actors to act against. So we worked with our prop master Gay Perello and art director Ace Eure to find all the pieces of elephant as puppets and prosthetics.

Arjen Tuiten, prosthetic designer: They first called me about doing the makeup on Babylon’s Elephant Man-looking guy and the conjoined twins for later scenes. But then they were like, Oh, we also have this elephant behind. We know it’s not really your cup of tea, but do you want to please take it on, so it’s under one roof? I’m like, Uh, yeah, I’ll do it.

One of my guys went to the LA Zoo with the visual effects team, and we studied one of the elephants that they liked. We photographed it, then started sculpting. And we worked with Elia in special effects, who did the fake feces. There was so much to figure out for it to be safe for the actor.

Elia P. Popov, special effects supervisor: My company [Jem V/X] builds stunt vehicles. Probably close to 300 stock vehicles per year out of here alone. On Babylon, it was our responsibility to manufacture anything that has to be what they call “show action.” So in the case of the opening scene with the elephant truck and all the poop emitting, the truck itself was a picture car, but the elephant box didn’t exist.

Martin: We did extensive research on horse trailers of the period, and it actually scaled to where we could fit an elephant behind the truck without it being uncomfortable. We didn’t want to put an elephant in a situation where it would be completely outside the trailer, and obviously the elephant is much taller than a horse, so we redesigned the truck, which was a Model T, and redesigned the truck bed in a way that our characters would have dismantled it at that time in order to make the elephant fit in. We got it so that his legs are at the back and his butt is kind of pushing the back gate forward. It was amazing to work with such artisans who could be so accurate.

Popov: Step two was getting the prosthetic from Arjen, and building a whole system to mount the elephant butt in the bed itself. Then we also came up with an auger system to distribute the elephant poop.

Sandgren: There was a green-screen buck that they later put CG skin on, but the ass was there, and it could shit.

Tuiten: We sculpted the behind and then we did two different... anuses? I guess you could call them that. We made them out of a very light shell of soft silicone. They had to be reinforced.

Martin: Elia basically reconstructed the guts of an elephant in a very simple way in order to get our elephant poop to push through the anus accurately, and projectile forward.





 

Stranger Things star Noah Schnapp comes out as gay: 'Guess I'm more similar to Will than I thought'





The actor opened up in a TikTok video referencing his beloved TV alter ego.

Noah Schnapp is living his truth.

The 18-year-old actor, best known for playing the closeted gay teenager Will Byers on Netflix's hit sci-fi series Stranger Things, came out as gay in a TikTok video posted Thursday. "I guess I'm more similar to [Will] than I thought," he wrote in the caption.

The video features Schnapp reclining and lip-syncing to audio saying, "You know what it never was? That serious. Quite frankly, it will never be that serious." In text atop the video, Scnhapp wrote, "When I finally told my friends and family I was gay after being scared in the closet for 18 years and all they said was 'we know.'"

Representatives for Schnapp said the actor had no further comment at this time.

The sexual orientation of Schnapp's TV alter ego has been the subject of much discussion among Stranger Things fans over the years, and Schnapp confirmed last summer that Will is gay and in love with his best friend Mike (Finn Wolfhard). That revelation came after seasons' worth of teases and hints, like a season 3 episode in which Mike yelled at him, "It's not my fault you don't like girls!" following a heated Dungeons & Dragons session.

Obviously, it was hinted at in season 1," Schnapp told Variety in July, after the second volume of season 4 dropped. "It was always kind of there, but you never really knew: is it just him growing up slower than his friends? Now that he's gotten older, they made it a very real, obvious thing. Now it's 100 percent clear that he is gay and he does love Mike. But before, it was a slow arc."

Stranger Things director and executive producer Shawn Levy previously told EW that the season 3 scene wasn't specific to sexual orientation, though he added, "There aren't many accidents on Stranger Things. There is clear intention and strategy and real thought given to each and every character. So if you came away from [season 4, volume 1] feeling those breadcrumbs of plot and character, it's probably no accident."

Schnapp had played coy about Will's sexuality in past interviews but later acknowledged that the subject was open to interpretation. "I think that's the beauty of it, that it's just up to the audience's interpretation," he told Variety in May. "If it's Will kind of just refusing to grow up and growing up slower than his friends, or if he is really gay."


Entertainment articles news

 

Lisa Rinna Announces 'Real Housewives' Exit After 8 Seasons






It's official: Lisa Rinna is leaving Bravo's 'Real Housews of Beverly Hills

Lisa Rinna's run as a "Real Housewife" is coming to a close. 

The longtime Bravo star, who initially joined the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills cast back in 2014, has officially confirmed her exit from the beloved franchise. 

In a statement made to People, the 59-year-old reality star said, "This is the longest job I have held in my 35-year career and I am grateful to everyone at Bravo and all those involved in the series."

"It has been a fun eight-year run and I am excited for what is to come," she added in the statement published by the outlet on Thursday, Jan. 5. 

Rinna's contract reportedly expired at the end of last season, prompting her and the network to mutually decide that she will not return to RHOBH

The Days of Our Lives alum has been part of the show since Season 5 and has become one of the most iconic cast members to grace the show, among some of her other notable co-stars, who include Kyle RichardsErika JayneKathy Hilton, and more. 

Rinna made waves during her debut season on the Bravo series, mostly over her infamous argument with then-costar Kim Richards, who caused her to smash a wine glass in Richards' direction after making an insinuation about Rinna's husband, Harry Hamlin

Rinna has since had beef with other RHOBH cast members, including Yolanda HadidDenise Richards and Sutton Stracke, to name a few, but she hasn't been shy to show accountability for her actions, as she has even become known for her famous catchphrase, "Own it, baby." 

 In the show's most recent season, Rinna lost her mother, Lois Rinna, shortly after production began, making Season 12 a particularly difficult one for her. 

She criticized the show for not memorializing her mom properly, writing on her Instagram Story at the time, "Lois deserved and deserves much more. Shame on everyone," per People

But her exit likely isn't a major surprise to many RHOBH fans, as Rinna has been dropping hints about a possible departure for some time now. While it's not clear what Rinna has planned for the future (aside from her recent release of sparkling wines), we know she will own whatever she chooses to do next!



Prince Harry Tells ‘60 Minutes’ He Was “Probably Bigoted” Before Relationship With Meghan Markle And “Didn’t See What I Now See


CBS News’ 60 Minutes, which landed the first interview with Prince Harry tied to the publication of his memoir, released a clip of his interview with Anderson Cooper, including an admission that he was “probably bigoted” before his relationship with Meghan Markle, now his wife.

In the clip of the interview, airing in full on Sunday, Harry says that he was “incredibly naive” of how his relationship with Markle would be treated by British tabloids.

What Meghan had to go through was similar in some part to what Kate and what Camilla went through, very different circumstances,” Harry said. “But then you add in the race element, which was what the press, British press jumped on straight away. I went into this incredibly naïve. I had no idea the British press were so bigoted. Hell, I was probably bigoted before the relationship with Meghan.”

Cooper followed up, asking Harry, “You think you were bigoted before the relationship with Meghan?”

“I don’t know,” Harry said. “Put it this way, I didn’t see what I now see.”

Harry also has interviews lined up with Michael Strahan for Good Morning America, set to air on Monday, followed by a half-hour special that evening for ABC News Live and Hulu.

Harry’s memoir Spare is due to be released on Tuesday.

In the clip, Harry suggested that he tried to keep the family rift from public view, but “every single time I’ve tried to do it privately there have been briefings and leakings and planting of stories against me and my wife. You know, the family motto is never complain, never explain, but it’s just a motto.”

He added, “They will feed or have a conversation with the correspondent. And that correspondent will literally be spoon-fed information and write the story. And at the bottom of it they will say that they’ve reached out to Buckingham Palace for comment. But the whole story is Buckingham Palace commenting. So, when we’re being told for the last six years, ‘We can’t put a statement out to protect you’… But you do it for other members of the family. It becomes – there becomes a point when silence is betrayal.”

 


Nicolas Cage Bares His Fangs as Dracula in 'Renfield' Trailer with Nicholas Houl

Nicholas Hoult is desperate to get away from Nicolas Cage's Dracula in the first trailer for their upcoming movie Renfield.

On Thursday, Universal Pictures released the trailer for the upcoming "modern monster tale of Dracula's loyal servant," which stars Cage, 58, as Dracula opposite 33-year-old Hoult's title character, according to an official synopsis for the movie.

Renfield's trailer showcases Renfield himself as he attends a group meeting in search of help ending a "toxic relationship" with his boss and struggles to escape from doing Dracula's bidding. Renfield's association with the vampire has its advantages, though — Renfield has supernatural powers that allow him to fight off criminals and save Awkwafina's character's life in the process.

The trailer saves its best reveal for last, teasing Cage's Dracula as he enters Renfield's meeting in a school gymnasium and floats menacingly overhead.

The film is set to follow Renfield as he sets out "to see if there's a life outside the shadow of The Prince of Darkness" and "end his codependency" with Dracula, according to a synopsis.

In December 2021, Cage told Variety's Awards Circuit podcast that he wants to bring "something new" to the character, who has previously been portrayed onscreen by Bela Lugosi in the black-and-white Universal classic, Gary Oldman in Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 version, Frank Langella, Christopher Lee, Gerard Butler and Luke Evans, among others.

  I want it to pop in a unique way from how we've seen it played. So I'm thinking to really focus on the movement of the character. You know, I saw Malignant and I thought what she did with those moves — and even Ringu with Sadako [Yamamura]," he said at the time. "I want to look at what we can explore with this movement and voice."

What makes it super fun is that it's a comedy. And when you get that tone right — comedy and horror — like American Werewolf in London, it's a blast," Cage added to Variety during his podcast appearance. "It's got to be a bullseye. But that's what I'm looking for, something new to bring to the character and also that perfect tone of comedy and horror."

The new movie, directed by The Tomorrow War's Chris McKay, also stars Ben Schwartz and Adrian Martinez alongside Cage, Hoult and Awkwafin.




Natasha Lyonne’s Knives Are Out in Poker Face


Rian Johnson is taking his mystery tales to the small screen. Russian Doll’s Natasha Lyonne plays  Charlie Cale, a traveling sleuth with a preternatural ability to tell when someone’s lying in the upcoming Peacock mystery-of-the-week series, Poker Face. Armed with nothing but her flask and quick wit in the stylish trailer, Lyonne wanders the U.S. in her Plymouth Barracuda, sticking her nose into the strange local crimes. Not everything is a Sunday drive, though — someone is after Charlie Cale, and they won’t rest until she’s brought in. The plot thickens.

“Never underestimate the power of a good dinner conversation between friends,” wrote Johnson and Lyonne in a press release. “What started as a discussion over steak frites about detective shows and what made them such a reliable pleasure — the exploration of little worlds within each new setting, the guest stars playing killers and victims, and most importantly, a scrappy protagonist you were always ready to kick back with and see win — ultimately resulted in the creation of Charlie.”

With a stacked list of guest stars — Adrien Brody, Benjamin Bratt, Chloë Sevigny, Clea DuVall, Dascha Polanco, Ellen Barkin, Hong Chau, Jameela Jamil, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Judith Light, Lil Rel Howery, Rhea Perlman, Ron Perlman, S. Epatha Merkerson, and Tim Meadows — you’d be lying if you said you weren’t interested. The first four episodes premiere on January 26 on Peacock.

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