Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Jennifer Lawrence’s ex triggers drama between Mila Kunis, Natalie

    Jennifer Lawrence’s ex triggers drama between Mila Kunis, Natalie



    Jennifer Lawrence’s ex triggers drama between Mila Kunis, Natalie

    Black Swan director Darren Aronofsky admitted that he tried to stir a rivalry between Mila Kunis and Natalie Portman while filming their psychological thriller. 

    Fifteen years after the movie’s release, which earned $329.4 million worldwide against a $13 million budget, the 56-year-old filmmaker explained his reasoning in an interview with Vogue.

    Aronofsky said that he wanted to push the actors to argue to help them get into character as ballet dancers competing for the lead in Swan Lake. 

    He admitted, “My take is that I was trying to be a sneaky director and make them argue. Mila and Natalie both realized very quickly what I was doing and made fun of me, so it quickly became a joke that we all understood.”

    Portman, 44, recalled being separated from Kunis when not shooting and described how Aronofsky would praise Kunis to provoke her. However, she remembered telling him, “She’s so f**king talented and I love her so much and I’m happy she’s doing a great job.” 

    Kunis shared a similar story, saying Aronofsky would tell her, “Nat is working really, really hard. She’s not even taking Saturdays and Sundays off,” which prompted her to text Portman, confirming the director’s playful tricks.

    Despite the attempts at rivalry, both actresses looked back fondly on their experience. Portman called it the first time she felt a “mind meld” with a director, while Kunis described Aronofsky as kind and thoughtful, even taking them to see Twilight on a day off.

    For the unversed, Black Swan was released in 2010 and received five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actress.

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  • LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY


    wardrobe

    Whether you’re curating your wedding trousseau or planning looks for the festive season, it’s all about picking pieces that balance timeless kaarigari with effortless wearability. Think rich fabrics, delicate embellishments, and colours that photograph like a dream. The key? Styling them in a way that feels true to you, whether that’s pairing a heavily worked dupatta with minimal jewellery, or letting a statement neckline shine with sleek hair and a soft lip. This week You! shares tips on how to style formal-wear in different ways…

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    This midnight blue organza anarkali is embroidered with gold sequins and resham in Kashmiri-style motifs. The fitted bodice features zardozi and thread work, while the dress flows in gold foil patterns. Its highlight is a contrasting blue-green chunri dupatta in chiffon or silk, finished with gota and kiran edging. Ideal for a mehendi or shendi with chunky jhumkas, a teeka, glass bangles, and soft glam makeup.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    In a soft moss-gray sheesha silk, the kameez features gold tilla and resham embroidery with scalloped finishing. Paired with a navy-blue raw silk gharara detailed with broad gota lines for added flare.

    A rani pink bandhani chiffon dupatta edged with kiran lace adds vibrant contrast. Drape it loosely and pair with uncut kundan jewellery, dewy skin, and a berry-toned lip for a mehendi or dholki.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    Decadent yet refined, this muted ensemble balances richness and restraint. Embellished with soft gold thread work, the outfit is lifted by delicate hints of jade green that appear in the embroidery and trims, which flows into a deep maroon colour for an extra oomph. Pair with jade earrings or a statement choker to echo the green accents. Keep the base makeup glowy and the lips a warm nude.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    A teal angrakha peshwas with gold zardozi and tilla embroidery concentrated on the bodice and sleeves. Vertical detailing elongates the silhouette. The mustard jamawar dupatta, with navy and gold scalloped gota border, adds festive dimension. Wear to a nikah or formal event with chandbalis, a sleek bun, and warm-toned makeup.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    This bridal look radiates moonlit majesty. Glistening resham and silver tilla embroidery is worked heavily across a sculpted silhouette with hints of pale gold. Best suited for a nikah or reception paired with an all-silver jewellery set, sleek bun, luminous skin, and a soft rose lip.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    This crimson red peshwas features dense gota, dabka, and zardozi embroidery in antique gold. Floral and vine motifs cover the bodice and ghera, with a brocade lining peeking from the hem. The chiffon dupatta has four-sided kiran and scattered bootis. Pair with gold jewellery, and kohled eyes for barat or a vintage-inspired wedding.

    LOOKS, LAYERS AND LEGACY

    A green deep-toned shirt with hand-embellished mukesh work, paired with a crush buttersilk sharara and a dupatta speckled with light-reflecting details. Traditional yet wearable, this look is perfect for a dholki or post-wedding dinner. Style with jhumkis, kohl, and a pulled-back hairstyle.

    C R E D I T S

    Text: Wallia Khairi Designer: Sehrish Nadeem

    Photography, Styling and Art Direction: Hussain Piart

    Makeup and Hair: Nomi Lawrence

    Models: Sana Husayn, Maria Malik and Sughand

    Accessories: Bukhari Accessories

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  • Kendall Jenner’s new tequila ‘shooters’ are meant as an accessory

    Kendall Jenner’s new tequila ‘shooters’ are meant as an accessory


    The 818 Minis will be available in nationwide retailers in September.

    play

    Kendall Jenner is looking to accessorize alcohol bottles.

    Jenner’s alcohol brand 818 Tequila will soon be selling 818 Minis, 50-milliliter bottles of tequila that the reality television star and model hopes consumers will wear as accessories after enjoying. Known as “shooters,” “tasters” or “nips,” these pocket-size tequila bottles will come in Reposado and Blanco, according to an 818 Tequila news release.

    The minis are a part of a campaign Tequila 818 has called “Free the Nip.”

    “No longer confined to minibars or airplane carts, the 818 Minis are now more versatile and spontaneous, clipped to your purse, going where you go,” the news release states.

    To launch the minis, 818 Tequila is partnering with Gopuff, the around-the-clock delivery service. Starting at midnight ET on Sept. 8, customers can purchase a limited-edition 818 Minis bundle that includes a collectible 818 Mini Bag Charm.

    Here’s what to know about the pocket-size tequilas.

    Where to buy 818 Minis

    818 Minis will be available at retailers like BevMo!, Total Wine & More and Remedy Liquor starting in September, according to the news release.

    How much are 818 Minis?

    An 818 Mini Blanco will be around $3.99, and an 818 Reposado will be around $4.99, according to the news release.

    What are the 818 Minis flavors?

    The 818 Minis will be available in two variations. Blanco is agave-forward with undertones of tropical and citrus fruits, and Reposado features notes of honey, toasted almonds, pecans and dried fruit, according to the 818 Tequila website.

    Do you have to be 21 to buy 818 Minis?

    Yes. 818 Minis contain tequila, so consumers must be at least 21 years old.

    What is 818 Tequila?

    Jenner launched 818 Tequila in 2021. The brand’s tequila is produced in Jalisco, Mexico at a family-owned distillery, according to the news release. In addition to Blanco and Reposado, 818 Tequila offers two more variations: Añejo (vanilla, toffee and herbal notes) and Eight Reserve (agave, vanilla, cinnamon, dried berries and praline). The latter is aged for up to eight years.

    According to the 818 Tequila website, the brand gets its’ name from the San Fernando Valley area code – 818, where Jenner and her family are from.

    Upon its launch, 818 Tequila and Jenner faced criticism, as some found the brand to be a form of cultural appropriation – a non-Latina celebrity creating a tequila brand.

    Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her at gcross@usatoday.com.

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  • Belgian painter Walter Swennen dies at 79.

    Belgian painter Walter Swennen dies at 79.

    Belgian artist Walter Swennen, known for playful and experimental paintings, has died at 79. His death was announced by Xavier Hufkens, which represents him.

    “Walter’s passing is an immense loss, both personally and artistically,” Xavier Hufkens said in a statement. “He was a dear friend and a true visionary, whose thinking was as uncompromising as it was free. We will miss him profoundly, but his spirit will endure, inspiring and challenging generations to come.”

    Born in Brussels in 1946, Swennen first pursued poetry and performance in the 1960s before turning to painting—at first privately, then publicly in the early 1980s. He briefly studied philosophy at Saint-Louis University in Brussels and engraving at Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts. He graduated with a master’s in psychology from the Université Catholique de Louvain in 1973.

    Swennen’s paintings often incorporated words in multiple languages, alongside comic book figures and everyday motifs that he treated irreverently. He drew inspiration from sources as varied as free jazz, philosophy, street signage, and art history. After his initial pursuit of poetry, language remained central to his art practice, through which he endeavored to unsettle fixed meanings.

    In 1981, Swennen presented his first solo exhibition at Gallery Patrick Verelst in Antwerp. That same year, he showed his paintings at the Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels, which would later be the venue for his first institutional show in 1986. He quickly became a central figure in Belgian painting, rising to prominence alongside artists exploring the material limits of the medium, such as Marcel Broodthaers.

    Swennen’s work was the subject of major international exhibitions, including “So Far So Good” at WIELS in Brussels in 2013, “Ein perfektes Alibi” at Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen in Düsseldorf in 2015, and “La pittura farà da sé” at La Triennale di Milano in 2018. A retrospective opened at Kunstmuseum Bonn in Germany in 2021 before traveling to Kunstmuseum Den Haag in the Netherlands and Kunstmuseum Winterthur in Switzerland.

    Xavier Hufkens began representing Swennen in 2014. In 2015, Gladstone Gallery started representing the artist and has presented three solo shows over the last decade.

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  • Disability, Eastern Diversity Steering, Latino, LGBTQ+ and Women’s Steering Committees Announce Election Results

    Disability, Eastern Diversity Steering, Latino, LGBTQ+ and Women’s Steering Committees Announce Election Results

    Directors Nick Copus, Ashley Eakin & Afia Serena Nathaniel have been elected as Co-Chairs of the Disability Committee; Directors Melissa Haizlip & Afia Serena Nathaniel & UPM Canella Williams-Larrabee as Co-Chairs of the Eastern Diversity Steering Committee; Directors Alejandro Brugués, Eli Gonda & Andrew Molina as Co-Chairs of the Latino Committee; and Directors Shaz Bennett, Jade Jenise Dixon & Valerie Weiss as Co-Chairs of the Women’s Steering Committee.

    Additionally, for the Disability Committee, Director Rachel Raimist has been elected as the Western Director category representative, 2nd AD Alex Martini and 1st AD Thomas McAuley Burke as the Western and Eastern AD/UPM category representatives and Associate Director Dan Bowen as the Western AD/SM/PA category representative. For the Latino Committee, Director Carlos Lopez Estrada has been elected as the Director category representative and 1st AD Rene Villarreal as the AD/UPM category representative. For the Women’s Steering Committee, Director Mary Lou Belli has been elected as the Director category representative.

    The LGBTQ+ Committee has also completed its representative elections with Directors Peter Paige, Jessica Lowrey and Steven Canals elected as Western Director category representatives; 1st AD Mark Hansson and UPM Steak House elected as Western AD/UPM category representatives; 1st AD Sarah R. Fairchild elected as Eastern AD/UPM category representative and Production Associate David B. Cooper elected as Eastern AD/SM/PA category representative. Directors Rhys Ernst and Kimberly Peirce and 1st AD Mark Hansson will continue in their posts as Co-Chairs of the Committee.


    About the Disability Committee Co-Chairs

    Nick Copus
    Copus has served as a producing Director on series including Bel-Air, Titans, Animal Kingdom, Lethal Weapon, Siren, Into the Badlands, Salem, Damien, Alphas, True Tales of Terror and I Shouldn’t Be Alive. He has directed over 160 television episodes on 43 different series including episodes of American Gods, The Right Stuff, Queen of the South, Gotham, Arrow, Sleepy Hollow, Revolution, Nikita, The 4400 and The Dresden Files. A DGA member since 2006, Copus previously served as a Co-Chair of the DGA Disability Committee. 

     

    Ashley EakinAshley Eakin
    Eakin’s directorial credits include episodes of the series Growing Up and Best Foot Forward; and the shorts Forgive Us Our Trespasses, Blue and Exo. Her other short films, Single and Roommates, earned nominations for the Narrative Short Grand Jury Award at the 2020 and 2022 SXSW festival. Eakin became a DGA member in 2021. 

     
    Afia Serena NathanielAfia Serena Nathaniel
    Nathaniel’s directorial credits include the feature Dukhtar, which was Pakistan’s official submission for Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards; episodes of Chicago Med; and the shorts Nadah, Toba Tek Singh, Long After and Don’t be late, Myra. Nathaniel became a DGA member in 2022, and also serves as a Co-Chair of the Eastern Diversity Steering Committee. 
    About the Disability Committee

    The   mission of the Disability Committee is to examine a broad range of issues DGA members with disabilities face on sets, with the goal of developing recommendations to address these matters. The Committee was created in 2023 where DGA members could lead the work to destigmatize disability as a way to empower other members to feel comfortable with disclosing their disability identity and push the industry towards greater acceptance of Directors and Directorial Team members with disabilities. In 2024, the Committee was designated a permanent committee by the DGA National Board.



     

    About the Eastern Diversity Steering Committee Co-Chairs
    Melissa HaizlipMelissa Haizlip
    Haizlip’s directorial credits include the documentary features Satisfied and Mr. Soul! and an episode of the documentary series Independent Lens. Haizlip has been a DGA member since 2018.
     
    Afia Serena NathanielAfia Serena Nathaniel
    Nathaniel’s directorial credits include the feature Dukhtar, which was Pakistan’s official submission for Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards; episodes of Chicago Med; and the shorts Nadah, Toba Tek Singh, Long After and Don’t be late, Myra. Nathaniel became a DGA member in 2022, and also serves as a Co-Chair of the Disability Committee. 
     
    Canella Williams-LarrabeeUPM Canella Williams-Larrabee
    Williams-Larrabee’s credits include features such as Jingyi Shao’s Chang Can Dunk and Dayna Hanson’s Confession; and episodes of The Night AgentThe Crowded RoomThe Best Man: The Final ChaptersEvil, Raising Dion, NCIS: New Orleans and the DGA Award-nominated limited series, The Undoing. A DGA member since 2019, Williams-Larrabee also serves as the Chair of the Eastern AD/UPM Council, and as a Second Alternate on the DGA National Board This is her third term as a Co-Chair of the EDSC.
    About the Eastern Diversity Steering Committee

    The Eastern Diversity Steering Committee represents the concerns of Guild members of African, Asian, Native American, Arab-Middle Eastern or Latino descent residing in the East. Committed to improving the employment opportunities, working conditions and the skills of ethnically diverse Guild members, the Committee sponsors workshops, seminars, round-table discussions and networking events to showcase the talents of its members, recognize their contributions and increase their visibility


    About the Latino Committee Co-Chairs

    Alejandro BruguesAlejandro Brugués
    Brugués’ directorial credits include the feature films The Inheritance and Juan of the Dead; a segment in the feature anthology Satanic Hispanics; segments of ABCs of Death 2 and Nightmare Cinema; and episodes of From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series, 50 States of Fright and Into the Dark. Brugués has been a DGA member since 2015 and previously served as the alternate co-chair of the Latino Committee. 

     

    Eli GondaEli Gonda
    Gonda’s directorial credits include the feature films Sid Is Dead and The Outfield; and episodes of Neon, Freeridge, With Love, On My Block, Freeridge, ABC Discovers: Los Angeles Talent Showcase, Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Husbands. He has been a member of the DGA since 2019 and previously served as a co-chair of the Latino Committee.

     

    Andrew MolinaAndrew Molina
    Molina’s directorial credits include an episode of the series Uncharted; and numerous shorts and commercials including Heaven on Earth, You’ve Got This All in a Day’s Work, Fantasy, and People are Great. Molina has been a DGA member since 2016. 

     
    About the Latino Committee

    The Latino Committee was created as a networking group to advance career and job opportunities for Latino DGA members by improving craft skills, networking, and making Latinos better known to the Hollywood creative community. To achieve this mandate, the LC sponsors workshops, seminars, networking sessions and major events to showcase members’ talent, enhance qualifications, improve employment opportunities, and recognize our contributions to the industry.


    About the Women’s Steering Committee Co-Chairs
    Shaz BennettShaz Bennett
    Bennett’s directorial credits include the feature film, Alaska is a Drag — based on her short of the same name — as well as episodes of the series Billions, Queen Sugar, Animal Kingdom, Ordinary Joe and Bosch; and the short films Desert Rats, Top of the Circle and Tunnels. She has been a member of the DGA since 2019 and previously served as a Co-Chair of the Women’s Steering Committee.
     
    Jade Jenise DixonJade Jenise Dixon
    Dixon’s directorial credits include the features Truth Hall and Dog Park; and episodes of Raven’s Home and Kold x Windy. She has been a DGA member since 2022.
     
    Valerie WeissValerie Weiss
    Weiss’s directorial credits include the feature films, Mixtape, The Archer, A Light Beneath Their Feet and Losing Control; the movie for television, An American Girl Story: Maryellen 1955 – Extraordinary Christmas; and episodes of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Echoes, Monarch, Outer Banks, Why Women Kill, Suits, Impulse and Echoes. A DGA member since 2016, Weiss currently serves on the Sustainable Future Committee and previously served as a Co-Chair of the Women’s Steering Committee.
     
    About the Women’s Steering Committee

    The Women’s Steering Committee was created to advance the professional interests of its members, and to heighten their visibility and career opportunities. The WSC currently promotes diversity through sponsoring networking events, screenings and seminars, and fosters relationships between the members to provide support, mentoring and networking opportunities.


    About the LGBTQ+ Committee

    The LGBTQ+ Committee was founded in 2021 as a provisional committee to explore ways to educate, inform, address the concerns of and create opportunities for members who identify in these categories. At the DGA National Board meeting on January 8, 2022, the Board voted make the LGBTQ+ Committee an official standing committee. The Committee is dedicated to empowering and advancing the professional interests of LGBTQ+ and to promoting and working for employment equity throughout the entertainment industry.

     

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  • Millie Bobby Brown jokingly recreates Hailey Bieber’s lip gloss phone case

    Millie Bobby Brown jokingly recreates Hailey Bieber’s lip gloss phone case

    Millie Bobby Brown gives Hailey Bieber a playful shoutout

    Millie Bobby Brown just gave Hailey Bieber’s viral lip gloss phone case her own DIY twist

    Taking to Instagram, the Stranger Things star, 21, posted a mirror selfie video over the weekend, showing off a makeshift version of Bieber’s now-famous Rhode lip gloss phone case.

    Instead of the viral sleek accessory by Rhode, Brown fastened a simple hair tie around her phone and tucked in a lip balm from her own beauty line, Florence by Mills.

    The funny recreation was set to the tune of Go Baby, a track by Hailey’s husband, Justin Bieber, which gives a direct nod to his wife’s product placement. “That’s my baby / She’s iconic / iPhone case / lip gloss on it.”

    Brown also gave the fellow beauty founder, 28, a shoutout in the caption, writing, “@haileybieber did it first,” with a purple heart emoji.

    The move got a sweet acknowledgement from the Rhode founder herself as Hailey dropped a like and commented “Hehe” along with a slew of heart emojis.

    Florence by Mills’ official account chimed in with an enthusiastic, “ICONICCC,” while the brand’s fashion arm added its own cheeky nod to Justin’s lyric, writing, “that’s my baby, she’s iconic.”


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  • Kumail Nanjiani says Elon Musk didn’t like his show ‘Silicon Valley’

    Kumail Nanjiani says Elon Musk didn’t like his show ‘Silicon Valley’



    Kumail Nanjiani on Elon Musk’s reaction to ‘Silicon Valley’

    Kumail Nanjiani is opening up about how some of Silicon Valley’s biggest names reacted to the HBO comedy that poked fun at their world. 

    The actor, best known for playing Dinesh Chugtai on Silicon Valley, recently joined comedian Mike Birbiglia on his Working It Out podcast, where he revealed that Elon Musk wasn’t exactly a fan.

    Nanjiani recalled meeting the Tesla CEO, who immediately made it clear he didn’t like the show. 

    Musk, 54, apparently took issue with the very first scene of the series, where Kid Rock performs at a tech party while “seven nerdy dudes” stand around, barely paying attention. 

    “Elon was upset,” Nanjiani said. “He was like, ‘Well, the parties I go to are much cooler than these parties.’ ” 

    Nanjiani laughed at the memory, adding, “Yeah, man. You’re one of the richest people in the world. We’re like losers on the show. Of course, your parties are better than my parties. What are you talking about?”

    The actor also shared another story from his time on the series, this one involving Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Around the show’s third or fourth year, Nanjiani and co-star Martin Starr presented at the Breakthrough Awards, an event Zuckerberg co-founded in 2016. 

    The pair decided to tweak their prepared script and instead made a callback to a risqué moment from the show’s first season finale. The room didn’t respond the way they hoped. 

    “He was like, ‘What the f— was that?’” Nanjiani recalled of Zuckerberg’s reaction. Looking back, Nanjiani admitted, “And truly in that moment he was right.”

    Silicon Valley premiered in 2014 and ran for six seasons, becoming a sharp satire of the tech industry and startup culture. Over its run, the series earned 40 Emmy nominations, including five consecutive nods for Outstanding Comedy Series, and won twice, for Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series and Outstanding Art Direction for a Contemporary Program (Half hour or less).

    Alongside Nanjiani and Starr, the acclaimed ensemble included Thomas Middleditch, Zach Woods, Josh Brener, and T.J. Miller.

    For Nanjiani, the stories behind the scenes now serve as funny reminders of how the fictional world of Pied Piper sometimes clashed with the real titans of Silicon Valley.

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  • Doomsday Return a ‘Healing’ Experience

    Doomsday Return a ‘Healing’ Experience

    Alan Cumming is opening up about how playing Nightcrawler in Avengers: Doomsday was actually “really healing” after his “terrible experience” in 2003’s X2: X-Men United.

    The actor recently told People at the Televerse 2025 conference that he “just finished” filming the Russo brothers’ highly anticipated Doomsday film, which is set to hit theaters in May 2026.

    “I just came back. It was amazing. It was actually really… in a sort of ooey, gooey way, it was really healing and really nice to go back to something that was a terrible experience when I did it the first time,” Cumming said. “A great film, great film. I love the film.”

    The Traitors host has previously been open about why it was so “miserable” to make the 2003 X-Men sequel, including the challenges of spending “like four and a half to five hours” in makeup each day to transform into the blue-skinned mutant, as well as difficulties with director Bryan Singer.

    However, he said it “was actually really great to go back” for Doomsday as it was much more positive this time around.

    “And especially, I’m 60 years old. I did not think I would be doing stunts, playing a superhero in my 60s. So that was great,” he said. “And everyone was really nice. And I got it done really quickly because I couldn’t go, because of The Traitors, when most of my scenes were being shot. So I squashed them all together, and got a green screen and various things and little scenes of people here and there. But it was pretty stealthy.”

    While details surrounding the Phase Six installment of the Marvel Cinematic Universe are being kept under wraps, Cumming previously teased that his Nightcrawler may have a fight scene with Pedro Pascal’s Mister Fantastic.

    The Avengers: Doomsday cast also includes Chris Hemsworth (Thor), Tom Hiddleston (Loki), Anthony Mackie (Captain America), Paul Rudd (Ant-Man), Letitia Wright (Black Panther), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Danny Ramirez (The Falcon), Winston Duke (M’Baku), Sebastian Stan (The Winter Soldier), Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova), Wyatt Russell (U.S. Agent), David Harbour (Red Guardian), Hannah John-Kamen (Ghost), Lewis Pullman (Bob), Patrick Stewart (Professor X), Ian McKellen (Magneto), James Marsden (Cyclops), Rebecca Romijn (Mystique), Vanessa Kirby (The Invisible Woman), Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Thing) and Joseph Quinn (The Human Torch), among many others.

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  • ‘Take that risk’: the New Zealand teen author named one of Time magazine’s girls of the year | New Zealand

    ‘Take that risk’: the New Zealand teen author named one of Time magazine’s girls of the year | New Zealand

    When New Zealand teenager Rutendo Shadaya was nine years old, she wanted to create the perfect birthday present for her best friend – an act of kindness that has helped land her on the front of Time magazine.

    “I was very good with gift giving, and I knew she liked reading … so I was like ‘why don’t I write a book for her?’,” Shadaya tells the Guardian.

    Two months later she had her fantasy novella, Rachel and the Enchanted Forest, in her hands, and, despite having previously “despised” writing, had enjoyed the process so much she wanted to push it further.

    After finding out it was “unrealistic” for a girl her age to find a traditional publisher, Shadaya self-published, winning over a young local audience and going on to sell hundreds of copies.

    Shadaya, now 17, has since published two more books in the series, and has just been named one of Time magazine’s girls of the year for featuring strong female leads in her work, and for using her platform to lift up other budding writers.

    Shadaya, who was born in New Zealand to Zimbabwean parents and lives in Tokoroa, a rural town in the central North Island, does not know how she ended up on the magazine’s radar. It was such a surprise, she thought their first email was fake and did not immediately respond.

    “What are the chances they would reach out to a 17-year-old in Tokoroa?”

    She only started feeling the enormity of the recognition in the lead up to it becoming public.

    “It’s surreal,” Shadaya says. “I’m being featured with these iconic young women and I feel like its such a privilege being honoured and [seeing] my hard work paying off”.

    Shadaya is one of 10 girls from around the world to feature in the magazine’s new list, and is the only girl representing Oceania.

    Her series traverses themes of adventure, friendship, mental health and perseverance, as her protagonist, Rachel, overcomes challenges through pushing herself out of her comfort zone, using her magical powers for good and surrounding herself with supportive friends.

    Shadaya wants “young girls to feel empowered when they read these books” and says it is “really cool to see people are interested.”

    Since publishing her books, Shadaya has used her platform to encourage other young writers, including appearing at community talks and events, and more recently running a competition for writers and artists between 8 and 13 years old, the winners of which will feature in a soon-to-be-released book.

    Shadaya is also a keen netball player, a student volunteer, a YWCA young leader, and is considering a future in dentistry alongside a writing career.

    Until then, Shadaya hopes her work will inspire others around her, particularly young women and girls.

    “Never let your background or age define you,” she says. “You’ll always face a lot of challenges but those challenges are built on to your journey … take that risk, you won’t regret it in the end.”

    Time’s girls of the year list is the magazine’s first list to highlight girls’ achievements, and builds on its existing women of the year list.

    Other entrants on the list include 13-year-old Scottish inventor, Rebecca Young, the Olympic skateboarder Coco Yoshizawa, 15, from Japan and an organ donation advocate, Naomi S DeBerry, 12, from the US.

    Time senior editor Dayana Sarkisova said the girls featured in the list “prove that changing your community and inspiring those around you can send ripple effects around the globe”.

    “These girls are part of a generation that’s reshaping what leadership looks like today,” she said.

    “Their generation understands that change doesn’t require waiting for adulthood – it starts with seeing problems and refusing to accept them as permanent.”

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  • ‘Good Boy’ Trailer: Dog Investigates Haunted House

    ‘Good Boy’ Trailer: Dog Investigates Haunted House

    In the official trailer for Good Boy, released Monday, Indy, a loyal dog, and his owner Todd (Shane Jensen) move to a new home but find paranormal activity lurking in the dark. As these evil forces encroach, the pup finds the courage to protect his owner and territory.

    The preview kicks off with snippets of Indy as a pup with heartwarming messages on the screen including, “man’s best friend”, “always by your side” and “through the good times.” The trailer then takes a scary turn, as the dog perks up following suspicious sounds in the dead of night.

    Eerie knocking fills the silence in the house, and Indy heads over to investigate. The banging only grows louder as an unknown person pounds their forehead into a door. Indy barks loudly to alert Todd that something is wrong, but viewers are left on a cliffhanger as the clip sharply cuts away.

    A barrage of spooky scenes follow, with Todd’s grandfather (Larry Fessenden) unleashing a bloodcurdling growl as the dog looks on. Fast paced clips of Indy fill the rest of the preview as he scampers through forests and keeps watch at night.

    The official synopsis of Good Boy states: “Our canine hero, Indy, finds himself on a new adventure with his human owner — and best friend — Todd, leaving city life for a long-vacant family home in the country. From the start, two things are abundantly clear: Indy is wary of the creepy old house, and his affection for Todd is unwavering.”

    Good Boy marks director Ben Leonberg’s feature debut, and there is no better main actor for his first feature than his own dog, Indy.

    The Good Boy cast also includes Arielle Friedman, Anya Krawcheck and Stuart Rudin. The film premiered at the SXSW Film Festival back in March.

    IFC Films will release the film in North American theaters on Oct. 3, with the U.K. release following a week later on Oct. 10.

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