Category: 5. Entertainment

  • How Marvel Designed the Thing and Honored Jack Kirby

    How Marvel Designed the Thing and Honored Jack Kirby

    Ryan Meinerding is having a full-circle moment.

    When he was in high school, one of his favorite characters was The Thing — so he sketched him. That artwork is featured in “Marvel Studios: The Art of Ryan Meinerding.” Meinerding has been with the Marvel Cinematic Universe from the very beginning, brought on to help Jon Favreau with “Iron Man.”

    He is now a character designer, creative director and the head of visual development at Marvel Studios, and has spent the last five years helping bring The Thing to life for Marvel’s latest, “Fantastic Four: First Steps.”

    The film stars Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, aka Mr. Fantastic; Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, aka the Invisible Woman; Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm, aka the Human Torch; and Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm, aka the Thing. The cast also includes Ralph Ineson as the planet-devouring villain Galactus and Julia Garner as the Silver Surfer. The film is set in Earth-828 and takes place in an alternate Marvel Cinematic timeline.

    Variety paid a visit to Meinerding’s office in Burbank, Calif. where he and his team work in the dark, lit up by their screens as they conceive environments, action sequences and character designs for the MCU. He shared his design process, which often begins with a pencil sketch “to figure out basic ideas. Or if I’m working on a big story moment, I’ll do it by hand just to get some fast ideas out.” Meinerding also talked about how he found a way to give The Thing emotion, and how this film turned out to be his biggest project to date — with his team, they produced 3,600 pieces of concept art.

    Meinerding’s high school sketch of The Thing.

    Inside your art book, there’s a drawing you did of the Thing from your high school days. How does it feel coming into this full-circle moment, where you’re bringing that very character to life for the feature film?

    I always loved The Thing. I love the Fantastic Four in general, but I also always loved The Thing, and so I did that when I was in high school.

    He’s one of those characters that’s so iconic to Marvel. It’s one of the first characters Jack Kirby designed, and the idea of that character having so much life, heart and expression was what drew me to him. Also, as a character designer, the idea of characters that are a little harder to figure out, like a guy made of rocks — to make him lovable, that’s a hard challenge. I can’t quite describe how it feels, because it is one of those things that comes along once in a lifetime.

    What was important in bringing The Thing to life?

    When Jack Kirby started drawing him, he looked a little bit like a mud man. Jack Kirby drew about 100 or 103 issues of “Fantastic Four.” Over the course of that time, he evolved. He got to draw him so much that he changed and perfected the design. The idea of this weird-looking head shape with the huge brow, the tiny nose, the long, muzzle-like mouth, all those things he made work so well. Artists in the comics have done lots of different and amazing things through the years with him, but for me, it was always looking at what Jack Kirby had done. The idea of that heavy brow and these bright, shining blue eyes, really popping when he looks up at you, was important.

    One of the notions going into this film was trying to have as much practical stuff on set as possible, which included a number of things. One of the things was building a stand-in. Alexandra Byrne, our costume designer, built real clothes and giant shoes. So they had all that as a reference. Another thing was going out and finding some actual rock that was going to be used as a reference, and they brought some of that stuff to set. It was just to make sure that when they did visual effects, they would know exactly what the color of the tonality would be.

    Where did you find those rocks?

    I went out to a few landscaping places and found decorative rocks. We’re always looking for ways to make this stuff feel as real as possible. On “Captain America,” that started with buying World War II stuff from our army surplus stores. This one started with, “How do I find something that’s as grounded as real as possible to be the building blocks for him?”

    Time-wise, when do you typically start working on something like this?

    Kevin kicks me off on stuff as soon as he’s super excited [about a project] – and he was very excited once the acquisition [of the “Fantastic Four” film rights] happened in 2019. The first thing I got to start working on was The Thing. I started sculpting him on the computer and trying to bring him to life. It was iteration upon iteration and coming to the final design images for him. Around the same time, we were also talking about the overall aesthetic of the film and trying to find something that felt retro-futuristic. Kazra, the production designer, ended up bringing that stuff to life in a way that is so exciting. When we started, it was “Should we look at the ‘60s sci-fi movies?” “Should we be looking at concept artists of that era, such as Syd Mead and Robert McCall, people who worked on ‘2001 and the early ‘Star Trek’ movies?” We were finding inspiration in places from that era of filmmaking.

    Going back to The Thing, he manages to have such character depth and emotion, but it’s all rocks. How did you find your way through that?

    One of the great things about The Thing is that eyes, eyebrows and a mouth are the most expressive features on a face, and he’s all that.  And he’s all eyebrows, eyes and mouth. That eyebrow does everything. It makes him surprised, angry or happy. And his mouth can turn from this grouchy-looking, sad mouth to something that’s a full smile. As long as we find a way of not making all the rocks get in the way of seeing those things, you can use those tools of expression to really communicate. The challenge with him is that, because there are so many rocks, sometimes the lines between them can make the viewer not quite see the expression. So there’s a balancing act there. I always thought the brow was this tremendous challenge, because it casts so much shadow in his eyes. But it’s also such a possibility for expression that I’m glad we were able to get it in film.

    You’ve got an incredible team working with you. What is that collaborative process?

    I’ve been here a long time. We hired a team for the first “Avengers” movie. So, Andy Park and Rodney Fuentebella have been around for 15 years. Sometimes our team grows depending on the productions. But I’ve been fortunate enough to have the most talented people around me who go from designing characters to doing key frames for big story moments.

    We worked to figure out Reed’s stretching powers or Sue’s powers, and how Surfer is going to look cool surging the wave of a neutron star. The team brings a wealth of experience, and each one of them brings what they love about the characters and tries to solve those problems in different ways. A number of artists will try out different things and will present all of that to the filmmakers, so it really creates a conversation amongst the filmmakers. It feels like there’s been an exploration.

    There’s a lot to get correct, right down to their suits, given how iconic these characters are. What was the idea there?

    With the look of their suits, Alexandra and I were looking through different iterations of the comics. The initiative came to lean into the blue and white suits more than the other iterations from the comics. It was meant to feel a little bit friendlier and more earnest and not quite so contemporary in its coolness. We landed with something that felt like it was from the past, as if it was designed for a 1960s sci-fi movie.

    The Fantastic Four has been done many times. What is it like creating this world, say, versus something like ‘Thor’ that hadn’t been done previously?

    Working on “Thor” was a very interesting experience because up until then, everything had been on Earth. The idea of creating a new Asgard for Thor to exist in required a lot of artistic input and a lot of research into the comics. Any of this starts with what the needs of the story are. We’re trying to look at making something that feels like something you haven’t seen before, but grounded enough that you’re going to buy the pushed idea of science driving it, even if it’s not going to look like the science we understand. Charlie Wen, the concept artist, cracked the look of the Asgardian costumes by referencing stuff from the comics, but found a way of making those characters feel regal, grand and theatrical in some ways, but there was a purpose to them.

    Which is harder, creating a character like The Thing, a digital character, or creating something like Sue’s powers?

    They’re all the same challenge. The Thing is a challenge for reasons that you have a lot of comic book fans who have very strong ideas, and you want to deliver for them. But you also want the character to feel real. It’s synthesizing all of that into something that the director responds to and that Kevin responds to. Working on stuff for Reed and Sue is a different balancing act. The Fantastic Four costumes are not, strictly speaking, grounded in as much reality as something like what we did with Captain America, where we’re trying to make him feel like a legitimate soldier that’s tough and hardened. These are going to have this earnestness, making people believe that those suits actually accomplish something, and that they are based in their version of science as well, and that the simplicity actually helps the project.

    What were the challenges in bringing Galactus to the big screen?

    There was a lot of work on Galactus, trying to figure out the appropriate scale and how he’s going to be experienced for the first time, and we did key frames surrounding that.

    But Galactus was a complete joy to work on. He was challenging to try to get as much detail on. He was meant to be one of those cosmic characters that you almost can’t fully appreciate how big he is. We also stayed close to the Kirby design. So I’d say that out of the designs I worked on, Galactus and The Thing are probably two of the most Kirby-inspired characters I’ve ever been able to work.

    And what about Surfer?

    Matt brought this notion that she would have this tarnished mirror surface. So, trying to figure out how to represent that without it detracting from her reflectivity was a lot of fun. Julia’s face is so compelling and interesting, trying to capture that. I was trying to find something that felt haunting, that she’s staring into your soul.

    She’s a challenge because she reflects whatever environment she’s in. It was finding ways for her to have that common tone that would also be affected by other things. In the film, they play that up a lot, where they try to find ways of making her feel real in the environment, by really reflecting what’s there.

    How did you land on getting the logo for this correct?

    In trying to find something that fit the retro-esthetic, we were trying to get into something that felt like a science fiction movie, or maybe that feels a little bit older than the 60s. We ended up sitting pretty well on the tech suits, it was like, “Okay, I think we got something.”  We did present quite a few different sets of character design illustrations to see what Matt and Kevin were responding to.

    This interview has been edited and condensed.

    See Ryan’s concept art below.

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  • First Steps Opens To $218M Global Box Office

    First Steps Opens To $218M Global Box Office

    SUNDAY UPDATE, Refresh for latest…: Marvel/Disney’s The Fantastic Four: First Steps has come in with an estimated $218M global opening. While this is lower than where we saw it yesterday, it remains above the pre-weekend projection, both worldwide and in terms of international box office. The latter landed at $100M, the top end of our pre-opening projection.

    The overseas debut is 13% ahead of Thunderbolts*, 11% ahead of Superman and 4% above Captain America: Brave New World in like-for-like markets at current rates. The Fantastic Four folks also scored the biggest superhero opening of 2025 in Mexico, the UK, France, Italy, Spain and the European and Latin American regions, as well as several smaller markets.

    The offshore take of $100M is about 46% of the global total. Normally, in this genre, we see overseas numbers much higher than domestic, but that’s not been the case recently (see Superman‘s bow at 43% from overseas). Is it a sign of the times, or the properties, or other vagaries? Likely a mix of those, but Hollywood is also facing challenges in Asia.

    We’ve known for a long while now that China is not the slam-dunk it once was, and that’s factored into consideration. What’s more worrying is that studio films are not always clicking amid local productions in other Asian markets. This weekend is perhaps an anomaly because there is a huge movie (Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle) in Japan and also a new local title in Korea (Omniscient Reader). All boats rise, but there’s a rethink needed for audiences in the region.

    This is food for thought that we’ll revisit, but speaking of a movie that’s doing better domestically than overseas, Warner Bros’ Superman has topped the half-billion milestone, now at $502.7M worldwide, including $213.2M from international.

    On the flipside, Universal/Amblin’s Jurassic World Rebirth has topped $700M global ($718.4M), with a heftier overseas haul ($416.8M), while Apple Original Films’s F1, via Warner Bros, has sped to $509.7M worldwide amid great holds, and with $344.1M coming from the international box office.

    Also of note, Sony and Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later has topped $150M worldwide, with $80M from international and $70M from domestic.

    MORE…

    PREVIOUS, SATURDAY UPDATE: Marvel/Disney’s The Fantastic Four: First Steps is on its way towards a global opening of $220M-$230M, which would place it ahead of the pre-weekend projection. Through Friday, the Matt Shakman-directed F4:FS has grossed an estimated $106.2M worldwide. 

    Domestic is at $57M through Friday and is eyeing a full weekend bow of $120M-$125M. The international box office through Friday is $49.2M with the whole opening frame looking at $100M-$105M. 

    Friday openers overseas included Spain, China and Japan. As previously noted, China is just not playing ball – nor was it expected to. Japan and Korea have local movies on the high end.

    Latin America and Europe are leaning into the family.

    The Top 5 markets for The Fantastic Four: First Steps through Friday are as follows: Mexico ($6.2M), UK ($5.7M), France ($3.5M), Brazil ($2.6M) and Italy ($2.4M). 

    We’ll have a full update on Sunday.

    PREVIOUS, FRIDAY: Marvel/Disney’s The Fantastic Four: First Steps kicked off overseas rollout on Wednesday, and through Thursday is in 44 material offshore markets. The international box office cume through Thursday is an estimated $27M. That includes No. 1 opening days across Europe, Latin America and Asia Pacific.

    At this early stage in the proceedings, First Steps is estimated to be running 57% ahead of Captain America: Brave New World, 32% over Superman and 9% above Thunderbolts* in like-for-like markets and at current exchange rates. 

    As we noted in our global preview, the international box office launch projection for the Matt Shakman-directed Fantastic Four is $90M-$100M, with room for upside.

    The movie — starring Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, Ebon Moss-Bachrach and Julia Garner — has also helped propel The Walt Disney Studios past the $3B mark globally. When The Fantastic Four’s domestic previews are factored in today, Dis will cross the milestone; the first studio to get there in 2025.

    The Top 5 overseas markets on First Steps through Thursday are Mexico ($4.1M), UK ($2.8M), France ($2.7M), Italy ($1.7M) and Brazil ($1.7M).

    On Wednesday, France logged the 3rd highest opening day of 2025, up 84% on Thunderbolts*, 80% ahead of Superman (+13% including previews), 57% over Captain America: Brave New World and 16% over Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.

    Italy also had the 3rd best opening day of 2025, ahead of Superman (+111%), Captain America: Brave New World (+81%), Thunderbolts* (+63%) and Quantumania (+47%).

    Netherlands gave the family the 2nd highest opening day of 2025, well above Superman (+122%), Captain America: Brave New World (+67%), and Thunderbolts* (+37%), as well as 5% ahead of Quantumania.

    Asia-Pacific saw strong market shares in Wednesday launches (89% Indonesia, 76% Philippines, 53% Hong Kong) and positive social reactions.

    On Thursday, majors joining the family included Mexico, UK, Brazil, Australia, Germany and Korea.

    As noted above, the Latin America bows were all No. 1s while the regional debut saw the 3rd highest opening day of the year. 

    Mexico, which leads all overseas play after just one day, came in 97% ahead of Brave New World, 51% ahead of Superman and 3% ahead of Thunderbolts*. First Steps took 68% market share on Thursday. 

    Also on Thursday, the UK greeted F4:FS with the 2nd biggest opening day of summer 2025. While the movie came in below Superman (-23%), that film opened on a Friday. Germany’s opening Thursday was 136% ahead of Superman

    In Australia on Thursday F4:FS had 60% market share and scored the biggest Marvel opening day of the year, landing 57% ahead of Thunderbolts* and 45% ahead of Captain America: Brave New World. Versus Superman, it was -2%/-46% (including/excluding previews), the latter having launched during school holidays. 

    In Korea, where F4:FS opened on Thursday to sidestep a new local title, the debut was, as expected, somewhat muted, but still a No. 1 start on the day. The cume there through Friday (Friday is not reflected in the international total above) is $1.04M.

    Markets that open today include China, Japan and Spain. China, as previously noted, is soft on superheroes (and soft overall) and Japan has some mega local titles in the mix – but we should see some good numbers out of Spain.

    We’ll have more throughout the weekend.

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  • Reading deeper into Virginia Woolf’s vicious diary entry | Virginia Woolf

    Reading deeper into Virginia Woolf’s vicious diary entry | Virginia Woolf

    John Harris confuses Virginia Woolf’s admittedly vicious diary entry about disabled people with her firmly held beliefs in referring to her “grim ideas” and associating her with contemporary eugenics (Again and again, we are shocked by the treatment of learning-disabled people. Yet we never learn from the past, 20 July). Under the Mental Deficiency Act 1913, mentioned by Harris, Woolf could easily have been categorised as an “imbecile” during her several breakdowns, and hallucinations occasioned by family deaths and sexual abuse by her half-brothers.

    Woolf’s experiences of medical professionals who forced her to gain weight and forbade reading and writing (which made her life meaningful), and of private asylums, left her in no doubt of this possibility, which she illustrates so brilliantly in Mrs Dalloway.

    The diary entry is surely a defence mechanism and projection – caricaturing others’ features to displace her personal fears.
    Maggie Humm
    Vice-chair, Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain

    Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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  • First Steps’ Global Opening Weekend, ‘Superman’ and ‘F1’ Cross $500 Million

    First Steps’ Global Opening Weekend, ‘Superman’ and ‘F1’ Cross $500 Million

    “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” was greeted with a hero’s welcome at the box office as Marvel’s newest superhero adventure touched down with $100 million overseas and $218 million globally.

    Those ticket sales are ever-so-slightly above the international launch of “Superman,” which collected $95 million while debuting in 78 markets earlier in July. However, “Superman” (just barely) enjoyed a larger global debut with $220 million. “The Fantastic Four” landed in 52 markets with Mexico ($12 million), the United Kingdom ($10.8 million), France ($5.7 million) and Brazil ($5.1 million) standing as the top-earning territories. “First Steps” misfired in China with $4.5 million, which isn’t a surprise because the country has been hostile to most superhero movies in recent years. But even “Superman,” who is more recognizable but ultra-patriotic, managed to collect $6.6 million in its debut in China.

    Directed by Matt Shakman, “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” follows the superhero quartet of Mister Fantastic (Pedro Pascal), Invisible Woman (Vanessa Kirby), The Thing (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) and Human Torch (Joseph Quinn) as they protect their world from a planet-devouring cosmic being. Strong reviews and positive word-of-mouth should benefit the film in the coming weeks at the box office. This initial reception is encouraging for Disney and Marvel, which long stood as Hollywood’s most reliable hit maker but has recently struggled with commercial consistency. Though last year’s “Deadpool & Wolverine” was a massive, billion-dollar hit, the studio’s two prior movies this year, February’s “Captain America: Brave New World” and May’s “Thunderbolts,” both ended up losing money against their $180 million budgets.

    Three other big-budget movies crossed notable box office milestones, with “Superman” and “F1” clearing $500 million and “Jurassic World Rebirth” surpassing $700 million worldwide over the weekend.

    “Superman,” which arrived two weekends prior to “The Fantastic Four,” added $19.8 million from 78 territories for a painful 57% decline. The Warner Bros. and DC Studios adaptation has underperformed at the international box office with $213 million to date. (Most all-audience tentpoles tend to earn around 60% of ticket sales at the international box office, with the remaining percentage from domestic markets.) With a heavier lift from North American audiences, the Man of Steel adventure has powered to $502 million globally after three weekends of release.

    Although Universal’s “Jurassic World Rebirth” and Apple’s “F1” have been playing on the big screen for a longer period of time, those tentpoles flew slightly higher than “Superman” at the international box office on weekend charts. That’s because, unlike “Superman,” the latest “Jurassic” and “F1” didn’t have the same direct competition among comic book buffs.

    “Jurassic World Rebirth” collected $23.5 million from 82 territories in its fourth weekend of release, boosting its international tally to $416 million. The dinosaur adventure is one of three Hollywood releases this year to clear the $700 million mark with ticket sales at $718 million so far. That’s a huge tally, but the newly revived property (this time around with Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey and Mahershala Ali) faces a high metric of success because the three films in the prior sequel trilogy, led by Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard, each grossed $1 billion globally.

    Meanwhile, “F1” continues to stay strong with $20 million from 78 markets in its fifth lap around the track. Brad Pitt’s racing drama, which cost $250 million to produce, has earned an impressive $344 million internationally and $509 million worldwide to date.

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  • George RR Martin shares his verdict on James Gunn’s ‘Superman’

    George RR Martin shares his verdict on James Gunn’s ‘Superman’



    George RR Martin shares his verdict on James Gunn’s ‘Superman’

    George RR Martin has recently made bold statement about James Gunn’s Superman.

    In his blog post, the Game of Thrones creator wrote, “Supes and I are old friends, and this is one of the best Superman movies in a long time… maybe ever.”

    “This new Superman reminds me of the version I used to read about when I was a kid, the strange visitor from another planet who came to Earth with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men,” said the author.

    George noted in her blog that Superman “has always been an immigrant, an illegal immigrant”.

    Gushing over James, the author stated, “The movie looks great, and the director did a great job with the casting.”

    “Rachel Brosnahan was terrific as Lois Lane; I’d say it’s between her and Margot Kidder for Best Lois Ever,” pointed out the author.

    He continued, “There’s no doubt whatsoever for the Best Lex.”

    “Nicholas Hoult was far and away the Best Luthor of All Time, a truly chilling villain. The kid in the cape was excellent as well. I hope he gets to play Kal-El in another dozen movies,” he explained.

    However, George added that the “kid in the cape is David Corenswet” who made his debut as Superman in the movie.

    Meanwhile, Superman is in theatres now.

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  • Classics at Klosters from Onofri and the Munich Chamber Orchestra

    Classics at Klosters from Onofri and the Munich Chamber Orchestra

    This year’s Klosters Music festival began with high drama. Beethoven’s Coriolan Overture of 1807 concerns the same Coriolanus of Shakespeare’s tragedy, but opened a contemporary play by Collin. The rejected Roman general leads a band of former enemies against Rome herself, relents before the appeals of his wife and mother, then kills himself. This blend of belligerence and entreaty forms a template for themes beloved of middle-period Beethoven – we begin in C minor as fatefully as in the Fifth Symphony, and with a second lyrically pleading theme.

    Enrico Onofri

    © Benno Hunziker

    This is overture as embryonic symphonic poem, and was given a dramatic presentation by the Munich Chamber Orchestra. For this piece they deployed a large chamber group of 34 players; pairs of woodwinds and brass, timpani, with 21 strings (6, 5, 4 ,4, 2). Modern instruments (save for pairs of natural horns and trumpets), but deployed in an historically informed manner with little use of vibrato – exactly the non-doctrinaire compromise that serves this repertoire well. So this curtain-raiser alerted those new to the Klosters Arena of its lively acoustic and solid bass (there is just empty space below the wooden platform).

    This full-fat sound, so effective in the overture, was slightly less so in the ensuing Mozart Symphony no. 40 in G minor, given in its revised form with added clarinets. This much-played work has oddly never quite achieved a settled performance tradition. Schumann spoke of its “Grecian lightness and grace” and many performers play it as if handling Meissen china. But later it survived as a residual example of the mid-1780’s Sturm und Drang aesthetic deep into the Romantic era, even a tragic work. Conductor Enrico Onofri and his Munich players saw it through this 19th-century lens, helped by swift tempi and some sforzandi accents. Not everything would have satisfied the purist, especially in the Andante and Menuetto movements, but it suited this band in this hall, and followed on well from Coriolan, even sounding proto-Beethovenian at times.

    Haydn’s Nelson Mass was first called “Missa in angustiis” (Mass in troubled times), reflecting Napoleon’s bullying of Austrian armies around European battlefields. When Bonaparte’s navy was defeated at the Battle of the Nile by the British fleet under Horatio Nelson, a new nickname was gained, and it has stuck. Nelson, known both for bravery and vanity, did not mind. He and Haydn, who met later on, would surely have enjoyed this evening’s terrific performance. First, we had a fine professional chorus, the 32 singers of the Zürcher Sing-Akademie, singing with fervour and power, but also precision and feeling – “miserere nobis” actually sounded lachrymose for once.

    Soloists Anna Stéphany, Judith Spiesser, Werner Güra and James Atkinson

    © Benno Hunziker

    The choir sings in every movement of this mass, but there is much work too for the solo quartet. The soprano has by far the most to sing, and here we had a late stand-in, Judith Spiesser replacing Katharina Ruckgaber. Fortunately Spiesser is an accomplished singer of concert music, and the part was delivered with exemplary tone and accuracy, and even comfort in its higher reaches – she also sings the Queen of the Night. Mezzo-soprano Anna Stéphany was a worthy companion as ever, with her rich, warm sound. As is not always the case, close your eyes and you could not mistake which female soloist was singing. Veteran tenor Werner Güra, still producing noble tone, and British bass James Atkinson, completed a strong team. Onofri’s direction blended these vocal inputs ideally with the orchestral parts, to produce the performance of the evening. The Nelson Mass has sometimes been lauded as Haydn’s greatest single composition in any genre. Here was more support for that claim. 

    Roy’s press trip was funded by Klosters Music Festival.

    ****1

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  • Orlando Bloom Reveals He was 'Triggered' by 'Partner' Which Led Him to Therapy—as He Sells $7M Los Angeles Home Following Katy Perry Split – SFGATE

    1. Orlando Bloom Reveals He was ‘Triggered’ by ‘Partner’ Which Led Him to Therapy—as He Sells $7M Los Angeles Home Following Katy Perry Split  SFGATE
    2. EXCLUSIVE: Orlando Bloom Sells Beverly Hills Home For $7 Million—Weeks After Splitting From Katy Perry  Realtor.com
    3. Orlando Bloom Says Working Through His Childhood Has Changed How He Parents His Own Children (Exclusive)  People.com
    4. Orlando Bloom opens up about co-parenting ‘challenges’ following split with Katy Perry  The Mirror US
    5. Orlando Bloom sells LA mansion following Katy Perry split  Domain

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  • ‘Superman,’ ‘F1’ both cross $500 million at the global box office

    ‘Superman,’ ‘F1’ both cross $500 million at the global box office

    Rachel Brosnahan and David Corenswet star as Lois Lane and Superman in Warner Bros.’ “Superman.”

    Warner Bros. Discovery

    Warner Bros. Discovery had a bountiful weekend at the global box office.

    The studio had two films cross the $500 million mark worldwide — “Superman” soared to $502 million and Apple’s “F1,” which Warner Bros. distributed, topped $509 million in ticket sales.

    The benchmark is a boon for Warner Bros.’ DC Studios, as “Superman” is the first theatrical debut of James Gunn and Peter Safran since they became co-heads of the film and TV unit in late 2022. The pair has developed a 10-year plan to reinvigorate the studio’s franchises across TV and film, including fresh spins on Superman and Batman.

    At present, 2025’s “Superman” is the fourth-highest-grossing film featuring Superman. Zack Snyder’s 2016 “Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice” is the highest with $874 million in global ticket sales, while 2013’s “Man of Steel” is second-highest with $669 million and 2017’s “Justice League” with $661 million, according to data from Comscore.

    “Superman” debuted in theaters just two weeks ago and continues to drive weekend moviegoing as well as weekday trips.

    A still from the film F1 starring Brad Pitt.

    Source: F1 | Apple Studios

    As for Apple’s “F1,” passing the $500 million mark is just another feather in the cap for the studio. Earlier this month, the film became Apple’s best film release ever, surpassing Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon,” which generated $221 million during its 2023 run, to become Apple’s then-highest-grossing theatrical release.

    The tech company has only sent a handful of films to cinemas with wide releases since delving into the media business in recent years. “Killers of the Flower Moon” tallied $158 million worldwide, “Fly Me to the Moon” took in just $42 million and “Argylle” generated $96 million in ticket sales globally.

    “F1” has benefited greatly from its partnership with IMAX. Before production, Apple and the film’s top creatives reached out to not only secure the use of IMAX’s camera technology but also a three-week release in its theaters.

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  • Kristin Scott Thomas reveals inspiration behind ‘My Mother’s Wedding’ – ARY News

    1. Kristin Scott Thomas reveals inspiration behind ‘My Mother’s Wedding’  ARY News
    2. Kristin Scott Thomas on the pain behind “My Mother’s Wedding”  CBS News
    3. Kristin Scott Thomas reveals personal connection to directorial debut ‘My Mother’s Wedding’  Hindustan Times
    4. Kristin Scott Thomas Opens Up on Personal Loss and Directorial Debut “My Mother’s Wedding”  BizzBuzz

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  • Destiny’s Child Reunites at Beyoncé’s Final Cowboy Carter Show

    Destiny’s Child Reunites at Beyoncé’s Final Cowboy Carter Show

    Beyoncé‘s Cowboy Carter Tour really went out with a bang!

    To celebrate the final show of the music icon’s latest global tour at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Saturday night, Beyoncé reunited with her former band members, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams, for the first time in several years for a surprise Destiny’s Child performance.

    In fan videos posted on social media from the concert (below), the trio could be seen sporting coordinated gold-sparkly outfits. As the crowd went wild and could be heard screaming, the group strutted down the stage, singing a mashup of some of their biggest hits, including “Lose My Breath” and “Bootylicious.”

    At one point, Beyoncé also did her famous mute challenge with Rowland and Williams during her song “Energy” from her 2022 album Renaissance.

    The following morning, they all took to their respective social media accounts to commemorate the night, sharing photos from the performance. Rowland added three red heart emojis in her caption, while Williams wrote, The Chil’ren!” The latter also added in the comments, “We’ll tell y’all next time!!
    SIKE!!”

    A Destiny’s Child reunion wasn’t the only surprise Beyoncé had for her Beyhive on Saturday. She also brought out her husband, Jay-Z, as well as Shaboozey at different times throughout the night.

    The “Texas Hold ‘Em” singer has been performing across the globe since April for her Cowboy Carter Tour, in support of her Grammy-winning album of the same name. She started with several shows in Los Angeles before heading to Chicago, New Jersey, London, Paris, Houston, Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Las Vegas.


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