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The biggest awards and movie deals from the 2021 Sundance Film Festival

SALT LAKE CITY — As the 2020 movie awards season got underway Wednesday with the announcement of Golden Globe nominees, the Sundance Film Festival also wrapped up the first major event of the new movie year.

Awards for the 2021 Sundance festival were presented Tuesday evening. The festival, which was held virtually online for the first time, started on Thursday and ends today.

The Grand Jury Prize winners for this year’s Sundance were “CODA,” which took the top prize in the U.S. Dramatic competition, “Summer of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)” in U.S. Documentary competition, “Hive” in World Cinema Dramatic competition and “Flee” in World Cinema Documentary competition.

“This was not a ‘virtual’ festival, it was a real festival and the power of these artists and their work was what made it so,” Sundance Film Festival Director Tabitha Jackson said in a news release Tuesday. “It has been a privilege to help this work meet new audiences and enter the culture with such fanfare, especially now, when breaking through the noise is harder than ever.”

“CODA,” “Summer of Soul” and “Hive” also took home audience awards, as well as the Indian documentary “Writing With Fire” and the drama “Ma Belle, My Beauty.” The full list of awards can be found at this link.

A still from Summer Of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised) by Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, an official selection of the U.S. Documentary Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. (Photo: Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Mass Distraction Media)

In addition to all the awards, “CODA” also brought home the bacon — Apple’s $25 million acquisition of the film smashed the previous record for biggest deal out of Sundance. That was previously held by the Andy Samberg comedy “Palm Springs,” which sold to Neon and Hulu at last year’s festival for a reported $22 million.

Sundance Institute CEO Keri Putnam also touted the creative work showcased at this year’s film festival.

“Watching people come together to connect and discuss exciting new work has been incredibly rewarding — and a resounding confirmation that great independent storytelling inspires rich conversation,” Putnam said.

Here’s a look at the rest of the deals reported out of Sundance this year so far.

‘Ailey’

Distributor Neon picked up the documentary “Ailey,” which is about the dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey, for an undisclosed sum, according to the Hollywood Reporter. It’s directed by Jamila Wignot.

‘CODA’

“CODA,” Sian Heder’s drama about a child of deaf adults who is the only hearing member of her family, went for a record-breaking $25 million at Sundance, according to Variety. Apple Studios won the rights to distribute the film after a bidding war between several other major distributors, Variety reported.

‘Cryptozoo’

Dash Shaw’s eclectic adult animation film sold to Magnolia Pictures, according to Variety. The film follows two lovers who dash off to the woods for a date, stumbling upon a park full of fantasy creatures. It features voice acting from Lake Bell, Michael Cera and Zoe Kazan.

A still from “Flee” by Jonas Poher Rasmussen, an official selection of the World Cinema Documentary Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. (Photo: Courtesy of Sundance Institute)

‘Flee’

Neon’s second pickup from this year’s Sundance is the animated documentary “Flee.” It sold to Neon in a partnership with Participant for a seven-figure deal, according to Deadline. Directed by Jonas Poher Rasmussen, “Flee” documents an Afghan refugee’s tale of persecution and escape.

‘Jockey’

Clifton Collins Jr. earned a Sundance special jury prize for best actor for “Jockey,” which sold to Sony Pictures Classics, according to Deadline. Collins plays an aging horse racer who is reconciling with his deteriorating health when he encounters a rookie rider who claims to be his long-lost son.

‘Playing With Sharks’

National Geographic Documentary Films bought distribution rights to the documentary “Playing With Sharks,” according to the Hollywood Reporter. The movie features Australian conservationist and filmmaker Valerie Taylor.

‘Superior’

Visit Films acquired the rights to distribute the neo-noir “Superior,” which features two twin sisters who meet under mysterious circumstances, according to Screen Daily.

Nick Cassavetes and Nic Cage appears in Prisoners of the Ghostland by Sion Sono, an official selection of the Premieres section at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. (Photo: Courtesy of Sundance Institute)

Deals completed before the festival began

  • “A Glitch In The Matrix”: Magnolia Pictures announced it acquired the documentary, which examines simulation theory, late last year, according to The Wrap.
  • “The Most Beautiful Boy In The World”: Juno Films acquired North American distribution rights for this documentary, Deadline reported. The movie documents the life of former child acting star Björn Andrésen.
  • “Prisoners of the Ghostland”: RLJE Films will release the zany Nicolas Cage action flick, according to The Wrap. The distributor previously released the art house titles “Mandy” and “Color Out Of Space,” which both also featured Cage.
  • “Together Together”: Bleecker Street acquired distribution rights for the comedy, which stars Ed Helms and Patti Harrison, according to Variety.

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Here Are Your 2021 Sundance Film Festival Award Winners

Emilia Jones in CODA.
Photo: Seacia Pavao

History was made at Tuesday night’s virtual Sundance Film Festival Awards ceremony. Siân Heder’s CODA, a family dramedy about the hearing child of deaf parents, became the first film in the festival’s history to win the Grand Jury Prize, the Directing Award, and the Audience Award in the U.S. Dramatic category. CODA also picked up a Special Jury Prize for Best Ensemble. The film sold for a record $25 million to Apple Studios following a bidding war on Sunday. Blerta Basholli’s Hive similarly broke records in the World Cinema Dramatic category. Hive, which follows a single mother in the aftermath of the war in Kosovo, swept the Grand Jury Prize, the Directing Award, and the Audience Award in the World Cinema Dramatic category, becoming the first film in that category to do so. Other winners from Tuesday include Summer Of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised), a documentary about the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival directed by Questlove, which took home the Grand Jury and Audience Awards in the U.S. category, as well as Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated refugee documentary Flee, which won the Grand Jury Prize in the World Cinema category. Check out the full list of winners below.

U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic
CODA

Audience Award: U.S. Dramatic 
CODA

Directing Award: U.S. Dramatic 
Siân Heder, CODA

Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award: U.S. Dramatic 
Ari Katcher and Ryan Welch, On the Count of Three

U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Award for Best Actor
Clifton Collins Jr., Jockey

U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Award for Best Ensemble
The cast of CODA (Emilia Jones, Eugenio Derbez, Troy Kotsur, Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, Daniel Durant, and Marlee Matlin)

U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Documentary
Summer Of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

Audience Award: U.S. Documentary
Summer Of Soul (…Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

Directing Award: U.S. Documentary 
Natalia Almada, Users

Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award: U.S. Documentary
Kristina Motwani and Rebecca Adorno, Homeroom

U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Emerging Filmmaker 
Parker Hill, Isabel Bethencourt, Cusp

U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Nonfiction Experimentation 
Theo Anthony, All Light, Everywhere

World Cinema Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic
Hive

Audience Award: World Cinema Dramatic
Hive

Directing Award: World Cinema Dramatic
Blerta Basholli, Hive

World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award for Acting 
Jesmark Scicluna, Luzzu

World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award for Creative Vision
Baz Poonpiriya, One for the Road

World Cinema Grand Jury Prize: Documentary 
Flee

Audience Award: World Cinema Documentary 
Writing With Fire

Directing Award: World Cinema Documentary 
Hogir Hirori, Sabaya

World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Vérité Filmmaking
Camilla Nielsson, President

World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Impact for Change
Rintu Thomas, Sushmit Ghosh, Writing With Fire

NEXT Audience Award
Marion Hill, My Belle, My Beauty

NEXT Innovator Award
Dash Shaw (director), Jane Samborski (animation director), Cryptozoo

Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize
Alexis Gambis, Son of Monarchs

Sundance Institute/Amazon Studios Producers Award for Narrative Features
Natalie Qasabian, Run

Sundance Institute/Amazon Studios Producers Award for Documentary Features
Nicole Salazar, Philly D.A.

Sundance Institute NHK Award
 Meryam Joobeur, Motherhood

Sundance Institute/Adobe Mentorship Award for Editing Nonfiction
Juli Vizza

Sundance Institute/Adobe Mentorship Award for Editing Fiction
Terilyn Shropshire

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3 critically hurt in explosion on film set near Los Angeles

Three people on a film set were critically hurt in an explosion that sparked a grass fire near Los Angeles on Tuesday, authorities said. The blast was reported around 4:45 p.m. in a mixed-use industrial neighborhood of Santa Clarita, said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Abraham Bedoyan. Ambulances took three critical patients to hospitals, according to Supervisor Martin Rangel with the LA County Fire Department. Fire spread to a grassy hillside but firefighters were able to quickly douse the flames, Rangel said. Aerial TV news footage showed fire crews at a large lot with multiple cargo containers. Sheriff’s officials advised residents to stay clear of the area about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles.

Three people on a film set were critically hurt in an explosion that sparked a grass fire near Los Angeles on Tuesday, authorities said.

The blast was reported around 4:45 p.m. in a mixed-use industrial neighborhood of Santa Clarita, said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Abraham Bedoyan.

Ambulances took three critical patients to hospitals, according to Supervisor Martin Rangel with the LA County Fire Department.

Fire spread to a grassy hillside but firefighters were able to quickly douse the flames, Rangel said. Aerial TV news footage showed fire crews at a large lot with multiple cargo containers.

Sheriff’s officials advised residents to stay clear of the area about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles.

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Questlove’s Summer of Soul Documentary Wins Sundance 2021 Grand Jury Prize

The 2021 Sundance Film Festival concluded tonight by awarding the top jury prizes to films that premiered at the event. The Questlove-directed Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)—a film about the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival—was awarded the U.S. Documentary Competition’s Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award. Questlove reacted to the news on Twitter: “OOOOMMMGGGGHGGG WE DID IT.”

“It has always been a dream of mine to direct films and telling this story has truly been an amazing experience,” Questlove wrote in a statement. “I am overwhelmed and honored by the reception the film is receiving and want to give special thanks to Sundance, and my production partners: Radical Media, Vulcan Productions, Concordia, Play/Action Pictures and LarryBilly Productions.”

The film made its world premiere at this year’s festival. It features footage that sat unseen in a basement for 50 years. Stevie Wonder, the Staples Singers, Nina Simone, Sly and the Family Stone, and other icons appear in the film.

Read Pitchfork’s feature “Questlove On Why Music Festivals Matter and How to Do Them Right.”



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Golden Globes 2021: Final Nomination Predictions for Film

As the film awards season continues to take shape in this unconventional year, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s 72nd annual Golden Globes will be one of the first big needle movers for contenders. For films, the voting body has an opportunity to recognize a larger group of films and performances with its comedy and drama splits among the categories.

This year, films like “The Trial of the Chicago 7” and “Mank,” both from Netflix, could lead the tally, currently predicted for five nominations, which would mirror the same nomination tally as last year’s “The Irishman” from Martin Scorsese.

There doesn’t seem to be one film that could dominate with a wide-open year that could dominate, as seen in previous years, or long-standing records being broken. Currently, Robert Altman’s “Nashville” has the most nominations ever received with 11. Unless you’re predicting five men from Sorkin’s “Trial of the Chicago 7” taking up all available slots in best supporting actor, no film looks anywhere near touching this record.

However, Sacha Baron Cohen can break a record held by Jamie Foxx for receiving the most Golden Globe nominations in a single year. Foxx was nominated for three in 2004 for his performances in “Collateral,” “Ray” and “Redemption: The Stan Tookie Story.” Cohen could receive up to five nominations for best picture (comedy for “Borat”), actor (comedy for “Borat”), supporting actor (for “The Trial of the Chicago 7”), screenplay (co-writing “Borat”) and original song (co-writing “Wuhan Flu”). He’s currently predicted to receive two.

Down below, you can find the final Golden Globe nomination predictions in all the film categories.

MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA

  • “The Father” (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • “Nomadland” (Searchlight Pictures)
  • “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” (Netflix)
  • “Mank” (Netflix)
  • “The Trial of the Chicago 7” (Netflix)

ALTERNATE: “Judas and the Black Messiah” (Warner Bros.)

“Nomadland” has dominated the critics’ awards and should find its place among the nominated films. This could easily become a spot where Netflix takes up the remaining spots with their arsenal of films this year. “Mank,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7” seem like safe bets, but something with the European sensibilities like “The Father” could take one of the spots. It’s also rumored that the group really digs “Judas and the Black Messiah” and “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” which we shouldn’t discount. The latter could emulate a former nominee like “Bohemian Rhapsody,” which won the category. I also have a sneaking suspicion that could see a tie occur, which would result in six nominees, something that hasn’t occurred since 2011, where “The Descendants” triumphed. It’s also important to note, just because films like “One Night in Miami,” “Promising Young Woman” and “Sound of Metal” are predicted to miss, and are ranked on the lower side of the charts, remember that films like “Capote,” “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close” and an eventual best picture winner “Crash” all found best picture recognition without love from the HFPA.

MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL

  • “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” (Amazon Studios)
  • “Hamilton” (Disney Plus)
  • “On the Rocks” (A24/Apple TV Plus)
  • “Palm Springs” (Hulu/Neon)
  • “The Prom” (Netflix)

ALTERNATE: “The Personal History of David Copperfield” (Searchlight Pictures)

There are two musicals from streamers in the mix, “Hamilton” from Disney Plus and “The Prom” from Netflix, that seem like assured spots. Simultaneously, the laughs of “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,” along with likely having the two frontrunners of the Globes acting categories, will surely keep it in the conversation. “On the Rocks” and “Palm Springs” could be the strongest candidates for the final slots, but the European flavor of “The Personal History of David Copperfield” or the sheer star-power of “Wild Mountain Thyme” could get it over the hump. What’s interesting is, at least for the predicting moment, we may not have a best picture nominee come out of the top comedy category, which hadn’t occurred since 2009 when “The Hangover” reigned supreme.

MOTION PICTURE – ANIMATED

  • “Onward” (Pixar)
  • “Over the Moon” (Netflix)
  • “Soul” (Pixar)
  • “The Willoughbys” (Netflix)
  • “Wolfwalkers” (Apple TV Plus/GKIDS)

ALTERNATE: “The Croods: A New Age” (DreamWorks Animation)

The HFPA likes to typically stick with the populist selections in this category since its creation in 2006. There were 17 features submitted, as compared to the Academy’s 27, so this falls within the big four default choices — “Onward,” “Over the Moon,” “Soul” and “Wolfwalkers.” That last spot could be sprinkled with either “The Croods: A New Age” or “The Willoughbys,” the latter of which I’m giving the edge to. I also wouldn’t count out “Trolls: World Tour.”

MOTION PICTURE – FOREIGN LANGUAGE

  • “Another Round” (Denmark)
  • “La Llorona” (Guatemala)
  • “The Life Ahead” (Italy)
  • “Minari” (USA)
  • “Two Of Us” (France)

ALTERNATE: “I’m No Longer Here” (Mexico)

This category is not usually a strong indicator for the Academy Awards as they don’t just consider the country submissions, but also all foreign language films. There has already been quite a lot of controversy surrounding “Minari” being submitted in this category by A24 due to HFPA’s rules regarding languages. It may have helped it outside the category with contenders like Yuh-Jung Youn and Steven Yeun. Expect to see Sophia Loren’s star vehicle, “The Life Ahead,” to make an entry, especially since Italy’s official submission “Notturno” is not eligible due to its documentary status. Films like “Another Round” and “Two of Us” should find their way fairly easily, but it’ll be interesting if “I’m No Longer Here” or “La Llorona” get a spot that seems like it can go to a Spanish speaking feature.

BEST ACTOR – DRAMA

  • Riz Ahmed, “Sound of Metal” (Amazon Studios)
  • Chadwick Boseman, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” (Netflix)
  • Anthony Hopkins, “The Father” (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • Delroy Lindo, “Da 5 Bloods” (Netflix)
  • Mads Mikkelsen, “Another Round” (Samuel Goldwyn Films)

ALTERNATE: Ben Affleck, “The Way Back” (Warner Bros.)

This is where it can get interesting as four of the predicted nominees feel safe for some love — Riz Ahmed, Chadwick Boseman, Anthony Hopkins and Delroy Lindo. That seemingly last spot could go to a variety of individuals. There’s a chance for European stars such as the currently predicted Mads Mikkelsen (“Another Round”) to pop up, who also has the best chance of any submitted international feature to find recognition outside the Oscars category. Colin Firth (“Supernova”), Jude Law (“The Nest”) and Tahar Rahim (“The Mauritanian”) also seem viable. Then there’s the star power of contenders like Ben Affleck (“The Way Back”), George Clooney (“The Midnight Sky”), Tom Hanks (“News of the World”) or one from the Washington family, John David (“Malcolm & Marie”) or Denzel (“The Little Things”).

BEST ACTOR – COMEDY OR MUSICAL

  • Sacha Baron Cohen, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” (Amazon Studios)
  • Jamie Dornan, “Wild Mountain Thyme” (Bleecker Street)
  • Leslie Odom, Jr, “Hamilton” (Disney Plus)
  • Dev Patel, “The Personal History of David Copperfield” (Searchlight Pictures)
  • Andy Samberg, “Palm Springs” (Hulu/Neon)

ALTERNATE: Will Ferrell, “Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga” (Netflix)

Sacha Baron Cohen won this award in 2006 for the first outing of “Borat.” He’ll be the first actor since Johnny Depp (“Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest”) to be nominated for a sequel performance, which coincidentally happened the year Cohen won. Doing a glance, if Cohen manages to win in this category, he would be the first in the category’s history to win for a sequel and its predecessor. The rest of the contenders is fluid as alternates like Will Ferrell (once nominated for “The Producers”), Lin-Manuel Miranda (former nominee for “Mary Poppins Returns”) and potential first-timers Michael Angelo Covino and James Corden could make some noise.

BEST ACTRESS – DRAMA

  • Viola Davis, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” (Netflix)
  • Andra Day, “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” (Hulu)
  • Vanessa Kirby, “Pieces of a Woman” (Netflix)
  • Frances McDormand, “Nomadland” (Searchlight Pictures)
  • Carey Mulligan, “Promising Young Woman” (Focus Features)

ALTERNATE: Zendaya, “Malcolm & Marie” (Netflix)

This is the hardest category to predict of the film bunch. Davis and McDormand feel secure. There were some rumblings about members of the HFPA not really liking “Promising Young Woman,” which makes us a tad worried for Carey Mulligan, but we expect her to pull through. I also heard the group is loving “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” which could help Andra Day make an entry. That leaves three Netflix contenders with Sophia Loren (“The Life Ahead”), Vanessa Kirby (“Pieces of a Woman”) and Zendaya (“Malcolm & Marie”) to wiggle their way through, assuming the rumors are correct. Perhaps this is another spot where six nominees show up, like at the Independent Spirit Awards?

BEST ACTRESS – COMEDY OR MUSICAL

  • Maria Bakalova, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” (Amazon Studios)
  • Emily Blunt, “Wild Mountain Thyme” (Bleecker Street)
  • Meryl Streep, “The Prom” (Netflix)
  • Michelle Pfeiffer, “French Exit” (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • Anya Taylor-Joy, “Emma.” (Focus Features)

ALTERNATE: Rashida Jones, “On the Rocks” (A24/Apple TV Plus)

One of the darlings of the awards circuit, Maria Bakalova, may be heavily in the running to win this category, which would make her the first since Maggie Smith (“California Suite”) to win this award and go on to be nominated in the supporting category. That’s assuming the Oscar love is real. Meryl Streep could be a double threat, like in 2009 when she won for “Julie and Julia” and was also nominated for “It’s Complicated.” This year, she has “The Prom” and Steven Soderbergh’s “Let Them All Talk.” After Emily Blunt received nods for “Salmon Fishing in the Yemen” and “The Young Victoria,” it’s undeniable that the group loves her. Again, playing to European tastes, Anya Taylor-Joy could squeeze out a nom for her turn in “Emma.”

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR – MOTION PICTURE

  • Kingsley Ben-Adir, “One Night in Miami” (Amazon Studios)
  • Chadwick Boseman, “Da 5 Bloods” (Netflix)
  • Daniel Kaluuya, “Judas and the Black Messiah” (Warner Bros.)
  • Bill Murray, “On the Rocks” (A24/Apple TV Plus)
  • Leslie Odom Jr, “One Night in Miami” (Amazon Studios)

ALTERNATE: Paul Raci, “Sound of Metal” (Amazon Studios)

This is where things could get crazy in the awards race. The HFPA is not always great at picking out large ensembles’ standout, proven by the shutout of “Spotlight” in the acting category in 2015. We have a few of those this year with “One Night in Miami” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7.” With the former, I’m suspecting Kingsley Ben-Adir to pop up with a mention, which will surely muddy his awards prospects since he’s lead for SAG and the Oscars. I wouldn’t be shocked to see him in lieu of co-star Leslie Odom Jr, who also could be nominated in the comedy category for “Hamilton.” The love for Sorkin’s film is big within the HFPA, with many standouts being cited, including Cohen, Frank Langella, Mark Rylance and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. They might cancel each other out, making room for Bill Murray, who’s been nominated many times, including a win for “Lost in Translation.” Word through the grapevine also suggests that “Judas and the Black Messiah” is loved by them, which could start up the Daniel Kaluuya train to the Academy. And let’s not forget, this could also be the official starting point for first-time double posthumous nominee Chadwick Boseman. With star power always a factor with the L.A.-based journalists, I feel that could leave our season sweeper Paul Raci on the outside (at least just for the Globes).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS – MOTION PICTURE

  • Ellen Burstyn, “Pieces of a Woman” (Netflix)
  • Olivia Colman, “The Father” (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • Jodie Foster, “The Mauritanian” (STXfilms)
  • Amanda Seyfried, “Mank” (Netflix)
  • Yuh-Jung Youn, “Minari” (A24)

ALTERNATE: Nicole Kidman, “The Prom” (Netflix)

Colman, Seyfried and Youn feel safe. Burstyn could be vulnerable if we’re in store for a shutout of “Pieces of a Woman” like at the Independent Spirit Awards. That could free up a spot or two for Jodie Foster, former Cecil B. Demille recipient, or Nicole Kidman, who they adore. This also could be a spot that gives hope to Glenn Close (“Hillbilly Elegy”) or Saoirse Ronan’s (“Ammonite”) Oscar prospects, if they can manage a mention. When it comes to this category at the Globes, they tend to stay within the realm of reason for contenders, even if their eventual nominees don’t translate (for example, Jennifer Lopez for “Hustlers” or Claire Foy for “First Man”). They tend to feel like they were in the number 6-7-8 spot of contender listings.

BEST DIRECTOR – MOTION PICTURE

  • George Clooney, “The Midnight Sky” (Netflix)
  • David Fincher, “Mank” (Netflix)
  • Spike Lee, “Da 5 Bloods” (Netflix)
  • Aaron Sorkin, “The Trial of the Chicago 7” (Netflix)
  • Chloé Zhao, “Nomadland” (Searchlight Pictures)

ALTERNATE: Florian Zeller, “The Father” (Sony Pictures Classics)

Last year’s Globes lineup for director matched 5/5 with the Academy, even when many thought Todd Phillips seemed like a long shot. But that match up doesn’t happen too often as the last time was with the 1980 film year (David Lynch, Roman Polanski, Robert Redford, Richard Rush, Martin Scorsese). In between, we usually get some big names like Peter Jackson (“King Kong”), which explains George Clooney’s prediction. They also love David Fincher, previously nominating him for “Gone Girl” and “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.” Now and again, we get a lone director in the lineup like Ridley Scott (“All the Money in the World”) or Tom Ford (“Nocturnal Animals”). That could be Spike Lee this year if “Da 5 Bloods” misses one of the available places. While many cross their fingers that Chloé Zhao will continue her streak with a nomination, she will be the first Asian woman to be nominated by the Globes, but won’t hold the same distinction at the Oscars as the first woman of color. Ava DuVernay was nominated for “Selma” in 2014. It should be noted, though, the HFPA has still only awarded one woman in this category in its history — Barbra Streisand for 1983’s “Yentl,” and she didn’t get nominated for an Oscar. It’s long past the time to close that 37-year gap. Let me also put on the record — watch out for Christopher Nolan (“Tenet”).

BEST SCREENPLAY – MOTION PICTURE

  • “Da 5 Bloods” (Netflix) – Danny Bilson, Paul De Meo, Kevin Willmott, Spike Lee
  • “Mank” (Netflix) – Jack Fincher
  • “Minari” (A24) – Lee Isaac Chung
  • “Nomadland” (Searchlight Pictures) – Chloé Zhao
  • “The Trial of the Chicago 7” (Netflix) – Aaron Sorkin

ALTERNATE: “The Father” (Sony Pictures Classics) – Christopher Hampton, Florian Zeller

They love Aaron Sorkin, plain and simple. Every feature script he’s written has been nominated by the HFPA, except 1993’s “Malice.” He’s a shoo-in for a nomination here. Since the category doesn’t separate based on original or adapted works, history has favored the former contenders. Expect some love for Fincher’s late father, Jack, along with a possible spot for Lee Isaac Chung.

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE – MOTION PICTURE

  • “Mank” (Netflix) – Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross
  • “News of the World” (Universal Pictures) – James Newton Howard
  • “Soul” (Pixar) – Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Jon Batiste
  • “Tenet” (Warner Bros.) – Ludwig Göransson
  • “The Trial of the Chicago 7” (Netflix) – Daniel Pemberton

ALTERNATE: “The Midnight Sky” (Netflix) – Alexandre Desplat

One of the clear signs of proof on how this group differs from the Academy, especially with the music branch. Over the last decade, seven of the winners have won the Oscar, which is a strong indicator. However, there are other instances where the winner fails to get nominated like “All is Lost” and “First Man.” Even Alexandre Desplat’s Oscar-winning “The Grand Budapest Hotel” was snubbed by the HFPA, though his other nominated work on “The Imitation Game” was shortlisted. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross have won this race before and have managed two other nominations, all for Fincher films. Expect a double nomination for them this year, at least with the Globes, for “Mank” and “Soul.” The group also likes Daniel Pemberton quite a bit, as he’s been nominated three times despite never receiving AMPAS love. Ludwig Göransson feels like someone that will get a nomination but can’t figure out if it will be here or in original song (“The Plan” from “Tenet”). Flipping a coin feels like he could be here.

BEST ORIGINAL SONG – MOTION PICTURE

  • “Fight for You” from “Judas and the Black Messiah” (Warner Bros.) – H.E.R., Dernst Emile II, Tiara Thomas
  • “Io Si (Seen)” from “The Life Ahead” (Netflix) – Diane Warren, Laura Pausini, Niccolò Agliardi
  • “Speak Now” from “One Night in Miami” (Amazon Studios) – Leslie Odom Jr, Sam Ashworth
  • “Everybody Cries” from “The Outpost” (Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment) – Rod Lurie, Larry Groupé, Rita Wilson
  • “Hear My Voice” from “The Trial of the Chicago 7” (Netflix) – Daniel Pemberton, Celeste

ALTERNATE: “Húsavík” from “Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga” (Netflix) – Savan Kotecha, Rickard Goransson, fat max Gsus

This is the one HFPA category where it’s difficult to follow the history that could provide eventual nominees hints. They obviously have chosen the Oscar frontrunners (like “City of Stars” from “La La Land”), chart-topping pop songs (“Skyfall” from “Skyfall”), and others that, quite frankly, can’t be explained (like “Masterpiece” from “W.E.”). It seems to all boil down to, follow the famous people. H.E.R., Diane Warren, Leslie Odom Jr feel like those selections, and also can translate to the Academy. “The Outpost” feels like that surprise entry on the day while the Daniel Pemberton love looks appropriate, especially considering he was nominated for “Gold.”

2021 Golden Globes Predictions (Film)

2020-2021 Golden Globes Awards Timeline

  • Nominations for the 78th Annual Golden Globe Awards are announced at 8:35 a.m. ET / 5:35 a.m. PT – Feb. 3, 2021
  • Final ballots mailed to all HFPA members by Ernst & Young – Feb. 23, 2021
  • 78th Annual Golden Globe Awards will air live coast to coast at 8:00 p.m. ET / 5:00 p.m. PT on NBC from The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California – Feb. 28, 2021

 



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Blade Runner Origins Trailer Takes Us 10 Years Before the Film

Titan Comics released a new trailer and preview pages for Blade Runner: Origins #1 which sets up the events of the original Blade Runner film.

Titan Comics released an official trailer and preview pages from the debut issue of Blade Runner: Origins.

The series takes place in the year 2009, a full decade before the events of the original Blade Runner film. LAPD detective Cal Moreaux is assigned to the apparent suicide of one of the Tyrell Corporation’s top scientists. While conducting his investigation, Moreaux finds several documents hinting at the construction of a new breed of Replicant — and a dark secret within the heart of Tyrell. Mike Johnson, who wrote Blade Runner 2019 and its currently ongoing sequel series Blade Runner 2029, is joined by K. Perkins (Supergirl) and Mellow Brown as co-writers for Blade Runner: Origins. Fernando Dagnino (Suicide Squad) will provide art for the series.

RELATED: Blade Runner 2019’s Andres Guinaldo Opens Up On Expanding the Iconic Movie’s World

The preview pages for Blade Runner: Origins #1 feature Moreaux and his fellow officers encountering two Replicants, which leads to a bloody outcome. Another page features a look at Los Angeles 2009; though the structure features a futuristic bent, it is a far cry from the towering skyscrapers and flying cars associated with the Blade Runner universe. Blade Runner: Origins #1 will also feature variant covers by artists including Stanley ‘Artgerm’ Lau and Peach Momoko.

A senior bioengineer for the Tyrell Corp is found hanging in her sealed laboratory, the victim of an apparent suicide. LAPD Detective Cal Moreaux — a war-scarred veteran of the bloody Off-world conflict known as Kalanthia, as depicted in the “Blackout 2022” Blade Runner anime — is sent to write it up, quickly, quietly and with the minimum of fuss. But something doesn’t sit right with the detective, and it soon becomes apparent that this is anything but a “normal” suicide. Did the scientist’s ground-breaking research on Nexus-model Replicants somehow contribute to her death? And is the apparent disappearance of a prototype Nexus unit also connected to the case? Det. Moreaux’s investigation will draw him into a dark conspiracy behind Dr. Tyrell’s Replicant empire.

Blade Runner Origins #1, by Mike Johnson, K. Perkins and Mellow Brown, goes on sale Feb. 24, 2021, from Titan Comics.

KEEP READING: Blade Runner Gets a Prequel Comic From Titan

Did Chris Claremont Tell Dave Cockrum to Pull Starjammers From Appearing in X-Men?


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AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. Cl A stock rises Friday, outperforms market

Shares of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. Cl A
AMC,
+53.65%
rocketed 53.65% to $13.26 Friday, on what proved to be an all-around dismal trading session for the stock market, with the NASDAQ Composite Index
COMP,
-2.00%
falling 2.00% to 13,070.69 and Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-2.03%
falling 2.03% to 29,982.62. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. Cl A closed $7.10 short of its 52-week high ($20.36), which the company achieved on January 27th.

Trading volume (590.8 M) eclipsed its 50-day average volume of 97.8 M.


Editor’s Note: This story was auto-generated by Automated Insights using data from Dow Jones and FactSet. See our market data terms of use.

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‘Summer of Soul’: Film Review | Sundance 2021

In his directing debut, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson delves into forgotten footage from a 1969 Harlem concert series that showcased a who’s who of Black acts.

Not many people know his name, but half a century ago Tony Lawrence created something extraordinary in the middle of New York City. And few people know the name Hal Tulchin, but he documented the feat. It was called the Harlem Cultural Festival, and over six weekends in the summer of 1969 it showcased more than five dozen acts and drew 300,000 people, who were charged not a cent to see — are you ready? — Nina Simone, Stevie Wonder, Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln, B.B. King, Gladys Knight and the Pips, The Staple Singers, Sly and the Family Stone. To name just a few of the artists, some in their prime and some groundbreaking up-and-comers, who graced the outdoor stage.

But this monumental alignment of the stars — what some would later refer to as the Black Woodstock — generated little media attention, in part because it was overshadowed by the actual Woodstock, which took place during the Harlem event’s penultimate weekend and just a couple of hours north, turning Max Yasgur’s farm into ground zero for a generation. Still, that’s a feeble excuse for the dearth of headlines, or for the networks’ lack of interest in TV producer-director Tulchin’s expertly shot (on spec) footage of the high-voltage lineup. The local CBS station aired a few highlights, but on a national scale there were no takers.

Thus the subtitle of Summer of Soul, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson’s electrifying documentary on those concerts and the political climate in which they unfolded — a subtitle that riffs on an immortal turn of phrase from the late great Gil Scott-Heron: Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised. The footage sat in storage for decades, until Summer of Soul‘s producers set the ball rolling to give it its long-overdue spotlight. 

It’s no surprise that Thompson, an accomplished and celebrated musician, has a knack for revealing the emotional core of concert performances. At the helm of a feature-length film for the first time, he also lends the long-lost material the eye of an assured director, approaching it on three eloquently interwoven narrative tracks: the knockout concerts themselves; a piercing capsule portrait of 1969 as a turning point in Black identity; and a collection of lovely, charged Boomer reminiscences from those who were there, some onstage and some in the audience. The film captures several of them as they view the previously unseen footage, dazzling evidence of a moment in time that seemingly had been written out of the official story.

The result is deeply felt on both sides of the timeline, drawing clear parallels between two galvanizing historical periods, then and now. An opening-night selection of Sundance’s first virtual edition, Summer of Soul is as thoughtful as it is rousing, a welcome shot of adrenaline to kick off not just a film festival but a new year.

On the evidence of the film, Lawrence, the Harlem fest’s producer and emcee, was a schmoozer extraordinaire with a predilection for sharp suits and puffy shirts. (He’s also something of a mystery, his current whereabouts unknown, despite the filmmakers’ concerted efforts to find him.) Lawrence secured the support of the city’s Parks Department and the sponsorship of Maxwell House (Thompson includes an eye-opening Africa-centric commercial for the coffee brand). Even with financial support, though, there was no money for lights, requiring that the stage for the late-afternoon shows face west. The liberal mayor, John V. Lindsay, receives a warm reception when introduced onstage by Lawrence as “our blue-eyed soul brother.” But relations with the NYPD were another matter, and the Black Panthers signed on to provide security.

In comparison with familiar scenes of Woodstock’s countercultural convergence, the Harlem festival, with its all-ages audience, is a downright wholesome affair. Announcements from the stage concern found wallets, not bad acid. For Musa Jackson, a child at the time who attended with his family, and whose delighted reactions to the footage bookend the film perfectly, the fest was “the ultimate Black barbecue” and “the first time I’d seen so many of us.” Movingly, this was the case for performers as well. Gladys Knight recalls being “totally, totally taken aback” by the crowd she encountered in Mount Morris Park, a gathering that one attendee describes as “a sea of Black.”

Among the highlights of Summer of Soul is the chance to witness Billy Davis and Marilyn McCoo, of The 5th Dimension, watching, for the first time, their group’s performance that long-ago summer. On waves of love from the audience, their younger selves’ exuberance rises. So do the couple’s emotions as they remember the feeling of playing their first show in Harlem. For a pop-oriented group deemed “not Black enough” by some, connecting with that uptown crowd was profoundly important. A potent sense of kinship between fans and artists pulses through every frame of the doc’s concert scenes.

The music runs the gamut: classic R&B (King), contemporary gospel (the Edwin Hawkins Singers, featuring Dorothy Combs Morrison’s earthy contralto), Motown (Gladys and those exhilaratingly synchronized Pips; a smooth and scorching David Ruffin, fresh off the Temptations), newfangled pop (The 5th Dimension), psychedelic soul (Sly and his utopian big-band constellation, complete with female trumpeter and white drummer). The jazz ranges from bebop legend Roach to avant-gardist Sonny Sharrock, Latin maestro Ray Barretto and South African innovator Hugh Masekela. There’s comedy too: briefly excerpted stage routines and, in a post-credits coda, a bit of faux conflict between Stevie Wonder and his musical director, Gene Key.

With 39 songs on the soundtrack, most don’t play in their entirety, but it’s a testament to Tulchin’s dynamic footage (he deployed five video cameras), Thompson’s astute directorial choices and the exquisite editing of Joshua L. Pearson that a nagging sense of “snippet-itis” never intrudes. The music flows, enhanced rather than hindered by the intercutting of new interviews and vintage documentary footage.

The numbers that do play out in full are stunners, the showstopper being a six-minute sequence likely to send shivers up your spine while rearranging the molecules in your earthly form. The gospel song in question, “Precious Lord, Take My Hand,” was Martin Luther King’s favorite, and it was only a year since his murder when Mavis Staples and her idol, Mahalia Jackson, dug into its verses and soared.

Even for non-gospel acts, that genre’s alchemy of lament and rejoicing expresses itself in many of the performances. This is the fuse that burns through Summer of Soul, and, arguably, through much of American Black culture: a resilient way of confronting deep-rooted violence and injustice. Journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault, one of the film’s exceptional selection of interviewees, recalls the strength and comfort she derived from Nina Simone’s records when she was being harassed by white students at the University of Georgia, where she was one of the first two Black students to break the color barrier in 1961.

The doc ponders the long-view perspectives of leading activists — among them Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson (a concert participant as a leader of the Operation Breadbasket initiative) and Denise Oliver-Velez, formerly of the Young Lords — and revels in coming-of-age memories. Sometimes they’re one and the same. Writer-musician Greg Tate delivers incisive commentary on the pivotal shift among Black Americans, circa 1969, from identifying as “Negro,” and how that was expressed in music and fashion as well as politics.

Thompson and Pearson’s fluent interweaving of the concert performances and the social backdrop reaches a sublime peak in a sequence that combines the Staples’ “It’s Been a Change” with festivalgoers’ reactions, for a local news report, to the moon landing, which coincided with the fest’s third weekend. Song and sound bites alike signal a grassroots awakening.

That Summer of Soul looks and sounds as good as it does is a considerable technical achievement. But more than that, the preservation of Tulchin’s 50-year-old footage restores a vital piece to the chronicle of a period defined by social unrest, antiwar fervor, artistic trailblazing and liberation movements that still reverberate today. Tulchin, who died in 2017, hoped that this documentary would be his legacy. There’s no question of that, for him and for event creator and high-spirited showman Lawrence.

The Harlem Cultural Festival was a statement of Black pride. The power of Thompson’s film is the way it taps into the urgency of the moment on a personal level as well as the wider scale, and its bone-deep understanding that they’re inseparable. “Are you ready, Black people?” the commandingly regal Simone asks the audience. Get ready, music and movie lovers: For two spellbinding hours, the communion between performers and a summer crowd leaps off the screen and across the years.

Venue: Sundance Film Festival (U.S. Documentary Competition)
Production companies: Vulcan Productions, Concordia Studio, Play/Action Pictures, LarryBilly Productions, Mass Distraction Media, RadicalMedia
Director: Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson
Producers: David Dinerstein, Robert Fyvolent, Joseph Patel
Executive producers: Jen Isaacson, Jon Kamen, Dave Sirulnick, Jody Allen, Ruth Johnston, Rocky Collins, Jannat Gargi, Beth Hubbard, Davis Guggenheim, Laurene Powell Jobs, Jeffrey Lurie, Marie Therese Guirgis, David Barse, Ron Eisenberg, Sheila Johnson, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson
Director of photography: Shawn Peters
Editor: Joshua L. Pearson
Sales: Cinetic Media

117 minutes



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Lulu Wang Short Film for Chinese New Year Shot on Apple iPhone 12 Pro

Apple tapped director Lulu Wang to showcase the cinematic features of the tech company’s latest iPhone.

Wang, who wrote and directed 2019 feature film “The Farewell,” directed a new short for Apple in celebration of Chinese New Year, “Nian,” which puts a fresh twist on a well-known Chinese folktale. (Watch above or at this link.) The 11-minute film was directed by Wang and her team from “The Farewell” and shot on an iPhone 12 Pro Max.

Apple, which just reported a blowout holiday 2020 quarter with a record $65.6 billion in iPhone sales, has touted the iPhone 12 Pro models as the best smartphone it’s ever made for filmmakers. They’re the first iPhones that can record HDR video in Dolby Vision, as well as provide the ability to edit 4K video at up to 60 frames per second directly on the phone. During the launch event last fall, Apple showed a 60-second film shot in HDR video with Dolby Vision on an iPhone 12 Pro by Oscar-winning cinematographer Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki (watch at this link.)

With the release of the iPhone 12, Apple sales in Greater China soared to an all-time high of $21.3 billion for December 2020 quarter — and with the promotional short “Nian,” Apple’s fourth annual Chinese New York film, the tech giant wants to keep the momentum going.

Wang and her crew worked on “Nian” remotely in the U.S. with a mirror crew on the ground in China because of COVID travel restrictions. The team used the iPhone 12 Pro Max’s Dolby Vision, low-light, ultra-wide lens, telephoto lens, stabilization and time-lapse features. The production featured hard-to-shoot night scenes and scenes set inside a cave, where space and lighting were limited.

“Nian” tells the story of a brave young girl’s determination to find — and confront — the widely feared Nian beast. When she comes face to face with him, she discovers that Nian is not at all terrifying and the two strike up a beautiful friendship based on acceptance.

“It’s really exciting that we have this opportunity to retell this ancient story, to capture these incredibly cinematic images with the iPhone, this very versatile device,” Wang said in a behind-the-scenes feature accompanying the film. She said the “Nian” team had “a lot of fun just trying to figure out where else can we stick the phone so we can get angles and perspectives that are just a little bit more unique.”

“We thought, ‘Oh, why don’t we just put the phone inside of the Nian’s mouth?’ I think the size of it allows us to get all kinds of cool, specialty shots that would be much harder to get with the traditional camera,” Wang said.

Wang, whose parents emigrated from China to the U.S. when she was 6, added, “As a child, my parents wanted me to go further than they have ever gone. And yet there’s also this fear that I was going into the unknown, and so I wanted to bring that theme into this film.”

“Nian” was produced by Iconoclast in association with Apple ad agency TBWAMedia Arts Lab (Shanghai). The film features an original score by Alex Weston.

Apple’s previous films marking the Chinese New Year are “Daughter” (2020), “The Bucket” (2019) and “Three Minutes” (2018).

Watch the behind-the-scenes clip of the making of Wang’s “Nian”:



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‘I was appalled to be tarred as misogynist’: Variety critic hits back at Carey Mulligan’s sexism accusations | Film criticism

Dennis Harvey, the veteran film critic whose review of Promising Young Woman has sparked a furore across the industry, has hit back at accusations of misogyny amid calls for Variety to fire him.

Harvey’s review was published more than a year ago, following the film’s premiere at the Sundance film festival. Largely positive, it called Mulligan’s performance “skilful, entertaining and challenging” while also querying the central casting. While “a fine actress”, wrote Harvey, Mulligan “seems a bit of an odd choice as this admittedly many-layered apparent femme fatale”.

Discussing the character’s deliberate artifice in more depth, Harvey noted that “Margot Robbie is a producer here, and one can (perhaps too easily) imagine the role might once have been intended for her. Whereas with this star, Cassie wears her pickup-bait gear like bad drag; even her long blonde hair seems a put-on.”

Mulligan objected to the review, telling the New York Times in December: “I felt like it was basically saying that I wasn’t hot enough to pull off this kind of ruse.

“It drove me so crazy … I was like, ‘Really? For this film, you’re going to write something that is so transparent? Now? In 2020?’ I just couldn’t believe it.”

Variety responded by adding an editor’s note at the top of Harvey’s review, apologising for “insensitive language” but leaving his words intact.

Mulligan reiterated her discomfort at the review earlier this week in a video interview hosted by Variety, prompting renewed abuse of the critic on social media.

Speaking to the Guardian, Harvey said he was ill at ease with the way in which Mulligan’s words to the New York Times describing her anger at the review had become received wisdom as to what his review actually said. “I did not say or even mean to imply Mulligan is ‘not hot enough’ for the role,” Harvey said.

“I’m a 60-year-old gay man. I don’t actually go around dwelling on the comparative hotnesses of young actresses, let alone writing about that.”

Harvey added that he had been “appalled to be tarred as misogynist, which is something very alien to my personal beliefs or politics. This whole thing could not be more horrifying to me than if someone had claimed I was a gung-ho Trump supporter.”

Harvey said he avoided the social media discourse triggered by the fallout on the advice of friends who said nobody commenting appeared to have read the review and that some people had said “I must be advocating rape, was probably a predator like the men in the film”.

“What I was attempting to write about was the emphasis in the film and [Mulligan’s] performance on disguise, role-playing and deliberate narrative misdirection. Nor was bringing up Margot Robbie meant to be any comparison in ‘personal appearance’.

“Robbie is a producer on the film, and I mentioned her just to underline how casting contributes to the film’s subversive content – a star associated with a character like Harley Quinn [Robbie’s Suicide Squad character] might raise very specific expectations, but Mulligan is a chameleon and her very stylised performance keeps the viewer uncertain where the story is heading.”

Photograph: Supplied by LMK

Harvey conceded he may not have expressed such a sentiment specifically enough in his review, but said that he was driven by a desire to withhold the plot’s twists and turns from the audience.

“I assumed that film-makers who created such a complex, layered movie wouldn’t interpret what I wrote as some kind of simpleminded sexism. And while Carey Mulligan is certainly entitled to interpret the review however she likes, her projection of it suggesting she’s ‘not hot enough’ is, to me, just bizarre. I’m sorry she feels that way. But I’m also sorry that’s a conclusion she would jump to, because it’s quite a leap.”

Mulligan’s publicists have not yet responded to the Guardian’s request for comment.

Harvey also highlighted the discrepancy between the reaction of the film’s star and its US distributor, who “immediately asked permission to use multiple pullquotes from the review in their marketing a year ago”.

He also queried the timing of the controversy, noting that his review had apparently been found unobjectionable enough to escape complaint for 11 months, “until the film was finally being released, promoted and Oscar-campaigned”. Only then was his review “belatedly labelled ‘insensitive’ and flagged with an official ‘apology’”.

Variety’s editors had not raised any concerns with the review when he first filed it, said Harvey, nor in subsequent months until the New York Times article.

His professional fate remains uncertain. “It’s left in question whether after 30 years of writing for Variety I will now be sacked because of review content no one found offensive until it became fodder for a viral trend piece.”

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