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A rom-com veteran and a newbie director, Amanda Peet and Matthew Shear found ‘Fantasy Life’ together

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A rom-com veteran and a newbie director, Amanda Peet and Matthew Shear found ‘Fantasy Life’ together
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Though Amanda Peet has worked steadily in television in recent years, the sincere and urbane comedy “Fantasy Life” marks her first role in a movie since 2015. Her performance as a woman struggling to get back in touch with her true self easily rates among the finest work of her career, alongside turns in such films as “Something’s Gotta Give” and “The Whole Nine Yards.”

She says she never particularly noticed her absence.

“I wasn’t thinking about it at all,” Peet, 54, says in a recent interview. “I think part of it is because the landscape has changed and it’s a little bit more of a mish-mosh [between movies and TV]. You’re getting a lot of nuanced, middle-aged women characters now in both. I’ve always just based everything on the writing for the last however long.”

In the new film, Peet plays Dianne, who stepped away from an acting career and now lives in Brooklyn with her self-involved musician husband (Alessandro Nivola). She finds herself emotionally entangled with Sam (Matthew Shear), the troubled young man they hire to help look after their three daughters. Warm and insightful, “Fantasy Life” is a low-key throwback to the talky city-dweller comedies of Nicole Holofcener and Noah Baumbach.

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The film is the first as writer-director for Shear, best known as an actor in numerous Baumbach films including “Mistress America” and “Marriage Story” and for his role on the TNT series “The Alienist.” When it premiered at last year’s South by Southwest Film & TV Festival, “Fantasy Life” garnered a special jury prize for Peet’s performance and an audience award.

Peet says that from the first time she looked at the script, with its world of therapy sessions and chaotic family dinners, she knew she wanted to be a part of it.

“I almost did a spit-take,” Peet remembers of her first read. “I was like, ‘Oh, I wanna do this movie.’ Matthew’s sense of humor was very special and reminded of the kind of New York Jewish humor that I love. I wanted to do right by him.”

Matthew Shear and Amanda Peet in the movie “Fantasy Life.”

(Greenwich Entertainment)

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Peet connected to the unease of not knowing how to recognize when one has become a has-been and staying open to whatever life still has to offer. That some of her deepest insecurities were being conveyed by someone like Shear, 41, seemed even more remarkable.

“I thought it was weird that the writer was a man writing this character — that’s true,” says Peet. “Those are things that I feel all the time, anxiety about whether it’s over, when it’s going to be over, should it be over? People who are in the creative world feel this precarity all the time.

“I’ve gotten much better in my old age, weirdly,” says Peet, “even though being an older actress is not easy, I feel more like I have such a better perspective about Hollywood and about the business and have more peace about it.“

Catching herself, she adds, “If my husband reads this, he’ll be like, ‘I’m sorry, what? What peace are you referring to?’”

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An actor in a dark top smiles, resting her chin on her fingers.

“I’ve gotten much better in my old age, weirdly,” says Peet, “even though being an older actress is not easy, I feel more like I have such a better perspective about Hollywood and about the business and have more peace about it.“

(Justin Jun Lee / For The Times)

For our interview, Peet is in a hotel room in Los Angeles, in the middle of a press day for the second season of the Apple TV series “Your Friends & Neighbors,” while Shear is in the law office of his father-in-law on the Upper West Side of New York City, down the street from his apartment.

In conversation, Peet and Shear have an easy, playful chemistry even on a video call from opposite coasts, with Peet often finishing or clarifying Shear’s thoughts, while humbly deflecting credit whenever he wants to say she was responsible for something turning out as well as it did.

In the time since the movie premiered last year, Peet saw both her parents go through hospice care before dying and had her own battle with breast cancer. (She recently chronicled those events in an essay for the New Yorker.)

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She describes her personal experiences with an insight, vulnerability and openness that is reminiscent of the raw emotions of Peet’s recent performances, which traffic in an understated, unassuming power.

Peet, who says her own health is currently “doing great,” recalls she was actually with Shear at a film festival in Miami earlier this year when she received news her mother’s condition had taken a turn for the worse and she had to leave to go to her.

“It’s been a part of my life for a while, what’s gone on with my mom,” she says. “It was harder when it was a secret. It’s been more calming to have people I love, like Matthew, who I can talk about work and get on with it, but they also know what’s going on.”

Shear says he first began his original screenplay with an image of a young man having a panic attack in the self-help section of a bookshop and grew the script from there. He had worked as a babysitter for Upper East Side families in his 20s and was able to draw on the ways he often felt himself inserted too deeply into the dynamics of the families he was working for.

When a friend from outside of show business suggested Peet, the idea just clicked. And then after she read the script and agreed to participate, also getting involved as a producer, things gained momentum, adding cast members like Nivola based on her involvement.

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A man in eye glasses smiles at the lens.

Sheer remembers a collaboration with Peet that extended to all aspects of the story — even to other characters. “Which is not the cliché about an actor who gives notes,” he says. “Amanda was so resilient on the journey.”

(Justin Jun Lee / For The Times)

“It was completely game-changing,” says Shear. “On paper, having Amanda attached to the movie just helped us get other people interested. But from our first conversation on Zoom, when I was blabbering and trying to make excuses for the fact that I was a first-time director, she just said to me, ‘You’re fine. Let’s talk about the script.’ And so that’s what we did. “

Peet brought a fresh perspective to the characters and story beyond just her own part.

“She had really sharp, thoughtful things to say about the script and helped me develop things that had nothing to do with her character,” Shear says. “Which is not the cliché about an actor who gives notes.

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“And then it was just off to the races,” Shear says. “Amanda was so resilient on the journey. She just never lost confidence in the project.”

Peet did also have thoughts on how to expand upon her character’s growth and the nature of her burgeoning relationship with Sam. Though they do share a meaningful kiss, the stakes of their relationship remain more emotional than physical.

“One thing I can share,” says Shear with obvious relish, “was that one of Amanda’s first notes was that I had to turn up the sexual chemistry between us. I mean, you weren’t weird about it.“

“I was definitely weird about it,” Peet shoots back.

It was Peet who suggested a scene in which Shear’s Sam helps Peet’s character Dianne with creating a self-tape audition, a very specific indignity suffered by many working actors, as a way of seeing their growing affection for one another and how deeply he is falling for her.

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“I remember thinking that it does have to be a love story of sorts,” says Peet. “And so it does have to go from like, ‘Oh, you’re the manny’ to waking up to each other as something other than this transactional thing with you babysitting. And just slowly turning up the dial.”

Two actors interact playfully during a photo shoot.

“Matthew’s sense of humor was very special and reminded of the kind of New York Jewish humor that I love,” says Peet. “I wanted to do right by him.”

(Justin Jun Lee / For The Times)

The film’s perspective on mental health, including Sam being open about his use of antidepressants, is quietly refreshing.

“I have a pet peeve about mental-health narratives in a lot of movies,” says Shear. “They’re usually either people in the mental hospital, hysterical suicide narratives or like the Joker not taking his meds. You don’t see what it’s like to be a normal-enough person and manage some very common mental-health issues and have some specifics about what that experience is like. I wanted to make something that had that.”

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“I liked that the script was handling a more relatable kind of mental illness,” Peet says. “The script had a nonjudgmental view of that, but it’s not an issue movie. It’s not trying to get on any soapbox or anything like that. If you’re going to talk about hard issues, [it’s important] that you’re not constantly pointing to your own profundity as a writer, but instead making things funny and entertaining. I think that’s where I like to be.”

In another scene, Peet’s character is asked for an autograph by a young woman who mistakes her for the actor Lake Bell. This has actually happened to Peet “like a million times,” she admits, including once on a red carpet when photographers started shouting Bell’s name at her.

“It’s a weird thing because you’re like, what do I do here?” says Peet with a laugh. “What’s the least douchey way to get out of this?”

The scene originally had Peet’s character being recognized by someone who awkwardly can’t quite place her. When Peet told Shear she is often mistaken for Bell, they reconfigured the moment. (Peet and Bell have texted about the phenomenon and Peet only recently learned that sometimes Bell is mistaken for her.)

“Fantasy Life” has played a handful of other festivals, including L.A.’s AFI Fest last fall, since its 2025 premiere at SXSW. Shear is happy and relieved to see the film finally come to theaters, in part so that he can better focus on writing his next script.

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Peet perks up at the mention of Shear’s new writing project.

“Is there a part for me in it?” she asks earnestly.

“We’ll talk later,” says Shear. Reading her face and realizing that he might have sounded dismissive, he adds, “It’s a conversation. A really creative conversation.”

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Kanye West sued for battery, emotional distress over ‘cowardly’ altercation at Chateau Marmont

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Kanye West sued for battery, emotional distress over ‘cowardly’ altercation at Chateau Marmont

Ye, the controversial rapper formerly known as Kanye West, faces more legal backlash amid his latest efforts to mount a comeback.

The Grammy-winning “Bully” and “All of the Lights” musician, 48, has been accused of battery and intentional inflection of distress in a lawsuit submitted Monday in Los Angeles County Superior Court. An alleged altercation in April 2024 involving Ye and a man — identified in court documents as John Doe — is at the core of the complaint. The civil suit, reviewed by The Times, accuses Ye of punching Doe in the face and repeatedly punching him while he was unconscious, leading Doe to suffer “serious” physical injuries, incur medical expenses and experience a blow to his professional reputation.

Doe seeks a jury trial and is suing for an unspecified amount in damages including loss of earnings.

A representative for Ye did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.

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The complaint resurfaces allegations that Ye punched a man in the late evening of April 16, 2024, in West Hollywood. At the time, TMZ reported the “Vultures” musician got physical after the unnamed man allegedly grabbed his wife, Bianca Censori, at Chateau Marmont. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department confirmed that officers had responded to the 8200 block of Sunset Boulevard at around 12:30 a.m. for a “battery investigation” but did not confirm the suspect’s identity. A representative for Ye at the time denied the rapper was a suspect in the battery case and claimed in an email that “police aren’t even investigating.”

The complaint describes the unidentified plaintiff as someone whose business relies on “personal reputation, professional relationships, and public perceptions.” Ye’s accuser is also willing to disclose his identity, the filing said, under “an appropriate protective order,” though numerous outlets reported on the victim’s suspected identity around the original incident two years ago.

According to the suit, the altercation began when Ye approached the plaintiff’s table and punched him in the face, knocking the accuser “to the ground where he hit his head and lost consciousness.” Ye allegedly proceeded to “repeatedly” punch the man as he lay on the ground, the complaint says. The plaintiff said he did nothing to provoke the rapper’s “cowardly” attack, adding that the musician “acted with malice and oppression.”

The lawsuit alleges Ye fled the scene to the protection of his security detail, leaving his accuser injured on the floor. After the incident, Ye also allegedly “falsely” accused the plaintiff of inappropriate behavior toward a woman in his party. Ye then allegedly “embellished” his claims against the plaintiff during his appearance on a “widely viewed” podcast, though the lawsuit does not explicitly name the program.

“These false statements were republished and circulated widely across social media platforms,” the lawsuit says, “exposing Plaintiff to public scorn, suspicion, and ridicule.”

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In a footnote, the plaintiff clarified that his brother was also present at the time of the incident and that neither of them engaged in inappropriate conduct toward the unidentified woman. The lawsuit also mentioned the existence of video from the scene of the alleged attack.

The lawsuit said the plaintiff has suffered “severe emotional distress, including anxiety, humiliation, loss of standing in his community and harm to his professional relationships” as a result of his squabble with Ye.

The latest allegations against Ye come less than two weeks after he delivered his first full live performance in Los Angeles since 2021 at Inglewood’s SoFi Stadium on April 3. Notably, Ye fell out of public favor in recent years for a number antisemitic controversies including threatening violence to Jewish people on social media and selling T-shirts emblazoned with swastikas. He issued an apology for the scandals in January, taking out a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal that attributed his behavior to his bipolar disorder.

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Movie Review – Wasteman (2025)

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Movie Review – Wasteman (2025)

Wasteman, 2025.

Directed by Cal McMau.
Starring David Jonsson, Tom Blyth, Alex Hassell, Neil Linpow, Paul Hilton, Corin Silva, Layton Blake, Jack Barker, Fred Muthui, Lunga Skosana, Robert Rhodes, Keaton Ancona-Francis, and Cole Martin.

SYNOPSIS:

Follows parolee Taylor whose fresh start hopes are jeopardized by cellmate Dee’s arrival. As Dee takes Taylor under his wing, a vicious attack tests their bond, forcing Taylor to choose between protecting Dee and his own parole chances.

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Backing up its intentions and messaging with real spliced-in cell phone footage of rowdy, uncontrollable prison behavior in an understaffed British penitentiary, director Cal McMau’s narrative debut feature Wasteman (from a screenplay by Eoin Doran and Hunter Andrews) is often purposely, effectively disorienting. That’s not merely limited to be incorporated leaked footage (this is a prison that, in some respects, is more of a recreational facility than one for rehabilitation, since the guards are in such low quantity, all while the incarcerated are rather easily smuggling drugs through drone technology while typically unbothered in their jail cells playing video games in between hard partying or fighting one another), but the brutality as well, with claustrophobic, tilted camera angles and a shakiness that lends a visceral grime to that physicality.

The exception to this disorder seems to be rising star David Jonsson’s Taylor, still using drugs but also consistently avoiding any such drama. He is quiet and timid to the point where he not only comes across empathetic, but one wonders how he became locked up alongside an otherwise degenerate bunch. It turns out that due to a new law going into effect, some prisoners will be released on good behavior, which, in Taylor’s case, means that he is far from a problem here despite abusing drugs. Nevertheless, he is nervously excited about the possibility of reconnecting with his teenage son, even if a phone call with his separated ex-partner makes it clear that she is firmly against such a reunion.

There also wouldn’t be a film here without a wrench being thrown into that impending release back into society, which is where the introduction of new cellmate Dee (a manipulative and psychotic Tom Blyth) enters as an inmate more concerned with taking over the in-house drug dealing hierarchy rather than fronting anything remotely close to good behavior. By extension, this jeopardizes Taylor’s chances of being released. That’s also not to say Dee doesn’t have his friendly moments, such as letting Taylor use his phone to reconnect with his son on social media.

Where Wasteman makes up for in familiar plotting is its sense of authenticity, which comes through not only in the previously mentioned cuts to rowdy cell phone footage but also in the decision to work with a charity and round out the rest of the ensemble with formerly incarcerated individuals who are now reformed. One gets a full sense of the microcosmic incarceration society, the pecking order, and just how low on the rung Taylor is, since he isn’t like most of the others. There is also a full-blown riot at one point that parallels and mirrors the clips of authentic footage. It’s scripted, somehow almost feeling as dangerous.

When Wasteman inevitably comes down to a bond tested between Taylor and Dee, that too is less about thrills and more to do with capturing rawness; part of a brawl here contains one character vomiting on another, driving home just how dirty, literally and figuratively, the film gets in its unflinching depictions of life on the inside for this particular penitentiary. It’s fiction with a dash of documentary, each with bracing importance. It’s enough to ensure the film doesn’t go to waste for its minor shortcomings.

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Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★

Robert Kojder

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

 

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Commentary: Am I the only one who hates delivery robots?

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Commentary: Am I the only one who hates delivery robots?

When I was a child, I watched “The Jetsons” and “Lost in Space” and imagined my adult self living in a world of high-tech ease: flying cars, self-cleaning rooms, high-speed trains, personal jetpacks and wise-cracking robotic companions capable of solving any problem in a trice.

Instead I got Google (now with an irritating and frequently wrong AI feature), increased gridlock, Roombas, far too many passcodes/two-factor authenticator systems and a bunch of motorized ice chests cluttering up the sidewalks.

The last of which were recently banned, mercifully if temporarily, in Glendale. Reading about the city’s upcoming moratorium on delivery robots, I literally cheered. I hate them so much.

I know, I know, they’re adorable, with their wide “eyes” and squat toddler-like determination as they trundle along, pausing in careful recalculation whenever they encounter a curb, street sign, a sidewalk cafe table. Hating them makes me feel a bit like those folks who ban children from weddings or make snarky comments about dogs showing up just about everywhere (two things I would never do).

A Serve Robotics delivery robot heads to work Feb. 13. They navigate autonomously using LiDAR and only require human intervention if they get stuck, damaged or are heavily vandalized.

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(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

But though I am happy to accommodate dog walkers, stroller-pushers and other slow-moving/space-requiring pedestrians, I am less happy to do so for a tricked-out little metal box as it picks its way over potholes and sidewalk cracks on a “heroic” mission to deliver takeout to someone who, presumably, lives less than a mile away from its source.

And it isn’t just cranky-pants impatience. I recently became part of a face-off between two opposite-running Coco bots on the small strip of sidewalk in front of Cafe Figaro. The minutes-long standstill forced several people into the street; many more, including my husband and his cane, engaged in a potentially perilous stutter-step around the two knee-high, randomly moving yet noncommunicative vehicles.

One of which was, for reasons of its own, sporting an American flag — maybe it wants to be a Mars rover when it grows up.

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Delivery bots, including those made by Coco, a company begun in 2020 by two UCLA graduates, have been around for a while. Early rollouts, however, were small and often plagued by trouble. Stranded or struggling robots became the new Bird scooters — nifty ideas that proved more problematic in practice.

In the last two years, however, improved models have become an increasing presence; Coco, which has expanded across the country, recently announced a bigger, bolder next-gen model.

 The Coco 1, left, alongside the new Coco 2 (Next-Gen)

The Coco 1, left, alongside the new Coco 2 (Next-Gen) at the Coco Robotics headquarters in February in Venice. Coco Robotics launched its next-generation, fully autonomous delivery robot, Coco 2.

(Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times)

Many people love Coco and other delivery robots, which partially replace traffic-clogging, exhaust-spewing delivery drivers with a more environmentally friendly alternative.

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Others do not, viewing the bots as sidewalk lice that create hazards and take jobs from humans. Several cities, including Chicago, Toronto and San Francisco, have already instituted bans; Glendale is, as Long Beach recently did, taking a less draconian approach, putting the robots on pause while city officials figure out a regulatory framework.

Good luck with that. The e-bike craze, which is putting many people, including kids, in the hospital at an alarming rate, has thus far defied similar regulatory frameworks. As with delivery robots, the possible benefits of e-bikes — environmentally friendly, traffic-decreasing, super fun to ride — created a demand that ignores the dangers created by popularity.

Unlike e-bikes, or the electric scooters that preceded them, delivery robots aren’t yet causing widespread physical harm. Even my own feelings for those motorized metal coolers are fueled by existential disappointment as much as personal irritation.

In many ways, the high-tech future I envisioned as a child has come to pass — we have computers in our pockets, driverless cars, thumbprint and face ID, and voice-activated remote controls for everything. We may not be able to teleport, either physically or via hologram, but we can Zoom or video chat with pretty much anyone anywhere. ChatGPT is not exactly J.A.R.V.I.S., but it’s something. High-speed trains, and pretty much any mass transportation improvement, continue to elude the United States, but one can experience them elsewhere.

Serve Robotics

Matt Wood, Serve Robotics supervisor, drives a robot to a holding area earlier this year in the company’s parking lot where it and 26 others were to be transported by delivery truck to a farther service location.

(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

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The problem is, of course, that reality is much more complicated than futuristic visions sold by “The Jetsons,” “Minority Report” or the cultural marketers of Silicon Valley. Like e-bikes, every advancement creates a host of new problems — hackers, identity theft, system failures, increased energy demands. Labor-saving devices are rarely that — instead labor is shifted, from one department to another, from the body to the brain, or standards are raised — when laundry is done by a machine, its operator must ensure that all clothing is bright, soft, sweet smelling and stain-free just as those who have been given a company smartphone must be available 24/7. After all, how hard is it to answer a text?

Delivery robots are both disappointing in their reality and alarming in their symbolic implication. With all manner of industries constricting and AI threatening entry-level positions, many people have become delivery drivers, full-time or as an economically necessary side gig. Are robots coming for them as well? And are we all going to step around them and post photos on Instagram as they do?

It’s a lot to put on a relatively new and small industry that remains, thus far, a cute and novel way to receive a salad or a few groceries. Those who fear imminent robotic world domination can actually take heart — like the AI actor Tilly Norwood, these little geezers have limited abilities. They don’t go very far, or move very fast; they are easily damaged and disabled (especially in Philadelphia). If they are the vanguard of a sentient nonhuman enemy, we don’t have much to fear yet.

Still, as these robots grow in number and size, those big innocent “eyes” and the cutesy design take on an unnerving air. As Albert Brooks said in “Broadcast News”: “What do you think the devil is going to look like if he’s around … he will be attractive, he’ll be nice and helpful.”

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And deliver your lunch.

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