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‘Price of Glee’ trailer touches on role of fame in the deaths of three ‘Glee’ actors

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‘Price of Glee’ trailer touches on role of fame in the deaths of three ‘Glee’ actors

A brand new trailer for “The Value of Glee,” a three-part restricted collection concerning the Fox collection “Glee,” discusses the function fame performed within the deaths of three actors from the hit TV present.

Within the 11 years following the collection’ Might 2009 debut, three of the present’s fundamental actors died, the trailer for the Investigation Discovery documentary underscores in its opening seconds.

As dramatic music crescendos, the trailer flashes photos of a makeshift memorial for Cory Monteith, who died at 31 from a drug overdose in 2013; scenes of Lake Piru, the place Naya Rivera died at 33 in 2020; and a photograph of Mark Salling, who died by suicide in 2018.

“I don’t wish to say the ‘C-word,’ the ‘curse’ phrase, however that’s the place your thoughts goes,” one interview topic says.

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The trailer introduces themes of fame and media consideration thrust on the younger stars who broke out with “Glee.” Seemingly in a single day, as the recognition of Ryan Murphy‘s Fox collection exploded, the newcomers grew to become family names.

“The larger the present went, the smaller their worlds grow to be,” one other interviewee says.

Later, the identical interviewee says his first response to their deaths was “blame” and that he “nonetheless looks like there’s somebody in charge.”

The surviving starring solid members of the present are notably absent from the trailer, although Rivera’s father seems and remarks, “Fame might be toxic.”

“I knew that was the highest of the mountain for Naya, to your child,” George Rivera says. “It was simply surreal.”

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Naya Rivera, who performed cheerleader Santana Lopez,, drowned in Lake Piru in July 2020 after saving her then-4-year-old son whereas the pair boated collectively.

Monteith, who starred as Finn Hudson, a highschool soccer star-turned-gleek, was the primary solid member to die. In 2013, he was discovered lifeless in a Vancouver resort room from an unintended overdose of alcohol and heroin.

“Fame was exhausting for him,” one among Monteith’s buddies instructed Individuals after his dying. “It was one thing he knew he deserved however someway he by no means fairly knew the right way to deal with.”

Maybe essentially the most controversial of the deceased solid members was Salling, who in late 2015 was arrested on suspicion of receiving and possessing youngster pornography.

Salling, who performed soccer jock Noah “Puck” Puckerman, died by suicide in early 2018. It was simply days earlier than his sentencing and after he had pleaded responsible to the costs.

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Co-star Heather Morris defended Salling in a collection of tweets in 2020, writing, “We didn’t simply lose 2 solid members, we misplaced 3. And it’s SO unimaginable robust to should act like that third one is invisible, as a result of regardless that his actions are unjustifiable, he was part of our household at one level and he was mentally SICK.”

Morris has since walked again her feedback, which drew outrage when she appeared to excuse Salling’s actions by saying “pedophilia is a illness.”

The three-part docuseries will premiere Jan. 16 on ID.

Movie Reviews

There’s Still Tomorrow (2023) – Movie Review

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There’s Still Tomorrow (2023) – Movie Review

There’s Still Tomorrow, 2023.

Directed by Paola Cortellesi.
Starring Paola Cortellesi, Valerio Mastandrea, Romana Maggiora Vergano, Emanuela Fanelli, Giorgio Colangeli, and Vinicio Marchioni.

SYNOPSIS:

Trying to escape from the patriarchy in the Italian post-war society, Delia plots an act of rebellion against her violent husband.

Italian Cinema has had its share of triumphs over the years with the likes of Federico Fellini and Roberto Rossellini helping to define European Cinema of the mid 1900s. There’s Still Tomorrow from Star and Director Paola Cortellesi, proves that there is still plenty of life left in Italian Cinema. It has earned rave reviews and proven to be the most successful film of 2023 in Italy and the ninth highest-grossing film of all time there.

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Set in Rome in 1946, it follows Delia (Cortellisi), caught in a loveless marriage, struggling to put food on the table. Delia cares for their three young children and is also expected to tend to her bedridden father-in-law.  The Rome we follow is far from the more glamorous one we tend to see now, more like something in Rome Open City, with the effects of the war apparent, with a sizable US military presence still in place.

It has rightly earned plaudits and the way Cortellisi has balanced the period elements with neorealism is worth singling out. On paper this shouldn’t work, feeling often like a drama lifted straight from the era but also with a striking, contemporary edge to it, buoyed by some of the musical choices. The likes of Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and Outkast helping to lend it a ferocious energy and give it a sense of purpose. As far as debuts go this is incredibly ambitious but it never succumbs to striving for too much, miraculously finding balance throughout.

While the action is kept largely to Delia and her family it is gripping with plenty of impressive traits from our first-time director from the use of music and dance to slow motion. Davide Leone’s cinematography is striking and perfectly captures the downbeat nature of post-war Rome.

There’s Still Tomorrow is a wonderful blend of 1940s Italian Cinema and melodrama with a distinctly modern edge to it, landing this awkward balance for the most part. It will be intriguing to see whether international audiences take to it quite as strongly but as Italian as it feels, there is a global appeal to it, of a woman trying to escape a horrendous situation and reclaim her life. It is a very impressive debut and we can only hope Paola Cortellisi directs more in future. It is an unpredictable love letter to Italian cinema and this particular era in Italian society that wears its heart on its sleeve and is hard not to be enamoured with.

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

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Chris Connor

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These Latina queens will be on Season 9 of 'RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars'

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These Latina queens will be on Season 9 of 'RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars'

Keep your engines running, squirrel friends!

Paramount+ and World of Wonder announced on Tuesday the drag queens competing in Season 9 of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars.” Among the eight returning contestants are Latina queens Jorgeous, Roxxxy Andrews and Vanessa Vanjie Mateo.

The cast ruveal comes days after the Season 16 finale of “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” Latinidad was on full display in the latest iteration of the reality competition, which had five Latinas vying for the crown. The season also featured pop star Becky G and “Lopez vs. Lopez” series creator and actor Mayan Lopez as guest judges.

For the first time in drag herstory, “All Stars” contestants will be competing for a chance to donate the $200,000 grand prize to the charity of the winner’s choosing, provided by the Palette Fund.

Here’s a quick primer on the Latina queens that will be featured in Season 9 of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars,” which premieres May 17 on Paramount+.

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Jorgeous

The diminutive Mexican American queen from San Antonio quickly became a Season 14 fan favorite thanks to her style and dancing skills. Though she struggled in the challenges, Jorgeous earned the distinction of being her season’s “lip-sync assassin,” winning four out of five stay-or-sashay-away face-offs. Her standout performance remains her lip sync to Ava Max’s “My Head & My Heart.” She will be competing on behalf of the National Alliance of Mental Illness (NAMI), a grassroots organization that focuses on mental health.

Roxxxy Andrews

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This Puerto Rican-Cuban queen from Orlando, Fla., brings plenty of experience to the competition. She was the Season 5 “RuPaul’s Drag Race” runner-up and finished fourth in the second season of “All Stars.” Will the third time finally be the charm? Andrews will be competing for Miracle of Love, an organization that provides HIV/AIDS prevention programming and assistance in central Florida.

Vanessa Vanjie Mateo

“Miss Vanjie. Miss Vaanjie. Miss … Vaaanjie!”

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The Puerto Rican queen didn’t last long during her Season 10 “Drag Race” stint: She was the first person eliminated. Despite her brief appearance, Miss Vanjie quickly became an internet sensation and was brought back for Season 11 to redeem herself. In Season 9 of “All Stars,” she will be competing on behalf of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, a 150-year-old organization that fights against animal cruelty and homelessness.

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Movie Review: Prepare to get hot and bothered with stylish, synthy tennis drama 'Challengers'

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Movie Review: Prepare to get hot and bothered with stylish, synthy tennis drama 'Challengers'

“Challengers” is a bit of a tease. That’s what makes it fun.

There is plenty of skin, sweat, close-ups of muscly thighs and smoldering looks of lust and hate in this deliriously over-the-top psychodrama. But get that image of Josh O’Connor, Zendaya and Mike Faist sitting together on the bed out of your mind. Most of this action takes place on the tennis court.

It’s still a sexy tennis movie about friendship, love, competition and sport set to a synth-y score from Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross — it just might not contain exactly what you think it does. But remember, Luca Guadagnino is the one who filmed Timothée Chalamet with that peach, perhaps more memorable than any actual sex scene from the past decade. Manage expectations, but also trust.

And like “Call Me By Your Name” did for Chalamet, “Challengers” is one of those rare original big-screen delights that firmly announces the arrival of a new generation of movie stars. Zendaya and Faist already had a bit of a leg up. She has played significant supporting roles in some of the biggest movies of the past few years, from “Spider-Man” to “Dune,” and he had had his big cinematic breakthrough as Riff in Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story.” But it’s O’Connor who really comes out on top, effectively shedding any lingering image of him as a whiny, dweeby Prince Charles in seasons three and four of “The Crown.” In “Challengers,” his Patrick Zweig is the cocky, flirty, slightly mean, slightly dirty and slightly broken bad boyfriend of our fictional dreams.

Written by playwright Justin Kuritzkes (who is married to “Past Lives” filmmaker Celine Song) “Challengers” is a prickly treat, about fractured relationships, egos, infidelity and ambition. Set during a qualifying match at the New Rochelle Tennis Club, outside New York City, the intricately woven story reveals itself through flashbacks that build to a crescendo in the present-day match.

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O’Connor’s Patrick and Faist’s Art are old boarding school roommates turned tennis teammates. It’s a relationship that’s at turns brotherly, erotic and competitive. Whatever it is, they are definitely too close and not remotely prepared for Zendaya’s Tashi Duncan to enter the mix.

Tashi, in high school, is well on her way to becoming the next big tennis superstar. Art and Patrick watch her play, mouths agape at her technical form and physical beauty. Later, they both ask for her number, leading to a revealing night in a grungy hotel room. She promises her number to the one who wins the singles match the next day. Tashi just wants to see some good tennis, she says, but she also knows how to motivate and manipulate.

This image released by Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures shows Zendaya in a scene from “Challengers.” Credit: AP/Niko Tavernise

Because of the fractured timeline, we know that Tashi in the present day does not play tennis anymore. She was injured at some point and never recovered, unlike her husband, Art, who is now one of the most famous players in the world. The two of them are wildly wealthy, living in a ritzy hotel and fronting Aston Martin ad campaigns. At night, Tashi uses Augustinus Bader cream to moisturize her legs. Guadagnino, who likes to wink at and luxuriate in wealth signifiers, enlisted JW Anderson designer Jonathan Anderson to do the costumes, which will surely populate summer style inspiration boards the way his “A Bigger Splash” and “Call Me By Your Name” have in the past.

But while they are technically at the top, Art is also on a losing streak, so Tashi sends him to a low-stakes tournament where he can get his confidence back. That’s where they encounter Patrick, who has not been so fortunate over the years and who has fallen out with his old friends. Of course, it’s all building to Patrick and Art playing one another in the final match, a part of which is so wildly and comically drawn out that you can almost envision the “Saturday Night Live” spoof.

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“Challengers” is a drama, but a funny and self-aware one. It doesn’t take itself very seriously and has a lot of fun with its characters, all three of which are anti-heroes in a way. You might have a favorite, but you’re probably not rooting for anyone exactly — just glued to the screen to see how it all plays out on and off the court.

“Challengers,” an MGM release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for “language throughout, some sexual content and graphic nudity.” Running time: 131 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

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