Connect with us

Lifestyle

The Brooklyn Navy Yard Hosted Circoloco’s Enormous Halloween Party, Where Guests Included Leonardo DiCaprio And Gigi Hadid

Published

on

The Brooklyn Navy Yard Hosted Circoloco’s Enormous Halloween Party, Where Guests Included Leonardo DiCaprio And Gigi Hadid

This weekend, Leonardo DiCaprio and Gigi Hadid, who was initially rumored to be courting again in September, have been seen hanging out collectively at Circoloco’s large Halloween bacchanal on the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

Now we have it on good authority that the Titanic actor and the mannequin arrived on a celebration bus, accompanied by her sister Bella, the mannequin Irina Shayk, and the artwork seller Helly Nahmad.

In accordance with a spy, Leo hid his face with a terrifying masks for many of the night time, besides when he was ingesting. After that, the group was supplied with bottle service.

Stella Maxwell and Giancarlo Stanton, outstanding members of the New York Yankees baseball workforce, have been additionally current on the social gathering, which was one in all Rob Toma’s Teksupport occasions. As well as, Home of the Dragon actor Matt Smith was reportedly dressed as a vampire for the occasion.

Now we have it on good authority that DiCaprio’s masks was a hybrid of a monster and a zombie. Sadly, in response to a request for remark, representatives for Hadid and DiCaprio didn’t present any.

Advertisement

The notoriously secretive Shutter Island actor, who all the time stays hidden behind a black baseball cap and a medical masks, has been recognized to attend Halloween events whereas concealing his identification. The earlier yr, we unfold the rumor that he pretended to be a century previous and tricked attendees at a serious celebration.

The preliminary reviews of a love relationship between Leonardo DiCaprio and the mannequin Gigi Hadid surfaced in September whereas Trend Week was in progress. It was solely reported by Web page Six that they have been socializing at a loft social gathering in Soho. They have been additionally seen visiting the Casa Cipriani restaurant.

After we requested round, we have been informed by a dependable supply that the 2 have been attending to know one another and have been taking issues slowly. An insider shared that they’ve spent a lot of their time hanging out in teams and hanging out alone.

Later that month, Hadid walked the Versace Spring/Summer time 2023 vogue present in Milan, and the Revenant actor was there.

Advertisement

Lifestyle

'IF' only! These imaginary friends are sweet, but could have been so much more

Published

on

'IF' only! These imaginary friends are sweet, but could have been so much more

Bea (Cailey Fleming) and Blue (voiced by Steve Carell) in IF.

Paramount Pictures


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Paramount Pictures


Bea (Cailey Fleming) and Blue (voiced by Steve Carell) in IF.

Paramount Pictures

The third installment in John Krasinski’s blockbuster horror franchise A Quiet Place will soon employ noise-triggered monsters to scare audiences shoutless. But the filmmaker is starting the summer with sweeter monsters — the sweetest, really — in IF.

Which doesn’t mean they don’t cause 12-year-old Bea (Walking Dead’s Cailey Fleming) to faint right away the first time she sees them — though in fairness, she’s got a lot on her mind. Having already lost her mom to cancer, she’s moving in with her grandma for a bit while her dad’s in the hospital awaiting surgery.

Advertisement

Still, when wouldn’t encountering a giant plush critter in the apartment upstairs be startling, even if he turns out to be a sweetheart voiced by Steve Carell? It’s an imaginary friend (an “IF,” in his parlance) of a kid who’s long forgotten about him — and who, being colorblind, named him “Blue” even though he’s purple.

Also up there is Blossom (voiced by Phoebe Waller-Bridge), a life-size ballerina doll, and the apartment’s harried resident, Cal (Ryan Reynolds), the only person besides Bea who seems able to see IFs.

Bea has been trying to be very grown up for her dad, played by director Krasinski. When she visits him at the hospital, he starts dancing with his I.V. pole and cracking jokes, and she has to tell him to dial things back a bit. As the film goes on, you may be tempted to echo that with regard to his directing, but things are certainly lively as the IFs explain that they’ve started a matchmaking agency to help fellow imaginary friends find new kids. Bea volunteers to help, and is soon introduced to a whole lot of critters – unicorns, dragons, even a flaming marshmallow — at an IF retirement home in Coney Island.

All of which gives Krasinski an excuse to call in an army of digital animators, first to bring life to imaginary critters voiced by his A-list Hollywood buds, including George Clooney, Awkwafina, Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, Jon Stewart, Steve Carell, and the late Lou Gossett Jr. in a warmly avuncular turn as a supervising teddy bear. And then to make the walls and floors of the retirement home morph and flip as if they’re just so many pixels.

At which point, if you’re like me, you may start wanting something a little more solid to hold onto — like, say, a plot that holds up, or even that just holds still. This one jumps around as much as the IFs themselves, at first linking them to new kids, then to their now-grown-up original kids, with little logic, and less explanation.

Advertisement

Along the way, some intriguing issues are raised — about wanting to return to childhood, about growing out of childhood, and about dealing with loss.

But mostly the filmmakers detour, decorate and digitize their story rather than telling it, and that doesn’t mesh well with the real-world stuff — dad’s surgery, for instance, and Bea’s wandering all over Brooklyn without her grandma seeming to notice. And yes, I know: IF is a kid-flick, but it still needs grounding. We’re in Brooklyn, not Willy Wonkaland.

Also, star voices and digital wizardry notwithstanding, IF‘s IFs feel generic, especially when they’re stealing focus from the live performers. Grandma, for instance. No filmmaker who has actress Fiona Shaw on screen needs special effects.

Krasinski, in fact, clearly knows that. He’s crafted a lovely moment where Bea puts a ballet record – the “Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia” — on the turntable, and Grandma stands listening to it, bathed in twilight at a window, with her back to the camera. She’s remembering the dancer she was as a child, and as the music rises, her right hand does too … just so. And in that lovely, unforced gesture, you realize all the other things Krasinski’s sweet little kid flick might have been … IF only.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Lifestyle

Download the checklist of the 101 best West Coast experiences

Published

on

Download the checklist of the 101 best West Coast experiences

Michelle Woo is the West Coast experiences editor for the Los Angeles Times. Previously, she worked as a senior editor at Medium, the parenting editor at Lifehacker and a staff writer at OC Weekly. She is the author of “Horizontal Parenting: How to Entertain Your Kid While Lying Down.”

Continue Reading

Lifestyle

Showcasing Authentically American Style

Published

on

Showcasing Authentically American Style
For four days in early May, Indigenous fashion designers, models and artisans from across North America came to Santa Fe, N.M., for Native Fashion Week.

The event, new this year, included runway shows, panel discussions, pop-up shops and, of course, parties. It was put on by the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts, the longtime organizer of the Indian Market, a popular showcase of Indigenous-made goods in Santa Fe.

The style outside and inside the city’s Community Convention Center, where much of Native Fashion Week took place, reflected the diversity of its participants — a group with a growing presence in the American fashion industry.

Continue Reading

Trending