
Song Sung Blue: A Neil Diamond Tribute Act's Sweet Treat of a Movie
A Neil Diamond tribute act's story is turned into a movie starring Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson, following a Milwaukee couple's rise to fame with their band, Lightning and Thunder.

A Neil Diamond tribute act's story is turned into a movie starring Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson, following a Milwaukee couple's rise to fame with their band, Lightning and Thunder.

Cristian Mungiu venceu a Palma de Ouro em Cannes 2026 com 'Fjord'. O filme aborda uma família romena em busca de estabilidade na Noruega. Outros vencedores incluem 'Minotaur' e 'Hope'.
Steven Soderbergh's documentary 'John Lennon: The Last Interview' premiered at Cannes, featuring clips from Lennon's final interview hours before his death. The film highlights Lennon and Yoko Ono discussing life, death, their relationship, and his return to music.

From Soderbergh to Aronofsky, esteemed Hollywood directors are starting to find ways to include artificial intelligence in the production of their filmsIn Steven Soderbergh’s beguiling new movie The Christophers, a reclusive artist (Ian McKellen) tangles with the quiet art forger (Michaela Coel) who his greedy children have hired to secretly finish further entries in a well-known painting series. The movie is smart and provocative about the nature of artistry and authorship, exploring what it means to create – and to stop creating. It’s especially fascinating coming from Soderbergh, who has made movies with workhorse dependability (The Christophers is his third theatrical release of the past 18 months) and also spent four years retired from directing features entirely.It also provides particularly jarring context for Soderbergh, in interviews promoting the film, to voice his interest in something that a lot of great artists have pointedly refused to embrace: using AI in films. Soderbergh mentioned in an interview with Filmmaker Magazine that he used what sounds like generative AI to produce “thematically surreal images that occupy a dream space rather than a literal space” for his upcoming documentary about John Lennon and Yoko Ono. He also said that a movie he’s hoping to make about the Spanish-American war would use “a lot of AI”. In a subsequent conversation with Variety, Soderbergh didn’t sound like an AI evangelist, but nor did he back down: “I don’t think it’s the solution to everything, and I don’t think it’s the death of everything. We’re in the very early stages. Five years from now, we all may be going, ‘That was a fun phase.’ We may end up not using it as much as we thought we were going to.” Continue reading...