THR Talks
►Barry Jenkins and Nikole Hannah-Jones on the nuances of storytelling and trauma. The
Underground Railroad director and Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project creator talk freely about Kanye West saying slavery was a choice, the TikTok calling for Black wizard stories, and the controversy of casting African actors over African American talent.
--Jenkins: "I feel like I made two movies. The one movie is the story of Cora Randall. She’s on this journey. It’s this big adventure, but it’s rooted in the condition of American slavery. That was the one movie. Then this other movie: I’m also aware of the power of the possibility of doing harm with these images. And so I’m making that in my head — I had to see it in order to not do it. Then there was this third thing that happened, which was [about] disconnection and erasure. I feel like we haven’t been allowed to really see our ancestors."
--Hannah-Jones: "I felt so many connections to my feelings and my fears in creating The 1619 Project. You have the weight of the subject matter, but you also have the weight of the obligation of doing right by the people, you know, our ancestors. I love that you talked about the Black gaze, because one of the things that I was determined to do from the beginning was, we were going to be completely unconcerned with how white people would feel or think about what we were doing. We were going to do the project that we needed to do. And if white people loved it and Black people hated it, we would have failed, period. Hopefully, a bunch of white folks would like it, but that wasn’t what I was thinking about."
The complete conversation.
►Star Wars authors claim Disney royalties “fall through the cracks." Writers speak out with allegations that they’re owed money since the Lucasfilm and Fox acquisitions, while an activist task force goes public to reclaim pay.
The story.
►Creators are the new currency. And they are a commodity in increasingly high demand. As digital influencers keep gaining in popularity, companies like YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok are increasingly leaning in and betting that their pathway to growth lies with these independent content producers. And the tech giants are putting their money where their mouths are, committing hundreds of millions of dollars to support, create and entice creators to produce for their platforms.
The story.
►Fox Corp’s “key future focus” emerges: Streaming and sports betting. The Murdochs eye growth for the media giant with the acquisition of sports site Outkick and investment in ad-supported streamer Tubi.
More.
►Ahead of the release of A Quiet Place II, John Krasinski and his Sunday Night banner have inked a first-look deal with Paramount.Sunday Night’s slate includes a new installment of the
A Quiet Place franchise from
Mud director Jeff Nichols and thriller
Apartment 7A from director Natalie Erika James.
More.
+Also: Amazon has inked Super Bowl champion Russell Wilson and Grammy-winning singer-actress Ciara to a first-look deal. Under the pact, the married duo will develop and produce scripted series and films via their Why Not You Productions for the company.
More.
►Obituary: Norman Lloyd, the actor, producer and director whose collaborations with Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, Charlie Chaplin, Bertolt Brecht and Jean Renoir made him a legend — albeit an off-the-radar one — in Hollywood, died Tuesday morning. He was 106.
The obituary.
►In Hollywood, is the press the new human resources? Studios and agencies shouldn’t wait to act on claims of bad behavior until the media start reporting on it, write Liz Alper and Deirdre Mangan, television writers and co-founders of grassroots group #PayUpHollywood.
The guest column.
►Film review: Lovia Gyarkye reviews
Spiral: From the Book of Saw, writing that the film "delivers when it comes to gore, if that’s your thing, and appropriately dour aesthetics — but not much else. That’s a shame, because the story’s themes, from the unreformable nature of the police department to the cost of integrity in a space that values power above all else, could not be more relevant. If the mission was, as Bousman has suggested, to create a
Saw film driven by a strong narrative instead of gruesome torture, it hasn’t been fully accomplished."
The review.
In other news... --Edward Norton is sharpening his detective skills for Rian Johnson’s
Knives Out sequel. Norton
is in talks for the follow-up to the popular whodunit, joining Dave Bautista in what will be a starry ensemble.
--James Murdoch is
getting in on the SPAC frenzy that has taken over Wall Street over the past year. Murdoch is the co-chairman of Seven Island Inc., a special purpose acquisition company seeking to raise $345 million from investors in an IPO. Murdoch’s partner in the venture is Uday Shankar, the former CEO of STAR India and chairman of The Walt Disney Company’s India businesses.
--Alt-rock veterans Foo Fighters, new wave pioneers The Go-Go’s, East Coast hip-hop icon Jay-Z, singer-songwriter north star Carole King, mercurial rock savant Todd Rundgren and Queen of Rock n’ Roll Tina Turner make up the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame's
Class of 2021.
--Palestinian actress Maisa Abd Elhadi — who starred in Hulu’s
Baghdad Central and last year’s Venice-bowing feature
Gaza Mon Amour —
has been injured after allegedly being shot by Israel police during a demonstration on Sunday in the city of Haifa.
What else we're reading... --"How the Golden Globes went from laughingstock to power player" [N.Y. Times]
--"Who should John Mulaney be now?" [Vulture]
--"Donald Glover thinks fear of cancelation is to blame for boring films and TV. He’s wrong" [Vanity Fair]
--"Jake Tapper, Rat Pack novelist, likes to unwind with a martini and a mountain of research" [L.A. Times]
Today's birthdays: Rami Malek, 40, Jason Biggs, 43, Emilio Estevez, 59, Malin Akerman, 43, Tony Hawk, 53.