Neneh Cherry has announced a memoir titled A Thousand Threads, due October 8th, 2024 via Simon & Schuster imprint Scribner (pre-orders are now ongoing).
Covering the life of the “Buffalo Stance” singer from her childhood through her punk years, global success, woes, and more, A Thousand Threads will be “deeply personal.” According to its press release, the book will touch on “the highs and lows, the friendships and loves, and the addictions and traumas that have shaped [Cherry] as a woman and an artist.”
A Thousand Threads will be available in hardback, ebook, and and audio formats. Check out the cover artwork below.
Born in Sweden, Cherry moved to the UK in her teen years and joined punk groups like The Slits, Rip Rig and Panic, and others. After going solo in the ‘80s, she shared the acclaimed album Raw Like Sushi, which included the hit “Buffalo Stance.”
In recent years, Cherry...
Covering the life of the “Buffalo Stance” singer from her childhood through her punk years, global success, woes, and more, A Thousand Threads will be “deeply personal.” According to its press release, the book will touch on “the highs and lows, the friendships and loves, and the addictions and traumas that have shaped [Cherry] as a woman and an artist.”
A Thousand Threads will be available in hardback, ebook, and and audio formats. Check out the cover artwork below.
Born in Sweden, Cherry moved to the UK in her teen years and joined punk groups like The Slits, Rip Rig and Panic, and others. After going solo in the ‘80s, she shared the acclaimed album Raw Like Sushi, which included the hit “Buffalo Stance.”
In recent years, Cherry...
- 3/17/2024
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big new singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Cardi B returns with her first single of 2024, Miley Cyrus delivers a salve with a funky Bangerz B-side, and Charli Xcx is at the top of her game in glitzy new track. Plus, new music from Schoolboy Q, Fred Again.. , Kacey Musgraves, and more.
Cardi B, “Like What (Freestyle)” (YouTube)
Miley Cyrus feat. Pharrell, “Doctor (Work It Out)” (YouTube)
Charli Xcx, “Von Dutch” (YouTube)
Schoolboy Q,...
Cardi B, “Like What (Freestyle)” (YouTube)
Miley Cyrus feat. Pharrell, “Doctor (Work It Out)” (YouTube)
Charli Xcx, “Von Dutch” (YouTube)
Schoolboy Q,...
- 3/1/2024
- by Rolling Stone
- Rollingstone.com
On her enigmatic new single “Houdini,” Dua Lipa is a slippery illusionist who is hard to catch and quick to leave. It’s reflective of her approach to the latest era of her career as she preps the release of her third studio album, which marks a departure from the disco dream that defined 2020’s Future Nostalgia. But before Lipa performed her grand vanishing act and disappeared into her new psychedelic soundscape, Barbie the Album executive producer Mark Ronson caught her at just the right moment.
Ronson connected with Lipa...
Ronson connected with Lipa...
- 12/4/2023
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
“Bohemian Rhapsody” performed above most expectations with an estimated $50 million total, a terrific result for this film. It’s also the fifth title to open to over $40 million since Labor Day. That’s three more than last year, which had only “It” and “Thor: Ragnorok” (although both were over $100 million).
“Bohemian Rhapsody” is also the lowest number 1 opening for this weekend since 2013; prior years had Marvel and Bond. While this weekend’s total gross is lower than last year — unsurprising, since 2017 had “Thor: Ragnorok” — people who did go to the theaters saw a wider swath of movies. “Thor” claimed more than two thirds of total business, and only two films grossed over $7 million. This year, we had six.
In the debit column, two major releases saw shortfalls with “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms” and Tyler Perry’s latest, “Nobody’s Fool.” However, their struggles were more internal.
Considering its production issues,...
“Bohemian Rhapsody” is also the lowest number 1 opening for this weekend since 2013; prior years had Marvel and Bond. While this weekend’s total gross is lower than last year — unsurprising, since 2017 had “Thor: Ragnorok” — people who did go to the theaters saw a wider swath of movies. “Thor” claimed more than two thirds of total business, and only two films grossed over $7 million. This year, we had six.
In the debit column, two major releases saw shortfalls with “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms” and Tyler Perry’s latest, “Nobody’s Fool.” However, their struggles were more internal.
Considering its production issues,...
- 11/4/2018
- by Tom Brueggemann
- Indiewire
Genre project currently in post-production.
Toronto-based Ddi has picked up worldwide sales rights to supernatural horror The Cleansing Hour and will launch sales at the Toronto International Film Festival (Tiff) next week.
CEO Jason Moring (pictured) and his team will introduce buyers to the feature about millennial entrepreneurs who get tormented by a demon during a live webcast.
When the evil spirit possesses the fiancée of one of the men, it forces them to expose dark secrets. Ryan Guzman, Kyle Gallner and Alix Angelis star
The Cleansing Hour is currently in post-production and marks the feature directorial debut of Damien LeVeck,...
Toronto-based Ddi has picked up worldwide sales rights to supernatural horror The Cleansing Hour and will launch sales at the Toronto International Film Festival (Tiff) next week.
CEO Jason Moring (pictured) and his team will introduce buyers to the feature about millennial entrepreneurs who get tormented by a demon during a live webcast.
When the evil spirit possesses the fiancée of one of the men, it forces them to expose dark secrets. Ryan Guzman, Kyle Gallner and Alix Angelis star
The Cleansing Hour is currently in post-production and marks the feature directorial debut of Damien LeVeck,...
- 8/30/2018
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
“Old School RuneScape” is making its way to mobile devices now, beginning with the debut of the open beta for those on Android devices. As of today, players can sign up for the game and give it a try ahead of its full release.
The mobile iteration of “RuneScape” is exactly as its title describes: a re-release of the classic browser Mmorpg, preserved from its original state back in 2007. It’s been continuously updated and preserved alongside developer Jagex’s other releases, with separate content dumps and additional patches as the years have gone by. As far as gameplay goes, you can expect a mixture of point-and-click adventuring, combat, and simplistic mechanics that really do bring back 2000s game design in a big way. It’s extremely addictive, though, as many former players will attest.
Unfortunately, getting into the beta at this time does come with something of a catch.
The mobile iteration of “RuneScape” is exactly as its title describes: a re-release of the classic browser Mmorpg, preserved from its original state back in 2007. It’s been continuously updated and preserved alongside developer Jagex’s other releases, with separate content dumps and additional patches as the years have gone by. As far as gameplay goes, you can expect a mixture of point-and-click adventuring, combat, and simplistic mechanics that really do bring back 2000s game design in a big way. It’s extremely addictive, though, as many former players will attest.
Unfortunately, getting into the beta at this time does come with something of a catch.
- 7/5/2018
- by Brittany Vincent
- Variety Film + TV
If there was a recurring theme during the recent broadcast network upfronts, it was this: Ratings must die. “We are in a new era of media and it’s time to retire the Nielsen television metric,” Turner president David Levy said. “While it undoubtedly served its purpose, it no longer fully captures how to successfully measure an audience in today’s landscape.”
Of course, complaining about Nielsen and traditional ratings is nothing new. And these days, virtually every outlet has embraced its own version of multi-platform program measurement — including TV, DVR, VOD and streaming viewership. Levy pointed to audience targeting and other methods as better ways of selling their wares. At the NBCUniversal upfront, ad sales chairman Linda Yaccarino pushed the company’s new “CFlight” metric.
“I still cannot believe I have to get up this stage and talk about legacy measurement,” Yaccarino said, dismissing the current “C3” standard (which...
Of course, complaining about Nielsen and traditional ratings is nothing new. And these days, virtually every outlet has embraced its own version of multi-platform program measurement — including TV, DVR, VOD and streaming viewership. Levy pointed to audience targeting and other methods as better ways of selling their wares. At the NBCUniversal upfront, ad sales chairman Linda Yaccarino pushed the company’s new “CFlight” metric.
“I still cannot believe I have to get up this stage and talk about legacy measurement,” Yaccarino said, dismissing the current “C3” standard (which...
- 5/26/2018
- by Michael Schneider
- Indiewire
Before we get to your Amazon Prime June updates, the streaming service has a special surprise for its members: every season of “Dawson’s Creek” is available now, and you don’t even have to wait until next month.
Starting June 1, stream “All or Nothing” which follows the New Zealand rugby team the All Blacks throughout their 2017 season. On June 3, you can stream the Oscar-nominated “Lady Bird,” followed by Amazon Original series “Goliath” Season 2 on June 15.
See below for the complete list of titles hitting Amazon next month.
Also Read: Amazon Sets Awards Release for Luca Guadagnino's 'Suspiria'
Available June 1
1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992)
2 Days in the Valley (1996)
Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987)
As Good As Dead (2010)
August Rush (2007)
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (2009)
Beer for My Horses (2008)
Beowulf (2007)
Black Widow (Aka: Before It Had a Name) (2005)
Blitz (2011)
Blood and Glory (2016)
Blue Like Jazz...
Starting June 1, stream “All or Nothing” which follows the New Zealand rugby team the All Blacks throughout their 2017 season. On June 3, you can stream the Oscar-nominated “Lady Bird,” followed by Amazon Original series “Goliath” Season 2 on June 15.
See below for the complete list of titles hitting Amazon next month.
Also Read: Amazon Sets Awards Release for Luca Guadagnino's 'Suspiria'
Available June 1
1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992)
2 Days in the Valley (1996)
Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987)
As Good As Dead (2010)
August Rush (2007)
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (2009)
Beer for My Horses (2008)
Beowulf (2007)
Black Widow (Aka: Before It Had a Name) (2005)
Blitz (2011)
Blood and Glory (2016)
Blue Like Jazz...
- 5/16/2018
- by Ashley Boucher
- The Wrap
Jon Hamm stars as Will in Nostalgia, a Bleecker Street release.
Credit: Bleecker Street
Nostalgia is a word that evokes a warm feeling of sentiment and sentimentality, something linked to pleasant memories of the past. Little of that warm feeling is found in the dark drama Nostalgia, an exploration of loss and complicated feelings about family and family possessions. “Loss” or “sadness” might have been a more accurate title.
“One man’s treasure is another man’s trash” seems to a central message of this sometimes moving, sometimes disturbing drama. Despite the title, there is little that is sweet or sentimental in Nostalgia. While some of the characters are briefly nostalgic, that is not the overall tone.
Nostalgia weaves together a series of stories about loss, grief, greed and, yes, even a little nostalgia. The losses range from the aftermath of a house fire that destroyed the possessions of a lifetime,...
Credit: Bleecker Street
Nostalgia is a word that evokes a warm feeling of sentiment and sentimentality, something linked to pleasant memories of the past. Little of that warm feeling is found in the dark drama Nostalgia, an exploration of loss and complicated feelings about family and family possessions. “Loss” or “sadness” might have been a more accurate title.
“One man’s treasure is another man’s trash” seems to a central message of this sometimes moving, sometimes disturbing drama. Despite the title, there is little that is sweet or sentimental in Nostalgia. While some of the characters are briefly nostalgic, that is not the overall tone.
Nostalgia weaves together a series of stories about loss, grief, greed and, yes, even a little nostalgia. The losses range from the aftermath of a house fire that destroyed the possessions of a lifetime,...
- 2/23/2018
- by Cate Marquis
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
‘Black Panther’ Squashes Specialty Box Office, Sally Potter’s ‘The Party’ Is Best of Limited Openers
As the specialized world begins to move past a rich diet of awards contenders — still providing the bulk of the gross — films from established directors opened in New York and Los Angeles this weekend, led by British auteur Sally Potter’s “The Party” (Roadside Attractions). Mark Pellington’s “Nostalgia” (Bleecker Street), with a similar strong ensemble cast, succumbed to weak reviews.
Russian foreign-language Oscar nominee “The Loveless” (Sony Pictures Classics) opened well for a subtitled release in two cities. While Francois Ozon’s sexy “Double Love” (Cohen Media) got off to a big-city national start during the week, the result is at the low end of the French director’s films.
With all the hype on the stronger-than-average results among this year’s Oscar nominees, comic book movie “Black Panther” in its first three days totaled more than the grosses for the entire runs of even top Best Picture nominees “Dunkirk” and “Get Out.
Russian foreign-language Oscar nominee “The Loveless” (Sony Pictures Classics) opened well for a subtitled release in two cities. While Francois Ozon’s sexy “Double Love” (Cohen Media) got off to a big-city national start during the week, the result is at the low end of the French director’s films.
With all the hype on the stronger-than-average results among this year’s Oscar nominees, comic book movie “Black Panther” in its first three days totaled more than the grosses for the entire runs of even top Best Picture nominees “Dunkirk” and “Get Out.
- 2/18/2018
- by Tom Brueggemann
- Indiewire
Nobody could argue that Mark Pellington’s “Nostalgia” isn’t clear about the nature of its concern. From its mournful opening credits to its bittersweet final beat, this strange mosaic — a relatively star-studded melodrama that’s passed from one sad character to another like a baton or a bad cold — is a movie with only one thing on its mind. Of course, there’s nothing inherently wrong with a story that’s so willing to spend itself on a single idea, but nostalgia is maybe too elusive a subject for such close examination.
It’s a universal sensation — memory’s aftertaste. But it’s also one of the most intensely personal feelings we have (or pleasantly suffer through), so difficult to retrace in fiction because it requires a character to have something and lose something at the same time; to be seduced by a shadow for the sole reason that...
It’s a universal sensation — memory’s aftertaste. But it’s also one of the most intensely personal feelings we have (or pleasantly suffer through), so difficult to retrace in fiction because it requires a character to have something and lose something at the same time; to be seduced by a shadow for the sole reason that...
- 2/16/2018
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Like something you might find tucked away in an attic or a basement, Mark Pellington’s Nostalgia is a plainly personal curiosity. Handmade with care and also a touch of clumsiness, it probably means a lot to those who have lived with it, so to speak, even if there are also plenty who will look at it and see only the…
Read more...
Read more...
- 2/14/2018
- by A.A. Dowd
- avclub.com
Hating on a movie like veteran director Mark Pellington’s “Nostalgia” costs you something. It’s an achingly sincere, Proustian mosaic about grief and memory, co-written and directed by a bereaved filmmaker as a therapeutic exercise. (Pellington’s wife died suddenly in 2004, leaving him to raise their then 2-year-old daughter alone.) The film is low key and very slow, but there’s a quiet missionary zeal at work: a fervid desire to impart Big Truths about the human predicament by preaching personal epiphanies, traumatically acquired. “Nostalgia” means well. It tries hard. It wants to help. And there’s nothing at all pleasurable in stomping on...
- 2/14/2018
- by Ray Greene
- The Wrap
Nostalgia, Romans head to Efm.
Jason Moring’s Toronto-based Double Dutch International (Ddi) has come on board to handle two new sales titles in Berlin, boarding international rights to Mark Pellington’s Nostalgia and Romans starring Orlando Bloom.
Nostalgia stars Jon Hamm, Catherine Keener, Bruce Dern and Ellen Burstyn and explores the meaning of objects, artifacts and memories that shape our lives.
Pellington co-wrote the screenplay with Alex Ross Perry, who wrote the upcoming Disney release Christopher Robin, and produced the film with Tom Gorai, his collaborator on Arlington Road. Bleecker Street will release Nostalgia theatrically in North America on February 16.
Romans stars Bloom as a sex abuse survivor whose attacker reenters his life after he is hired to demolish the church where the abuse took place. The man realises forgiveness is his only viable course of action.
Cannes Young Director Award winners Ludwig and Paul Shammasian directed Romans from Geoff Thompson’s screenplay. Sheetal Vinod Talwar, Mark Lane, James...
Jason Moring’s Toronto-based Double Dutch International (Ddi) has come on board to handle two new sales titles in Berlin, boarding international rights to Mark Pellington’s Nostalgia and Romans starring Orlando Bloom.
Nostalgia stars Jon Hamm, Catherine Keener, Bruce Dern and Ellen Burstyn and explores the meaning of objects, artifacts and memories that shape our lives.
Pellington co-wrote the screenplay with Alex Ross Perry, who wrote the upcoming Disney release Christopher Robin, and produced the film with Tom Gorai, his collaborator on Arlington Road. Bleecker Street will release Nostalgia theatrically in North America on February 16.
Romans stars Bloom as a sex abuse survivor whose attacker reenters his life after he is hired to demolish the church where the abuse took place. The man realises forgiveness is his only viable course of action.
Cannes Young Director Award winners Ludwig and Paul Shammasian directed Romans from Geoff Thompson’s screenplay. Sheetal Vinod Talwar, Mark Lane, James...
- 2/11/2018
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
In the era of peak TV multi-camera sitcoms have largely fallen out of fashion. Shows like “Friends” and “Everybody Loves Raymond” filmed in front of a live studio audience have mostly given way to more cinematic-style single-camera network shows like “Modern Family” and “The Good Place” and cable comedies like “Veep” and “Atlanta.” Nostalgia is bringing some of those old classics back to the airwaves — like “Will and Grace,” “Roseanne” and “Murphy Brown” — but you don’t need to go back in time for an award-worthy multi-cam series. There’s a relatively new one on Netflix right now, “One Day at a Time,” whose second season premiered on January 26. It was mostly overlooked by the Emmys in 2017, but season two is even better, and voters have plenty of “Time” to get caught up before voting in a few months.
Okay, so “One Day at a Time” is also kind of a throwback.
Okay, so “One Day at a Time” is also kind of a throwback.
- 2/1/2018
- by Daniel Montgomery
- Gold Derby
Mark Pellington and Tom Gorai return (after 15 years apart) as a directing-producing team with the world premiere of ‘Nostalgia’. ‘Nostalgia’ touches on objects holding dear memories and explores how those holding on to them can also, when the time comes, discard them.
This emotionally charged film is a mosaic of stories about love and loss exploring relationships to the objects, artifacts, and memories that shape lives. In the telling of the stories, we are engaged with our own experiences, our collective need to find meaning in the objects we hold dear. Nostalgia is a film of rare insight and sensitivity, filled with characters as real and recognizable as your friends and neighbors. Before hearing what the stars Joe Hamm and Ellen Burstyn and writer Alex Ross Perry have to say, I present the writer-director, Mark Pellington himself in a candid and personal interview.
Mark Pellington in Palm Springs
He aptly...
This emotionally charged film is a mosaic of stories about love and loss exploring relationships to the objects, artifacts, and memories that shape lives. In the telling of the stories, we are engaged with our own experiences, our collective need to find meaning in the objects we hold dear. Nostalgia is a film of rare insight and sensitivity, filled with characters as real and recognizable as your friends and neighbors. Before hearing what the stars Joe Hamm and Ellen Burstyn and writer Alex Ross Perry have to say, I present the writer-director, Mark Pellington himself in a candid and personal interview.
Mark Pellington in Palm Springs
He aptly...
- 1/24/2018
- by Sydney Levine
- Sydney's Buzz
Few artists and activists have been has outspoken in the aftermath of the Harvey Weinstein scandal and the rise of the #MeToo movement than Rose McGowan, who has remained vocal and vigilant in the past few months in stunning ways. Next up for McGowan is a two-pronged attack by way of very personal creation: both her upcoming autobiography “Brave” and her E! docuseries “Citizen Rose” are due for release later this month.
The new series was announced just last week, and it’s already spawned an insightful and intriguing new teaser trailer that promises an inside look at McGowan’s past and the future she’s fighting so hard for.
Read More:Rose McGowan Lines Up Five-Episode E! Documentary Series to ‘Show How We Can Heal Through Art’
Per E!, the series will follow “McGowan as she readies her memoir/manifesto, ‘Brave,’ for release,” promising that “‘Citizen Rose’ is McGowan’s world: the art,...
The new series was announced just last week, and it’s already spawned an insightful and intriguing new teaser trailer that promises an inside look at McGowan’s past and the future she’s fighting so hard for.
Read More:Rose McGowan Lines Up Five-Episode E! Documentary Series to ‘Show How We Can Heal Through Art’
Per E!, the series will follow “McGowan as she readies her memoir/manifesto, ‘Brave,’ for release,” promising that “‘Citizen Rose’ is McGowan’s world: the art,...
- 1/9/2018
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Chris Longo Jan 5, 2018
David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Chris Carter and others talk about what has made The X-Files a pop culture staple...
Nobody blinks when there’s a monster lurking around the set of The X-Files. Nine seasons, two feature films, and a six-episode revival would condition any actor or crew member to treat the paranormal as just another day at the office. But what happens when a superfan invades the production?
See related The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 10 review: The Confidence Erosion The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 9 review: The Bitcoin Entanglement The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 8 review: The Tesla Recoil
In season 10, writer and director Darin Morgan cast lifelong X-Files fan Kumail Nanjiani (Silicon Valley, The Big Sick) to play a guest role as the titular creature in Mulder And Scully Meet The Were-Monster. His first night on-set, Nanjiani recalls walking through the Vancouver forest and...
David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Chris Carter and others talk about what has made The X-Files a pop culture staple...
Nobody blinks when there’s a monster lurking around the set of The X-Files. Nine seasons, two feature films, and a six-episode revival would condition any actor or crew member to treat the paranormal as just another day at the office. But what happens when a superfan invades the production?
See related The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 10 review: The Confidence Erosion The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 9 review: The Bitcoin Entanglement The Big Bang Theory season 11 episode 8 review: The Tesla Recoil
In season 10, writer and director Darin Morgan cast lifelong X-Files fan Kumail Nanjiani (Silicon Valley, The Big Sick) to play a guest role as the titular creature in Mulder And Scully Meet The Were-Monster. His first night on-set, Nanjiani recalls walking through the Vancouver forest and...
- 1/4/2018
- Den of Geek
Bleecker Street has set its first five film releases for 2018. The lineup includes What They Had, Elizabeth Chomko's debut film, based on her Nicholl-winning screenplay, starring Hilary Swank and Michael Shannon, which will bow in theaters March 16. Also dated are two Jon Hamm-starring films, Beirut and Nostalgia, as well as Tiff acquisition titles, Disobedience, with Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams, and On Chesil Beach starring Saoirse Ronan and Billy Howle. See the list…...
- 10/26/2017
- Deadline
Alex Ross Perry is an independent-film conundrum. The 32-year-old writer-director received very strong reviews for his 2015 dramatic thriller “Queen of Earth” and 2014 Sundance Film Festival entry “Listen Up Philip,” but both films were box office flops, taking in around $90,000 and $200,000, respectively.
Read More: ‘Golden Exits’ Exclusive Soundtrack: Listen to Keegan DeWitt’s Score From Alex Ross Perry’s New Film
Perry’s latest film, “Golden Exits,” premiered Sunday in U.S. Dramatic Competition at Sundance. The film follows two families in Brooklyn whose social bubble is disrupted by a visiting girl from Australia, played by Emily Browning. The ensemble cast is comprised of Jason Schwartzman, Chloë Sevigny, Mary-Louise Parker, Lily Rabe and former Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz.
The prospect of three commercial duds in a row could give any filmmaker a panic attack, but Perry has a sense of humor about his lack of box office prowess.
“It would be...
Read More: ‘Golden Exits’ Exclusive Soundtrack: Listen to Keegan DeWitt’s Score From Alex Ross Perry’s New Film
Perry’s latest film, “Golden Exits,” premiered Sunday in U.S. Dramatic Competition at Sundance. The film follows two families in Brooklyn whose social bubble is disrupted by a visiting girl from Australia, played by Emily Browning. The ensemble cast is comprised of Jason Schwartzman, Chloë Sevigny, Mary-Louise Parker, Lily Rabe and former Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz.
The prospect of three commercial duds in a row could give any filmmaker a panic attack, but Perry has a sense of humor about his lack of box office prowess.
“It would be...
- 1/27/2017
- by Graham Winfrey
- Indiewire
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