Author: business

  • Impossible’ movie ranked including ‘Final Reckoning’

    Impossible’ movie ranked including ‘Final Reckoning’

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    Sure, Tom Cruise has hung off the side of an airborne plane, driven a motorbike off a cliff, climbed a skyscraper and sprinted across rooftops to entertain the movie-loving masses. But has he dared to take on a truly harrowing assignment and put the “Mission: Impossible” movies in order from worst to best? Not so much.

    Nobody’s better as his own stuntman than Cruise, and he’s back doing things that would have mere mortals in a fetal position in “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” (in theaters May 23). In the eighth (and potentially last) film in the franchise – a spinoff of the TV show from the 1960s and ’70s – the A-lister’s superspy Ethan Hunt returns for another world-saving adventure, this time in a final faceoff with a digital supervillain.

    Since Tom hasn’t accepted the mission yet, we’re doing the “Impossible” and ranking all eight films so far. (If you need to catch up, the first seven are streaming on Paramount+, as is the old series.)

    8. ‘Mission: Impossible 2’ (2000)

    Director John Woo is an action-movie master but his “Mission” was a whiff in comparison to films like “The Killer” and “Face/Off.” When a deadly genetically modified virus and its cure are stolen by a former agent (Dougray Scott), Ethan teams up with a professional thief (Thandiwe Newton) to stop him from creating a pandemic. Oh, and did we mention she’s the bad guy’s former lover? This is a case of too much style and too little substance, as melodrama and excessive slo-mo overshadow the few explosive scenes, including a decent motorcycle chase.

    7. ‘Mission: Impossible III’ (2006)

    Director J.J. Abrams’ one crack at a “Mission” films feels almost like a danger-filled episode of “Felicity.” Ethan tries to make a somewhat normal life for himself and even gets hitched. But marital bliss goes kablooey when Ethan has to rescue a former protege (Keri Russell) and also his kidnapped new wife Julia (Michelle Monaghan), plus steal a biohazard device and further enrage his bosses. The highlight by far is a fantastically villainous turn by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman as a sadistic arms dealer.

    6. ‘Mission: Impossible’ (1996)

    It pales in comparison to a lot of what came after, yet director Brian De Palma’s continuation of the old show and its tropes (mask reveals, self-destructing messages) made the property cool again. Twists, turns and betrayals abound when Ethan is framed for the deaths of his team and has the government after him. It’s interesting in hindsight to see him as just a member of the Impossible Mission Force rather than the de facto leader, and the tension-packed sequence where Ethan breaks into a booby-trapped CIA vault from the ceiling is still an all-timer.

    5. ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning’ (2023)

    Who else but Ethan are you going to call when a rogue artificial intelligence called The Entity threatens the entire globe? Our hero is in a race to get a key that could destroy the digital baddie before it gets into the hands of countries greedy to have its power. Ethan finds a new partner in spycraft with Grace (Hayley Atwell), a skilled pickpocket, as they go on an epic car chase through Rome and a gnarly ride on the Orient Express. (Plus, Cruise pulls off a seriously impressive mountain jump from a motorbike with a memorable landing.)

    4. ‘Mission: Impossible: The Final Reckoning’ (2025)

    Bringing closure to a three-decade story arc, the installment sends Ethan and his crew all over the world, from the Arctic seas to the South African skies, to keep The Entity from causing a global apocalypse. Old faces return, new ones show up (welcome to the “Mission” club, Tramell Tillman and Hannah Waddingham!). And after a slow early going, Cruise goes ballistic in the movie’s awesome second half, spelunking a sunken submarine and pulling off some aerial derring-do that’ll have your jaw on the theater floor next to some spilled popcorn.

    3. ‘Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation’ (2015)

    The IMF gets shut down at pretty much the worst time for such a thing, just as a sinister bunch of operatives from around the world called The Syndicate have emerged to give everyone fits. Director Christopher McQuarrie begins a doozy of a run with this fifth “Mission,” where Ethan’s a fugitive, ex-MI6 agent Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson) comes into Ethan’s life and Cruise shows off his breathtaking lung capacity for a spiffy underwater rescue sequence.

    2. ‘Mission: Impossible – Fallout’ (2018)

    Cruise and Henry Cavill destroying a public bathroom during a hellacious fist fight is enough to rank “Fallout” high. But the movie, which hinges on Ethan and Co. dealing with stolen plutonium and a heinous nuclear bomb plot, has so much going for it. Cruise dangles from a helicopter and does a HALO jump from 25,000 feet in the air, Ethan’s ex Julia comes back into the picture, Ilsa is more awesome than usual, and a mustached Cavill plays a double agent no one would want to stare down.

    1. ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’ (2011)

    Director Brad Bird’s lone “Mission” was a game-changer for the franchise and set the stage for the spy intrigue, interesting ensembles and death-defying stunt work that would become the series’ hallmarks. After Ethan gets blamed for an explosion at the Kremlin, his crew is tasked with preventing the use of stolen nuclear launch codes and staving off a showdown between America and Russia. The characters and plot pop, and Cruise scales the 163-story Burj Khalifa in Dubai for a bit that’s important to the narrative but that also made us all as a culture say, “This dude is nuts, but we love him anyway.”

  • Bono talks new doc ‘Bono: Stories of Surrender’Entertain This!

    Bono talks new doc ‘Bono: Stories of Surrender’Entertain This!

    Bono talks new doc ‘Bono: Stories of Surrender’Entertain This!

  • Wes Anderson questions Donald Trump’s movie tariff proposal in Cannes

    Wes Anderson questions Donald Trump’s movie tariff proposal in Cannes

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    Wes Anderson has some questions about President Donald Trump’s proposed film tariff.

    During a Cannes Film Festival press conference for his latest movie “The Phoenician Scheme,” the Oscar-winning director reacted to the president’s plan to institute a 100% tariff on movies produced outside of the United States.

    Anderson, who shot “The Phoenician Scheme” in Germany, expressed confusion about how such a tariff would work logistically.

    “Can you hold up the movie in customs?” he asked. “It doesn’t ship that way.”

    While Anderson noted he is not an expert on the subject, he called Trump’s announcement “fascinating” and voiced surprise at the idea of a 100% tariff, saying, “I feel that means he’s saying he’s going to take all the money, and then what do we get?”

    But the “Moonrise Kingdom” filmmaker said he wanted to “hold off on my official answer” until he hears the details of the plan.

    After Trump’s social media post announcing his film tariff proposal sparked widespread confusion in the entertainment industry, the White House appeared to walk the announcement back, saying that “no final decisions” had been made.

    Trump had said on his social media platform Truth Social that he would authorize the Commerce Department “to immediately begin the process” of instituting the tariff because “the Movie Industry in America is DYING a very fast death,” adding that other countries “are offering all sorts of incentives to draw our filmmakers and studios away from the United States.”

    Trump’s proposal also came up during a Cannes press conference for Richard Linklater’s new film “Nouvelle Vague,” which was shot in France. But the “Boyhood” director said he doubts that the president’s plan will ever come to pass.

    “That’s not going to happen, right?” Linklater said. “The guy changes his mind like 50 times in one day.”

    Outside of Cannes, Tom Cruise was asked about Trump’s tariff proposal during a “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” event earlier this month but declined to engage in the topic, saying, “We’d rather answer questions about the movie.”

    Alex Jacquez, chief of policy and advocacy at the economic think tank Groundwork Collaborative and a former White House National Economic Council official during the Biden administration, previously told USA TODAY that Trump’s “tossed-off idea” is “nonsensical” and “not serious policy.”

    Contributing: Brian Truitt

  • Meghan Markle shares new photos of Prince Harry marriage

    Meghan Markle shares new photos of Prince Harry marriage

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    Duchess Meghan is offering an intimate glimpse at her love story with Prince Harry as the pair mark seven years of marriage.

    “Seven years of marriage. A lifetime of stories,” the duchess wrote in an Instagram caption alongside a photo of a corkboard decorated with shots of the couple throughout their courtship, engagement and marriage.

    Some of the shots are from the couple’s royal engagement in 2017, while others show Meghan pregnant, or the pair alongside their two children, Archie, 6, and Lilibet, 3. Many depict the couple embracing, whether on a California beach or in Botswana, where they traveled early in their relationship.

    “Thanks to all of you (whether by our side, or from afar) who have loved and supported us throughout our love story – we appreciate you,” the duchess wrote. “Happy anniversary!” The post was overlayed with the song “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles),” a 1980s hit from The Proclaimers.

    Meghan and Prince Harry first tied the knot in May 2018 in an ornate ceremony at Windsor Castle in the United Kingdom. Only the second time a member of the British monarchy has married an American, the union was met with manic fanfare on both sides of the pond.

    Meghan, an actress best known for the legal serial “Suits,” proved a complicated addition to the royal family as rumors of internal conflict swirled and a racist tabloid backlash grew.

    After working for several years as principal royals, the pair officially stepped back from their senior duties as part of a bitter family dispute that saw the couple move out of the U.K. and back to Meghan’s native California.

    Since then, the two have carved out a new path: settling in the Montecito hills to raise their two children and venturing into the entertainment space.

    Prince Harry authored a tell-all memoir, and Meghan recently launched a bevy of new projects, including a cooking show on Netflix, a podcast and a much-talked-about lifestyle brand.

    In a recent appearance on the “Jamie Kern Lima Show,” the duchess gushed about her relationship with Harry, whom she calls H.

    “There is something that is not something to be taken for granted when you have a partner, a spouse, who is just so behind you,” she said. “H, that man loves me so much. Look what we’ve built? We have a beautiful life, we have two healthy, beautiful children.

    “He’s constantly going to do whatever he can to make sure that our family is safe and protected, and we’re uplifted and still make time for date nights,” she continued.

  • Watch new scene from Stephen King movie

    Watch new scene from Stephen King movie

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    Based on the Stephen King novella, the upcoming movie “The Life of Chuck” features everything from an end-of-the-world scenario to multiple dance sequences. You can’t pigeonhole it with a genre, but what’s undeniable is the film’s big, life-affirming heart.

    Director Mike Flanagan’s movie (in select theaters June 6, nationwide June 13) chronicles the life of a seemingly ordinary accountant named Charles Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) over three acts, in reverse chronological order. USA TODAY debuts a touching exclusive scene from the movie’s final act, where young Chuck (Benjamin Pajak) asks his sixth-grade English teacher, Miss Richards (Kate Siegel), what the line “I contain multitudes” means in Walt Whitman’s poem “Song of Myself.”

    Her elegant answer is “a microcosm of what this movie is about,” Siegel tells USA TODAY, and there’s “something profoundly human” about this “pivotal” moment in the movie.

    “In saying that Chuck contains multitudes, that this little kid has a whole world that will grow, it means that every other person on the planet also contains multitudes,” Siegel says. “Chuck is the most important person in the universe and also completely insignificant at the same time. And that feeling is what it means to be human, to feel utterly important and centered and also to be part of a huge whole where every human being contains a universe.”

    Four actors play Chuck over the course of the movie: In addition to Hiddleston and Pajak, Jacob Tremblay inhabits the character’s older teenage years while Cody Flanagan, Siegel’s son with husband Mike Flanagan, is the youngest Chuck as a little boy.

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    ‘The Life of Chuck’: Tom Hiddleston headlines Stephen King movie

    Based on a Stephen King novella, “The Life of Chuck” chronicles the life of accountant Charles Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) in three acts told in reverse.

    So in that scene where Miss Richards holds Chuck’s head and face, “it felt a bit like I was talking to my son of the future,” Siegel says. “And that added a whole other layer knowing that on some level, my son is a part of Chuck. It brought a ton of empathy to me just kind of organically.”

    Now 8, Cody “of course” wants to be an actor, Siegel reports. “This kid had more confidence than I’ve had in 20 years of an acting career. He’s just like talking to his dad, being like, ‘I think I need lines here.’ And I was just so proud of him.

    “Every day now, he says to me, ‘Mom, when am I going to get an agent?’ And I say the same thing: ‘When you turn 18.’ “

  • Diddy trial sketches: Internet reacts

    Diddy trial sketches: Internet reacts

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    Amid Sean “Diddy” Combs’ federal sex-crimes trial, the public’s only look into the court proceedings is courtroom sketches.

    A centuries-old method of capturing key moments and figures in high-profile proceedings, sketch artists are hired by news agencies to quickly draw what they see as trials unfold.

    Because Combs faces federal criminal charges (for sex trafficking and racketeering), the presence of “electronic media” like cameras is expressly banned, due to a procedural rule passed in 1946. State courts tend to be more flexible.

    As a result, illustrators like Jane Rosenberg for Reuters and Elizabeth Williams for The Associated Press, as well as the reporters taking handwritten notes from inside the courtroom, provide the only accounts from the trial.

    Internet skewers courtroom sketches: ‘A different vibe’

    Being the only window to the trial is apparently a thankless job, though, as many people online have ripped into the images coming out of the courtroom.

    “The Diddy trial sketches are killing me,” an X user wrote with a laughing emoji, while another wrote: “Diddy court sketches really give this trial a different vibe.”

    “The Diddy courtroom sketches are prime meme material,” one user added.

    One X user was particularly harsh: “The Diddy sketch artist needs to be put on trial next.”

    Courtroom sketching is a dying art, though, that isn’t necessarily going for accuracy.

    “It’s not always about drawing the most perfect, beautiful picture,” Elizabeth Williams, a sketch artist in President Donald Trump’s hush money trial, told NPR in 2024. “It’s about trying to draw the most honest and true and real moment, so people can understand what’s going on in that courtroom.”

    Contributing: Anna Kaufman

  • 'The Life of Chuck': Check out a heartwarming exclusive sceneMovies

    'The Life of Chuck': Check out a heartwarming exclusive sceneMovies

    ‘The Life of Chuck’: Check out a heartwarming exclusive sceneMovies

  • 'The Life of Chuck': Tom Hiddleston headlines Stephen King movieMovies

    'The Life of Chuck': Tom Hiddleston headlines Stephen King movieMovies

    ‘The Life of Chuck’: Tom Hiddleston headlines Stephen King movieMovies

  • Bono talks ‘Stories of Surrender’, new U2 ‘sounds like the future’

    Bono talks ‘Stories of Surrender’, new U2 ‘sounds like the future’

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    Bono turns his head and pulls off his tinted glasses, the profile of his aquiline nose and hint of stubble on his chin drawing your attention.

    “If I turn to the left, I’m younger,” he says over a video call. “And that’s the person who played Bono.”

    He twists his neck the other direction, the shimmering ocean of the French Riviera behind him.

    “If I turn to the right, I’m older. I’m the person who played my father,” he says. “For such a demonstrative performer as I am with U2, (I learned) that just turning your head is enough.”

    Bono is seated in a hotel suite in Cannes, preparing for the city’s famed film festival to premiere “Bono: Stories of Surrender” the next night. It’s set to debut on Apple+ on May 30.

    It’s a striking film – black and white and exceedingly vivid – and, like the memoir it pulls from, “Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story,” is alternately stirring and poignant, heartbreaking and wickedly funny and, as with all things Bono, deeply philosophical in an Irish-bloke-knocking-back-pints-at-the-pub kind of way.

    Before the book became the film, it inspired Bono’s one-man stage show, “Stories of Surrender: An Evening of Words, Music and Some Mischief…,” performed in select cities around the world in 2022-23, including a mini-residency at the Beacon Theatre in New York.

    In his 25 performances, Bono – one of the most mega of music stars on the planet – played to intimate theater crowds a fraction of the size of the stadiums U2 commands and learned that sometimes the most gripping props are an empty chair and a spotlight.

    “There’s a sense of undressing yourself in taking off the armor and your sword and your shield and just letting people in,” Bono, 65, says. “I can pull off the swagger. I can do the macho thing. I’m Irish. I can give you lots of that. But at this point, I just thought it would be better to be closer to who I am when I’m at my most insecure, I suppose.”

    Bono says he’s ‘done singing about all the dead people I was close to’

    Throughout the almost 90-minute film, Bono touches on the tenets of family, music, faith and charity.

    He opens with the devastating and dramatic tale of his 2016 surgery to repair a potentially fatal aortic aneurysm, leaping on a table that will become symbolic for many reasons in the show. He shares the unfathomable story of his mother collapsing at her father’s funeral and dying that day from an aneurysm when Bono was only 14.

    Close-ups of his visage amplify the lived-in lines that crease around his eyes when he smiles. “The face, after a while, it just is a map. It tells a story of where you’ve been,” Bono says from France, adding that director Andrew Dominik encouraged him to embrace his sincerity by reminding him, “The lens will know if you’re lying.”

    He weaves in U2 songs including “Vertigo,” “City of Blinding Lights,” “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “Where The Streets Have No Name,” reimagined inventively by producer Jacknife Lee, who plays in the onstage shadows along with cellist Kate Ellis and harpist Gemma Doherty. Using empty chairs as stand-ins, Bono unwraps his U2 mates Larry Mullen Jr., Adam Clayton and his brother in all but name, the Edge.

    But the star of the show isn’t Bono, says Bono. It’s his father, Bob Hewson, whose emotional distance and hard-shelled manner shaped his son.

    “He’s got all the best lines!” Bono says with a smile before imitating Bob, who died in 2001, bellowing at him as a teenager, as he does with that subtle head turn in the show. “ ‘You. You’re the baritone who thinks he’s a tenor,’ ” Bono sneers before pulling out of character.

    “I ended up, as much as loving my father, I ended up liking him,” Bono says. “That’s a beautiful thing, to end up closer to him. My mother, I’ve always felt close to. I’d just wished I’d known her and because my father or any of us never spoke of her after she passed, I lost all of those memories. The book was an attempt to retrieve memories of her and I’m still getting some of them returned to me.”

    He leans back and clasps his hands with a slight laugh.

    “But I think I’m done now singing about my dead ma and my dead da, all the dead people I was close to. Edge says, ‘Nostalgia is a thing of the past, Bono.’ And I agree. U2 are getting ready for the future and this is, well, a privilege to be given a chance to record this most intimate story that, in a way, the band wrote. Edge wrote this story. Larry, Adam, (wife) Ali wrote this story, not just my father and mother. So now it’s time to face the future and dance.”

    New U2 music ‘sounds like the future’

    That future for U2 has ignited anticipation from fans eager to hear what the band creates, now a year removed from their groundbreaking residency to open the Las Vegas Sphere.

    Mullen, who was sidelined for the Vegas run to recover from neck surgery, is “back from his injuries, that’s for sure,” Bono says. “I’ve never seen him play like this. He’s at his most innovative, I would say.”

    While there is no timeline or specific blueprint about the stylistic leanings the band is crafting, Bono mentions “the songs we’re making presently sound like the future.”

    Edge, he says, is “determined to take the guitar into the future.” And as for Clayton, Bono jokes that U2 has to make another record “just to get Adam off Gardeners’ World,” the long-running BBC gardening show where Clayton showcased his shovel skills last year.

    Bono shares an anecdote that he was standing next to Clayton when the latter received a text from JJ Burnel, a punk legend and bassist for the London band the Stranglers. U2, it turns out, played on a bill with the band in the ‘70s, but because Burnel refused to wear a button stating “U2 can happen to anyone,” Bono and the boys robbed their dressing room.

    Bono cackles at the memory.

    “JJ was a tough guy and a genius bass player and he’s texting Adam 40 years later to say, ‘So excited to see you on Gardeners’ World tonight.’ I said to Adam, ‘this is a long way from punk rock,’” Bono says. “And Adam went, ‘No, it isn’t. Doing precisely what you want to do is the most punk rock thing we can do.’ ”

  • Why Misa Hylton attended ex Diddy's sex-crimes trialCelebrities

    Why Misa Hylton attended ex Diddy's sex-crimes trialCelebrities

    Why Misa Hylton attended ex Diddy’s sex-crimes trialCelebrities