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Tuwaine Barrett

7 New Movies & TV Shows on Paramount+ in May 2025
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When you purchase through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Paramount+ is ready with an entertainment-packed May this year. The upcoming month will see the premiere of the much-anticipated new season of Showtime’s The Chi and the return of Paramount+’s Criminal Minds. Just like every month, Paramount+ is ready to overload you with great content. So, we’re here to tell you about the 7 best movies and TV shows coming to Paramount+ in May 2025.

Titles with an * will only be available with the Paramount+ with Showtime plan.

Just Friends (May 1) Credit – New Line Cinema

Just Friends is a Christmas romantic dark comedy film directed by Roger Kumble from a screenplay by Adam ‘Tex’ Davis. The 2005 film follows Chris Brander, a formerly obese high schooler who goes through a transformation, and when he returns to his hometown, he tries to get back his former best friend and crush,...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 4/30/2025
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
Hard Truths
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There is no filmmaker alive who understands the mundanity and quiet grace of the human experience quite like Mike Leigh. Over a decades-spanning career he’s found poetry and pathos in the everyday business of being alive. From David Thewlis’ nihilistic Johnny in Naked to Sally Hawkins’ irrepressibly effervescent Poppy in Happy-Go-Lucky, his characters feel intensely real while also reflecting a subdued desperation at the heart of British society.

After taking on a larger canvas with Peterloo, Leigh makes a welcome return to intimate character studies with Hard Truths, shooting in a stripped-down style that echoes the television films that made his name. He reunites with Marianne Jean-Baptiste, who he directed in the Palme d’Or-winning Secrets & Lies, and who here gives a truly astonishing performance as a woman who cannot articulate her abject misery.

An affecting portrait of a woman in crisis

Pansy (Jean-Baptiste) constantly lashes out at everyone around her,...
See full article at Empire - Movies
  • 1/28/2025
  • by Laura Venning
  • Empire - Movies
Hard Truths (2025) – Review
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Although the big family holiday celebrations are nearly a month in the past, there’s always a need for a new look at sibs, parents, and kids at the movies. This new release is set across the pond and concerns connected family units headed by two sisters who couldn’t be more different. It’s that whole “sweet and sour” dynamic at play here. It’s also funny, sad, and totally engaging thanks to the reunion of a celebration filmmaker and one of his greatest actresses/collaborators after nearly three decades. This time out they’re giving us an intimate look at a damaged soul who really needs to deal with some Hard Truths.

The film’s story begins on a quiet street in a London neighborhood. It’s early on a sunny Spring-like day as a young man on a bicycle meets up with his boss as the enter...
See full article at WeAreMovieGeeks.com
  • 1/18/2025
  • by Jim Batts
  • WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Audio Film Review: Whole of Anger in Mike Leigh’s ‘Hard Truths’
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Chicago – Patrick McDonald of HollywoodChicago.com audio film review for the new film “Hard Truths,” written and directed by notable British filmmaker Mike Leigh (“Happy-Go-Lucky’), an urgent character study on how one woman’s angry depressive state affects her entire family. In select theaters since January 10th. See local listings

Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) is the mother in a family of three, including her husband Curtley (David Webber) and adult son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett). Pansy is constantly angry or withdrawn, lashing out at her family and her loyal sister Chantelle (Michele Austin). Her anger is a poison in the well of her relationships, and as she slides further down the depressive rabbit hole … exacerbated by a visit to her dead mother’s grave … she risks all of her relationships.

”Hard Truths” is in select theaters since January 10th. See local listings. Featuring Marianne Jean-Baptiste, David Webber, Tuwaine Barrett, Michele Austin and Jonathan Livingstone.
See full article at HollywoodChicago.com
  • 1/12/2025
  • by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
  • HollywoodChicago.com
Hard Truths Review: Emotionally Draining Drama Boasts An Oscar-Worthy Marianne Jean-Baptiste
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This review was originally published on September 9, 2024, as a part of our Toronto International Film Festival coverage.

In Hard Truths, Mike Leigh's beautifully humane drama, the writer-director takes us into the lives of an ordinary British Jamaican family with the easily bothered, miserable Pansy at the center. Starring a ferocious and convincing Marianne Jean-Baptiste in an Oscar-worthy performance, Pansy finds a way to quarrel with everyone. The film concentrates little on plot structure and instead slowly peels back the layers of its characters and challenges us to rethink what we know about our elders. Inherently, witnessing a woman propel insults at people is humorous, but sadness layers the script, making it deeply moving.

Hard Truths, released in 2025, is set in post-covid London and follows Pansy, a working-class Black woman dealing with the aftermath of global panic, navigating a fractured psyche amid ongoing personal and societal challenges.

Director Mike LeighRelease...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/10/2025
  • by Patrice Witherspoon
  • ScreenRant
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‘Hard Truths’ Makes a Case for the Miserable — and Marianne Jean-Baptiste’s Greatness
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Everyone has a Pansy Deacon in their life, or has at least encountered someone a lot like her at their job, a get-together, or simply railing against something or someone in a public place. She’s the type of person to find a storm cloud behind every silver lining, to see every glass of water as half full yet also containing an abundance of flesh-eating bacteria. When she unleashes a tsunami of accusations and verbal abuse on whatever her target is — her family, a salesperson, an unlucky someone stuck behind...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 1/9/2025
  • by David Fear
  • Rollingstone.com
Where To Watch Hard Truths: Showtimes & Streaming Status
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Hard Truths is the latest movie by acclaimed filmmaker Mike Leigh, with options available for audiences to view it. Mike Leigh is an English writer and director who's been making original films since the 1980s, including critically acclaimed masterpieces like Naked and Secrets & Lies. Hard Truths premiered at 2024's Toronto International Film Festival, where Screen Rant's review praised its outstanding, Academy Award-worthy performances and hard-hitting, emotional script. With the Oscars coming up soon, Hard Truths is a movie to keep an eye out for.

Marianne Jean-Baptiste leads the cast of Hard Truths as Pansy, a woman suffering from mental health issues who takes her anger out on family and friends. Despite everything, her sister, Chantelle (Michele Austin), stands by her and supports her. Mike Leigh's new movie is about family and the shaky connections that bind human beings in the modern world. The film has been praised for...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/7/2025
  • by Charles Papadopoulos
  • ScreenRant
“We Discover What the Film Is When We Watch It”: Marianne Jean-Baptiste on Hard Truths
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Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths is a study in contracts. At the center of the tale are two sisters, Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) and Chantelle (Michele Austin), who are as dissimilar as possible. While Chantelle, a hairdresser and single mother of two adult daughters, has a cheerful outlook on life, Pansy is brash, gruff and downright mean toward everyone she encounters—from strangers in the grocery store and the local furniture shop to her detached husband Curtley (David Webber) and reclusive son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett). Over the course of 100 minutes, it’s easy to despise Pansy because of her shockingly short temper and […]

The post “We Discover What the Film Is When We Watch It”: Marianne Jean-Baptiste on Hard Truths first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
See full article at Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
  • 12/13/2024
  • by Tyler Coates
  • Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
“We Discover What the Film Is When We Watch It”: Marianne Jean-Baptiste on Hard Truths
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Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths is a study in contracts. At the center of the tale are two sisters, Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) and Chantelle (Michele Austin), who are as dissimilar as possible. While Chantelle, a hairdresser and single mother of two adult daughters, has a cheerful outlook on life, Pansy is brash, gruff and downright mean toward everyone she encounters—from strangers in the grocery store and the local furniture shop to her detached husband Curtley (David Webber) and reclusive son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett). Over the course of 100 minutes, it’s easy to despise Pansy because of her shockingly short temper and […]

The post “We Discover What the Film Is When We Watch It”: Marianne Jean-Baptiste on Hard Truths first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
See full article at Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
  • 12/13/2024
  • by Tyler Coates
  • Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
If Marianne Jean-Baptiste Doesn’t Get an Oscar Nomination for ‘Hard Truths,’ This Whole System Is Broken
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If Marianne Jean-Baptiste doesn’t get an Oscar nomination for Best Actress for “Hard Truths,” then what the hell are we even doing here?

Her performance as Pansy — a depressed, middle-aged Jamaican-born Londoner who spews the hate in her heart on all the world — is a tower of acting. It’s a crowded field for Best Actress contenders this year: Mikey Madison, Karla Sofía Gascón, Nicole Kidman, Demi Moore, Angelina Jolie, Cynthia Erivo, and, of course, Jean-Baptiste, who did not score a Golden Globe nomination Monday for “Hard Truths.” It’s not a movie that feels very Golden Globes, which went more for flashier films and musicals over Leigh’s pared-down, five-character drama. The Globes are mostly journalists, after all, though the telecast is always good exposure for voters tuning in.

Whatever Jean-Baptiste’s awards fate, the actress who broke out with a Best Supporting Actress nomination in 1997 for Mike Leigh...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 12/10/2024
  • by Ryan Lattanzio
  • Indiewire
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In 2024, pregnancy horror gave way to mothers who are fed up and worn out
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As the U.S. prepares for another four years of Trump presidency, issues surrounding abortion access and the future of women’s bodily autonomy are at the forefront of everyone’s mind. Naturally, as these discussions reached a fever pitch outside of the studio lots, they also bled into the cinematic narratives of this year,...
See full article at avclub.com
  • 12/9/2024
  • by Nadira Begum
  • avclub.com
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Marianne Jean-Baptiste rages against Hard Truths in bold, biting drama
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In 2008, filmmaker Mike Leigh released Happy-Go-Lucky, a bright and breezy comedy (as alluded to by its title) that still managed to have the occasional dramatic bite. Hard Truths provides the antithesis, a film about sisters that plays as an unsettling social drama full of tears, bitterness, and familial consternation, but...
See full article at avclub.com
  • 12/4/2024
  • by Jason Gorber
  • avclub.com
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Marianne Jean-Baptiste on not knowing she was the ‘Hard Truths’ lead until seeing it, Mike Leigh’s unique writing style
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Oscar nominee Angela Bassett and Oscar winner Sam Rockwell hosted a private screening for Mike Leigh‘s “Hard Truths” at the Linwood Dunn Theater in LA Tuesday night. The audience filled with Academy members, press, and other invited guests gave actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste a standing ovation as she sat down with film critic and podcaster Kate Walsh for a post-screening Q & A.

Reunited with Leigh for the first time since she earned an Oscar nomination for “Secrets & Lies,” Jean-Baptiste plays Pansy, a woman wracked by fear, tormented by afflictions, and prone to raging tirades against her husband, son, and anyone who looks her way. The film may sound dark, and there are plenty heavy moments, but there is also an abundance of laughter as the actress delivers one zinger after the next aimed at whoever stands in front of her.

The actress described that Leigh’s writing process is...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 11/13/2024
  • by Denton Davidson
  • Gold Derby
Mike Leigh
Hard Truths (2024) ‘Philadelphia Film Festival’ Movie Review: An Angry, Devastating Cry For Compassion Is Mike Leigh’s Best In Years
Mike Leigh
If there’s one overarching theme within all of Mike Leigh’s films, it is a sense of naturalism. Leigh is a patient filmmaker who lets scenes play out to their fullest extent and does not conform to traditional narrative structures that impede the authenticity of what he is capturing. This general style has allowed Leigh to approach radically different topics, such as a tortured anti-hero in “Naked,” the London Opera in “Topsy-Turvy,” or a legendary British painter in “Mr. Turner.” With his latest work “Hard Truths,” Leigh turns his sights on the epidemic of anger that has seemingly swept the world over the past decade.

The notion of a filmmaker of Leigh’s experience reflecting on the generational divide could have easily been misconstrued as an embittered, older artist lashing out at a world that he no longer recognizes. However, “Hard Truths” doesn’t condemn just one generation, cultural shift,...
See full article at High on Films
  • 10/23/2024
  • by Liam Gaughan
  • High on Films
Mike Leigh Planning To Shoot Next Movie In 2025
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Exclusive: Octogenerian Mike Leigh isn’t slowing down in terms of output. The acclaimed British filmmaker is currently enjoying strong notices for new film Hard Truths, which recently debuted at TIFF and is playing this week at the London Film Festival.

Leigh took part in a Deadline Contenders panel in London this morning during which he dismissed any talk of retirement and confirmed that he is planning to shoot another movie next year.

“We’re planning to make the next movie in 2025. We’re raising the money now.”

The seven-time Oscar nominee wouldn’t be drawn on the subject or creatives involved in the project but Leigh often works with a team including producer Georgina Lowe and DoP Dick Pope.

In a recent interview Leigh admitted that the filmmaking process has become more physically challenging: “It’s a challenge physically. My cinematographer, Dick Pope, who I’ve worked with ever since Life Is Sweet,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 10/12/2024
  • by Andreas Wiseman and Baz Bamigboye
  • Deadline Film + TV
‘Hard Truths’: Mike Leigh Is Having an ‘Increasingly Difficult’ Time Getting Films Made, but He’s Not Stopping
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Mike Leigh is moving slowly around the Toronto International Film Festival with a cane. His latest film, “Hard Truths” has earned raves and plays the New York Film Festival October 5. The 81-year-old British filmmaker, Oscar-nominated five times for writing and twice for directing has struggled to raise money for his projects since his $18-million period battle epic “Peterloo” (Amazon) flopped at the box office in 2018 ($2 million worldwide).

“Hard Truths” was delayed by the pandemic, but Bleecker Street and a group of European backers cobbled together a modest budget, Leigh’s lowest in some time, for the small-scale film focused on the astonishing character of Pansy (“Secrets & Lies” Oscar nominee Marianne Jean-Baptiste), a woman of Jamaican heritage who is so miserable that her massive pain and anger leak out on anyone unlucky enough to be near her, from her hapless husband (David Webber) and son (Tuwaine Barrett) to people in...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 10/5/2024
  • by Anne Thompson
  • Indiewire
‘Hard Truths’ Review: Mike Leigh’s Compassionate Portrait of a Woman on the Brink
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Few filmmakers can electrify the mundane as convincingly as Mike Leigh, whose trademark style—broadly characterized by discreet pacing and stripped-back storylines—belies a meticulous narrative rigor. Born from a well-documented process of intense rehearsal and improvisation with a cadre of trusted actors, Leigh’s scripts are astonishingly precise in their character work, spinning knotty, elaborate webs of tension out of generally unremarkable scenarios, such as drinks with a co-worker, or a weekly driving lesson. Implicitly, the films demand close attention. Blink and you may miss someone baring their soul.

Hard Truths, then, arrives as something of a challenge. Its central character, Pansy, isn’t particularly easy to sit with. In fact, she may be the most hard-bitten lead in Leigh’s entire roster. Nary a moment passes without her loudly, viciously slinging insults at anyone who crosses her path, be it her aptly named husband, Curtley (David Webber), her soft-spoken son,...
See full article at Slant Magazine
  • 10/5/2024
  • by Cole Kronman
  • Slant Magazine
Mike Leigh
Keeping it real by Amber Wilkinson
Mike Leigh
Mike Leigh and Marianne Jean-Baptiste at the San Sebastian press conference Photo: Amber Wilkinson Veteran filmmaker Mike Leigh and the star of his latest film, Hard Truths, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, have been in San Sebastian this week, where the film - which focuses on a mum with mental health issues and her family - is screening in Competition. She plays Pansy, a harried middle-aged woman who is angry at the world, not to mention her 22-year-old son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett) and husband Curtley (David Webber). She’s also tired of it, as she repeatedly tells her hairdresser sister Chantelle (Michele Austin), who is a force of warmth against the fierce misanthropy of Pansy.

Marianne Jean-Baptiste in Mike Leigh's Hard Truths Photo: Courtesy of San Sebastian Film Festival It’s 28 years since the pair of them collaborated on Secrets & Lies and, at the press conference, I asked whether that might make...
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 9/27/2024
  • by Amber Wilkinson
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
Toronto Film Festival 2024: All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews
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The Toronto Film Festival kicked off September 5 with a multi-move opening night that included David Gordon Green’s family comedy Nutcrackers starring Ben Stiller. It kicked off a slate of world premieres and buzzy movies across 11 days for the 49th edition of one of North America’s biggest film festivals.

Other key titles making their debuts in Toronto included The Luckiest Man in America starring Paul Walter Hauser, the Amy Adams-starring Nightbitch, theater guru Marianne Elliott’s The Salt Path, DreamWorks Animation’s The Wild Robot and Mike Flanagan’s The Life of Chuck, which won the coveted People’s Choice Award.

Documentaries that made a splash included Elton John: Never Too Late and Paul Anka: His Way.

Click below to read Deadline’s reviews from the ground in Toronto, where the festival wrappred September 15.

The Assessment ‘The Assessment’

Section: Special Presentations

Director: Fleur Fortune

Cast: Alicia Vikander, Elizabeth Olsen,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/17/2024
  • by Pete Hammond, Damon Wise and Matthew Carey
  • Deadline Film + TV
Hard Truths Trailer: Marianne Jean-Baptiste Is A Woman On The Edge In Darkly Comic Mike Leigh Drama
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28 years after their Palme d'Or winning collaboration on the extraordinary Secrets & Lies, director Mike Leigh and actor Marianne Jean-Baptiste have reunited on Leigh's upcoming new slice of social realist drama, Hard Truths. A return to modern times for Leigh after a twofer of period pieces (Mr. Turner and Peterloo), the legendary British filmmaker's latest — which sees Jean-Baptiste star as Pansy, a woman ever on the verge of a scathing rant, a breakdown, or possibly both — looks like a darkly comic, emotionally resonant, fiercely human piece of cinema driven by an ensemble of acting powerhouses. Or, as we like to call it, a Mike Leigh film. Check out the trailer below to find out what's getting Pansy's goat in the new movie:

A supermarket bust-up, an ostrich-based insult, and an admonishment of "cheerful, grinning people" all within the trailer's first 30 seconds? Yeah, we're thinking Jean-Baptiste and Leigh are back. But...
See full article at Empire - Movies
  • 9/12/2024
  • by Jordan King
  • Empire - Movies
Marianne Jean-Baptiste is Worthy of Another Trip to the Oscars for Her Brilliant, Biting Performance in Mike Leigh’s ‘Hard Truths’
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It shouldn’t be hard for “Hard Truths” to get some Oscar love, but that doesn’t mean it won’t be.

British actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste delivers an emotionally charged performance in Mike Leigh’s powerful drama. She portrays a woman on the verge of mental collapse, navigating her life with a volatile mix of vulnerability and rage. Whether interacting with a furniture store clerk, her sister, or her husband and child, Jean-Baptiste commands the screen for nearly every one of the film’s 97 minutes, taking the audience on a turbulent emotional ride. But that can be a lot for moviegoers to handle. Hopefully, the searing nature of the performance won’t prevent voters from nominating her for best lead actress at this year’s Academy Awards.

In order for that to happen, Bleecker Street, the film’s distributor, will need strong word-of-mouth to keep the drama Jean-Baptiste and “Hard Truths” in the awards conversation.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Clayton Davis
  • Variety Film + TV
Breaking Baz: Marianne Jean-Baptiste And Mike Leigh Reunite 28 Years After ‘Secrets & Lies’ With ‘Hard Truths’: Her Character Pansy’s Petals Reveal A Complex Personality—Toronto Film Festival
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Marianne Jean-Baptiste says that she’s playing “the ultimate Karen” in Mike Leigh’s new film Hard Truths. The character’s name is, actually, Pansy. The horticulturalists at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, just outside of London, describe the Pansy flower as a symbol for “humanism.”

That’s not a description Jean-Baptiste would recognize in the Pansy she plays in the movie.

She smiles as she relates how the character she and Leigh created after intense discussion and rehearsal “as a combination of five different women, all of whom had the milk of human kindness removed from them.”

That’s a perfect summation of Pansy, a fastidious woman, who keeps the North London house she shares with her plumber husband Curtley (David Webber) and Moses (Tuwaine Barrett) as their unmotivated son, spotlessly clean.

She’s particularly fixated on polishing her leather couch.

Her family, including her sister Chantel, played by Michele Austin,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Baz Bamigboye
  • Deadline Film + TV
TIFF Review: Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths is a Work of Knotty Dramaturgy and Patient Form
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Mike Leigh is nothing if not an expert at conceiving (in conjunction with talented actors) a certain kind of larger-than-life character. Well, larger-than-life within the context of a realist drama. Think of Johnny in Naked, the revolting and terminally ranting man, or Poppy in Happy-Go-Lucky, a young woman perpetually optimistic to the point of threatening her own safety. They are not necessarily the people you meet every day, but they articulate the very real worlds that Leigh creates, often as forms of social criticism.

Hard Truths introduces the newest character in this canon: Pansy (Marianne Jean-Baptise). The mother figure in a working-class family that includes the stoic tradesman Curtley (David Webber) and layabout 22-year-old son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett), her life seems a nonstop series of indignities both emotional and physical. Flying off the handle with zingers at every person she can––be it her family, service workers, or doctors simply...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Ethan Vestby
  • The Film Stage
‘Hard Truths’ Review: Marianne Jean-Baptiste Gives a Colossal Performance in Mike Leigh’s Small but Spiky Drama
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Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Bleecker Street releases “Hard Truths” in theaters on Friday, December 6.

In 2008, Mike Leigh made a movie called “Happy-Go-Lucky,” in which Sally Hawkins played a school teacher named Poppy who was so irrepressibly buoyant and upbeat that her joy seemed like a taunting provocation to the misery of the world around her. Sixteen years later, the filmmaker returns to similar territory with “Hard Truths,” a searing but indivisibly empathetic drama about a British Jamaican woman so wretched that it might as well be called “Misery-Go-Fuck-Yourself.”

Pansy is to Poppy what Samuel L. Jackson’s Mr. Glass was to David Dunn — the existence of one implies the existence of the other. They will never cross paths, much as all of Leigh’s characters seem to occupy a shared universe that so honestly resembles our own, but if they...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/7/2024
  • by David Ehrlich
  • Indiewire
‘Hard Truths’ Review: You Can’t Help but Love a Bitter Marianne Jean-Baptiste in Mike Leigh’s Slender Sketch
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Some people bring happiness and positivity into the world, uplifting the lives of all around them, and some make flowers wilt and milk curdle wherever they go. As Pansy, Marianne Jean-Baptiste embodies the latter sort in “Hard Truths,” coming away from her reunion with “Secrets & Lies” director Mike Leigh with her richest character yet — not economically speaking, of course, though we’d all be millionaires if we had a nickel for every blistering complaint that spills from Pansy’s lips.

“Hard Truths” arrives more than 50 years after Leigh’s first film, “Bleak Moments,” bookending a career of tough, tell-it-like-it-is looks at working-class British life. Frankly, that vague-sounding title seems better suited to a Criterion Collection boxed set of his work than to his latest feature. A return to intimate kitchen sink realism after the grand-scale ambition of several relatively expansive period pieces — “Topsy-Turvy,” “Vera Drake,” “Mr. Turner” and “Peterloo...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Peter Debruge
  • Variety Film + TV
‘Hard Truths’ Review: Marianne Jean-Baptiste Reunites With Mike Leigh And The Results Are As Bleak As You Might Guess – Toronto Film Festival
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Right at the end credits of Hard Truths it says “any similarity to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.” I am not sure that is so true. I know many people who are just as mad at the world for various reasons as Pansy, the main character in Mike Leigh’s latest depressing look at working class day-to-day existence in Great Britain. We’ve been here in this bleak zone many times with Leigh, and in fact this is the second time the great Marianne Jean-Baptiste has worked with him, the first being her Oscar-nominated performance in his 1996 classic Secrets and Lies. She was unforgettable then, and she remains unforgettable now, albeit playing a thoroughly unlikable character in Pansy, a woman who somewhere along the way lost any sense of joy, if indeed she ever had any.

Pansy is a real pip if ever there was one. Leigh workshops his scripts,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Pete Hammond
  • Deadline Film + TV
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‘Hard Truths’ Review: Marianne Jean-Baptiste Delivers a Virtuosic Turn in Mike Leigh’s Searing Study of a Woman at War With the World
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In the pantheon of unpleasant screen heroines, Pansy Deacon more than holds her own. Played by a ferocious Marianne Jean-Baptiste, the perpetually harried and hostile protagonist of Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths spews her venom on everyone she encounters — from family members to furniture store employees, and all manner of unlucky folks in between.

Stranding us with such a spectacularly disagreeable person for 97 minutes may seem like a cruel trick, and the movie will test the patience of viewers who prefer their main characters closer to the likable end of the spectrum. But fans of the British auteur will discern, in Leigh’s latest, his trademark generosity, alongside his willingness to show people at their wince-inducing worst. With this prickly, piercing new film, the writer-director presents an intriguing challenge, pushing the bounds of our empathy and asking us to look, really look, at someone from whom we’d surely avert...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 9/7/2024
  • by Jon Frosch
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
‘Hard Truths’ Director Mike Leigh Still Peeved Marianne Jean-Baptiste Lost the Oscar for ‘Secrets & Lies’
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Director Mike Leigh vividly remembers the 1997 Academy Awards, where Marianne Jean-Baptiste was nominated for best supporting actress for her role in his best picture nominee “Secrets & Lies.”

“She should have won,” Leigh said during an interview at the Variety Studio, sponsored by J Crew and SharkNinja, during the Toronto International Film Festival.

Jean-Baptiste lost the award to Juliette Binoche, who shockingly won for her performance in “The English Patient,” which also took home the best picture Oscar. However, neither Binoche nor Jean-Baptiste were favored to win. Instead, Lauren Bacall in “The Mirror Has Two Faces” won Golden Globe and SAG prizes for her work.

“The person who won that year walked backstage after the interviews, came straight over to Marianne and said, ‘You should have won this,’” Leigh recalled. “That has to be for the record.”

Nearly three decades later, Leigh and Jean-Baptiste are teaming up again for Leigh’s 15th feature film,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/6/2024
  • by Clayton Davis
  • Variety Film + TV
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Marianne Jean-Baptiste Stars in Mike Leigh's Film 'Hard Truths' Trailer
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"Why can't you enjoy life?!" "I don't know!" Bleecker Street has revealed the first official trailer for Hard Truths, the latest Mike Leigh film premiering at the 2024 Toronto Film Festival soon. It'll also screen at the New York & London Film Festivals as well, and the US release is now set for January 2025. Legendary director Mike Leigh returns to the contemporary world with a fierce, compassionate, often darkly humorous study of family and the thorny ties that bind us. An ongoing exploration of the contemporary world with a tragicomic study of human strengths and weaknesses. For the first time since their award-winning Secrets & Lies (from 1996), Leigh and Oscar-nominated actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste reunite for Hard Truths, a compassionate story about family and the thorny ties that bind us. Marianne Jean-Baptiste stars as Pansy, and Michele Austin co-stars as her sister, a single mother with a life as different from Pansy's as can be.
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 9/4/2024
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
First Trailer for Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths Finds Marianne Jean-Baptiste Searching for Happiness
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Among the most-anticipated films on the fall festival circuit is the long-awaited return from Mike Leigh with Hard Truths. Marking a reunion with Secrets & Lies star Marianne Jean-Baptiste, it’s the British filmmaker’s first contemporary work in nearly fifteen years. Ahead of a TIFF world premiere this Friday, followed by a stop at NYFF and one-week qualifying run on December 6th, then nationwide release on January 10th from Bleecker Street, the first trailer and poster have arrived.

Here’s the synopsis: “Legendary filmmaker Mike Leigh returns to the contemporary world with a fierce, compassionate, and often darkly humorous study of family and the thorny ties that bind us. Reunited with Leigh for the first time since multiple Oscar-nominated Secrets & Lies, the astonishing Marianne Jean-Baptiste plays Pansy, a woman wracked by fear, tormented by afflictions, and prone to raging tirades against her husband, son, and anyone who looks her way.
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 9/4/2024
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Serpent’s Path and More Set for San Sebastián Film Festival
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At long last, we now have at least one festival premiere set for one of our most-anticipated films of the year. Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Serpent’s Path, a remake of his superb, bad-vibes 1998 thriller that stars Damien Bonnard, Mathieu Amalric, Ko Shibasaki, and Drive My Car‘s Hidetoshi Nishijima, is now set for a premiere as part of San Sebastián Film Festival’s Official Selection.

Taking place September 20-28, the lineup also features the latest from Edward Berger, Gia Coppola, Costa-Gavras, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Mike Leigh, Diego Lerman, Joshua Oppenheimer, and François Ozon. While we could see Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Serpent’s Path pop up at other fall fests, it’s exciting to know it’s finally seeing the light of day.

Check out the full lineup below.

Bound In Heaven

Xin Huo (China)

Country(ies) of production: China

Cast: Ni Ni, You Zhou

This film narrates the poignant tale of a...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 7/30/2024
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
San Sebastián: Edward Berger, Gia Coppola, Mike Leigh, Joshua Oppenheimer & François Ozon Among Names Set For Competition
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The San Sebastián Film Festival has revealed a bumper Official Selection for its latest edition, which will unfold from September 20 — 28.

The festival, which is celebrating its 72nd edition, will screen new films from established filmmakers such as Edward Berger, Gia Coppola, Costa-Gavras, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Mike Leigh, Diego Lerman, Joshua Oppenheimer, and François Ozon alongside works from new filmmakers including Laura Carreira and Xin Huo.

Coppola’s The Last Showgirl heads to San Sebastián following a debut in Toronto. The film stars Pamela Anderson, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Dave Bautista. The film’s plot follows a seasoned showgirl who must plan for her future when her show closes after a 30-year run. Also heading to Spain from The Six is Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths, starring Marianne Jean-Baptiste and Michele Austin. The British-Spanish production is said to portray the everyday life of a London family, addressing such issues as family relations,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 7/30/2024
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
Sharon Horgan & Michael Sheen To Lead Jack Thorne’s ‘Best Interests’; ‘The Witchfinder’ Cast; Sky Super League Trailer; ‘Downton Abbey’ Podcast; BBC Studios Creator Residencies – Global Briefs
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Sharon Horgan & Michael Sheen To Lead Jack Thorne’s ‘Best Interests’

Sharon Horgan and Michael Sheen are to lead the Jack Thorne-scripted BBC One drama Best Interests. The duo will play married couple Nicci and Andrew who have two daughters: Katie (Alison Oliver) and Marnie (Niamh Moriarty). Marnie has a life-threatening condition and doctors believe it is in her best interests to be allowed to die, but her loving family disagree. Thus begins a fight that will take them through every stage of a legal process, as they struggle to contemplate this huge decision. Additional cast include Noma Dumezweni, Chizzy Akudolu, Des McAleer, Mat Fraser, Gary Beadle, Jack Morris, Pippa Haywood, Shane Zaza, Lucian Msamati and Lisa McGrillis. Thorne said: “Best Interests cases are both compelling and revealing. Our country has a very troubled relationship with disability and these cases put a spotlight on that. But our drama is first...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 3/16/2022
  • by Nancy Tartaglione and Max Goldbart
  • Deadline Film + TV
BAFTA-Nominated ‘Rocks’ Actor Bukky Bakray to Star in BBC and Netflix Drama ‘You Don’t Know Me’ (Exclusive)
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One of the bright lights of this year’s awards season, BAFTA best actress nominee Bukky Bakray of the film “Rocks” will star in forthcoming BBC One and Netflix drama “You Don’t Know Me.”

Produced by Snowed-In Production and co-produced with Netflix, the show has now begun filming in Birmingham. The project is an adaptation of Imran Mahmood’s bestselling novel, and is written by “The Crown” and “Judy” writer Tom Edge.

Directed by Sarmad Masud, the four-part drama turns on a young man named Hero (Samuel Adewunmi) who, with overwhelming evidence against him, stands accused of murder. At his trial, Hero tells an extraordinary story about the woman he loves, and how he risked everything to save her. Hero swears he is innocent, but can we believe him?

Bakray plays Bless, Hero’s younger sister, who is a guiding force for her older brother and believes fiercely in his innocence.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 3/18/2021
  • by Manori Ravindran
  • Variety Film + TV
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