
L-R: Pedro Almodóvar on set with Leonardo Sbaraglia and Quim Gutiérrez
Sony Pictures Classics
Monday night belonged to Nicolas Winding Refn at Cannes and though his trippy psychedelic female ensemble pic, Her Private Hell, is playing out of competition, it spiced up the Grand Theatre Lumiere with a 12-minute standing ovation, the second of the night after Fjord.
The movie stars Sophie Thatcher, Havana Rose Liu, Kristine Froseth and Charles Melton in a tale that begins at a swanky futuristic LA-like metropolis hotel. A group of model-esque women congregate, about to make a Barbarella-like sci-fi movie. But a killer by the name of Leather Man lurks.
Refn won Best Director in his Cannes debut for his 2011 Ryan Gosling Hollywood heist movie Drive which starred Albert Brooks playing against type as a villain, Carey Mulligan and a fresh-face Oscar Isaac. Pete Hammond reported at the time that Drive clocked an epic near 15-minute standing ovation.
NEON has domestic on Her Private Hell. A trailer dropped today for the pic which hits theaters on July 24.
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Pedro Almodóvar is known for mining his own personal experience, but Bitter Christmas (Amarga Navidad) explores this on a whole new level.
His viewpoint is reflected in the film in two interwoven protagonists — director Raul (Leonardo Sbaraglia), and Elsa (Bárbara Lennie), the cult filmmaker at the center of Raul’s screenplay. As Raul grapples with telling the story of Elsa’s life — she is wracked by panic attacks and migraines — he’s confronted by the murkiness of borrowing from real people for the purposes of fiction. Meanwhile, Elsa’s boyfriend Beau (Patrick Criado), a fireman who moonlights as a stripper, brings classic Almodóvar-esque humor, while Raul’s assistant Monica (Aitana Sánchez-Gijón) serves as the voice of reason.
DEADLINE: How long have you been thinking about this film? It feels like the culmination of so much personal experience.
PEDRO ALMODÓVAR: It’s been about four years that I’ve been working on the script intermittently while I was also working on some other projects. So it’s been brewing for about four years, which is not one of the longest periods of time for me to write a script.
DEADLINE: A hallmark of your films is the complexity and twists and turns of your plotting. How much do you plan in advance before you begin writing?
ALMODÓVAR: It sounds a little bit paranormal, but I really do feel like something else takes a hold of me during the writing process, and there comes a point at which it’s the story that’s dictating what’s happening. I was surprised by the ending myself when I got to the end of the story. This is actually the adaptation of a short story that I wrote many, many years ago, that told the story of Elsa with her boyfriend, the firefighter/stripper, and her friend Patricia (Victoria Luengo), and the trip that they take to Lanzarote. It was a complete surprise to me that Monica, the character that appears in the last half-hour of the film, is the one who’s challenging the author. She was not part of the story previously. She came to me.

L-R: Pedro Almodóvar on set with Leonardo Sbaraglia and Quim Gutiérrez
Sony Pictures Classics
DEADLINE: Speaking of that character, I wonder if that, for you, is the internal antagonist who asks those questions of yourself?
ALMODÓVAR: You’re right. Monica’s character is a reflection of the ways in which I may question myself. I’m always very aware and wary of not wanting to become complacent, and I particularly didn’t want to become complacent vis-à-vis the figure of the director, which is a reflection of myself in the film. And as Monica is challenging him, yes, she’s challenging me as a director. And I found the experience of displaying that both liberating and amusing because it did become a process of criticizing myself. Sometimes a writer doesn’t think of the way precisely that they’re going to hurt the people around them, because at the end of the day, they don’t think about the hurt, they think about the idea, and that becomes a dangerous thing. And so at a certain level, my screenwriter is kind of also the villain in the film.
One of the things that I was the most interested in that really became quite organic in this film — perhaps in a way that hadn’t been in some of my other films, although it is a topic that I have covered in other films — is the relationship between reality and fiction. I’m endlessly fascinated by that relationship, as I am fascinated by the origin of creativity. It is very mysterious to me where creativity comes from. And so that really becomes the principle theme in this film.
I have touched upon this in films like Bad Education or Broken Embraces, but I do feel like I have done this so definitively in this particular film that I may never again come back to that topic.
DEADLINE: Have you ever had a situation — as Raul does with Monica — where someone has confronted you about your work in such a personal way?
ALMODÓVAR: No, fortunately not. Because, as I said, the writer is someone who can be dangerous for loved ones, because you are always inspired, more or less, by someone that is close to you. I mean, I write with absolute freedom. So when I’m writing, I don’t think about other people, or I only think about the story itself and do exactly what the story demands me to do.
But after that, there is a debate about what are the limits of autofiction because there are no legal limits, but it’s an ethical issue. I’ve always made it a point to not hurt the people who are being reflected in my films. For that reason, I haven’t had anybody be upset at me, so I’ve never had a confrontation like the confrontation that you see in this film. And in fact, if I was ever grabbed by a story about someone who then asked me not to have their likeness be represented in the film, I might just not do the film at all.
DEADLINE: There’s a great scene with Beau set to the music of Grace Jones. Can you tell me about building that scene and about casting Patrick Criado?
ALMODÓVAR: I was very lucky with the actor. He’s very young, and I was amazed that he could be so versatile. And the key of that sequence is not only that he’s very hot, but also the response of the girls — the reactions that he’s getting from the women and the chemistry between them — is key to that scene. I had a lot of fun directing that scene. That scene is also very important to establish that Elsa is there not for erotic purposes, she’s there because she wants to cast him. And so she’s interested in his physical appearance in so far as his ass and his crotch, but not necessarily for erotic reasons.
DEADLINE: I laughed out loud in the scene where Elsa explains what it means to be a cult director. That feels so real. Is that a conversation you’ve had in your own life?
ALMODÓVAR: No, no, no. I just invented it. But it’s curious because it’s one of the favorite sequences of many people. I think there is a lot of fun explaining what a cult movie means. I mean, a cult movie means more things than that. And you have the doctor in the scene, as played by Carmen Machi, a very well-known actress, and she really lends that comedic aspect to that particular scene. The audience in Spain really laughs a lot during that sequence.
DEADLINE: I loved seeing Lanzarote in this film. I’ve been there and it’s unlike anywhere else in the world. It’s like going to the moon.
ALMODÓVAR: Yes, it’s a landscape that doesn’t seem real. It’s also almost like a mental landscape. And given Lanzarote’s volcanic, dark characteristics, it’s also the perfect place for someone to either go hide themselves or mourn, as is the case of Elsa as well. And so these particular characteristics make the island almost a character in itself.

Read the digital edition of Deadline’s Disruptors/Cannes magazine here.
DEADLINE: Do you feel you’ll ever return to English-language films?
ALMODÓVAR: First of all, with The Room Next Door, it really taught me that yes, I could direct in English. I could direct the actresses, they could understand what I was saying, I could understand what they were saying to me. And so, I knew that I could overcome that challenge. I realized that I can shoot a movie in English, but of course, not just any movie. The Room Next Door is ultimately an extension of many of my films. It’s a film about two women of a particular age, in a particular situation. And I was blessed with having these two marvelous actresses who carried the film on their shoulders — Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore. I did that because I discovered the novel of Sigrid Nunez called What Are You Going Through. I felt like I was [working] in my own themes. So that’s why I said that I could do that movie, because I felt it was close to my interests. I’m not talking about the American culture, I don’t know it enough. I’m just talking about these two female characters. If it’s a comedy, you can invent something, but I don’t know so much the language and the country.
So, it depends, but I’m reading [English-language material] because I would like to keep on working with those actors. With Ethan Hawke I made a short film called Strange Way of Life. I would like to work again with Tilda and Julianne. And I really am looking to find something that I could manage and that could make an adaptation. So, perhaps in the future there will be another movie in English.
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Jimmy Kimmel returned to his ABC late-night show Monday after a week in New York where he attended the Disney upfront presentation, delivering his annual roast.
Among other topics, he discussed the NBA playoffs and addressed a conspiracy theory circulating about the Eastern Conference semifinal between the Pistons and the Cavaliers, in which the Pistons tied the series at 3 games apiece before the Cavaliers took Game 7 to face the Knicks in the Eastern Conference final.
“Some believe the series was rigged in favor of the Cavaliers by the league because of this promo that aired on our network ABC the day before Game 7 took place,” Kimmel said and played the promo, which teased “The Eastern Conference Finals: Cavaliers-Nicks Game 1 on ESPN.”
A day after the promo ran, Game 7 indeed produced the the outcome “predicted” in in.
“ABC said they ran the promo by mistake and I believe them,” Kimmel said. “If ABC could predict the future, we wouldn’t have wasted $20M on a canceled season of The Bachelorette.”
In March, ABC pulled Season 22 of The Bachelorette only days before its premiere over as Taylor Frankie Paul became engulfed in a domestic assault-related controversy. Two months later, there has been no update on whether the season will be released on ABC or Hulu.
Here is Kimmel’s monologue:
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UK production company Evolutionary Films has entered into an exclusive worldwide partnership with Kling AI on upcoming animated feature Minibots, a production that aims to redefine how artificial intelligence is integrated into mainstream filmmaking.
Under the terms of the partnership, Kling will become the exclusive global “technological brand partner” on the feature, providing production support, platform access and a dedicated Creative Partnership Programme supporting Minibots’ internationally recognised AI artist team.
Evolutionary Films says that, unlike recent AI film experiments that have been focused primarily on automation and cost reduction, Minibots is positioning itself as “a fundamentally artist-led production, combining Hollywood storytelling, world-class animation talent and next-generation AI workflows under a strict ethical framework designed to protect performers and creators”.
The film is produced by Evolutionary Films co-founders John Adams and Diane Shorthouse, with a creative team including writers Michael Ferris (Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines, The Simpsons), Alistair Audsley and Scott Christian Sava (Animal Crackers).
The AI creative team attached to the project includes AI producer Giulio Musi, along with Samuele Poggi, Sebastian Kamph, Edmond Yang, Billy Boman, Erica Montanaro and Josef Samuel, all artists who have been working at the intersection of AI and cinematic storytelling.
Set in a robotics summer camp where three teenage geniuses inadvertently create miniature sentient robots who escape into human society, the film explores themes surrounding technology, identity and humanity.
Evolutionary Films says the project has been designed from the outset as a direct response to growing industry concerns surrounding generative AI. The production has adopted a strict “performance-first” AI charter under which all performances remain entirely human-created and actor-owned. Adams and Shorthouse also say the project has already attracted significant interest from A-list voice talent.
Adams said: “Minibots is not about replacing artists. It’s about empowering some of the most exciting new creative voices in filmmaking with extraordinary new tools. We believe the future belongs to productions that combine cutting-edge technology with genuine artistic authorship and strong ethical standards. Audiences don’t care whether something was made with AI, they care whether it’s imaginative, emotional and visually unforgettable. That’s the opportunity here.”
Kling AI Head of Operations, Yushen Zeng, said: “Minibots represents exactly the kind of creative collaboration we believe AI should enable: artist-led, ambitious and responsibly executed. We’re proud to support a project pushing cinematic storytelling forward while placing human creativity firmly at the centre of the process.”
Minibots is currently in production with Evolutionary Films handling international sales. The company’s credits in conventional filmmaking include Paramount+ thriller Curfew, action film I Am Vengeance and The Magnificent Eleven, co-written by Irvine Welsh.
Kling AI, a division of Chinese tech giant Kuaishou, offers AI video generation tools that are used by international filmmakers including House Of David creator Jon Erwin.
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