Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Brittany Snow Teases “Wild” Death and “More Steamy” Scenes in ‘The Hunting Wives’ Season 2

Fans of *The Hunting Wives* should be ready for a lot of emotions in the upcoming second season.

Brittany Snow, who plays Sophie O’Neil in the Netflix show created by Rebecca Cutter, shared some hints with Entertainment Tonight at the 2026 Golden Globes.
 She mentioned there’s a “wild” death in the new season, which also features Malin Akerman as Margo Banks.

“Wild.
 Every script is like a new adventure,” Snow said. “They told us we couldn’t top last year, but somehow I think we’re doing it.” She added, “I’m surprised. And I even knew a little bit what was coming. So I think people are going to be shocked, angry, and excited.”

She said she wasn’t sure if saying that was a good or bad thing, but added, “People should definitely watch.”


Shooting for season two is already happening.
 Season one, based on May Cobb’s popular book, follows Sophie as she and her family move from Boston to a small town in Texas. She gets close to a rich woman named Margo and becomes obsessed with her, leading to seduction and murder.

When asked about her biggest reaction to reading the season two script, Snow said, “I stood up on my couch.
 Someone dies. I won’t tell you who. That’s a wild play. Wild behavior.”

If fans thought *The Hunting Wives* couldn’t get more dramatic, Snow hinted at more steamy scenes in the second season.


“We’ve filmed some scenes and played some Reneé Rapp.
 We got into a groove,” she told Justin Sylvester on *Live from E!*. “A lot of things happen this season that are very shocking. It’s gonna leave people very angry, but in a sexy way.”

WBD Slams “Meritless Lawsuit,” Attacks On Board As Paramount Seeks To Derail Netflix Deal

WBD said in a statement today: “Even after six weeks and many press releases from Paramount Skydance, they have not raised the price or fixed the many clear problems with their offer.
 Instead, Paramount Skydance is trying to distract with a weak lawsuit and attacks on a board that has created a lot of value for shareholders. Despite many chances, Paramount Skydance keeps suggesting a deal that our board agreed is not better than the one with Netflix.”

These comments came after Paramount filed a lawsuit in Delaware Chancery Court today, asking for basic information so WBD shareholders can decide whether to sell their shares.
 It also said it plans to suggest new board members for the 2026 annual meeting, setting up a vote to stop the Netflix deal.


PREVIOUSLY: An advance notice window for WBD’s 2026 annual meeting opens in three weeks, Paramount said earlier today, and it plans to suggest a group of board members who will help WBD follow through on the deal with Paramount, as per the Netflix agreement.
 The company also said in a letter to WBD shareholders that it wants to take next steps after Warner's board rejected its offer of $30 per share multiple times, choosing the Netflix deal instead.

Paramount will also suggest changing WBD’s rules to require shareholder approval for splitting up the Global Networks.
 “If WBD calls a special meeting before the annual meeting to approve the Netflix deal, Paramount will try to get people to vote against that approval.”

As for the lawsuit, Paramount said it was filed today in Delaware to get the court to ask WBD to explain how it valued the Global Networks part, how it valued the entire Netflix deal, how the price reduction works for debt in the Netflix deal, or even what the basis is for its “risk adjustment” on its $30 per share cash offer.


Paramount is trying to buy all of WBD.
 WBD shareholders need this information to decide if they should sell their shares. The offer was made once and now ends on January 21.

Paramount has been trying to buy WBD since it finished merging with Skydance last summer.
 It made three offers before Warner opened up the bidding process to others, ending up with a deal with Netflix. The streamer is offering $27.75 in cash and some Netflix stock to buy WBD’s studios and streaming parts. WBD’s traditional TV business, Discovery Global, will be split into a separate public company in the third quarter before the Netflix deal is done.

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Both the Netflix and Paramount deals need approval from government regulators and could take 12 to 18 months to finish.


WBD has told shareholders twice in recent weeks not to sell their shares to Paramount, pointing out that the deal has risks and uncertainties.
 It doesn’t argue that one deal is better than another in terms of cost or regulations. It does mention several issues, like the complexity and lack of information in the Paramount offer, which would see a smaller company buy a bigger one.

Paramount says it has fixed all WBD’s concerns.
 Larry Ellison, one of the world’s richest people, personally agreed to back the equity part of the latest offer to address WBD’s worries. Most recently, on January 8, Paramount reaffirmed its $30 per share offer.

WBD also mentions restrictions on its financing while a Paramount deal is being discussed (which Paramount denies), that could be harmful.
 It would require stopping work on the Discovery Global split. That, WBD says, would put them in a worse position if the Paramount deal fails than if the Netflix deal fails.

Because neither deal is certain.
 President Donald Trump, who has said he will be involved, is a friend of Larry Ellison. He has also said he likes Ted Sarandos, the co-CEO of Netflix. He hasn’t made up his mind, including in a social media post last night.

Going to court to get documents related to a deal is not uncommon.
 For example, a group of Paramount shareholders sued last year for similar access to see how Shari Redstone’s payout was calculated compared to others in Par’s sale to Skydance. At least one case is still going on.

Proxy fights can be tough, messy, and expensive for both sides.
 In 2024, Disney beat back a challenge from billionaire activist investor Nelson Peltz, who ran two candidates for the Disney board — himself and a former Disney executive, Jay Rasulo — to change things. Neither was elected.

A proxy is the official notice to shareholders about what will be voted on at the annual meeting.
 Filed yearly with the SEC, it includes the election of directors, leader pay, and changes to company rules. It can also include proposals from shareholders who disagree with the current management to change how the company is run.

Monday, January 12, 2026

Bob Weir, Grateful Dead Co-Founder, Dies at 78

Bob Weir, the quiet singer, songwriter, and skilled rhythm guitarist, who was sometimes called the "other" original member of the Grateful Dead, passed away. His family shared the news on Instagram on Saturday. He was 78 years old.

They said he "passed away peacefully, surrounded by loved ones, after bravely fighting cancer, as only Bobby could.
 Unfortunately, he eventually succumbed to lung problems," they explained.

He was diagnosed with cancer in July, but he returned to his hometown stage just a month later for a three-night event celebrating 60 years of music at Golden Gate Park.


His family added: "Bobby will always be a guiding force, whose unique artistry changed American music.
 His work did more than just play music; it brought warmth and light into people's lives, building a sense of community, a shared language, and a feeling of family that fans have carried for generations. Every chord he played, every word he sang, was part of the stories he created. His music invited people to feel, to question, to wander, and to belong." 

As the leader of bands like Dead and Company, Phil Lesh and Friends, Further, Rat Dog, and Wolf Bros, Weir continued the legacy of the Grateful Dead after the sudden death of his bandmate Jerry Garcia in 1995.


In a 2014 interview with Vanity Fair, when asked if he "still takes psychedelics, once in a while?"
 the upcoming rock star replied: "Not much. Every now and then. I haven't done it so much lately, but over the last ten years, if one of the bands I'm hanging with, and all the guys want to take mushrooms, I'm not going to … you know, I'll go there. But not a whole lot." 

Weir and lead guitarist Garcia formed the Grateful Dead in 1965 with Ron "Pigpen" McKernan (keyboards, harmonica), Lesh (bass), and Bill Kreutzmann (drums).
 Weir wrote or sang on songs like "Sugar Magnolia," "Playing in the Band," "Truckin'," "Throwing Stones," "Let It Grow," "I Need a Miracle," "One More Saturday Night," "Let It Rain," "Mexicali Blues," "Hell in a Bucket," "Cassidy," and "The Other One," to name just a few.

The last one, which appeared on the Dead's second album, 1968's Anthem of the Sun, became one of Weir's most popular songs.
 A 2014 documentary about him, directed by Mike Fleiss, was titled The Other One: The Long Strange Trip of Bob Weir. It was executive produced by Justin Kreutzmann (Bill's son) and premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival.

In the film, Weir said he "took LSD, every Saturday without fail, for about a year," and he served as Garcia's "bag man," keeping and passing out the drugs.


With Weir's boyish style filling in between Garcia's upbeat guitar work and Lesh's innovative bass lines, the Grateful Dead — the most famous jam band of all time — toured for long stretches, playing improvisational, psychedelic shows that lasted for hours, much to the delight of the tie-dyed Deadheads.


In an interview published in March 1973, Weir told Cameron Crowe about how the group built its free-form shows.


"We have certain numbers that we use for certain pivot points, of course," he said.
 "We have the crowd pleasers for the end. A little bit into the second set, you can expect us to do a number that we're gonna stretch out on … for like 45 minutes or an hour. And you can expect us to pull out of that with some fairly forceful rock 'n' roll just to shake out the cobwebs of the people that are … well, we space out on the space-out numbers, and if we may be losing some of our audience at that point, we bring them back with a little rock 'n' roll.

We try to take the numbers that we stretch out on and develop them very gradually from level to level to level so that we're not all of a sudden introducing them to a whole new weird realm of music.
 I guess essentially, if it makes sense to them, then they can keep up with us; if it doesn't, then they don't. You have to have that positive feedback from an audience to keep you going." 

The modest, fame-fleeing Weir, known for wearing shorts onstage — he also soaked his T-shirts in beer coolers to beat the heat of the hot lights — had big hands that enabled him to "voice chords that most people can't reach," Garcia once said, "and he can pull them off right in the flow of playing.

Weir once said, "We all feel Bob's the finest rhythm guitarist on wheels right now.
 He's like my left hand," Garcia noted in a 1978 interview. "We have a long, serious conversation going on musically, and the whole thing is of a complementary nature. We have fun, and we've designed our playing to work against and with each other. His playing, in a way, really puts my playing in the only kind of meaningful context it could enjoy." 

Garcia died of a heart attack in a California rehab center at age 53 on August 9, 1995, but Weir, Lesh, and others continued on in groups like Bobby and the Midnites, The Other Ones, and an incarnation known simply as The Dead.
 As the Rat Dog frontman, formed shortly before Garcia’s death, Weir played more than a thousand shows.

The Grateful Dead was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.
 After that night of celebration, Weir once recalled, he emerged from "the fog" while under a table with Chuck Berry.

Weir was born on October 16, 1947, in San Francisco and was adopted as an infant by a family in the Palo Alto area.
 He was expelled from nearly every school he attended and struggled with dyslexia, which went undiagnosed.

Weir became obsessed with the guitar by age 14 (one of his influences was Jorma Kaukonen of Hot Tuna and Jefferson Airplane fame), and a couple of years later he came upon Garcia on New Year's Eve 1963.

James Cameron is helping movies stay popular in the new year as "Avatar: Fire and Ash" topped the box office for the fourth week in a row. His third adventure with the Na'vi characters made $21.3 million from 3,700 theaters over the weekend, bringing its total to $342.6 million in the U.S. and $1.23 billion worldwide.

Those sales were double the next biggest movies, including the new film "Primate" and the holiday movie "The Housemaid."
 These two are close in second place, each expected to make about $11 million over the weekend. (Exact numbers will be known on Monday.)

"Primate" made $11.3 million from 2,964 theaters during its opening weekend.
 It also earned $2.1 million internationally, making a total of $13.4 million worldwide. People's reactions to the $21 million film were mixed, with a CinemaScore of B-. The movie is about a group of friends on a tropical vacation that goes wrong when a chimpanzee becomes aggressive. Paramount is distributing the film, which is the first under the studio's deal with 18Hz, a company run by Walter Hamada, who used to work at DC Films.

Lionsgate's psychological thriller "The Housemaid," which is expected to take third place with $11.2 million, has kept drawing crowds.
 After four weeks in theaters, it has made $94.15 million in North America and $192 million worldwide. That's especially good because the movie only cost $35 million to make.

"Zootopia 2" dropped to fourth place with $10.1 million in its seventh weekend.
 The animated sequel has been a big success, making $378.8 million in the U.S. and $1.65 billion worldwide, becoming Walt Disney Animation's highest-grossing movie of all time.

Another new film, Lionsgate's disaster sequel "Greenland 2: Migration" with Gerard Butler, took fifth place with $8.5 million from 2,710 theaters.
 The original "Greenland" came out on demand because of the pandemic but did well overseas with $52 million. The sequel was made for $90 million, and Lionsgate bought the U.S. rights for $10 million. The movie follows a family searching for a new home after a comet crashes and destroys most of the world. It received a weak CinemaScore of B-.

David A. Gross from Franchise Entertainment Research said, "This is a flat start."
 However, he added that "Gerard Butler is an action star who is well-loved around the world. His international numbers and the rental and streaming business should be good."

Sixth place went to A24's "Marty Supreme" with $7.3 million from 2,512 theaters, a 38% drop from last weekend.
 Those sales take the Timothee Chalamet-led film past $70 million in North America and $84 million worldwide, making it one of A24's biggest movies. The film cost $70 million to make, the most expensive for A24 so far, so it needs to keep doing well through the winter to justify the budget. (Theaters keep about half of the money.) However, awards attention, including Chalamet's win at Critics Choice and his Golden Globe nomination, could help justify the spend beyond just the money.

Searchlight's "Is This Thing On?"
 made $2.3 million while expanding to 1,475 theaters. The film, directed by Bradley Cooper and starring Will Arnett as a divorced man who turns to stand-up comedy, has already made $3.4 million.

Another awards hopeful, Neon's dark comedy "No Other Choice," made $1.3 million from 147 theaters over the weekend.
 The film, directed by Park Chan-wook, has made $3.4 million in limited release.

Angel Studios introduced "I Was a Stranger," which made $1.2 million from 1,400 theaters and placed at No. 15 in the U.S.
 The PG-13 film, with a $6 million budget, tells the story of a Syrian family in Aleppo after a tragedy.

So far, the box office is doing slightly better than in 2025.
 Although January is usually slower for theaters, this month might be busier than expected. Upcoming big movies include Sony's apocalyptic thriller "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple," the anime "All You Need Is Kill," Amazon MGM's sci-fi adventure "Mercy" with Chris Pratt, Sam Raimi's survival horror film "Send Help," and the Jason Statham movie "Shelter."

David A. Gross said, "We're hoping for a stronger start this year than in 2025 and 2024.
 For the [January] box office to reach pre-pandemic levels, 'All You Need Is Kill,' 'Mercy,' 'Send Help,' and 'Shelter' need to do really well."

Avatar: Fire and Ash’ Leads for Fourth Weekend With $21 Million as ‘Primate’ Debuts to $11 Million

James Cameron is helping cinemas stay busy this new year, as his film "Avatar: Fire and Ash" leads the box office for the fourth straight weekend. This third adventure with the Na'vi characters made $21.3 million from 3,700 theaters over the weekend, bringing its total to $342.6 million in the US and $1.23 billion worldwide.

These sales were double what the next biggest movies made, like the new film "Primate" and the holiday movie "The Housemaid."
 Both are close in second place, each expected to make around $11 million over the weekend. The final numbers will be known on Monday.

"Primate" opened with $11.3 million from 2,964 theaters, and earned $2.1 million internationally, giving it a global start of $13.4 million.
 The film, which had a $21 million budget, got a "B-" rating from CinemaScore, and follows a group of friends on a tropical vacation that goes wrong when a chimpanzee becomes violent. The film is being distributed by Paramount, the first under its deal with 18Hz, managed by Walter Hamada, former head of DC Films.

Lionsgate’s "The Housemaid," which is likely to take third place with $11.2 million, has continued to attract big crowds.
 After four weekends, the R-rated film has made $94.15 million in North America and $192 million worldwide. That’s a great result, especially since the movie cost just $35 million to make.

"Zootopia 2" dropped to fourth place with $10.1 million in its seventh weekend.
 The animated sequel has been a big hit, with $378.8 million in the US and $1.65 billion worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film from Walt Disney Animation.

Another new film, "Greenland 2: Migration" with Gerard Butler, came in fifth with $8.5 million from 2,710 theaters.
 The sequel was produced for $90 million by STX, and Lionsgate bought the US rights for $10 million. The film follows a family searching for a new home after a comet strikes and destroys most of the planet. It earned a "B-" grade on CinemaScore.

David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research says the opening was a flat start, but he adds that international numbers and sales through rental and streaming could be strong because Gerard Butler is a popular action star.


" Marty Supreme," from A24, came in sixth with $7.3 million, down about 38% from the previous weekend.
 The film, starring Timothee Chalamet, has earned $70 million in the US and $84 million worldwide so far. With a $70 million budget, it needs to keep doing well to justify the cost. However, awards buzz, including Chalamet's recent win at Critics Choice and a Golden Globe nomination, helps make the investment worthwhile.

Searchlight's "Is This Thing On?"
 made $2.3 million, expanding to 1,475 theaters, and has earned $3.4 million overall.

Neon's "No Other Choice," a dark comedy directed by Park Chan-wook, made $1.3 million from just 147 theaters, bringing its total to $3.4 million in limited release.


Angel Studios launched "I Was a Stranger" with $1.2 million from 1,400 theaters, placing it at No. 15 on the domestic chart.
 The film, with a $6 million budget, tells the story of a Syrian family in Aleppo after a tragedy.

So far, the box office is slightly ahead of 2025.
 Even though January is usually slow for theaters, this month might be more active than expected with big movies like Sony's apocalyptic thriller "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple," the anime "All You Need Is Kill," Amazon MGM's sci-fi adventure "Mercy" with Chris Pratt, Sam Raimi's survival horror film "Send Help," and Jason Statham's action film "Shelter."

David A. Gross says the goal is to have a better start to the year than in 2025 and 2024.
 He believes that "All You Need Is Kill," "Mercy," "Send Help," and "Shelter" will need to do very well to reach pre-pandemic box office levels.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Movies for Grownups Awards With AARP: ‘Hamnet’ Takes Home Best Picture

Hamnet won the best picture award at the Movies for Grownups Awards, which is hosted by AARP. This annual event celebrates movies and TV shows that highlight the stories and voices of people aged 50 and older. The awards were given out on Saturday at the Beverly Wilshire hotel, with Alan Cumming hosting the event again. One Battle After Another entered the night with eight nominations and ended up winning three, but Chloé Zhao's Shakespeare movie took home the top prize.

Laura Dern, George Clooney, Regina Hall, and Delroy Lindo also had big wins, with Guillermo del Toro being named best director for Frankenstein.
 Noah Wyle and Kathy Bates each won in the TV categories. The Movies for Grownups Awards will be shown on Great Performances on Sunday, February 22 at 7 p.m. on PBS.


Check out the fill list of winners below.

Best Picture/Best Movie for Grownups
Hamnet (WINNER)
A House of Dynamite
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Train Dreams

Best Actress
Laura Dern (Is This Thing On?) (WINNER)
Jodie Foster (A Private Life)
Lucy Liu (Rosemead)
Julia Roberts (After the Hunt)
June Squibb (Eleanor the Great)

Best Actor
George Clooney (Jay Kelly) (WINNER)
Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another)
Joel Edgerton (Train Dreams)
Ethan Hawke (Blue Moon)
Dwayne Johnson (The Smashing Machine)


Best Supporting Actress
Regina Hall (One Battle After Another) (WINNER)
Amy Madigan (Weapons)
Helen Mirren (Goodbye June)
Gwyneth Paltrow (Marty Supreme)
Sigourney Weaver (Avatar: Fire and Ash)

Best Supporting Actor
Benicio Del Toro (One Battle After Another)
Delroy Lindo (Sinners) (WINNER)
Sean Penn (One Battle After Another)
Michael Shannon (Nuremberg)
Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value)

Best Director
Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another)
Kathryn Bigelow (A House of Dynamite)
Scott Cooper (Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere)
Guillermo del Toro (Frankenstein) (WINNER)
Spike Lee (Highest 2 Lowest)

Best Screenwriter
Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another) (WINNER)
Noah Baumbach and Emily Mortimer (Jay Kelly)
Bradley Cooper, Will Arnett and Mark Chappell (Is This Thing On?)
Julian Fellowes (Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale)
James Vanderbilt (Nuremberg)

Best Ensemble
A House of Dynamite
Jay Kelly
Nuremberg
One Battle After Another (WINNER)
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Best Intergenerational Film
Eleanor the Great
The Lost Bus
Rental Family
Rosemead
Sentimental Value (WINNER)

Best Period Film
Dead Man’s Wire
Marty Supreme
Nuremberg
Sinners
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (WINNER)

Best Documentary
Becoming Led Zeppelin
Cover-Up
My Mom Jayne (WINNER)
Riefenstahl
Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost

Best Foreign-Language Film
It Was Just an Accident
No Other Choice
Nouvelle Vague
The Secret Agent
Sentimental Value (WINNER)

Best TV Series or Limited Series
Adolescence
Hacks
The Pitt (WINNER)
The Studio
The White Lotus

Best Actor (TV)
Walton Goggins (The White Lotus)
Stephen Graham (Adolescence)
Gary Oldman (Slow Horses)
Pedro Pascal (The Last of Us)
Noah Wyle (The Pitt) (WINNER)

Best Actress (TV)
Kathy Bates (Matlock) (WINNER)
Kathryn Hahn (The Studio)
Catherine O’Hara (The Studio)
Parker Posey (The White Lotus)
Jean Smart (Hacks)



Saturday, January 10, 2026

The White Lotus’ Season 4 to Shoot at 19th-Century Castle Hotel in Saint-Tropez



As Mike White is still working on Season 4 of “The White Lotus,” Variety has learned that the show will be filmed at a 19th-century castle turned luxury hotel called the Château de La Messardière in Saint-Tropez on the French Riviera.


The Château de La Messardière is located on 32 acres of land with parasol pines, cypress trees, and jasmine.
 It is part of the Airelles Collection, a group of 5-star hotels owned by Stephane Courbit, the founder and chairman of Banijay Group (“Survivor,” “Peaky Blinders”). HBO has not commented on the news.

The hotel’s suites range from $3,000 to $8,000 per night and offer a spa, beach access via Rolls-Royce, restaurants, sports activities, and a children’s camp.


Filming for Season 4 will start at the end of April and continue through October, according to Variety.
 Like previous seasons, the show will not be filmed entirely at one place. Mike White likes to use different locations to create unique backdrops. The Château de La Messardière is just one of several locations that will be used. The story will take place on the French Riviera, with some scenes also filmed at a Paris hotel.

The plot is still secret — except that HBO confirmed the show will again follow a group of hotel guests and staff over the course of a week.
 Sources say the Cannes Film Festival may be part of the storyline. Since the show will be filmed on the Riviera during the festival, which runs from May 13 to 26, it sounds very likely.

Casting for Season 4 is happening, and many French actors have auditioned.
 As Variety reported last month, Alexander Ludwig (“Earth Abides,” “Vikings”) and AJ Michalka (“The Goldbergs,” “Super 8”) are the first new cast members announced. So far, only three cast members have appeared in more than one season: Jennifer Coolidge, who played Tanya McQuoid in Seasons 1 and 2; Natasha Rothwell, who played Belinda Lindsey in Seasons 1 and 3; and Jon Gries, who has played Greg Hunt in all three seasons.

The Thailand-set Season 3 also starred Walton Goggins, Michelle Monaghan, Carrie Coon, Sam Rockwell, Jason Isaacs, Parker Posey, Aimee Lou Wood, Sam Nivola, and Patrick Schwarzenegger.
 It earned eight acting Emmy nominations. “The White Lotus” is executive produced by Mike White, David Bernad, and Mark Kamine.


PGA Award Nominations: ‘Weapons’ and ‘F1’ Join ‘Sinners,’ ‘One Battle After Another’ and More

The Producers Guild of America announced the nominees for the 37th Annual Producers Guild Awards, which sets the stage for the Oscar race for best picture.

The guild’s main award, the Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures, is considered one of the best indicators of Oscar success.
 In the past 22 years, 17 of the winners have gone on to win best picture at the Academy Awards, showing how important the PGA is as the awards season draws closer.

This year’s top category at the PGA includes a variety of high-quality films, both from creative directors and successful commercial projects.
 Warner Bros. is leading the field with three entries and shares a fourth with a co-distributor. The nominees are:

"Bugonia" (Focus Features)  
Ed Guiney, p.g.a., Andrew Lowe, p.g.a., Yorgos Lanthimos, p.g.a., Emma Stone, p.g.a., Lars Knudsen, p.g.a.  
"F1" (Apple Original Films/Warner Bros.)  
Nominees to be determined  
"Frankenstein" (Netflix)  
Guillermo Del Toro, p.g.a., J. Miles Dale, p.g.a., Scott Stuber, p.g.a.  
"Hamnet" (Focus Features)  
Liza Marshall, p.g.a., Pippa Harris, p.g.a., Sam Mendes, p.g.a., Steven Spielberg, p.g.a., Nicolas Gonda, p.g.a.  
"Mart y Supreme" (A24)  
Nominees to be determined  
"One Battle After Another" (Warner Bros.)  
Adam Somner, Sara Murphy, Paul Thomas Anderson  
"Sentimental Value" (Neon)  
Maria Ekerhovd, Andrea Berentsen Ottmar  
"Sinners" (Warner Bros.)  
Ryan Coogler, p.g.a., Zinzi Coogler, p.g.a., Sev Ohanian, p.g.a.  
"Train Dreams" (Netflix)  
Marissa McMahon, p.g.a., Teddy Schwarzman, p.g.a., William Janowitz, p.g.a., Ashley Schlaifer, p.g.a., Michael Heimler, p.g.a.  
"Weapons" (Warner Bros.)  
Zach Cregger, p.g.a., Miri Yoon, p.g.a.  

Warner Bros. received expected recognition for Paul Thomas Anderson’s "One Battle After Another" and Ryan Coogler’s "Sinners," both of which have been strong nominees throughout the season.
 The studio also got nods for Zach Cregger’s "Weapons" and shared in the nomination for Joseph Kosinski’s "F1," which was produced by Apple Original Films.

The list also highlights notable entries like Clint Bentley’s indie drama "Train Dreams" and Yorgos Lanthimos’ dark comedy "Bugonia."
 After missing out at the Actor Awards, Joachim Trier’s "Sentimental Value" is still in the running, along with Guillermo del Toro’s "Frankenstein," Josh Safdie’s "Marty Supreme," and Chloe Zhao’s "Hamnet," a literary adaptation.

Some major movies were left out, including Universal’s box office hit "Wicked: For Good," which was nominated last year.
 "Sentimental Value" is the only non-English-language film in the list, and Jafar Panahi’s "It Was Just an Accident" was not nominated. Other missing films include James Cameron’s "Avatar: Fire and Ash," Richard Linklater’s "Blue Moon," and Craig Brewer’s "Song Sung Blue."

In animation, the PGA field included both sequel movies and bold new projects, like "The Bad Guys 2," "Elio," "KPop Demon Hunters," "Zootopia 2," and the anime epic "Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle."


On television, prestige dramas dominated.
 The Norman Felton Award for episodic drama includes "Andor," "The Diplomat," "The Pitt," "Pluribus," "Severance," and "The White Lotus." Comedy shows up for the Danny Thomas Award include hits like "The Bear," "Hacks," "Only Murders in the Building," and the long-running "South Park."

Limited and anthology series nominees include "Adolescence," "Black Mirror," "Black Rabbit," "Dying for Sex," and "The Beast in Me," reflecting the continued success of these formats on streaming platforms.


The guild also recognized producers of televised and streamed films, non-fiction programming, live and variety television, and competition series.
 Nominees in these categories include "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy," "Mr. Scorsese," "SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night," "The Daily Show," "Last Week Tonight with John Oliver," "RuPaul’s Drag Race," and "The Traitors."

As Oscar nomination voting begins on Monday, the PGA Awards are once again a key indicator in an awards season that is more unpredictable than ever.
 The ceremony will be held on February 28 at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles.