10. THE PERFECT NEIGHBOR

A Netflix true-crime hit on the platform that is also an awards darling, Geeta Gandbhir’s timely body-cam account of a minor disagreement between neighbors in Florida which takes a lethal turn deftly prompts conversations of race, gun law and American society. Horribly fascinating.

9. 28 YEARS LATER

Danny Boyle’s return to his ‘infected’ franchise delivers teeth-gritting tension, social commentary and the same verve as his 23 year-old original. Continuing to push the boundaries of tech (filming on iphones), Boyle’s fable is a strangely beautiful poem to death which takes on new emotional resonance post Covid.

8. BRING HER BACK

Following up their sensational horror debut Talk To Me with an escalation in discomfort, sibling writer/directors Danny and Michael Philippou prove their flair is no fluke with a story of the monstrosity of motherhood. Disquieting and haunting in every way, with kitchen utensils used in unforgettable ways.

7. A REAL PAIN

An awards winner last season but only coming out in UK cinemas in January, Jesse Eisenberg’s self-penned tale of two cousins travelling to their grandmother’s Polish homeland and reckoning with their Jewish heritage lives long in the memory. That’s thanks to a finely-calibrated dramedy script and a pitch perfect performance that is both infuriating and endearing by Keiran Culkin.

6. IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT

Jafar Panahi’s electric, salient film festival hit is understandably on awards shortlists now. Following a group of former prisoners who think they recognise their sadistic jailer, Panahi explores the cruelty of man, trauma, revenge, forgiveness and the difficult road to Iranian democracy.

5. MARTY SUPREME

Timothée Chalamet’s bombastic bid for Oscar is housed in this energetic, nervy anti-sports movie from Josh Safdie which follows the mythomania of a table tennis player and might as well be about America’s unapologetic self-identification in the world. Electrifying cinema.

4. BUGONIA

Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons for a more accessible satire than their Kinds Of Kindness – and it pays off. Taking in themes of misogyny, environmentalism and radicalisation while still playing exploding head for grisly laughs, it’s entertaining while also being sly, smart and ultimately, unbearably sad.

3. TRAIN DREAMS

Adapted from Denis Johnson’s novella, this ode to the vanished life of an early 20th century logger in the Pacific Northwest is more profound than its, ahem, logline. Astonishingly beautiful visuals, sound and a melodious narration make it akin to meditation. Stunning.

2. SINNERS

Innovative, spiritual, thrilling, box office-defying… Ryan Coogler’s vampire period movie delves into grief, Jim Crow laws, artistic ownership and the generational power of grassroots music. All that and dripping in blood and sex. Cinema at its vital finest.

1. ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

Paul Thomas Anderson’s exemplary stoner comedy loosely based on Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland addresses immigration, white supremacy, racism and corruption by making them a lot of fun and a lot of a mess. An embarrassment of riches in performances from an all-star cast but the absolute comet blazing through it all is Teyana Taylor; magnificently, unapologetically fierce, with two lone eyelash extensions and a semi-automatic, she is one of cinema’s great female creations.

Words by Jane Crowther

December 19, 2025

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Who wears a push up bra to bed? If you wore exclusively white, wouldn’t there be a lot of laundry? Does liking Barry Lyndon make you a monster? Questions you will ask while watching Paul Feig’s knowing, horny, beach read of a movie that zips along breathlessly but leaves gaping holes in logic if you really think about it. That is not to say it’s bad – this is the sort of bonkbuster thrill-ride you’d consume on a sun lounger and feel satiated without ever declaring it a work of art.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

The set-up: Ex-con Millie (Sydney Sweeney) needs a job and interviews as a housekeeper for the picture-perfect, wealthy Winchesters; cream cashmere-clad wife, Nina (Amanda Seyfried) and hunky hubby Andrew (Brandon Sklenar). Miraculously, Millie gets the gig – which fulfils her parole conditions and provides a home. But within days Nina has turned from calm delight to feral psycho, while Andrew simmers with disapproval, regret and a propensity to lurk around the house in a white vest that shows off his guns. So far, so Jane Eyre

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

What is really going on in the Winchesters’ dynamic? Who is a reliable narrator? Why does the window not open in the housemaid’s room? How does Millie have this many Abercrombie & Fitch saucy-student outfits in her bag of meagre possessions? Why does the gardener look like a dancer from a Magic Mike show? As Nina turns to shrieking hysteria, Millie and Andrew start flirting over Junior Mints in the den and things flip to ‘thriller’ in ways that are easily pre-plotted by aficionados of the genre.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

But sometimes, that’s exactly what you want. With dialogue that is knowingly camp, sex scenes that tap into Mills & Boon tropes and a performance by Seyfried that feels designed to let you in on the secret while Sweeney flaunts, The Housemaid is a wilfully trashy ride that should be enjoyed with a beverage and a side of self-awareness. The only trigger warning is to not watch if you like china sets or dentistry.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

Pictures courtesy of Lionsgate
The Housemaid is in cinemas now

December 15, 2025

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Photographs & interview by GREG WILLIAMS
As told to JANE CROWTHER


As she prepares to release her directorial debut, Goodbye June, Kate Winslet returns to her creative and family roots in Reading with Greg Williams and takes a trip down memory lane.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Kate Winslet is studying the information board of the number 17 bus in Reading town centre on an autumnal October morning. She smiles and turns to me. ‘It says here: “Your bus fare could take you anywhere.” That’s actually incredibly moving, because it was things like bus fares and saving for train fares that did take me to London for auditions. It took me to the delicatessen to earn the money to pay for the train fares to go to auditions, where I would then start getting jobs in London. I was always getting on one stop later, and off one stop earlier, to just save a bit off the bus fare. I would get the train from Reading to London a lot. I’d run around with my little A to Z, running from audition to audition. You just hoped you’re going to get a gig…’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Kate has been getting the gig for some years now. The Oscar-winning actor hasn’t stopped working since landing her calling-card role as Juliet in Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures as a 17-year-old, which took her away from her hometown in the South of England to New Zealand – and beyond. Having played a diverse range of roles during a glittering career, Kate is now challenging herself in a different way: as director. As she turns a milestone birthday, she’s putting the finishing touches to her directorial debut, Goodbye June, a heartfelt family comi-drama following spatting siblings as they come together to look after their ailing mother at Christmas time. Before we travelled to Reading for a trip down memory lane, I watched Kate finesse the sound mix of her film at Abbey Road Studios a few days earlier, where she has previously worked in a producer capacity on Lee and The Regime. Today we’ve arrived in the Berkshire town for the actor/director to revisit her childhood haunts and home, to process the progress she’s made from being a little girl from humble beginnings who wanted to perform. 

While we stand at the bus stop, the purple number 17 appears as if on cue. ‘It cost about 30p to get home and it stopped a little bit before our house…’ As we linger in town, she recalls getting her ears pierced in a local jewellers and reminisces about Butts shopping centre and the treats she coveted from there. ‘They had a big sweet shop in there called Confetti. We weren’t really allowed sweets, mainly because they were expensive. But I do remember on our birthdays, my mum would always include a big bag of pick ‘n’ mix from Confetti.’ The Winslets lived in Reading as an artistic family; dad Roger was a part-time actor who worked a variety of jobs between roles, mum Sally was a part-time nanny. Kate grew up one of four siblings with an older sister, Anna, a younger sister, Beth, and a younger brother, Joss. The children were part of an amateur dramatic company who regularly performed at the town’s Hexagon Theatre, a Brutalist behemoth on the ring road. While there, Kate auditioned for TV and film roles and, as a teen, started to save money from the paying gigs she landed. ‘I used to do a lot of children’s voiceovers for foreign films because I had a very good ear for accents. So I would do Danish films into American, and things like that. I could just start saving, you know, for a life.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

I was always getting on one stop later, and off one stop earlier, to just save a bit off the bus fare. I would get the train from Reading to London a lot. I’d run around with my little A to Z, running from audition to audition

Her life now is all over the world as she travels for work. But as a teenager, Reading was her domain. ‘I lived here until I was 17 years old, and I got my first movie. The Hexagon Theatre is the first place I ever went on stage, when I was 11 years old, in a production of Bugsy Malone.’ As we drive over to the Hexagon to relive those days, Kate opens up about her family. ‘You know, people often don’t believe this about me… I speak very well, so it sounds like I would have been very well-educated, well-bred, from privilege, etcetera. And that’s not the case at all. My parents had very, very, very little. The one thing that they did do for us, because it was free, was that they enrolled us in a fantastic theatre company [Starmaker] that was based here in Reading, which was so incredible and phenomenally diverse and inclusive, and took kids from about the age of eight right through to adults. It was our first proper introduction to what it means to be part of a functioning creative community, when you put on a show, and create a piece of art in any way that involves multiple people.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We arrive at the theatre and I ask what being part of a creative community felt like to that little girl. ‘You all had to listen and muck in – and also concentrate. We had a lot of dance routines and tons of dialogue we had to learn, and you all had to look out for each other, and take it in turns to get the parts. I never actually did get very massive parts with that theatre company, but it didn’t matter, because they made everyone feel equally as important. It was one of the best things I think our parents did for us, because it meant that our life didn’t revolve around school, and the minutiae of school playground politics. I didn’t particularly like school and I don’t think I really thrived there. But it was here that I really did thrive. My mum and dad probably did feel terrible guilt that they couldn’t pay for things like piano lessons or a proper dance school or acting school – but what they could do was give us these experiences of community, and being part of something that meant that our self-esteem as people was always pretty well-rounded, you know?’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

She pauses. ‘It’s so much harder for kids now with social media and people constantly comparing themselves to one another, and wanting to be liked, and falling apart if they’re disliked. It’s so insane. It’s an invented form of how one’s natural self-esteem should grow, when in actual fact it’s just being part of life and communicating with others that often gives you the best measure of who you’re becoming within the world, and your place in the world, and figuring out who you want to be. We were just so lucky that we had that. Thank God mobile phones didn’t exist.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

When we arrive at the theatre we find the places she remembers: the stairwell where the bigger kids stole crafty smoking breaks or ‘snogs’, the massive red theatre sign out front and the front-of-house lobby inside (‘It smells the same!’ she marvels). As we walk inside to explore, I ask if she feels that she draws from those formative experiences when working now? ‘To me, I was learning how to act here. I was learning how to do all of it – the acting and the dancing and the singing, which is quite significant, because you learn to understand your body as something that you have to take care of. And also you learn its limits. There’s things that you learn, and that also involves an enormous amount of trust. So the way in which I think I learned to listen and respect a space that had other people in it – that really did begin here. And actually directing now – I was acutely aware of my own capacity to pull everyone in. I’ve always done that as an actor. But as a director, it’s completely 100% the job to do that, to pull everyone in. And because the film that I made is about a family, I wanted the on-set experience to feel as close to that as possible, so that everyone was just doing it by osmosis.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

You know, people often don’t believe this about me… I speak very well, so it sounds like I would have been very well-educated, well-bred, from privilege, etcetera. And that’s not the case at all. My parents had very, very, very little. The one thing that they did do for us, because it was free, was that they enrolled us in a fantastic theatre company

Written by Kate’s son, Joe Anders, the film follows June (played by Helen Mirren), the matriarch of her family; mother to four disparate grown kids (Winslet, Andrea Riseborough, Toni Collette and Johnny Flynn), grandmother to a number of kids and wife to Timothy Spall’s befuddled pensioner. Battling terminal cancer in hospital, June approaches Christmas as her health declines, hoping to see her argumentative offspring united and to depart on her own terms. Kate worked as director to create a company feeling among the cast, something she can trace back to the years she spent here. ‘Being part of experiences I had here for a formative time of my life – it definitely set me up in terms of reaching for community, time and time again.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We find the stage door and the memories come flooding back. ‘On the first night, my mum and dad would always find a way to send flowers. That was just incredible – to be a child, and to be sent flowers by your parents. I remember seeing my mum’s little handwriting on the card. I was never the star. I never got the main part. It never occurred to me, because that wasn’t why I was doing it. I never sought out fame. I wasn’t setting myself up mentally ever for fulfilling a big dream of becoming a famous actress. I just thought, “Well, if I’m lucky, I might get the odd episode of Casualty, and a bit of theatre, and voiceover work.” And I thought, “Well, that would be incredible if I could make a living that way.” I didn’t anticipate any of this to have happened to me.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Though she started out as an amateur performer at the Hexagon, Kate soon transferred that experience to drama school and beginning to get paid work. ‘I got a part bursary, and my grandmother contributed something for the first year,’ she says of affording a fee-paying school. ‘Then I started to get this voiceover work and that went towards the fees. I was able to gradually actually pay for those school fees myself.’ We head backstage where Kate recalls the way to stage left and right, the sound of tap shoes clattering along the corridors. She remembers the dressing rooms, the excitement, the noise, the nerves… ‘It was nervous excitement. It wasn’t a proper, real stage fright. I’ve successfully avoided putting myself in a position where I would feel stage fright, because somehow as a grown-up I haven’t done any theatre. The last play I did was when I was 18 years old, and I did a production of What the Butler Saw at The Royal Exchange in Manchester. And it was amazing. But I was terrified.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

To me, I was learning how to act here. I was learning how to do all of it – the acting and the dancing and the singing, which is quite significant, because you learn to understand your body as something that you have to take care of

It seems strange to hear an actor who has achieved so much on film and in TV admit to such a thing. She laughs. ‘As an actor, most of the prep time is really spent just shitting yourself, procrastinating… If I’m getting ready for a film, I’ll wake up at half-three in the morning, and think, “Oh, well, I’m awake now. I might as well get up and panic a bit more.” I’m then pacing the floor, learning lines in the dark, or figuring out character stuff. And that experience of preparation for a film can often be a little bit destructive because there is so much panic that goes on. And then when you start, it’s all fine. You’re in it. And with Goodbye June, I didn’t have time to think about nerves. And we had a good rehearsal period that was very concentrated because I know what a nightmare it is as an actor to be on a roll in rehearsal, and suddenly be pulled away for dialect coaching, or for fight practice…’

Her directorial debut seems to have been a way to put right some of the pet peeves she might have had in front of the camera. ‘I was able to do a lot of things that I’d had on my private wish list,’ she nods. ‘As an actress I’d thought to myself, “One day, if I ever direct, I really would love to not have booms on poles. I would really love to have locked-off cameras, and the crew just walk away, so the actors can just be in that space together.” And I was able to do that on Goodbye June. It was also really important that we created a really respectful, calm, mindful, inclusive on-set environment. We had a child actor on set with special needs and a child who was neurodivergent, so it mattered that everyone felt safe and supported – because it’s not something that often gets given as much consideration. I did feel that having experienced really beneficial working environments – and some less beneficial ones – during a 33-year career, I was able to implement my own dream environment as an actor and provide it for the other actors.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

With its messy family dynamics and dialogue, audiences will no doubt recognise many aspects of family life in Kate’s film. ‘I think some of our most complicated relationships in life are with the people that we love the most of all in the whole wide world. And to be able to create that, I knew that I would have to provide an environment in which everybody felt not just safe and heard – but sometimes held, because every one of our cast members had experienced loss in some way, either of a parent or of a very close family member or past love. Sharing those stories was hard for them. But when you do something like Goodbye June, which is about family and loss in equal measure, you know as an actor that you are going to have to talk about the hard stuff that you try to leave behind. This was a space that all of that had to be included.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Inspired by Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, Kate worked closely with her cinematographer, Alwin Küchler, to capture the mechanics of a family as they rowed and reconciled. She relished the edit, the sound mix, the whole creative process. ‘I loved it all. I absolutely want to do more. You know, I’ve worked with some incredible directors and I’ve also worked with some directors who were maybe less comfortable working with actors, more visual directors. And so there are certainly things that I have learned myself were absolutely areas to avoid with actors. Sometimes I’ve hung on to things I know I wouldn’t say to an actor, because those things were just either unnerving to me or simply not helpful. But I had huge support from Francis Lee who reminded me to trust myself. Todd Field and Todd Haynes were also brilliantly supportive and encouraging, and Jocelyn Moorhouse, who pointed out certain things that she felt I could lean into within my own integrity as a creative.’

Part of helming a project was setting the tone for the 35-day shoot – one that she admits crew members were uncharacteristically reluctant to leave by the end of a filming experience she describes as ‘warm’. ‘How I am in my life is a big smile on your face and lots of good, positive energy. And I’ve always been like that as an actor because when you’re number one on the call sheet, that comes with a responsibility, your energy is 100% setting the tone. So if you’ve had an argument with somebody at home or a colleague has upset you or something’s not gone according to plan, you have to leave that at the door. You can change the course of the entire day and often you can make things fantastic if you just decide that you’re going to put that energy into it. And so as the director, I was doing that tenfold. I definitely learnt that as a director, you just wear the stress on the inside!’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We make our way out to the stage, where Kate is astonished anew at the size of the venue, the number of seats looking back at her. ‘When you’re a little kid, this is huge!’ As she stands looking out to the stalls I wonder if she’d like to do theatre now. ‘I’ve several times come very, very close, and then timing hasn’t worked. And I think part of the reason why I still haven’t really done theatre is because I had a child when I was really young. I had Mia [Threapleton] when I was 25. Theatre is actually quite impractical when you’re a parent, because it’s evenings and all of your weekend. Whereas at least with filming hours, even though the hours are much longer, you’re not really working on the weekends, and usually you can get back in time to put the kids to bed. So that makes a big difference.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

As she turns back to the stage she remembers her tap choreography from one of her childhood shows, muscle memory kicking in. She tap dances with a grin on her face… When we leave the stage, we find a souvenir programme from a production of Annie that Kate starred in as Miss Hannigan. She turns the pages reverentially, finding a photo of herself at 15. ‘In the production of Annie that my sister Anna was in five years previously, in that production was a young Christian Bale who was also in this theatre company. He was an extraordinary tap dancer, he danced on the top of a stack of rotating suitcases.’ She relates a story of a castmate who talked of disliking her body because of how it was perceived by the boys in the company. She shakes her head. In her career she’s been subject to media dissection of her own body. ‘Sometimes I think so much has changed, and sometimes I think absolutely nothing has changed at all. It’s a constant thing, isn’t it?’ 

Real life vs dramatic life is something I want to ask her about. Her family make-up is similar to the one at the centre of Goodbye June. She’s one of four, and like Spall’s disabled dad, Kate’s father suffered a terrible accident when his foot was severed at the ankle by a boat rope. ‘His foot was put back on in a massive 18-hour operation during which he nearly died twice. So we grew up with our whole universe quite altered from that time, because life was already quite challenging in terms of financial resources and just trying to get by. And then things got a whole lot harder when Dad became disabled.’ There’s also a family link in that the screenplay is written by her son, Joe. ‘Joe got a place in screenwriting school after he finished his A levels. When he left school, he really struggled just to declare the fact that he did think he would like to go into the film industry. I did feel that very strongly, and I think there was a part of him that was almost resisting it being true. Perhaps like me, he would never want to do anything unless he felt he could really do it, or make a meaningful contribution to anything. So he got a place at screenwriting school, and he was encouraged by a fantastic writing tutor: “Write what you know, Joe.” The most significant thing that had happened in his life was the loss of his grandmother, my mum, and when she died, he was 13-and-a-half. We really all came together as a family, and gave her this passing that not only she deserved but would have wanted. He was struck by how for so few people that is ever the case, whether it’s just sheer geographics; whether it’s that death can creep up and take you by surprise; or for other more complicated family reasons. So he created a story that was predominantly about a family coming together as they were adjusting to the impending loss of the matriarch. The framework is very similar to my own family: sisters, a brother, a mum and dad who have been married forever. My parents were married forever until my mum passed away. And that was the backdrop.’

Kate was originally going to produce the film, and play the character of organising daughter, Julia (because she wanted to play the sister who was least like herself) but as she discussed who should direct she felt she couldn’t give the feature away to anyone else. That was when she realised she wanted to direct. ‘As an actor, it matters to me to tell stories that not just hopefully resonate with people, but that do make them feel that their stories do have a place to be told. I hope that if I do go on, and continue to be a director  that I continue in that vein of making sure that people are given a platform to have a voice, and getting those stories told. Because, so often, that doesn’t necessarily happen.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

When you do something like Goodbye June, which is about family and loss in equal measure, you know as an actor that you are going to have to talk about the hard stuff that you try to leave behind. This was a space that all of that had to be included

We decide to head out to the deli where Kate worked as a teenager, and jump in the car for the short journey. ‘It was where I was working when I received the phone call to tell me I had been cast in Heavenly Creatures, and that was the film that really did start my whole career. It’s crazy – 33 years ago,’ she tells me as she drives. After she filmed the movie she went straight back to work, just as her dad always did. ‘Well, yeah, because that’s what the life of an actor is. That’s also what I’d grown up seeing. Even though there were lots of actors in my family, they were completely impoverished. It’s actually typically very hard to make a living – still, today – as an actor. You always have to have a fallback plan. So I just went straight back to work, thinking, “Well, I’ll do this, then, until the next audition comes in…”’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

The next auditions came; she worked on Sense and Sensibility and Jude (‘So at that point, I was then able to make a living from acting’) and then Titanic came along. She stands outside the former deli, now a Vietnamese pho restaurant, and thinks about her past when a local woman called Maureen approaches to ask what we are doing. When she asks Kate what she does as a job, Kate replies, ‘I do films.’ She chats to Maureen and some other wellwishers that ask for photos and talks about her roles. They are delighted when she poses for pictures and tells them how pleased she is to meet them. When we leave to drive on to her old family home, Kate tells me how much she appreciates such interactions. ‘In the early parts of my career, the mainstream media in this country was really, really not very pleasant about me. So I learned quite a long time ago how to not care what people think. But it’s very different to caring about what people feel. And I do care about what people feel. How I make people feel is very important.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

I learned quite a long time ago how to not care what people think. But it’s very different to caring about what people feel. And I do care about what people feel. How I make people feel is very important

Learning is also important to her. ‘I’ve always said this: you can never stop learning as an actor. If you decide you know everything, you are fucked, because it means that you’ll stop listening, and you won’t pay attention – not just to what other actors say, but what they might bring into a room that could genuinely have an impact on the performance you’re about to give that you may have thought was going to come out of you in a certain way. Going into directing, I genuinely did feel solid in terms of what to do with a group of actors, and how to put a story together. But of course there were going to be things that I had never done before, you know? The wealth of information and knowledge that I was able to gain from working with these brilliant people [on Goodbye June] – it was just incredible. I never want to not do it. It’s the most intense, consistent period of absolutely working with no break. I started work on the film on the 3rd of January, and I’ve only just started to draw breath now in October. In theory, I should be exhausted, but I’m not at all. I feel completely empowered and uplifted by the work, because I was just so challenged by it, and felt really enriched by the whole experience, moment to moment.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

As we approach her childhood home on Oxford Road and park up, she tells me that she ensured that experience was paid forward. ‘I had a lot of first-time people on this film. If I was a first-time director and my son was a first-time writer… so I was able to give an opportunity to a first-time composer, a first-time set designer, a first-time costume-designer. These were just wonderful things to be able to do for people.’ I wonder if it’s different putting a project out into the world as a director, rather than an actor. ‘I am nervous about this, actually,’ she admits. ‘But one thing that I have strategically done throughout my career to help me stay grounded and level headed is I don’t read reviews ever. Even if it’s a good one I still won’t read it, because that will stay with me and that doesn’t really help. Of course, we hope that people will watch it, take something from it, be moved by it and hopefully even uplifted by it, because that is what we intend. But I think if I am to try to answer your question, I think it is going to be a bit harder for me to avoid what people think of the film.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We stand outside the small terraced house where Kate grew up. The house is much run down since Kate lived there as a child, with newspaper instead of curtains and a boarded-up door. It’s not clear if the house is inhabited. ‘I’m fascinated by how similar it is here, but I do feel sad about the house, it’s a shame that it doesn’t look like a home anymore. When we lived here, we were never sad. We were really happy, had a really lovely life. We used to swing on this gate, I remember the sound of the letterbox…’ A passing pedestrian calls out ‘Are you famous?’ and Kate smiles. ‘Well, I could be,’ she laughs. The woman can’t place her til they discuss The Holiday. When she walks away with a selfie, Kate shrugs. ‘See, this happens. She knows I’m famous, but she doesn’t know who I am. But that’s how I’ve survived!’ She tells me she still uses public transport and for the most part moves around without being bothered.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We scoot around the back of the terrace of houses to the alleyway that runs along behind them. ‘I haven’t been down this alleyway since I was 15 years old,’ Kate exclaims and remembers riding her bike down the narrow path. ‘You’d grate your knuckles down the sides.’ We peer into gardens looking for her dad’s shed and her mum’s blackcurrant bush. She yelps when she finds it, and the remnants of her mum’s gardening and paving. ‘We felt really lucky with what we had. We had a home, this nice garden, and we had our rabbit, and our grandmother didn’t live too far away… We were very cramped, and the walls were paper thin, but we were really happy. And not many kids can say that. I do think what my upbringing really did give to me is a sense of perspective on what’s important. And I’ve never, ever, ever lost that perspective. You know, family, gratitude, a shared meal, a shared experience, that sense of community and team spirit. We grew up just getting on with it and making the best of everything. And I still have that same attitude now in an industry in which people can slightly lose their way or lose a sense of priority, and also believe all the “yes” people around them. I’m deeply distrustful of people who say “yes” to me all the time! So, yeah, it’s taught me to be very good at seeing right through all the bullshit!’ She pauses for a moment and looks emotional as she peers over the back fence.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We leave the house and garden behind and as we return to the car I ask how she feels now about returning home to where it all started for her. ‘Reading served me well. But I will say this: I always knew I was just not meant for here. I was meant to be going off, and finding my way somewhere else. I felt that very strongly.’ We pass the number 17 bus stop on the road and she grins. Her bus fare really did take her everywhere… 


Photographs and interview by GREG WILLIAMS
As told to JANE CROWTHER
Goodbye June is out in cinemas now and released on Netflix, 24 December 

Styling: Cheryl Konteh c/o A-Frame
Hair: Nicola Clarke
Make-up: Lisa Eldridge, c/o Streeters
Thanks to The Hexagon Theatre, Reading
www.whatsonreading.com

Beige striped jacket: Max Mara
White vest: American Vintage
Grey trench coat: Frankie Shop
Black cashmere knit: Theory
Jeans: Ralph Lauren
Loafers: Church’s
Black blazer: Saint Laurent
Black cashmere knit: Theory
Jeans: Ralph Lauren
Loafers: Church’s
Black shirt: Equipment
Grey jeans: FrameTrench coat: Burberry
Sweater: The Frankie Shop

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

December 15, 2025

Lily James, Dan Stevens, Myha’la, Jackson White, Swiped, Rachel Lee Goldenberg, Swiped

Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by JANE CROWTHER


The British actor has been working ferociously since her Cinderella breakout. Now, as she adds ‘producer’ to her resume, Lily James invites Greg Williams to the premiere of her first produced feature, Swiped, and considers what the experience has taught her as an actor and a person.

Lily James, Dan Stevens, Myha’la, Jackson White, Swiped, Rachel Lee Goldenberg, Swiped

For Lily James’ next evolution she’s planning on becoming a sea siren. When Hollywood Authentic catches up with her she’s prepping for her role in submarine thriller Subversion on the Australian Gold Coast, getting ready for upcoming underwater stunts by learning breath- holding techniques. ‘So I can officially become a mermaid!’ she laughs. She may be joking, but the British actor has had a busy couple of years of transformation – from essaying Pamela Anderson in Pam & Tommy to a wrestling wife in The Iron Claw and dangling off mountains for the upcoming gender-flip reboot of Cliffhanger. And not just on screen, either: having established her production company, Parodos Productions, with partner Gala Gordon, James made the leap to producing her first feature film (as well as headlining) with Whitney Wolfe Herd biopic, Swiped. As she told Greg Williams when he captured her on the way to the film’s London premiere in September, the experience had truly changed her. ‘I’ve learnt so much through producing Swiped. I was building my production company at the same time, so from playing Whitney I was learning that entrepreneurial spirit, ambition, hustle and having a real mission.’

James is probably being modest. It’s clear she’s always had ambition and a mission since her days breaking through on Downton Abbey and Cinderella, which catapulted her to a prolific work output. Stepping up to produce seemed like the next logical step. ‘My partner, Gala, and I were so ferocious in our desire to explore every part of [Wolfe Herd’s] story. But one of the things I learned about producing is to accept the compromises. It’s such a collaboration, which is very powerful, and there are so many wins, but there are inevitably losses too, and everything feels so precious to me. There’s no way I could have done this film and not had at least the agency to be in those discussions, and involved in the edit bringing the story to life. It was very profound for me.

I’m going to love continuing to produce and growing in that – and I think I’ll love it even more when I’m not in it!’

Her bursting upcoming slate is full of both experiences. She recently executive-produced Cliffhanger, a remake of the 1993 Stallone actioner in which she plays a mountain climber alongside Pierce Brosnan as her father. For the shoot, she learnt to rock climb in Ibiza before hanging off precipices in the Dolomites during filming. ‘There’s a spiritual, meditative, slowing down of your mind while climbing,’ she enthuses. ‘I’m working in the edit now with [director] Jaume Collet-Serra, and I was very much involved in the script, the forming of my character, and the family dynamic in Cliffhanger. So it has been a big year of producing.’ 

Also in the pipeline: Angry Birds 3; playing a cult leader in Harmonia; a thriller with Riz Ahmed, Relay; and Takashi Miike’s Bad Lieutenant: Tokyo, a sequel to Abel Ferrera’s classic. It was one of James’ favourite experiences on a film set and one that she nearly didn’t take. ‘I’d been in Costa Rica for six weeks – learning to surf and editing Swiped from the jungle. I didn’t want to come home. And then this job came along, and it was so far out, so wild and explicit and dangerous. I didn’t know if I was ready but I just threw myself into it and I loved losing myself. Takashi Miike works a bit like Clint Eastwood, in that you get one take, and then he moves on. I like multiple takes, exploring and trying different things and being sure we’ve got it. And I had to let go of all of that and lean in. It was magic and invigorating. I felt like every nerve ending was on fire. I was so present.’ She pauses and thinks for a moment. ‘When I was at drama school, there’s a beautiful naivety to the work, and you’re taught to fail. Be bold, be brave, be courageous. And if you fail, it’s probably going to be even more interesting. I think I’d lost that. I was reminded of how much better it is if you let go of the reins.’

Lily James, Dan Stevens, Myha’la, Jackson White, Swiped, Rachel Lee Goldenberg, Swiped

I have a great clarity in what I believe in, how I show up at work, what I know I can contribute. But I’m still after the same thing, which is to lose yourself to a moment of work, opposite amazing actors, telling a story that triggers something inside you. Now I have such a heightened sense of time passing, and I just want to make sure that I’m showing up for something that is really meaningful

When she looks back at the young woman in Downton Abbey, what changes can she see now in approach and decision-making? ‘I have a great clarity in what I believe in, how I show up at work, what I know I can contribute. But I’m still after the same thing, which is to lose yourself to a moment of work, opposite amazing actors, telling a story that triggers something inside you. Now I have such a heightened sense of time passing, and I just want to make sure that I’m showing up for something that is really meaningful. The production company is a part of trying to find that agency and clarity. But I’m also trying to find a better work-life balance in terms of feeding all the parts of me – not just the actor.’ 

As an actor, James also understood the special scorn reserved for Wolfe Herd on social media and via the press. ‘I’m very sensitive,’ she admits. ‘Being an actor, being out there, you can’t help but absorb all these different energies and ideas, and what people project onto you. Having a way of disassociating from that is very important.’ To that end, she plans to spend more time singing/focusing on music (she’s been working with musician Ben Abraham), possibly directing and giving herself time away to creatively recharge. ‘At the moment, I’ve been waking up at 5am and watching the sunrise. I feel much more connected to who I am when I’m living in that rhythm. So I plan on exploring, travelling and seeing the world.’ 

Lily James, Dan Stevens, Myha’la, Jackson White, Swiped, Rachel Lee Goldenberg, Swiped

Before she can exhale, though, she needs to master the breath-holding. ‘I love anything that stretches me and pushes me beyond my limits,’ she smiles. ‘But I’ve really begun to acknowledge how important  it is to create better boundaries between yourself and the character. You have to let it go, and come back to yourself…’ 


Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by JANE CROWTHER
Swiped is available on Disney+ and Hulu now

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

December 15, 2025

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by JANE CROWTHER


Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

The prolific actor tells Hollywood Authentic about being a muse to David Lynch, the family she finds at work and learning to say it as it is.

In Jay Kelly, Noah Baumbach’s bittersweet love letter to moviemaking, the titular Hollywood star (George Clooney) attends an Italian film festival – staying in luxurious accommodation with gorgeous views and encountering people with European sensibilities. So it’s fitting that the film premiered in the land of la dolce vita, bowing at the Venice Film Festival with the cast including Emily Mortimer, Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup and Laura Dern bobbing to their red carpet via water taxi from the Cipriani Hotel, where Greg Williams captured their pre-prem prep and post-event wind-down. ‘It was amazing,’ says Dern of the experience when Hollywood Authentic catches up with her back in LA a few weeks later as she prepares to premiere her next movie, Is This Thing On? ‘The embedded Italian film festival storyline made it particularly delicious!’ 

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

Equally delicious, she says, was the experience of making a movie with a company she calls her family. ‘You know, as an only child my best friends have come from every movie that I’ve made, and the filmmakers that found me at a very young age were my best friends. They are as much a part of my life, deeply, as my own family that I was given in this life.’ Key to this particular family is Noah Baumbach, who wrote and directed a story Dern knows well as the child of movie stars – of an actor at the top of his game struggling to balance work and life, trying to navigate fame.

‘I love Noah Baumbach so much. I feel so privileged to have him literally as a family member now. I just feel so safe in our work, in our collaborative discoveries together. I’m like, “Wherever you want me, I’m showing up.” I’ve only had that with a few directors where you feel so blessed to be with them over years. It’s like any relationship – you see so much in each other, and you get to explore and try new things, and you get to know the language of the filmmaker.’ 

Dern has certainly had her pick of incredible filmmakers in her illustrious, award-winning career, including her long collaborative relationship with David Lynch – more of which later. As the daughter of actors Diane Ladd and Bruce Dern, she has been surrounded by the business from birth and made her film debut in White Lightning and Scorsese’s Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (opposite her mother), before going on to work with a who’s who of auteurs. Adrian Lyne, Peter Bogdanovich, Martha Coolidge, Steven Spielberg, Clint Eastwood, Alexander Payne, Robert Altman, Paul Thomas Anderson, Jean-Marc Vallée… the list goes on. But while working on Jay Kelly reminded her on all the sublime filmmaking experiences that have brought her to this point, it also marked a reunion of the stars of Grizzly II: Revenge, a 1983 schlock horror that remained unreleased until 2021, featuring Charlie Sheen, Dern and a newbie actor, George Clooney. ‘The ever-famous Grizzly II – we’re giving it so much press!’ she laughs. ‘I’m like, “George, should we be talking about Grizzly II in every interview? The 40-minute, unfinished horror film that we made?” But, you know, what a gorgeous gift that movie was for me, because I got George. And then, on this movie, I got Adam Sandler and his amazing family, who I really call my family now.’ 

‘Gift’ is a word Dern is fond of using; she projects enthusiasm and gratitude about the opportunities she’s had, and seems invigorated about those that may be on the horizon. The way she talks about her career highlights certainly feel like cherished prizes as she recalls her ‘myriad experiences’. ‘You see a clip of something, or a moment in time – my first movie, I was 11. My whole life is captured from sixth grade on… At 17, I met David Lynch. At 15, I met Peter Bogdanovich on the film Mask. Peter’s way of working was: it’s family. The minute we started, we were in his kitchen cooking or rehearsing. He was introducing me and Eric Stoltz to Renoir and Buñuel movies. He was like, “If I’m going to reference cinema, all of us need to know the language of it.” What an education. It’s a very different way of working. And then meeting David was such an incredible, extraordinary gift that lasted as long as I had him. So I’m very blessed. I’m so grateful that I have those memories, especially as we lose people that we love, that we have all those stories that we experience together. It’s really a great privilege.’

Her experience working with Baumbach on Marriage Story netted her a Best Actress Academy Award after nominations for Rambling Rose and Wild at Heart, as well as BAFTA and Golden Globe wins. She also won an Emmy for her role in Big Little Lies – another ensemble cast where she made friends and learned new tricks, working with Jean-Marc Vallée. So is that feeling of creative fellowship something she actively seeks having experienced it with some of the greatest artists? ‘I think it’s a continual theme for me,’ she considers. ‘I don’t know if it would have had the same value had I not seen it from my parents’ relationships. Yes, my parents were actors who had very close friendships with filmmakers. But more specifically, it was the ’70s. So I got to be privy to ’70s cinema through my parents’ experiences with those filmmakers who made so much impact on film. And the directors that I’m finding now that are becoming my family, have the same language as those people, and the same priorities. So I think that education, if you will, made me long for something very specific.’

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

You know, as an only child my best friends have come from every movie that I’ve made, and the filmmakers that found me at a very young age were my best friends. They are as much a part of my life, deeply, as my own family

That specificity was perhaps never more in evidence than her long and fruitful relationship with Lynch, with whom she made Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart and Inland Empire. The duo met on a casting call for Blue Velvet and, as she wrote in a tribute in the LA Times on his death, bonded over ‘The Wizard of Oz, Bob’s Big Boy turkey sandwiches on white bread, transcendental meditation… and our shared love of Los Angeles’. Lynch cast her and Dern wrote that she ‘quickly traded college for following you to the ends of the Earth. I never looked back’.

‘After David, I was like, “Oh, am I never going to have that with someone else?” I assumed I wouldn’t,’ she says now. ‘But, you know, I did meet Jean-Marc Vallée, and we did get to work more than once together in such beautiful ways [on Wild and Big Little Lies]. And then the family that is Noah and Greta [Gerwig] – I made films with both of them over the course of a year [Little Women and Marriage Story]. That was such an incredible, rare beginning. And we were dear friends before we started the movies. It’s an incredible gift.’

For Baumbach’s Jay Kelly, Dern plays an exasperated publicist trying to harness an unspooling Jay as his career, family life and public persona come into uncomfortable focus after a run-in with a former friend (Crudup). Constantly surrounded by staff, Kelly is nevertheless lonely, and disconnected from his daughters (Grace Edwards and Riley Keough). Though there’s amusement to be had in poking fun at the pomp of Hollywood (private jets, trailers, lifetime achievement awards), the themes of isolation and self-doubt are something Dern perhaps relates to more. ‘All of the chapters of Jay’s life give us room to consider whichever player we’ve been in any of those moments,’ she says. ‘Longing for having done it differently; not wanting to miss our lives when we’re focused on the big picture of being at an Italian film festival or wherever it is for any of us, for any vocation. I was feeling the gift of the moment, remorse in my own life, question marks; all of it…’

The solitude of Jay in a crowded room isn’t something Dern particularly recognises though. ‘I’ve never felt loneliness because I’m an actor. But I felt loneliness as the child of an actor. I know what that cost feels like by the nature of anyone who’s raised by parents who are taken away to go do their work – you do have a loneliness, because inevitably you’re being left for this other thing, whatever that profession is: travelling salesman or an actor or filmmaker. It’s hard to understand in childhood why your parent is not making you the priority, even if it’s impossible in that profession to do so.’

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

A mother of two herself, Dern considers how things have changed since her mom and dad were trying to juggle acting and parenthood. How her own experience of motherhood was deliberately, and fortunately, different. ‘You know, when my first child was born, I just didn’t work for almost two years, because I wanted to be there because of what I had been through, I’m sure. But I’m lucky. I have had producers or companies with agents and managers being very protective of [parental needs], figuring out ways to let me take my kids with me or getting me home, and giving me several plane tickets. My parents were in indie cinema. They weren’t being paid enough to fly home, you know? So when my parents went to do a movie, and there was nowhere to put a kid, and they didn’t want a kid on the set – I was blessed to have a grandma to be home with. But my parents left for a movie for three months, and I didn’t see them – we would talk on Sundays on a hotel phone which was very expensive. You had to save up your money for the Sunday call. You didn’t have FaceTime and texting your kids. So the heartbreak that I did sometimes experience was, I believe, matched by my mother’s heartbreak of having to work and leave me. So I am blessed to get to do it differently, and still, I’m sure, mess up all the time! I’m just trying my best.’

The actor’s mothering instinct has extended to Hollywood Authentic cover star Austin Butler, playing his parent onscreen in an uncredited cameo in Darren Aronofsky’s Caught Stealing, as well as helping him navigate his sudden fame off-screen in the wake of 2022’s Elvis. Butler’s late mother was often likened to Dern and their friendship blossomed after he told her about this. ‘I feel like I’m learning every day. I don’t know if I’m imparting any wisdom. But I did find a beautiful and particular bond with Austin. I appreciate that he’s asking the questions deeply, and I was really happy to be there for that process.’

She’s playing another mom in her next film, Bradley Cooper’s awards-buzzy Is This Thing On? based on the real-life experience of British stand-up comedian John Bishop. She plays Tess, a former Olympic volleyball champ whose marriage to Will Arnett’s Alex disintegrates, sending him to stand-up sessions at New York’s Comedy Cellar, and the couple on a voyage of emotional discovery. It’s messy, brutally honest and gives Dern the juicy opportunity to play a complex, relatable mid-life woman. ‘I was so excited Bradley wanted to explore a real relationship, and then also a real couple in their 50s. And to really question in a deep and true way how we lose our way to who we are – which we all do, because we have to continue to redefine ourselves. We’re not who we were at 20. As we go on that discovery and adventure, then we get to redefine the partnership. And if we aren’t looking at ourselves, everything’s going to be lost. So that idea as a premise was really moving to me.’

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

Every experience I have is teaching me more, especially with these filmmakers who have invited me into their writing process, prep process, editing process. I want to keep learning. I’m definitely open to all the ways that I can be part of storytelling

Written by Arnett and Mark Chappell, Cooper made space for his cast to investigate and contribute to the honing of the characters. ‘He didn’t say, “Here’s the script. Do you want to play the part?” But: “Here’s the invitation. Who is this woman? Let’s find her together.” The process was beautiful. I would share thoughts and ideas, and he would just be like, “Tell me what she’s feeling, what she’s longing for?” These are not therapy-ised people. These are not affluent people. These are all of us trying to figure our shit out.’

Though Dern doesn’t think Tess is like her, there are elements of the character that she’s cleaved to since playing her. ‘I think this is the first character I’ve played where I would say there are parts of me that Bradley knows that I don’t stay true to, that I hope I become when I grow up,’ she smiles. ‘Having that direct “saying it as it is” energy. This is the most honest thing I can say to you… In the last two days even, I’ve found myself – because I’m tired from life and press and whatever – I’ve been saying stuff like Tess would. I think I’m still caught between growing into these qualities, and feeling comfortable with them.’ At this point Dern’s Husky, Baby, begins howling in the house. ‘Sorry, my Husky is very opinionated about this. She is like, “You are not Tess at all. You haven’t told me the truth yet. You haven’t even fed me!”

One thing Baby can agree on, breakfast or not, is the success of Dern as a producer. Having previously produced shorts and docs, she read the novel Mr & Mrs American Pie by Juliet McDaniel, and along with her producing partner, Jayme Lemons, developed the project, shepherding it to TV in the shape of Apple+’s hit limited series, Palm Royale. Originally she planned to play the lead, Maxine, but scheduling meant she offered it to Kristen Wiig with a new role written for Dern as castmate and exec-producer. The show is now rolling out a second season of period adventures among a fierce female cast including Carol Burnett, Allison Janney, Leslie Bibb and Kaia Gerber. 

Adam Sandler, Billy Crudup, Emily Mortimer, George Clooney, Jay Kelly, Jim Broadbent, Laura Dern, Noah Baumbach

‘As an actor, and a daughter of actors, to see this incredible cast having fun, and loving each other, and doing stuff that nobody gives them a chance to do…’ she marvels. ‘Kristen called me yesterday, and she said, “Did you actually develop a show where you’re letting me basically have musical numbers and dancing, and we’re working with Carol Burnett, and we’re all together producing this?” It’s just amazing. And seeing that, and the attention to detail, thanks to Abe Sylvia, our showrunner, and making sure in the second season that each character has their own arc, and even acting journey – those things are a blessing. Also creating, hopefully, a really lovely fun environment – it’s beautiful that I can do that. And to have that going, and also be exploring, as I love to do as an actor, with these amazing filmmakers that I get to work with.’

She has numerous projects lined up with Lemons under their shingle, Jaywalker Pictures, but perhaps her next progression is direction – especially given that she’s coming into her ‘saying it like it is’ era? ‘I definitely have thought about it. I made a short when I was in my mid-20s, and I loved the experience of that. I love acting – that’s my happy place. But I loved working with actors, and I also was fascinated by the framing as truth, that was so interesting to me. I just didn’t know enough for me to feel confident. But every experience I have is teaching me more, especially with these filmmakers who have invited me into their writing process, prep process, editing process. I want to keep learning. I’m definitely open to all the ways that I can be part of storytelling.’

For now though, there’s breakfast to get for Baby, the press tour for Is This Thing On? and awards season… ‘Last night I was with Adam Sandler and George Clooney. And I was like, “How did I get here, that everyone around me is one of my favourite people?” It’s not just the luck of timing and getting to do these things that I love. But in all three of these projects, I deeply love these people, and admire them so much. You feel like you’re giving a journalist a line  when you’re saying that, but I actually am working with my family members. So I’m really grateful.’ 


Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Interview by JANE CROWTHER
Jay Kelly is on Netflix now
Palm Royale S2 is on Apple+ TV
Is This Thing On? is in cinemas 30 January
Laura wears Saint Laurent, Armani Privé and jewellery by Pasquale Bruni

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

December 15, 2025

78th Cannes Film Festival, Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac
78th Cannes Film Festival, Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac

Photograph and words by GREG WILLIAMS


Greg Williams takes pause to consider the bigger picture of images seen small on his social media. This issue: Jacob Elordi at the Venice Film Festival in August.

I took this picture of Jacob just before the premiere of Frankenstein at the Venice Film Festival, my favourite festival without any doubt. To have actors all dressed up in such a beautiful city, the boats, the water and of course the rich history of cinema makes it an incredible canvas to work on. Within that history is a set of photos taken of Paul Newman by Graziano Arici in 1963. They are my favourite Venice pictures ever. So for the 10 years I’ve been covering the Venice Film Festival I have carried those images in my head.

I’ve met Jacob a number of times in recent years and so when I was at a dinner with him I asked him if he’d be happy for me to do a picture. ‘Ah, you want to do the Paul Newman?’ he said. I couldn’t believe my ears as that was exactly what I was about to say to him. ‘Yeah, meet me at 6.30pm downstairs from my hotel tomorrow night…’ I ended up getting closer to ‘the Paul Newman’ than I ever have before in what must be close to 200 shoots I’ve done at Venice over the years.

Jacob’s great look and authentic style worked perfectly for the picture. He is up at the front of the boat in a not dissimilar pose to Newman. The image has an authenticity that I love. Seeing Jacob’s eye behind his glasses, the angle of his hand. The picture has a timeless quality that is made modern by Jacob’s slight mullet haircut, which makes it a little more punk rock. And then the Jacques Marie Mage sunglasses make it still feel vintage.

Leica SL2, 1/2000 sec, f/4.0, 1600 ISO, 75mm 


Photograph and words by GREG WILLIAMS
Shot on Leica SL2
Read our review of Frankenstein here

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

December 15, 2025

Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025

Photograph and words by GREG WILLIAMS
Words by JANE CROWTHER


Greg Williams joins George and Amal Clooney at their fourth annual fundraiser in London as the Clooney Foundation for Justice awards trailblazers and icons in philanthropy, freedom of speech and equality.

This year’s Albies, the Clooney Foundation for Justice annual fundraiser and awards recognising individuals making a difference in the world, were held at London’s Natural History Museum, with Greg Williams capturing the guests attending the event. Among the attendees was anti-apartheid activist and lawyer Justice Albie Sachs (a recipient in 2022 and who the awards are named after), who dined alongside guests such as Donatella Versace, Shailene Woodley, Charlotte Tilbury, Richard E. Grant, Dominic West and Felicity Jones. Hosted by Graham Norton, presenters included Meryl Streep, Jacinda Ardern, Dame Emma Thompson and the Clooneys, while musical interludes came from Brandi Carlile and John Legend. The dinner menu nodded to the Clooneys’ favourite holiday spot, with Italian penne all’arrabbiata served as table conversations flowed underneath the museum’s famous suspended Blue Whale skeleton. ‘At The Albies, the sacrifices and courageous commitments to justice and human rights take centre stage,’ George and Amal Clooney noted. ‘This is a celebration of the individuals whose lives and careers have come to embody those values that form the cornerstone of our foundation’s global work.’ Award recipients were:

Fatou Baldeh – Women in Liberation and Leadership (WILL)
A leading voice on the dangers of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) and a survivor herself, Baldeh founded WILL and successfully advocated against a 2024 effort to overturn The Gambia’s ban on the practice.

José Rubén Zamora – Journalist
One of Guatemala’s most respected journalists known for investigating corruption, he was charged and convicted of money laundering after reporting unfavourably on the President of Guatamala. He is in prison awaiting retrial.

Marty Baron – Editor and journalist
The former executive editor of The Boston Globe and The Washington Post.He led the Globe’s exposé on the Catholic Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse, as well as the Post’s reporting on widespread digital surveillance of American citizens.

Melinda French Gates – Philanthropist
A champion of global efforts for women’s health and equality for over 25 years. She now leads Pivotal Ventures – an organisation that advances women’s empowerment around the world. 

Darren Walker – President of the Ford Foundation
The Lifetime Achievement recipient created the first billion-dollar social bond in U.S. capital markets to stabilise nonprofit organisations during Covid. During a long career he has been key in numerous social justice initiatives. 

To find out more about The Albies, visit cfj.org/the-albies. See other causes The Clooney Foundation for Justice supports at cfj.org

Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
George and Amal Clooney
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
George and Amal Clooney
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Albie Sachs
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Bianca Jagger and Donatella Versace
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
The Albies
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
John Legend and George Clooney
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Richard E. Grant, Meryl Streep, Stella McCartney and Shailene Woodley 
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Meryl Streep
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Fatou Baldeh — Women’s Rights Activist (Award) and Dame Emma Thompson
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
José Rubén Zamora – (Human Rights Award) accepted by his son José Carlos Zamora  
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Darren Walker — Pursuit of Justice (Lifetime Achievement Award)
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Melinda French Gates — (Award)
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Marty Baron – Editor and journalist (Award)
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Brandi Carlile
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Graham Norton and Jacinda Ardern
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
George and Amal Clooney 
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
Katherine Waterston
Amal Clooney, George Clooney, The Albies 2025
George Clooney and Dame Emma Thompson

Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Words by JANE CROWTHER
To find out more about The Albies, visit cfj.org/the-albies. See other causes The Clooney Foundation for Justice supports at cfj.org

December 15, 2025

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

Photographs MARK READ
Words by JANE CROWTHER


A La-La Land fixture since the ’30s, this trolley-car bar has entertained The Duke, The King and The Chairman among a constellation of stars who have dropped by for a Mai Tai and a bite. It has featured in movies, songs and legends, dodged the wrecking ball and continues to provide old Hollywood glamour and gossip from its rouge embrace. Hollywood Authentic invites you to meet us at The Formosa…

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

First opened in 1939 across the road from the Samuel Goldwyn Studio lot, the Formosa Cafe has been the site of whispered secrets and Hollywood tales ever since. The 1917 Hampton Studios, 1920s Pickford-Fairbanks Studio and the fledgling United Artists, plus the Warner Hollywood Studios all sat at the corner of Formosa and Santa Monica Boulevard at various times over the decades. The stars of productions looking for a quick bite and drink – off-site and away from the commissary – would pop across the street to sink into the deep, red vinyl booths and speakeasy atmosphere of the Formosa. The sign on the bar, ‘Where the stars dine’, isn’t an empty boast. Regular John Wayne got so sloshed one night he slept off his whiskey in the bar and was found making scrambled eggs for breakfast in the kitchen the next morning. Marilyn Monroe has sipped at the storied watering hole, as has Howard Hughes, while juggling screenings across the street and dates at his table. While making films in town, Elvis Presley used to rock up to meet Colonel Tom Parker in his favourite booth (his liquor decanters are on show in the bar now), and he once turned up with a new Cadillac for a waitress who his party had forgotten to tip. His daughter, Lisa Marie, continued the tradition and hosted a posthumous 88th birthday party for her father in the cafe days before she died in 2022. 

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe
Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

The sign on the bar, ‘Where the stars dine’, isn’t an empty boast. Regular John Wayne got so sloshed one night he slept off his whiskey in the bar and was found making scrambled eggs for breakfast in the kitchen the next morning

Mobster Bugsy Siegel used a booth so often the restaurant was referred to as his ‘office’ and he had a secret safe installed at his table for sneaky cash transactions, which is still visible through a glass pane in the floor. Frank Sinatra, James Dean, Humphrey Bogart and Ava Gardner frequented the venue for its discretion, dim lighting, cosy vibes and killer cocktails. Little wonder that it featured in a key scene in Curtis Hanson’s love letter to cinema’s Golden Age, LA Confidential, when LAPD detectives (Guy Pearce and Kevin Spacey) offend Lana Turner by interrupting her dinner and assuming she is a sex worker. In The Majestic, it stood in for the fictional Coco Bongo bar on Santa Monica Pier, and of course such a vintage hangout would be an onscreen haunt for old-school Hollywood fans Jon Favreau and Vince Vaughn in Swingers

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

For almost as long as movies have been the industry of Los Angeles, a restaurant has sat on this site. Established in 1925 as the Red Post Cafe, the business was expanded with a decommissioned 1904 red trolley car and a partnership with chef-turned-restauranteur Lem Quon (and stayed in the Quon family for decades). The trolley car remained, Chinese food went on the menu and the Formosa asked many of its famous clients to autograph their headshots as they draped over the bar. Those 8x10s lined the walls for years, looking down on the swirling cigarette smoke and hushed conversations through to the threat of demolition in 1991. When longtime patron Bono heard his favourite cocktail lounge might shut down, he scribbled a poem on a drinks coaster:

 … It’s dark in the daylight,
you can’t see very far

Past the ghosts of Sam Goldwyn
in the old train car.

Jane Russell was there,
and so was Monroe

When James Dean told the
“Rock” where to go

Hey, Elvis is dead but he haunts
the PagodaIt’s on Santa Monica,
it’s called Formosa.

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe
Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

The Formosa survived, with fans including the Beastie Boys, until an unpopular remodelling in 2015 when the vibrant lacquered walls, pagoda lanterns and buddha statues were ripped out for a more modern look. Later, as it seemed that the ghosts of Hollywood might be lost along with a legendary haunt, preservationists and the 1933 Group moved in to save and restore the grand dame. 

Consulting old photographs for veracity, the team painstakingly replaced all the fitting and ephemera as it was (dusting off in-storage items, re-purchasing sold property), and worked on a new bar area and the refurbishment of the 36-seater, 800-series Pacific Electric trolley car – which is now the oldest surviving model of its kind. The careful $2.4 million restoration replaced trolley parts and uncovered new glass – and allowed the small room at the back of the car, which was formerly Siegel and then later mobster Mickey Cohen’s private office, to shine. Now it’s a cosy VIP dining space for up to 20 people with its own separate entrance and a vintage rotary phone to make orders directly to the bar. It was also here during the recent Presley birthday celebrations that Elvis’ prized possessions were displayed for guests (his gem-encrusted ‘TCB’ ring, Aloha Hawaii cape and silver Vegas belt among the treasures) after being flown in with the curator via private jet direct from Graceland. The vibe of both kingpins and the king reside here.

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

Wanting to honour the heritage of the place, a back dining room was created where the smoking patio used to be, with an ornate bar formerly from Chinatown’s famous Yee Mee Loo restaurant. The Yee Mee Loo was a similar time capsule, with an underground Tiki joint called the Kwan Yin Temple serving lurid drinks, decorated with a clock that ran backwards and a bar that was a prop altar used in the 1937 movie The Good Earth. The bar had been in a Glendale restaurant and then a private home’s lounge before the 1933 Group found it and relocated it. The tiles on the pagoda roof of the whimsical bar were created by Warner Bros Design Studio – a fitting link to the company’s old-time links to the bar as former neighbours. The dining space alongside it is now decorated with vintage photos, lobby cards and promo material of trailblazing Asian actors who made their mark on Hollywood, in theatre and in TV and radio, curated by filmmaker Arthur Dong. 

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe
Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe
Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

These days, the Yee Mee Loo bar and the original brass-topped bar – which gleams like a polished Buick – are linked by the same terrazzo floor slabs that line the Hollywood Boulevard Walk of Fame. Famous names once again stare down from the reinstated headshots on the walls and identify the coveted booth seating (take a pew at the Ava Gardner, the Elvis or the John Wayne); the cocktail list is a book of talent favourites. The Duke’s ‘All Nighter’ (Milagro Blanco Tequila, RumChata, Fair Goji Liqueur, passionfruit and lime) sits alongside the bar’s famous Mai Tais and Blood and Sand concoctions. Drink a couple of those and you may well feel you’ve travelled to another time – or dimension; apparently the ghost of a gentleman sits in booth eight and can only be seen through the reflection in the bar’s overhead mirror… 

Beastie Boys, Elvis, La La Land, Los Angeles, Mark Read, Swingers, The Formosa Cafe

Photographs by MARK READ
Words by JANE CROWTHER
7156 Santa Monica Blvd, West Hollywood, Los Angeles, CA 90046
www.theformosacafe.com

Words by CLINT BENTLEY 


Co-writer and director of Train Dreams, Clint Bentley, celebrates an American New Wave movie that showcases a beautiful paradox and resonates through the decades.

ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST (1975)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest was the first film that really changed me. I probably saw it way too young – in seventh grade – about 12 years old – but that’s also part of why it was so impactful. I was having a terrible time in school: bullied, feeling out of place, learning for the first time that the world was not inherently fair. Then I saw Nicholson try to rip a sink out of the floor to throw it through a window and escape his confinement. And in that moment I was saved. I’ve carried that moment, along with the rest of this incredible film, with me ever since.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

I grew up on a ranch in Florida. We only had three TV channels and so I watched a ton of movies, mostly with my mom. She loved American movies from the ’60s and ’70s and so that’s what I loved, too. Movies taught me about life. Steve McQueen, Clint Eastwood, Jack Nicholson – watching these men struggle helped me navigate those years. When I first watched Cuckoo’s Nest, I was moved so deeply by McMurphy – in a position where everything is stacked against him, but never losing his spirit. Never letting go of his passion for life. It opened me up as a person and, looking back, it set the tone for the types of films I one day hoped to create. There’s a deep humanism that runs through the film. A love and an understanding for its characters who are all trapped in an oppressive system. The older I get, the more that resonates with me.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

The craft of the film is also so striking and so beautiful. It’s amazing to see how Milos Forman achieves this magical combination of intention and openness. It’s a beautifully written script that’s always taking the audience somewhere, yet so gently that many moments feel totally improvised. As if a camera just happened to be there when something happened. I know now what a rare and difficult balance it is to strike as I’m constantly trying to find it as a filmmaker. I’ve been so inspired by this approach. Of trying to create what might be closer to a theatre troupe and letting scenes play out before a camera in hopes that we might achieve the feeling of life, with all of its beauty and surprises. When you get lucky enough to find that balance, some magic happens. Moments appear that you never would have been able to dream up. Moments that come to define your movie. The whole film comes to life and you feel more like you’re discovering it rather than creating it.

Cuckoo’s Nest is also a film that allows itself to make mistakes. There are moments that I think the film could probably have been fine without – moments that, in and of themselves, you might not have missed had they been left on the cutting room floor. And yet that shagginess is part of what makes the film so lovely. It helps give it its personality. Like the characters in the film itself, its ‘flaws’ are part of what helps reveal its spirit.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

In a movie full of unforgettable moments, one scene that has always stayed with me is the baseball game scene. Nurse Ratched (the incomparable Louise Fletcher) won’t let the guys watch a baseball game on TV. So McMurphy, in an act of defiance, pretends that he’s watching the game, acting it out for the guys. What starts out as something juvenile and a bit silly slowly takes on more resonance and depth. The other patients start to gather around him and he narrates the imaginary action with such conviction (yelling over the piped-in ‘calming’ music, no less) that these lost and bullied men momentarily believe in the game. They get lost in the performance and, more movingly – for this moment at least – they’re free. It’s an incredible performance from Nicholson, in the midst of a company of amazing performances. But more deeply, it’s a moment of rebellion and solidarity. A moment that illuminates the power of imagination. Of play. Of making art in dark times. It shows the power of art to foster resilience, endurance and to even be a protest in its own way.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

There’s a melancholy to Forman’s film. It’s not only inherent in the story, but it suffuses through the filmmaking itself. From the look of the cinematography to the strange, haunting score that always seems to wander in from around the corner. And yet hand-in-hand with that melancholy is a deep love and appreciation for life. I leave this film and I’m just very thankful to be alive, to be able to walk around. It reminds you to revel in the little moments. Having a beer at a baseball game. Going out to meet a friend. It reminds you what a blessing it is just to be alive.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

A more recent inspiration from this film came when considering how to approach an adaptation of a piece of literature – especially one as iconic and beloved as Train Dreams. Having just adapted this novella, I now know the responsibility and the fear inherent in the task. It’s a delicate process. The film must be able to stand on its own, whether the audience has read the book or not. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest releases itself from the source material while always honoring its spirit. Despite the liberties taken with the text (and despite Ken Kesey’s hatred of the film), it’s hard not to see the reverence that Forman had for the source material and for what it could communicate about the human spirit.

Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Milos Forman
Amazon MGM Studios

The ending of the film still bowls me over every time I see it. The way tragedy and triumph somehow exist in the same moment. The element of rebirth inherent in the story. It’s a catharsis I still get shaken by every time I experience the film. One of the beautiful aspects of great art is that it can give us this emotional release. It seems to be something we’ve needed as long as we’ve been human – from the early tribal ceremonial experiences, up through Ancient Greek theatre, into today where most of us get it in the cinema (I’m sure there will be some other unimagined form one day). It’s a rare and special thing when a film can pull us into a story, take us on a deep emotional journey and, in the process, transform us. The pieces of art that achieve this resonance and depth become timeless. We hold onto them. It’s why we still read Don Quixote. It’s why this film will never go out of style. Despite moments that end up feeling dated or from another time, there’s a universality that we hold onto. Something that we’ll return to over and over to help us get through the dark times, whatever form they may take. 


All images © Amazon MGM Studios
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) received critical acclaim, and is considered by critics and audiences to be one of the greatest films ever made.

Train Dreams is streaming now on Netflix

December 15, 2025

Adeel Akhtar, Down Cemetery Road, Four Lions, Murdered by My Father, The Night Manager
Adeel Akhtar, Down Cemetery Road, Four Lions, Murdered by My Father, The Night Manager

Photographs by SARAH CRESSWELL


Down Cemetery Road star Adeel Akhtar tells Hollywood Authentic about his evening chocolate fix, clapping with one hand and being buried alive in a coffin.

How important is a little bit of nonsense now and then to you?
Very important. It allows you to not take things, yourself or other people too seriously. It’s important to take things a little bit seriously, though.

What, if anything, makes you believe in magic?
The goodness in people. Especially from people who have gone through a lot and you wouldn’t expect them to be able to have the breadth of emotion to afford to be kind to people, and they are… that makes me believe in magic.

What was your last act of true cowardice?
I’m filming at the moment in Greece, and I had to go to the edge of this mountain. I was harnessed and I was clipped in and I did it – but I was terrified. 

What single thing do you miss most when you’re away from home?
My family and my children. I’m in a beautiful place right now, but it would be even more beautiful with my wife and my kids.

Do you have any odd habits or rituals?
It’s not an odd habit, but it is a bit of a ritual. On the first day of filming, I have to pack my bag and leave it all by the door the night before. Everything has to be ready by the door for me to go. And the times I haven’t done that, it hasn’t been a very good day. 

What is your party trick?
You know that Zen quote? What’s the sound of one hand clapping? You’re supposed to say it doesn’t sound like anything, because how can you clap with one hand? I can clap with one hand because I’ve got a really floppy wrist, and that’s my party trick.

What is your mantra?
I don’t have one, but if I were to make one up it would be ‘keep going’. 

What is your favourite smell?
I suppose the distinct smell of home when I get back after being away for a long time. You know your house always has a particular type of smell? That’s the smell of home.

What do you always carry with you?
Headphones. If I’m going on set they’ll be small ones, and if I’m walking around, big ones. But I have to have my headphones because I listen to music all the time. 

What is your guilty pleasure?
Chocolate with milk in an evening. Or a chocolate chip cookie with milk. But a big glass of cold milk. At the end of the day, that makes me quite happy. 

Who is the silliest person you know?
My two boys. Both of them are equally as silly as each other. Some of the silly chats that we get into start in English and then end in gibberish.

What would be your least favourite way to die?
In a coffin, buried alive.

What’s your idea of heaven?
I had it a little bit this summer. Me, my wife and the kids went to the south of France and we hired a little house there with a swimming pool. The weather was lovely, and we drank loads of rosé and ate really well. That was heaven to me.

BAFTA-winning actor Adeel Akhtar studied law at university but found his calling in drama, training at the Actors Studio Drama School and The New School, New York. He made his name in Four Lions and has appeared in diverse projects ranging from Clio Barnard’s Ali & Ava, Sherwood and The Night Manager to Back to Life, Capital, River and Murdered by My Father (for which he won the BAFTA) as well as numerous theatre productions. He is currently starring in thriller series Down Cemetery Road, based on the novel by Mick Herron. 


Photographs by SARAH CRESSWELL
Down Cemetery Road is out now on Apple+

*Arguably one of the most memorable (and quotable) scenes in 1971’s Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is when Mr Salt mumbles, ‘It’s a lot of nonsense,’ to which Wonka replies, in a sing-song voice, ‘A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men.’