Colin Jost and Scarlett Johansson Team Up for SNL Finale Revenge
Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost enact revenge on Michael Che during SNL's season 50 finale after a crude joke left viewers stunned
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Die, My Love review: 'Jennifer Lawrence shines in tale of desire and psychosis'
Lynne Ramsey’s latest has screened in Cannes, and features Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in a heavy tale of sex, depression and motherhood
Review at a glance
Lynne Ramsay last participated in competition in Cannes in 2017 with the phenomenal You Were Never Here. This year, Ramsay returns to the Croisette with Die, My Love, based on the novel of the same name by Ariana Harwicz and adapted by Ramsay with Enda Walsh and Alice Birch. Although the action is transposed from France to rural Montana, Ramsay sticks close to the source, which is an unflinching and unsentimental depiction of motherhood, sexual desire and post-partum psychosis.
Jennnifer Lawrence is Grace, a writer, who lives with Jackson (Robert Pattinson). They decide to move into his dead Uncle Frank’s home – ‘I lost a tooth on this porch’ – just a short distance from where he grew up and where his parents still live. Ramsay dashes through time in the opening couple of scenes: one minute the horny couple are having hot and slightly violent sex, the next Grace is hugely pregnant. The film flits back and forth between past and present: in one scene the baby is six months old and it’s Thanksgiving, Grace heavily pregnant. Jackson’s dad Harry (Nick Nolte) is in the kitchen, alone and confused while the rest of the family gather in the dining room.
Harry’s death comes shortly before the birth of Grace and Jackson’s baby. Parallels between the madness – or at least the unhinging – of grief and post-natal depression are made. Jackson’s mother Pam (an extremely sympathetic Sissy Spacek) and Grace both losing the plot, albeit to different degrees. As Grace’s psychosis escalates, so does Pam’s grief-stricken sleepwalking. In one scene, both women are seen wandering in the moonlight, one wielding a rifle, the other a knife, both in their nighties.
The threat of violence and killing – or at least the fantasy of it – pervades the film. Much of the action takes place at night, adding to the horror element and also to the dreamlike (or nightmarish) sense of surreal. A motorcyclist rides back and forth past the house, occasionally dismounting and walking through the fields in his gear and helmet like a leather-clad alien. This mysterious figure turns out to be a neighbour (LaKeith Stanfield). Or we think he is. He could just as easily be a figment of Grace’s pent-up sexual imagination until it’s clear he isn’t. This blurring of what might be real and what is merely Grace’s imagination is discombobulating, but with all this time travelling and shape shifting, Ramsay provides a horrible glimpse into a psychotic’s mind: if we are exasperated or baffled by what’s on the screen, imagine what it’s like being in Grace’s head.
Nature abounds and is portentous. Like Darren Aronofsky’s Mother!, which also starred Lawrence, the story is bookended by flames, in this case a forest wildfire, perhaps a representation of the uncontrollable instincts that engulf Grace and those around her. Blood, piss and mother’s milk all make an appearance. A wild black stallion appears – again, it’s initially unclear whether this animal is real or imagined, but there’s no reason why it could not be both. Flowers are everywhere, in the fields or in vases, or depicted on wallpaper or dressing gowns or tablecloths. A stag’s head hangs above the fireplace in Jackson’s parental living room, while Jackson’s dog is a constantly barking presence. In one foreboding forest scene, Grace walks with her baby as the delightful Little April Shower from Bambi plays.
In fact, music carries the story along throughout. Ramsay also wrote some of the original score, as well as singing her own beautiful version of Joy Division’s Love Will Tear Us Apart over the end credits. John Prine and Iris DeMent’s In Spite of Ourselves plays at the couple’s wedding. And when Jackson collects Grace from hospital, David Bowie’s Kooks gets them singing in unison.
It is unclear what the title refers to – a real death, the death of love, the death of a dream? Ramsay doesn’t let on and the audience is bamboozled and perplexed. Whilst Pattinson offers excellent support as the often absent, frequently useless but ultimately committed husband, this is really Lawrence’s film. She’s in every scene and everything that takes place is from Grace’s point of view. She carries it with aplomb and it’s great to see her in such a strong role. This film won’t be for everyone, and it makes for tough viewing (and occasionally even tougher listening – that bloody dog!), but thanks to Ramsay’s deft touch and Lawrence’s powerful performance it’s worth a little pain and suffering.
Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost enact revenge on Michael Che during SNL's season 50 finale after a crude joke left viewers stunned
Read more >> : Cick here
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The star was discussing her role in new film Die, My Love.
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Adapting Ariana Harwiczâ??s ambiguous bestseller was always going to be tricky â?? but despite strong work from Robert Pattinson, this Lynne Ramsay psycho-drama never achieves lift-off
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The UK commentator claimed that the soap legend 'changed her name' to take part in the singing contest.
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So bad, it’s brilliant, Eurovision was a triumph of kitsch with spectacular staging and as much tension as hilarity
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EUROVISION act Remember Monday have broken their silence on their crushing show defeat. The UK act came in 19th place after performing track What The Hell Just Happened? – landing zero points…
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Great Britain entry Remember Monday share emotional statement after disappointing Eurovision 2025 grand final score
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Great Britain entry Remember Monday share emotional statement after disappointing Eurovision 2025 grand final score
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Eurovision's UK act Remember Monday have shared a statement reflecting on their 'emotional and surreal' performance, after a disappointing night in Basel.
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The contest was won by Austriaâ??s JJ with his emotional song Wasted Love.
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Remember Monday competed in the Eurovision Song Contest this weekend, and fans can still get tickets to their upcoming UK shows now.
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The UK's Remember Monday took to the stage at the Eurovision Song Contest 2025 in Switzerland, and despite receiving 88 points from the jury, they got 0 points from the public
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We now know exactly where the 26 countries ranked.
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BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Austrians were getting ready Sunday to welcome back home and celebrate classically trained singer JJ, who won the 69th Eurovision Song Contest for their country with “Wasted…
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A protest group claims he was assaulted
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