Latest news with #Alpha


Pink Villa
3 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Pink Villa
WATCH: Alia Bhatt glows in black outfit as she steps out after dance rehearsal for Shiv Rawail's Alpha
Alia Bhatt is all set to star in the upcoming spy venture Alpha. Bankrolled by YRF, the film is a part of the spy universe and is expected to perform exceptionally well upon its release. Lately, the actress was snapped in the city after she returned from the dance rehearsal session for the movie. Dressed in a sleeveless black crop top, featuring knotted hem, and high-waisted black pants, Alia exuded a sporty vibe. She tied her hair in a high ponytail for a fuss-free appearance. The Love and War actress was all smiles as the shutterbugs clicked her. After a while, she got into her car and left. For the unversed, Alpha also stars Sharvari in a pivotal role. Directed by Shiv Rawail, the movie is scheduled to hit the big screens on December 25, 2025. It promises an action-packed experience for the cinegoers.


Metro
4 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Metro
'I'm the 6ft 8in Alpha in 28 Years Later that's haunting your dreams'
'Terrify me.' That was the instruction given to Chi Lewis-Parry by director Danny Boyle in his 28 Years Later audition. 'I didn't really understand what that meant. Like, how do you want me to go about this?' Lewis-Parry laughs. 'But I'm guessing I terrified him good enough!' The actor and MMA fighter didn't know the movie he was reading for initially, it was just 'Untitled Danny Boyle project'. But as he says of the name attached: 'It didn't matter what it was. I could have played a bin bag, and I'd have been happy.' * Spoilers ahead for 28 Years Later!* Lewis-Parry gets rather more than that as he portrays the 'king of the Alphas', Samson, in 28 Years Later – the most feared, and genuinely nightmare-inducing, of the newly evolved strain of the Infected. Over 20 years since Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland introduced their take on the zombie horror flick to the world with 28 Days Later in 2002, they're back with their hotly anticipated follow up, which was released in cinemas on Thursday. It's not a sequel, but – like the less well-received 28 Weeks Later in 2007, which Boyle and Garland only executive-produced – it's set in the same post-apocalyptic world, ravaged by the blood-born Rage Virus that turned humans into the flesh-eating Infected. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video But, after 28 years and with mainland Britain now under quarantine, new variants have emerged, and the most fearsome of all is the massive Beserker or Alpha. Not only are they bigger, stronger and meaner, but they display intelligence – and also the truly hideous habit of 'despining' their victims. Another variant is the Slow Low, a blubbery and bald creature that crawls on the ground slurping up worms. 'I saw it as you became what you are in your society,' Lewis-Parry tells Metro of the Infected's evolution. 'So if you are an alpha in your everyday life, then you are an Alpha as the infected. The traits and characteristics of the Infected didn't necessarily change from when they were human, but they are fuelled by rage, so control is lost.' We see one Alpha chase father and son Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Spike (Alfie Williams) down the causeway to their human haven on Holy Island after an educational hunting trip. But Samson, who is so named by the iodine-stained and eccentric Dr Kelson (Ralph Fiennes), gets a little more character development. After we see him take out a patrol of NATO soldiers – ripping one man's skull and spine out and then using it to beat another to death – he announces his arrival in an abandoned train carriage in similar fashion after Isla (Jodie Comer) helps a pregnant Infected give birth. Samson is shown to be more in control of his Rage than normal, aware of his surroundings and clocking the Infected after seeing her feet, leading to an interaction that informed the rest of that claustrophobic encounter between him, Spike and Isla. 'I remember when we shot that, it wasn't on the page. That was something we came up with. Danny just said, 'I want to include something here that shows he is conscious, what do you think?'' 'That's his creative genius is he lets you talk about things because we all inspire each other. There's no ego involved – and he literally just made it up on the day, based off our conversation.' Spike and Isla are then stunned to see Dr Kelson sedate Samson rather than kill him – something which would take as many as 12 precious arrows anyway in a society without guns. Suddenly, he's not just a scary killing machine – especially as Kelson reveals he has spent 13 years tending to the dead among both humans and the Infected alike, building his towering 'memento mori' of their skulls and bones. 'A lot of people would be put off by a person like Dr Kelson, and Jamie even says that he's gone mad, but he's a complicated man, in a very dire situation, and he's also very lonely,' suggests Lewis-Parry, who also played Phoebus in Gladiator II. And as to their characters' unexpected 'sweet relationship', he adds: 'I think in Samson he sees something that is probably more attractive than the humanity that's left, because this is something that's just operating off instincts, not hatred or a dislike for people, it is just existing. I think there's a nice sort of innocence to it.' That's one way of describing the huge naked zombie with wild hair and a long beard, red eyes and a thirst for blood – oh, and near-unstoppable strength. And yes, because everyone will be wondering – the Infected wear prosthetic genitals for both modesty and also legal reasons, due to working with the then 12-year-old Williams (or as Lewis-Parry confirms of the behind-the-scenes processes for the appearance of nudity: 'I never at any point thought I was going to be walking around in the nip'.) But it's not just how Lewis-Parry looks – being 6 ft 8in barefoot helps with the intimidation – but how he moves as an Alpha too that gives him such impact on screen. There's a very neat story behind the first person he explored Samson's physicality with, actor and the film's movement coach, Toby Sedgwick. Sedgwick actually played the Infected priest who Cillian Murphy's confused courier Jim interacts with in 2002's 28 Days Later, when he's trying to work out why he's woken up from a coma to find London abandoned. It was also him who invented the iconic stilted but petrifyingly fast run of the Infected. But Lewis-Parry knew he needed to do something different as he saw his Alpha having 'more control over the state that the infection puts him in, so that actually makes him more dangerous'. 'I felt like it looked like he was trying too hard, and I didn't want him to be trying anything – everything he did was just incidental. So I started to look at legendary movement, people like Andy Serkis, who is, in my opinion, the greatest all time. I looked at how he moved.' Although he couldn't directly copy Serkis due to – in his words – 'how vastly different our sizes are', he knew it was all about intention. 'What was his intention when he was moving, when he was crawling, when he was standing or when he was breathing?' shares Lewis-Parry, who was also inspired by creatures in 1980s and 90s horror movies like Predator and the Wolf Man. '[Samson's] very predatory, but he's not hiding the fact that he's coming after you. He's not trying to sneak up on you or conceal his presence. He's just like, I'm running through this wall, and if you're on the other side of it… The motive I gave him was that nothing will stop me.' And it appears that nothing has yet, as – although Lewis-Parry is very careful about giving anything away regarding next year's sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple , which was shot back to back – Samson is still alive and kicking as a zombie can get at the end of this year's film. More Trending 'What can I tease? There's a part two,' he smiles before hesitating as he picks his next words carefully. 'It's different, it's amazing.' And that's all I'm getting. 28 Years Later is in cinemas now. 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple will be released on January 16, 2026. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Netflix fans devour 'unrelenting' horror movie as sequel hits cinemas MORE: The 'best horror film of 2025' has arrived on Amazon Prime's Shudder MORE: Jurassic World Rebirth embraces hardcore horror: 'I waited for the studio to say no'


The Star
10 hours ago
- Entertainment
- The Star
Star singer Hael Husaini overjoyed as tickets for solo concert almost sold out; celebrates by inviting more 'friends' on stage for big show
Malaysia's top music artiste Hael Husaini's first ever solo concert at Zepp KL only on Aug 8. But tickets has been selling like hot cakes and are expected to be sold out by the end of the month. And currently Malaysia's class act with top hits, Hael, is just so humbled and thankful for the support that he has received from his many fans. According to Hael, this concert is his promise to the fans who have been his backbone since his early appearance in the entertainment world. And he is just so glad that the fans snapped up the 90% of the tickets after going on sale in less than two weeks. "This is an amazing feeling. It is just feels great to be loved by many. I'm so thankful. I thank all my fans. This show is a tribute to them. It will be night to remember and me and my friends will give them an unforgettable night of music," said Hael in an interview with The Star. According to the singer, also known for his extraordinary vocals, creativity beyond the norm and classy style, the "Hael Husaini & Repertoire Concert" promises a night that is not just a concert — but an artistic, fashion and emotional experience that is sure to become a part of the history of Malaysian music. During the launch of the concert, Hael announced that top local singer Dayang Nurfaizah and Nadeera Zaini, will be his special guests together with rising stars of Malaysian music Wany Hasrita and Nabila Razali. It is learnt that fast-rising local boy-band Alpha is also expected to join the fun on the night of Aug 8. "Let's make the show an unforgettable one. I intend to call up another 'special guest' to make the night even more lively. The more the merrier as they say and I just want to put up a show for all to have fun and enjoy the athmosphere throughout the night. I want the show to be an ever lasting memory for the fans." Hael, whose real name Hal Husaini Razmi, 38, is also open to sharing the stage with other artistes, as he always enjoys sharing the stage with performers who are great in jiving up the night. "My guests are also my good friends. They are just as excited about the concert as I am. Like me, they are all just so geared up to make it a night to remember for all the fans," said Hael. "If you follow along, the name of the concert "Hael Husaini & Repertoire" means all my songs and the ones I created for many other singers. "Also, personally for me, it is never a problem sharing the stage with my friends and other artistes. The aim is always try to lift the standards of Malaysian music. As a singer, producer and composer, I always want the best for the fans. For me, they always deserve the best," added Hael. "It is due to them I'm here today and on the night Aug 8, I will share my life journey with them." It has been success after success for Hael over the last two years. His current track "Penjuara" for the movie Ejen Ali is already burning the charts. Last year, his superb rendition "Diam" was a stupendous hit with fans and many observers felt it was the best song for 2024. Of course, the height of it all for Hael was his Hari Raya duet with songstress Nadeera Zaini this year. The duet's "Meriah Lain Macam" for the Raya festival was simply a super boomer, to say it right. Over 1.87 billion hits in media and social streaming platforms and being ranked No.1 in so many charts. Breaking records just about everywhere and also a superb 16 million-plus hits in You Tube alone. And now he aims to cap it all with his first-solo concert on Aug 8 ... "It will be one heck of a night to remember," smiled Hael promisingly ...


Irish Examiner
10 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Irish Examiner
Film Review: 28 Years Later is ambitious — and blackly comic
And so to the cinema, there to take refuge from all the rage swirling about the world, where we discover – courtesy of 28 Years Later (16s) – that a rage virus has infected most of the UK's population, turning them into rampaging zombies who feast on human flesh. Happily, a self-sufficient community has kept itself safe on an island for the three decades or so since the virus first erupted in 28 Days Later (2002). On a rites-of-passage trip to the mainland, however, 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams) and his father Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) make a terrifying discovery: the zombies have made an evolutionary leap, and soon father and son are fleeing for their lives from an apparently indestructible Alpha. Alex Garland and Danny Boyle reunite as writer and director, respectively, for a gripping zombie flick that seeks to expand the parameters of the genre. Occasionally self-indulgent – there's an insistence on equating the survivors with the heroes of WWI, for example, or the doughty yeomen of Shakespeare's Henry V; the percussive soundtrack, meanwhile, is frequently intrusive to the point of irritation – the film is endearingly rooted in the most prosaic of vital concerns: there might be a plague of ravenous zombies roaming the mainland's rewilded forests, but Spike will stop at nothing to get medical help for his ailing mother Isla (Jodie Comer). The storytelling is erratic at times, such as when a Swedish commando, Erik (Edvin Ryding) pops up to save Spike and Isla from certain doom, but it's also gloriously cinematic when the deranged hermit Dr Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) emerges from the wilderness like a mellow Colonel Kurtz. All told, it's a sprawling, ambitious and blackly comic take on the zombie genre, and one likely to make a star of young Alfie Williams. Disney/Pixar's Elio Elio ★★★★☆ Theatrical release Elio (G) opens with the space-obsessed, friendless Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) desperate to be abducted by aliens. So it's joy unconfined when Elio finds himself beamed up to the Communiverse, where all the intelligent life of the universe convenes. There are just two small issues: one, the other aliens believe Elio to be the leader of all Earthlings; two, the warlord Lord Grigon (Brad Garrett), rejected by the Communiverse on the grounds of excessive aggression, has declared his intention to bring the rest of the universe to heel. Can Elio and his new pal Glordon (Remy Edgerly) save the Communiverse? Directed by Adrian Molina, Madeleine Sharafian and Domee Shi, this latest offering from Pixar delivers a charming sci-fi yarn that promotes a timely message of plurality and inclusivity in the face of an authoritarian threat. Vividly delivered as the Pixar creatives cut loose on all manner of alien possibilities, the story also gives us an unusually vulnerable, self-doubting hero: Elio is a likeably ebullient character who is comically unaware of his very many failings as a space-faring hero, which only adds to the poignancy of his quest. Renowned Swedish TV-duo Filip and Fredrik embark on a trip to France, aiming to rekindle the zest for life of Filip's father in The Last Journey The Last Journey ★★★★☆ Theatrical release Concerned that his 80-year-old father Lars, a retired teacher, has resigned himself to 'rotting into his armchair,' Swedish filmmaker Filip Hammar decides to take Lars on a road-trip – The Last Journey (PG) – from Sweden to the South of France, where the Hammar family spent many idyllic summer holidays. Slightly bewildered and more than a little depressed, Lars reluctantly agrees, and so the pair, with Filip's filmmaker colleague Fredrik Wikingsson along for the ride, take to the road in a battered orange Renault 4 (aka 'Europe's most overtaken car'). What follows is a touching account of Lars' gradual revitalisation, even if the process is not without its perils, physical and emotional, and especially because Filip, determined to force his father's recovery, can occasionally ride roughshod over his father's fears that he is being pushed too far. Overall, though, the film is a bittersweet, heart-warming affair; you would be well advised to have some tissues handy for the concluding scenes.


Hindustan Times
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Hindustan Times
Anil Kapoor is ‘jhootha no 1' says Pahlaj Nihalani, slams him for calling Andaz B-grade film: He was desperate to do it
Filmmaker and former CBFC chairperson Pahlaj Nihalani, who produced the 1994 film Andaz starring Anil Kapoor, Karisma Kapoor, and Juhi Chawla, has hit out at Anil for calling the film a B-grade production. In a recent interview with Vickey Lalwani, Pahlaj criticised the actor for making the comment and also accused him of lying about objecting to the controversial song Khada Hai from the film. (Also Read: Pahlaj Nihalani rubbishes Govinda's claim of being offered James Cameron's Avatar: 'Uske dimag ka disc ghum gaya') Pahlaj lashed out at Anil for calling Andaz a B-grade film and said, "I know of this interview. I told him off also once. He called Andaz a B-grade movie. Woh tarasta tha iske liye (He was desperate to do it). Karisma begged me to be in it. People were desperate to work with me at that time, and Anil Kapoor was one of them. He's done so many B-grade movies in his life, how can he say that he did Andaz for money?" When informed that Anil, in an interview, claimed he wasn't informed about the song Khada Hai and even objected to it, Pahlaj said, 'He's jhoota number one. This never happened. He must've heard the song 'Khada Hai Khada Hai' 50 times before we shot it. He'd say, 'This song will make our film a hit.' Only Juhi Chawla had some issues with the song. But Anil Kapoor was crazy about the song and was sure that it would be a superhit. He's spreading lies and defaming me. I've never made a B-grade movie in my life!" Directed by David Dhawan, Andaz was an action-comedy that also featured Kader Khan, Raj Babbar, Shakti Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Ishrat Ali, and Mahesh Anand. Though the film was a commercial success, the song Khada Hai drew criticism for its double-meaning lyrics. Anil Kapoor is currently awaiting the release of his upcoming film Alpha, which is part of Aditya Chopra's YRF Spy Universe. The film also stars Alia Bhatt and Sharvari in lead roles. Directed by Shiv Rawail, Alpha will be the seventh instalment in the spy franchise, following Ek Tha Tiger, Tiger Zinda Hai, War, Pathaan, Tiger 3, and the upcoming War 2, which is slated for release on 14 August. Alpha is scheduled to release this Christmas.