Emma Stone and Lily Gladstone are the frontrunners to win the Best Actress Oscar this year. Stone has so far won the Golden Globe, Critics Choice Awards, and BAFTA among many others for her role as Bella Baxter in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things. Gladstone, on the other hand, won the Golden Globe for Killers of the Flower Moon but was controversially omitted from BAFTA nominations. She won the Best Actress Award at Saturday’s SAG Awards and Emma Stone’s reaction to it has sparked some interesting internet talk.
Lily Gladstone won the SAG Award for Best Actress beating Emma Stone
When Jessica Chastain announced the Best Actress at the 30th SAG Awards, Stone was very enthusiastic about Gladstone receiving the award. However, some fans were not entirely convinced of her enthusiasm for the Reservation Dogs actress’s win.
Fans Have Wild Reactions To Emma Stone Cheering For Lily Gladstone...
Lily Gladstone won the SAG Award for Best Actress beating Emma Stone
When Jessica Chastain announced the Best Actress at the 30th SAG Awards, Stone was very enthusiastic about Gladstone receiving the award. However, some fans were not entirely convinced of her enthusiasm for the Reservation Dogs actress’s win.
Fans Have Wild Reactions To Emma Stone Cheering For Lily Gladstone...
- 2/25/2024
- by Hashim Asraff
- FandomWire
This effective documentary examines why no one is held to account over torture and how close the UK is to adopting techniques used in Guantánamo
If there is another terrorist attack in Britain, one of the interviewees suggests in this documentary by Scottish director Stephen Bennett, then the UK is only a step away from using the kind of torture techniques linked to Guantánamo. Globally, torture is happening in a regular cycle: every time it gets exposed and condemned, no one is ever really held to account.
That may be a depressing fact, but as citizens the least we can do is make ourselves aware it’s going on and keep the history alive through retelling. Eminent Monsters’ highly competent contribution is to connect some of the dots and craft a narrative that mostly implicates complicit professionals from the world of psychology and psychiatry, starting first and foremost with Dr Ewen Cameron.
If there is another terrorist attack in Britain, one of the interviewees suggests in this documentary by Scottish director Stephen Bennett, then the UK is only a step away from using the kind of torture techniques linked to Guantánamo. Globally, torture is happening in a regular cycle: every time it gets exposed and condemned, no one is ever really held to account.
That may be a depressing fact, but as citizens the least we can do is make ourselves aware it’s going on and keep the history alive through retelling. Eminent Monsters’ highly competent contribution is to connect some of the dots and craft a narrative that mostly implicates complicit professionals from the world of psychology and psychiatry, starting first and foremost with Dr Ewen Cameron.
- 2/13/2020
- by Leslie Felperin
- The Guardian - Film News
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