Completely happy 2026, y’all! That is additionally going to be a shorter e-newsletter, since we’re type of within the breath earlier than the guild award stuff, winter TV, and no matter goes to occur in “Primate” pops off. I’ve had a enjoyable week, largely not occupied with motion pictures and tv, and replaying Lucy Dacus singing “Bread and Roses” a [redacted] variety of instances.
However I’ve been catching up on the “Pluribus” official podcast now that the present’s wrapped. It’s the type of factor that needs to be known as out in a Craft e-newsletter as a result of it’s hosted by editor Chris McCaleb, who has been doing these making-of podcasts because the “Higher Name Saul” days and has it all the way down to a science.
Even insightful Official Podcasts™ will largely be about actor reactions/showrunner reflections on character and plot, and that’s great, positive. However the Vince Gilligan crew actually appears to like and respect the group effort that goes into making issues. There are standalone episodes with the “Pluribus” sound group, with the DPs, the costume designer, and the choreographer, along with the roundtables that basically attempt to information listeners from what concepts have been vital within the writing to how they’re realized by way of prepro, manufacturing, and put up. It’s nice stuff.
The comedy streaming service Dropout, really, is excellent about this, too. I’ve talked about “Very Essential Folks” on this e-newsletter, and you must go watch a few of the new episodes. Nevertheless it seems like what completes that sequence is the “Final Seems to be” mini-episodes concerning the making of every outsized character, which host Vic Michaelis should confront throughout the present itself.
Getting to listen to straight from director Tamar Levine, make-up division head Alex Perrone, and prosthetics wizard Bruce Spaulding Fuller concerning the particulars of their work is fascinating, from child enamel dental functions to precisely how one ought to do alien goo. I’m positive not all people watches them, but it surely’s sensible that Dropout does these quick making-ofs for “VIP” and “Recreation Changer” as a part of these sequence’ launch schedules. It actually deepens your appreciation for the exhibits themselves, and creates a way of them being handmade by individuals who care — not one thing we are able to typically take with no consideration within the age of IP.

There’s a number of bemoaning (by me, as a lot as anybody) about the truth that we don’t have DVD commentaries as a default a part of how we devour media outdoors of the theatrical expertise, however the DVD commentary/BTS featurette hidden within the menu continues to be on the market, in several guises. It could be nice to see extra streamers take into consideration their ancillary supplies on this approach and combine them as carefully as attainable into their foremost feeds. If I can watch “Frankenstein” in Spanish, Netflix, I ought to have the ability to watch it with GDT’s commentary. C’mon now.
The Craft facet of IndieWire’s been fairly quiet this week, apart from Jim Hemphill sneaking one final “Avatar: Hearth and Ash” piece in — he merely can’t be stopped — and a very implausible Hugh Hart piece concerning the music of “Music Sung Blue.” I’m enthusiastic about a few of what we’ve got coming down the pike in January, although: Some long-overdue love for a few of the finest worldwide movies of final 12 months, and Chris O’Falt and I’ve been scheming about some enjoyable we are able to have speaking about casting as a self-discipline, in honor of the primary 12 months of the Oscar class.
We didn’t conduct our “The Greatest Forged Motion pictures In response to Casting Administrators” survey this 12 months. However we could also be conducting one other one quickly… after which, in fact, Sundance is about to hit earlier than we all know it, and we’ll be digging into our ordinary cinematography survey and an entire lot else there. It’s good to have issues to stay up for. Don’t fuck it up, 2026.

