Natalie Erika James Turns Diet Culture Into Body Horror in “Saccharine”

SaccharineA woman eats human ashes to lose weight. Then things get weird.

That’s the setup for “Saccharine,” the latest from Natalie Erika James, the filmmaker behind “Relic” and “Apartment 7A.” It follows Hana (Midori Francis), a medical student desperate enough to try an obscure weight loss trend, only to find herself terrorized by something far worse than the scale.

James uses supernatural horror to dig into the toxic messaging around body image that saturates everything from casual conversation to Instagram feeds. It’s body horror with a queer perspective, tracking one woman’s spiral through shame, self-worth, and compulsion.

The film stars Francis alongside Danielle Macdonald and Madeleine Madden. Early reviews call it “sharply menacing” (The Wrap) and praise its take on “the destruction we inflict on ourselves and others” under the banner of self-improvement.

James made waves with “Relic” at Sundance 2020, earning a Gotham nomination and multiple AACTA nods. Her latest continues that momentum, made in partnership with Carver Films, XYZ Films, and Screen Australia.

“Saccharine” hits select theaters May 22. For indie horror fans watching how the genre tackles modern anxieties, this one’s worth catching.

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Green Day Comedy “Nimrods” Hits Theaters August 14

NimrodsA Green Day-inspired road trip comedy is coming to theaters this summer, and fans can actually own a piece of it.

“Nimrods” follows three friends who mistakenly think their band is opening for Green Day on New Year’s Eve, so they take off for LA. The cross-country journey is based on Green Day’s own wild years living in a tour van. Mason Thames, Kylr Coffman, and Ryan Foust play the leads, with McKenna Grace, Jenna Fischer, Angela Kinsey, Fred Armisen, and Bobby Lee rounding out the cast.

Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt, and Tre Cool are producing alongside Tim Perell. Live Nation Studios and Ryan Kroft executive produce.

The film hits theaters August 14 through Inaugural Entertainment and Legion M, the fan-owned studio that’s letting audiences invest in distribution. Legion M co-founders Jeff Annison and Paul Scanlan saw it at TIFF and jumped. “Green Day wouldn’t exist without the fans,” they said, “and we’re excited to give those fans the opportunity to own a stake in the film.”

This follows Legion M’s recent success with “Fackham Hall” and fits their model of building fan momentum around theatrical releases. For a comedy rooted in punk rock chaos, letting the community rally behind it feels right.

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Doug Wagner’s New Spy Thriller Features an AI Lamborghini Built Like a WMD

00EXA jilted girlfriend hacks MI6, burns it to the ground, and finds herself a getaway car that doubles as a weapon of mass destruction.

That’s the setup for Yumi: 00EX, a new four-issue series from Image Comics hitting shelves this August. Writer Doug Wagner (Plastic, Narco) teams up with artist Hoyt Silva for what sounds like Kingsman meets Fast and Furious with a K-Pop twist.

The story follows Yumi, whose MI6 boyfriend vanishes without a trace. Instead of waiting around, she storms the agency, hacks their systems, takes out their operatives, and torches everything in sight. Her only ally? A fully AI Lamborghini that’s more weapon than vehicle.

“Part The Kingsman, part K-Pop Demon Hunters, all attitude,” Wagner told Popverse. “We even tossed in an AI Lamborghini sidekick that’s built like a WMD, because with Hoyt and I involved, subtlety never really had a chance.”

The series launches August 12 with four variant covers, including work from Mirka Andolfo (Sweet Paprika) and Nicoletta Baldari. Digital versions drop the same day on Kindle, Apple Books, and Google Play.

Wagner’s built a reputation for wild, violent stories that don’t pull punches. This one looks like more of the same, just with better cars.

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Chandler Riggs Goes Full Villain Mode in Revenge-Fueled Horror Comedy Based on Real Hack

hackedA family gets hacked out of their life savings and decides to take matters into their own hands. That’s the setup for “Hacked: A Double Entendre of Rage Fueled Karma,” a new horror comedy starring Chandler Riggs as Florida’s most wanted cybercriminal.

The film is based on what actually happened to director Shane Brady and producer Emily Zercher. When the Rumble family loses everything to a hacker known as “The Chameleon,” the bank can’t help and the cops are useless. So they plot their own takedown.

“I make films to turn pain, chaos, and frustration into something communal, funny, and wildly entertaining,” Brady said.

Riggs, best known for “The Walking Dead,” plays the elusive hacker. Fellow TWD alum Katelyn Nacon also stars, along with Richard Riehle (“Office Space”) and, oddly enough, NHL legend Phil Esposito.

The cast went all in. Owen Atlas got to showcase MMA skills in a fight scene with Riggs. “He was such a good sport about the whole thing,” Atlas said.

Scatena & Rosner Films is handling the North American release. Limited theatrical run hits this May, with VOD following June 2.

The film already won Best Comedy at Dunedin International Film Festival and Best Focus on Florida Feature at Gasparilla. For indie filmmakers turning personal disasters into dark comedies, this one’s proof that revenge really can be art.

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Cameron Whitcomb Books Biggest US Tour Yet With “The Kingdom of Fear” Run

Cameron Whitcomb is stepping up. The 22-year-old singer-songwriter just announced The Kingdom of Fear Tour, his largest US headline run to date, kicking off September 24 at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium and wrapping October 31 at Houston’s House of Blues.

The tour hits some serious rooms. Atlanta’s Tabernacle, Tulsa’s Cain’s Ballroom, Seattle’s Paramount Theatre, LA’s Wiltern, and Austin’s Stubb’s Waller Creek Amphitheater are all on the itinerary. Presales start Tuesday, May 12, with general on-sale Friday, May 15. A dollar from every ticket goes to Project Healthy Minds.

This comes on the heels of Whitcomb’s new EP Deep Water, out now via Atlantic Outpost. The title track’s explosive single “Kingdom of Fear” is his highest-charting song to date in the US, Australia, UK, and Canada. He’ll perform it live on the American Idol finale May 11.

Whitcomb’s already deep into a relentless tour schedule. He’s wrapping sold-out shows across Australia and New Zealand, just finished packed rooms in Boston and New York on his Fragile Egos Tour, and he’s still supporting HARDY through the summer. Earlier this year, he took home two JUNO Awards, including Breakthrough Artist.

The BC native left home at 17 to work on a pipeline before finding music. Now he’s got 7.5 million monthly Spotify listeners and over 835 million global streams. Not bad for a kid who’s barely old enough to rent a car.

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Alice Eve Faces Sharks and Secrets in Malta Thriller ‘CHUM’

chumA destination wedding goes sideways when a great white shows up uninvited. CHUM, starring Alice Eve, hits theaters and VOD on June 5 from Independent Film Company.

The premise is simple but effective. A wedding party in Malta gets ambushed by a bloodthirsty shark and a fisherman with his own twisted plans. Trapped between open water and a human threat, the group has to figure out who to trust while fighting to stay alive. The newlyweds, meanwhile, are forced to confront whether their relationship can survive the chaos.

Eve, known for Star Trek Into Darkness and recent indie thrillers like Cult Killer, leads the cast. Jonathan Zuck directs from a script he co-wrote with Joe Leone. The ensemble includes Eric Michael Cole, Elle Haymond, and Sarah Siadat.

IFC is giving this one a day-and-date release, meaning it’ll be available in theaters and at home simultaneously. The 87-minute runtime suggests a lean, no-filler approach, which is exactly what a survival thriller needs.

For indie filmmakers and genre fans, CHUM is a reminder that you don’t need a massive budget to deliver tension. A smart concept, a solid cast, and a killer location can go a long way.

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Grammy Museum’s New Exhibit Celebrates Legendary Songwriters With Kurt Cobain’s Guitar, Prince’s Purple Rain Glasses, and More

The Grammy Museum is opening a new permanent exhibit that puts the spotlight on the people who actually write the songs.

Tower of Song: Iconic Songwriters & Recordings opens May 28 in Los Angeles, bringing together artifacts from both the Grammy Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. It’s a partnership that makes sense, shining a light on the craft behind the hits.

The crown jewels are wild. Kurt Cobain’s Mosrite Gospel guitar that he used to write most of Nevermind. Prince’s gold-rimmed glasses from Purple Rain. Miles Davis’s red lacquer trumpet. Keith Moon’s gold Premier drum kit from Tommy. Jim Morrison’s personal notebook. Frank Sinatra’s microphones from Capitol Records sessions.

On the songwriting side, there’s Neil Diamond’s handwritten lyrics for “Song Sung Blues,” Diane Warren’s Yamaha DX 7 keyboard she used to write countless hits, and the LinnDrum and Ensoniq synthesizer Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis used to create Rhythm Nation 1814.

The exhibit includes an original film featuring Alan Menken, Carole King, Warren, and Jimmy Jam discussing their creative process. There’s also a digital interactive asking visitors to break down what makes these Hall of Fame songs actually work.

The opening night features a public program with Jimmy Jam and Warren breaking down their craft, followed by a reception.

For indie songwriters grinding it out, this is validation that the craft matters.

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Miami Swim Week Kicks Off With 30+ Designers Across the City’s Hottest Venues

miami-swim-weekMiami Swim Week Powered by Art Hearts Fashion is back, and this time it’s spreading across some of the city’s most buzzing spots. Over 30 international designers will show at M2, Strawberry Moon, Joia Beach, Habibi, Queen, LIV, Bentley Hotel, and Park Central Hotel.

The multi-day event is bringing a mix of emerging talent and established names to the runway. Berry Beachy Swimwear, Papi Swim, Lyberthas, Ca Rio Ca, Copacabana, Christian Audigier, and Merlin Castell are just a few on the lineup.

Art Hearts Fashion, founded by Erik Rosete in 2010, has built a reputation for high-energy runway shows that blur the lines between fashion, art, and nightlife. The platform produces events across New York, LA, Miami, Las Vegas, London, and internationally, and has worked with brands like Adidas, Nike Swim, and PatBO.

Tickets are available now at artheartsfashion.com. VIP packages and media credentials can be requested directly.

For independent designers trying to break through, platforms like this offer real visibility in a crowded market. Miami Swim Week remains one of the few places where emerging swimwear talent can share the stage with globally recognized names.

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Lighthouse Film Fest Drops 2026 Doc Slate With Two World Premieres

lighthouse-film-festThe Lighthouse International Film Festival just announced its 2026 documentary lineup, and it’s stacked with world premieres, Sundance picks, and stories you won’t find anywhere else.

The fest runs June 10-14 on Long Beach Island, New Jersey. This year’s doc competition includes 10 films spanning wildlife conservation, deep sea diving, indie horror families, and vigilante justice.

Two world premieres anchor the slate. Celluloid W-W-Wars follows stuttering director Allan Holzman’s wild ride through Hollywood, from working with Roger Corman to winning two Emmys. Our Colors Never Fade tracks LGBTQIA+ Ukrainians who left their lives behind to fight Russia’s invasion.

The headliner section features Phoenix Jones: The Rise and Fall of a Real Life Superhero, about Seattle’s actual caped crusader who pepper-sprayed criminals until his identity got blown.

Other highlights include Seized, a Sundance doc about a police raid on a Kansas newspaper that turned into a constitutional nightmare, and My NDA, which follows three people who broke their silence agreements to expose rape and discrimination.

The fest previously announced special guests Jason Alexander and Tony Shalhoub, plus a revival screening of Big Night. Known for its beach-centric vibe, Lighthouse has been named one of MovieMaker’s “25 Coolest Film Festivals” twice.

For doc makers looking to break through, this lineup proves regional fests are programming just as bold as the majors.

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Niall Horan announces massive North American arena tour kicking off St. Patrick’s Day 2027

Niall-HoranNiall Horan is taking his new album on the road, and he’s starting big. The Irish singer just announced Dinner Party Live On Tour, a 26-date North American run produced by Live Nation that kicks off March 17, 2027 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Yes, St. Patrick’s Day.

The tour supports his fourth studio album, Dinner Party, dropping June 5 via Capitol Records. Stops include Brooklyn’s Barclays Center (April 4) and The Kia Forum in Los Angeles (May 22) before wrapping in Vancouver on May 29.

Tickets hit general sale Friday, May 15 at 10 AM local time on livenation.com. Citi cardmembers get early access starting today, and an artist presale opens Wednesday. VIP packages include access to a pre-show Dinner Party lounge, premium tickets, and early venue entry.

Horan’s summer is packed. He’ll play Rockefeller Center’s plaza in New York on June 12 as part of the TODAY show’s Citi Concert Series, then co-headline stadium shows with Thomas Rhett in Nashville and Hershey, Pennsylvania. The UK/EU leg starts September 22 in Birmingham.

His 2024 world tour sold over 1.2 million tickets. This time around, he’s leaning into the album’s themes of life, love, and the magic of gathering around a table. For an artist who’s sold 90 million records worldwide since his One Direction days, Horan keeps finding new ways to connect.

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