The Annual AFI Awards Lunch Allows Rivals to Chill

At the annual AFI Top Ten Awards lunch, AFI president Bob Gazzale soberly referenced the chaos in the world outside as he applauded the astonishing assemblage of film and television talent inside the ballroom at the Four Seasons Hotel.

“What do we have to celebrate?” he asked. “Because we need you, because we need your stories to help us make sense of emotions that we cannot escape, nor should we escape them. We’re human, and we need each other. Just look around. So this gathering is our annual grace to say thank you and to say we love you.”

This celebration of the top 10 jury-voted lists for film and television is always a big draw for talent and their studio chiefs. No one has to make a speech, and mingling freely were the likes of Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos and his movie chairman Dan Lin (“The Diplomat,” “Train Dreams,” “Death by Lightning,” “Frankenstein,” and “Adolescence”); NBC/Universal chairman Donna Langley (“Wicked: For Good,” “Bugonia,” and “Hamnet”); and producer Steven Spielberg (“Hamnet”).

Also in attendance were Apple CEO Tim Cook (“Severance,” “The Studio,” and “Pluribus”), Warner Bros. motion picture chiefs Pamela Abdy and Michael DeLuca (“One Battle After Another,” “Sinners”), FX’s John Landgraf (“The Lowdown”), HBO’s Casey Bloys (“The Pitt,” “Task”), Disney’s Lucasfilm producer Kathleen Kennedy (“Andor”), producer-writer-director James Cameron (“Avatar: Fire and Ash”), and A24’s David Frankel (“Marty Supreme”).

Hobnobbing ahead of the lunch, Ethan Hawke (“The Lowdown”) buttonholed George Clooney (“Jay Kelly”), who was then joined by Gwyneth Paltrow (“Marty Supreme”). “Frankenstein” star Jacob Elordi spent time with the film’s composer Alexandre Desplat, while “The Diplomat” star Rufus Sewell approached Stellan Skarsgård (“Sentimental Value”). Edward James Olmos grabbed a selfie with Benicio del Toro (“One Battle After Another”).

Del Toro commented on reports that he arrived on set with a full plotline for his Sensei character, calling the claims somewhat overblown. “They all worked it out,” he said, referring to Paul Thomas Anderson’s rewrites of the script.

“Sinners” Critics Choice Casting winner Francine Maisler advised 20-year-old Miles Canton (CCA’s Best Young Actor and SAG’s Actor Award nominee) to take his time choosing his next role.

Best Actress Oscar frontrunner and new mother Jessie Buckley, sleek in black leather, spoke about Maggie Gyllenhaal’s take on “The Bride!” (Warner Bros., March 6), which finds a mate (Buckley) for Frankenstein (Christian Bale). She described it as “a punk gothic romance.”

Executives from Netflix, Focus, and Neon (which is juggling five Best International Feature contenders) are not only navigating the rest of awards season but are also heading for Sundance to scout for potential acquisitions. Michael DeLuca is eagerly awaiting clearance on a name for the studio’s new indie acquisitions label, which will be run by ex-Neon rising star Christian Parkes. (Warner Bros. Independent is not a candidate.)

Eventually, the tables settled as applause rippled across the room with the announcement of each of the ten film and TV winners along with their clips.

Summoning the most applause was a scene from Oscar frontrunner “One Battle After Another,” featuring a hilarious contretemps between Leonardo DiCaprio and his daughter (Chase Infiniti) before she heads out for prom night. Both were present at the event.

The rousing music-eras scene from “Sinners” also brought down the house, much to the delight of Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordan.

These two films will be duking it out with “Frankenstein” for the most nominations on January 22.
https://www.indiewire.com/awards/industry/afi-awards-lunch-2026-recap-1235172369/

Sabrina Carpenter hosts ‘SNL,’ and Domingo returns (again) in a politics-less cold open

Pop star Sabrina Carpenter hosted “Saturday Night Live” for the first time ever, but it sure didn’t feel like it. Carpenter was the musical guest last year when Jake Gyllenhaal hosted, and at the 50th anniversary special, she performed with Paul Simon and appeared in a sketch. Whether it’s because she’s done the show both as a musician and a comedic performer (her song performances are often a mix of both) or not, Carpenter seems perfectly at ease in Studio 8H, like she’s always been there.

That served her well on an episode that started badly with a retread of a sketch that’s been done a few too many times (keyword: Domingo), and a monologue that, despite Carpenter’s charm, didn’t seem to connect with the audience. But after that, Carpenter’s quicksilver timing and ease, plus a diverse set of sketches, put the episode over the top.

She sounded just like a 12-year-old boy in a sketch about preteens hosting a podcast called “Snack Homies” with President Trump (James Austin Johnson) as a guest, sold a provocative neck pillow in a funny Shop TV sketch, performed a pretaped “Grind Song” with Bowen Yang, and was thrown out of a window as the host of a girlboss seminar. She scared a coworker (Ashley Padilla, quickly becoming a critical “SNL” utility player) on her birthday and played a singing and dancing washing machine alongside new cast member Veronika Slowikowska.

It also didn’t hurt that Carpenter’s two playful and well-sung musical performances, for “Manchild” and “Nobody’s Son,” were showstoppers. Her love of the show was evident: she performed the former wearing a “Live from New York” T-shirt and panties with “It’s Saturday Night!” written on the back.

The best argument for inviting Sabrina Carpenter back sometime might be that she held the show together with no outside guests or surprise cameos, which hasn’t happened on “SNL” in a long time. The only exception was a short film from “Please Don’t Destroy” writer Martin Herlihy at the end of the show that may have been about racism and Frankenstein’s Monsters (yes, plural).

**The Cold Open**

We’ll keep this short because the less said about this week’s cold open the better. Chloe Fineman and Andrew Dismukes returned as Matthew and Kelsey, a couple that has struggled in the past with trust issues from Kelsey’s frequent trips with her friends that usually end with a passionate affair with a guy named Domingo (Marcello Hernández).

This time, they’re celebrating Matthew’s 30th birthday, but for some reason, Kelsey has flown in her girlfriends (including Carpenter) to sing some pop songs in bad karaoke style about a recent weekend they spent in Nashville. The songs were modeled after Taylor Swift’s “Fate of Ophelia,” Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra,” and Alex Warren’s “Ordinary Song.” The ladies went to Nashville and, of course, Domingo is still around.

“This is strike six,” Matthew cries haplessly. “Babe, it won’t happen again,” Kelsey promises. Let’s hope so. The Domingo sketches need to be put to rest.

**The Monologue**

Carpenter’s monologue was largely about dispelling (but not really) the notion that the singer is overly sexualized, or as she described it, a “Horndog popster.” “There’s so much more to me,” she said, “I’m not just horny. I’m also turned on.”

She made hay of the controversy over her “Man’s Best Friend” album cover by joking that it was cropped and revealing that Bowen Yang and Martin Short both originally appeared on it, with Yang pulling her up by her hair and Short pushing her away from a buffet line.

The monologue started to fizzle when Carpenter went to the audience for some interaction to prove she can have chemistry with anyone or anything, only to come back to the stage for an awkward bit with Kenan Thompson, who said he wanted a Cameo video for his niece.

Carpenter has charisma to spare, but the monologue was too disjointed to go anywhere.

**Best Sketch of the Night**

Does making plans to see “Plans” also scare you? Mock horror movie trailers have done well on “SNL” lately and the streak continues with “Plans,” a Blumhouse horror film featuring Ben Marshall and Carpenter as a couple horrified to realize that plans they made back on Fourth of July have suddenly come to fruition with a cousin and her husband.

As their terror grows, they remember that the cousin (Sarah Sherman) talks about marathons (“The way I see it, losing toenails is a badge of honor”) and the husband (Dismukes) likes to show off 11-minute YouTube videos.

They’re going to end up at a crowded ramen restaurant and then a bad interactive play. For anyone who’s ever regretted saying yes to socializing, this might be your worst nightmare.

**Also Good: The Neck Pillow Monologues**

The Shop TV sketches wouldn’t work so well if Padilla and Mikey Day didn’t do such a good job infusing their characters Bev and Rhett with such practiced professional panic when things go awry, as they’ve done before.

Carpenter appears as Virginia Duffy, a crafter who’s designed an ergonomic pillow that looks just like a giant vagina, which comes in different colors. “Why would you bring the pink one?” asks an exasperated Rhett.

By the time the faux fur lining is added and Rhett tries on the neck pillow, culminating in an unwanted baby sound effect, Shop TV has done it again.

Bonus points for Johnson as Tim Tucker, who appears at the beginning of the sketch with a trick-or-treat pail in the shape of Jesus Christ’s head. “Trick or treat, smell my feet, walk with Christ down the Halloween street,” he chants.

Overall, Sabrina Carpenter’s debut as an “SNL” host showcased her multifaceted talent and natural ease on stage. Despite a shaky start, her strong comedic instincts, musicality, and versatility carried the episode to a satisfying finish. It’s clear that Carpenter is not only a star in music but also a promising comedic presence on live television. We look forward to seeing her return to Studio 8H soon.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2025-10-19/snl-recap-sabrina-carpenter

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