Essayer OR - Gratuit
Pity nepo parent Daniel Day-Lewis. Is he just another dad who can't say no?
The Observer
|August 10, 2025
What happens when the nepo debate inconveniently attaches itself to someone whose work you respect? There's excitement about triple Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis returning to acting to star in the film Anemone.
It will be the first time since the actor retired in 2017 after Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread (he also retired in 1997 to train as a cobbler). Maybe the reason Day-Lewis is involved - also co-writing - is that Anemone is the directorial debut of his son, Ronan. There it parps, the nepo-klaxon, and it would be hypocritical to ignore it. It can’t be unbridled scorn for Brooklyn Beckham alone flexing the family name and a wave-through for others. I'm not dismissing Ronan, a Yale art graduate. I loved the 2009 film Moon, by David Bowie's son, Duncan Jones. Nevertheless, Ronan would have been unlikely to get this opportunity without his connections. A big “dad” move from Day-Lewis too: the instinct to help his child seemingly propelled him out of retirement.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 10, 2025 de The Observer.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Observer
The Observer
Clacton seat could be up for grabs after investigation into Farage’s £5m ‘unconditional gift’
The next British parliamentary byelection is, quite possibly, going to be in Clacton.
4 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Fayed abuse survivors accuse Met police of ignoring trafficking claims
Women now identified as victims of modern slavery have complained about how the force handled cases against the former Harrods boss and his network
4 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Meeting Greenspan was like an audience with the Wizard of Oz
For a young economics journalist, an interview with Alan Greenspan (officially, he never gave interviews) was like having an audience with God, or perhaps the Wizard of Oz.
1 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Vagrancy Act of 1824 is finally repealed
Homelessness charities have hailed the repeal of the Vagrancy Act after 202 years as a “watershed”, “land-mark” and “defining” moment.
1 min
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Volkswagen workers fear bite of ‘Wolf of Wolfsburg’
If Volkswagen proceeds with its plan to shed as many as 100,000 jobs, it will not only underline how dire the outlook is for Germany’s car industry in the face of fierce Chinese competition but may also sound the death knell for the vaunted postwar German model of stakeholder capitalism.
1 min
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Myanmar demanded data from a Norwegian telecoms firm. Months later, an activist was dead
Telenor's sharing of private data with the military led to the arrest and deaths of pro-democracy resistance members, alleges a class-action lawsuit filed in Norway
11 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
'It'll get more intense and more frequent'
Last week’s weather will not be a one-off. Experts say it’s time to make infrastructure more resilient to climate change.
1 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
The Thames Water test will flush out Burnham’s approach to the economy
A tourist gets lost in the Irish countryside and asks a passing farmer for directions. “Well, if I was you,” the man responds, “I wouldn’t start from here.” So goes the old joke.
4 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
EasyJet adds to UK equities flight fears
The budget airline could soon become the latest British company to fly off the FTSE as foreign investors rush to snap up a bargain, reports Barney Macintyre
2 mins
June 28, 2026
The Observer
Lammy: ‘I’ve been loyal to every Labour PM. I’ll be loyal to the next’
When Keir Starmer made his tearful resignation speech outside No 10 last week, David Lammy was one of only a handful of cabinet ministers standing beside him. “Loyalty and trust and conviction are underrated values, but important values in politics,” he says.
3 mins
June 28, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
