Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (2025)

Jack and I enjoyed this fictionalized retelling of Bruce Springsteen’s creation of his 1982 album Nebraska. In the title role, Jeremy Allen White does his own performing (listen here) after getting voice, guitar, and harmonica coaching. The great cast also includes Jeremy Strong as his manager/producer Jon Landau, Paul Walter Hauser as his best friend Mike, Odessa Young as his girlfriend Faye (an amalgam of women in Springsteen’s life), and Stephen Graham and Gaby Hoffmann as his parents. Though we were excited to see Marc Maron listed as producer/engineer Chuck Plotkin, he had very few lines. Producer Jimmy Iovine appears as himself. Stephen Singer’s part as a psychiatrist is not big but his face is familiar because we’ve seen him in dozens of movies and TV shows.

Director Scott Cooper based his screenplay on the 2023 book Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska by Warren Zanes, plus some elements of Springsteen's 2016 autobiography Born to Run. In the interesting imdb trivia, Cooper calls this an "anti-biopic."

In addition to the Springsteen songs, Lumineers co-founder Jeremiah Fraites has provided a lovely score, available to stream on Apple Music and elsewhere.

After I wrote about White in Afterschool he won a bunch of awards for 39 episodes of The Bear. Strong was last blogged for Armageddon Time, Hauser for The Naked Gun, Young for Shirley, Graham for Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, Hoffman for C'mon C'mon, Maron as the subject of the documentary Are We Good? and for acting in To Leslie, and Cooper for Crazy Heart (about a fictional musician). This is Iovine's first and Fraites' fifth feature.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics want this picture to stay nowhere, averaging 61%, while its audiences like the delivery better at 82. We watched it on May 19 on Hulu.

Is This Thing On? (2025)

We liked a lot this story of a couple navigating an amicable divorce while discovering and rediscovering their true passions for comedy and sports. Will Arnett and Laura Dern are terrific as Alex and Tess, and are supported by a bearded and bespectacled Bradley Cooper, who directed, as Alex's best friend "Balls," Andra Day as Balls' wife Christine, Amy Sedaris as a comedy club emcee, Christine Ebersole and CiarĂ¡n Hinds as Alex's parents, Sean Hayes as another friend Stephen, and Scott Icenogle (Haye's real-life husband) as Stephen's husband. Peyton Manning has a cameo as Tess' old friend, as do several actual comics.

Cooper co-wrote the script with Arnett, Mark Chappell, and John Bishop. When Bishop, who turned to stand-up comedy while separated from his wife, met Arnett, Arnett was so fascinated by Bishop's story that they turned it into this movie.

James Newberry's evocative score can be streamed on Apple Music. Cooper also acted as camera operator for most of the scenes that didn't include him, something he hadn't done before, for director of photography Matthew Libatique.

Cooper was last blogged for acting in Superman and for directing (and acting in) Maestro, Arnett for The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part, Dern for Jay Kelly, Day for United States vs. Billie Holiday, Sedaris for Theater Camp, Ebersole for Licorice Pizza, Hinds for Belfast, Chappell for See How They Run, and Libatique for Maestro.

Hayes is best known for 246 episodes of Will & Grace but has lots of other credits on screens big and small and on stage. Icenogle is a music producer/composer (including for Will & Grace) and Manning is a retired football player with three features to his credit. Newberry has scored dozens of features, TV, and shorts

Rotten Tomatoes' critics are listening, with an 87% average, with its audiences not far behind at 82. Jack and I watched it on Hulu on May 24.