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The Weeknd unveiled the eerie music video for Hurry Up Tomorrow album cut “Baptized in Fear” on Friday (June 6).
Pop star The Weeknd enlists director Trey Edward Shults for a fictionalized recreation of the circumstances around a disastrous tour appearance.
While Hurry Up Tomorrow and The Idol may have been flops, The Weeknd proved his acting abilities in his supporting role as ...
In Trey Edward Shults' thinly drawn portrait of the artist, it would appear both star and subject is trading old indulgences ...
Hurry Up Tomorrow, which is now in theaters, begins and ends with a close-up of Abel (playing a fictionalized version of ...
Hurry Up Tomorrow' was a flop at the box office, but the Jenna Ortega and The Weeknd thriller will look for an encore on ...
Director Trey Edward Shults breaks down the fact, fiction, and psychological meaning of the dark mythology he and Abel Tesfaye created for The Weeknd.
Hurry Up Tomorrow is not a movie in the traditional sense. Noir lighting and a haunting synth orchestral score does not a movie make. The film draws inspiration from a real-life incident in 2022 when ...
Not even Jenna Ortega or Barry Keoghan can save director Trey Edward Shults' 'Hurry Up Tomorrow,' which unravels as a sloppy, ...
"Hurry Up Tomorrow" sees the Weeknd craft a new way to connect with fans across a film, a sold-out tour and massively popular album.
The video plays clips of the Weeknd singing the haunting lyrics in front of several cement backdrops that show the star stuck ...
Jenna Ortega and Barry Keoghan co-star in this film about a tormented pop star, which doubles as a feature-length promotion for The Weeknd's new album.