Current:Home > MarketsBenny Safdie confirms Safdie brothers split, calls change with brother Josh 'natural progression' -BeyondProfit Compass
Benny Safdie confirms Safdie brothers split, calls change with brother Josh 'natural progression'
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:21:45
There is no bad blood between the Safdie brothers amid their creative split, Benny Safdie says.
Brothers Josh and Benny Safdie, along with their production company, Elara Pictures with Ronald Bronstein, directed movies "Uncut Gems" and "Good Time," and produced shows "Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God," "Telemarketers" and more. The other half of the filmmaking family duo opened up about their separate ventures in a Variety interview published Thursday.
Amid Benny Safdie's solo filmmaker job for Mark Kerr biopic "The Smashing Machine" and booming acting career with roles in "Oppenheimer," "Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret" and "The Curse," fans have speculated there is a rift with his older brother.
"It's a natural progression of what we each want to explore," Benny Safdie told Variety. "I will direct on my own, and I will explore things that I want to explore. I want that freedom right now in my life."
The duo was also supposed to collaborate on a follow-up film to "Uncut Gems" with Adam Sandler, which Benny Safdie stepped away from.
The movie is "on pause," he told Variety.
When asked whether the "Oppenheimer" actor plans to direct with his brother in the future, he said, "I don't know."
USA TODAY has reached out to reps for Josh Safdie.
In July, Benny Safdie told GQ that although he is not a part of the Sandler movie, Elara Pictures "is still there" to create it.
"We work on a lot of documentaries and there's just a constant flow of ideas. It just felt like, OK, there's things that I want to explore that don't necessarily align right now with Josh. So it's a divide-and-conquer mentality," he said, adding that his older brother "wants to tell this story, he can go and do that. I'm going to go and do a couple of other things. It seems like a natural progression for how things have happened."
'Oppenheimer' review:Christopher Nolan's epic is a crafty blast of nuclear doomsday dread
veryGood! (9649)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Billions of Acres of Cropland Lie Within a New Frontier. So Do 100 Years of Carbon Emissions
- Coastal biomedical labs are bleeding more horseshoe crabs with little accountability
- Another $1.2 Billion Substation? No Thanks, Says Utility, We’ll Find a Better Way
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Senate 2020: In Storm-Torn North Carolina, an Embattled Republican Tries a Climate-Friendly Image
- Malpractice lawsuits over denied abortion care may be on the horizon
- Tina Turner's Cause of Death Revealed
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Debt limit deal claws back unspent COVID relief money
Ranking
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Department of Energy Program Aims to Bump Solar Costs Even Lower
- A Climate Change Skeptic, Mike Pence Brought to the Vice Presidency Deep Ties to the Koch Brothers
- After Deadly Floods, West Virginia Created a Resiliency Office. It’s Barely Functioning.
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Mark Zuckerberg agrees to fight Elon Musk in cage match: Send me location
- Gun deaths hit their highest level ever in 2021, with 1 person dead every 11 minutes
- A Climate Change Skeptic, Mike Pence Brought to the Vice Presidency Deep Ties to the Koch Brothers
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
We Finally Know the Plot of Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling's Barbie
Kangaroo care gets a major endorsement. Here's what it looks like in Ivory Coast
How Canadian wildfires are worsening U.S. air quality and what you can do to cope
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Yes, the big news is Trump. Test your knowledge of everything else in NPR's news quiz
More Than $3.4 Trillion in Assets Vow to Divest From Fossil Fuels
Department of Energy Program Aims to Bump Solar Costs Even Lower