Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Matthew McConaughey contemplates suicide in the woods in trailer for Gus Van Sant film

Add as a preferred source on Google

The first trailer for famed director Gus Van Sant’s upcoming The Sea Of Trees hit screens everywhere this week, offering a look into the depressing life of a college professor whose marriage is disintegrating.

The upcoming film stars Matthew McConaughey as a professor who travels to Japan’s famed “Suicide Forest” to take his own life, only to decide to aid a lost Japanese man in the process.

Recommended Videos

The beginning of the new teaser showcases flashbacks to the character’s poor relationship with his wife, played by Naomi Watts, who is revealed to have a very serious brain tumor. Her ultimate fate isn’t revealed in the clip.

The Sea of Trees will be the 17th film from Van Sant, whose previous hits include Milk, Finding Forrester, and Good Will Hunting. The film was selected to compete for the Palme d’Or at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, and given the all-star cast and the broody subject, the director likely has some hopes for hardware during this years’ awards season.

The film received harsh criticism when it debuted at Cannes last year, however, with some critics loudly booing it from the audience during a screening. In fact, the debut caused initial distributors R.S.

Serious, dramatic, and dark, it’s unlikely that the film will tear up the box office when it comes to ticket sales. But for fans of the director and the two stars attached, it should be worth a watch. The Sea Of Trees comes out on August 26. For more information, visit the film’s website.

Parker Hall
Former Senior Writer, Home Theater/Music
Parker Hall is a writer and musician from Portland, OR. He is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin…
Targeted by scammers, adult content creators are getting hacked government sites removed
OnlyFans creators are fighting piracy and exposing hacked government sites
A dark mystery hand typing on a laptop computer at night.

Adult creators routinely battle scammers and pirates stealing their pictures, videos, and sometimes even identities. Now, that exhausting cleanup job is producing an unexpected side effect that involves cleaning up government websites.

Scammers have been compromising trusted .gov and .edu domains and stuffing them with pages advertising supposedly leaked OnlyFans content. This has even lead to hacked government and university websites are disappearing from Google Search. The pages frequently contain no stolen material at all. Instead, they use popular creators’ names to lure people toward dating scams or other kinds of suspicious advertisement and malicious downloads.

Read more
Your Netflix homepage is about to look a lot more like YouTube
The streaming giant has signed deals with Condé Nast, Hearst, Penske Media, and more to bring publisher content to its platform.
netflix on tv

Netflix has spent years trying to become more than a place to watch movies and TV shows. After experimenting with everything from interactive games to live sports, it's now borrowing a page from YouTube's playbook to give you another reason to stay.

Vogue, Variety, and BuzzFeed head to Netflix

Read more
I found a free universal TV remote app for iOS and Android that doesn’t spam ads
AnyRemote turns your phone into a TV remote without forcing a login or subscriptions
AnyRemote Universal remote app on iPhone 17 Pro Max

I have been looking for a universal TV remote app that just works without being annoying. Most of the ones I tried had some kind of catch. Some asked me to create an account before I could even connect to a TV. Some showed annoying un-skippable ads before a simple action. A few locked basic controls like volume behind a paywall, while others simply did not work as advertised.

In that search, I recently came across AnyRemote, a free universal TV remote app available on both iOS and Android. It turns your phone into a remote for your TV or streaming device without forcing a login or making you pay for the core buttons.

Read more