Even Paul Mescal's Algorithm Is All Paul Mescal Right Now
CultureThe Gladiator II star joined co-stars Connie Nielsen and Fred Hechinger and GQ global editorial director Will Welch to introduce the film to a stylish crowd of fashion and culture luminaries during a screening in New York.By Raymond AngPhotography by Krista SchlueterNovember 21, 2024Save this storySaveSave this storySave“It definitely feels loud at the moment,” Paul Mescal told a room full of fashion and culture luminaries last night, at the Gladiator II screening he co-hosted with GQ at the Whitby Hotel in Manhattan. “Like, my algorithm is serving me. The internet’s a cursed space when it’s your face.”“Like, get out of here!” he continued, laughing at the absurdity of it all. “I need a break from myself in every sense of the word. I’m ready to disappear for a second, in at least two weeks. Hopefully your algorithm is cleansed of my face.”But before then, there’s the small matter of the rumored $300 million movie Mescal’s the face of. “We need you through this weekend so the movie can put up some numbers,” cracked GQ global editorial director Will Welch, during an onstage conversation with Mescal ahead of the screening. “Yes, yes!” Mescal laughed. “This weekend, next weekend, and then I’m out of here!”Welch and Mescal were co-hosting a reception and screening, with Paramount and Cartier, for Ridley Scott’s latest epic, the sequel to the Oscar-winning 2000 film that made Russell Crowe a superstar, brought the sword-and-sandal genre back to the box office, and spawned an all-timer of a movie quote in “Are you not entertained?” Mescal, arguably already his generation’s most revered actor, is making the big leap from the character-driven dramas that built his reputation—the A24 drama Aftersun, the hit Sally Rooney series Normal People—to large-scale Hollywood mega-blockbusters.As you might expect, anticipation was high At the reception preceding the screening, even the seen-it-all crowd of fashion and culture personalities—including supermodel Helena Christensen, fashion designer Todd Snyder, Cobra Kai star Xolo Maridueña, Challengers and Queer screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes and DJ Zack Bia—buzzed with excitement.Waiting for the screening to start, the crowd toasted cocktails and Cartier champagne while sharing their memories of the first Gladiator as well as expectations for the new film.“I think I watched the first one in high school,” fashion designer Connor McKnight told me. “Russell Crowe, one of his marquee performances. It’s such an iconic movie, so I’m curious to see this one.”The 23-year-old Maridueña confessed he only saw the first film a few days ago. “I had to watch it for this,” he said. “So I’m fresh. That’s the way to do it, honestly! All these flicks that have reprisals years later, you gotta [watch the original] right before.” A fan of Ridley Scott (who he calls “the master of scope”), the actor was curious to see how advances in technology would aid the master filmmaker’s storytelling. “The CGI’s gonna be crazy!”Still, like most people in the room, Maridueña lit up most at the mention of the film’s star. “Paul Mescal is a fantastic actor of my generation, so any chance to see him in action is a blessing,” he said. “Normal People, come on! I saw it during the pandemic not once, not twice—I cried maybe three times.”The fashion designer Kim Shui—a touch winded but still glamorous—had a particularly memorable story about making her way to the screening. “So the plane broke halfway through, while I was coming [back to New York] from L.A.,” she said, through nervous laughter. “There was not enough oxygen so the masks came down, the alarms went off—it was a nightmare. But I’m alive! I’m here now. That’s what it took me to get here.” (With a small bottle of Cartier champagne in hand, she said with a laugh: “We gotta celebrate life!”)On the way into the screening room, I caught New York City councilman Chi Ossé red-handed with an arm full of snacks. “I have popcorn,” he sheepishly confessed. “I have those really fruity little berries—and I’m not talking about myself. I have the bourbon drink with the gold leaf. I got some M&Ms to mix in with the popcorn…. I’m a snacker!” Ossé doesn’t remember for sure if he saw the first Gladiator as a kid but does remember the iconic line from the film. “‘Are you not entertained?’ That sounds the alarm… That’s a diva moment! That’s some RuPaul-ass shit.”As the crowd sat down for the screening, Welch gave Mescal and his co-stars Connie Nielsen and Fred Hechinger an opportunity to introduce the film.“This was a movie that was meant to be seen on a big screen—that’s part of why we were so excited to make it,” Hechhinger said, with palpable excitement. “I have no smart takeaway to lead you here. Just sit back and enjoy!”“I also would just like to add that no CGI animals were hurt in this film,” Nielsen cracked, before telling the crowd that her eldest biological son—who was 10 years old during the first Gladiator—was sitting front row tonight, 24 years later. “It mu
“It definitely feels loud at the moment,” Paul Mescal told a room full of fashion and culture luminaries last night, at the Gladiator II screening he co-hosted with GQ at the Whitby Hotel in Manhattan. “Like, my algorithm is serving me. The internet’s a cursed space when it’s your face.”
“Like, get out of here!” he continued, laughing at the absurdity of it all. “I need a break from myself in every sense of the word. I’m ready to disappear for a second, in at least two weeks. Hopefully your algorithm is cleansed of my face.”
But before then, there’s the small matter of the rumored $300 million movie Mescal’s the face of. “We need you through this weekend so the movie can put up some numbers,” cracked GQ global editorial director Will Welch, during an onstage conversation with Mescal ahead of the screening. “Yes, yes!” Mescal laughed. “This weekend, next weekend, and then I’m out of here!”
Welch and Mescal were co-hosting a reception and screening, with Paramount and Cartier, for Ridley Scott’s latest epic, the sequel to the Oscar-winning 2000 film that made Russell Crowe a superstar, brought the sword-and-sandal genre back to the box office, and spawned an all-timer of a movie quote in “Are you not entertained?” Mescal, arguably already his generation’s most revered actor, is making the big leap from the character-driven dramas that built his reputation—the A24 drama Aftersun, the hit Sally Rooney series Normal People—to large-scale Hollywood mega-blockbusters.
As you might expect, anticipation was high At the reception preceding the screening, even the seen-it-all crowd of fashion and culture personalities—including supermodel Helena Christensen, fashion designer Todd Snyder, Cobra Kai star Xolo Maridueña, Challengers and Queer screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes and DJ Zack Bia—buzzed with excitement.
Waiting for the screening to start, the crowd toasted cocktails and Cartier champagne while sharing their memories of the first Gladiator as well as expectations for the new film.
“I think I watched the first one in high school,” fashion designer Connor McKnight told me. “Russell Crowe, one of his marquee performances. It’s such an iconic movie, so I’m curious to see this one.”
The 23-year-old Maridueña confessed he only saw the first film a few days ago. “I had to watch it for this,” he said. “So I’m fresh. That’s the way to do it, honestly! All these flicks that have reprisals years later, you gotta [watch the original] right before.” A fan of Ridley Scott (who he calls “the master of scope”), the actor was curious to see how advances in technology would aid the master filmmaker’s storytelling. “The CGI’s gonna be crazy!”
Still, like most people in the room, Maridueña lit up most at the mention of the film’s star. “Paul Mescal is a fantastic actor of my generation, so any chance to see him in action is a blessing,” he said. “Normal People, come on! I saw it during the pandemic not once, not twice—I cried maybe three times.”
The fashion designer Kim Shui—a touch winded but still glamorous—had a particularly memorable story about making her way to the screening. “So the plane broke halfway through, while I was coming [back to New York] from L.A.,” she said, through nervous laughter. “There was not enough oxygen so the masks came down, the alarms went off—it was a nightmare. But I’m alive! I’m here now. That’s what it took me to get here.” (With a small bottle of Cartier champagne in hand, she said with a laugh: “We gotta celebrate life!”)
On the way into the screening room, I caught New York City councilman Chi Ossé red-handed with an arm full of snacks. “I have popcorn,” he sheepishly confessed. “I have those really fruity little berries—and I’m not talking about myself. I have the bourbon drink with the gold leaf. I got some M&Ms to mix in with the popcorn…. I’m a snacker!” Ossé doesn’t remember for sure if he saw the first Gladiator as a kid but does remember the iconic line from the film. “‘Are you not entertained?’ That sounds the alarm… That’s a diva moment! That’s some RuPaul-ass shit.”
As the crowd sat down for the screening, Welch gave Mescal and his co-stars Connie Nielsen and Fred Hechinger an opportunity to introduce the film.
“This was a movie that was meant to be seen on a big screen—that’s part of why we were so excited to make it,” Hechhinger said, with palpable excitement. “I have no smart takeaway to lead you here. Just sit back and enjoy!”
“I also would just like to add that no CGI animals were hurt in this film,” Nielsen cracked, before telling the crowd that her eldest biological son—who was 10 years old during the first Gladiator—was sitting front row tonight, 24 years later. “It must be a little weird for him,” she said. “But for him and for me, Gladiator I and Gladiator II have just had an outsized sort of role in our lives.”
At the end of the Q&A, Mescal tipped his hat to their director: “This is ‘a Ridley Scott film’—that means the same to me as it did 10 years ago, as it did 20 years ago, as it did before I was born,” he said. “I think because Ridley makes so many films, we shouldn’t sleep on the fact that he is one of the greatest living filmmakers working today—no question, period.”