Diddy’s Potential Home Buyer Unwilling To Budge On Lowball Offer

image

Earlier this month, TMZ reported that Diddy was having a difficult time selling his Beverly Hills mansion, which went up for sale in September. According to the outlet, "only a few" potential buyers walked through the home, but most felt that it had an "ick factor" due to all of the disturbing allegations the mogul is currently facing. Moreover, Diddy is asking for $60 million for the property. This is over $20 million more than he paid for the home back in 2014. It's since raised eyebrows among realtors.

Last week, Bo Belmont of Belwood Investments announced that he'd finally put in an offer. He's only offering $30 million for the home, however. TMZ reports that Belmont plans on sticking to his guns when it comes to the price. In fact, he even vows to take money off the table if his initial offer is turned down. As for what Belmont plans to do with the property, he tells the outlet that he'd completely transform it so it looks and feels nothing like it did when Diddy was living there.

Bo Belmont Insists Diddy's Home Is Not Worth $60 Million

Top real estate agent makes Diddy a bizarre offer for his L.A. mansion |  Marca

[Entertainment: 94th Academy Awards - Show] Mar 27, 2022; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Sean “Diddy” Combs intoduces a tribute to “The Godfather” during the 94th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre. Robert Hanashiro / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

If Belmont's offer is accepted, it won't be the first property he takes off a celebrity's hands. Recently, he also purchased Kanye West's former home in Malibu. The Chicago rapper had allegedly started transforming the property into a bomb shelter, but ultimately, never followed through with his plans. He sold it to Belmont and his company for $21 million in August, a whopping $36 million less than he originally purchased it for in 2021.

Following the sale, Belmont criticized the changes Ye had already made to the home, making it clear that he was not a fan. "That was a really d*mb move. Really no purpose," he said in part at the time. “He single-handedly destroyed this architectural masterpiece. My goal is to make it as though Kanye was never there."

COMMENTS

Leave a comment

Bill Skarsgård’s ‘Nosferatu’ vampire fit was inspired by The Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger

image

Bill Skarsgård’s Nosferatu vampire fit was inspired by The Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger according to a new interview.

The movie, which is set to release on December 25 in the US and January 3 in the UK, is a remake of the 1922 film of the same name, which in turn was based on Bram Stoker’s gothic horror novel Dracula. Directed by Robert Eggers, it stars the likes of Skarsgård alongside Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Emma Corrin.

The film’s costume designer Linda Muir has now opened up more about the inspirations behind Skarsgård’s outfit in the film, which she says drew from Jagger.

Speaking to IndieWire, the designer said she had fun creating the costume for Skarsgård’s Orlok saying his coat was “more of a cape, like Dracula”.

She continued:  “And then he has underneath a beautiful dolman, which is like a tunic…And that is layered and layered and layered. It has patterned silk, and I tried to choose textiles that have a lot of gold threads because I knew [cinematographer] Jarin [Blaschke] would be using firelight and candlelight and this beautiful moonlight. So things that could twinkle and reflect back to us to give the shape of an outline.

“And then he has kind of Mick Jagger trousers,” she added, “which are mustard-coloured, kind of shiny gold thread, skin-tight trousers and a beautiful sash at his waist. And then he has the coolest footwear. He has leather. They’re like mules, so a slip-on. But for safety and comfort, they gave Bill another 4 inches or so in what is already a really beautiful, thin, tall outline.”

Skarsgård also had to wear a harness next to his body because of the heavy weight of his cloak, heat, and prosthetic makeup. “So we tried to make it so that we could release him as quickly as possible,” Muir continued. “We cooled him off between takes, in between setups, and not tire him out from walking around with this. It also had to look effortless, like he wouldn’t fall off, like it’s mesmerised onto his shoulders, and magical, too.”

The first reviews of the film arrived recently and it received much praise from critics.

Courtney Howard, a member of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, said that Nosferatu “goes harder than any other horror film this year,” and calls it a “gorgeous grotesquerie of dread-infused terrors and a divine dark delight.”

She described Skarsgård’s Count Orlok as “pure sinister nightmare fuel” and calls the movie Depp and Hoult’s “best work to date”.

Fellow film critic Carlos Aguilar added: “After a few months I can finally share I loved Nosferatu. It further crystallizes Eggers’ exploration of evil as an elemental force, as inherent to existence as desire, emerging from the same divinity as kindness. It’s so inextricable from us, fighting it demands great sacrifice.”

Nosferatu is set to be Eggers’ fourth feature film, following his 2015 debut The Witch, 2019’s The Lighthouse, and 2022’s The Northman. It’s been a long time in the making, too, with an Eggers-directed remake first announced back in 2015.

NME gave The Northman a five-star review, writing: “If there’s one criticism to be made, it’s that the more avant-garde moments sometimes turn tedious. Dafoe is best when he’s freaking out, but an early rite-of-passage sequence that ends in an orgy of burping and farting seems silly – even if it does soften up the viewer for a shocking plot twist.”

COMMENTS

Leave a comment