….
A week after the Golden Globes, another major event came and went, the Oscars.(A/N: Event Times are different)
Regal Seraphsail didn't show up for that one either.
The event organizers and industry heavyweights saw it as a slap in the face, here was someone nominated for multiple awards, and he couldn't even be bothered to attend.
So they did what Hollywood does best - they froze him out.
His nominations went nowhere, his name barely got mentioned during the broadcasts.
But even after being essentially blacklisted from the biggest night in entertainment, there was still nothing, no statement from his publicist or a carefully crafted apology through his representatives.
Regal had gone completely dark, he had cut himself off from the industry, from the media, from the world entirely.
The headlines weren't about the records shattered or the roaring acclaim for [Death Note] and [The Hangover] - both of which had practically bulldozed through their categories.
No, the talk of the town, the chatter in studios, and the backroom murmurs all orbited around a single, deafening absence:
Regal Seraphsail was missing.
The cameras had waited, his name had been called - twice, then four times, but the man didn't come.
What should have been a crowning night - where his [Death Note] picked up Best Director (Drama), Best Screenplay, Original Score, and Cinematography.
And [The Hangover] completed a perfect sweep with four wins in Comedy/Musical - had turned into a storm of confusion.
Instead of Regal lifting trophies under golden lights of Golden Globes and Oscars, there were conspiracies, plotting and damaging his image.
All the headlines after the night of Oscars were clear, blatant, and disrespectful mocking from the media:
["Regal Seraphsail vanishes after Golden Globe wins!"
["After walking out mid-ceremony of the Golden Globes, the Director didn't appear for the Academy Awards either, what happened?"
["Did the fame finally get to Regal?"]
["Regal leaves everyone hanging, Hollywood reacts with fury."]
….
The coverages increased with each day, spreading like smoke- fast, invasive, and hungry.
It was kinda ironic when the same media talked about his astonishing rise from humble beginnings, just a couple weeks ago.
However, everyone knows - that is how fame operates.
One day it praises you, and another day it will be what will be your downfall.
Just like, how all the major media outlets jumped in to find any footage or quote.
TMZ was the first to leak a backstage clip of Regal quietly exiting through a side corridor around the time the awards reached the midway point.
Red Studios, for their part, issued a vague:
"No comment at this time, Mr. Seraphsail had a personal emergency."
But that wasn't enough.
Because the wolves had been waiting.
….
Liam and Henry Bethell, the media-savvy uncle-nephew duo from the Bethell Family Trust, were the first to pounce.
Known for their subtle jabs at Regal's rise, masked as banter during interviews - their latest comments left nothing to interpretation.
"A director who walks out on the biggest night of his career? That's not vision, that's instability." Liam said on Good Morning LA.
Henry chimed in. "We have built this industry on reliability, if you can't show up when it matters… maybe you are not ready to be part of it. Just leave."
Their clip, cut and clipped again by facebook users, went viral within hours.
Then came Brad Carter, the powerful studio head of Pixy Studios - one of the five major studios in the country, and one who had reportedly tried and failed to court Regal for a picture deal last year.
"Let's not pretend it was noble, you don't just disappear, not unless you are scared… or careless." He said during a panel on The Hollywood Pulse.
"Disrespectful to his crew, his fans, his co-directors, he owes people an explanation. And if he doesn't give one, well, maybe it's time we stop treating him like some kind of messiah."
Hudson Grant, executive at Angel Talent Agency, joined the criticism not long after.
Having recently lost Timothée Chalamet to Christopher - a move Hudson blamed squarely on Regal's influence, his bitterness practically dripped from his interviews.
"There is a pattern here, he is pulling actors into his world, turning projects into cultish loyalty tests, and now he ghosts the entire community. You think that's sustainable?"
But perhaps the most significant, albeit veiled, critique came from Richard Bethell, Henry's father and senior partner at Henderson & Reeves.
Speaking in an official capacity, Richard said:
"While we recognize his immense contributions this year, the business of cinema thrives on professionalism and accountability. There are obligations to your cast, to the studios, to your peers, silence is not a luxury in this industry - it's a liability."
He didn't name anyone, of course.
But the message was loud and carefully curated.
Henderson & Reeves, with its deep roots in talent contracts and studio negotiations, was a powerful voice - and it was aligning itself against Regal, not with him.
….
Across platforms, the takes grew increasingly wild:
"He is burned out, probably in rehab."
"He had a fight with his girlfriend, maybe they broke up…. Or he got caught while cheating on her. This is Hollywood alright."
"It was a protest, he is anti-Hollywood now."
"Is he pulling a Phoenix? His next film is probably about this stunt."
"His girlfriend was also not seen at any afterparties pictures that came out, are the rumors true?"
Tweets.
Articles.
Debates.
Speculation.
The internet was a volcano, erupting in real time.
YouTubers, film Twitter, and gossip sites spun their wheels fast, one popular film critic, under the handle @ReelTalks, posted:
"Regal disappearing from the Globes is the most Regal thing Regal could do, of course he did, drama king."
A top-liked comment responded:
"Nah, you don't get to win and ghost, this ain't a movie, we deserve answers."
Soon from all the cluster of narrative one started to stand out in a very unnatural manner… as if some one is deliberately trying to manipulate people.
Across café screens, subway TVs, and phones held up in cabs, the same montage played over and over, clips of Regal's films cut with the glittering stage of the Golden Globes, abruptly followed by shots of an empty director's seat, an unclaimed trophy, and a fading name: Regal Seraphsail.
["The young genius who vanished."]
["Protest or panic? Hollywood reels after Regal skips biggest night of his career."]
["Is this the downfall of the outsider king?"]
News anchors from the likes of Vanessa Craye of Showbiz Tonight and Neil Ferns from ET Now were eating it up, framing the story not as an emergency, but as rebellion.
"Regal has been… a unique voice." Vanessa complimented, but it didn't last long. "But Hollywood has always been a collaborative organism, directors don't operate in a vacuum, and it seems he has forgotten that - when you believe you are bigger than the cinema - there are… and will be consequences."
Across the screen, bold red letters stamped her claim:
"REGAL'S SILENT BOYCOTT?"
Soon after, clips began to flood in from inside the afterparties, the confused murmurs, the agents making hushed calls, some producers furiously checking their watches as Regal failed to appear, even for his own wins.
And then, one domino hit the next.
….
Meanwhile, the man himself?
Regal hadn't been seen since the side-door exit.
And only a select few knew that, as the spotlight scorched empty stages back in LA, he had been standing in a hospital hallway, wearing his usual hoodie and fishing drinks out of a vending machine.
Keanu sat beside him in a wheelchair, still healing, it had been three days since Seren had fully regained consciousness and started her recovery.
"Hey." Regal said, handing Keanu a drink. "Remember when we used to walk into all those distribution houses trying to get [The Following] released?"
"Of course I remember, why would you even ask that?"
"Sorry, I just..." Regal trailed off.
They sat in comfortable silence for a moment.
"Don't you think we've come pretty far since then?" Regal continued. "I mean, at least now I can actually afford Seren's hospital bills, when my dad was in a situation like this, I couldn't even..."
"If you put it that way, yeah, we have." Keanu shifted in his chair. "But honestly? I still hate that hospital smell."
"You and me both." Regal said with a tired laugh.
While the world debated his supposed downfall and disrespect to the industry, he and his friend just sat there, waiting for the day they could all go back to something resembling normal life.
….
While Regal and Keanu talked quietly by the vending machines, someone else was watching from across the hallway near the reception desk.
It was the same young guy who had been there that night after the Golden Globes - the one who had come to the hospital because his friend had some minor accident.
But now there was a university ID card hanging around his neck.
Nathan Emery, fourth-year journalism major, his camera bag was slung over one shoulder, and his Westbridge School of Journalism ID badge caught the fluorescent lights.
Over the past week, Nathan had been doing what journalism students do, digging.
He had been quietly talking to nurses during their breaks, chatting with orderlies, piecing together fragments of information that most people would never think to ask about.
What he had discovered was huge.
The kind of story that could completely flip the narrative that was destroying his favorite director's reputation.
Nathan had been a fan of Regal's work for years.
Watching the media tear him apart for 'disrespecting the industry' had been painful, especially when Nathan suspected there was so much more to the story.
Today, he was finally going to publish what he had found.
….
Later that same day, a video appeared on MeTube with the title: THE TRUTH Behind Regal Seraphsail's Absence
It wasn't some carefully orchestrated PR move.
No publicist had signed off on it.
It wasn't part of any official statement or damage control campaign.
It came from one person, a university student with video evidence and photos to back up every word, and it changed everything.
The young journalist didn't mince words as he wrapped up his upload:
"Anti-Hollywood? You would have to be a complete fucking idiot to slap that label on someone without knowing the first thing about what actually happened."
Maybe it was because he wasn't tied to any major media outlet, but his words were unfiltered.
"I have been following Regal's work since [Following], I was actually at the hospital that night - visiting a classmate who had gotten hurt, and I saw him there. At first, I didn't want to make this public, I mean, this is about his family, his privacy, I respected that then, and I still do."
He paused, and when he continued, there was real anger in his voice.
"But some of you went ahead and twisted the whole thing, you made up your own story, said he was protesting, trying to 'make a statement,' being arrogant, boycotting the industry, you turned his silence into your scandal."
"Here's the truth - plain and simple. Regal's sister Seren was in a serious car accident with her boyfriend, you probably know him: Keanu Reeves."
"For those who actually support the guy, Seren's recovering, she's stable now, everything's under control."
"And for everyone else spreading complete bullshit, pushing your own agendas while this man was going through hell - have some shame, maybe think before you tweet next time."
"This man didn't skip awards shows to spit on Hollywood, he missed them because someone he loves almost died."
"Jesus Christ, the guy hasn't been home in a week, he didn't ask for anyone's sympathy, he just kept his head down and dealt with it."
"So no - he wasn't protesting Hollywood, he was doing something way more important."
"He was taking care of his family."
….
The reaction was seismic.
The ripple hit Twitter like thunder on dry glass.
@cinemahound: Holy shit, Regal didn't storm out, he left to save a life… Literally.
@splicedframe: I take back every comment I made, man was in the ER while winning 4 Golden Globes.
@bethellwatcher: Paging the Bethells to the front desk, time to eat crow.
….
In the next hour, the article got picked up by Variety, Deadline, and The Wrap - each citing Nathan Emery - a student journalist, as the original source.
….
Immediately, as a counter attack - Variety released a follow-up post titled:
[The Truth Behind Regal's Absence: Family Over Fame]
Deadline pushed a correction on their earlier piece:
[Not a Protest - A Crisis: Sources Confirm Emergency Hospitalization Behind Regal's No-Show]
Hudson Grant issued a stiff on-camera apology, saying:
["I spoke too soon, it was misinformed, Regal deserves our support, not our judgment."]
Even Liam Bethell - grizzled and pride-worn - retracted his earlier comments via a brief, reluctant statement:
["Had I known the full situation, I would have withheld my assumptions."]
But it wasn't just the apologies that changed the tone - it was the public who reacted first and loudest.
Suddenly, Regal wasn't the pretentious rebel anymore.
He was the brother.
The human.
Hashtags shifted.
#StandWithRegal
#FamilyFirst
#ProtectSeren
….
Within hours, reporters stormed the hospital, and the security had to put barricades to keep them at bay.
Soon, the Golden Globes and Oscar management team - which was propagating against him for being disrespectful, backed off -
They announced their interest to award him the winnings personally.
Overall, the tide was completely shifted.
.
….
[To be continued…]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
Author Note:
Visit Patreon to instantly access +1 chapter for free, available for Free Members as well.
For additional content please do support me and gain access to +12 more chapters.
--> p@treon.com/OrgoWriters