Street Fighter Trailer Is Just Weirdos Battling Each Other, As It Should Be

In 1994, Universal released a movie about United Nations forces investigating a warlord who expanded his grasp by establishing a new country, complete with its own currency. For some reason, this movie was called Street Fighter, and was based on the video game series. The video game series is about choosing one to three characters, having them stand equidistant on opposite sides of the screen, and then mashing buttons to cause all sorts of spectacular nonsense until the opposing character(s) fall down.

If the latest trailer for the 2026 movie is any indication, the new movie will feel a lot more like the game and not so much like the previous film. Sure, the trailer manages to include bits about a warrior who has lost his way, a friend called back into battle, and the joys of singing 4 Non Blondes on karaoke night. But really, it’s just a bunch of colorful weirdos kicking and punching each other until a crunchy, digitized voice declares, “Perfect!”

This new Street Fighter comes from director Kitao Sakurai, who wrote the script with T.J. Fixman (from a story by Dalan Musson and Gary Dauberman). It stars Noah Centineo as Ken Masters and Andrew Koji as Ryu, two students at the same martial arts school who have long since gone their separate ways. The trailer shows that both have fallen on hard times, but seem to have found new inspiration to keep going, possibly by the arrival of Chun-Li (Callina Liang), but more likely by their participation in a fighting tournament held by the villainous M. Bison (David Dastmalchian).

Such thin plot threads would not be enough to make most movies watchable. But Street Fighter is not most movies, because it’s based on a simple game with outlandish visuals. Even though the fighting game genre owes a great debt to Bloodsport, the 1989 Jean-Claude Van Damme film about a guy in a secret fighting tournament, films based on those games have been loath to just film the tournament. Even the recent (and largely very good) Mortal Kombat film spent a lot of time building up to the fighting tournament instead of actually showing the thing.

Street Fighter appears to be breaking that trend, and doing so with style. The trailer is filled with insane-looking characters, all unabashedly styled like their unrealistic video game predecessor. There’s Cody Rhodes as Guile, with a blond flattop glued to the top of his head. There’s 50 Cent as Balrog, with a somehow even worse hair-do. There’s Jason Momoa, all green and orange and feral as Blanka.

If the movie is nothing but these weirdos squaring off against one another, shot in a static wide shot, we’d probably love it. But the fact that Sakurai also seems to be whipping his camera around the contestants to make something visceral and exciting thrills us even more. Heck, we’re so dazzled by what we see, we’ll even be okay if Street Fighter wants to throw in a character arc or an emotional moment.

As long as it doesn’t get in the way of the kicking and punching.

Street Fighter premieres in theaters on October 16, 2026.

Game of Thrones: Aegon’s Conquest Makes the Most Sense as a Movie

Most of the buzz coming out of Warner Bros.’ panel at CinemaCon has surrounded upcoming films like Dune: Part Three and Supergirl, but the studio’s presentation had one key piece of information for Game of Thrones fans: Official confirmation that the long-rumored movie about Aegon’s Conquest is at last in development. 

Titled (unsurprisingly) Game of Thrones: Aegon’s Conquest, the film appeared briefly on a slide touting the company’s projects in 2027 and beyond. It will be written by former House of Cards showrunner Beau Willimon, and tell the story of the birth of the Targaryen dynasty and the creation of Westeros (or at least most of it) as we know it today

But it’s something of a relief to know that the folks in charge have finally realized an important truth: This story pretty much has to be a feature film. Not just because of the sheer scale of events involved in the conquest of a full continent, but because there’s not really enough material to necessitate a full-on prestige TV drama in the style of the original Thrones or its prequel, House of the Dragon

That Warner Bros. wants to tell the story of Aegon I Targaryen is a no-brainer. Known as Aegon the Conqueror, he is the stuff of literal legend, the founder of a dynasty that spawned at least a dozen confusingly named descendants, made incest a thing again, and shaped almost all of Westeros history as we know it. (His invasion literally reset the calendar; Aegon’s Landing is dated from year 1.) Alongside his two sisters/lovers/wives, Rhaenys and Visenya, and on the back of the infamous dragon Balerion the Black Dread, Aegon took control of six of the seven (er…nine?) kingdoms, and forged the Iron Throne out of the swords of his vanquished enemies. 

Rumors have been flying pretty much since Game of Thrones ended that an Aegon’s Conquest prequel was one of the (many) proposed spinoffs under consideration. There’s been debate over whether it would be a movie or a TV show, with two separate projects seemingly dueling at various points. But a feature film is the right call; not only does it allow the true scope of the devastation caused by Aegon’s Conquest to be depicted, but it also means that the film will have to, by necessity, streamline its story.

Unlike a TV series, which would most likely have to feature a steady grind of regular folks getting burned to a crisp by dragons as their lives are destroyed — which is, let’s face it, the bulk of what happens in this story, it’s a conquest! — a film can reorient itself toward bigger, more thematic swings. Like, say, the House of the Dragon season 1 revelation that Aegon may not have come to conquer so much as to save, driven by prophetic dragon dreams of the so-called “song of ice and fire,” which says a ruler from the fiery House Targaryen would be needed to defeat the icy undead White Walkers. 

Plus, a film budget means our first real glimpse of Balerion will be more than worth the wait. 

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Brings Venom Into Season 2

Although it didn’t generate the same amount of buzz as X-Men ’97, the Disney+ series Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man was a delightful bit of wall-crawler fun. Set in the early days of Spider-Man’s career, the series remixed all of Peter Parker’s stories into a unique, and often wonderful blend, turning Norman Osborn into a malevolent Tony Stark and Tombstone into a tragic figure.

Season 2 of Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man promises to continue that fun take on classic villains. A new promo image leaked to social media shows Venom, Spider-Man’s monstrous arch-enemy turned lethal protector. Although far less slobbery than most depictions of the baddie, the picture is clearly of Venom, complete with a frightening grin full of sharp teeth and menacing claws. And yet, the caption with the picture reads not “Venom,” but “Symbiote Spider-Man.”

That title isn’t completely inaccurate to the original story. As most fans know, Venom was originally a black alien costume that Peter Parker wore for a while, in place of his usual red and blue duds. The change occurred in 1984’s Secret Wars #8 (which actually hit shelves after Peter was swinging through the streets of New York in his sleek new costume), in which the red and blue suit was destroyed while off-planet. Because Pete couldn’t run around naked, not even in deep space, aliens devised a new costume for him, one that was alive.

Spidey wore his black costume for a while, but soon turned back to his regular clothes after realizing that the suit created dark feelings within him. After being abandoned by Spidey, the suit bonded with ‘roided out photojournalist Eddie Brock, who has hated Peter since he exposed Brock’s shoddy work. The two combined to become Venom, first fully revealed in 1988’s Amazing Spider-Man #300.

Venom was an immediate hit and has been a mainstay in the Marvel Universe ever since. And, like other breakout bad guys, he developed enough of a following to carry his own book and undergo several revisions. Several other humans have been Venom’s hosts, including the Scorpion Mac Gargan, Peter’s high school bully Flash Thompson, and, in current Marvel continuity, Mary Jane Watson.

In short, Venom’s very open to interpretation, which is great news for Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man. Where early reports suggested that the series would take place in the mainline MCU and tell the story of Tom Holland’s Spider-Man before Captain America: Civil War, the series takes place in a different reality. That separation has given creators room to go in exciting directions with their stories.

In fact, the freedom allowed the creators to introduce a variation of Venom in the very first episode of Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man. The first episode begins with what appears to be Kraven the Hunter, bonded with the symbiote and attacking Peter Parker’s school, Midtown High. Because Peter doesn’t have his powers yet, it’s up to Doctor Strange, who arrives via portal, to stop the creature. He whisks the monster away, but leaves the portal open just long enough for a spider to get through and bite Peter, setting him off on his heroic journey.

Does this mean that Venom is somehow tied to Spider-Man’s origin? We don’t know, because that’s very different than anything that’s been done before in Peter Parker’s history. But that sort of experimentation with the canon is exactly why we love Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man.

Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man season 2 swings onto Disney+ in 2026.

For All Mankind Season 5 Episode 4 Exclusive Clip: Alex Has a Plan for Helios

For All Mankind season 5 has gotten off to a complex and emotional start. In last week’s episode, tensions grew on Mars, and we said a sad yet grateful goodbye to Joel Kinnaman’s Ed Baldwin, who’d been a main character since the Apple TV sci-fi series first started in 2019.

His grandson Alex (Sean Kaufman) was the only one there when Ed finally passed. After graduating from high school, Alex feels a bit lost. He seems unsure of where his future lies, and who can blame him? Alex has grown up on Mars, but he feels caught between the Baldwin legacy and forging his own path on a planet where a violent revolution may be bubbling under the surface.

In episode 3, Alex spoke of his inner turmoil with Helios founder Dev Ayesa (Edi Gathegi) and the pair seemed to bond while fixing Alex’s bike. The savvy entrepreneur, who has taken disruptive risks that have profoundly influenced humanity’s political landscape, is currently fixated on building Meru, a sustainable, self-sufficient city on Mars that could potentially provide a home for 1 million citizens.

Surprisingly, this ambitious plan hasn’t gone down well at the company he co-founded in the 1980s where the budget is being directed to other game-changing projects. But Dev has rarely taken “no” for an answer, and it doesn’t look like he’s about to start now. In our exclusive episode 4 clip, Dev begins to see Alex as someone who could help bring his Meru dream to life on Mars, even as Helios CEO Aleida Rosales (Coral Peña) looks further ahead to finding life on Titan.

Dev always seems fairly certain that his way is the right way, but he’s taken aback by Alex’s youthful, creative ideas. Arguing that Dev’s vision for Meru is too perfect and restricts its inhabitants’ ability to express themselves, Alex gets through to Dev at a time when he’s more likely to shut out other voices. Still, Dev tells Alex that if he wants to make key changes to the environment on Meru, he’ll have to consider the financial impact. Like very few others before him, Alex may just realize that explaining to Dev why he should care about the outcome of his decisions is far more effective than going to war with him.

For All Mankind season 5 streams weekly on Apple TV.

The Odyssey: Charlize Theron’s Character Confirmed

We’re still months away from Christopher Nolan‘s The Odyssey coming to theaters, but it feels like the production has been simultaneously drip-dropping information about the film and holding off announcements for years. For example, we’ve long known that Nolan has assembled an incredible cast, including Matt Damon, Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, and Zendaya. But outside of those few names, Nolan and co. have been reluctant to tell us who is playing whom in this big-budget take on the Heroic Greek tale.

However, Universal has finally released some more information. According to EW, the studio showed new footage from The Odyssey to attendees of CinemaCon last night. Presumably set early in the film, the scene found Matt Damon’s Odysseus talking to the figure who has held him hostage on an island for seven years. That figure, played by Charlize Theron, is Calypso.

For those who haven’t had a course in Classics, Calypso is a nymph (an ethereal creature less powerful than a goddess but more powerful than the average person) who traps Odysseus on the island of Ogygia. Calypso captures Odysseus as he travels home from the Trojan War and, immediately charmed by his good looks and ingenuity, devotes herself to him. Using magical songs and weaving on her golden loom, Calypso tries to convince Odysseus to marry him. However, he refuses and insists that he is faithful to his wife Penelope (Hathaway).

Although Calypso only appears in the first part of the story, she’s integral to The Odyssey. Not only does she effectively set the story in motion, keeping Odysseus away for seven years, but she also illustrates the stakes of the tale.

Odysseus is defined by his cleverness and his determination, as demonstrated by the way he refuses Calypso’s advances and by his attempts to escape. Those qualities will come up again and again throughout the story. However, Odysseus cannot leave Ogygia without the help of higher powers, namely Athena (Zendaya), who appeals to Zeus on his behalf. Zeus sends Hermes to deliver the news to Calypso, and after a bit of grouching about how it’s apparently okay for him to have affairs with humans but not her, she finally relents and gives Odysseus the means to leave.

The events only cover a couple books of The Odyssey, and they’re certain to be even shorter in the final film, which has to condense an entire epic to blockbuster length. For that reason, Theron’s casting makes perfect sense. She has both the presence as a performer and the screen history as a movie star to make an immediate impression, getting us viewers to believe that she had the power to keep Odysseus for so long.

And what of the other questions around the story? Who will be playing Zeus and Hermes? Who will Lupita Nyong’o, Elliot Page, or Samantha Morton be? We don’t have answers yet, and therefore have to beg the muses to tell us more, just like Homer himself.

The Odyssey arrives in theaters on July 17, 2026.

Crash Land Director on Crafting a Jackass-Inspired Coming-of-Age Drama

What happens when a group of amateur stuntmen try to make a “real movie” so they can prove their worth to a town that hates them? Crash Land, directed by Dempsey Bryk, answers that very question. 

Inspired by decades of misadventurous buddy comedies, Bryk executed a goofy ode to films including, but not limited to, Bottle Rocket, Napoleon Dynamite, and Superbad.

“It came out of COVID,” Bryk says. “I was stuck with my brother and my entire family in a really small one bedroom … living behind the couches in the living room, as you do, and I was watching this Jackass marathon on loop and the idea blossomed out of there.” 

Crash Land manages to evoke nostalgia for an incomparable era of filmmaking while simultaneously highlighting a young directorial voice with new things to say. 

“It’s an homage to the movies that we loved growing up (and) it’s sort of a love letter to the friendships I had when I was 12,” Bryk says. “Now it’s just a labor of love that we made with our best friends.” 

Against a Canadian backdrop of charming chaos, Bryk whips viewers through belly laughs, sharp gasps, and welling eyes with a fresh energy. 

“It’s a really, really emotional and sweet movie about friendship at the end of the day,” Billy Bryk – Dempsey’s brother, producer, and cast member of the film – says. “Under all the stuff about stunts and guys being delinquents and hurting each other and hurting themselves, it’s really a tender movie about love and friendship and grief.” 

In addition to serving as a love letter to classic films and television programs of the genre, the plot of Crash Land is a testament to rudimentary filmmaking in itself. It follows an ensemble of young adults who terrorize their small town performing crude stunts and generally wreaking havoc, and upon realizing the passion with which their community despises them, they attempt to make a “real movie” to prove that their lives have meaning. The true star of the film is the chemistry shared among the cast as their mission twists and turns across town. 

The feminine counterbalance to a film dominated by many testosterone-driven characters is Abby Quinn as Jemma, the offputting French iteration of the girl next store. Quinn demonstrates the essence of her character through the work she looked to while preparing for the role. 

“I think my character probably mostly watches animated movies, and I’d never seen Ratatouille,” Quinn says. “So, I watched Ratatouille.”

The spirit of Crash Land is rooted in the coming-of-age story told behind the scenes. Dempsey and Billy Bryk’s journey as young adult artists is just as touching as the one of Crash Land’s protagonists, albeit less destructive. 

According to Dempsey and Billy, the SXSW crowd reacted well to the heart of the film, and to its setting. 

“This movie takes place in Canada … but a lot of people who … are not from Canada, don’t know about Canada, still really connected with it,” Dempsey says.

Through the influence of their surroundings, a quirky cast, and infinite stunts to try, the characters crash and land in a world that is fun, endearing, and unexpectedly touching. 

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Review: Evil Dead, Egyptian Style

Can a mummy be scary? That iconic revenant of Ancient Egyptian civilization is certainly fun in a beloved Saturday morning, Indiana Jones sort of way. It can also be romantic. What staple of horror better expresses the enormity of eternity than a pained face, frozen in longing beneath the sands of time? Yet are these wrapped-up wraiths ever truly spooky? Even the first, most classic mummy chiller of the screen sprang more from a fear of a curse supposedly stalking the recent excavation of King Tut’s tomb—consider it the QAnon conspiracy theory of its day—than it did terror of a well-bandaged corpse.

One senses this mystery of how to make a mummy frighten has likewise bedeviled Lee Cronin, the formidable genre filmmaker of commanding style and a nihilistic disposition. He definitely knows the ins-and-outs of revolting and unsettling an audience. His riff on Sam Raimi’s now own relatively ancient horror standard, Evil Dead Rise, is in contention for the cruelest and most misanthropic bloodbath in the Deadite canon. And when tasked with coming up on his own mummy mischief by Blumhouse Productions, Cronin ultimately lit on a novel but effective approach: do Evil Dead again, but Egyptian style.

I’m not sure Lee Cronin’s The Mummy qualifies, then, as a “real” mummy movie, whatever that might be, but it’s definitely the most grotesque, sinister, and ruthless flick I’ve ever seen featuring someone wrapped head-to-toe in linens. And at times—when you sense Cronin is stifling his oblique laughter off-screen—it’s fairly scary. 

Beginning nominally in Egypt proper (which is more than we can say about a Tom Cruise movie with the similar title), Lee Cronin’s The Mummy is set in a world that is recognizably modern, chaotic, and rife with dread. One doesn’t need to whisper about ancient curses and spells to get Charlie (Jack Reynor) and Larissa (Laia Costa) ready to unravel. Beforehand, they’re a fairly happy, if displaced, couple who’s lived the better part of a year in Cairo while journalist Charlie chases his dream job of being a major network correspondent in New York City. Larissa is making the best of it, too, working at a nearby hospital while they split duties (and attention) on two young children, including wee Katie (Emily Mitchell).

Poor Katie. Adored but neglected just enough that her parents never notice she’s made friends with neighbors behind a fence in the garden, Katie is thus left vulnerable when one of these strangers claims to be a magician… albeit the older maternal figure seems darkly reluctant to perform a final trick that leaves the garden empty and Charlie and Larissa bereaved as their daughter vanishes into an Egyptian sandstorm.

Cut to eight years later. Charlie never got that New York job, but he and Larissa, now living with Larissa’s aging mother (Verónica Falcón) and their two remaining children, teenage Seb (Shylo Molina) and new wee daughter Maud (Billie Roy), seem to have found some equilibrium of peace in their elapsed grief. That’s why the call from Cairo hits like a thunderbolt. Katie has been discovered alive. So they say. She was also covered in bandages and seemingly left for dead in a 3,000-year-old sarcophagus that was recovered, inexplicably enough, from a plane wreck. And despite being virtually catatonic and covered in scars, she is considered healthy and ready to come home to Albuquerque.

Cronin’s use of Egypt as a backdrop and a table-setter is in some ways more admirable than it is necessary. The filmmaker captures a mood that feels bustling and uneasy in the modern world, while setting the stage for an ancient primordial evil. But it’s worth noting that William Friedkin did more or less the same thing half a century ago in The Exorcist with a lot more brevity. And at heart that is very much what Lee Cronin’s The Mummy is chasing: a film where there is something deeply wrong with a little girl and the effect it’s having on her childhood home and parents.

By alluding to The Exorcist, it’s fair to say that Cronin’s Mummy is more grounded and deliberate than his brisk splatterfest in the Evil Dead sandbox three years ago. It’s also a lot longer with a 134-minute running time. But in spirit, this Mummy is still all about atmosphere, queasy aesthetics, and a brutality tha goes for heaving shock value every time. Also like Evil Dead Rise, it chronicles the destruction of a family laid low by an evil force.

As the heads of that family, Reynor and Costa give the film gravitas where possible. With his millennial beard and abstract sense of doom hanging over his head, Reynor looks like the most bewildered American in the Middle East/North Africa this side of JD Vance in Islamabad. He carries himself with a sense of disbelief that this is his life, and his despondency pairs nicely with Costa’s credible delusional fantasy that everything will be fine now that Katie’s back. Both performances suggest characters retreating from reality, which goes a long way to paper over some of the logic gaps these parents are experiencing—such as never wondering once if they should consult a child psychologist or a nearby doctor when Katie begins peeling off chunks her own skin or is found feasting on scorpions beneath their crawl spaces.

But this really isn’t a “logic” movie, nor is it a horror trying to deal with a metaphor for grief, despite grief being all around. It’s purely a visceral exercise in sadistic set pieces, which it piles up with abandon. The longer the ex-mummified Katie stays in their house, the more corrosive her shadow on the whole family becomes, with the clever suggestion that this particular brand of made-up Ancient Egyptian demonology can spread like a cold from one family member to the next.

It leads to one particularly mean-spirited sequence involving the whole family and their extended friends at a party. It’s so thunderously nasty that it will surely live on in a thousand memes. It also raises questions about why the whole family isn’t having a stronger reckoning with one another about what they’re experiencing.

But the appeals of Lee Cronin’s The Mummy remain with these surface level freak-outs. Like Katie’s countenance, they each make a mark, but also suggest that despite its epic length, this movie could have strived to do more with its premise. Ironically, it isn’t even the central family where the film most intrigues. A subplot involving an Egyptian detective (May Calamawy) as she unearths the real source of Katie’s disappearance and the nature of the dark magic that’s been placed on the child, hints at a more narratively and emotionally complex picture. On one hand, these scenes could have easily been jettisoned since at the end of the day, the viewer just needs to know it’s another demon-in-a-child movie, but on the other, they tease grim mystique and a post-colonial act of revenge that’s begging to be unwrapped. Similarly, the dread Cronin builds as Calamawy finds the source of the evil is one of the highlights of the picture.

Yet as just another layer in a more conventional movie, complete with an ending that suggests studio fingerprints, it leaves us with what is ultimately a longer possession movie. It makes for a spooky, nominal mummy, but one that settles for trinkets when there is still treasure buried up in its hills.

Lee Cronin’s The Mummy opens on Friday, April 17.

15 Times the Trailer Was Way Better Than the Movie

A great trailer can sell almost anything. In just a couple of minutes, it can build excitement, set a tone, and make a movie feel like a must-watch event. That carefully crafted preview can sometimes backfire, ending up being more memorable than the film itself.

With clever editing, better pacing, or simply highlighting the strongest moments, some trailers create expectations the final product can’t meet. In these cases, audiences walk away feeling like they’ve already seen the best version of the movie before it even started. These are the films where the marketing didn’t help, setting a bar the movie couldn’t reach.

Suicide Squad

Its trailers, set to energetic music and sharp editing, created huge hype and a distinct tone. The final film felt disjointed, with many noting the marketing was more cohesive than the movie itself.

Prometheus

The trailers leaned heavily into mystery and existential horror, building expectations of a deeper sci-fi story. The final film divided audiences, with many feeling it didn’t deliver on the intrigue the marketing suggested.

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies

Epic trailers promised a grand, emotional conclusion, but the film itself was criticized for overreliance on CGI and stretched storytelling that didn’t match the intensity teased beforehand.

Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

Trailers teased a dramatic and cohesive finale, but the film’s pacing and narrative choices left many feeling it didn’t live up to the promise built by its marketing.

Sucker Punch

The trailers showcased a visually inventive, action-heavy experience. The final film was criticized for its storytelling, with many noting the trailer highlighted nearly all of its strongest moments.

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice

Marketing emphasized a monumental clash and dramatic stakes, but the film’s structure and tone divided audiences, with some feeling the trailer better captured the excitement.

The Matrix Resurrections

The trailer built intrigue and nostalgia, suggesting a bold continuation. The film’s meta approach and narrative choices left many viewers feeling it didn’t meet those expectations.

Pearl Harbor

The trailer highlighted romance and large-scale action, but the film was criticized for uneven pacing and tone, failing to match the emotional weight suggested in its marketing.

The Village

Trailers sold it as a horror film filled with creatures and suspense. The actual movie leaned more into drama and a twist-driven narrative, leaving many feeling misled.

Kangaroo Jack

Marketed as a wacky talking-animal comedy, the trailer focused heavily on a brief fantasy sequence. The actual film barely featured that concept, leading to widespread disappointment.

The Snowman

The trailer suggested a tense, atmospheric thriller. The finished film felt incomplete and confusing, with critics noting production issues that prevented it from matching its own marketing.

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets

Visually stunning trailers promised a vibrant sci-fi epic. The film struggled with character chemistry and storytelling, leaving many feeling the trailer captured its peak moments.

300: Rise of an Empire

The trailer leaned into the stylistic intensity of the original, but the sequel lacked the same impact, making the marketing feel more compelling than the final product.

Green Lantern

Trailers highlighted large-scale action and visual spectacle, but the film’s execution and tone failed to resonate, making the promotional material feel more polished than the movie itself.

Jupiter Ascending

The marketing promised an ambitious sci-fi saga, but the film’s complex world-building and uneven tone left many feeling it didn’t deliver on its trailer’s promise.

15 Times a Video Game Made Us More Uncomfortable Than it Needed To

Videogames can be the most immersive experience someone can have, and that comes with good and bad things. On the plus side, they can give memorable experiences that you’ll remember for years. The problem is, those experiences might be more than what you bargained for.

In some cases, the discomfort is intentional, meant to provoke a reaction or deliver a message. That, of course, does not make the discomfort any less disturbing. And of course, there are moments when the uncomfortable comes from unexpected places. These are the moments that didn’t just stick with players, they made them wish they could look away.

BioShock Infinite: Burial at Sea – Episode 2

A first-person lobotomy scene forces players to endure a graphic, slow procedure, complete with sound design and visual cues that make it feel disturbingly real and far more intense than expected.

F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin

The ending involves an unsettling encounter with Alma that blends horror and sexual imagery, creating a deeply uncomfortable sequence that many players found unnecessarily disturbing rather than purely frightening.

Dead Space 2

Dead Space 2

The eye surgery sequence requires player input while a needle slowly approaches Isaac’s eye, blending gameplay with body horror and creating a level of tension that many found almost unbearable.

Spec Ops: The Line

The white phosphorus scene forces players to confront the consequences of their actions, revealing civilian casualties in a way that is intentionally shocking and emotionally difficult to process.

The Last of Us Part II

A brutal early death and later forced confrontations between characters push players into uncomfortable emotional territory, making them question their role in the violence rather than simply observe it.

It Takes Two

A seemingly lighthearted game includes a scene where players must tear apart a crying toy elephant, creating a moment that feels unexpectedly cruel and tonally jarring.

Doki Doki Literature Club

A sudden shift into psychological horror includes a shocking character death that is presented in an uncomfortably direct and lingering way, catching many players completely off guard.

Grand Theft Auto

Grand Theft Auto V

A torture sequence forces players to actively participate in interrogating a captive, turning what could have been implied violence into an uncomfortable, hands-on experience.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2

The “No Russian” mission allows players to participate in a mass shooting, creating one of the most controversial and unsettling sequences in mainstream gaming.

Heavy Rain

The finger-cutting trial forces players to mutilate the protagonist in a slow, deliberate sequence, making the player complicit in a moment that feels more disturbing than necessary.

Detroit: Become Human

Certain routes involving abuse and control of android characters create scenes that feel uncomfortably close to real-world issues, especially when player choices directly enable or resist that behavior.

God of War

A notorious minigame involving implied sexual activity feels out of place compared to the rest of the narrative, creating an awkward tonal shift that many players found unnecessary.

Until Dawn

Certain scenes involving traps and character deaths force players to make split-second decisions that can lead to brutal outcomes, emphasizing helplessness in ways that feel intentionally distressing.

Cyberpunk 2077

Cyberpunk 2077

Some romance scenes and character interactions can feel awkward or oddly staged, especially when player choices lead to unexpected tonal shifts or uncomfortable intimacy.

Persona 5

Early storylines involving abuse and exploitation are intentionally dark, but their presentation can feel uncomfortably intense, especially given the contrast with the game’s otherwise stylish tone.

15 Movies That Just Couldn’t Overcome Production Nightmares

Some movies struggle before audiences ever get to see them. Behind the scenes, productions can spiral into chaos due to budget issues, creative clashes, technical problems, or unexpected real-world complications. In some cases, films limp across the finish line, with the turmoil clearly visible on screen. In others, things fall apart so badly that the movie never gets released at all.

These troubled productions often become stories of their own, remembered as much for what went wrong as for what was created. From infamous flops to shelved projects, these are the films that simply couldn’t overcome the problems behind the camera.

Sigourney Weaver as Ellen Ripley in Alien 3.

Alien 3

The film began production without a finished script, with sets built before the story was finalized. Constant rewrites and studio interference led to a troubled shoot and a final product that even its director later disowned.

Heaven’s Gate

Director Michael Cimino’s perfectionism led to massive delays and budget overruns, with excessive takes and constant changes. The production spiraled out of control, resulting in a notorious box office disaster.

Batgirl

Despite being nearly complete, the film was shelved by Warner Bros. as part of cost-cutting measures. Its cancellation became one of the most high-profile examples of a finished blockbuster being abandoned before release.

The Island of Dr. Moreau

Marked by director changes, on-set conflicts, and erratic behavior from cast members, the production became chaotic. The final film reflected this instability and is often cited as a notorious failure.

Waterworld

Filming on open water caused constant delays, damage to sets, and ballooning costs, making it one of the most expensive films ever at the time and widely seen as a troubled production.

The Mothership

Starring Halle Berry, the sci-fi film wrapped filming but was ultimately scrapped due to prolonged and difficult post-production issues, with the studio deciding it wasn’t worth completing.

The Man Who Killed Don Quixote

A decades-long production plagued by financial issues, cast changes, and failed shoots. Multiple attempts collapsed before the film was finally completed years later.

Cats

A rushed post-production schedule led to unfinished visual effects making it into theaters, with last-minute fixes even being sent after release, reflecting the film’s chaotic production pipeline.

Empires of the Deep

Plagued by unpaid crew, multiple directors, and constant rewrites, this ambitious underwater fantasy never recovered from its chaotic production and remains unreleased despite significant investment.

Chaos Walking

Extensive reshoots, delays, and production issues plagued the film for years, ultimately resulting in a poorly received release.

The Lone Ranger

Budget overruns, delays, and production challenges turned the film into a costly disappointment despite its high-profile cast and crew.

Black Water Transit

Legal battles and fraud allegations involving its producer halted the film’s release indefinitely, despite filming being completed and early cuts reportedly screened.

Cleopatra

Massive budget overruns, delays, and health issues plagued the production, making it one of the most expensive and troubled films of its time.

Hippie Hippie Shake

After years of delays and creative conflicts, including the director leaving during post-production, the film never reached theaters and remained stuck in limbo despite being largely completed.

All-Star Weekend

Directed by Jamie Foxx, the comedy was shelved after production due to concerns about its content and changing audience sensitivities, leaving it unreleased despite being finished.

15 Movies That Tried So Hard to Be Smarter Than They Were

Many movies aim to develop complex thoughts throughout their runtime, something to be proud of, certainly. Sadly, aiming to do something is not succeeding, and there are films that focus too much on appearing deep or intellectual, losing sight of what makes a story engaging in the first place.

Overcomplicated plots, heavy-handed symbolism, and confusing narratives can leave audiences feeling more frustrated than impressed. In some cases, these movies gain a following for their boldness, while others are remembered for missing the mark. These are the films that reached for something profound, but ended up feeling like they were trying a little too hard to get there.

Cloud Atlas

A sprawling, multi-timeline narrative aiming for philosophical depth, but it can be argued it collapsed under its own ambition, making the premise overly complex and “pretentious” rather than profound.

Robert Pattinson and John David Washington in Tenet

Tenet

Built around complex time inversion concepts, the film ends up prioritizing intricate mechanics over character and clarity, leaving many viewers confused despite its ambition.

The Tree of Life

Its abstract storytelling and philosophical imagery divided audiences; some praised its ambition while others saw it as overly self-serious and difficult to connect with emotionally.

The Fountain

Attempting to blend romance, science fiction, and existential themes, the film ended up being overly symbolic and emotionally distant despite its ambitious scope.

Southland Tales

A chaotic mix of sci-fi, satire, and political commentary, the film was widely criticized for being unfocused and overly ambitious, resulting in a confusing and often incoherent narrative.

Lucy

Built around exaggerated scientific ideas about brain capacity, the film presents pseudo-intellectual concepts as profound, undermining its attempts at philosophical storytelling.

Transcendence

A high-concept sci-fi story about artificial intelligence that struggled to balance its ideas with engaging storytelling, often feeling more concerned with sounding smart than being compelling.

Jupiter Ascending

A dense mix of world-building and mythology that ended up overcomplicating its narrative, trying to establish a grand sci-fi universe without grounding it in clear storytelling.

The Happening

Despite its attempt at a thought-provoking environmental message, its execution and dialogue were widely criticized, making its serious themes feel unintentionally simplistic (and comedic) rather than insightful.

In Time

A strong conceptual premise about time as currency was weighed down by heavy-handed messaging, with critics noting it focused on its metaphor over developing a nuanced story.

Prometheus

Attempting to explore existential questions about creation, the film raised complex ideas without providing satisfying answers or coherent character decisions.

Blonde

Its stylized approach and heavy symbolism divided audiences, with some arguing it leaned too far into artistic expression at the expense of clarity and emotional resonance.

White Noise

An adaptation packed with intellectual themes and satire, but often criticized for feeling overly talkative and concept-heavy without fully translating those ideas into engaging cinema.

Synecdoche, New York

An extremely layered exploration of identity and art, often praised but also criticized for being so abstract and self-referential that it becomes difficult to emotionally engage with.

Attic scene in Beau Is Afraid

Beau Is Afraid

A surreal, anxiety-driven narrative that often felt indulged too heavily in symbolism and absurdity, making it feel more like an exercise in excess than a coherent story.

15 Movie Scenes That Were Cut for Being Too Weird

A lot of scenes are deleted from the final cut of movies, yet not all of them for pacing reasons. There are times when, once all is said and done, certain scenes just feel off. Even films with bold ideas have limits, and when a scene pushes too far into the bizarre, surreal, or tonally out-of-place, it can end up on the cutting room floor.

In many cases, these scenes are fascinating on their own, offering a glimpse into alternate versions of the story that might have felt completely different. While they might not really fit the tone, it is still interesting to know what could have been for these famous films.

Zootopia

An early version included a disturbing “taming party” where young predators were forced to wear shock collars. The concept was deemed too unsettling and tonally off for a family film, leading to a complete overhaul of the story.

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

A deleted bathroom scene shows E.T. trying to take a bath in a strangely staged sequence that leaned too far into surreal comedy, clashing with the film’s grounded emotional tone. It was added in the 20th anniversary of the film, with a completely CGI E.T.

Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone in The Amazing Spider-Man

The Amazing Spider-Man

A deleted scene features Peter encountering a mysterious figure implied to be his father, creating a confusing and oddly mystical moment that didn’t fit the grounded reboot tone.

Titanic

A tense fight between Jack and Lovejoy during the sinking added a more action-heavy, almost thriller-like tone that clashed with the film’s emotional pacing, leading to its removal.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1

A farewell scene between Dudley and Harry added emotional closure, but its tone and pacing didn’t align with the film’s darker, more urgent narrative focus.

It

A deleted flashback involving Pennywise and a disturbing child sacrifice was removed for being excessively grotesque, even for a horror film, and potentially too jarring for audiences.

Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy

An entire subplot involving a bank robbery and armed confrontation was removed for being wildly disconnected from the film’s newsroom comedy tone.

American Psycho

Certain extended scenes leaned even further into surreal ambiguity and dark humor, which were trimmed to keep the film from becoming too abstract and alienating.

The Shining

An epilogue scene in a hospital attempted to soften the ending but felt tonally strange compared to the film’s ambiguity, leading to its removal shortly after release.

Terminator 2: Judgment Day

A scene showing Sarah and John physically modifying the Terminator’s CPU was removed for slowing pacing and adding unnecessary exposition that felt oddly technical.

Alien

A deleted cocoon scene showing victims transformed into alien eggs was considered too grotesque and slowed the film’s climax to a crawl, though it later appeared in extended versions.

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

Saruman’s death was removed from the theatrical cut because it was not only oddly placed, despite its narrative importance, but also poorly executed, including dialogue exchanges that feel completely unnatural.

Get Out

An alternate ending showing a darker fate for the protagonist was removed because it shifted the tone too heavily and conflicted with the film’s intended message.

I Am Legend

The original ending revealed the creatures’ intelligence, which felt too thematically different from the theatrical version’s tone, leading to its replacement.

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

An alternate ending where Ramona leaves Scott for good was removed for feeling tonally off compared to the film’s energetic, romantic style.

Beef Season 2 Review: A Star-Studded Cast Grounds This Passive Aggressive Grudge Match

This Beef season 2 review is Spoiler-Free.

The anthology drama is a popular trend in prestige TV these days. Shows ranging from The White Lotus to True Detective have all racked up awards hardware, A-list casting coups, and buckets of critical acclaim by completely reinventing themselves from year to year and keeping little but the series’ title the same. Whether this shift is a good idea or not is an open question, particularly since many of these shows never quite regain the narrative heights of their superior first seasons in subsequent outings (Cruel Summer, The Terror, the aforementioned True Detective). But the impulse behind them is understandable. The entertainment industry loves an established property, after all. 

The first season of Netflix’s Beef premiered to widespread acclaim, registering a 98% positive score on Rotten Tomatoes before going on to nab eight Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology series and acting wins for stars Steven Yuen and Ali Wong. Its concept, a dysfunctional feud between two strangers whose lives grow increasingly adversarial after a road rage incident, doesn’t immediately seem to lend itself to an anthology format. But after that kind of success, it’s not a surprise that Netflix and creator Lee Sung Jin wanted to keep the show alive. What’s more surprising, perhaps, is that Beef season 2 is a compelling, propulsive endeavor, staying true to many of the franchise’s larger themes — unexpressed anger, class disparity, and existential unhappiness — even as it recasts them in a very different setting and tone. 

From its opening moments, Beef season 2 is a very different viewing experience than its predecessor, both narratively and tonally speaking. A meditation on love and marriage told through a cross-section of couples at various stages in their lives and relationships, it’s one part generational clash, one part domestic drama, and one part sly send-up of capitalistic excess. Set at a posh Southern California country club that caters to the wealthy, elite, and frequently shallow, the story initially follows two couples: Gen Z-ers Austin (Charles Melton) and Ashley (Cailee Spaeny), a pair of newly engaged low-level club employees, and Josh (Oscar Isaac) and Lindsay (Carey Mulligan) Martin, married elder millennials wrestling with the reality that their lives haven’t exactly turned out the way they once hoped.

Their lives become intertwined after Austin and Ashley witness the Martins having a potentially violent argument, and use their recording of the event to force Josh to use his position as the General Manager at Monte Vista Point Country Club to help them get ahead in their careers. As the beef between the two couples escalates, the show delves into the ways that even the best and most well-intentioned relationships can evolve into something quite different and more complicated than they started out as. Things become even messier when both pairs are pulled into the orbit of the wealthy Korean couple taking over the country club, the billionaire Chairwoman Park (Youn Yuh-jung) and her second husband, Dr. Kim (Song Kang-ho), a famous plastic surgeon.

As they all vie for her approval — and for the job security that comes with it — each is forced to make darker personal choices and painful relationship compromises along the way. Much like season 1, things escalate steadily over the course of the season’s eight episodes, in ways that threaten the settled lives and livelihoods of all the couples at the story’s center in increasingly over-the-top (and occasionally borderline unbelievable) ways. 

Unlike the franchise’s first season, in which the titular beef between Danny and Amy is aggressive and overt, the various beefs that unfurl in season 2 are much more passive-aggressive and internal. Part of that is because Austin, Ashley, Josh, and Lindsay all have to work in the same community to some degree, so there’s a much higher degree of performative niceness required from all of them, much of which is played for laughs. It’s also because the beef between these two couples isn’t the only conflict at work in these episodes; each pair is also wrestling with its own set of demons within their relationships, as well as the internalized anger that often goes hand in hand with the realization that your life is going to contain a lot more settling and compromise than you initially expected it to. 

But while this season has plenty of buzzy moments and more than a few surprises, the real reason to indulge in this second helping of Beef is its cast, which is absolutely stacked from top to bottom with outstanding performers. Isaac and Mulligan are dynamite together, deftly conveying the complicated layers of a marriage that’s been through years of ups, downs, and everything in between — and have the grudges and lingering resentments to show for it. Melton and Spaeny channel the most irritatingly stereotypical traits of Gen Z, even as their youthful chemistry and determined optimism remind us how naive and inexperienced they both are.

Oscar winner Youn doesn’t get nearly enough to do — a sidequest to Korea is one of the season’s weakest elements — but she makes the few introspective moments her character gets count. And some of the series’s funniest moments come courtesy of William Fichtner as megarich club member Troy, whose marriage with trophy wife Ava (might actually be the series’s most honest. (If only because it’s clear his real true love is his private jet.)

While Beef season 2 doesn’t quite reach the narrative heights of the franchise’s first season, its sharp social satire and incisive relationship arcs make it a perfect binge, and the kind of drama that’s very hard to look away from. Though it’s a story of a very different kind of beef, in the end, the franchise’s second helping is ultimately still satisfying. 

All eight episodes of Beef season 2 are available to stream on Netflix now.

Masters of the Universe Hopes to Follow Barbie’s Lead and Question Gender Roles

As far as the toy company Mattel was concerned in the 1980s, the world was split into two groups. Girls played with Barbie and boys played with He-Man. Sure, the respective lines occasionally made gestures to inclusivity, introducing She-Ra and making Ken a bit more active. But for the most part, the toys reinforced indivisible gender roles.

The upcoming Masters of the Universe movie is going to continue that trend, but not in the way you’d expect. Chris Butler, one of the movie’s final screenwriters, told EW, “A lot of what Travis [Knight, director] and I wanted it to be was to nod to the thing that we love so much as kids, take it back to its roots…. If Barbie was the toy for girls, He-Man was the toy for men. It was about might and power and being top dog. And so definitely thematically, I wanted to lean into that and what it means to be a man and what it means to be a human.”

In many ways, that was the major theme of the Barbie movie. Of course, director Greta Gerwig and co-writer Noah Baumbach poke fun at masculinity, especially when Ryan Gosling‘s Ken follows Margot Robbie‘s Barbie into the real world to learn about patriarchy. However, most of the movie is concerned with how women see themselves. As a Mattel project, the film certainly positions Barbie dolls as the means of liberation, as explained in its 2001 style opening scene, and by its multitude of Barbies with different body types, skin colors, and interests. But it also insists that there are many different ways to be a woman, even if those types sometimes come into conflict with one another.

For Knight, that’s a message that could resonate with male viewers. Back in the 1980s, when Masters of the Universe was at its peak popularity, boys were told a simple message: “Real men don’t cry. Boys don’t cry,” recalled Knight. “If you express any kind of vulnerability, you must immediately punch a fence post to establish equilibrium.”

Few franchises exemplified that ethos better than Masters of the Universe. At its heart, the series portrayed the meek Prince Adam as unable to deal with the problems facing the kingdom of Eternia. Instead, he had to transform into the hyper-masculine He-Man to save the day, a process he underwent by exclaiming, “I have the power!” Although each episode of the cartoon series kept things at a kid-friendly level, they always ended with physical conquest: He-Man overpowered his enemies and saved the day, and only then could he return to the less imposing Adam.

As indicated by the movie’s first trailers, Masters of the Universe certainly isn’t going to avoid the franchise’s love of muscles and warfare. The marketing heavily features Nicholas Galitzine looking incredibly ripped in toy-accurate underpants and armor, waving his sword at Skeletor, a CGI creation to make Jared Leto into an equally-imposing monster man. Beyond the principal good guy and bad guy, the trailers showcase all manner of fighting, from spaceships blasting away at one another to magic users such as Evil-Lyn (Alison Brie) conjuring scary spells.

But the trailers also feature a lot of self-aware humor, often poking fun at the core principles. Take, for example, the bit in the first trailer that sees Adam, now an office drone in a meaningless job, finding the Power Sword in a store and trying to lift it. The camera zooms in on Galitzine’s straining face and cuts away to a clerk, dispassionately mocking him.

Between those two elements, it’s clear that Masters of the Universe is trying to do the same tightrope walk that Barbie pulled off, celebrating the source material while having fun with its sillier elements. It’s a challenge, but Knight thinks that the movie offers a unique opportunity. “It was a really interesting way for us to explore these things that are happening in our culture, for us to compare and contrast what that stuff meant in the ’80s versus what that means now,” he explained.

Can Masters of the Universe do it all: deliver a satisfying adventure romp, pay tribute to the beloved cartoon and toys, and offer a thoughtful critique of gender norms? If Barbie is any indication, then this He-Man does indeed have the power.

Masters of the Universe will arrive in theaters on June 5, 2026.

Timothée Chalamet Prepares Audiences for a Darker Paul in Dune 3

If you’re not paying much attention, Dune and its sequel Dune: Part Two can seem like a typical hero’s journey tale. It follows Paul Atreides, a boy who comes with his father to the desert planet of Arrakis to find himself caught in the middle of an interplanetary coup, a religious uprising, centuries of manipulation by space nuns, and one lady’s decision to have a baby. By the time the dust storm settles, Paul has become Muad’Dib, the savior of the Fremen and galactic emperor.

Yet, attentive watchers and, especially readers of the novels by Frank Herbert, know that the Dune franchise regards Paul as just one more charismatic leader, unworthy of trust and given to destructive goals. Those viewers certainly include Paul’s actor Timothée Chalamet, who described his character’s role in Dune: Part Three to attendees at CinemaCon. “He’s become his worst vision,” he said (via EW) of Paul, a person still “trying to figure out how to still protect those who he loves in his life while becoming the all-powerful dark emperor of the universe.”

“All-Powerful Dark Emperor” is not what most moviegoers want from their heroes. One need only look at the enormous backlash Rian Johnson continues to get for saying that Luke Skywalker made some bad decisions in the years after Return of the Jedi. A weirdo like Alan Moore can turn Harry Potter‘s “Chosen One” arc into something stomach-churning for his League of Extraordinary Gentlemen series, but most people just want to see the local kid do good, to see the stableboy pull the sword from the stone and become a very good king, no questions asked.

But that’s never been Paul’s story, not even in Herbert’s telling. While he certainly doesn’t pin all the blame on Paul and, in fact, allows his protagonist to see that the Fremen jihad would happen regardless of his actions, Herbert never frames the character as a hero. Instead, he understands Paul as someone just as subject to the currents of history as everyone else. Further, the books’ most pointed criticism pokes at those who would deify those people, such as Princess Irulan and the hagiographies she presents as historical records.

Dune Messiah, the source material for Dune: Part Three made this point more strongly than any of Herbert’s other books. While later entries featured previously-killed characters and Paul’s very large sandworm son to act as villains and antagonists, Messiah took a smaller focus to show how his actions affected those around him. The story follows a conspiracy against Paul, one that involves the face-dancer Scytale (Robert Pattinson, hopefully as weird as possible) and that strikes out at Chani as well.

Despite the small stakes of Dune Messiah, Dune: Part Three promises to have a more epic scope, just by virtue of being a blockbuster trilogy. “It was just deeply moving to be part of a sci-fi trilogy on the scale of Lord of the Rings, but in a time when movie theaters and movies aren’t as naturally successful as they used to be, you know,” Chalemet added. “It’s a deep honor, if not the biggest one of my career, to be working with ‘The One,’ which is Denis Villeneuve, the real Paul Atreides.”

Wait, did Chalemet mean that as a compliment? Maybe he isn’t paying as much attention as we thought…

Dune: Part Three comes to theaters on December 18, 2026.

Jinx and Susie Are the Linchpin of Margo’s Got Money Troubles’ Modern Family

Margo has way more than money troubles in the Apple TV series Margo’s Got Money Troubles.

After an affair with her married English professor leads to an unexpected pregnancy, Margo Millet (Elle Fanning) confronts a laundry list of issues from negotiating with the baby’s father, to mollifying her sleep-deprived roommates to, yes, a lack of money. And while she’s able to solve some of those problems with her creative approach to OnlyFans modeling, others don’t have easy solutions. That is to say: Margo’s got family troubles.

As the only daughter to a histrionic former Hooter’s waitress mother Shyanne (Michelle Pfeiffer) and a drug-addicted ex-pro wrestler father Jinx (Nick Offerman), Margo is used to a complicated family dynamic. Once her son Bodhi is born, however, she needs everyone on their A-game. And that’s where two mismatched figures come in to establish the beginnings of an unlikely, yet unbreakable, family unit: Margo’s aforementioned father Jinx and her sole remaining roommate Susie (Thaddea Graham).

“I really love their journey together in support of Margo and Bodhi; in support of the household,” Offerman tells Den of Geek. “I come from a big family and Susie reminds me of my family where she sees the work that needs doing in the apartment and she just does it. She doesn’t ask questions. She’s like ‘I’m here for you.’ We end up forming this wonderful family bond. I think that’s a nice thing to show an audience in a time when isolation is being sold to us so powerfully.”

Jinx and Susie are the two most stalwart figures on Team Margo, helping the single mother with all sorts of child-rearing tasks. They also make up an unusual partnership, with one being an adolescent wrestling megafan and the other being her washed up idol. Though Susie is beyond star struck when Jinx knocks on her front door (Margo didn’t let her in on what her largely absent father does for a living), the pair slowly develops a co-equal relationship of mutual respect.

According to Graham, a young actor previously seen in Sex Education and Bad Sisters, the structure created by Margo’s Got Money Troubles director Dearbhla Walsh allowed her to swiftly acclimate to working with a veteran actor like Offerman.

“One of the incredible things about Dearbhla is she page-turns your scenes so you can see your arc in its entirety,” she says. “I think that’s so important. You get time to throw out ideas and ask questions. A lot of our scenes were together and I got to do them with Nick before we got to set. Especially as someone who feels very, very green and very new to this whole world, to step into a cast of this caliber, that time beforehand was so generous. It meant I wasn’t stepping in for the first time on set with the cameras rolling and going ‘Oh my God, that’s Nick Offerman!”

“I didn’t care for her,” Offerman deadpans in response. “It’s actually funny to hear you [say that.] I know you’re young but you don’t seem green. I was such a big fan of Bad Sisters and I saw season 2 that Thaddea was in. It was like when I got offered my job on The Last of Us, I had just seen Murray Bartlett in The White Lotus. It’s like seeing Raiders of the Lost Ark and they say ‘the guy in the hat and the whip – that’s gonna be your friend in the show.'”

While connecting with each other and forming the backbone of an unconventional family unit came naturally to Offerman and Graham, getting attuned to the cultural phenomenon that is professional wrestling was a bigger challenge. Thankfully, Offerman had resources to learn from, including Margo’s Got Money Troubles novelist and wrestling stan Rufi Thorpe.

“I knew about the Von Erichs because of [my friend Corn Mo’s] gorgeous ballad ‘Shine On, Golden Warrior.’ But I really came in pretty ignorant to the contemporary world. Rufi is a crazy wrestling fanatic. She really turned me on to Bret Hart’s memoir and Mick Foley’s memoir. She was a great resource. I was able to do a lot of homework. Then being trained by Chavo Guerrero – in actual wrestling by an actual member of the Guerrero family – were all huge parts of my recipe to put together Jinx.”

The Von Erichs, Bret Hart, Mick Foley, Chavo Guerrero, and Rufi Thorpe may have been the recipe to put together Jinx, but the bond between Jinx and Susie is the recipe to put together the Millet family…money troubles be damned.

The first three episodes of Margo’s Got Money Troubles are available to stream on Apple TV now. New episodes premiere Wednesdays on Apple TV, culminating with the finale on May 20.

Godzilla Minus Zero Teaser Promises a Reckoning for the US

The King of the Monsters is too great to be held to just one country. 2023’s Godzilla Minus One kept Big G at home, for an honest and humane look at Japan’s actions during World War II. However, the first teaser for the sequel Godzilla Minus Zero makes clear that there’s plenty of blame to go around.

The trailer establishes that Minus Zero takes place in 1949, two years after the first film. We check in with protagonist Kōichi Shikishima (Ryunosuke Kamiki), seen briefly inside the cockpit of a fighting plane, as well as Noriko Ōishi (Minami Hamabe), wearing an eye patch from her injuries sustained in Godzilla‘s first attack and caring for orphan child Akiko (Sae Nagatani). However, the most powerful moment occurs at the end of the teaser, when the camera adopts a worm’s-eye view to stare up at Godzilla striding past and towering above the Statue of Liberty.

Godzilla’s arrival in the United States promises to continue the themes that director Takashi Yamazaki established in the first film. Godzilla Minus One focused on the practice of kamikaze attacks, in which pilots sacrificed themselves by crashing their planes into enemy vehicles. When Kōichi hesitates during Godzilla’s first attack in the opening of the movie, he’s haunted with guilt, the feeling that he should have died trying to stop the creature and should have died fighting in World War II. However, when he gets the opportunity to smash his plane into Godzilla in the film’s climax, Kōichi is persuaded to choose life instead.

The climax highlights the way Minus One critiqued Japan’s actions during World War II, suggesting that the country embraced a death drive that only compounded their losses. However, the film in no way ignores America’s role in dropping the bombs, even tying Godzilla’s mutation directly to the tests at Bikini Atoll.

Thus, it follows that Minus Zero would turn its attention to the States, unleashing Godzilla as an avenging force for their actions. Indeed, the voice-over playing at the start of the teaser features Americans talking about a third test, suggesting that the U.S.’s interventions in the country will go even further than we realize, causing Godzilla to rise again.

However, there is a historical note worth considering that might expand Minus Zero‘s scope even further. In 1949, the Soviet Union exploded its first atomic bomb, setting the stage for the Cold War that would hold the rest of the world hostage for the next fifty years. As Godzilla holds the U.S. accountable for its actions, will he also be looking to the U.S.S.R. and their escalation?

Whatever happens, we hope that Yamazaki can continue to balance political commentary, effective human drama, and kaiju spectacle as well as he did in the first movie. Godzilla is big enough to take on the entire world, and Godzilla Minus Zero might be the movie to deliver them.

Godzilla Minus Zero arrives in the United States on November 3, 2026.

15 Sequels That Totally Ignored What Made the Original Work

When we hear that a beloved movie of ours is getting a sequel, what we expect is for it to build on what audiences loved the first time around. Sadly, that doesn’t always happen, even if you’d think it is the natural course of action.

It can be a drastic tone shift, overcomplicating the story, or sidelining key characters; what matters is that these follow-ups end up feeling disconnected from what fans expected. While they don’t always become a failure, they most often do, showing that whoever is making the continuation lost what made the original work function.

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

The original trilogy leaned into grounded pulp adventure, but this sequel introduced sci-fi elements and heavy CGI, which many felt clashed with the series’ tone and stripped away the practical charm fans loved.

The Matrix Reloaded

While the first film balanced philosophy and action, the sequel leaned heavily into exposition and complex lore, losing the clarity and tight storytelling that made the original so impactful.

Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides

The original succeeded through character chemistry and adventure, but this entry reduced that balance, focusing more on spectacle while losing the dynamic interactions that defined the series.

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

The first film centered on magical creatures and adventure, but the sequel shifted heavily into complex franchise lore, losing the charm and accessibility that made the original engaging.

Son of the Mask

The original relied heavily on Jim Carrey’s performance and humor, but the sequel replaced that energy with exaggerated effects and a different lead, losing its comedic identity.

Speed 2: Cruise Control

The high-stakes, fast-paced tension of the original was replaced with a slower, less urgent setting, removing the core concept that made the first film so effective.

Alien 3

After the action-driven energy of the previous film, this sequel shifted tone drastically and dismissed key character arcs, frustrating audiences who expected continuity and payoff.

Terminator: Dark Fate

By ignoring previous sequels and altering established character arcs, the film attempted a reset but lost the emotional continuity that made earlier entries resonate.

Batman & Robin

Following a darker tone in earlier entries, this sequel leaned heavily into camp and spectacle, losing the grounded atmosphere that audiences had responded to.

Jaws: The Revenge

The suspense and realism of the original were replaced with an implausible premise, removing the grounded tension that made the first film so effective.

Highlander II: The Quickening

The sequel drastically altered the mythology introduced in the original, confusing audiences and undermining what made the first film compelling.

The Blair Witch 2: Book of Shadows

Instead of sticking with the found-footage realism of the original, the sequel abandoned the format entirely, losing the immersive style that defined its predecessor.

Grease 2

Without the original cast and chemistry, the sequel failed to replicate the charm and cultural impact that made the first film a success.

The Lost World: Jurassic Park

While still successful, the sequel leaned more into action than suspense, moving away from the careful buildup and wonder that defined the original.

Pacific Rim: Uprising

The sequel shifted tone toward a lighter, more generic blockbuster style, losing the distinct visual identity and weight that made the original stand out.

14 Movies That Lied About the ‘True Story’ Part

Hollywood loves the phrase “based on a true story,” even though that label often stretches the truth to its limits. In many cases, real events serve only as a loose foundation, with filmmakers reshaping timelines, inventing characters, or exaggerating details to heighten drama.

Some films blur facts beyond recognition, while others build entire narratives on disputed or unreliable sources. The result is a long list of movies that feel authentic on the surface but drift far from reality upon closer inspection. It’s always good to treat the label of “true story” with some skepticism, but with these films, finding the truth is what’s hard.

Saturday Night Fever

Marketed as a gritty snapshot of real disco-era life, it was inspired by a magazine article that its own author later admitted was largely fabricated.

Bloodsport

Claims to tell the story of Frank Dux and his participation in a secret underground martial arts tournament. Most of Dux’s story has been widely discredited, with no verifiable evidence of the ‘Kumite’ ever existing.

Catch Me If You Can

Promoted as the unbelievable real-life exploits of Frank Abagnale Jr., the movie exaggerates or invents many of its most memorable events. Investigations into Abagnale’s past suggest that key claims, including major impersonations, lack evidence, making the film far more fictionalized than its framing implies.

The Conjuring

Presents itself as a faithful retelling of one of Ed and Lorraine Warren’s most famous cases. While many of the film’s most dramatic elements were invented or heightened to create a more intense cinematic experience, the reality of the couple is that they were con artists, not paranormal heroes.

The Greatest Showman

Though inspired by the life of P. T. Barnum, the film significantly rewrites history. It portrays Barnum as a compassionate visionary while downplaying or omitting his more controversial practices.

Flamin’ Hot

Tells the story of Richard Montañez and his claim to have invented Flamin’ Hot Cheetos. However, that origin story has been disputed by the company behind the product, which credits a different development process. The film leans heavily into a narrative that remains controversial rather than confirmed.

Fargo

The movie famously opens by claiming it is based on a true story, but that statement is entirely false. The Coen brothers later confirmed the film is fictional, aside from vague inspirations. The “true story” label was a deliberate stylistic choice, making it one of the most playful yet misleading examples.

Pain & Gain

While the movie is based on a real criminal case, it takes significant liberties with tone and detail. The film exaggerates events and alters facts to fit its dark comedic style, often downplaying the brutality of the crimes.

Cocaine Bear climbs a tree

Cocaine Bear

Inspired by a real incident involving a bear that ingested cocaine, Cocaine Bear transforms a brief and tragic event into a chaotic action spectacle. The real bear died quickly, with no rampage or encounters.

Bohemian Rhapsody

The film dramatizes the life of Freddie Mercury and the rise of Queen but rearranges major events for narrative impact. The timeline of Mercury’s diagnosis and the band’s history is altered, particularly around Live Aid.

Green Book

Based on the relationship between Don Shirley and Tony Lip, Green Book has been criticized for inaccuracies and omissions. Shirley’s family disputed key aspects of the portrayal, including the nature of their relationship.

Argo

The movie recounts a real CIA operation during the Iran hostage crisis but reshapes events to heighten tension. The film minimizes the crucial role played by Canadian officials and adds dramatic sequences that did not occur.

The Strangers

Marketed as inspired by real events, The Strangers does not directly depict a specific true story. Instead, it draws loosely from various sources, including vague criminal cases and general fears.

The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things

Presented as an adaptation of autobiographical stories by JT LeRoy, this film’s “true story” roots collapsed when the author’s identity was exposed as a fabrication. The persona behind the work was fictional, casting serious doubt on the authenticity of the events depicted in the film.

The 15 Movies That Make Us Cry the Most

All movies are meant to move something inside us, yet some hit us so deeply that we end up ugly-crying on the couch. These are the movies people return to when they need a good cry, the ones known for their ability to break even the toughest viewers.

From sweeping dramas to animated classics, they all share one thing in common: an emotional impact that’s hard to shake. Even when you know what happens, who dies or what is lost, you’re driven to tears because of how the themes covered in these films aren’t often seen elsewhere.

Grave of the Fireflies

This devastating story of two siblings struggling to survive during World War II is widely regarded as one of the most heartbreaking films ever made, exploring loss, innocence, and the human cost of war.

Schindler’s List

Following a man saving Jewish lives during the Holocaust, the film’s emotional weight comes from its stark portrayal of suffering, sacrifice, and humanity in unimaginable conditions, making it one of the most powerful and widely cited tearjerkers.

The Green Mile

A supernatural prison drama that builds toward an emotionally overwhelming conclusion, combining themes of injustice, compassion, and loss in a way that consistently leaves audiences in tears.

The Notebook

A lifelong romance marked by separation and memory loss, the film’s emotional core lies in enduring love and the passage of time, resonating strongly with audiences seeking catharsis.

Up

Famous for its opening sequence, the film quickly establishes an emotional connection through love and loss, demonstrating how even animated films can evoke powerful emotional responses.

Toy Story 3

The film’s climax taps into themes of growing up and letting go, turning a beloved franchise into an unexpectedly emotional experience for audiences of all ages.

Manchester by the Sea

A quiet, devastating exploration of grief and guilt, the film’s restrained storytelling makes its emotional impact even stronger, leaving audiences reflecting on loss and healing.

Bridge to Terabithia

What begins as a whimsical story about friendship turns into a deeply emotional exploration of loss, catching many viewers off guard and leaving a lasting impression.

Brokeback Mountain

A restrained love story marked by repression and missed opportunities, the film’s emotional power builds through its quiet depiction of longing and regret.

Life Is Beautiful

Balancing humor and tragedy, the film uses a father’s love to shield his son from the horrors of a concentration camp, leading to a deeply emotional payoff.

My Girl

A coming-of-age story that takes a sudden emotional turn, leaving audiences heartbroken through its portrayal of childhood and loss.

Atonement

A tragic story shaped by misunderstanding and time, its emotional impact builds toward a devastating conclusion that reframes everything that came before.

Dead Poets Society

The film’s themes of individuality, loss, and inspiration culminate in an emotional finale that continues to resonate with audiences.

Marley & Me

A story about life with a beloved pet evolves into an emotional reflection on companionship and loss, striking a chord with many viewers.

Requiem for a Dream

Rather than traditional sadness, the film’s emotional impact comes from its intense portrayal of addiction and despair, leaving viewers deeply affected.

15 Times a Movie Just Tried to Copy a Trend and Still Failed

When a certain type of movie becomes a hit, it’s only a matter of time before studios try to replicate the formula. Big franchises, shared universes, gritty reboots, and young adult adaptations have all sparked waves of imitators hoping to capture the same success.

But following a trend doesn’t always work, especially when audiences can tell something feels derivative or arrives too late. In many cases, these films had the budget and the blueprint, but not the originality or timing to stand out. These are the movies that tried to ride the wave of a popular trend and still ended up falling short.

Green Lantern

Released during the early superhero boom, it attempted to capitalize on the growing comic book trend but failed to stand out, underperforming financially and critically despite a large budget and franchise ambitions.

John Carter

Despite adapting a story that inspired many sci-fi trends, the film ended up feeling like a copy of later space epics. Audiences saw it as derivative, contributing to one of Disney’s biggest box office failures.

Battleship

Clearly riding the wave of blockbuster spectacle films like Transformers, it leaned heavily on visual effects and large-scale destruction but failed to resonate with audiences or critics.

The Mummy

An attempt to launch a shared cinematic universe similar to Marvel’s, the film struggled with tone and identity, ultimately collapsing Universal’s planned “Dark Universe” before it could properly begin.

Miles Teller, Kate Mara, Jamie Bell, and Michael B. Jordan in Fantastic Four (2015)

Fantastic Four

Trying to replicate the darker tone popularized by The Dark Knight, the film clashed between gritty realism and superhero expectations, resulting in a poorly received and commercially disappointing reboot.

Eragon

Released during the fantasy boom sparked by The Lord of the Rings, it attempted to capture the same appeal but was criticized for its execution and failed to launch a franchise.

The Golden Compass

Positioned to capitalize on the success of fantasy franchises, it struggled with tone and adaptation choices, underperforming domestically and halting plans for sequels.

King Arthur: Legend of the Sword

Attempted to blend classic mythology with modern blockbuster style, following trends of stylized reboots, but audiences didn’t connect with its approach, leading to a major box office disappointment.

The Lone Ranger

Trying to replicate the success of Pirates of the Caribbean with a similar creative team, it failed to capture the same magic, becoming one of Disney’s most notable flops.

Jupiter Ascending

Aiming to create a new space opera franchise in the mold of Star Wars, it leaned into large-scale world-building but was criticized for its storytelling and underperformed commercially.

Pan

Part of the trend of reimagining classic stories with darker or more epic tones, it failed to attract audiences and became a notable box office disappointment.

Mortal Engines

Attempted to replicate the YA fantasy and dystopian boom, but audiences had moved on from the trend, resulting in a major box office loss.

The Dark Tower

Attempted to blend fantasy and blockbuster action trends, but failed to satisfy fans or newcomers, leading to poor reception and canceled franchise plans.

Robin Hood

Another attempt to modernize a classic story with a gritty, stylized approach, following contemporary trends, but it failed to gain traction.

Gods of Egypt

Tried to replicate the success of mythological action films like Clash of the Titans, but was criticized heavily and performed poorly at the box office.

18 People Share the Movie That Puts Their Brain in a Pretzel

Some movies are hard to wrap your head around, while others just leave your brain in shambles. Users of Reddit shared the movies that destroyed their psyche, and their names alone can give you a headache. These are films that demand attention and, if you brave through them on multiple viewings, can offer deeper insights about their real plots.

If you’re looking for something a bit deeper to watch, or if you just love to have complicated films in the background, then this list is for you. Be warned, after watching all of them, you might end up questioning your sanity and what is even real anymore.

Pi

A mathematician becomes obsessed with finding patterns in numbers, spiraling into paranoia and madness. The film blends mathematics, philosophy, and psychological breakdown, creating a dense, unsettling experience that feels increasingly disorienting the deeper it goes.

Paprika

This animated film blurs dreams and reality as characters enter each other’s subconscious. Its constantly shifting visuals and logic make it difficult to separate what’s real, turning the entire experience into a surreal puzzle that refuses to settle into clear answers.

Coherence

A dinner party turns chaotic when a cosmic event fractures reality into multiple overlapping versions. The film’s low-budget, improvisational style enhances the confusion, as characters and viewers alike struggle to track which version of reality they’re even in.

Primer

A deeply complex time travel story that avoids exposition, forcing viewers to piece together overlapping timelines themselves. Its technical dialogue and nonlinear structure make it one of the most famously difficult films to fully understand on a first viewing.

Videodrome

A man becomes entangled in a mysterious broadcast that begins to alter his perception of reality. The film mixes body horror with media paranoia, creating a surreal descent where hallucination and reality become indistinguishable.

The Lighthouse

Two lighthouse keepers descend into madness in isolation, with shifting power dynamics and strange imagery. The film intentionally obscures what is real versus imagined, leaving viewers to interpret events through fragmented, unreliable perspectives.

Oldboy

A man imprisoned for years is suddenly released and seeks answers, only to uncover a deeply disturbing truth. The film’s shocking revelations reframe everything that came before, turning a revenge story into something far more unsettling.

12 Monkeys

A time travel mission to stop a virus becomes a looping paradox where past and future blur together. The film’s structure forces viewers to question whether events can be changed or are already predetermined.

Memento

Told in reverse order, the film places viewers inside the mind of a man with short-term memory loss. The fragmented narrative forces constant reevaluation of what’s true, creating a uniquely disorienting storytelling experience.

The Game

A wealthy man becomes trapped in an elaborate “game” that begins to take over his life. The film constantly shifts reality, making it unclear what is staged and what is real until the very end.

Being John Malkovich

A portal into an actor’s mind leads to a bizarre exploration of identity and control. Its surreal premise escalates into increasingly strange territory, challenging the idea of individuality and consciousness.

Enter the Void

Told from a drifting, out-of-body perspective, the film follows a consciousness moving through time and memory. Its structure and visuals create a hypnotic, often overwhelming experience that blurs life, death, and perception.

Synecdoche, New York

A theater director creates a life-sized replica of New York inside a warehouse, blurring art and reality. As the project expands, time and identity collapse into something increasingly abstract and difficult to grasp.

Frailty

A man recounts a childhood shaped by his father’s belief that he was chosen to destroy demons. The narrative gradually reveals layers that force viewers to reconsider what’s real, moral, or imagined.

Blue Velvet

A seemingly normal town hides a disturbing underworld beneath its surface. The film’s dreamlike tone and unsettling shifts in reality create a constant sense of unease and ambiguity.

Predestination

A time travel agent pursues a criminal across multiple timelines, only to uncover a paradox that folds in on itself. The film’s structure creates a loop that challenges identity, causality, and linear storytelling.

The Prestige

Two magicians engage in a rivalry filled with deception and obsession. The film layers its narrative like a magic trick, revealing truths in ways that force viewers to reconsider everything they’ve seen.

The scariest scene in Event Horizon.

Event Horizon

A rescue crew investigates a spaceship that has returned from a mysterious dimension. As reality begins to break down, the film blends sci-fi and horror into a disorienting descent into madness.

The Top 10 Movies and Shows Streaming Right Now, How Many Did You Know?

Streaming platforms continue to rotate fresh hits into the spotlight, with both returning favorites and newer releases pulling strong viewership over the past month. From reality TV and crime docuseries to anime adaptations and major film releases, the current lineup reflects a wide range of audience tastes.

There are certainly some old timers in here, but quite a few entries here are from new and fresh IPs. Based on recent viewing figures, these are the movies and shows audiences have been watching the most right now. Here’s a look at the top performers and what’s driving their popularity across streaming platforms.

Ripple: Season 1, 2,000,000 views

A serialized drama centered on interconnected lives, Ripple has steadily gained traction through word of mouth. Its first season’s performance suggests growing audience curiosity, positioning it as a developing contender among recent original series.

Beauty in Black: Season 2, 2,300,000 views

Returning with its second season, Beauty in Black continues exploring ambition, relationships, and personal struggles. The increase in viewership indicates sustained interest, likely driven by ongoing character arcs and expanding storylines.

Virgin River: Season 7, 2,400,000 views

A romantic drama about a nurse practitioner who relocates to a small town, Virgin River remains a consistent draw. Its seventh season maintains the show’s steady appeal, reflecting a loyal fanbase that continues to follow its ongoing drama.

Homicide New York: Season 2, 2,600,000 views

This true crime docuseries continues to attract viewers with its second season. Its performance highlights the enduring popularity of true crime-inspired storytelling on streaming platforms.

WWE Raw, 3,000,000 views

The long-running wrestling program remains a reliable performer in weekly streaming metrics. Its March 30 episode drew strong numbers, underscoring the brand’s continued relevance and dedicated fanbase.

Love on the Spectrum: Season 4, 3,400,000 views

This reality series continues resonating with audiences in its fourth season. Its growing viewership reflects ongoing interest in its heartfelt and personal storytelling approach.

One Piece. (L to R) Emily Rudd as Nami, Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy, Mackenyu Arata as Roronoa Zoro in season 1 of One Piece.

One Piece: Season 2, 3,500,000 views

Following a successful debut, One Piece returns with strong numbers for its second season. Its continued performance shows the adaptation is maintaining momentum among both new viewers and longtime fans.

The Predator of Seville, 4,700,000 views

This crime-focused limited series has emerged as a notable performer, drawing significant attention. Its centered on a dangerous predator, detailing the investigation and impact of their actions on a community.

Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen: Season 1, 6,900,000 views

One of the biggest breakout shows in this list, its debut season has attracted a substantial audience. It’s a thriller series built around an impending crisis, following characters as tension escalates toward a major, unavoidable event.

XO, Kitty: Season 3, 12,900,000 views

Leading the pack, XO, Kitty continues to dominate with its third season. The teen romantic drama’s massive viewership highlights its strong appeal and sustained popularity within the streaming landscape.

Let Him Go , 3,700,000 views

Moving on to movies, we have a drama that has found renewed life on streaming, drawing solid numbers. Its performance shows how older releases can gain fresh audiences through platform availability.

Gru in Despicable Me 4

Despicable Me 4, 3,800,000 views

The latest installment in the franchise continues to attract viewers. This animated comedy continues Gru’s story as he balances family life with new threats, alongside the antics of the Minions.

Madagascar (2005)

Madagascar, 4,900,000 views

A familiar animated favorite, Madagascar remains a strong performer years after release. Its continued viewership highlights its lasting appeal among family audiences.

Rumi in KPop Demon Hunters

KPop Demon Hunters, 5,100,000 views

This title has gained noticeable traction, drawing a sizable audience. It continues to be the most watched movie of all time on the Netflix platform; we are only considering last month’s viewing numbers here.

Jamie Bell as Duke Shelby in Peaky Blinders

Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man, 5,900,000 views

Expanding on the popular series, this film has attracted significant attention. It follows Tommy Shelby as he faces new power struggles and lingering consequences of his past.

War Machine, 6,100,000 views

This war-themed film continues to pull viewers on streaming. Its consistent performance reflects ongoing interest in military-focused narratives.

40 Acres, 6,200,000 views

A lesser-known entry that has gained traction, 40 Acres has drawn a solid audience. Its streaming numbers suggest growing visibility among viewers.

The Truth and Tragedy of Moriah Wilson, 6,700,000 views

This true crime documentary has resonated strongly with audiences. Its high viewership reflects continued demand for real-life stories and investigative content.

Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom, 8,400,000 views

Part of the Untold series, this installment has achieved major numbers. It goes over Lamar Odom’s career, personal struggles, and recovery after a near-fatal overdose.

Anaconda, 9,900,000 views

Leading the movie side of the list, this modern reimagining is doing surprisingly well on streaming platforms. It already crushed it at the box office, so it continues to see renewed success.

21 Fun Movie Facts That Make Watching Them Better

Sometimes, knowing a little extra about a movie can completely change the way you watch it. Small behind-the-scenes details, clever hidden choices, or unexpected decisions can add a whole new layer to scenes you thought you already knew. These kinds of facts actually make the experience richer, helping you notice things you might have missed the first time around. From subtle details to surprising production stories, here are some fun movie facts that make watching them even better.

The Blair Witch Project (1999)

The directors gave the actors GPS coordinates and minimal instructions, leaving them alone in the woods to create genuine fear and tension.

The Florida Project (2017)

Some scenes were filmed without official permits, including the ending, to capture a more authentic and spontaneous feeling.

The Invitation (2015)

The dinner party atmosphere was carefully built so actors wouldn’t always know what was coming next, increasing tension naturally.

The Lobster (2015)

Actors were instructed to deliver lines in a flat, emotionless way to create the film’s strange and unsettling tone.

The Witch (2015)

The film used historically accurate dialogue taken from real 17th-century documents, which is why it feels so unique and immersive.

Under the Skin (2013)

Many scenes with Scarlett Johansson were filmed with hidden cameras, using real people who didn’t know they were part of a movie.

Whiplash (2014)

Miles Teller actually learned to play drums for the role, and many of the intense moments were physically real.

A Ghost Story (2017)

The famous pie-eating scene was filmed in a single, uninterrupted take, making it feel unusually raw and intimate.

Blue Valentine (2010)

The actors lived together for a period before filming to build real chemistry, which adds to the authenticity of their relationship onscreen.

Coherence (2013)

The actors weren’t given a full script. Instead, they received notes before each scene, which is why the conversations feel so natural and unpredictable.

Drive (2011)

The film’s quiet tone and minimal dialogue were intentional, with long pauses designed to let the atmosphere carry the story.

Enemy (2013)

The giant spider imagery was never meant to be fully explained, encouraging viewers to interpret its meaning in their own way.

Ex Machina (2014)

The visual effects for Ava were added so seamlessly that the performance feels completely grounded in reality, enhancing the film’s unsettling atmosphere.

Good Time (2017)

Robert Pattinson stayed in character on set and even interacted with people who didn’t realize he was filming a movie.

Her (2013)

Scarlett Johansson wasn’t the original voice of the AI and recorded her lines later, which changed the entire tone of the character.

It Follows (2014)

The “entity” can take any form, and the film deliberately avoids rules, which keeps viewers constantly on edge.

Locke (2013)

The entire movie takes place inside a car, and Tom Hardy filmed it while actually driving, adding to the realism.

Moon (2009)

Sam Rockwell often acted opposite a stand-in or even himself, which makes his dual performance even more impressive.

Primer (2004)

Made on an extremely low budget, many props were built by the director himself, adding to the film’s raw and realistic feel.

Room (2015)

The small space was built to feel even more confined on camera, helping amplify the emotional intensity of the performances.

Snowpiercer (2013)

Each train car was designed to feel like a completely different world, reinforcing the class divide visually without needing constant explanation.