The Walking Dead’s Longest Beef Is Finally Coming to an End

Maggie Rhee has been trying and failing to get her revenge on Negan Smith for a long time on The Walking Dead, but it seems that the upcoming third season of Dead City will finally see the pair properly bury the hatchet over the brutal, iconic murder of her husband Glenn.

In a new interview with EW, Lauren Cohan and Jeffrey Dean Morgan, who continue to play Maggie and Negan in AMC’s popular Walking Dead spinoff, have confirmed that the duo’s beef is about to come to an end. Though the first two seasons of the show saw an uneasy alliance form between them, the anger that has consumed Maggie since Negan needlessly killed Glenn has often boiled over into mistrust and violence against her baseball bat-wielding nemesis. Now, the creators of Dead City have sensed that it’s time for Maggie to put the past behind her.

“We needed this relationship to move on between Maggie and Negan,” said Morgan. “And I was desperate for it. Negan kept doing things like saving her, saving her kid, and yet she just hated me. I just think we all were ready to move on. It’s not just gonna be, ‘I’m gonna kill you when I get the chance,’ you know?”

Cohan added, “It’s the biggest turning over of a new leaf for Maggie and Negan that there’s ever been. Because they’re gonna work together. It’s been sort of hinted at, strived for, maybe attempted, and this is the first time it’s legitimately happening.”

Morgan stressed that this would not be a romantic relationship, but a friendship that’s been a long time coming for a relentlessly unhappy Maggie, noting that he was taken aback while filming the season’s premiere when he saw her smiling. “It was the first time that we had a scene that didn’t end with her threatening my life or stabbing me or something. It was a pleasant change.”

“If I’m not gonna kill him, I gotta live with him and I have to see him for who he really is,” Cohan explained. “And that involves a lot of healing for both their relationship and for her personally. The thing that’s different this year is her vulnerability of saying, ‘I need your help.’ And that’s something she’s never tried with him. She’s coerced him and manipulated him into helping her, and he’s done it either knowingly or unknowingly to repay a debt, but this is the first time that she’s led with more openness with him.”

Dead City season 3 will also feature an episode set in an alternate reality, EW reported, with Aimee Garcia (Lucifer) and Jimmi Simpson (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia) joining the cast in the real timeline as “flip sides” to Maggie and Negan that may give them an idea of how their lives may have turned out had they gone down different paths.

The Walking Dead: Dead City season 3 premieres July 26 on AMC and AMC+.

The Most Pointless Director’s Cuts Ever Released

The director’s cut of a movie is, at least in terms of expectation from the audience, the true form of a film when compared to its theatrical release. However, that isn’t often the case, since many of the cut scenes were cut for a reason. Movies don’t have an unlimited amount of time to tell their stories, hence why theatrical cuts exist.

But director’s cuts sell, so they are constantly being made, even if they don’t add much value. There are cases where the original, theatrical cut is lost from circulation, leaving audiences with a much longer cut for no real reason. If you’re planning on seeing the following movies, you know what cut to avoid.

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Donnie Darko

The theatrical version became a cult classic partly because of its ambiguity, but the director’s cut added heavy exposition and explanatory text that many fans felt weakened the movie’s mysterious atmosphere.

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Dumb and Dumber

The unrated version restores several deleted scenes that mainly make Lloyd and Harry seem meaner and less lovable, damaging the goofy charm that made the original comedy work.

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Star Wars Original Trilogy

George Lucas repeatedly altered the original trilogy with CGI additions, dialogue changes, and scene edits that many longtime fans considered unnecessary distractions from the original films.

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The Warriors

Walter Hill’s director’s cut inserted comic-book transition effects between scenes, a stylistic addition many viewers found distracting compared to the gritty simplicity of the theatrical release.

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Halloween

Rob Zombie’s director’s cut added even more brutality and unpleasant character moments, leading many horror fans to argue it amplified the remake’s worst tendencies without improving the story itself.

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Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves

The extended version mostly restores extra political scenes and additional exposition, but many viewers felt the theatrical cut already communicated everything important much more efficiently.

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Apocalypse Now

Francis Ford Coppola’s Redux version added lengthy sequences that slowed the film’s oppressive momentum, especially the heavily debated French plantation scenes inserted deep into the journey.

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Amadeus

The director’s cut restores additional scenes involving Constanze and Salieri, but some fans believe the tighter theatrical version maintained better pacing and emotional focus overall.

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Alien

Ridley Scott himself admitted he preferred the original theatrical version, with the director’s cut functioning more as an alternate edition featuring small pacing and scene adjustments.

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Tropic Thunder

The extended cut mainly adds more improvisation and changes jokes, but many viewers felt the theatrical release already contained exactly the right amount of chaotic comedy.

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Mr. & Mrs. Smith

The unrated cut restores extra violence and slightly longer action scenes, though critics and audiences generally agreed the additions changed almost nothing meaningful about the movie.

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The Exorcist

The “Version You’ve Never Seen” restored infamous scenes like the spider-walk sequence, but many horror fans felt the original cut’s restraint made the supernatural terror far more effective.

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Elektra

The director’s cut attempted to improve the critically disliked superhero film with minor additions and tonal adjustments, but audiences generally viewed the changes as too insignificant to matter.

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Cinema Paradiso

The longer director’s cut restores an extended adult romance subplot that many viewers felt weakened the emotional nostalgia and bittersweet simplicity of the beloved theatrical version.

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Army of Darkness

The alternate ending and darker tone in the director’s cut fascinated hard fans, but many audiences preferred the theatrical version’s more crowd-pleasing and energetic conclusion.

Star Wars’ Slow Lightsaber Duels Were Elegant Battles For a More Civilized Age

Who da man? If you’re a Star Wars fan of a certain age, there’s only one answer to that question. It comes from a television ad for the DVD release of Attack of the Clones, which began with the lines, “Who da man? Yoda man!” The commercial is built around a scene from the movie, the first to feature a CGI Yoda. No longer bound by the arm of Frank Oz, Yoda hobbles into a cave to face Count Dooku and, in a hyperactive variation of the Drunken Master trope that birthed him, leaps into the air to attack with his lightsaber.

What follows is an aggressive, spectacular, and frankly dizzying sword fight, unique for Yoda, but not, at this point, for Star Wars. Since the release of The Phantom Menace, lightsaber duels have become all about speed and flash, as if the combatants primarily wanted to overwhelm their opponents with slashes rather than land a strategic strike. The evolution makes the contests in the original trilogy look slow and outdated, but something is lost when spectacle becomes the main goal of a fight scene.

Stories and Sabers

Consider perhaps the best lightsaber duel of the original trilogy, the climactic clash of Luke Skywalker against Darth Vader in The Empire Strikes Back. The scene looks incredible, with cinematographer Peter Suschitzky using smoke and colored lights to add texture to the industrial setting. The fighters face off in silhouette, the blue and red of their blades providing simple representations of good and evil.

Luke gets in a few fancy moves during the fight. He employs the occasional spin and flip, and even uses the Force to leap out of a pit. But he just as often stumbles, as when he gets the saber knocked from his hands, and even visibly struggles when climbing up some hoses to escape Vader. When Luke knocks his enemy down, the editing takes its time to show his process of moving in to complete the job. Luke pauses to attach his weapon to his belt, he waits for the hydraulic gate to open. When Vader uses the Force to hurl objects against Luke, he simply stands stoically to the side, letting the flying debris do the work.

The Empire battle leads to one of the most famous twists in cinema history, the reveal that Darth Vader is Luke Skywalker’s father. But even before that legendary piece of dialogue, the scene is telling a story through its fighting. When the two meet, Luke draws his saber first and points it at Vader, indicating that he wants to fight the man who killed his mentor, not to just attack him. Vader doesn’t immediately strike either, and instead touches his blade to Luke’s, initiating the battle. By doing so, Vader shows respect to Luke that he didn’t have in the previous movie, when Young Skywalker was just a farm boy picked up by Obi-Wan.

All of the attacks in the fight continue the narrative, with each slash and strike adding a new wrinkle. Lukes initial salvo demonstrates how much he’s learned from Obi-Wan; Vader’s one-armed deflections show how little he actually knows. Vader’s stance during the Force indicates his confidence in his overwhelming power; Luke’s frantic attack toward the climax reveals his loss of control.

These story beats are only legible because we viewers aren’t distracted by the mania of the fight. The battle has room to establish the characters, without detracting from their skill as duelists.

First Fight

The same principle is at work in the franchise’s first lightsaber fight, between Obi-Wan and Darth Vader in the original Star Wars. In the memory of most fans, the contest is slow and plodding, a consequence of pitting 63-year-old Alec Guinness against costume-laden David Prowse. Some have even taken to recreating the scene to bring it into line with the more frenetic modern battles.

In fact, Obi-Wan does get in a couple of spins, and Vader does do a little charge while slashing, albeit much less than when Ewan McGregor and Hayden Christensen face off. But to dismiss the pace of the fight as nothing but old people making a shoddier movie is to miss the drama of the scene.

Like the battle in Empire Strikes Back, the fight in Star Wars comes laden with tension between the two characters. In this case, Vader wants to show his former master what he has learned, to prove that he no longer needs the old man’s teachings. Obi-Wan seeks to show that his pupil has learned nothing at all, which he demonstrates even before sacrificing himself.

Vader thinks that power comes entirely from physical strength, and while he’s mature enough to avoid the onslaught that the excitable Luke unleashes in the next movie, he still wants to win the duel. To that end, Vader maintains his form and keeps to the rules, hoping to defeat his opponent fair and square. Conversely, Obi-Wan knows that he will only become more powerful if Vader strikes him down, and therefore doesn’t need to fight to win. His strikes are sparse and strategic, his stances tend to be defensive, giving him space to teach his protégé one last time.

The Star Wars duel cannot be fast, because it’s not about winning or physical domination. It’s about developing the characters.

Losing the High Ground

It wouldn’t be fair to say that lightsaber battles after the original trilogy have disregarded storytelling. Yes, the Yoda fight in Attack of the Clones is egregious, but others have their beats and memorable moments. The sliding doors in The Phantom Menace give space to show young Obi-Wan’s anger at Darth Maul after Qui-Gon Jinn’s death. “I have the high ground” may be a clanger, but that fight shows just how far Anakin has fallen, and the desperate measures Obi-Wan is willing to take.

The sequel trilogy has notable moments too, especially in The Force Awakens. Finn losing the lightsaber and Rey gaining it may be a lamentable story beat, but it is a story beat. And Kylo Ren’s pounding of his chest to increase blood flow adds a compelling character detail.

But these beats and quirks are minor digressions. Instead, the fundamental point of each modern lightsaber scene is simple and the same: look how cool this guy is. What once began as scenes intended to show that size matters not, have turned into celebrations of power, spectacles designed to answer once and for all, “Who’s the man?”

The Biggest Movie Every Single Year of the 1980s

The 1980s were one of Hollywood’s most explosive decades, turning blockbuster filmmaking into the industry’s dominant force. Sequels got bigger, special effects improved dramatically, and studios realized audiences would return again and again for massive spectacle.

The decade produced some of the most recognizable movies ever made, many of which still dominate pop culture today. We had science fiction epics, action classics and emotional dramas; these films ruled the global box office during their release years, helping define what modern blockbuster entertainment eventually became. Looking back at the decade is basically watching Hollywood learn how to print money.

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1980, Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back

The second Star Wars movie became the highest-grossing film of 1980 worldwide and is still widely considered one of the greatest sequels ever made. Its darker tone, major plot twist, and expanded universe helped prove blockbuster franchises could become even bigger after the original.

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1981, Raiders of the Lost Ark

Steven Spielberg and George Lucas created an instant icon with Indiana Jones. Raiders of the Lost Ark blended old-school adventure serials with modern blockbuster pacing, making Harrison Ford one of the decade’s defining movie stars almost overnight.

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1982, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

E.T. became an enormous worldwide phenomenon and briefly held the title of highest-grossing movie ever made. Spielberg’s emotional alien story connected with audiences of every age and turned a simple friendship story into one of cinema’s most beloved family films.

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1983, Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi

The conclusion of the original Star Wars trilogy dominated the worldwide box office in 1983. Audiences packed theaters to finally see Darth Vader’s fate, the destruction of the second Death Star, and the end of one of cinema’s biggest cultural events.

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1984, Ghostbusters

Ghostbusters became one of the defining blockbusters of the entire decade, combining supernatural comedy, quotable dialogue, and groundbreaking effects into a worldwide phenomenon. The movie turned its cast into comedy legends and launched a franchise that remained culturally relevant for generations afterward.

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1985, Back to the Future

Robert Zemeckis’ time-travel adventure became one of the defining movies of the decade. Michael J. Fox turned Marty McFly into a cultural icon, while the movie’s mix of comedy, science fiction, and teen drama made it endlessly rewatchable.

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1986, Top Gun

Top Gun transformed Tom Cruise into a full-blown global superstar. The fighter jet action, soundtrack, and hyper-stylized visuals made the movie a cultural juggernaut that influenced action films and military recruitment for years afterward.

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1987, Fatal Attraction

The psychological thriller shocked audiences and became a massive box office success worldwide. Its story about infidelity spiraling into obsession sparked huge cultural conversations and helped turn adult thrillers into one of Hollywood’s hottest genres during the late 1980s.

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1988, Rain Man

Rain Man balanced critical acclaim with enormous commercial success, becoming the year’s top worldwide hit. The road-trip drama earned multiple Academy Awards while also introducing mainstream audiences to one of Dustin Hoffman’s most celebrated performances.

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1989, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

The third Indiana Jones movie narrowly became 1989’s biggest worldwide release, beating even Tim Burton’s Batman. Pairing Harrison Ford with Sean Connery helped elevate the sequel into one of the franchise’s most beloved entries.

15 of the Weirdest Fake Accents in Movie History

Acting is hard, there’s no denying that, and we can’t expect actors and performers to be experts in every area within their character’s lives. However, when it comes to being able to speak convincingly, a believable accent is a high priority. After all, if the actor can’t match the accent, why not get an actor with that accent for real?

These performers likely tried their best, or at least we hope so, but it wasn’t good enough. In a way, their performance felt lacking, robbing us of a well deserved immersion into the world of fiction. While it might seem admittedly harsh to criticize them for this, it remains quite entertaining.

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Dick Van D, Mary Poppins

Dick Van D’s exaggerated Cockney accent became legendary for all the wrong reasons. Even decades later, it remains one of the most mocked fake British accents in movie history.

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Keanu Reeves, Bram Stoker’s Dracula

Keanu Reeves struggled noticeably with the film’s English accent, creating a performance so distracting that it became one of the most criticized parts of Coppola’s gothic horror adaptation.

Sean Connery, The Hunt for Red October

Sean Connery played a Lithuanian-born Soviet submarine captain while sounding unmistakably Scottish the entire time, creating one of cinema’s most entertainingly unconvincing accent performances.

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Don Cheadle, Ocean’s Eleven

Don Cheadle attempted a Cockney accent in Ocean’s Eleven that drew heavy criticism from audiences and reviewers, eventually becoming one of the film’s most frequently mocked elements.

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Nicolas Cage, Con Air

Cage’s Southern accent in Con Air constantly shifts in intensity throughout the movie, adding another layer of chaos to an already gloriously over-the-top action film.

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Cameron Diaz, Gangs of New York

Cameron Diaz’s attempt at an Irish accent struggled to convince many viewers, especially alongside actors delivering much stronger period performances throughout Martin Scorsese’s historical drama.

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Ewan McGregor, Angels & Demons

Ewan McGregor’s Italian accent as Camerlengo Patrick McKenna faded in and out repeatedly, sometimes disappearing entirely during major dramatic scenes.

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Dennis Quaid, Wyatt Earp

Dennis Quaid’s Southern accent in Wyatt Earp sounded exaggerated and inconsistent, especially in scenes alongside actors using more restrained Western dialects.

Leonardo DiCaprio, Blood Diamond

Although many praised DiCaprio’s effort, his Rhodesian accent still became divisive among audiences, particularly viewers familiar with the specific regional speech patterns he attempted.

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Mickey Rooney, Breakfast at Tiffany’s

Rooney’s exaggerated Japanese accent and caricatured performance became one of the most uncomfortable and offensive examples of fake accents in Hollywood history.

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Tom Cruise, Far and Away

Tom Cruise’s Irish accent fluctuates dramatically throughout the film, becoming especially distracting during emotional scenes where the accent grows noticeably inconsistent.

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Emma Watson, The Perks of Being a Wallflower

Emma Watson’s American accent is often pointed out by some audiences, who felt traces of her natural English voice repeatedly slipped through during important emotional moments.

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Forest Whitaker, The Crying Game

Forest Whitaker’s Irish accent became a focus in the movie for the wrong reasons, especially because the performance stood out sharply against the film’s mostly authentic regional accents.

Jodie Foster, Elysium

Jodie Foster’s unusual accent in Elysium confused audiences because it seemed to drift unpredictably between different European influences without ever settling into something identifiable.

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Julia Roberts, Michael Collins

Julia Roberts’ Irish accent became one of the most criticized parts of Michael Collins, with many viewers finding it distractingly inconsistent throughout the historical drama.

15 of Cinema’s Most Shameless Cash Grabs

Making movies is both an art and a business, and not all movies manage a balance of the two. This is why independent films can take more risks than summer blockbusters can; the bigger the investment, the less experimental you want to get. But in most things we consume, we expect at least a minimum level of artistry involved.

Well, no artistry went into these following films. They were made with no real ideas beyond a popular name, following trends that produced money in the past. Sadly, that tends to work for certain products, but when the lack of effort is too blatant, audiences refuse to show up.

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Jaws: The Revenge

The fourth Jaws movie pushed the franchise into outright absurdity by suggesting a shark was somehow personally targeting the Brody family across the ocean.

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Son of the Mask

Made without Jim Carrey, the sequel attempted to continue the popularity of The Mask despite lacking nearly everything audiences actually loved about the original.

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Home Alone 4

The franchise reached obvious cash-grab territory once beloved characters were recast for a made-for-television sequel that barely resembled the original movies anymore.

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The Hangover Part III

Instead of another wild comedy adventure, the third film awkwardly transformed the franchise into a crime story while still relying heavily on audience familiarity with the brand.

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Transformers: The Last Knight

The movie spent enormous amounts of time setting up future sequels and spin-offs that audiences clearly were not interested in seeing by that point.

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Space Jam: A New Legacy

Rather than focusing on basketball or comedy, the sequel often felt like a giant corporate showcase for Warner Bros. intellectual property references and brand recognition.

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Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

The sequel buried itself in franchise mythology and future setup, creating a movie many viewers felt existed primarily to extend the Wizarding World brand indefinitely.

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Cars 2

Pixar shifted the franchise toward spy-action chaos and marketable side characters, leading many critics to argue the sequel mainly existed to sell more merchandise.

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Independence Day: Resurgence

Released twenty years after the original, the sequel heavily relied on nostalgia while failing to recapture the energy that made the first film a blockbuster phenomenon.

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Terminator Genisys

The movie aggressively recycled iconic moments from earlier Terminator films while simultaneously rebooting continuity in ways that confused even longtime franchise fans.

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Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2

The sequel doubled down on talking babies and lowbrow jokes despite the original already being critically despised, creating one of Hollywood’s most baffling follow-ups.

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The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies

Stretching a relatively short novel into three lengthy blockbusters left many audiences convinced the adaptation existed largely because of the massive success of The Lord of the Rings.

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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III

The third movie abandoned much of the franchise’s charm and noticeably reduced production quality, yet still arrived quickly to capitalize on the turtles’ enormous popularity.

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Speed 2: Cruise Control

Replacing a speeding bus with a slow-moving cruise ship immediately signaled the sequel existed mostly because the studio wanted another recognizable Speed movie.

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The Lion King

Disney’s photorealistic remake closely recreated the animated original scene-for-scene, leading many viewers to question whether the project existed for artistic reasons at all.

15 Times a Movie Treated Stalking Like Romance

Following someone without their knowledge, either in real life or online, is stalking. You can be curious about someone’s life, sure, but taken to the next level, it becomes dangerous toxic behavior that needs to be analyzed, not rewarded. Sadly, movies have taught us the exact opposite.

In part, it makes sense; movie characters aren’t meant to do realistic things, and without their strange ways of thinking, plots wouldn’t happen. The problem is when the resolution is that warped way of thinking, leaving us with the message that stalking (and other problematic behaviour) is more than ok.

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Twilight

Edward secretly watching Bella sleep became one of the franchise’s most infamous moments, yet the movie presents the behavior as protective and deeply romantic rather than genuinely alarming.

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Love Actually

Mark silently showing romantic cue cards to his best friend’s wife is framed as heartfelt vulnerability, despite many viewers finding the entire situation deeply uncomfortable instead.

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The Notebook

Noah hanging from a Ferris wheel and pressuring Allie into a date is presented as charming persistence, though modern audiences often interpret the scene very differently.

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There’s Something About Mary

Multiple men hiring investigators, spying on Mary, and obsessively tracking her whereabouts somehow becomes the foundation for the film’s romantic comedy setup.

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Say Anything

Lloyd Dobler standing outside Diane’s home blasting music from a boombox became an iconic romantic gesture despite essentially ignoring her request for space.

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You’ve Got Mail

Joe knowingly manipulates Kathleen both online and in real life while hiding his identity, creating a romance built largely around emotional deception and calculated observation.

Sleepless in Seattle

Annie tracks Sam across the country, researches his life, and watches him from a distance before even properly meeting him, yet the movie treats it as destiny.

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Revenge of the Nerds

The film notoriously presents deception and impersonation during a sexual encounter as triumphant comedy, a scene modern audiences widely view as deeply disturbing instead.

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Grease

Danny repeatedly changes his personality and inserts himself into Sandy’s activities to win her back, while the movie frames the relentless pursuit as classic teen romance.

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Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

Scott becomes obsessively fixated on Ramona almost immediately, following her around Toronto and forcing himself into her life after barely speaking to her initially.

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Passengers

Jim awakens Aurora from hypersleep specifically because he wants companionship, effectively trapping her aboard the ship forever while the film still pushes toward romance.

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While You Were Sleeping

Lucy accidentally becomes entangled in a false engagement while never correcting the misunderstanding, creating an entire romance through prolonged deception and emotional manipulation.

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Beauty and the Beast

The story’s romance grows from captivity and emotional pressure, creating decades of debate about whether the relationship reflects genuine love or disguised coercion.

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Silver Linings Playbook

Pat repeatedly ignores boundaries and becomes intensely fixated on reconnecting with his ex-wife, behavior the movie partially reframes through quirky romantic comedy energy.

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Sixteen Candles

Several romantic subplots involve spying, objectification, and ignoring consent, all presented through the lens of harmless teen comedy rather than invasive behavior.

TV Episodes That Accidentally Traumatized a Generation

We watch TV shows to be entertained, to feel safe under the blanket of the expected, and to live a life different from our own through fictional characters. But above all, we watch shows because we want to experience a story, and stories need to be unexpected from time to time.

And they worked, because these episodes were incredibly memorable within and outside their medium. While each show is still popular outside of these moments, it was the shocking episodes that made us stay for longer, tuning into their channels to know what would happen next.

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Sesame Street, “Farewell, Mr. Hooper”

After actor Will Lee died, Sesame Street addressed Mr. Hooper’s death directly, introducing countless children to grief and mortality in an unusually honest and emotional way.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, “Papa’s Got a Brand New Excuse”

Will breaking down over his absent father became one of sitcom television’s most emotionally devastating moments, shocking audiences expecting a lighthearted comedy episode.

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Dinosaurs, “Changing Nature”

The family sitcom ended with environmental catastrophe and implied extinction, leaving young viewers stunned that a comedy about talking dinosaurs concluded with unavoidable mass death.

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M*A*S*H, “Abyssinia, Henry”

The sudden death of Henry Blake blindsided audiences because the series rarely treated beloved main characters with such brutally permanent realism before that moment.

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Buffy the Vampire Slayer, “The Body”

Instead of supernatural horror, the episode focused entirely on the raw emotional reality of losing a parent, making it painfully relatable for many viewers.

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Boy Meets World, “And Then There Was Shawn”

What began as a goofy parody episode suddenly shifted into slasher horror territory, terrifying younger viewers who absolutely were not expecting murder-mystery tension from the sitcom.

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Doctor Who, “Blink”

The Weeping Angels instantly became nightmare fuel thanks to the episode’s simple but terrifying concept that monsters move whenever somebody looks away.

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The X-Files, “Home”

The episode became infamous for its disturbing violence and horrifying family storyline, even receiving a rare television warning before broadcast because executives knew it crossed lines.

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Full House, “Silence Is Not Golden”

Stephanie discovering her classmate was being abused introduced many younger viewers to domestic violence through a show they normally associated with comforting family comedy.

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Black Mirror, “Shut Up and Dance”

The episode’s devastating final reveal completely recontextualized everything beforehand, leaving audiences horrified by how effectively the story manipulated viewer sympathy.

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ER, “Love’s Labor Lost”

The brutal depiction of a preventable childbirth tragedy shocked audiences because medical dramas rarely portrayed catastrophic mistakes with such emotional realism at the time.

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Punky Brewster, “The Perils of Punky”

The infamous cave sequence terrified children unexpectedly, transforming a cheerful sitcom into nightmare material involving claustrophobia, hallucinations, and genuinely disturbing imagery.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation, “The Best of Both Worlds”

Captain Picard becoming assimilated by the Borg fundamentally shattered the crew’s sense of safety and traumatized viewers who never imagined the franchise’s hero could fall.

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The Simpsons, “Homer’s Enemy”

Frank Grimes reacting realistically to Springfield’s cartoon logic created an episode so bitter and uncomfortable that many longtime fans still find it strangely upsetting.

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Game of Thrones, “The Rains of Castamere”

The Red Wedding became a cultural shockwave because audiences genuinely believed major heroic characters were protected until the episode suddenly massacred nearly all of them.

15 ‘Explicit’ Scenes That Really Were Necessary for the Plot

There are plenty of explicit scenes in entertainment history, and to be honest, they are often done for shock value. After all, intimacy sells, and a movie with that type of shameless content spreads like wildfire through social media, influencers, and word of mouth.

That isn’t to say that all explicit content is a blatant cashgrab; in fact, the movies we’re discussing today are the opposite. After all, the level of intimacy these films explore is a key part of life, and we want art to delve into all aspects of it.

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Boogie Nights

Paul Thomas Anderson used the film’s explicit content to examine loneliness, exploitation, and the emotional emptiness behind the adult entertainment industry rather than simple shock value.

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Blue Valentine

Its intimate scenes deliberately contrast the couple’s emotional highs and eventual collapse, making the physical closeness essential to understanding how deeply the relationship deteriorates over time.

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Shame

The film’s explicit content is central to portraying addiction, emotional isolation, and self-destruction, with its scenes intentionally becoming increasingly uncomfortable rather than glamorous.

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Black Swan

Darren Aronofsky used the film’s explicitness to reinforce Nina’s psychological breakdown, blurred identity, and growing obsession with perfection throughout the story.

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Y Tu Mamá También

The movie’s explicit moments are deeply tied to its themes of friendship, class differences, jealousy, and emotional maturity rather than existing purely for provocation.

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Brokeback Mountain

The intimacy between Ennis and Jack is crucial to understanding the emotional weight of their relationship and the tragedy created by repression and societal expectations.

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American Psycho

The film’s personal encounters intentionally emphasize Patrick Bateman’s narcissism, emotional emptiness, and complete inability to connect with other human beings normally.

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Monster’s Ball

Its famous intimate scene works because it represents two grieving people desperately attempting to escape loneliness and trauma through temporary emotional connection.

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Titanic

Jack sketching Rose symbolizes her rejection of aristocratic expectations and personal repression, making the scene important to her character transformation throughout the film.

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The Handmaiden

Park Chan-wook used the film’s explicit content to explore manipulation, control, trust, and liberation, with intimacy becoming directly tied to the characters reclaiming personal agency.

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A History of Violence

David Cronenberg intentionally contrasted two very different personal scenes to reflect the collapse of the protagonist’s carefully constructed family identity and hidden violent nature.

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Poor Things

The film’s explicit content directly supports Bella Baxter’s journey of self-discovery, independence, and understanding of the world through personal experience rather than social restrictions.

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Carol

The movie’s intimacy carries emotional significance because it represents genuine vulnerability and affection within a relationship constrained by 1950s social expectations.

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Crash

David Cronenberg used explicit scenes as part of the film’s disturbing exploration of trauma, obsession, and people emotionally disconnecting from ordinary human experiences.

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Watchmen

The awkward intimacy between Nite Owl and Silk Spectre intentionally reflects the characters’ emotional repression, insecurity, and difficulty separating hero fantasies from real relationships. Doctor Manhattan’s exposure is a bit less justifiable.

15 Times a Director Cast Themselves Under Dubious Circumstances

Writers and directors have a difficult task when bringing their vision to life: finding the right actor to portray their characters. Of course, there are times where you don’t need to look far: many directors star in their own movies, being at the center of the story as it’s being built.

This can create problems, since the power you have when casting yourself in a given universe is unparalleled. Here, we’ve compiled the most controversial times a director said “yes, I am better suited to do this than anyone else.” We hope their intention was artistic and nothing else.

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Quentin Tarantino, From Dusk till Dawn

Although Robert Rodriguez directed the movie, Tarantino wrote the screenplay and cast himself in a scene where Salma Hayek pours alcohol down her leg into his mouth, creating one of cinema’s most infamous self-indulgent moments.

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M. Night Shyamalan, Lady in the Water

Shyamalan cast himself as a writer whose work would supposedly change humanity’s future, leading many critics to mock the role as an unusually self-important creative decision.

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Tommy Wiseau, The Room

Wiseau directed himself as a beloved, endlessly victimized romantic hero constantly praised by everyone around him, accidentally turning the movie into a legendary example of cinematic vanity.

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Mel Gibson, Braveheart

Gibson cast himself as William Wallace, giving himself multiple heroic speeches, battle victories, and martyrdom scenes that pushed the historical epic firmly into larger-than-life fantasy territory.

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Ben Affleck, Live by Night

Affleck directed himself as a stylish gangster effortlessly navigating shootouts, romances, and criminal empires, prompting criticism that the movie leaned heavily into self-serious wish fulfillment.

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Kenneth Branagh, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein

Branagh directed and starred as Victor Frankenstein while delivering intensely theatrical performances that often overshadowed the rest of the cast through sheer dramatic excess.

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Kevin Smith, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back

Smith returned as Silent Bob in a movie built almost entirely around inside jokes, celebrity cameos, and exaggerated wish-fulfillment scenarios involving his longtime fictional alter ego.

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Taika Waititi, Jojo Rabbit

Waititi cast himself as an imaginary version of Adolf Hitler, intentionally creating an absurd comedic performance that kept the director visibly at the center of the film’s satire.

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Spike Lee, She’s Gotta Have It

Lee cast himself as one of the men pursuing Nola Darling, placing his own character directly inside the film’s central romantic and sexual conflicts.

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Woody Allen, Manhattan

Allen repeatedly cast himself as intellectual romantic leads involved with much younger women, a pattern that became increasingly controversial and uncomfortable in retrospect.

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Vincent Gallo, The Brown Bunny

Gallo directed himself opposite Chloë Sevigny in a very explicit scene that instantly overshadowed every other aspect of the film upon release.

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Neil Breen, Fateful Findings

Breen consistently casts himself as genius-level figures uncovering conspiracies, exposing corruption, and attracting admiration from nearly every character around him throughout his famously bizarre independent films.

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James Cameron, Titanic

Cameron famously provided the sketching hands for Jack’s drawing scene, meaning the director himself technically drew Kate Winslet during one of the movie’s most iconic moments.

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Eli Roth, Hostel

Roth gave himself a cameo involving partying and sexual excess within the same exploitative horror world he created, perfectly matching the film’s intentionally sleazy atmosphere.

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Tyler Perry, Madea Goes to Jail

Perry repeatedly cast himself as Madea, creating increasingly exaggerated scenarios where the character dominates entire films through chaotic wisdom, outrageous behavior, and endless attention from surrounding characters.

14 Movies That Feel Embarrassing to Watch With Other People in the Room

We shouldn’t be embarrassed for the things we like. We all have our own tastes, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But at the same time, if we like something that can be frowned upon, seeing it alongside other people can, and will, fill us with embarrassment.

These movies are artistic expressions in their own right, even if not everyone sees it that way. If you’re curious about these films, and were looking for an excuse to watch them, then it might be about time you gave them a chance. Just make sure no one else is around, so you don’t have to get into an awkward conversation in the future.

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Eyes Wide Shut

Stanley Kubrick’s final film combines long stretches of uncomfortable intimacy, explicit imagery, and emotionally cold conversations that can make even casual group viewing feel strangely awkward almost immediately.

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Borat

The movie’s deliberately cringe-inducing interviews and outrageous public behavior create constant secondhand embarrassment, especially during scenes where unsuspecting real people visibly struggle to react appropriately.

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The Room

Watching Tommy Wiseau’s cult classic with other people often turns into nervous laughter because of the bizarre dialogue, awkward performances, and strangely endless love scenes scattered throughout the film.

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Showgirls

Its exaggerated performances, aggressive melodrama, and relentless adult content create a viewing experience that somehow becomes more uncomfortable the more people are sitting nearby.

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Cats

The uncanny digital fur effects and strange human-cat performances made many viewers genuinely uncomfortable, especially when trying to explain the movie’s existence to confused friends or family members.

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Napoleon Dynamite

Its painfully awkward social interactions and deadpan humor become either hilarious or unbearable depending entirely on the audience, making group reactions wildly unpredictable during nearly every scene.

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Magic Mike

Even though the film received strong reviews, watching extended dance sequences and intimately charged performances beside relatives or coworkers can become immediately uncomfortable for everyone involved.

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Jack and Jill

Adam Sandler playing both lead characters already feels awkward enough, but the endless product placement and chaotic comedy somehow make group viewing even more painfully embarrassing.

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Midsommar

Ari Aster’s horror film contains disturbing rituals, graphic imagery, and emotionally intense relationship drama that quickly transform casual movie nights into deeply uncomfortable shared experiences.

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American Pie

Teen comedy awkwardness reaches maximum levels through humiliating sexual mishaps and painfully embarrassing conversations that become especially difficult to sit through around parents or older relatives.

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Bruno

Sacha Baron Cohen pushed cringe comedy even further with Bruno, creating scenes so aggressively awkward that audiences often spend more time hiding their reactions than actually watching.

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Fifty Shades of Grey

The adaptation became infamous for creating deeply uncomfortable theater experiences, particularly for audiences who suddenly realized they were watching explicit romantic drama beside complete strangers.

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The Human Centipede

The movie’s grotesque premise alone makes group viewing uncomfortable before it even starts. Trying to explain the plot to someone entering the room only worsens the experience.

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Swiss Army Man

The film’s emotional story about loneliness surprised critics, but its bizarre premise and constant absurd humor make introducing it to unsuspecting viewers incredibly awkward during group movie nights.

Devil May Cry Season 2 Review: DMC Takes Daddy Issues to Extreme Power Levels

Fan-favorite gunslinging “Jackpot-”saying half-demon mercenary Dante Sparda is back for season 2 of Netflix’s Devil May Cry, joined by his equally powerful, more stoic and demonically-leaning twin brother. Dante (Johnny Yong) returns to TV with a renewed purpose: to defeat the king of the demons, Mundus (Ray Chase), and get his brother, Vergil Sparda (Robbie Daymond), back on the right side. However, Vergil is not the same little boy that Dante believed had died in the attack that killed their mother. Instead, he is now one of Mundus’ top soldiers. 

In the ending of season 1, Dante was betrayed by Mary “Lady” Arkham (Scout Taylor-Compton), who chose the demon-slaying organization, Uroboros, over the chaotic half-demon gun slinger, resulting in him being cryogenically frozen in the organization’s lab. 

Season 2 picks up where season 1 left off, showing the impact that Dante’s captivity has on Lady and the current state of the war in Hell, a world actually named Makai. Lady is faced with the guilt of her hand in the deaths of hundreds of innocent Makai refugees. The head of Uroboros, Arius (Graham McTavish), makes a deal with the literal cowboy president, President Hopper (Jon Gries), to manufacture the war, resulting in the continuous deaths of thousands of Makaians, for both good optics for a presidential campaign and for test subjects for the organization. 

Season 1 was a great introduction to this newest rendition of Devil May Cry, but this season makes it really start to feel like a world and is very reminiscent of the world-building in the first and second seasons of Castlevania. Dante is given a level of depth and complexity that, in some ways, hasn’t been seen since the franchise’s first installments. Taking a change from his more serious counterpart in the Devil May Cry anime from the early 2000s. 

Vergil is given a chaotic rebrand: a multifaceted personality with a more monotone demeanor than his twin, yet somehow just as, if not more, chaotic. Showing that the recklessness of the Sparda bloodline didn’t just go to one twin. Though better trained than his younger brother, Vergil is just as naive about his own brainwashing and the impact that Mundus’ propaganda has on his ambitions to avenge his mother. Holding the same ambition as Dante, they find themselves on opposite corners of the boxing ring, only to be forced together to take down their mutual enemies, Arius, who is trying to revive Argosax the Chaos, an even bigger threat than Mundus, and Mundus, who lied to Vrigil about who killed his mother. 

One of the main emotional themes this season is the impact that father figures and male relationships have on the main characters. 

The twins’ father, Sparda, almost literally haunts the narrative. His absence from their lives, even his whereabouts, is never fully explained, even in the stories’ source materials. Dante and Vergil both reject and embrace their father’s legacy in various ways in the season. Vergil rejects his humanity, believing it inhibited his ability to protect his mother. In season 1, Dante rejected his demonic nature due to his seeing demons (Makaians) as nothing but evil due to their hand in his mother’s death. This season, Dante embraces humanity, as it is the only thing he has left of his mother. 

Lady still deals with the trauma of her father’s experiments that ultimately turned him into the villainous demon, the Jester – a traumatic transition she witnessed – as her father brutally killed her mother, and set her on the path of hating the Makaians. Lady admits to herself that her father’s greed for knowledge was his undoing, having lost her father long before his transformation. 

Even Mundus’ relationship with Sparda and Argosax is a reflection of generational trauma amongst mentor figures. Argosax, the original king of Makai, had his tyrannical reign ended by Mundus, who saw that his mentor had gone too far. Only for Sparda, his top general and loyalist subject, did the same when he saw that Mundus had strayed too far from their path. 

Matilda “Mattie,” a young girl whom Lady and Dante meet, loses her grandfather, Prof. Lucan, a powerful, arcane scientist and sorcerer. Mattie is impressionable, dealing with the feelings of hatred and anger that the story’s main protagonists dealt with at her age, acting as a mirror for them in certain scenes. 

Even the season’s main antagonistic figure, Arius, is impacted by the cruelty of his father. Learning that Arius had lived numerous lifetimes, his father subjected him to severe abuse that resulted in an event that twisted his childhood ambitions and fascinations into a homicidal and power-driven future. 

The entire season shows the impact of childhood trauma, the conclusions made based on it, and impacts people for the rest of their lives, humans, and demons alike. 

The season does a good job at really developing the fact that Dante and Vergil don’t know their father; everything they have learned about him comes from second-hand sources. The series has truly conveyed that, despite Sparda’s legacy being the main focal point of the series, no one truly knows him. 

The season goes full force on the idea that every single character that we meet has a legacy that impacts their lives, leading some to their deaths. 

The season does a great job of captivating the viewer, though there are a few critiques to be made about the CGI used to animate the bigger figures like Mundus, Argosax, and Dante and Vergil’s Devil Trigger forms, whose movements can sometimes feel clunky.

The storyline is well done. The DanLady shippers are in for a treat, as are Vergil stans with the newest take on the character. The season calls back to some of the most iconic scenes in the games, while making the characters feel alive again. 

All eight episodes of Devil May Cry season 2 are available to stream on Netflix now.

The 5 Most Unusual (But Realistic) Choices to Play James Bond

The hunt for James Bond is on. Even though it has been years since Daniel Craig ended his run with a bang in No Time to Die, a year since Amazon bought the rights from Eon Productions, and months since Denis Villeneuve was announced as the next director, apparently the search for the next 007 has just now begun in earnest. Amazon MGM has named Nina Gold as the casting director. In a statement released through Variety, the studio said, “While we don’t plan to comment on specific details during the casting process, we’re excited to share more news with 007 fans as soon as the time is right.”

Such is their prerogative as a movie studio. But it’s our prerogative as fans to do our own casting. And because we don’t have to worry about things like budgets, schedules, and franchise plans, we can get as wild as we want. So here are five unusual, but ultimately realistic, choices to play James Bond.

A quick note on the word “realistic”: six different male actors have played Bond since 1962’s Dr. No, and although Amazon MGM is not Eon Productions, they’ll likely follow suit. Moreover, James Bond was imagined by Ian Fleming as a blunt instrument of the British empire, a quality that has remained part of the character, even as the edges are sanded down. Modern Bond stories tend to ignore the degree to which Bond kills people to advance England’s colonial and capitalist interests. And while Amazon is happy to produce The Boys, they likely won’t want audiences thinking too much about how Bond is a colonizer.

Which is to say that Bond will probably be another white British man, and so that’s what we’re sticking with here. But that doesn’t mean we can’t get a little weird daydreaming, at least until Gold has found her man.

George Mackay

Easily the most likely of the choices on this list, George Mackay has two strikes against him when looking at traditional Bond candidates. First, his hair is too light. Second, his face is too distinctive. If you think these are silly complaints, well… they are silly complaints. But do a little digging to find the reaction to Craig’s casting 20 years ago, and you’ll find plenty of griping about the actor’s hair color and ear shape. All this despite the fact that the Bond novels by Fleming compare the spy to Hoagy Carmichael, a man with a longer face and wider ears than Sean Connery or Pierce Brosnan.

Moreover, Craig showed that a distinctive look can make for a distinctive Bond, especially if the actor has the chops to suggest sorrow in his cold eyes. Mackay certainly fits the bill here. After debuting as a Lost Boy in 2003’s Peter Pan, Mackay has gone on to do impressive work in independent films, earning acclaim for Femme and The Beast, with 1917 being his most well-known movie. It would be quite the leap to go from those productions to a franchise picture helmed by Villeneuve, but Mackay would have just the right energy to be an off-beat leading man in a unique Bond flick.

Josh O’Connor

As long as we’re talking about Bonds with idiosyncratic appearances, let’s consider Josh O’Connor. Unlike McKay, O’Connor has a higher profile, having played major roles in Challengers, Wake Up Dead Man, and the upcoming Steven Spielberg film Disclosure Day. But ever since Villeneuve landed the directing gig—reversing Eon’s tendency to deny big name filmmakers such as Spielberg, Quentin Tarantino, and Danny Boyle—a B- or A-list star doesn’t seem impossible.

With his lanky frame, curly hair, and pronounced ears, O’Connor certainly doesn’t fit the usual Bond mold. But O’Connor does have an off-kilter energy that captures something about the secret agent. Anyone who has watched a Bond film knows that 007 isn’t a spy, not really. He walks right into the bad guy’s lair and introduces himself with his real name. He succeeds in his missions thanks to his ability to charm everyone, from women to the villains themselves, even when it doesn’t make sense. O’Connor has just that type of appeal.

Jack O’Connell

Bond films tend to be either serious and brutal or goofy and slick. After five Craig movies that fell into the former category, conventional wisdom suggested that the pendulum would swing toward the lighthearted. But with Villeneuve as director, Bond isn’t going to be driving submarine cars anytime soon, which means that we need another 007 in the mold of Connery and Craig. And if there’s one thing those two actors brought to the character, it’s a sense of danger.

No young British actor has been as charming and scary onscreen as Jack O’Connell. Whether playing an ageless Irish vampire in Sinners or the charitable killer Sir Jimmy in 28 Years Later, O’Connell is at once alluring and unnerving. Moreover, there’s a roughness to O’Connell that can remind viewers that Bond didn’t grow up in the lap of luxury. He’s the son of an arms company rep, and was shuffled around after he lost his parents at the age of eleven. O’Connell can clean up nice, slicking back his hair and slipping into a tux. But he can retain that edge of menace necessary, a reminder that no matter how many martinis he enjoys, Bond always carries a license to kill.

Matt Smith

If we’re talking about unique physiology combined with the ability to play charming and menacing, then we have to look at Matt Smith. Yes, the guy from Doctor Who, House of the Dragon, and, of course, Morbius. Smith oozes charisma that made him a delightful Doctor and a terrifying Targaryen. If he put those qualities together, then he would be the ideal Bond. Don’t believe me? Just look at any of his scenes from Edgar Wright‘s Last Night in Soho, in which he was at once the coolest guy in the room and the one with murder in his heart.

Furthermore, Smith fits the profile of an ideal Bond actor. Like Roger Moore and Pierce Brosnan before him, Smith has a strong television career, but hasn’t yet become a movie star. He has just enough cache to bring in fans and to do the work, but not so much that the actor will overshadow the character.

Pierce Brosnan

No, I didn’t make a mistake. What if we just brought back Brosnan? Despite starring in two of the worst Bond films, Brosnan never gave up his love for the character and wanted to keep playing the part, even after the disaster that was Die Another Day. As long as No Time to Die already requires a continuity shift, and as long as the movie has Villeneuve on board, a filmmaker who will likely make a single idiosyncratic film instead of a standard franchise entry, why not bring Brosnan back for something different?

Imagine Old Man Bond, the story of a once dashing spy forced to contend with a world he doesn’t understand. Brosnan never totally left the world of espionage and secret service, having appeared in The Matador and in last year’s excellent Black Bag. It wouldn’t be a great leap for him, and it would give Villeneuve a chance to tell a very different type of Bond story.

Plus, it would give Amazon MGM just a little more time to pick their next long-running Bond, since they seem to be making that decision as slowly as possible.

Star Wars Has Forgotten Its True Villains: The Company Men

At the end of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, after all of the heroes have perished on their mission, Darth Vader arrives to absolutely wreck a bunch of rebels. The 60-second sequence shows Vader slashing dudes with his lightsaber, crushing enemies with the Force, and deflecting every laser blast. Yet, even within that bravura moment, Darth Vader will never be as frightening as Admiral Motti, the little snot played by Richard LeParmentier in the first Star Wars.

Even if you don’t know Motti’s name, you certainly know one of his lines: “This station is now the ultimate power in the universe! I suggest we use it.” Motti gets Force choked by Vader and blown up in the Death Star, and that’s part of what makes him scary. He’s a regular guy, not a corrupted space wizard. Moreover, he’s a regular guy who gleefully calls for global genocide.

Motti is just one of many mundane villains of the Star Wars universe, bland guys with British accents, receding hairlines, and indifference to human suffering. These company men are the greatest villains in the world of Star Wars, and the franchise lost something when it started ignoring them.

Beaucrats lost their importance almost immediately. In the original Star Wars, Darth Vader was a smaller concern. He served as an enforcer for Grand Moff Tarkin and his history with Obi-Wan Kenobi made him an issue for Luke Skywalker, even before their familial relationship was revealed. But when Princess Leia makes a crack about Tarkin holding Vader’s leash, she was not cutting him down as much as she was pointing out what everybody knows: he’s a yes man, a weird religious nut who Tarkin kept around to serve a purpose.

The functionaries stick around through the rest of the original trilogy, most notably Firmus Piett (Kenneth Colley), who debuts as a first officer during the battle of Hoth in Empire Strikes Back and returns as an admiral in Return of the Jedi. But the introduction of Emperor Palpatine immediately diminishes their importance. With the reveal that the Empire is run by a monstrous space wizard who can shoot lightning from his fingertips, Vader changes from anomaly to centerpiece. From then on, the company men are no more important than Storm Troopers, incidental figures on the sidelines of a battle between magic users and their allies.

The franchise has never recovered from the change. The prequel trilogy works beaucracy into its main plot, including trade negotiations, cross-planet supply chains, and legislative rules. But all of these scenes involve bizarre-looking aliens or Palpatine, played only with only slightly less malevolence by Ian McDiarmid. Gone were the banal humans doing evil deeds. The sequel trilogy did no better, pairing Kylo Ren with the functionary General Hux. But not only was Hux increasingly diminished across the trilogy, but Domhnall Gleeson played the character as a passionate lunatic. None of these characters felt like regular guys just doing their jobs.

It’s easy to see why Motti, Piett, and even Tarkin faded to the background. Unremarkable humans could never steal the screen from Darth Vader, Kylo Ren, or Emperor Palpatine. Moreover, Star Wars operates according to moral binaries. There’s the Light side and the Dark side, and you’re either one or the other.

Yet, the series has never been without its shades of grey. One of the reasons that Han Solo remains a favorite, beyond the fact that he’s played by Harrison Ford, is that he’s a scoundrel, a guy who hides his heart of gold under layers of cynicism. The Mandalorian became a hit in part because it dealt with the paper pushers after the fall of the Empire. Werner Herzog’s the Client, Carl Weathers’s Greef Karga, and even Giancarlo Esposito’s Moff Gideon had more in common with Motti and Piett than they did Vader or Ren—at least until Gideon’s quest for the Darksaber turned him into a supervillain.

Of course, nothing demonstrates the importance of the Star Wars company man better than Andor, easily the most creatively successful spinoff series. The series takes place entirely within the margins of beaucracy, whether that be Senate chambers where Mon Mothma (Genevieve O’Reilly) did her part, the offices of the Preox-Morlana Authority that spawned Syril Karn (Kyle Soller), or the industrialized prison of Narkina 5. Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) dies on the beach of Scarif, immolated by a Death Star blast. But that’s not nearly as terrifying as the indifference of the judge on Niamos, who efficiently sentences Cassian to prison because that’s what the paperwork prescribes.

As wonderful as it is, Andor is an outlier in the franchise, and shouldn’t be looked at as a guide for other movies and shows. Star Wars without Jedi and Sith, without aliens and droids, isn’t Star Wars at all. But when the company men are present, the franchise gains a little more grit to make the frothy fun more enjoyable, a little more realism to make the fantasy that much brighter. The fantastic baddies like Vader and Ren work best when there’s a bland little Englishman behind them, treating a million voices crying out in terror like one more item on the daily checklist.


Rivals Stars on Rupert and Taggie’s “Emotional Edging” in Season 2 

The following contains spoilers for the first three episodes of Rivals season 2.

Rivals is back for a second season, and it’s bigger, bolder, and more complicated than ever before. But while the show has garnered plenty of buzz for its copious amounts of sex, hedonistic attitude, and gleeful depiction of some of the worst excesses of life among the British elite in the 1980s, at its heart, Rivals is a romance. From Declan (Aidan Turner) and Maud O’Hara’s (Victoria Smurfit) fractious marriage to the sweet but definitely forbidden attraction between Lizzie Vereker (Katherine Parkinson) and Freddie Jones (Danny Dyer) — who are both married to other people — the show is a study in complicated relationships of all stripes and the messy emotions that come along with them. 

“I think people just love these characters,” Alex Hassell, who plays the aristocratic Rupert Campbell-Black, tells Den of Geek when asked what it is about Rivals that has captured so many viewers’ imaginations since the first season premiered. “All these characters, really. They love being in this world of Rutshire, and the character dynamics and the naughtiness of it all, and all the characters have a good sense of humor, and they’re just fun to watch.”

Based on the late Dame Jilly Cooper’s best-selling series of so-called “bonkbuster” novels, Rivals features love triangles, illicit affairs, ill-advised flings, sweet crushes, and hidden attractions. But if the show has a central romance, it’s probably the forbidden attraction/overt yearning going on between Hassell’s playboy Olympic showjumper turned Tory MP and Declan’s eldest daughter, Taggie (Bella Maclean), a wannabe private chef with her own catering business. Though there’s a significant age gap between the two — Rupert is roughly 17 years Taggie’s senior — nothing about their relationship feels juvenile or scandalous. In fact, they often seem to be better together than they are apart. 

“I think people respond to something about the fact that they’re trying to make changes in each other, that they inspire each other to be kind of happier versions of themselves,” Maclean says. “Rupert is encouraging Taggie all the time, he’s encouraging her to not sacrifice her own needs to everyone else’s, and to put herself first sometimes. Taggie’s encouraging Rupert to be more in touch with his emotions and just be a better person.”

Despite the pair sharing a swoon-worthy kiss at the end of Rivals’ first season, Rupert and Taggie’s relationship takes a decidedly platonic turn in the initial episodes of season 2. There are several reasons for this, not the least of which being Rupert’s relationship with Corinium TV producer Cameron Cook (Nafessa Williams), who, in her own messy subplot, is busy trying to cover up the fact that she left her boss, Lord Tony Baddingham (David Tennant) for dead after whacking him over the head with an award statuette. But Cameron’s attempted murder situation is the least of Rupert’s problems as he faces down an embarrassing personal scandal that leads to the ruin of his political career. It’s a big swerve for a character who wasn’t necessarily granted a ton of emotional depth in much of the show’s first season. 

“It’s so nice to play different aspects of a character like Rupert and to try and show as many layers as possible. Trying to get in touch with that sort of human vulnerability was really exciting to play, and kind of [help] make [him] a fully fleshed out human being.” 

But although Rupert pushes Taggie away romantically speaking, season 2 still adds some intriguing new layers to their relationship by having both continue to show up for one another at key emotional moments. 

“I think they’re trying to make very clear boundaries,” Maclean says. “I mean, when she picks up the phone to him during that dinner party gone wrong [in the second episode], I think he’s probably the last person she wants to talk to, because she feels mortified. But Rupert can’t help but want to save her in lots of ways; he always wants to rescue her. And even though he’s chosen Cameron, he still leaps at any opportunity to see Taggie or be with her. And, yes, she’s frustrated and angry and cross and furious and all these things, but she can’t help but enjoy the thrill and the fun of him saving the day.” 

The second episode is a classic rom-com romp, which features the pair working together to salvage Taggie’s professional reputation — and getting shoved in cupboards together at the same time. 

“They have a wonderful, fun dynamic together, and a really great sense of humor with each other,” she says. “I think that was especially fun to play because they can be quite serious, and it’s seldom that you get to see them running around being silly together.”

Season 2 also introduces Rupert’s children, Marcus and Tabitha, whose presence also offers another important glimpse at their father’s more vulnerable side, particularly when it comes to Taggie’s relationship with them both.

“I think it’s amazing, seeing them together, and I also think it’s really, really painful for him,” Hassell says. “He sees the way she is with them and how much she brings them to life, especially [his son] Marcus, who Rupert himself struggles to connect with. Taggie’s so natural and easy [with them], she sort of guides the conversation and looks out for both them and him. She’s so amazing with the kids — when she talks about how lovely Cameron is, actually, and how she’s not that scary at all, actually, it’s an incredibly generous thing for her to do, to say that about [someone who is] her love rival. He just sees them all together, and he sees this family unit that he wishes could be the case, but he daren’t go there.” 

But though much of Rupert and Taggie’s arc seems to be focused on their deepening understanding of one another’s vulnerabilities, this is still Rivals, which means that there’s plenty of drama — both sexual and otherwise — to come.  When asked to describe Rupert and Taggie’s overall season 2 dynamic in a single word, Hassell’s response is quick: “Edging,” he says. “Emotional edging.”

“That’s two words!” Maclean breaks in with a laugh. “How about I’ll say emotional, and you say edging? Can we do that?” 

Buckle up, folks. 

15 Shows We Don’t Believe Anyone Actually Watched All the Way Through

TV Shows often become a huge commitment, not only of your time, but of your emotional investment to the characters. As years go on, trying to keep that momentum going is difficult, not to mention that certain stories shouldn’t be several seasons long.

But if something has the proper rating, the show must go on, even if it doesn’t make sense. These are the shows that, unless you’re a serious fan, it’s hard to imagine anyone watching them all the way through. And as a new viewer today, it is even harder to believe.

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Once Upon a Time

What began as a fun fairy-tale mystery slowly expanded into a maze of curses, alternate realities, and Disney crossovers. Even longtime fans admit the later seasons became increasingly difficult to follow or finish.

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The Walking Dead

The zombie drama dominated television for years, but endless cast exits, repetitive conflicts, and constant spin-offs eventually created the internet joke that nobody actually watched until the end anymore.

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Grey’s Anatomy

After more than twenty seasons of hospital disasters and emotional trauma, Grey’s Anatomy became less a TV show and more a test of endurance for viewers somehow still emotionally invested.

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Riverdale

Riverdale started as a dark Archie adaptation before evolving into cults, serial killers, superpowers, and bizarre musical episodes. Even fans frequently sounded confused trying to explain current plotlines.

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Pretty Little Liars

The mystery surrounding “A” kept viewers hooked for years, but increasingly convoluted twists and endless fake-outs made the show infamous for exhausting even dedicated audiences.

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Supernatural

Fifteen seasons of demons, angels, alternate universes, and repeated apocalypses created one of television’s most loyal fandoms, though outsiders remain convinced nobody truly watched every single episode.

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Heroes

The first season became a cultural phenomenon, but the series rapidly lost momentum afterward. By the final seasons, many viewers had stopped entirely while pretending they still cared.

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Glee

What began as a sharp musical comedy gradually spiraled into chaotic storytelling and increasingly absurd emotional drama. Even former fans often struggle remembering how long they stayed committed.

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The Blacklist

James Spader’s performance kept viewers invested for years, but the constantly delayed answers, fake identities, and endless conspiracies eventually made the show feel impossible for casual audiences to fully keep up with.

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True Blood

The vampire drama became progressively stranger with each season, eventually introducing increasingly bizarre supernatural storylines that made early small-town murder mysteries feel almost normal by comparison.

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The Flash

The CW superhero series lasted nearly a decade despite constant complaints about repetitive villains, timeline resets, and emotional speeches somehow stopping world-ending threats every single week.

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Dexter

Dexter remained hugely popular despite one of television’s most criticized endings. Then the franchise returned years later, somehow asking exhausted viewers to emotionally commit all over again.

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Shameless

After years of increasingly chaotic Gallagher family disasters, many viewers admitted they eventually stopped because the show became emotionally draining and almost impossible to binge continuously.

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Sons of Anarchy

The biker drama remained successful throughout its run, but the increasingly grim violence and constant betrayals created the feeling that finishing the series required pure determination.

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House

Even fans joke that House eventually became a loop of medical mysteries, emotional sabotage, and Hugh Laurie insulting coworkers brilliantly enough to somehow sustain eight full seasons.

Alien: Isolation 2 Might Be Losing the Original Game’s Best Feature 

The blaring sirens of a space station’s decontamination room are set to hit gaming consoles once again with the sequel to Creative Assembly’s survival horror game Alien: Isolation

In the teaser for the sequel, a 25-second clip titled A False Sense of Security, we are introduced to the familiar intense atmosphere of a deserted ship, only for the door to open to a desolate planet, then the image of a payphone reading “Emergency,” introducing the idea of a storyline taking place on the surface of a planet, a drastically different scenario than the first game. 

Released in 2014, Alien: Isolation remains one of the best-ever games in its genre. The player controls Amanda Ripley, the daughter of Sigourney Weaver’s Ellen Ripley from the Alien franchise, who is searching for the cause of her mother’s disappearance 25 years ago. Alien: Isolation encapsulates the feeling of the player as prey. You are in a spaceship, stuck in space with a hundred ways to die, and stalked by a predator of unknown potential. 

What truly made the game a phenomenon, however, was the xenomorph AI system, which was revolutionary to the 2010s gaming industry and made the Alien franchise’s iconic monster feel alive. The slimy beast operated as a living, unpredictable creature and gave gamers a real sense of survival and dread, when every decision they made was actually being responded to. This set the bar for AI in gaming exceptionally high. 

The sequel comes with more than a change in scenery and it’s a change that might jeopardize that xenomorphic experience. Creative Assembly is switching up its software with Unreal Engine 5 being used to build the game instead of the original’s Cathode Engine. This is a cause for concern, as Unreal Engine 5 has had a series of performance issues to the point where many gamers have asked companies to stop using it. 

Remnant 2 was a highly-anticipated game and one of the first built using Unreal Engine 5. Once released, players complained of performance issues, including frame drops, stuttering, and low FPS. Players also reported playing other high-definition games with different engines that ran more smoothly. 

Borderlands 4 ran exceptionally poorly, with tech experts saying it ran “worse than usual for an Unreal Engine 5 game.” In addition to performance woes, there were also visual issues. Players reported that elements like vegetation would change animation as one got closer, showing a distinct quality difference between visuals at different distances.

In a thread on the gaming community platform Steam, titled “Unreal Engine 5 sucks,” one commenter brings up the quality issues, with numerous replies expressing dissatisfaction with the performance of the engine. 

“It’s a laggy, unfinished, and unready mess,” the author of the thread commented. “ It barely looks any better than Unreal Engine 4 and literally runs 10x worse. 

Building Alien: Isolation 2 on a new engine means changing the custom-built systems that were included in the original game. On top of a possibly more expansive setting, the prospect of Creative Assembly dumbing down the AI system to make it a smoother-running game means the original mechanic that captivated players might not make it to the sequel

Cathode Engine gave Alien: Isolation a distinct character design and ambience specific to the feel of Alien. Unreal Engine has a similarly distinctive feel that transfers to all of the games designed under it, which takes away from the individualism that brought notoriety to the game in the first place. 

The release date and official title of the second installment of Alien: Isolation have yet to be announced. 

15 Times the Actor Didn’t Agree With the Creative Direction

A character in a movie isn’t just made by the actor; the director, writer, and many other creatives are deeply involved in what makes a scene work. But the one putting their face on the line is, of course, the actor, and it can happen that they don’t fully agree (or commit) to the creative vision of the film.

Actors clashing with creative decisions likely happens more often than we know, but the cases covered here are with veterans of the industry. These are the cases where the actor isn’t an amateur, but someone with a legacy worth noting, yet their voice wasn’t heard in time.

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Mark Hamill, Star Wars: The Last Jedi

Mark Hamill publicly admitted he strongly disagreed with Luke Skywalker’s portrayal in The Last Jedi, saying he fundamentally viewed the character differently than director Rian Johnson ultimately did.

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Harrison Ford, Blade Runner

Harrison Ford famously disliked the studio-mandated narration added to Blade Runner, later explaining he intentionally delivered the voiceover poorly because he strongly opposed including it at all.

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Charlize Theron, Prometheus

Charlize Theron later criticized aspects of her character in Prometheus, particularly decisions involving emotional distance and certain narrative choices she felt limited the role’s potential.

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Edward Norton, The Incredible Hulk

Edward Norton reportedly clashed with Marvel over the film’s tone and final edit, contributing to his departure from the role shortly after the movie’s release.

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Burt Reynolds, Boogie Nights

Despite earning an Oscar nomination, Burt Reynolds openly disliked Boogie Nights during production and reportedly argued with director Paul Thomas Anderson about the film’s overall direction.

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Katherine Heig, Grey’s Anatomy

Katherine Heigl publicly criticized Grey’s Anatomy writing during later seasons, even withdrawing herself from Emmy consideration because she reportedly felt the material was not strong enough.

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Robert Pattinson, Twilight

Robert Pattinson repeatedly joked in interviews about criticizing Twilight’s story and characters, openly admitting he approached Edward Cullen very differently from how the franchise marketed him.

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Andrew Garfield, The Amazing Spider-Man 2

Andrew Garfield reportedly became frustrated with studio interference surrounding The Amazing Spider-Man 2, particularly pressure to expand the franchise setup at the expense of character storytelling.

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Chevy Chase, Community

Chevy Chase frequently criticized Community’s increasingly surreal direction, reportedly clashing with creator Dan Harmon over the show’s tone and the way his character evolved.

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Megan Fox, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

Megan Fox publicly criticized director Michael Bay’s filmmaking style and aspects of the Transformers franchise, creating tensions that ultimately contributed to her exit from the series.

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Christopher Eccleston, Doctor Who

Christopher Eccleston later explained he became unhappy with the behind-the-scenes environment and creative atmosphere during Doctor Who, contributing heavily to his departure after only one season.

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Jim Carrey, Kick-A 2

After the Sandy Hook shooting, Jim Carrey publicly distanced himself from Kick-A 2, stating he no longer felt comfortable supporting the film’s extreme violence.

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Jessica Alba, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer

Jessica Alba later recalled becoming discouraged during filming after receiving direction that prioritized appearance over emotional realism in dramatic scenes.

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John Boyega, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker

John Boyega openly criticized how the Star Wars sequel trilogy handled certain characters, particularly Finn, arguing the franchise sidelined important cast members after promising much larger roles.

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Bruce Willis, Die Hard

Bruce Willis initially resisted elements of Die Hard’s marketing and tone because he believed the studio underestimated audiences’ willingness to accept a more vulnerable action hero.

15 Games That Were Designed to Last Forever but Died Immediately Instead

When we think of video games, we often think of titles that start and end, not unlike a show or a movie. But live-service games offer a different kind of experience, one that tries to go on forever. Fortnite and Marvel Rivals know how to capitalize such an ecosystem, and even if they ever shut down, they would still be considered successful.

That isn’t the fate of all live-service games, since players might have the money, but they don’t have the time to play every game in existence. Without an audience, there is no game, so this are the experiences that tried to compete with the multiplayer juggernauts, and failed almost immediately.

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Concord

Sony positioned Concord as a major live-service multiplayer franchise, but weak player numbers and poor engagement caused the hero shooter to collapse almost immediately after launch.

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Forza Motorsport

Microsoft promoted the reboot as a long-term racing platform, yet technical complaints, progression frustrations, and declining player interest quickly hurt enthusiasm surrounding the supposedly evolving service model.

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Halo Infinite

Halo Infinite launched with enormous expectations as a decade-long platform for the franchise, but missing features, slow updates, and declining player counts severely damaged that ambition early.

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Hyenas

Sega and Creative Assembly spent years developing Hyenas as a major multiplayer live-service title before canceling it entirely shortly before release amid wider industry restructuring.

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Anthem

BioWare envisioned Anthem as a constantly expanding online universe, but repetitive missions, technical issues, and disappointing post-launch support caused the ambitious shooter to rapidly lose momentum.

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Babylon’s Fall

Square Enix designed Babylon’s Fall around long-term cooperative updates and seasonal content, yet disastrous reception led to servers shutting down barely a year after release.

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Marvel’s Avengers

The game was clearly built for years of evolving live-service content, but repetitive gameplay and weak player retention caused support to quietly wind down much sooner than expected.

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LawBreakers

Cliff Bleszinski promoted LawBreakers as a major competitive shooter, but the game struggled to attract enough players and disappeared quickly despite strong reviews from some critics.

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Battleborn

Gearbox attempted to launch Battleborn as a massive long-term multiplayer franchise, but unfortunate timing beside Overwatch caused the game’s audience to evaporate almost instantly.

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Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League

Rocksteady planned ongoing seasonal support and expanding content, but disappointing player engagement and backlash toward the live-service structure heavily damaged the game shortly after release.

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Spellbreak

The magic-focused battle royale introduced creative mechanics and long-term plans for expansion, but player numbers steadily declined until servers eventually shut down completely.

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Knockout City

Electronic Arts pushed the dodgeball multiplayer game as a lasting competitive experience, but despite strong early attention, the player base faded rapidly within a relatively short time.

Redfall

Arkane’s vampire shooter was clearly structured around ongoing cooperative support and future content, yet disastrous reviews and technical criticism destroyed excitement almost immediately after release.

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Crucible

Amazon intended Crucible to compete in the live-service multiplayer market, but disastrous reception led the company to pull the game back into beta before canceling it entirely.

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Evolve

Evolve launched with huge expectations for years of asymmetric multiplayer growth, but controversial monetization and rapidly shrinking player numbers crippled the game’s long-term future.

Celebrity Couples That Are Never, Ever, Getting Back Together

Relationships are about commitment, respect and companionship more than they are about love. As such, even when couples seem fine from the outside, there might be problems brewing on the inside. And that’s quite evident with celebrity couples, where we don’t truly know what happens behind closed doors.

Many of these entries are based on rumors, but it is a reality that these celebrities were once together, and their paths are now set apart. From public breakdowns to quiet separations, these are the celebrity couples that, even if now single, would never get back together.

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Johnny Depp and Amber Heard

Their relationship collapsed into one of Hollywood’s most public legal battles, involving defamation trials, leaked recordings, accusations from both sides, and nonstop internet discourse that permanently destroyed any possibility of reconciliation.

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Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie

Once marketed as Hollywood royalty, their split became increasingly bitter through custody disputes, lawsuits, and public disagreements that continued years after the divorce proceedings originally began.

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Kim Kardashian and Kanye West

Their divorce became extremely public through social media posts, interviews, and escalating personal tensions. Any possibility of reconciliation disappeared once the conflict became impossible to separate from constant online attention.

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Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman

Although both remained relatively private afterward, their marriage ended abruptly after years together. Persistent rumors and longstanding distance between them made any reunion seem extraordinarily unlikely.

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Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake

Their breakup became one of the defining celebrity separations of the early 2000s, fueled by songs, interviews, tabloid coverage, and years of public scrutiny surrounding both stars afterward.

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Taylor Swift and Jake Gyllenhaal

The lasting cultural impact of All Too Well alone makes reconciliation feel impossible. The relationship became permanently tied to heartbreak, fan analysis, and years of internet speculation.

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Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger

Their divorce became infamous for ugly custody disputes and leaked personal conflicts, creating one of Hollywood’s most notoriously hostile celebrity separations during the early 2000s.

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Madonna and Sean Penn

Their turbulent marriage produced years of headlines involving explosive arguments and controversy. Even decades later, the relationship remains more associated with chaos than romance.

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Sandra Bullock and Jesse James

Their marriage ended after multiple infidelity scandals became public, completely destroying the relationship and turning the breakup into one of Hollywood’s most heavily covered celebrity divorces at the time.

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Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth

After years of breakups, reunions, and eventually marriage, the relationship finally collapsed for good. Public comments afterward made it clear both had completely moved on emotionally.

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Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner

Even though they maintained a cooperative relationship while co-parenting, both repeatedly emphasized that their marriage had permanently ended despite ongoing public interest in reconciliation rumors.

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Shakira and Gerard Piqué

Their breakup became international tabloid news after allegations of infidelity surfaced. Shakira later referenced the split directly in music releases that made reconciliation seem completely impossible.

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Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher

Their relationship collapsed amid public cheating allegations and intense media attention. Demi Moore later discussed the emotional fallout openly, making the breakup feel far beyond repair.

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Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber

Years of on-again, off-again drama exhausted fans before both finally moved on. The relationship became permanently tied to emotional instability and constant public speculation.

15 TV Characters Who Needed to Die Much Sooner

On long-running TV shows, characters tend to die quite often; it’s what keeps a show interesting after all. But certain characters, those that become loathsome for whatever reason, become the target of the audience’s ire, and we wished they left the show earlier than they did.

Not all of these characters are villains, some are just side characters that we don’t want to see anymore. Conflict is an important part of storytelling, but considering how hard it was to watch these characters on the screen, a bit less conflict would’ve sufficed. They did meet their end, but not soon enough.

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Joffrey Baratheon, Game of Thrones

Joffrey’s cruelty became so unbearable that audiences spent multiple seasons waiting for someone, anyone, to finally poison him before the show eventually delivered one of television’s most satisfying deaths.

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Ramsay Bolton, Game of Thrones

Ramsay remained horrifyingly untouchable for far too long, repeatedly torturing characters while escaping consequences until viewers practically celebrated once his own dogs finally turned against him.

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Negan, The Walking Dead

Although eventually redeemed by the writers, Negan’s brutal introduction and extended dominance left many viewers feeling the character overstayed his welcome before the show softened him considerably.

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Andrea Harrison, The Walking Dead

Andrea’s increasingly frustrating decisions made her one of the show’s most criticized survivors, with many fans feeling the series dragged out her storyline long after audience patience disappeared.

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Livia Soprano, The Sopranos

Tony’s manipulative mother remained emotionally exhausting whenever she appeared, creating constant tension and misery that made many viewers relieved once the storyline finally concluded.

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The Governor, The Walking Dead

The Governor repeatedly survived situations that felt like natural endings for the character, causing his storyline to stretch well beyond the point many viewers found believable.

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Kai Winn, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

Kai Winn’s passive-aggressive manipulation made her one of Star Trek’s most infuriating villains, constantly undermining allies while somehow surviving political disaster after political disaster.

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Serena Joy Waterford, The Handmaid’s Tale

Serena repeatedly oscillated between sympathy and cruelty, frustrating audiences who felt the series continuously delayed meaningful consequences for one of Gilead’s central architects.

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Tara Knowles, Sons of Anarchy

While tragic, Tara’s constant attempts to escape the club’s violence left audiences emotionally exhausted long before the show finally delivered her brutal and inevitable fate.

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Nellie Oleson, Little House on the Prairie

Nellie survived years of manipulation, bullying, and cruelty toward nearly everyone in Walnut Grove, making her continued presence a constant source of frustration for viewers.

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Cersei Lannister, Game of Thrones

Cersei spent multiple seasons escaping consequences through sheer luck and political chaos, leaving many viewers disappointed that the series waited until the final episodes to remove her.

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Piper Chapman, Orange Is the New Black

Piper increasingly frustrated audiences as the series progressed, with many viewers eventually preferring nearly every supporting inmate storyline over the supposed main character herself.

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Ted Mosby, How I Met Your Mother

Not literally killed off, but Ted’s endless romantic disasters and self-important storytelling became so exhausting that many viewers joked the show itself outlived audience goodwill toward him.

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Alpha, The Walking Dead

Alpha’s psychological games and repetitive intimidation tactics eventually dragged on so long that many fans simply wanted the Whisperers storyline to finally end altogether.

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Nate Fisher, Six Feet Under

Nate’s constant indecision and emotional self-destruction increasingly alienated viewers over time, making his eventual death feel tragically inevitable rather than shocking.

15 Unfortunate Movie Details We Hadn’t Thought of Before

Making movies involves a lot of people, something everyone already knows. Yet this clashing of minds creates a lot of incredible stories, both intended and unintended. They can be things within the movies themselves, casting decisions, or even plot points that we didn’t think that hard about before.

Knowing these details can, sadly, lead to a given movie not meaning the same thing anymore. Iconic scenes can be ruined or elevated depending on what is found by the audience. At the very least, they make for an entertaining thought, considering all that goes behind the scenes in films.

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Finding Emily

The casting of Spike Fearn opposite Angourie Rice accidentally created one of the most aggressively British-sounding fictional couples imaginable, to the point many viewers initially assumed both names were invented jokes.

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Circle

In the movie’s deadly voting game, one contestant quietly survives almost the entire film simply because nobody notices him enough to eliminate him, accidentally turning invisibility into the smartest strategy available.

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Resident Evil: Apocalypse

The movie mixes scientific zombie outbreaks with undead corpses literally emerging from graves, quietly implying the franchise somehow contains both viral mutations and actual supernatural resurrection simultaneously.

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Zootopia 2

Animators packed parts of the sequel with animal-themed parody movie titles and background gags, meaning many viewers spent entire scenes ignoring the plot while trying to read signs.

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Daredevil

The opening credits briefly display cast and crew names in Braille, an unusually thoughtful visual detail many audiences completely missed despite it appearing directly at the beginning of the movie.

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Avengers: Endgame

Steve Rogers choosing to remain in the 1940s becomes slightly awkward once viewers remember he willingly returned to an America still deeply defined by segregation and discrimination.

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Aladdin

Jafar wishes to become “the most powerful being in the universe,” only to become a genie enslaved to magical rules, accidentally proving that in the Aladdin universe there is no God.

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Troy

Achilles humiliating a child saying “no one will remember you” somehow becomes even darker when viewers realize the terrified boy barely qualifies as an actual character and is not even properly credited.

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Minions: The Rise of Gru

Because the Minions are canonically drawn toward serving history’s most evil figures, the movie accidentally implies 1970s-era Gru ranked among humanity’s absolute worst people alive at the time.

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Hotel Transylvania 2

The movie implies Mavis carried a fully human baby while repeatedly transforming into a bat, creating biological questions the franchise very wisely chooses never to address directly.

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Home Alone

The gangster movie Kevin watches, Angels with Filthy Souls, feels so authentic many viewers assume it is real despite being filmed specifically for Home Alone as a fake black-and-white crime movie.

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Men in Black II

Agent K failing to recognize a Game Boy while immediately identifying the Backstreet Boys accidentally supports one of the franchise’s funniest background jokes: pop stars probably are aliens after all.

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Toy Story 2

Stinky Pete being packaged inside his box his entire life quietly means the Prospector spent decades fully conscious, unable to move, while watching other toys actually experience childhood.

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Who Framed Roger Rabbit

Judge Doom’s plan to destroy Toontown becomes disturbingly bleak once viewers realize he is effectively attempting genocide against an entire species of sentient cartoon characters.

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Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory

The movie never confirms the other children safely returned home before the ending, meaning Charlie technically wins the factory while several contestants are still recovering from horrifying industrial accidents.

Nicolas Cage and Spider-Noir Team Talk Hard-Boiled Inspirations for Spider-Man Series

Spider-Noir is a strange mix of the familiar and the strange. On one hand, you have a web-spinner doing battle against classic villains like Sandman and Tombstone. On the other, the hero here is Ben Reilly a.k.a. the Spider, a superhero who turned private investigator after a tragedy took away the love of his life. And that doesn’t even get into how the series nods to classic film noirs, starting with Humphrey Bogart staples The Big Sleep and The Maltese Falcon.

For star Nicolas Cage, Bogart is the best guide to mixing hard-boiled detective fiction with spectacular superhero adventures. “The thing I always enjoyed about watching Bogart, especially in movies like The Big Sleep, is that he seemed amused by other people’s bad behavior,” Cage tells Den of Geek. “He would start to laugh at other people’s wickedness, he got tickled by it.

“I tried to put a little of that into Spider-Noir. If Li Jun Li’s character Cat Hardy was doing something dangerous, it would amuse Ben Reilly. He’d think, ‘Oh, I know this is so much fun,’ just like Bogart would be doing.”

Cage’s commitment to film noir impressed showrunner Oren Uziel, who recalls a particularly memorable table read.

“We were out to lunch at a restaurant in Los Angeles, long before we had started shooting and he had already memorized half the script. He suddenly said, ‘I’m going to do this one like Edward G. Robinson,’ and he just did an entire scene.”

Performing the script in the manner of the star of greats such as Little Caesar, Scarlet Street, and Double Indemnity only further endeared Cage to Uziel, who got to combine several of his passions while making Spider-Noir.

“I always loved Spider-Man, but I’ve always also loved noir. So when they came to me with the idea of making a standalone Spider-Man show set in 1930s New York City that’s film noir, I felt like I was the obvious person they should be talking to,” confesses Uziel. “I asked them to please let me do this.”

Uziel cites 1949’s The Third Man as a particular favorite. Directed by Carol Reed and written by Graham Greene, with a memorable zither score by Anton Karas, The Third Man stars Joseph Cotton as an American who comes to postwar Vienna in search of his friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles), now a criminal running the underground.

Uziel’s fandom comes through when he gushes about his favorite parts of The Third Man. “Orson Welles, and the way it’s shot, the relationships, the intrigue, all in postwar Vienna,” he says with an enthusiastic grin. “It’s just so romantic. There are shots we stole from all our favorite noirs… Well, lovingly homaged.”

For Lamorne Morris, the exciting part is getting to play Joseph “Robbie” Robertson, a vital part of Spider-Man’s supporting cast who has rarely appeared in live action. “He’s the voice of reason,” Morris says of his character, who is not a top-ranking editor in Spider-Noir, but rather a principled journalist.

“This Spider-Man is a little bit different than the ones we’ve seen before. He’s faced with this dilemma where he’s over being a hero. He saved millions of lives already, and he’s just ready to be done with it,” Morris explains. “But the city still needs a hero, and so this is the first time Spider-Man has someone in his ear. As reporter for the Daily Bugle, Robbie really understands the pulse of New York. He understands what’s happening with crime and depression in the city, and in the mayoral race.

“So the fate of the city is in the Spider’s hands, and Robbie knows that. He understands the weight of it. And he’s trying to convince Ben that the city could use him.”

While Morris gets to create his live-action Robbie with little interference, his co-star Abraham Popoola has immediate competition for his character Lonnie Lincoln, better known as the villain Tombstone. Just months after Popoola debuts his Tombstone in Spider-Noir, Marvin Jones III will play the MCU version of the crime lord in Spider-Man: Brand New Day. But instead of feeling any sense of jealousy, Popoola has nothing but respect for his fellow Lonnie.

“I would love to talk with him about playing Lonnie,” he admits. “Marvin also plays Tombstone in the Spider-Man video game, and he’s amazing. I can’t wait to see what he does with the character in live-action.

“I didn’t take anything directly from the PlayStation video game, but I was definitely inspired by the essence of the story. I still play it now.”

Popoola’s love goes back further than the days of the PS4, back when he was voiced by Dorian Harewood. “Tombstone’s a character I’ve known since he was on the Fox Kids animated series from the ’90s,” Popoola notes. “I’m still processing the fact that I got this role. There’s one moment toward the end of the series where I was like, ‘This can’t be happening!'” he teases. “You’ll have to see it.”

Modern though his touchstones may be, Popoola understands the spirit of noir necessary for his character’s milieu. “The most noir thing you can do is to brood in a corner with the brim of a hat making a shadow over your eyes, watching people across the room,” he contends.

“I think it’s to just pop up,” jokes Morris. “In noir, they’re always just popping up. You never know what’s around the corner.”

But fittingly enough, it’s the show’s writer and creative guide who best understands the genre. “The most noir thing you can do is get your heart broken,” Uziel says. It’s a perfect answer, whether you’re talking about Humphrey Bogart, Spider-Man, or combing them together for Spider-Noir.

Spider-Noir premieres on MGM+ on May 25, 2026, and on Prime Video on May 27, 2026.

Netflix’s East of Eden Trailer Gives One of Literature’s Cruelest Women an Antihero Rewrite 

John Steinbeck’s 1952 novel East of Eden is being adapted yet again to question if identity truly is based on what you choose. Now Netflix has released a trailer for the upcoming limited series starring Florence Pugh that makes clear it’s choosing a new narration of the original story. 

The novel follows the lives of the Trask and Hamilton families across a multigenerational, interconnected saga about good, evil, greed, violence, and neglect. The story, which takes place between the American Civil War and the end of World War I, begins with Adam Trask and his half-brother Charles Trask, whose father’s favoritism creates a long-lasting dynamic of sibling rivalry and toxicity that follows the Trask family into the next generation. 

Adam marries Ames (who goes by Kate Trask while married), a wildly amoral woman, with whom he has twin boys, Aron and Cal Trask, and is abandoned by her after their birth. Ames goes on to become a sex worker in Salinas, California, which is a pivotal part of her character; as Ames rejects the expectations of traditional gender roles. She uses femininity as a weapon to increase her power in the only way permitted for women of the era. 

Ames is regarded as one of the cruelest antagonists in contemporary literature, being Steinbeck’s allegory for Satan in this generational rendition of the story of Cain and Abel. Steinbeck even goes as far as giving Ames Satan-like physical characteristics in her later years, after losing the hypnotic beauty that she used as a tool of manipulation, destruction, and selfishness. 

A born sociopath, Ames commits murders, divides families, and commits gross acts of violence over the span of the 600-page novel, leading her to be one of the most hated, yet captivating, characters of Steinbeck’s literary catalogue. 

In the trailer, Ames is portrayed as a more sympathetic character, giving a soft-spoken yet emotionally captivating monologue, showcasing her hopelessness as a child. 

“When I was a little girl, I imagined I could grow smaller. So small that the bad things couldn’t find me. And I could disappear. Because the world is so full of evil,” Ames recounts. As the monologue draws on, flashes of Ames’s life flash along the screen, including her youth, marrying Adam, birthing the twins, and the twins finding her years later in the brothel. 

There is a consistent melancholy throughout the trailer, making the viewer feel as captive as Ames has been described in the previous adaptation of her character. While Ames is shown as monotone and calculating, there is a distinct lack of apathy that her character is known for. Similarly, the displaying of emotion and a lack of unabashed arrogance is all new ground for the character.

In Elia Kazan’s 1955 film adaptation of the novel, Jo Van Fleet plays Ames, as the movie follows the second generation of the Trask family, with Cal Trask (James Dean) being the main protagonist. Ames is a character of literal darkness, even down to the brothel where she lives and works, only met down a dim corridor in the back of the building, immediately, and aggressively casting away Cal when he comes to find her.

Zoe Kazan, the granddaughter of the 1955 film’s director, is spearheading Netflix’s adaptation and taking a new direction on Ames’ character, describing the protagonist as an “indelible antihero.” 

Some might worry that this seeming new direction to humanize Ames misses the point of Steinbeck’s writing, as Ames acted as more than just a cruel, egotistical temptress character; she is the literal devil of the story. We’ll have to wait and see if the series ends up adopting a similar perspective.

While the official release date of the series has yet to be announced, the Trasks are expected to hit Netflix sometime this fall.