PlayStation Is Abandoning Physical Media, to the Detriment of Consumers

Sony announced Wednesday that it will stop making discs for its PlayStation games beginning in 2028, in the name of “consumer preferences.” Instead of finding their releases in retailers, PlayStation fans will have to purchase games in the PlayStation store on their consoles. This announcement came right after Rockstar Games informed fans that GTA 6, the biggest incoming release of the year, will not have a physical release and instead will only be available digitally (though they will sell game boxes with codes inside for those who want a box).

By doing this, PlayStation is not only betraying the tradition of physical media that has been the heart of the gaming industry for decades, but also harming the buyers who have made their company successful. 

The shift to digital is unfortunately in line with recent consumer behavior. The 2025 Sony corporate report revealed just 3% of PlayStation sales came from discs. Some video game business analysts have even claimed digital sales account for 80-90% of PlayStation and Xbox game sales.

Despite this shift, there are numerous problems associated with digital purchases that will ultimately cost gamers more. Purchasing a physical disc ensures its owners are able to hold onto it long-term. For example, buying a Halo 4 Xbox 360 disc allowed you to play Halo 4 on all future Xbox consoles, even if for some reason servers would shut down or its publishers would stop selling it. Purchasing the same game digitally does not allow this preservation to exist; if you purchased Halo 4 digitally, its publishers can revoke your ability to play the game at a moment’s notice. You bought Halo 4, but you don’t really own it. Even if you digitally transfer it over to every Xbox console you buy, at any point you could be locked out from playing it.

Additionally, gaming companies are making it increasingly difficult for people to purchase consoles with disc drives. A PlayStation 5 with a disc drive costs at least $649.99, and an Xbox Series X with a disc drive will cost $799.99. Unless players want to spend exorbitant amounts of money, they are essentially locked into this lack of ownership.

We have not yet lived in a world where digital stores are the only option for buying games. Every current video game fan has memories of going to Game Stop or another local store and purchasing a new release they were looking forward to, or just browsing for something new and grabbing the game with the flashiest box art. 

For some fans who relied on purchasing used discs from these stores in order to play games in the first place, that is no longer going to be an option. Buying a used disc is going to be impossible for any games that are sold exclusively on digital for their full market price, which is not exactly affordable. 

Those memories are always going to stay memories, but the ability to make new ones is slowly atrophying. Gaming companies are locking people out from buying discs and preserving their passions while also limiting who can actually participate in the gaming industry. Resisting the recent trends in purchasing games online rather than in stores is no longer about personal preference, but rather now about ensuring the gaming industry remains accessible and fun.

X-Men ’97 Finally Gives Jubilee the Gambit Treatment

This article contains spoilers for X-Men ’97 season 2 episode 2.

X-Men ’97 isn’t just concerned with adapting comic book stories from the ’90s or telling stories about the X-Men in 1997. The animated series also gives attention to characters who reached their peak in the 1990s, characters who embodied the edgy attitude that defined the era, guys like Gambit, Bishop, and Cable. As popular as these characters were in their heyday, they were divisive, drawing just as many haters, who resented characters like Bishop and Cable for drawing attention from their favorites in New Mutants and Uncanny X-Men.

The first season of X-Men ’97 seemed fully aware of the controversy surrounding Gambit and seemed determined to settle it once and for all. Season 2 turns its attention toward Jubilee, making the chili-fries-eating mall baby briefly the coolest person at Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters.

The scene occurs episode 2, “A Force to Be Reckoned With,” in which Jubilee and Sunspot join Cable, Psylocke, and Archangel to form the reactionary X-Force. X-Force clashes with the government-sponsored group X-Factor, who captures Jubilee and takes her to a holding facility. However, X-Factor member Polaris, who once served on the X-Men with Jubilee, has a change of heart and uses her magnetism to set her old teammate free. Instead of sneaking out, Jubilee intentionally sets off the alarm to draw armed guards towards her, and that’s when the fireworks start… literally.

Pulling on her headphones and pressing “play” on her walkman, Jubilee faces off with the guards while “Volcano Girls” by Veruca Salt blasts on the soundtrack. She uses her fireworks powers to propel herself around the guards and amp up her punches. When a guard grabs her and pushes her against a wall, Jubilee shoots a colorful blast from her feet, effectively making herself into a rocket.

The scene might be the best moment in Jubilee’s history, which has been weird and varied, even by X-Men standards. She made her debut in 1989’s Uncanny X-Men #244, written by Chris Claremont and penciled by Marc Silvestri, in issue in which, appropriately enough, a bunch of characters go to a mall. She soon started hanging around the Xavier Mansion and really found her place once Jim Lee came aboard as the regular artist. Lee paired Jubilee with Wolverine, making him the Batman to her Robin (why do you think she wears a yellow jacket, a red shirt, and green glasses?).

Although a mainstay in ’90s X-Men comics, Marvel hasn’t always known what to do with Jubilee. She really came into her own in Generation X, the ’90s teen book that filled the hole left when New Mutants became X-Force. But after that book ended and a 2004 solo series failed to give her a compelling new status quo, Jubilee was picked as one of the mutants her lost her abilities when the Scarlet Witch depowered thousands in the House of M storyline. Later, she became the adopted mother of a son, Shogo, and she also became a vampire after getting doused with an exploding monster’s blood. Worst of all, she used tech to replicate her powers and take on a new superhero name, Wondra, to join the New Warriors, a fate worse than death.

These days, Jubilee has her powers again and has been cured of all vampirism. She still has Shogo, though, because Jubes isn’t the type to abandon a kid. She played an active part on the mutant nation of Krakoa, working with the magical group Excalibur. But since the island’s destruction, Jubilee has faded into the background, making X-Men ’97 not just her best appearance, but also one of the few appearances in recent years.

It’s a good thing that she made that appearance count. Now, if only the show can do the same thing for another polarizing character, also seen in “A Force to Be Reckoned With,” the snot-nosed telekenetic punk, Quentin Quire.

X-Men ’97 streams new episodes every Wednesday on Disney+.

The Odyssey Final Trailer Just Spells Out the Plot For Non-Classics Majors to Enjoy Too

Look, you’re going to see The Odyssey. Universal knows it, you and I know it, and Christopher Nolan knows it. Nolan’s first movie after the triumph of Oppenheimer? A big, old-school epic with gods and monsters and warriors and big ships? Up-and-coming movie stars like Zendaya and Tom Holland and Robert Pattinson, alongside established greats such as Matt Damon and Anne Hathaway? Also, John Leguizamo, returning to his Romeo + Juliet roots to once again adapt a work of classic literature?!?

But here’s the thing: does anyone know what The Odyssey is actually about? Is there a modern version of Ducktales to educate the public about Sirens and Circe and Helen of Troy? Clearly, Universal isn’t taking any chances, as the final trailer lays out the basic plot beats. For those who could use a little more explanation, let’s break down the storylines set up in the trailer.

The trailer opens with Zendaya exercising the “ethereal perfume commercial” muscles she built for the first Dune, as the goddess Athena urges the shipwrecked Odysseus to remember his home in Ithaca. Played by Matt Damon, Odysseus has been fighting under King Agamemnon in the Trojan War for 10 years, and is ready to return home, but has been captured by the nymph Callisto (Charlize Theron). Odysseus’ decade-long journey back to Ithaca makes up the main plot of The Odyssey, as he’s constantly waylaid by monsters and witches and dumb crew people who open magic bags of air too early.

Next, we see what Odysseus has left behind, namely his wife Penelope (Hathaway) and son Telemachus (Holland). The trailer leans hard into the romantic and familial longing of those who miss their husband and father, as you’d expect from a modern blockbuster. However, the source text was less concerned about romantic feelings, something the original audience wouldn’t have thought about in the individualistic terms we use today, and more about the social implications.

The trailer gives us a sense of those implications too, especially in Holland’s plot. The young Telemachus feels a responsibility to step into his father’s place as the king, if only because the people need a leader and Odysseus’s absence would have threatened to plunge the city into anarchy. However, Telemachus’ youth and devotion to a king who seems to have abandoned the people raises questions about his ability to rule.

The trailer shows us the most notable challenger to Telamachus’s position, Antinous, played by Pattinson. It’s not entirely clear from the trailer, but Antinous is one of the suitors, a legion of men who visit Odysseus’ home in his absence and stay for several years—hospitality is a big thing in Greek culture, so Penelope couldn’t just kick them out. Antinous and the other suitors want to convince Penelope that Odysseus has gone for good, and that she should choose from the group. She will, but with a special test that involves the bow that she holds in the trailer, leading to a thrilling climax that we won’t spoil now.

Of course, a lot more happens across The Odyssey‘s ten-year span, and Nolan will certainly collapse the timeline in interesting ways, as is his wont. But thanks to the trailer, at least the most uninformed viewer will have a sense of what’s going on as Matt Damon battles his way back to Anne Hathaway.

The Odyssey arrives in theaters on July 17, 2026.

Netflix Facing Wonka Reality Show Backlash After Using AI to Recreate Gene Wilder’s Voice

A new Wonka-themed reality competition series has used AI to recreate Gene Wilder’s voice. The Golden Ticket, a nine-part Netflix series premiering September 23, debuted its first trailer this week, unveiling an AI-generated Wilder narration that promises a “life-changing prize” for the show’s winner.

Netflix partnered with AI audio company ElevenLabs for the project, according to Deadline, and Wilder’s estate has given its consent to the controversial move. ElevenLabs also recently made headlines in a deal with the Stan Lee Universe, resurrecting the voice and likeness of the Marvel Comics legend for a series of audiobooks and more.

“More than five decades after Gene brought Willy Wonka to life, people of all ages and backgrounds around the world continue to find joy, laughter and inspiration in his performance,” the late Wilder’s wife, Karen B. Wilder, said in a statement for the Gene Wilder Estate. “Gene had a remarkable ability to bring humor, wonder and heart into people’s lives, and that connection has endured for generations. We are delighted that Wonka’s The Golden Ticket celebrates the warmth and imagination that he brought to the role, introducing that magic to a new generation while honoring the fans who have cherished it for decades.”

Despite the estate’s backing, Netflix’s use of the AI-created voice was swiftly criticized across social media platforms, with a popular response both mimicking Wilder’s Willy Wonka in the original 1971 film and referencing the competition itself—“You lose! Good day, sir!”—while others had some more nuanced commentary on the matter.

“Using dead people’s voices through AI is just so creepy,” one person posted, while another wrote, “It’s maddening to me that anyone could be okay with this. Five years ago, everyone would have called it horrific and disrespectful. Now we’re just ressurecting [sic] the dead for ‘content.’” Another voiced their thoughts that “Gene Wilder died in 2016 and never, ever gave permission for his voice to be used in AI shit like this. I am so much angrier than I should be.”

Twilight franchise star Jackson Rathbone also responded to the news, posting parody lyrics of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory’s iconic “Oompa Loompa” song: “Oompa Loompa Doompity Doo/I’ve got another puzzle for you/If you die and don’t sign a will/They will lie and profit from you,” which got the response “It looks like a lot of fun, and plenty of people who grew up with the movie are genuinely excited for it. If Karen Wilder signed off on it, that’s good enough for me. He loved his wife. God forbid some people see the letters ‘AI’ anywhere without completely losing a gasket,” among others.

Stranger Than Heaven Dials Up the Intensity for Sega’s Brawler Franchise

The Sega game to generate the most buzz online coming out of Summer Game Fest 2026 was the upcoming period piece action brawler Stranger Than Heaven, arriving this coming January. A standalone prequel to the Yakuza/Like a Dragon franchise, the game follows Japanese American protagonist Makoto Daito at five different points of his life spanning 1915 to 1965 as he makes his way through the Japanese criminal underworld. In addition to featuring Snoop Dogg playing one of its characters, the game’s SGF trailer raised eyebrows by revealing the inclusion of Tupac Shakur, with the late rapper and actor’s likeness being used for another character.

At Summer Game Fest, we were invited to play an early build of Stranger Than Heaven by Sega, with the demo showcasing different fighting styles employed by Daito given the context of the combat, which was set within three different time periods throughout the game and Daito’s life. This demo gave us a strong idea how varied and original the gameplay mechanics in Stranger Than Heaven are shaping up to be, making it very clear that this isn’t like any number of Yakuza/Like a Dragon games before it. Though, to be clear, we did not play any sequences that featured Snoop Dogg or Tupac’s characters in it, so we have no new details to share on that front.

Played from a third-person perspective, Stranger Than Heaven has its attack and guard inputs linked to the shoulder buttons in a relatively unique way for a game of its genre. Left-handed blows and blocks are handled by shoulder buttons on the left side of the controller while right-handed blows and blocks are handled by shoulder buttons on the right side of the controller; we didn’t check out a PC mouse and keyboard setup for the demo to see how that was handled. Daito can also arm himself with melee weapons and, in two out of three of the sequences we played, he does, each with their own gameplay nuances.

The first sequence is the easiest and most straightforward, with Daito taking on a gang of crooks with his bare hands. After a couple of seconds of fisticuffs, we got the hang of throwing punches by alternating between both shoulder buttons to rack up combos and switch to blocking as other enemies came charging into the fight. This is the sequence that feels the most like a Yakuza game, both with its environmental presentation and its chaotic melee combat, with us breezing through the fight briskly once we got the fighting mechanics down.

The second sequence had Daito using a weighted staff-like weapon, better suited at sweeping blows to handle crowd control but making us move noticeably slower. The enemies in this scene were more aggressive and led by a large bruiser character who would regularly charge at us like a bull and knock us around like a ragdoll. This heightened difficulty along with the new handling with a heavier melee weapon made us relearn how to approach a fight, adapting to the pressure and how to take down a much more formidable lead adversary.

But this demo build of Stranger Than Heaven saved the best for last with its third and final sequence, with Daito taking on a grizzled swordsman in the middle of a city street at dusk. Armed with only a knife, this is a particularly precise duel, with the enemy able to dodge and parry just as well, if not better, than Daito, making us take timing and strategy into greater account when attacking and defending. This was an especially grueling fight and one that left us utterly defeated on multiple attempts, but never to the point where we felt overly frustrated or that the challenge wasn’t a fair one.

With that level of intensity, we could really see what Stranger Than Heaven is all about and how it more saliently distinguishes itself from a mainline Yakuza game experience. If anything, this is a Like a Dragon title for the soulslike fanbase, rewarding timing and precision and punishing mindlessly button-mashing for hack-and-slash combat. No matter how soundly we were cut down, we kept going back in for more, doing a little better each time and refining our approach until we finally emerged victorious.

Just when players have grown accustomed to what a Yakuza or Yakuza-adjacent title can be, Stranger Than Heaven rethinks what’s possible for the Sega franchise. Much of this is tied to its innovative combat system but the glimpses of Saito at different stages of his life and the correlating modernization of Japan also underscores those differences. Now understanding how the fighting works, we’re ready for a more immersive deep dive into the world of the game and its other mechanics to get a better idea of its breadth.

And, at the very least, we want to figure out what the heck Tupac is doing in this thing.

Developed by RGG Studio and published by Sega, Stranger Than Heaven launches January 15 for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC.

X-Men ’97 Revives the Hottest Comic Book Store Debate of the 1990s

This article contains light spoilers for X-Men ’97 season 2 episode 2.

In most ways, X-Men ’97 captures the spirit of Marvel in the 1990s. It has all the obvious stuff—the ostentatious pouches and belts and headsocks, as well as the convoluted plot lines of the comics of the time. And it nails the feeling of Marvel‘s X-books of the era, the constant soap operatics that moved at a faster pace than they did when writer Chris Claremont established the archetypes throughout the ’70s and ’80s.

The second episode of X-Men ’97‘s second season, “A Force to Be Reckoned With,” brings in another important part of X-Men books in the ’90s by introducing X-Factor and X-Force. Both of these teams were part of Marvel’s plan to expand the line through spinoff books, adding to the mainline series X-Men and Uncanny X-Men, as well as the Wolverine solo series. Furthermore, the tension between X-Factor and X-Force shown in “A Force to Be Reckoned With” mirrors the debates happening outside of the fictional universe, as nerds in comic book shops across the country argued for and against the flashy, extreme series X-Force, or the character-driven and sitcom-funny book X-Factor.

A Force For Change

Although X-Factor mainstay Lorna Dane a.k.a. Polaris, did pop up in a handful of episodes in the original show, as did the rest of the team in a single shot, viewers of X-Men: The Animated Series know X-Force better. X-Force founder Cable showed up in several installments, and with good reason. He was one of the most popular characters of the ’90s, thanks to his gigantic gun, his Terminator 2style cybernetic features and glowing eye, and his general bad attitude.

However, in the comics, Cable cannot be separated from either X-Force or its predecessor, the New Mutants. Introduced in the 1982 graphic novel The New Mutants by Claremont and Bob McLeod, the New Mutants were the second class of gifted youngsters who came to study at Xavier’s school. Most of their series focused on teenage adventures, as people like Cannonball or Sunspot balanced developing their powers with navigating crushes, going to parties, and more run-of-the-mill body changes.

Everything changed when Cable arrived in 1990’s New Mutants #87. Well, things had already started to change, when the popularity of up-and-coming hot artist Rob Liefeld allowed him to wrest creative control from longtime writer Louise Simonson, who left the book a few issues later. Under Liefeld’s guidance and Cable’s leadership, the New Mutants became more militaristic, a violent strike force that would attack problems before they began. In June of 1991, New Mutants was canceled and X-Force #1 hit shelves.

X-Force was a huge hit, filled with big narrative swings and over-the-top characters. Liefeld filled the ranks with characters with gigantic weaponry, illogical sartorial choices, and (it must be said) tiny little feet. He sacrificed anatomy, sound composition, and basic storytelling chops for the most extreme choices imaginable. Nothing illustrates this more than 1991’s X-Force #4, a crossover with Spider-Man that pit the team against the Juggernaut and was in landscape form, requiring the reader to hold the comic on its side, but offering widescreen action.

Even after Liefeld left the book, giving co-writer Fabian Nicieza more room to craft coherent narratives, X-Force remained incredibly silly and incredibly popular, a point not lost on those who loved its sister book, X-Factor.

X-Aminations

Like X-Force, X-Factor—or at least the version discussed here—has its roots in the ’80s. 1985’s X-Factor #1, by Bob Layton and Jackson Guice, reunited the original five X-Men: Cyclops, Beast, Angel, Iceman, and a recently-resurrected Jean Grey. After a bumpy beginning, the book found its footing when Simonson came aboard, and enjoyed a well-admired six-year run.

But in 1991, Marvel introduced an entirely new team in X-Factor #71, written by Peter David and penciled by Larry Stroman. This new X-Factor was an extension of the American government, designed to repair relations between the U.S. and its mutant population. The lineup consisted entirely of B-listers. It was led by Cyclops’ well-meaning but empty-headed little brother, Havok, who took the job to reunite with former finance Polaris, who was still regaining her sense of self after several years of possession by the evil mutant Malice. Joining them was Wolfsbane, the shy Catholic Scottish member of the New Mutants who wanted more adult experiences (in every sense of the word) with X-Factor; the arrogant speedster Quicksilver; Jamie Madrox the Multiple Man, a wisecracking scientist who could make endless duplicates of himself; and hulking bodyguard Guido Carosella, who refused to take a superhero codename until someone observed that he was the strong guy, and referred to himself as Strong Guy ever since.

That brief plot description captures the central appeal of X-Factor. The stories were character-driven and often very funny. In addition to penning some of the greatest Star Trek novels of all time, completely reinventing the Hulk, and creating Miguel O’Hara, the Spider-Man of 2099, the late, great David brought the quick-wit of sitcom level dialogue to superheroes, paring them with a novelist’s sense of interiority.

Nothing demonstrates that ability better than the legendary X-Factor #87, penciled by future Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada. The issue consists of nothing but the members having individual therapy sessions, a conceit that allows David to reveal simple character tics as deep pathologies. Wolfsbane’s crush on Havok is in fact her desire for a father figure taking on a confusing, adult form. Strong Guy never stops joking because it keeps people from making fun of his grotesque physique. Quicksilver is arrogant and irritated because he moves at superspeed, and all of existence is to him what standing in line behind a doofus at a fast food counter is to everyone else.

X-Factor‘s first several arcs paired David with penciler Larry Stroman. An expressive and expressionistic artist, Stroman also prioritized effect before sound anatomy or traditional compositions. But unlike Liefeld, Sroman has a coherent design sense that complimented David’s humanistic writing. It felt like we were reading real people who happened to live in an over-the-top world.

Mutant vs. Mutant

As a government-sponsored team, X-Factor clashed with the outlaws in X-Force time and again. But the battles on the page paled in comparison to the fights among fans.

No one could deny that X-Force gave the audiences what they wanted. Every issue promised shooting and stabbing and quipping, to say nothing of the convoluted time-travel plots or the sexy flirting between members, usually with the no-nonsense Boomer involved. The series remained a bestseller, leading to spinoffs starring Cable and Deadpool, as well as trading cards, T-shirts, and posters.

X-Factor always played a part in crossovers such as X-Cutioner’s Song, but remained a distant third in sales. Neither tenures by flashier artists such as Quesada and Jae Lee, nor additions such as gritty anti-hero Random turned things around, and within a year, X-Factor had a different creative team and another new lineup. Yet, despite that ignominious end, David returned to the characters in 2004, first with a Madrox limited series and then several new X-Factor ongoings.

So as we watch X-Men ’97 in 2026, looking back at these two books, we once again have to ask, which was better? X-Force or X-Factor? The clear answer: Excalibur! But you need to subscribe to Den of Geek‘s comics newsletter to learn more about that. In the meantime, enjoy “A Force to Be Reckoned With” and then head to Marvel Unlimited to read X-Force #4 or X-Factor #82 and make your own decision.

15 Sequels That Took Their Sweet Time

Movies these days are less and less self contained, ending with cliff hangers that set up multiple sequels, or franchises depending on how well a movie did. We didn’t used to be prepared for an endless sea of sequels, and now we want less of them, yet certain franchises took their sweet time before arising again.

These aren’t the usual “a sequel was bound to happen,” since decades separate one movie from the next. Still, we were more than happy to return to the stories of these beloved characters, diving deep into what made them special in the first place.

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The Incredibles 2

Pixar fans waited 14 years between The Incredibles (2004) and The Incredibles 2 (2018). Despite the lengthy gap, the sequel famously picks up just moments after the ending of the original film.

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Top Gun: Maverick

Released 36 years after Top Gun, Top Gun: Maverick finally reunited audiences with Pete “Maverick” Mitchell. The long wait paid off, as the sequel became one of the highest-grossing and most acclaimed films of 2022.

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Blade Runner 2049

Thirty-five years separated Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner from Denis Villeneuve’s Blade Runner 2049. The sequel expanded the original’s universe while bringing Harrison Ford back as Rick Deckard decades after his first appearance.

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Finding Dory

Pixar waited 13 years to follow Finding Nemo with Finding Dory. The sequel shifted focus to the forgetful blue tang while reuniting audiences with many familiar characters from the beloved underwater adventure.

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Tron: Legacy

Disney returned to the digital world 28 years after the original Tron. Tron: Legacy combined cutting-edge visual effects with Jeff Bridges reprising his role as Kevin Flynn for a new generation.

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Mary Poppins Returns

More than 50 years after the 1964 classic, Mary Poppins Returns brought the magical nanny back to Cherry Tree Lane. Emily Blunt stepped into the iconic role first made famous by Julie Andrews.

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Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps

Oliver Stone revisited Gordon Gekko 23 years after Wall Street. Michael Douglas returned to his Oscar-winning role, exploring how the legendary financier fit into the world following the 2008 financial crisis.

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Zoolander 2

Ben Stiller’s dimwitted supermodel returned 15 years after Zoolander. While anticipation remained high for years, the sequel ultimately received a far more mixed reception than its endlessly quotable predecessor.

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Independence Day: Resurgence

Twenty years after aliens first attacked Earth, Independence Day: Resurgence continued the story with many returning characters. Will Smith did not return, but the long-awaited sequel finally arrived in 2016.

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Dumb and Dumber To

Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels reunited as Lloyd and Harry exactly 20 years after the original comedy became a cult favorite. Fans had spent years hearing rumors before the sequel was finally produced.

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Mad Max: Fury Road

Although not a direct continuation of the previous films’ storylines, Mad Max: Fury Road arrived 30 years after Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Production delays stretched for years before George Miller finally completed the acclaimed action epic.

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Doctor Sleep

Nearly 39 years after The Shining, Doctor Sleep adapted Stephen King’s sequel novel. The film follows an adult Danny Torrance while revisiting the psychological scars left by the Overlook Hotel.

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Coming 2 America

Eddie Murphy returned as Prince Akeem 33 years after Coming to America. The sequel revisited Zamunda decades later, bringing back much of the original cast alongside several new characters.

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Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

Fans waited an astonishing 36 years for Beetlejuice’s return. Released in 2024, the sequel reunited Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, and Catherine O’Hara while introducing a new generation to the mischievous bio-exorcist.

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Bambi II

Perhaps one of Disney’s strangest delayed sequels, Bambi II arrived 64 years after the original film. Rather than continuing the story, it serves as an interquel, taking place during events from the 1942 classic.

14 Movie Characters Who Would Be HR Nightmares

Every workplace has that one employee who keeps Human Resources awake at night. Movies, however, take those personalities to absurd extremes. These characters would generate enough complaints to fill an entire filing cabinet, and sadly, there’s enough real people to represent them beyond fiction.

They may be entertaining on screen, but sharing an office with them would be an absolute nightmare, if not leading to a mass exodus of employees. These movie characters would keep any HR department permanently overwhelmed, assuming that the company in question would bother with the humane part of their resources.

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Miranda Priestly

Miranda’s impossible standards, emotional manipulation, and constant intimidation would trigger endless workplace complaints. Brilliant though she may be, HR would spend every day investigating allegations of bullying and creating hostile work environment reports.

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Jordan Belfort

Between rampant harassment, drug-fueled office parties, and outright financial crime, Jordan Belfort creates perhaps the least HR-compliant workplace in movie history. Every day would end with another emergency meeting.

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Buddy Ackerman

Buddy treats his assistant with nonstop verbal abuse, humiliation, and impossible demands. Modern HR would likely suspend him before lunch on his very first day.

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Les Grossman

As a studio executive, Les Grossman relies on profanity, intimidation, and outrageous threats to solve problems. His meetings alone would generate enough complaints to overwhelm an entire HR department.

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Bill Lumbergh

Lumbergh’s passive-aggressive management style, constant overtime requests, and complete disregard for employee morale make him the textbook example of a boss everyone dreads working for.

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Harry Ellis (Die Hard)

Ellis spends work hours partying, snorting cocaine in the office, and trying to negotiate with terrorists. HR would have several conversations with him long before the hostage situation even begins.

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Frank Costello (The Departed)

Any employee secretly running organized crime while mentoring corrupt subordinates would be an HR catastrophe. Frank creates an environment where ethics violations are practically part of the onboarding process.

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Danny McBride – This Is the End

Playing an exaggerated version of himself, Danny constantly insults coworkers, steals supplies, ignores boundaries, and creates conflict. He’d become the office’s most frequent subject of disciplinary meetings.

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Tony Stark

Tony’s genius doesn’t excuse his habit of ignoring corporate procedures, making inappropriate workplace jokes, and publicly embarrassing employees. Stark Industries probably employs an entire HR division just to manage him.

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Ace Ventura

Ace solves cases brilliantly but ignores virtually every rule of professional conduct. His invasive behavior, constant impersonations, and complete lack of workplace etiquette would horrify any HR representative.

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Derek Zoolander

Derek’s workplace distractions, astonishing lack of awareness, and constant drama would frustrate every manager. Even without the brainwashing conspiracy, he’d still require endless meetings with Human Resources.

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Ron Burgundy

Ron casually engages in sexist workplace behavior that was inappropriate even in the 1970s. HR would spend every broadcast fielding complaints from coworkers and issuing mandatory sensitivity training.

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Walter Sobchak

Walter escalates minor disagreements into explosive confrontations, threatens people over trivial issues, and refuses to follow basic social norms. One team meeting with him would likely end in formal complaints.

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Frank Drebin

Frank’s spectacular incompetence causes accidents wherever he goes. While his intentions are good, the constant property damage, safety violations, and accidental chaos would make him an HR department’s worst recurring headache.

15 Photos Remembering Hollywood’s Princess

Long before royalty became part of celebrity culture, there was one woman who seemed to embody both at once. Grace Kelly was elegance, mystery, and classic Hollywood glamour in its purest form. She rose quickly through the golden age of cinema, starring in unforgettable films and becoming one of the most admired women in the world before leaving it all behind for real royalty. Her beauty felt timeless, but it was her poise, intelligence, and quiet magnetism that made her unforgettable. These photos capture the life, style, and lasting legacy of the woman Hollywood still remembers as its favourite princess.

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Grace Kelly at the Oscars (1955)

Fresh off her win for The Country Girl (1954), this photo captures the exact moment she became Hollywood royalty.

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On the set of Rear Window (1954)

Dressed in one of cinema’s most iconic costumes, she brought elegance and suspense together in perfect balance.

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During the filming of To Catch a Thief (1955)

The French Riviera, Cary Grant, and Grace Kelly at her peak made for pure old Hollywood magic.

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Walking the streets of New York in the early 1950s

Before Monaco, before royalty, just a rising star with the kind of style everyone wanted to copy.

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With Alfred Hitchcock on set

Their collaboration created some of her most unforgettable performances and helped define her cinematic image.

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The Cannes Film Festival appearance (1955)

One of the photos that helped turn her into an international icon beyond Hollywood.

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Her engagement announcement to Prince Rainier III (1956)

The moment her real life story became even more unbelievable than the movies.

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Wedding day in Monaco (1956)

A ceremony watched around the world that cemented her transformation from actress to princess.

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Behind the scenes of Dial M for Murder (1954)

Even in candid moments, her screen presence never seemed to disappear.

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Public appearance with Princess Caroline (1960s)

One of the rare glimpses of Grace balancing royal duty and motherhood.

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Portrait session during her Hollywood years

The kind of image that explains instantly why she became a global symbol of beauty.

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Returning to the public eye at charity events (1970s)

Even years after retiring from acting, her presence still carried the same star power.

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Final public photographs in Monaco (1982)

A reminder of how timeless her image remained until the very end.

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Casual family photo in Monaco during the 1960s

Far from Hollywood, but still carrying the same effortless grace that made her famous.

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The portrait that defined Grace Kelly forever (1950s)

The image most people still picture first, a perfect symbol of old Hollywood glamour and the woman who became a real life princess.

15 Characters Who Needed Therapy, Not an Adventure

Movies love sending troubled characters on epic quests, dangerous missions, and life-changing adventures. In reality, many of them probably would have benefited from a few honest conversations with a licensed therapist instead. Their problems often stem from unresolved grief, childhood trauma, unhealthy obsessions, or an inability to process emotions in healthy ways.

Instead of working through those issues, they fight monsters, chase treasure, or save the world. That makes for entertaining stories, but it doesn’t always make for emotionally healthy protagonists. Looking back, these characters might have solved far more by unpacking their feelings than by embarking on another adventure.

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Bruce Wayne

Bruce Wayne channels the trauma of losing his parents into a lifelong crusade against crime. While Gotham certainly needs Batman, it’s difficult to ignore that years of therapy might have been equally transformative.

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Indiana Jones

Much of Indy’s emotional journey revolves around his strained relationship with his father. Chasing the Holy Grail helps, but decades of unresolved family issues probably deserved professional attention long before Nazis entered the picture.

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Anakin Skywalker

Anakin spends years suppressing fear, grief, and attachment until everything explodes catastrophically. Nearly every tragedy in the prequel trilogy suggests he needed emotional support far more than another dangerous mission.

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Walter Mitty

Walter spends years escaping into elaborate daydreams instead of confronting his loneliness and lack of confidence. His adventure ultimately helps him grow, but a therapist probably would have identified the underlying issues much earlier.

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Elsa

Elsa isolates herself out of fear and anxiety after accidentally hurting her sister. While self-acceptance eventually helps, years of emotional repression clearly leave lasting scars that therapy could have addressed sooner.

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Don Draper

Don constantly reinvents himself to escape a painful past instead of confronting it. His adventures through advertising are compelling, but nearly every season demonstrates the cost of avoiding emotional healing.

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Max

Max is haunted by survivors’ guilt and traumatic memories that follow him everywhere. His heroic actions save lives, but they never fully address the psychological wounds driving his solitary existence.

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Bilbo Baggins

Bilbo clearly enjoys the comfort and routine of home, yet spends much of the adventure overwhelmed by anxiety and self-doubt. His journey changes him for the better, but emotional support wouldn’t have hurt.

Carl Fredricksen

Carl isolates himself after losing Ellie, refusing to move forward with his life. Flying his house to South America is memorable, but processing his grief in healthier ways may have been the better first step.

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BoJack Horseman

BoJack repeatedly sabotages relationships while refusing to confront his depression and childhood trauma. The series eventually acknowledges therapy’s importance, but only after years of self-destructive decisions.

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Willy Wonka

Wonka’s eccentric behavior and extreme distrust of other people trace back to his childhood relationship with his father. Instead of processing that pain, he builds the world’s strangest candy factory.

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Sarah Connor

Sarah’s paranoia is understandable given her experiences, but years spent preparing for Judgment Day leave her emotionally isolated. Her warnings are correct, even if her trauma completely dominates her life.

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Shrek

Shrek insists he prefers isolation, yet much of his behavior stems from years of rejection and loneliness. His adventure eventually helps him heal, but his emotional walls run remarkably deep.

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Ebenezer Scrooge

Before three ghosts intervene, Scrooge has spent decades consumed by grief, regret, and emotional isolation. A therapist probably would have recommended reconnecting with loved ones before supernatural intervention became necessary.

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Peter Parker – Spider-Man 2

Peter tries to shoulder every responsibility alone while neglecting his own mental health, relationships, and happiness. His burnout is understandable, but learning to ask for help could have spared him plenty of suffering.

15 Movies Where Nobody Seems to Care About Property Damage

Exploding buildings, flattened city blocks, totaled cars, and smashed storefronts are all part of movie magic. What often gets overlooked is that someone eventually has to pay for all that destruction. In many films, heroes and villains tear through public and private property without anyone stopping to ask about insurance claims or repair bills.

Entire neighborhoods are left in ruins, yet the story moves on as if nothing happened. It’s one of cinema’s funniest recurring blind spots. These movies feature so much collateral damage that it’s almost comical how little anyone seems concerned about cleaning up the mess afterward.

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The Blues Brothers

Jake and Elwood destroy shopping malls, police cars, and city streets during their mission to save an orphanage. By the end, hundreds of vehicles have been wrecked, yet the movie barely acknowledges the staggering repair costs.

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Man of Steel

Superman’s battle with General Zod levels enormous sections of Metropolis. While later DC films address the aftermath, this movie largely treats citywide devastation as an unavoidable part of the climactic action.

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The Avengers

New York suffers an alien invasion that leaves skyscrapers damaged and infrastructure shattered. After the battle ends, the film quickly celebrates the victory rather than dwelling on the monumental rebuilding effort ahead.

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Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Chicago is nearly obliterated during the Autobots’ final battle with the Decepticons. Entire buildings collapse while the action continues uninterrupted, with surprisingly little concern for the city left behind.

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Fast & Furious 6

The franchise turns highways, tanks, and airports into demolition zones. Despite millions of dollars in destruction, the focus remains squarely on the next chase rather than who is footing the bill.

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Godzilla vs. Kong

Two gigantic Titans fight their way through Hong Kong, reducing skyscrapers to rubble. Once the dust settles, the movie is far more interested in the monsters than the devastated city beneath them.

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Pacific Rim

Every Kaiju battle leaves coastal cities in ruins. The films acknowledge rebuilding efforts in passing, but humanity seems remarkably accepting of entire districts being destroyed on a regular basis.

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Ready Player One

The virtual destruction is immense, but the real world isn’t spared either. Chases and battles leave plenty of physical wreckage, yet the story rarely pauses to consider the consequences.

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The Mask

Stanley Ipkiss, while wearing the Mask, tears through nightclubs, streets, and businesses with cartoonish abandon. Property damage becomes part of the joke, and nobody seems particularly interested in sending him the bill.

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True Lies

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s pursuit of terrorists destroys bridges, hotels, police equipment, and countless vehicles. The sheer scale of the damage is treated as another exciting set piece rather than a financial disaster.

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Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice

The title fight itself causes widespread destruction, adding even more damage to a city still recovering from previous events. Surprisingly little attention is paid to the civilians or businesses caught underneath.

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Independence Day

The alien attack wipes out entire cities and famous landmarks in spectacular fashion. Once humanity wins, the movie ends triumphantly without spending much time on rebuilding civilization from near-total destruction.

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The Matrix Reloaded

Neo’s highway rescue sequence leaves dozens of destroyed vehicles scattered across the freeway. The spectacular action overshadows the fact that someone will eventually have to clear away the massive pileup, since the Matrix is real for the people living in it.

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Bad Boys II

Mike and Marcus flatten houses, vehicles, and parts of Miami during one of the franchise’s biggest chase scenes. Their superiors complain about paperwork, but the unbelievable property damage is mostly played for laughs.

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Die Hard with a Vengeance

John McClane’s race across New York leaves a trail of wrecked taxis, exploding buildings, and damaged public spaces. By the finale, the city has taken an incredible beating with barely a mention of the cleanup.

14 Movies We Love in America, But Nowhere Else

We’re quite used to Hollywood movies being watched worldwide, letting us say quotes all around the world and know that they will be understood. It is quite unrealistic to expect every single movie made in America to be popular worldwide, though, and there are some home-based heavy-hitters that, surprisingly, didn’t quite land abroad.

In many cases, international audiences recognize the actors but have never actually seen the films themselves. These movies found devoted fans in their home soil, yet never achieved the same cultural footprint across Europe, Asia, Latin America, or other parts of the world.

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Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby

Will Ferrell’s NASCAR comedy is endlessly quotable in America, where stock car racing is deeply ingrained in the culture. Outside North America, many of its jokes and references simply don’t land the same way.

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Remember the Titans

A staple of American classrooms and sports culture, Remember the Titans is beloved for its inspirational football story. International audiences, however, are often unfamiliar with both the film and the sport itself.

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The Sandlot

For countless Americans, The Sandlot is childhood in movie form. Its nostalgic celebration of neighborhood baseball resonates deeply in the United States but has never developed the same following abroad.

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Field of Dreams

Baseball’s mythology sits at the heart of Field of Dreams. While Americans often consider it one of the greatest sports films ever made, its emotional impact doesn’t always translate internationally.

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Rudy

The underdog story of Rudy Ruettiger remains an American favorite, particularly among college football fans. Outside North America, the significance of Notre Dame football is often completely lost on audiences.

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National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation

This holiday classic returns to American television every December, but it lacks the worldwide Christmas tradition enjoyed by films like Home Alone or Love Actually.

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Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy

Many of Anchorman’s jokes became part of everyday American pop culture. Despite its success, the film never reached the same iconic status in many international markets.

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Friday Night Lights

High school football means everything in parts of the United States, making Friday Night Lights deeply relatable. Elsewhere, the intensity surrounding scholastic sports often feels difficult to understand.

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Dazed and Confused

Richard Linklater’s portrait of 1970s American teenagers has achieved cult status at home. Its celebration of U.S. high school traditions gives it a much smaller footprint overseas.

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The Great Outdoors

John Candy and Dan Aykroyd’s family comedy remains a cable television favorite in America. Despite its popularity domestically, it never became a widely recognized comedy in most international markets.

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Hoosiers

Often ranked among America’s greatest sports movies, Hoosiers celebrates small-town basketball culture. Its legendary status in the United States far exceeds its recognition elsewhere.

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Smokey and the Bandit

Car chases, CB radios, and Southern culture helped make Smokey and the Bandit a blockbuster in North America. Those same elements have limited its appeal in many other countries.

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American Graffiti

George Lucas’ coming-of-age classic perfectly captures early 1960s American car culture. While critically acclaimed worldwide, its nostalgic cultural impact is far stronger in North America than elsewhere.

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Napoleon Dynamite

The film became a cultural phenomenon in the United States through endlessly quoted dialogue and awkward humor. Outside North America, its deliberately offbeat style has generally remained more of a niche curiosity than a mainstream favorite.

America’s 10 Geekiest Presidents, So Far as We Know

American presidents are usually remembered for wars, elections, and major historical events. Less often discussed are the hobbies, obsessions, and intellectual quirks that made some of them surprisingly nerdy. This might come as a shock, but they were people, too, with their own dreams, aspirations, and ways to pass the time.

Some filled entire rooms with books. Others spent their free time studying nature, inventing gadgets, or diving deep into specialized subjects. While ‘geeky’ means different things to different people, these commanders-in-chief all displayed a level of curiosity and enthusiasm that would feel right at home in a modern fandom.

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Theodore Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt may be history’s most energetic nerd. He obsessively studied wildlife, collected animal specimens, wrote dozens of books, and could discuss natural history for hours. Before becoming president, he was the kind of person who turned personal interests into lifelong scholarly pursuits.

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Thomas Jefferson

Jefferson’s interests seemed endless. He collected books, studied architecture, designed inventions, experimented with agriculture, and maintained one of the largest personal libraries in America. His curiosity about science, engineering, and knowledge in general makes him almost a stereotypical nerd.

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John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams kept an incredibly detailed diary for most of his life, producing one of the most extensive personal records in American history. He was also deeply interested in astronomy and advocated for a national observatory.

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James Garfield

Before becoming president, Garfield could write Greek with one hand and Latin with the other simultaneously. A lifelong scholar who loved classical languages and mathematics, he might be one of the most academically gifted presidents ever.

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Herbert Hoover

Most people remember Hoover for the Great Depression, but he was also a highly accomplished mining engineer. He translated a medieval Latin mining text into English and remained fascinated by engineering and technical subjects throughout his life.

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Woodrow Wilson

Wilson’s passion for political science bordered on obsession. Before entering politics, he was a respected academic who spent years writing and teaching about government. Few presidents approached politics with such a professor’s mindset.

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Jimmy Carter

Carter’s engineering background and lifelong love of learning have defined much of his public image. Trained in nuclear engineering while serving in the Navy, he maintained a reputation for intellectual curiosity long after leaving office.

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Abraham Lincoln

Lincoln was largely self-taught and spent countless hours reading whatever books he could find. His fascination with mechanics even led him to receive a patent, making him the only U.S. president to hold one.

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John Adams

John Adams had a lifelong passion for history, political philosophy, and classical literature. He exchanged thousands of letters with fellow intellectuals, especially Thomas Jefferson, debating everything from ancient governments to human nature with unmistakable scholarly enthusiasm.

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Barack Obama

Obama’s well-documented enthusiasm for comic books, science fiction, and fantasy literature sets him apart from many predecessors. He has openly discussed reading authors like Tolkien and has frequently embraced pop-culture fandoms in public.

15 Actors Only Your Boomer Meemaw Could Name

There was a time when certain actors were household names, showing up in living rooms, movie theaters, and magazine covers so often that older generations could identify them instantly. They were dependable stars, familiar faces tied to westerns, melodramas, war films, and classic television. Today, many of those names have faded outside of older audiences, even though they once carried serious weight in Hollywood. Mention them now and younger viewers might draw a blank, while someone’s grandmother could probably list half their filmography without thinking twice. These are the kinds of actors whose fame lived loud, even if time moved on.

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Rock Hudson

A giant of romantic dramas and comedies whose name once carried instant recognition in every household.

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Tab Hunter

A clean cut heartthrob of the fifties and sixties whose fame has faded hard with younger generations.

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Troy Donahue

A staple of melodramas and teen films who once had a massive fan following.

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Robert Stack

Known for crime dramas and later television, his face was once impossible to miss.

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Loretta Young

An Oscar winner and television fixture who stayed relevant for decades in old Hollywood.

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Victor Mature

One of the defining tough guy faces of biblical epics and noirs in the forties and fifties.

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June Allyson

A familiar and beloved face in classic Hollywood whose films were once staples of television reruns.

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Robert Mitchum

A legend of noir and westerns whose cool screen presence shaped an entire era.

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Ann-Margret

A singer and actress who brought huge star power and remained unforgettable to older audiences.

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Burt Lancaster

A towering Hollywood figure whose career stretched across decades of prestige films.

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Debbie Reynolds

A bright and beloved star whose charm made her one of the most recognizable names of her era.

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Van Johnson

One of MGM’s most bankable stars who dominated wartime Hollywood.

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Dana Andrews

A respected leading man in noir and drama who carried major films in the forties.

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Claudette Colbert

A true classic era icon whose name still lights up older film lovers instantly.

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Tyrone Power

A massive matinee idol whose fame was once so big it is hard to explain now.

X-Men ’97’s Dark Future Explained: Mother Askani, Nathan Summers, Apocalypse, and More

This article contains spoilers for X-Men ’97 season 2 episode 1.

As bleak as things get for the X-Men, they can find always hope in the dream of their founder, Professor Charles Xavier, that there will be a time when humans and mutants can live together in peace. Until then, they must fight to save a world that fears and hates them. At least, that was the case up until the end of X-Men ’97‘s season 1 finale, when a mysterious force sends half the team to the past and the other half to the far future of 3960, a desolate world ruled by Apocalypse.

Of course, the X-Men have been to unpleasant realities before. But the one that Cyclops and Jean Grey visit in the premiere of X-Men ’97 season 2, “Days of Past Future,” is unique because of the way it unfolds the Summers family tree and for what it reveals about Apocalypse. So let’s take a look at the most important parts of the bad days to come for Marvel’s Mighty Mutants.

Nathan Summers

At the center of the entire story stands Nathan Christopher Charles Summers. Fans of the show met the infant Nathan last season, the son of Scott Summers a.k.a. Cyclops and a clone of Jean Grey. Thanks to the shenanigans of Mister Sinister, who both made the clone and infected baby Nathan with an incurable techno-organic virus, Cyclops and Jean had to send their son into the future with the time-traveler Bishop. Of course, fans also met Nathan last season, and in the original X-Men animated series, in the form of the adult warrior Cable.

The young Nathan of “Days of Past Future” hasn’t quite become Cable, and isn’t sure that he can. Still being raised and trained by the Askani Cult (more on them in a minute), Nathan’s gaining the skills he’ll need to battle Apocalypse across time. Cyclops and Jean push him even farther, helping him control his optic blasts and considerable psychic abilities, as well as his techno-organic parts.

Despite the time-travel complications, Nathan has a fairly clean plot in X-Men ’97. The same cannot be said of his comic book counterpart, who has taken multiple forms. Most notably, Mother Askani creates a clone of Nathan who gets kidnapped by Apocalypse and raised to become Stryfe, the leader of the Mutant Liberation Front. In another timeline, Mister Sinister creates a version of Nathan who become Nate Grey a.k.a. X-Man, a young, good-looking guy who transports to the mainline Marvel universe and, uh… makes out with a clone of his mom. And, in yet another universe, Nate became the savior of a mutant utopia, ushering in the Age of X-Man.

If that’s not weird enough, in the mainline Marvel Universe, Cable came to the present as a teenager and, disgusted that his older self hasn’t yet stopped Apocalypse, killed the older Cable. The teen Cable hung around with the X-Men for a bit until he realized that his older self had experience he lacked, and restored the familiar silver-haired Cable to the timeline.

Mother Askani

When Cyclops and Jean sent Nathan away, they trusted Bishop to care for him. Upon arriving in the future, they learn that he’s passed the job onto someone else, a hooded woman who calls herself Mother Askani (voiced by Star Trek legend Gates McFadden) and leads the Askani Cult. Mother Askani refuses to identify herself, but when she pulls back her hood, revealing a scarred face and her background from a different bleak future.

Mother Askani is Rachel Summers. If that name means nothing to you, sit down, because it’s about to get weird—yes, even weirder than it already is.

Rachel first appeared in 1981’s Uncanny X-Men #141 by Chris Claremont and John Byrne, part of one of the classic storyline Days of Future Past. In that reality, mutants and other superpeople were rounded up into concentration camps. The daughter of Cyclops and the non-clone Jean Grey, Rachel suffered a fate worse than death. She was captured by the hunter Nimrod and turned into a “hound,” treated like a dog and used to search out mutants.

Eventually, Rachel made her way to the mainline present, where she joined the X-Men and the UK-based team Excalibur. Moreover, Rachel gained control of the same Phoenix Force that her mother possessed. Yet, the Phoenix Force could not change her status as a time-displaced figure, a condition that eventually sent her deep into the future. There, she joined the resistance against Apocalypse and learned of a hero prophesied to overthrow the villain: her half-brother, Nathan.

Since then, Rachel took the name Mother Askani and formed the Askani Cult, dedicated to preparing for Nathan’s arrival and training him to become the hero Cable.

Apocalypse and His Horsemen

At this point, we need to pause to ask why Apocalypse matters at all. The hulking baddie certainly isn’t new, as he’s existed in the comics since 1986 and appeared not only in the original X-Men: The Animated Series, but was also played (badly) by Oscar Isaac in the 2016 movie X-Men: Apocalypse.

Later episodes of X-Men ’97 season 2 will unfold more of Apocalypse’s backstory and ethos, but “Days of Past Future” reintroduces us the Horsemen, to one of the most important elements of the character. To cull the weak, Apocalypse sends out four Horsemen before his arrival: Famine, Death, Pestilence, and War. We met the Horsemen in the first season of the original series, an arc that saw the X-Man Angel captured by Apocalypse and transformed into Archangel, the new Death.

In “Days of Past Future,” a whole new set of Horsemen appear, lead by a mysterious figure who can transform into sand. That is Ozymandias, first introduced in 1996’s Uncanny X-Men #332, by Scott Lobdell and Joe Madureira. Originally an ancient Egyptian warlord who sought to prevent the young En Sabah Nur from gaining power, Ozymandias was transformed into living stone when Nur became Apocalypse and forced into service. Ozymandias acts as a liaison between Apocalypse and the Horsemen, something between a field general and a messenger.

Over the centuries, Apocalypse’s Horsemen die and get replaced by new servants, which explains why the Horsemen in “Days of Past Future” look nothing like those we met back in the original series. This particular group are the Final Horsemen, from 2010’s Uncanny X-Force #2 by Rick Remender and Jerome Opena. In that story, the Final Horsemen were designed as a failsafe if Apocalypse were to be completely destroyed or removed from the timeline, allowing his work to continue.

The X-Men ultimately defeat this group, but Apocalypse always has plans within plans, so we may see more of them yet. Because if there’s one thing we learn from just this one episode, nothing is straightforward when the X-Men start traveling through time.

X-Men ’97 season 2 streams new episodes every Wednesday on Disney+.

X-Men ’97 Season 2 Premiere Review: Back to the Past, But Also the Future and Further Into the Past

This article contains spoilers for X-Men ’97 season 2 episodes 1-3.

After its blistering first season, X-Men ’97 fully established itself as much more than a nostalgic continuation of X-Men: The Animated Series that ran between 1992 and 1997. Sure, the classic team was back, all decked out in the same Jim Lee-designed costumes from the ’90s series, along with much of the first voice cast. But the new show immediately set itself to making up for lost time by not just adapting some of the stories form the past thirty years of Marvel Comics, but also by making explicit the social relevance only hinted at in the cartoon series. Add in cleaner, anime-influenced animation, and X-Men ’97 became one of the most thrilling shows on television, a rare recent win for the otherwise underpowered MCU.

However, the high bar set by season 1 became absolutely daunting when Disney fired showrunner Beau DeMayo, replacing him with head writer Matthew Chauncey. Worse, season 1 ended with a delicious cliffhanger, splitting the team into two groups, one to a dark future controlled by the villain Apocalypse and the other to Ancient Egypt, where Apocalypse had not yet embraced his survival of the fittest ethos. Could X-Men ’97 continue to mutate, letting season 2 be the next step in Marvel Animation’s evolution?

Based on the first three episodes, we can answer the question with a qualified “Yes.” Episodes one through three not only take the baton left by the predecessor, but they actually resolve most of the time travel arc, following the breakneck pace established in season one. Yet, while the show still delivers all the ’90s mutant soap opera one would want, the series shows none of the political relevance that made the X-Men so important in the first place.

Episode 1, “Days of Past Future,” follows Forge to the year 3960, where Cyclops (Ray Chase) and Jean Grey (Jennifer Hale)—along with Storm (Alison Sealy-Smith), Morph (JP Karliak), and Wolverine (Cal Dodd)—have been reunited with their son Nathan (Michael Johnston). As shown last season, Cyclops and Jean sent the infant Nathan into the future, as the only hope to cure him of a deadly techno-organic virus. Here, we learn that Nathan has been in the care of the mysterious Mother Askani (Gates McFadden), who trains him to become the grizzled X-Force leader (and, yes, another time traveler) known as Cable (Lawrence Bayne). When Forge (Gil Birmingham) arrives to bring them home, Cyclops and Jean must wrestle with the possibility of abandoning their son a second time.

Episode 2, “A Force to Be Reckoned With,” returns to the present, where two teams form to take the X-Men’s place. Cable recruits Sunspot (Gui Agustini) and Jubilee (Holly Chou) to join Psylocke (Naoko Mori) and Archangel (Christopher Barger) in X-Force, a military-style team that takes the fight to the bad guys. Conversely, there’s X-Factor, a government-sponsored team led by Cyclops’ brother Havok (Teddy Sears). The two groups come to blows over their wildly different approaches, showing how the conflict between Xavier (Ross Marquand) and Magneto (Matthew Waterson) repeats among the next generation of heroes.

That conflict comes to the fore in “Rise of Apocalypse Part I,” in which Professor X and Magneto try to prevent the outcast En Sabah Nur from ever becoming Apocalypse (Marquand). When Bishop (Isaac Robinson-Smith) locates the duo, as well as Rogue (Lenore Zann), Beast (George Buza), and Nightcrawler (Adrian Hough), Nur is on the precipice of a major decision, as another time-traveling conqueror has made his presence known.

Three episodes may sound like more than enough time to tell three quarters of a full story, but with runtimes of less than thirty minutes, the story must move fast to cover all the necessary ground. The episodes draw inspiration from multiple comic book arcs, including the four-issue series The Adventures of Cyclops and Jean Grey and The Rise of Apocalypse, and introduce dozens of new mutants. Further, each episode must tell a complete story, with coherent arcs for its main characters.

For the most part, the three episodes succeed admirably. Dividing the main team into two halves breaks them down into manageable chunks, making room for the action set pieces that have become the series’ hallmark. Even in these three episodes, every main mutant—and a surprising amount of the side characters—get time to shine. Chauncey and his animators take glee in finding new ways for the team to show off their powers, from Storm controlling the sun (while delivering an incredible monologue, of course) to Nightcrawler kicking and flipping as he teleports around enemies. In particular, episode 2 gives Jubilee a sequence that holds up to Nightcrawler’s Oval Office attack in X2 or the Quicksilver set-pieces from Days of Future Past and Apocalypse.

Moreover, the episodes include healthy amounts of fan service. In addition to X-Force and X-Factor, “A Force to be Reckoned With” gives screen time to members of Generation X and the New X-Men. Apocalypse’s origin brings in deep Marvel cuts like the Celestials and the Fantastic Four villain Rama Tut, who has his own ties to a famous abandoned MCU character. Most impressively, the episodes make a motif of Apocalypse’s famous “eternal shore” speech from the original series, turning it into a prophecy that spans centuries.

That attention to detail gives hope to anyone frustrated by the short shrift given to some of the heavy hitters. In particular, none of the first three episodes really acknowledge the huge change in Wolverine’s power set. While we see him pop his bone claws, and comic fans know what’s going on under the bandana he now wears as a mask, Logan seems like the same old hairy mutant we saw last year. Rogue barely has time to mourn the death of Gambit, reduced to making a few worried expressions when Magneto starts acting imperious.

Surely, these and other characters will have their time in the spotlight over the next six episodes. The first three episodes leave us less confident about the political themes that marked the first season. X-Men ’97 season 1 was a masterclass in using the mutant metaphor to highlight real-world oppression, showing how minority populations live in constant danger of those who will kill to maintain the status quo. The destruction of Genosha hit not just because we saw some beloved characters die, but because it reminded us of countless acts of violence against marginalized people, members of the LGBTQ+ population in particular. With a main story that spans centuries, season 2 doesn’t find space to speak about our current moment. Even the conflict between the resisting X-Force and the assimilationist X-Factor lacks the spark of the 30-year-old stories that inspired it, to say nothing of 2026.

It would be a shame for Chauncey and company to drop the social relevance ball. Chris Claremont and his co-creators transformed X-Men from perennial Marvel C-listers to the world’s most popular superhero team precisely because they explored the mutant metaphor to its full potential. X-Men ’97 season 2 admirably continues the first season’s lead in carrying over the dense storytelling, the soap operatics, and the inventive fight seasons that began with the Claremont run. Making the show apolitical would be the worst kind of mutation, a devolution in quality instead of another evolution.

The first three episodes of X-Men ’97 season 2 premieres are available to stream on Disney+ now.

A24 Has Confirmed its Interesting Re-Release Strategy for Backrooms

A24 has confirmed it is re-releasing its popular horror movie Backrooms to theaters this Friday, July 3, with 15 minutes of “brand new footage from director Kane Parsons.” 

Backrooms flooded the box office with horror fans at the end of May, sparking discussions online over the various laid “easter eggs” and the possibility of sequel material. Now A24 is attempting to rally fans back to the theaters to uncover further footage from the backrooms and fresh easter eggs. The indie studio confirmed in an Instagram caption that the footage is brand new, likely meaning that the extended version doesn’t merely shoehorn in deleted scenes from filming. Since the footage is exclusively from Parsons, the extended scenes may be more of his original handheld video camera footage calling further tribute to his YouTube short films. The short trailer A24 posted along with the announcement shows mainly handheld footage. 

Yesterday, A24 posted a hint at the upcoming announcement with a photo of the scene where the main character Clark (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is captured on an ASYNC security camera. The post was captioned with the displayed date on the footage “06.29.1990.” How this scene connects to the footage is unknown but the exclusive handheld shots from Parsons may tell the audience more about ASYNC operations and the security cameras planted around the backrooms where “doors” may appear. The audio over the short trailer features ASYNC employee, Phil (Mark Duplass), explaining that the doors continue to open “everywhere.”

Polygon reports that the extended footage will not be inserted throughout the movie but an exclusive post-credits scene that will be “theatrically exclusive” meaning it won’t be available on streaming or DVD. 

A sequel to Backrooms is not officially greenlit but has been heavily discussed publicly by Parsons. Whether these post-credit scenes will hint toward the plot of a sequel is unknown but it wouldn’t be surprising to fans who heavily anticipate one off of the original’s success. 

A24 is also extending the movie’s title along with its runtime, officially dubbing the re-release Backrooms: Everything Must Go. In an Instagram post from March 31 promoting the original release of the movie, A24 began the caption with “Everything must go.” Whether this was an intentional hint toward the concrete plan of this extended release or simply a coincidence is unknown, but it is an interesting connection for a movie that is known for its easter eggs. 

This extended version comes nearly one month after the initial movie’s release. Since the footage is brand new and tacked on after the credits, it is likely that A24 is hoping fans return to the movie theaters to look for hints they may have missed on their first watch and be rewarded with new footage at the end, perhaps even building excitement for a sequel. Whether fans will be satisfied with the movie’s extended version or if it’ll be seen as a grasp for further box office success is a mystery only the backrooms can answer.

Movie Sets Are Workplaces, Please Do Not Bother the Employees

This article contains spoilers for The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3.

Back in May, Prime Video TV series The Summer I Turned Pretty ran into issues with some fans filming the set and mobbing the streets during filming of the highly-anticipated movie spinoff following the series finale. 

Now The Sun reports that the set has become a “horror story for the cast and crew,” with an unnamed source claiming that the actors are “repeatedly interrupted” when filming scenes by crowds of fans and photographers. The franchise pleaded to fans earlier in May on its social media pages, ”We love the excitement but sharing locations and visiting set disrupts filming and creates real safety concerns for our cast and crew.” That plea appears to have been unsuccessful as massive crowds of fans showed up to film and watch Lola Tung (Belly) and Christopher Briney (Conrad) film scenes earlier this month in Plymouth, Massachusetts. 

The Summer I Turned Pretty author Jenny Han also posted her own instagram story to restate the message in her own words. “This story means a lot to me, and I know it means a lot to you too. I want to give you the best version of this movie. Please help protect our process.” 

The source from The Sun also claimed that production allegedly had blocked off several streets but failed to properly secure the area for such a large-scale project, arguing that the budget was not properly distributed to prevent issues like this, angering Amazon executives that are expecting this film to be a huge hit after the series success. 

While it’s unknown if every aspect of The Sun’s reporting is correct, it is clear that The Summer I Turned Pretty set has had issues with disruptive fans, and that’s a major problem. Not only is fan interference disrespectful to both the cast and crew, it can also cause production delays and undue stress for all involved. Even though the filming is in a public space full of pedestrians, who technically have a right to pull out their phones and record in that public space, the majority of productions’ complaints are towards the fans that camp out on the sidewalk and disrupt the filming process. 

Due to the TV series’ massive online success, this isn’t the first time fans have captured video of filming. When TSITP was shooting season 3, many photos and videos surfaced on TikTok. Production and Han even chose to film fake scenes of Belly and Jeremiah in Paris to throw off fans that were seeking spoilers on who Belly ended up with. 

Han told People, “If Gavin [Casalegno, who plays Jeremiah] never showed up in Paris it would be really obvious what the ending was…we were lucky that he could come.” The fake scene of Casalegno and Tung hugging in Paris had fans worried that Belly would end up with Jeremiah, changing the ending of the book series. Prime was equally as motivated to keep the ending a secret as the fans were to uncovering it. 

Fans sneaking a photo of a public filming set is not new, especially with everyone possessing an easily accessible phone to film on. Bigger studios like Amazon that produce highly-anticipated projects will inevitably have to deal with people attempting to capture the magic of the filming. But interfering with production is beyond the pale. And if fans truly want the TSITP movie to come out on time and put its best foot forward, they should be on their best behavior.

14 Movies Where They Could Have Just Called the Police

Movies thrive on conflict, and sometimes that means characters ignore the most obvious solution available. Instead of picking up the phone and calling the authorities, they launch their own investigations, confront dangerous criminals alone, or let misunderstandings spiral completely out of control.

Of course, if everyone made sensible decisions, many beloved films would be over before the opening credits finished rolling. These movies are entertaining precisely because their characters take matters into their own hands, even when a quick call to the police could have saved everyone a lot of time, danger, and unnecessary drama.

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Home Alone

Kevin spends days defending his house from burglars with elaborate booby traps. While he eventually calls the police near the end, contacting them as soon as he realized two men were trying to break in would’ve ended the ordeal much sooner.

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Phone Booth

Stu Shepard is trapped by a sniper who threatens to shoot if he hangs up. Ironically, the police do become involved later, but contacting them immediately instead of trying to outsmart the gunman would have been the safer choice.

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Rear Window

L.B. Jefferies becomes convinced his neighbor committed murder and conducts his own investigation from across the courtyard. Although he eventually alerts the authorities, he repeatedly risks lives gathering evidence that trained detectives could have pursued.

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Disturbia

After suspecting his neighbor is a serial killer, Kale begins spying on the house with his friends. Rather than documenting everything for the police immediately, they repeatedly place themselves in increasingly dangerous situations.

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The Burbs

The residents become convinced their mysterious neighbors have committed murder. Instead of reporting their suspicions and letting investigators handle it, they trespass, break into homes, and accidentally create far bigger problems for themselves.

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The Gift (2015)

Simon and Robyn receive increasingly disturbing visits and gifts from Gordo, whose behavior grows more threatening over time. Much of the escalating harassment could have been documented and reported to law enforcement much earlier.

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Cape Fear (1991)

Max Cady relentlessly stalks attorney Sam Bowden and his family after leaving prison. While Bowden does involve the legal system at points, he repeatedly confronts Cady personally instead of relying more heavily on police protection.

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The Hand That Rocks the Cradle

Claire gradually realizes her seemingly perfect nanny is manipulating her family. Instead of immediately involving authorities after multiple alarming incidents, she attempts to handle the increasingly dangerous situation on her own.

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One Hour Photo

Sy Parrish’s unhealthy obsession with the Yorkin family becomes increasingly disturbing through stalking and intimidation. Earlier reports to police about his escalating behavior might have prevented the terrifying confrontation that follows.

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The Cable Guy

Chip Douglas becomes dangerously obsessed with Steven after installing his cable service. As his harassment escalates into stalking and criminal behavior, Steven repeatedly tries to deal with Chip personally instead of seeking legal intervention.

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Fatal Attraction

Dan Gallagher’s affair turns into a nightmare when Alex Forrest refuses to let go. Although the situation quickly escalates into criminal harassment, both Dan and Beth spend much of the film reacting instead of immediately pursuing legal protection.

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Sleeping with the Enemy

Laura fakes her death to escape her abusive husband Martin. While her fear is understandable, much of the story highlights the limitations of legal protection available at the time, making every encounter more dangerous than it might be today.

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The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Journalist Mikael Blomkvist and hacker Lisbeth Salander uncover horrifying crimes during their investigation. While the mystery requires evidence before police can act, several confrontations with the killer become unnecessarily dangerous because they face him alone.

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The Menu

Once the guests realize Chef Slowik’s intentions, escaping or contacting authorities becomes nearly impossible. Earlier warning signs about the bizarre, isolated dinner invitation probably should have prompted someone to notify the police before arriving.

15 Movie Heroes Who Would Be A Nightmare In Real Life

Movie heroes are easy to cheer for when we’re safely watching from a theater seat. In real life, though, many of them would be exhausting friends, reckless coworkers, or outright dangerous people to have around. To live together in society, we need to follow rules, not constantly drag innocent bystanders into chaos, or create more problems while ‘solving’ others.

Their flaws make for entertaining stories, but living with them would be another matter entirely. Here are just a few beloved movie heroes who are much better on the big screen than they would be in your everyday life.

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Ferris Bueller (Ferris Bueller’s Day Off)

Ferris is undeniably charismatic, but he manipulates nearly everyone around him to get what he wants. He lies effortlessly, pressures his anxious best friend into breaking the rules, and rarely faces consequences for his actions.

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Tony Stark (Iron Man)

Tony Stark is a genius and eventually becomes one of Earth’s greatest defenders, but he’s also arrogant, impulsive, and often creates the very crises he has to solve. Working with someone who constantly thinks he’s the smartest person in the room would be exhausting.

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Indiana Jones

Brilliant archaeologist or not, Indiana Jones leaves a trail of destruction wherever he goes. Ancient ruins collapse, cities erupt into chaos, and anyone traveling with him has an alarmingly high chance of being shot, kidnapped, or nearly killed.

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Pete “Maverick” Mitchell (Top Gun)

Maverick is an exceptional pilot, but he’d be a nightmare colleague. He routinely ignores orders, disregards safety protocols, and relies on last-second heroics to fix problems caused by his own reckless decisions.

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James Bond

Bond is suave and resourceful, but every mission leaves behind wrecked buildings, destroyed vehicles, and innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire. You wouldn’t want your city, workplace, or vacation interrupted by one of his assignments.

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Jack Sparrow (Pirates of the Caribbean)

Jack Sparrow is entertaining from a distance, but his constant scheming, dishonesty, and habit of escaping trouble by dragging others into it would make him an incredibly unreliable friend or business partner.

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Ace Ventura

Ace is brilliant at finding missing animals, but his nonstop antics, invasive behavior, and complete disregard for social norms would make spending even a single afternoon with him an exhausting experience.

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John McClane (Die Hard)

McClane is courageous under pressure, yet disaster seems to follow him everywhere. If you happened to be nearby during one of his vacations or family visits, you’d probably end up caught in a hostage situation.

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Dom Toretto (Fast & Furious)

Dom values family above everything else, but his lifestyle involves high-speed street races, international fugitives, and city-leveling car chases. Joining his inner circle practically guarantees your life will become dangerously complicated.

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The Dude (The Big Lebowski)

The Dude is easygoing to a fault. While that makes him lovable on screen, his lack of ambition, constant procrastination, and tendency to drift through life would make him a frustrating roommate or coworker.

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Deadpool

Deadpool’s humor makes him entertaining to watch, but his nonstop talking, unpredictable behavior, and casual attitude toward extreme violence would make him one of the most stressful people imaginable to spend time around.

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Happy Gilmore

Happy has a good heart, but his explosive temper creates problems wherever he goes. Between frequent fights, public outbursts, and impulsive decisions, he’d be difficult to trust in almost any real-world situation.

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Ethan Hunt (Mission: Impossible)

Ethan Hunt consistently saves the world, but his missions leave a wake of explosions, collapsing buildings, and impossible odds. Being assigned to work alongside him would almost certainly shorten your life expectancy.

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Billy Madison

Billy eventually matures, but for much of the film he’s an immature adult with little sense of responsibility. His childish behavior, lack of focus, and endless pranks would wear thin very quickly in everyday life.

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Axel Foley (Beverly Hills Cop)

Axel Foley gets results, but his approach involves ignoring procedures, provoking dangerous criminals, and causing massive property damage. His coworkers may admire his instincts, yet few would want to deal with the chaos he leaves behind.

15 Actors Your Grandma Was Probably in Love With

Every generation has its heartthrobs, and long before today’s blockbuster stars dominated magazine covers, classic Hollywood produced a remarkable lineup of actors who captivated audiences around the world. With effortless charm, impeccable style, and unforgettable screen presence, these leading men became the crushes of millions.

They headlined romantic dramas, swashbuckling adventures, and epic classics, helping define the Golden Age of cinema. Chances are that if your grandmother grew up between the 1930s and 1960s, at least one of these actors had a permanent place on her bedroom wall or at the top of her favorite movie list.

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Cary Grant

With his debonair charm and effortless wit, Cary Grant became one of Hollywood’s most beloved leading men. Films like North by Northwest, His Girl Friday, and To Catch a Thief cemented his reputation as the ultimate gentleman.

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Gregory Peck

Gregory Peck’s dignified presence and deep voice made him a favorite for decades. His Oscar-winning performance in To Kill a Mockingbird only strengthened the admiration audiences already felt for one of Hollywood’s most respected stars.

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Rock Hudson

Rock Hudson embodied the handsome romantic lead throughout the 1950s and early 1960s. His successful partnerships with Doris Day in films like Pillow Talk made him one of the era’s biggest box office attractions.

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Paul Newman

Known for his striking blue eyes and natural charisma, Paul Newman became one of Hollywood’s defining leading men. Classics including Cool Hand Luke, The Hustler, and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid showcased his enduring appeal.

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Robert Redford

Robert Redford combined classic good looks with undeniable screen presence. From The Sting to The Way We Were, he became one of the most admired actors of the 1970s while also establishing himself as an accomplished director.

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Burt Lancaster

Former circus acrobat Burt Lancaster brought athleticism and confidence to the screen. Performances in From Here to Eternity, Elmer Gantry, and Birdman of Alcatraz made him both a critical and popular favorite.

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Tony Curtis

Tony Curtis won audiences over with his charm, comic timing, and versatility. Whether starring in Some Like It Hot or The Defiant Ones, he remained one of Hollywood’s most recognizable and admired leading men.

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Tyrone Power

Tyrone Power became synonymous with romantic adventure films during Hollywood’s Golden Age. His starring roles in The Mark of Zorro and The Black Swan established him as one of 20th Century Fox’s biggest stars.

Errol Flynn

Errol Flynn’s swashbuckling adventures made him an international sensation. His portrayal of Robin Hood and countless daring heroes defined the action-adventure genre while cementing his status as one of Hollywood’s earliest heartthrobs.

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Clark Gable

Often called the “King of Hollywood,” Clark Gable achieved immortality with Gone with the Wind. His rugged charm and confident screen persona made him one of the most admired actors of his generation.

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James Dean

Although his career lasted only three films, James Dean became an enduring cultural icon. His performances in Rebel Without a Cause and East of Eden turned him into a symbol of youthful rebellion and timeless appeal.

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Marlon Brando

Marlon Brando revolutionized screen acting with his natural performances and magnetic presence. Films such as A Streetcar Named Desire and On the Waterfront helped make him one of cinema’s most irresistible leading men.

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Dean Martin

Equally successful as a singer and actor, Dean Martin brought effortless cool to every performance. Whether appearing in comedies, westerns, or Rat Pack films, his relaxed confidence won over generations of fans.

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Sean Connery

Sean Connery became a global sensation as the first actor to portray James Bond on film. His blend of sophistication, confidence, and rugged masculinity made him one of the most admired stars of the 1960s.

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Richard Burton

Richard Burton’s commanding voice and Shakespearean background gave him a unique screen presence. Combined with his highly publicized romance with Elizabeth Taylor, he became one of Hollywood’s most glamorous leading men.

15 Unsettling Facts About Hollywood to Remind You of its Questionable Past

Hollywood’s Golden Age is often remembered as a glamorous era of dazzling premieres, legendary stars, and timeless classics. Behind the polished image, however, the industry was built on practices that would be considered deeply unethical today. Performers were tightly controlled by powerful studios, dangerous stunts were commonplace, and discrimination was often written into contracts and casting decisions.

While the film industry has evolved in many ways, its history includes countless uncomfortable chapters that deserve to be remembered alongside its greatest achievements. These unsettling facts reveal a darker side of Hollywood’s past that is easy to overlook.

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The Wizard of Oz Painted Its Tin Man With Aluminum Dust

Buddy Ebsen was originally cast as the Tin Man, but the aluminum makeup severely damaged his lungs, forcing him to leave the production after being hospitalized. Jack Haley replaced him with a safer makeup formula.

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Charlie Chaplin Was Put on Trial Over a Child Who Wasn’t His

In one of Hollywood’s biggest scandals, Chaplin lost a paternity suit despite blood tests indicating he could not be the father. Blood typing was not yet accepted as legal evidence in California courts.

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Buster Keaton Secretly Broke His Neck

While filming Sherlock Jr., Keaton performed a dangerous stunt involving a collapsing water tower. Years later, an X-ray revealed he’d actually fractured his neck during the scene and never realized it.

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Hollywood Once Added Fake Snow Made of Asbestos

Before the health risks were fully understood, asbestos was widely used to create realistic snow on movie sets, including during productions in the 1930s and 1940s.

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Judy Garland Was Reportedly Given Stimulants as a Teenager

MGM allegedly supplied teenage Judy Garland with amphetamines to maintain demanding production schedules and barbiturates to help her sleep, contributing to lifelong addiction struggles.

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Publicists Invented Entire Celebrity Relationships

Golden Age studios routinely arranged fake romances to generate publicity or hide scandals. Some stars were contractually expected to appear together in public despite having no actual relationship.

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Jean Harlow’s Platinum Hair Came at a Price

Harlow’s signature platinum-blonde look required frequent bleaching with harsh chemicals, contributing to severe hair damage as studios prioritized her image over her well-being.

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The Hollywood Blacklist Was Sparked by Congressional Hearings

The 1947 hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee led to the blacklisting of hundreds of entertainment professionals, many of whom struggled to find work for years despite never being convicted of crimes.

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Silent Films Were Melted Down for Their Silver

Thousands of silent films disappeared because studios saw little value in preserving them. Many nitrate prints were deliberately destroyed or processed to recover the silver content from the film stock.

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Sarah Bernhardt Filmed After Losing a Leg

Legendary actress Sarah Bernhardt had her right leg amputated in 1915 because of complications from an old injury. Remarkably, she continued acting on stage and in films, with productions adapting around her disability.

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Lon Chaney Created His Own Painful Makeup Effects

Known as “The Man of a Thousand Faces,” Lon Chaney designed many of his own makeup techniques. For The Hunchback of Notre Dame and The Phantom of the Opera, he wore painful prosthetics and wire devices that caused significant physical discomfort.

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Paul Mantz Died During Filming

Stunt pilot Paul Mantz was killed while filming The Flight of the Phoenix in 1965 after his aircraft crashed during a low-altitude sequence. Mantz had previously doubled for numerous Hollywood productions, including flying scenes connected to Superman serials.

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Bela Lugosi Was Buried as Dracula

When Bela Lugosi died in 1956, his family chose to bury him wearing one of his Dracula capes. The gesture reflected how closely the actor had become associated with the role that defined his career.

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Hattie McDaniel Had to Sit Separately at the Oscars

After becoming the first Black performer to win an Academy Award for Gone with the Wind, Hattie McDaniel was required to sit at a segregated table at the back of the ballroom because of the venue’s racial segregation policies.

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The Munchkins’ Costumes Were Washed in the Same Factory as Army Uniforms

Many of the elaborate Munchkin costumes from The Wizard of Oz were cleaned by the same industrial laundry that handled military uniforms. The harsh cleaning process caused rapid wear, forcing the wardrobe department to constantly repair or replace pieces during production.

The Wild GTA 6 Theory That Connects Rockstar’s Two Biggest Franchises

Few game studios generate fan theories like Rockstar Games. With Grand Theft Auto VI gameplay footage still under wraps and only a small batch of recently-released official screenshots available to them, players have been doing what they do best: dissecting every pixel for hidden meanings to fuel their theories. 

One of the most viral theories to emerge goes well beyond the typical Easter egg hunt, with fans now suggesting a familial connection between GTA 6 and Red Dead Redemption 2

At the center of the discussion is Jason Duval, one of GTA 6’s dual protagonists. Following the release of the new screenshots, fans began comparing Jason’s facial structure, expressions, and overall design to Arthur Morgan, the iconic outlaw from Red Dead Redemption 2. Side-by-side comparisons have since spread, with many arguing that the resemblance between the characters is too strong to dismiss as coincidence.  

Players have pointed to specific shared traits; similar eye shapes, nose structure, rugged facial features, freckles, and even the same broody frown as evidence that Rockstar could be hinting that Jason is a descendant of Arthur Morgan, despite the games taking place more than a century apart. 

The theory has also been reinforced by minor in-game details, including a weapon referred to as the “Morgan revolver,” which is a clear reference to Arthur but one fans have taken and run with now thanks to the visual comparisons between the protagonists. 

However, there’s no official confirmation from Rockstar Games that any narrative link exists between the two universes to even allow this familial tie to be possible. Most theorists and fans alike acknowledge that Rockstar has a long history of inserting Easter eggs across franchises without implying shared canon, like GTA 5’s book titled ‘Red Dead’ written by a ‘J. Marston,’ which is most likely a reference to John Marston’s son, Jack. 

But still, the theory has persisted and has even expanded beyond Jason alone. Some fans have argued that GTA 6’s dual-protagonist structure, featuring Lucia Caminos alongside Jason, mirrors the emotional and relational storytelling seen in Red Dead Redemption 2. That comparison has led to broader speculation that Rockstar may be reining in a shared story philosophy across both franchises, even if they are not explicitly connected. 

That seems more plausible than Jason being the product of surprise Morgan lineage, given that Arthur’s only known son, Isaac, died well before the events of Red Dead Redemption 2. One could argue that this alone already weakens any direct familial link between the two characters. 

More broadly, one could also point out that Rockstar frequently reuses familiar archetypes, such as outlaw couples, betrayal-driven narratives, and morally complex protagonists, without implying any literal connection between its universes. From that perspective, Jason’s resemblance to Arthur Morgan may simply reflect Rockstar’s consistent design language for rugged, grounded male leads rather than anything canonically significant. 

Real or not, the theory highlights something consistent about Rockstar’s fanbase: players love searching for meaning, and as GTA 6 inches closer to release and more is revealed, these theories are likely to grow bigger and bolder. Especially if Rockstar continues its tradition of subtle references between games that fuels such responses. 

For now, any confirmation that Jason Duval is related to Arthur Morgan remains purely fan speculation. Whether Rockstar has intentionally planted clues or the similarities are simply coincidental yet placed in the hands of a content-starved fan in desperate need of something to gnaw on won’t be known until GTA 6 launches on November 19, when players can finally see if the persisting theory holds any weight.

Pre-orders for Grand Theft Auto VI are now open, available for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.

Hideki Kamiya Pitches Every Resident Evil Fan’s Dream Spinoff 

Watering neat rows of crops, collecting fresh eggs from the coop, heading into town to greet neighbors before spending the afternoon fishing —these are only some of the quiet, predictable tasks that define the average Stardew Valley playthrough.

Now imagine the farmer behind that peaceful existence isn’t just a newcomer looking for a fresh start but instead a retired Leon S. Kennedy, who sees himself swapping bioweapon outbreaks and life-threatening missions for a well-earned life of peace on a humble farm, forging vegetables and inviting friends over for some BBQ. 

As ridiculous as it sounds, that’s exactly the kind of game Resident Evil 2 director Hideki Kamiya (perhaps jokingly) pitched and has since become a concept fans are falling in love with. 

Replying to a post Kamiya made congratulating the series on its 30th anniversary, a fan expressed their hopes for the director to return to the franchise saying, “I know you’re not good with scary things, but someday, I hope you’ll weave the story of Leon and Claire again…” 

In a response translated from Japanese, Kamiya shared a detailed vision for what that kind of sequel could look like. While Claire isn’t mentioned in the pitch, Kamiya imagined a cozy, slice-of-life adventure starring Leon, describing the DSO agent’s daily routine as one where he “goes fishing in the countryside, forages for wild veggies, bakes bread, walks the dog, tends a home garden, drives 50 km to the general store for supplies, invites old buddies over for a barbecue, fixes the neighbor grandma’s oven at her request, sells homemade lemonade at the local festival.” 

The idea of stripping the horror out of a Resident Evil game sounds absurd at first, considering it’s one of—if not the—most iconic horror franchises in gaming. However, it becomes less surprising when one remembers Kamiya’s well-documented dislike of the genre. 

In a clip shared by CLOVERS Inc. on X, he even suggested Capcom add a “non-scary mode” to Resident Evil Requiem, saying, “I’ve been saying for forever they should make a ‘non-scary’ mode.” When told it would “completely defeat the concept of the game,” he doubled down: “Look, I just want to enjoy the puzzles. The puzzles and the combat. I don’t need the scary stuff.

What would be surprising, and arguably more amusing than Kamiya’s ironic horror-phobia, would be seeing fan-favorite character Leon Kennedy in such a calm, peaceful environment. 

Since his debut in 1998’s Resident Evil 2, Leon has endured enough to make one wonder how he isn’t completely bald from stress (though his perfectly blond balayage side part is pretty suspicious). 

By the franchise’s latest installment, Requiem, the former Raccoon City cop-turned-bioweapon slayer is roughly 51 years old and has somehow survived decades of gunfire, stabbings, infections, explosions, car crashes, and more than a few moments of being tossed around like a rag doll

With that kind of resume, it’s no surprise that the idea of Leon finally living an easy, quiet life feels both completely implausible and oddly compelling. Fans seem to agree with the latter thought, expressing their enthusiasm for the concept in replies to Kamiya’s pitch post. 

Alongside a tearfully happy emoji, one user wrote, “I’m crying. This looks so peaceful for Leon, it’s the perfect life. The one he’s dreamed of for the rest of his life.” Another even imagined a potential gameplay moment, saying they “really want to see Uncle Leon grumbling ‘it’s so heartbreaking’ while staring at his charred meat after failing the BBQ QTE [Quick Time Event] and not grilling it right.” 

Kamiya even teased Capcom about the idea directly, suggesting that the level of fan interest might be a sign the studio should seriously consider bringing it to life, saying, Capcom, there are a lot of voices out there saying they want something like a Biohazard that’s not scary, so if you have some free time, please consider making it… I want to play it too…”

Whether or not the spinoff ever moves beyond wishful thinking is highly unlikely, considering Capcom’s current plans, but it’s hard to deny the appeal of the concept. After so much chaos, grief, and near-death experiences, the idea of Leon Kennedy finally getting to enjoy an untroubled countryside life feels almost as satisfying as any boss fight victory, if not more so. 

It’s the kind of simple, lighthearted take on Resident Evil that would find an audience not only among long-time Leon fans but also among those who are interested in seeing series with a little less horror, potentially giving Capcom an even broader audience if truly considered.