Daredevil: Born Again – Where is Luke Cage?

This article contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again seasons 2 and 3.

Only those who aren’t paying attention to the absolute mountain of Disney marketing were surprised to see Jessica Jones stride onto a rooftop to meet up with Matt Murdock in season 2 of Daredevil: Born Again. And, thanks to some now-deleted posts from actor Mike Colter, only those who aren’t on social media don’t know that Luke Cage will return for Born Again‘s third season.

But until then, there’s a Luke Cage-shaped hole in the lives of Jessica Jones and her daughter Danielle on Daredevil: Born Again season 2. Moreover, the nuggets we do get from Jessica make us think that Marvel‘s got bigger plans for Power Man than even a Defenders reunion in the third season of Born Again.

A few seconds into their rooftop rendezvous, Jessica mentions some “sketchy” government guy calling around with interest in “us”—meaning super-powered vigilantes. She and Matt don’t say any names for sure, but the subtext becomes text in episode seven, when Jessica goes to confront Mr. Charles, the CIA operative played by Matthew Lillard. When the two start threatening one another, Mr. Charles drops a bomb, reminding Jessica that he’s the only person who can connect her with Luke. When she demands to know where he is, Charles says only, “He’s overseas… doing the Lord’s work.”

That’s a loaded phrase, especially when we remember that Charles works directly under CIA head and general sketchy person Valentina Allegra de Fontaine. So one has to wonder, why would Luke take a job for someone like Mr. Charles and Val?

The simplest possibility is that Luke is doing a job. After all, he made his debut in a 1972 comic titled Luke Cage, Hero for Hire. Since his inception, Luke has been someone who understands the need to pay the bills, and doesn’t allow his labor to be exploited. As shown in an oft-memed comic frame, not even Doctor Doom could escape paying the bill if he owed Luke Cage money. Even in that earliest incarnation, Cage cared about justice and would never do anything to harm the community. But he was fundamentally a member of the working class, and understood that sometimes, you’ve got to do a job. So if Mr. Charles offered him a job, and he thought it wasn’t unethical to take it, Luke Cage could theoretically accept.

A more interesting answer involves the team with whom Val is most associated, at least among MCU fans. In 2010, Cage became the new leader of the Thunderbolts, a team of supervillains trying to become heroes. The assignment came at the request of Steve Rogers, who knew that Luke’s history as a man wrongfully imprisoned would give him insight and sympathy that other Avengers may lack. He served in that position for several years, until going onto form an Avengers splinter group dubbed the Mighty Avengers, and eventually rejoining with his frequent partner Danny Rand, a.k.a. Iron Fist.

While both of those options make sense, some might feel uncomfortable thinking about Luke Cage working for Mr. Charles for any reason. However, the comics might provide some insight there too. In the late 1990s series Heroes for Hire by writers Roger Stern and John Ostrander, penciled by Pasqual Ferry, Iron Fist puts together a new team and, of course, asks his old pal Luke to join. Luke declines, having decided to retire from superheroing and run the movie theater he bought with a long-time pal named David W. Griffith (yes… his name is D. W. Griffith).

Eventually, Luke does join the new Heroes for Hire. Yet, by the end of the series, we learn that he’s doing so under the command of a villain called the Master of the World, the type of caveman turned super-genius that you find kind of often in comics, believe it or not. However, it turns out that Cage was acting as a double-agent, pretending to betray his friends to the Master of the World to thwart his plan. If the MCU adapts this story, then Luke’s working with Mr. Charles could be part of a big heroic plan, so complex that not even his wife understands it.

Whatever Luke’s been up to, it can’t last forever. The pics that Mike Colter leaked show Cage back with Matt and Karen. And, if Matt’s bright orange duds are any indication, Daredevil won’t be leaving New York City anytime soon, so Luke must be back in the Big Apple. And when he does, he’ll have some explaining to do, not just to us fans, but especially to his wife, Jessica.

Daredevil: Born Again season 2 releases new episodes every Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET on Disney+.

Daredevil: Born Again Just Made a Major Change to One Character’s Fate

This article contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again season 2, episode 7

Daniel Blake wasn’t supposed to die in the penultimate episode of Daredevil: Born Again’s second season. According to showrunner Dario Scardapane and star Arty Froushan, who plays Wilson Fisk’s lethal right-hand man Buck Cashman, the scene where the Deputy Mayor gets shot to death originally played out with Buck letting him go and then lying to Fisk about his decision.

“The way that it would have gone is that [Blake] stayed in the Fisk administration,” Scardapane told Variety. “He goes in to resign and the new interim mayor is like, ‘I’m not taking your resignation. I’m going to keep you close because I don’t trust you.’”

Blake had been partially redeemed during the upsetting episode when he refused to kill his love interest, the rebellious journalist, BB Urich (Genneya Walton.) However, when they were editing the latest installment of the Marvel show, Scardapane said that Blake’s more upbeat fate felt wrong and unearned. He then had to break it to the actor who plays Blake, Michael Gandolfini, that his character wouldn’t make it.

“I was like, ‘Dude, I’ve got the worst news,’” Scardapane said. “And he’s like, ‘I know exactly what you’re gonna say, and it’s the right choice.’ He felt in that moment that there’s no way he’s getting out of that apartment. It was funny because there were scenes shot of him after that moment, and it really feels like we’re telling the wrong story here. I think it’s a testament to how much we all love him, that we knew this character probably should not survive but we just couldn’t bring ourselves to do it.”

A gunshot was then added in post-production, sealing Blake’s fate. “The fact that, as actors, we didn’t know that was gonna happen makes the scene maybe even more compelling,” Froushan explained. “I love Michael Gandolfini like a brother. This season, the whole journey we have together is a movie. So I was gutted. I was really upset. But I think it raises the stakes of the story in a really exciting way that was maybe necessary for that storyline.”

Gandolfini told TV Insider that Blake’s death felt “freeing,” adding, “I love Daniel, but it’s so right. Where else is he gonna go? And he gets this little hero’s moment, and it just felt so great, I just felt so lucky. Again it’s hard, you’ve got Bullseye, Fisk, Karen Page, Matt Murdock, and including other like people from the comics, so sometimes, characters that don’t have superpowers don’t have the longest arcs, and they’re there to support the superheroes, which is great, but the fact that Daniel got to have this, I just felt so touched and that they trusted me… there’s only so much screen time that you get every episode, and so like the fact that they gave me a real journey to go on, I was very lucky.”

Daredevil: Born Again streams new episodes on Tuesdays at 9pm EST on Disney+.

14 Iconic Photos From 1976’s “Taxi Driver”

Few films have left as lasting an impression as Taxi Driver. Directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Robert De Niro, the film captures a grim, haunting vision of 1970s New York through the eyes of a deeply troubled loner.

Its imagery has become inseparable from its legacy, with moments that feel burned into pop culture history. It can go from quiet introspection to sudden bursts of violence, with nearly every scene carrying a distinct visual identity. These photos revisit some of these moments from the film, the kind that could easily be frozen into unforgettable images.

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Travis Drives Through the Neon Streets

Travis Bickle’s taxi drifting through grim streets filled with neon lights captures the film’s mood immediately. The reflections, mood, and grime create a dreamlike but oppressive atmosphere that mirrors his growing isolation.

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Directing De Niro

The way Martin Scorsese managed to direct Robert De Niro into the iconic roll is legendary, and marked the way the two worked for decades.

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Travis Writing in His Journal

Sitting alone in his apartment, Travis writes his thoughts in a diary. The moment highlights his detachment from society, with the quiet setting emphasizing the intensity of his inner monologue.

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The Mirror Monologue

Travis rehearses a confrontation in front of a mirror, repeating the now-iconic “You talkin’ to me?” line. The scene’s simplicity makes it powerful, revealing his fractured mindset and desire for control.

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The Mohawk Transformation

Travis’s sudden appearance with a mohawk marks a turning point. The stark change in his look reflects his mental state, signaling his shift toward something far more dangerous and unpredictable.

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Travis Watching the City from the Cab

Seen from behind the wheel, Travis silently observes the chaos around him. The framing often isolates him from the world outside, reinforcing the divide between observer and participant.

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The First Meeting with Betsy

Travis notices Betsy from a distance, framed almost like an idealized figure. The contrast between her and the surrounding environment emphasizes how out of place she feels in his world.

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The Awkward Date at the Theater

Travis takes Betsy to an inappropriate film, completely misreading the situation. The tension of the moment highlights his inability to connect with others, turning a simple outing into an uncomfortable memory.

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The Gun Purchase Scene

Travis examines an array of weapons laid out before him. The quiet, methodical nature of the moment contrasts with its implications, marking a clear escalation in his intentions.

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Practicing Quick Draws Alone

In his apartment, Travis repeatedly practices drawing his weapons. The scene’s repetitive motion and silence underline his growing obsession and detachment from reality.

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The Sliding Gun Mechanism Reveal

Travis tests a homemade device that slides a gun into his hand. The mechanical precision of the moment feels unsettling, showing how far he has gone in preparing for violence.

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The Conversation with the Fellow Driver

A quiet exchange between Travis and another cab driver reveals his alienation. Even in conversation, he struggles to engage, reinforcing his inability to relate to those around him.

The Convenience Store Robbery

A sudden act of violence interrupts an otherwise mundane setting. The abruptness of the moment adds to its shock, showing how quickly Travis crosses moral boundaries.

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Travis and Iris

Jodie Foster would later be remembered for other roles, but at this young age, she was already staring in genre-defying films. Here, we see her sharing a scene with Robert De Niro’s Travis.

20 One-Hit Wonder Songs from the ’80s Everyone Still Knows

The 1980s were a perfect storm for one-hit wonders. With the rise of MTV, radio-friendly pop, and synth-driven production, artists could explode onto the charts with a single unforgettable track. Even if they never matched that success again, the songs themselves stuck around.

In fact, the era produced hundreds of acts remembered primarily for one standout hit, many of which still get regular airplay decades later. These tracks became cultural touchstones, tied to movies, commercials, and nostalgia playlists. Here are some of the most recognizable one-hit wonder songs from the ’80s that people still hum constantly today.

Come On Eileen, Dexys Midnight Runners

A global hit in 1982, this track became the defining song for Dexys Midnight Runners. Despite other releases, nothing matched its success, and it remains a staple of ’80s playlists and one of the decade’s most recognizable sing-alongs.

Take On Me, A-ha

Driven by its groundbreaking music video, this synth-pop hit became iconic worldwide. Although A-ha had more success internationally, in many markets they’re primarily remembered for this single defining track.

Spoiled Love, Soft Cell

This cover became a massive chart success and is widely regarded as Soft Cell’s signature song. Its minimalist sound and haunting tone helped it endure long after the band’s brief mainstream presence faded.

The Safety Dance, Men Without Hats

Known for its quirky lyrics and medieval-themed video, this synth-pop track became a major hit. The band never reached similar heights again, leaving this as their defining legacy.

I Ran (So Far Away), A Flock of Seagulls

With its distinctive guitar riff and futuristic aesthetic, the song became synonymous with early ’80s new wave. It remains far more famous than anything else the band released.

Maniac, Michael Sembello

Featured in Flashdance, “Maniac” became a massive hit tied to one of the decade’s most famous film scenes. Sembello never achieved the same level of recognition again.

Electric Avenue, Eddy Grant

Blending reggae and synth-pop, this track became a global hit in 1982. It remains Grant’s most widely recognized song and a frequent inclusion in ’80s retrospectives.

(I Just) Died in Your Arms, Cutting Crew

This dramatic power ballad topped charts and became the band’s signature hit. Despite continued releases, Cutting Crew never matched the song’s massive success.

She Blinded Me with Science, Thomas Dolby

This quirky synth-pop hit stood out for its eccentric lyrics and sound. While Dolby continued working in music and production, this remains his most recognizable song.

Turning Japanese, The Vapors

A defining new wave track, “Turning Japanese” became a hit in 1980 and remains the band’s only widely remembered song, despite their short-lived mainstream presence.

Break My Stride, Matthew Wilder

Its upbeat energy and memorable chorus helped it become a lasting pop hit. Wilder transitioned to behind-the-scenes work afterward, leaving this as his primary claim to fame.

Somebody’s Watching Me, Rockwell

Featuring a chorus by Michael Jackson, the song became a major hit. Rockwell never replicated its success, and the track remains a Halloween-season staple.

Two of Hearts, Stacey Q

A dance-pop classic, this track dominated clubs and radio. Stacey Q released more music, but none reached the same cultural impact.

Obsession, Animotion

Its infectious hook made it a standout hit of the mid-’80s. Animotion never achieved similar mainstream success afterward, cementing the song’s legacy.

Don’t Worry, Be Happy, Bobby McFerrin

Built entirely around vocal sounds, this song became a massive chart success. Despite McFerrin’s respected career, this remains his most widely recognized hit. And no, it’s not a Bob Marley song.

I Melt with You, Modern English

Though not initially a huge chart hit, it became iconic through films and commercials. Over time, it far outshined the band’s other work in cultural memory.

Let the Music Play, Shannon

A pioneering freestyle track, it helped define early dance-pop. Shannon never matched its success, but the song remains influential in club music history.

Our House, Madness

While Madness had broader success in the UK, this song became their defining hit internationally, especially in the U.S., where they are often remembered primarily for it.

Pass the Dutchie, Musical Youth

A global hit driven by its catchy rhythm and youthful energy, the song became instantly recognizable. Musical Youth never achieved comparable chart success afterward.

Walking on Sunshine, Katrina and the Waves

An enduring feel-good anthem, the song remains widely used in media and advertising. Despite later success in Europe, it stands as their defining hit for many listeners.

15 Burt Reynolds Movies That Couldn’t Be More 1970s

Few actors are as tightly linked to a single decade as Burt Reynolds is to the 1970s. With his swagger, humor, and unmistakable screen presence, Reynolds became the embodiment of the era’s laid-back, rebellious cool. His films often mixed action, comedy, and a distinctly Southern charm, reflecting a time when Hollywood leaned into grit, masculinity, and anti-establishment attitudes.

He’s often seen outrunning the law, playing flawed heroes, or leaning into pure absurdity, showing how Reynolds dominated the box office and pop culture alike. These movies feature him at his peak, making them inseparable from the tone, style, and attitude of the 1970s itself.

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Deliverance

A brutal survival story set in the wilderness, Deliverance pushed Reynolds into serious territory. Its raw violence and unsettling tone captured the decade’s darker edge, helping redefine him beyond light roles and cementing his place as a major Hollywood star.

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White Lightning

Reynolds plays Gator McKlusky, a moonshine runner entangled in corruption and revenge. With car chases, Southern grit, and anti-authority themes, the film perfectly reflects the era’s fascination with outlaw heroes and rural crime stories.

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The Longest Yard

Combining sports, rebellion, and prison drama, Reynolds leads a team of inmates against guards in a brutal football game. Its mix of humor and aggression embodies the decade’s appetite for anti-establishment storytelling.

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W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings

This crime-comedy hybrid leans into Southern charm and small-time outlaw antics. Reynolds’ easygoing charisma drives the film, which blends humor and crime in a way that feels distinctly tied to ’70s sensibilities.

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Hustle

A gritty detective story, Hustle dives into corruption and moral ambiguity. Reynolds plays a flawed cop navigating a bleak world, reflecting the decade’s shift toward more cynical, character-driven crime dramas.

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At Long Last Love

A musical experiment that became infamous for its reception, this film shows the era’s willingness to take risks. Reynolds’ participation highlights how even major stars embraced unconventional projects during the decade.

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Gator

Reynolds directs and stars in this sequel, doubling down on action, humor, and Southern flavor. The film’s mix of crime, stunts, and personal vendettas reflects his growing creative control and the era’s appetite for larger-than-life storytelling.

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Nickelodeon

Set during the early days of filmmaking, this comedy pairs Reynolds with Ryan O’Neal. While about another era, its tone and humor are unmistakably ’70s, embracing chaos, satire, and unconventional storytelling.

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The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing

A Western with darker undertones, the film blends romance and violence. Reynolds’ performance adds intensity to a story that reflects the decade’s revisionist approach to classic genres.

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Shamus

Reynolds plays a wisecracking private detective in a film that mixes noir elements with ’70s humor. Its casual tone and character-driven style align perfectly with the decade’s evolving approach to crime stories.

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Smokey and the Bandit

Arguably his most iconic role, Reynolds plays a charming outlaw outrunning law enforcement in a high-speed chase. The film’s humor, car culture, and rebellious tone made it a defining hit of the decade.

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Semi-Tough

Blending sports, satire, and romance, this film captures the decade’s obsession with self-improvement trends and counterculture ideas, all filtered through Reynolds’ laid-back, charismatic presence.

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Hooper

A love letter to stunt performers, Hooper leans heavily into action and humor. Reynolds plays a veteran stuntman, giving the film both physical spectacle and a self-aware nod to Hollywood excess.

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The End

This dark comedy, directed by Reynolds himself, explores mortality in an absurd, often chaotic way. Its willingness to mix humor with bleak subject matter reflects the experimental tone of late ’70s cinema.

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Starting Over

A romantic comedy with a more grounded, introspective tone, the film shows Reynolds adapting to changing trends at the end of the decade. It balances humor with emotional realism, marking a shift toward more character-focused storytelling.

Andy Serkis on the Legacy of Orwell, Gollum, and His Passion for Animals

Andy Serkis was still a child when his father disappeared into a black bag.

Before that horrible, indescribable plunge into uncertainty, the future actor and filmmaker had something of a cosmopolitan upbringing. Raised in Ruislip Manor, an area in the outer reaches of West London, Serkis is the son of Lylie, a half-English and Iraqi mother, and Clement, an Iraqi-Armenian father. And it was in Iraq that Clement helped build and raise up a Baghdad hospital, a feat which brought Serkis as a youth often to Middle East. That changed after his father made an anti-Ba’athist speech shortly after the party of new dictator Saddam Hussein came to power. 

“It landed him in a great deal of trouble,” Serkis reflects decades later on the other side of Hussein’s rise and fall, and Iraq’s continuous shift in fortunes. “He vanished for a while. He disappeared. We didn’t know what had happened to him for two months.”

Ultimately, Serkis’ father was released from prison and the country, and that hospital stood long enough to be commandeered by invading Americans, who in turn transformed it into a military facility. Still, neither Serkis nor his family has stepped foot in it since the 1980s.

“I suppose I was made aware of power and the abuse of power quite early on,” Andy says.

An Orwellian Life

The corrosive nature of power remains firmly perched in the storyteller’s mind. How could it leave after those dramatic childhood memories? Or, for that matter, his most famous roles, including the compromised and ruined Gollum, desperate to please his precious One Ring, or the more equanimous and regal Caesar in the recent Planet of the Apes trilogy. When we catch up with Serkis in a posh Italian eatery in New York’s Upper East Side, with the one-time King Kong actor fittingly dining on a meal of octopus, it is those formative experiences and stories he seems most eager to revisit. After all, he has just completed more than a decade of work that came with realizing his vision for an Animal Farm adaptation.

“I first read it on the bus going to school when I was about 11 or 12 years old,” Serkis recalls of George Orwell’s dystopian parable about an animal revolution against humans that, tragically, still ends in oppression and tyranny. “I remember being really taken in by this story that I knew was a fairy tale, because it had animals in it, so it felt innocent. And yet, there was something very sinister underneath it. It was the first time I really connected with a book in that way.”

Serkis confides his own childhood experiences with the Ba’athists might have made the story resonate with him more easily, saying when he read it, “I could see what was going on with the show trials of the animals and the persecution of the proletariat, as it were, by the elite.”

It was an image that stayed with him and came into greater focus when the prospect of turning the 1945 novel into a 21st century film became tangible. Serkis first began discussing the film with the Orwell estate around 2011, and even then the concept was to modernize the story. Initially, that would have featured a more complex approach, with the film being conceived as a motion-capture epic that utilized the same technology Serkis helped pioneer in movies like The Lord of the Rings. However, the tact eventually pivoted to treating it as a family-friendly animated endeavor.

The more all-ages attempt at modernizing Animal Farm for young viewers of today has earned the ire of a number of critics due to, among other things,  the film essentially supplanting the novel’s allegory about the Russian Revolution with a more current vision of authoritarianism. But in addition to underscoring that the Orwell estate always gave this direction their support, Serkis is quick to point out that the film taps into the dark despair about the cycles of human history which appear in the book.

“We really wanted to make this for young people, and so it becomes what are the things they can relate to?” In this way, Orwell’s reigning ambitious pig Napoleon better resembles a modern-day populist prone to self-aggrandizement and mendacious lies than a 1:1 proxy for Joseph Stalin. And as Serkis sought to “explore the world of the pigs” more than their largely off-stage presence in the novel, one of the female pigs of the film becomes akin to an influencer than Orwell’s oblivious people-pleasers.

“It’s more pernicious because it’s aimed predominantly at the destruction of truth,” Serkis contends, “and that’s such a huge theme of the book, the annihilation of what is the value that we ascribe to truth.” And if his desire to “go inside the bunker” of the pigs’ world led to any curiously overt echoes of Donald Trump, then even that is coincidental, according to the director. “We asked Seth [Rogen] to play Napoleon in 2012,” Serkis says. “Trump wasn’t even on the scene, really. Not in terms of a credible force.” Still, he allows “it’s bizarre” how much the dismantlement of truth has accelerated around the world since that time.

In the end, Serkis would seem to argue that, for all its modernizations and tweaks, his Animal Farm still grapples with the same grim observations of human nature that Orwell first set to capture on the page. Pointing to the anecdote of how the premise of the book came to the author upon seeing a country work-horse being beaten half to death by its owner, Serkis suggests Orwell’s entire biography is what makes the story timeless.

“He was part of the British colonial forces out in Burma,” Serkis says. “And he had gone from this posh public school boy at Eton to being part of the Burmese police force on behalf of the British Empire, and inflicting and controlling. Then he realized the error of his ways.”

In some sense, alongside activism that saw Orwell fighting the fascists in Spain, Animal Farm was a kind of atonement for the author. As well as a tribute to all who are exploited—not least of all the animals.

Monkeying Around for a Career

Much of Serkis’ journey has likewise been shaped by an appreciation and study of animals, of the farm persuasion or otherwise. The vocal inflections that led to the breakthrough of Gollum’s sound and cadence came from the actor watching his cat stifle a hairball. And of course two of his other most famous roles, Caesar the lawgiver in Matt Reeves’ Planet of the Apes trilogy and King Kong, came from our distant simian cousins.

“You become aware that all animals are sentient, they all have codes,” Serkis says about our neighbors on this planet. “They all have ways of being. They all have behavior. We are so connected to them and the patterns of behavior are recognizable. Anthropomorphization is something I’ve spent a lot of time doing.”

He developed a kinship, especially, with gorillas during the production of King Kong some 20 years ago. It began with an eye-opening tour of gorillas in the mists of Rwanda, where he observed how their peaceful and almost beatnik behavior better resembled hippies vibing out around a Piccadilly drum circle than the monster of Merian C. Cooper’s original 1933 King Kong.

But it was after he returned to England to work with gorillas at the London Zoo at Regent’s Park that he got to know the friendly female ape named Zaire—and aa bloke named Bob.

“I spent a good couple of months everyday visiting Zaire, and having a 1:1 sort of relationship with them,” Serkis explains. “We used to play games, we used to pass sticks to each other…. and Bob had been brought in as part of the breeding program, and he was very jealous of me because he was supposed to be there, but the three female gorillas were not interested in Bob. But with Zaire, I had a bit of a friendship.”

With a grin growing across his face, Serkis adds, “So Bob really didn’t like me. He used to watch me with beady eyes and give me a really hard stare every time I used to walk past his enclosure. Then he started this habit of gathering a small pile of stones, and whenever I turned my back, he’d throw them.”

Finding Kong’s animosity for Adrien Brody would come naturally later.

One Role to Rule Them All

The study of physical behavior, human or animal, live-action or motion-capture, unsurprisingly is organic to Serkis, especially these days, albeit he’ll admit it’s a far cry from how he initially perceived his art form. Serkis in fact felt slighted when he was first told Peter Jackson was considering him for the role of a digital character named Gollum in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. “There must be a load of decent roles in that film where I could play proper characters!” he told his agent at the time. In retrospect, however, Serkis concedes he was training his whole life for Gollum. 

“I’ve always found physicality, voice, and the psychology of a character to be inextricably linked,” says Serkis. “Voice comes out of where you carry tension or pain, or how you express yourself in an articulate or inarticulate way.” In the case of Gollum, that includes the epiphany that only a heaving feline could inspire. “He’s got this constriction in his throat and the raspiness in his voice, and that breath was really about where he carries his tension.”

When Jackson and longtime collaborator and partner Fran Walsh first approached Serkis, motion-capture was more a nascent technology associated with the medical industry’s ability to build functional prosthetics than it was seen as a moviemaking tool. Yet Serkis’ history with movement, both as a student at Lancaster University and as a young actor playing a character named Dog Boy in April De Angelis’ play, Hush, made Gollum’s vulnerability seem natural. This proved doubly true since Dog Boy required nudity every night in front of a London audience.

“Gollum is slightly naked and faces the elements,” Serkis muses, “and I shaved my head completely so that I could feel the wind on my skull.” Plus, he sheepishly laughs, “You have to be quite fearless to wander around in a gimp suit. No question! I’ll never forget the first day of shooting Lord of the Rings, and turning up in front of a crew of 250 rough, tough Kiwis on top of a mountain, and standing there in little more than a lycra speed-skating suit.”

Fathers, Sons, and Batman

Coming to film direction from the school of acting, Serkis equates the transition as generally going from being the son to a father. As the helmer, he must lead, or parent, a whole production. But while Animal Farm represents a kind of zenith in a 15-year journey for the filmmaker into cinematic parenthood, the next peak is coming fast, and it’s one where he will inhabit multiple generations at once: The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.

“We’ll find out if that son gets out of control,” Serkis chuckles about his most famous character. “Tell him, I might have to discipline him or them.”

It’s a production Serkis is particularly excited about since it is a chance to go back to some of the old ways the original film trilogy was produced between 1999 and 2003. “We’re using miniatures; we’re employing some of the older techniques and bringing some of the new techniques to bear as well. So we will be walking the tightrope of creating a world that people are familiar with, but also in terms of the story, it’s an entirely new story.”

With that said, Serkis is unsure of how many stories he has left to tell. He is always eager to continue his first love of acting, including when he reprises the role of Alfred Pennyworth in Matt Reeves’ The Batman: Part II.

“I read a script a long way back but I know it’s evolved and changed since, so I have no idea where it is at the moment,” Serkis teases. But even there, the thrill is largely collaborating again with his Planet of the Apes partner and patriarch.

“Matt and I worked on the Planet of the Apes movies together first of all, and we developed a very strong friendship, and actually one of the themes that sort of link us is his relationship to fatherhood. So his is always an emotional approach, and he took a very emotional approach to Batman. In the first film, the relationship between Alfred and Batman is quite an emotional one. And that notion of father is important going back to your original [Apes]. It’s very present for us both, so I’ll be interested to see if that develops in this one.”

But for his own onscreen children beyond Gollum and now Orwell?

“I’m working on all different types of projects. The only problem is there’s only so much time. And all you have to do is decide what to do with the time that is given to you,” Serkis says, with the trace of a Hobbit-like smirk. “It really is though. There comes a point with filmmaking, if they’re all going to take as long as Animal Farm, you think, ‘Wow, how many more have we got?”

At least enough to scale Mount Doom one more time.

Animal Farm is in theaters on Friday, May 1.

15 Photos Remembering Just How Cool Tom Selleck Really Was

Few actors have embodied effortless cool quite like Tom Selleck. With his signature mustache, laid-back confidence, and commanding screen presence, Selleck became a defining figure of ’80s television and beyond.

He has always been iconic, no matter if he was playing a Hawaiian-shirt-wearing private investigator or a no-nonsense authority figure; he brought a natural charisma that never felt forced. His roles often balanced toughness with charm, making him equally believable in action, drama, and comedy. Over decades, that consistent appeal turned him into a symbol of a timeless, understated cool.

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Magnum, P.I., Thomas Magnum

Selleck’s breakout role defined his career, playing a charismatic private investigator in Hawaii. The show ran from 1980 to 1988 and earned him an Emmy win, cementing Magnum as one of television’s most iconic leading characters.

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Blue Bloods, Frank Reagan

As a New York City police commissioner, Selleck anchored the long-running procedural with authority and restraint. The role showcased a more mature, grounded performance and kept him a major television presence well into the 2010s and 2020s.

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Jesse Stone

Across nine television movies, Selleck portrayed a troubled small-town police chief. The role allowed for a more introspective performance, focusing on character depth and personal struggle rather than action-driven storytelling.

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Three Men and a Baby, Peter Mitchell

Playing a bachelor forced into sudden fatherhood, Selleck helped lead one of the biggest box office hits of 1987. The film’s success proved his viability as a leading man in mainstream cinema.

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Three Men and a Little Lady, Peter Mitchell

Reprising his role, Selleck continued the character’s evolution into a more committed father figure. While less impactful than the original, it reinforced his appeal in family-oriented comedy.

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Quigley Down Under, Matthew Quigley

In this Western, Selleck played an American sharpshooter in Australia. The role highlighted his suitability for rugged, heroic characters and remains one of his most respected film performances.

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Friends, Dr. Richard Burke

Selleck’s recurring role as Monica’s older boyfriend became a fan favorite. His chemistry with the cast and understated charm made the character memorable despite limited screen time.

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In & Out, Peter Malloy

Playing a manipulative TV reporter, Selleck stepped into a more antagonistic role. The performance showed his range, balancing charm with opportunism in a satirical comedy setting.

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Mr. Baseball, Jack Elliot

Selleck starred as an aging baseball player sent to Japan. The role combined sports drama with fish-out-of-water comedy, giving him a chance to carry a film centered entirely on his character.

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Runaway, Jack Ramsay

In this sci-fi thriller, Selleck played a police officer dealing with malfunctioning robots. The role placed him in a more action-oriented, futuristic setting, showing his versatility beyond traditional genres.

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Lassiter, Nick Lassiter

Selleck took on the role of a suave cat burglar in 1930s London. The film leaned heavily on his charisma and classic leading-man appeal, even if it didn’t achieve major commercial success.

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An Innocent Man, Jimmie Rainwood

This crime drama cast Selleck as a man wrongfully imprisoned. The darker tone allowed him to explore a more serious, emotionally driven performance compared to his usual roles.

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Her Alibi, Phil Blackwood

In this romantic comedy, Selleck played a mystery writer caught up in a suspicious relationship. The role leaned into his comedic timing while maintaining his familiar leading-man persona.

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Las Vegas, A.J. Cooper

Joining the series in later seasons, Selleck played the new casino owner. Though not as defining as his earlier work, the role showed his continued relevance in ensemble television drama.

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The Sacketts, Orrin Sackett

In this Western miniseries, Selleck portrayed one of the Sackett brothers. The role aligned with his natural fit for frontier characters and contributed to his long-standing association with Western storytelling.

The Most Over-the-Top ’80s Action Movies to Ever Grace Our Screens

The action movies of the 80s defined a very particular style: one-man armies, one-liners, and massive explosions heroes walk away from. This formula is still being used today, but whenever it appears, it is classified as 80s action style, particularly within the Marvel Cinematic Universe or other franchises like Fast and Furious.

Not every movie was made this way, but enough heavy hitters came with the formula that it was bound to stick. Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger and many others built their careers on these movies, and we wouldn’t have it any other way.

Commando

A one-man army mowing through dozens of enemies to rescue his daughter, Commando condenses every ’80s action trope into one film. Endless gunfire, exaggerated kills, and relentless one-liners make it a defining example of excess-driven action filmmaking.

circa 1980: Sylvester Stallone, star of the Rocky and Rambo films. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Rambo: First Blood Part II

The sequel transforms John Rambo from a grounded veteran into a near-superhuman force. Armed with explosive arrows and endless ammunition, he single-handedly takes on an army, redefining the franchise as pure spectacle rather than character-driven drama.

Predator

What starts as a military rescue mission quickly escalates into an all-out war against an alien hunter. Packed with heavy weaponry, explosions, and hyper-masculine bravado, the film blends sci-fi and action into a famously excessive showdown.

The Terminator

A relentless cyborg assassin chasing its target through time turns this into a nonstop chase of destruction. Its mix of gunfights, explosions, and unstoppable villain helped define the decade’s love for larger-than-life action.

Cobra

Sylvester Stallone plays a cop who operates entirely outside the rules, taking on a cult with brutal efficiency. The film leans heavily into stylized violence, exaggerated machismo, and minimal plot, making it one of the decade’s most extreme action showcases.

Road House

Patrick Swayze’s bouncer turns a small-town bar conflict into a full-scale war. The film escalates from fistfights to explosions, embracing a level of melodrama and violence that feels perfectly in line with late ’80s action excess.

Bloodsport

Jean-Claude Van Damme headlines this martial arts spectacle filled with exaggerated fights and dramatic slow-motion moments. Its underground tournament premise becomes an excuse for increasingly intense and stylized combat sequences.

Big Trouble in Little China

This film throws everything together, martial arts, fantasy, monsters, and action, creating a chaotic blend that constantly escalates. Its willingness to pile on absurd elements makes it one of the most uniquely over-the-top entries of the decade.

RoboCop

Combining ultraviolence with satire, RoboCop delivers extreme action through brutal shootouts and exaggerated corporate dystopia. Its graphic approach to violence pushes it into unforgettable territory.

Escape from New York

Set in a dystopian prison city, the film embraces absurdity through its premise alone. Snake Plissken’s mission unfolds with stylized action, eccentric characters, and a tone that leans heavily into genre exaggeration.

Beverly Hills Cop

Eddie Murphy’s wisecracking detective turns a standard crime story into a fast-paced action-comedy. Its shootouts and car chases are elevated by Murphy’s energy, pushing it into a more exaggerated, crowd-pleasing style.

Lethal Weapon

The buddy-cop formula is pushed to extremes through explosive action and unpredictable characters. Mel Gibson’s unhinged performance adds to the film’s chaotic energy.

Die Hard

Though more grounded than some peers, Die Hard still delivers escalating action through explosions, gunfights, and a one-man battle against terrorists in a skyscraper, setting a new standard for spectacle-driven action.

Top Gun 1986

Top Gun

Aerial combat sequences and high-speed dogfights give the film its over-the-top appeal. Its emphasis on style, music, and adrenaline helped define the blockbuster action aesthetic of the decade.

Raw Deal

Arnold Schwarzenegger plays an undercover agent taking down the mob with overwhelming force. The film leans heavily into exaggerated violence and explosive confrontations, fitting squarely within the decade’s excess.

20 Fun Photos Taken Behind the Scenes of Movies from the 1970s

The 1970s were a time of constant evolution for cinema. Movies, the way they were made and the actors involved in them were in a constant flux of transformation, with technology advancing at an alarming rate. Horror, science fiction and sci-fi genres were in the rise, and their pioneers were looking for new ways to shoot their films.

This is what these pictures show: the real people behind the camera, their artistry at full display. Sometimes, they didn’t even use people, but it was all to trick the eye into getting a deep understanding of the story.

The Legacy

This here marks the first time Sam Elliott and Katherine Ross worked together. It might seem small, but it is where they met, and they’ve been a couple since 1978.

Three Days of the Condor

This may look like an actual scene in progress, but it actually shows actors Robert Redford and Cliff Robertson getting a feel for the set. The actual scene ends up a bit more chaotic.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show

It’s strange to watch these characters not just together, but calm and collected. Turns out, you need to stay still for the filmmakers to adjust your gothic cape.

Smokey and the Bandit

Working with animals can often be difficult, but dogs make everything better. Here, we see Burt Reynolds with Fred, the Basset Hound.

Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Line Up

Here, we have the world-renowned director, Steven Spielberg, prepearing an important shot in India. We can see the difficult preparation that went into every attempt at the scene.

Rocky

The fight scenes in Rocky were something ahead of their time, and it was certainly complicated to haul all the camera equipment to an actual boxing ring. But the results speak for themselves.

Star Wars, Millenium Falcon

Few things compare to actors than having a good time while filming, and these picture shows just that. Sadly, we don’t know if Chewbacca’s actor, Peter Mayhew, was smiling like everyone else.

Apocalypse Now

There are countless legends of how hard Apocalypse Now was to film, and how much of a toll it was in Martin Sheen’s life. Knowing that, seeing both him and director Francis Ford Coppola together on set is a bit eerie.

Alien

The preparation of the Facehugger scene has some history in Alien, since it leads to the Chestburster. But the cast was not warned of that second part.

Waterloo, Napoleon being instructed

Here we see actor Rod Steiger fully dressed-up as Napoleon, getting ready for his next scene. Curious how he never left the commander’s expression, even when not rolling.

Waterloo, fake army

Who needs and army when you have plastic models? This shows how the filmmakers avoided needing a literal platoon of people just for a few shots. Today, it would be all CGI.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

Nothing like a break between terrorizing the population. Of course, it clearly was not a long break, since most of the cast is still in costume.

Paint Your Wagon

There are times were you need to stop and think of what you, or rather your character, is doing. This is what was captured in this photograph of Lee Marving during the filming of Paint Your Wagon.

Close Encounters of the Third Kind, arm wrestle

It’s important for all actors to find levety during filming, but that’s even more important with child actors. Here, we see director Steven Spielberg reminding Cary Guffey that it is ok to be a little kid.

Star Wars, C-3PO

This may be a shock to you, but C-3PO isn’t a robot, it was played by actor Anthony Daniels. But at least the rest of the cast was actually interacting with something; the same can’t be said with R2D2.

Carrie

The final scene of Carrie is quite impresive, be it in the book, or on its many film adaptations. For the 1976 rendition of the story, the proximity of the fire to Sissy Spacek makes it feel even more intense.

Superman: The Movie

While this is quite the casual picture, it’s hard to know who Christopher Reeve is playing right now. Is it Clark Kent without his glassess? Superman without his suit? Hard to tell, but Valerie Perrine wasn’t complaining.

Halloween

If you found a given movie too scary, the behind the scenes pictures can help leave the horror behind. Here, we see Nick Castle, the actor behind Michael Myers, goofing around with his mask and a soda.

Star Wars, Shave

Few things show brotherly support than aiding your brother shave his nose. Not that Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill were brothers, but they characters were.

Jaws

Many people focus on the giant animatronic shark when discussing Jaws, but it wouldn’t be the same without both Steven Spielberg and Roy Scheider. Here, we see them prepare the next shot of the film.

The Boys Tricked Everyone With its Big Season 5 Cameos

This article contains spoilers for The Boys season 5 episode 5.

Supernatural fans were intrigued to find out earlier this year that the final season of The Boys would feature a long-awaited reunion. Jared Padalecki and Misha Collins were set to guest star alongside Jensen Ackles’ Soldier Boy in episode 5, playing “douchebags,” The Boys (and Supernatural) showrunner Eric Kripke teased. So when it was released, excited viewers may have been checking their watches as the episode ticked over the 45-minute mark, wondering when the duo might actually show up.

When Padalecki and Collins did finally appear onscreen as ageing supes Mister Marathon and Malchemical—minor antagonists in the comics the show is based on—they weren’t alone. In a rather cunning bit of misdirection, we were so focused on our Supernatural faves that we didn’t expect the rest of the surprising cameos that The Boys had in store during the episode!

Let’s take a look at everyone we met playing cards at Mister Marathon’s mansion. That is, before they died horribly, of course…

Kumail Nanjiani

Like almost everyone on this list, the Eternals actor appears as himself during the final minutes of episode 5. He sits next to The Boys executive producer Seth Rogen during the group’s card game and discusses Vought’s capture of Aziz Ansari, Macaulay Culkin, Joaquin Phoenix, Kiefer Sutherland, Benedicts Wong and Cumberbatch, and even Meryl Streep.

Rogen and Kumail Nanjiani are connected through mutual colleagues in the comedy world, such as director Judd Apatow, who produced Nanjiani’s award-winning movie, The Big Sick.

Seth Rogen

Rogen tells Homelander they already met at the premiere of one of Black Noir’s movies, Silent Vengeance 3: Vengeance Reloaded, but Homelander clearly can’t remember the encounter.

In reality, it would probably be hard for most of The Boys’ cast and crew to forget Rogen, who has been an executive producer on the hit show since 2016, along with his longtime collaborator, Evan Goldberg. The Pineapple Express star has made minor cameos on the mothership show before, and has also produced several spinoffs in the franchise, including Gen V and Diabolical.

Here, Rogen amusingly suggests that getting Lena Dunham to write a piece for The Atlantic will draw more eyes to the plight of people being rounded up into Vought’s “freedom” camps, but he seems to be playing both sides, as he tells Homelander that he’s planning to testify before Congress that Post Malone is a suspected Starlighter.

Christopher Mintz-Plasse

Breaking out in 2007’s Superbad (co-written by and also starring Rogen) where he starred as the iconic Fogell a.k.a. McLovin, Christopher Mintz-Plasse previously made an appearance as another fictional version of himself in Rogen’s 2013 apocalyptic comedy horror, This Is the End, with an ensemble cast that also boasted Jonah Hill, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, and Michael Cera.

In The Boys, Mintz-Plasse suggests turning in his Superbad co-star to snag a coveted movie role, and tries to smoke a joint with Homelander, which is not well received (to put it mildly.)

Will Forte

SNL alum Will Forte is yet another celebrity playing a skewed version of himself here. He admits he turned in Channing Tatum (who also popped up as Danny McBride’s sex slave in This Is the End) and drops a bombshell by telling everyone that fellow SNL co-star Bill Hader has been executed. For what, we can only imagine, but it must have been some big talk against Homelander and Vought’s deadly dealings.

Forte and Rogen are notably connected through the former’s role in Akiva Schaffer’s 2012 sci-fi comedy The Watch, which was co-written by Rogen and also starred Erin Moriarty in an early role before she went on to her breakout part as Starlight in The Boys.

Craig Robinson

Robinson only gets to register a little surprise at seeing Soldier Boy before he gets moved directly into Mister Marathon’s path and explodes, but it sure is fun to see him, however briefly.

The popular comedian and musician previously appeared in This Is the End, Knocked Up, Pineapple Express, and Sausage Party, the 2016 adult animated movie co-written by Rogen. He is also beloved for his role in Brooklyn Nine-Nine as Doug “the Pontiac Bandit” Judy.

Jared Padalecki

Finally, we get to the actors not playing themselves in this episode 5 cameofest! Supernatural star Jared Padalecki previously revealed his episode 5 character as Mister Marathon before its release, but we still didn’t really know what to expect!

Mister Marathon is a drug-peddling D-list speedster who was in The Seven at one point, but he was replaced with A-Train when he “got slow.” Homelander notes that Mister Marathon stars in movies made by Sony Pictures Television, one of the production companies behind The Boys, where “washed-up supes go to die,” though this seems like more of a dig at Sony’s live-action Spider-Man universe, where they can’t use any other big Marvel characters, so are stuck trying to make stuff like Madame Web a thing.

Mister Marathon tries to convince Soldier Boy to kill Homelander and stop his plan to become the new messiah. He manages to appeal to a surprisingly pro-choice Soldier Boy, but he ultimately pushes back against Mister Marathon’s plan and destroys both his legs before stamping on his head. Before that, Soldier Boy eventually determines that his old pal Bombsight probably has the remaining V1 everyone’s been looking for this season.

Misha Collins

Ackles and Padalecki’s other longtime Supernatural co-star, Misha Collins, also appears in the episode as a minor Supe named Malchemical, who can create deadly gases. He breathes one such gas in Homelander’s face, knocking him out and asking Soldier Boy to team up with them against Homelander.

Soldier Boy breaks his neck after realizing that no matter how messed up his biological son is, he can’t kill him.

The Boys Season 5 Episode 5 Review: Mess Served Hot

This review contains spoilers for The Boys season 5 episode 5.

It’s kinda hard to know where to start with this episode, since it’s nonlinear and tells a day’s worth of stories from different character perspectives. Unfortunately, while some are certainly better than others, together they’re serving a hot, uneven mess. Still, I was surprised to find one of them truly engrossing.

First up is Firecracker, who’s about to completely sell out her faith and the last remaining people who truly care about her. Then we hop back to Black Noir, who loses his mentor (the always-amusing Adam Bourke) to The Deep’s petty violence. There’s also a ludicrous segment with Terror that involves both his carnal desires and taste for chocolate. Meanwhile, Sister Sage is the smartest person in the world, we are continually told, and in this episode, that involves manipulating both Ashleys and starting a world war. Frankly, if that’s the best she’s got, I’m good. Quite happy to stay low IQ.

Finally, we get back to the search for that elusive dose of V1 as we switch to Soldier Boy’s perspective. Threatening Stan Edgar gets him and Homelander a lead: Mr. Marathon (played by Ackles’s Supernatural co-star Jared Padalecki) and the pair ventures over to his mansion for a chat about his Madame Web-level movies and some hints about where they can start looking for the V1 next, because Mr. Marathon doesn’t really have anything to offer that isn’t cocaine, nostalgia, or dreams. Along with gassy pal Malchemical (Misha Collins, completing the Supernatural reunion) Marathon explains that one of these dreams is to kill Homelander and stop his bonkers plan to rule over them as their new god. A suddenly paternal Soldier Boy doesn’t buy into it, and carnage ensues.

I watched all 15 seasons of Supernatural of my own free will (glutton for punishment) and was hyped to see Padalecki and Collins share the screen with Ackles again. Regrettably, I am not entirely immune to key jangling. But while their performances are amusing, they’re somewhat dampened by all the other surprise cameos in the segment, which feels a bit like This Is the End redux. “Celebrities saying stuff that is wildly out of character with their public image” was funny 13 years ago (I also enjoyed This Is the End!) but it’s grown stale, and season 5 has been so filler-y already that it’s just more noise in the mix. Seth Rogen, Kumail Nanjiani, Will Forte, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Craig Robinson…love all those guys, but this schtick is tiresome.

Maybe if I rewatch this season later on, I’ll feel differently. It’s hard to say. I can only express how I feel week to week at the moment, and seeing The Boys fall into worn millennial comedy tropes when it used to have so much edge has got me grinding my teeth into a paste. Your mileage may vary, though. Perhaps I am being too much of a curmudgeon this week!

I’m also having a hard time buying into Soldier Boy’s conflicting feelings for Homelander. One minute, he’s happy to torture him, the next, he’s feeling a weird kind of love for the tyrant. Soldier Boy once saw his own grandson as little more than collateral damage, but is ultimately just fine getting behind Homelander’s plan, despite clearly finding it insane. Is Soldier Boy working his own angle here? I guess we’ll find out. If he’s not, it comes across as though they’re writing the character around whatever actions the episode calls for. Not great!

At the start, I mentioned that I only found one of episode 5’s “one-shots” truly engrossing, and that would be Firecracker’s. As a people pleaser who’s found the ultimate person to please (and one who has become utterly unenamored by how she pleases) Firecracker cuts such a tragic figure in The Boys. To be clear, she absolutely sucks, and there’s no defending her actions, but watching her go through the turmoil of being Vought’s propaganda mouthpiece has been genuinely painful because it’s painful to watch anyone who might have once had good intentions bury them under a mountain of fascist bullshit. You may even have friends or family members who have done so.

What do they really get out of it in the end? They are simply more wheel meat for the tank, regardless of whether they appear to have any perceived weaknesses. The assholes they worship will never save them because they only care about themselves. Though Ashley may yet find some redemption in this season, Firecracker is too far gone. She died as she lived, desperately trying to hitch her star to a black hole. Getting sucked into oblivion is a fitting end for her. But I don’t think I’ll ever forget that final image of her dead body slumping off the wing of an eagle.

The Boys has certainly never been subtle.

New episodes of The Boys season 5 premiere Wednesdays on Prime Video.

Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Episode 7 Review – The Hateful Darkness

This article contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again season two, episode seven.

No one should ever get close to Matt Murdock. This is the ultimate moral of every Daredevil story. Yes, he’s incredibly charming and incredibly handsome. Yes, he has an unshakable sense of ethics. But Matt Murdock follows those ethics so tightly, he lets his Catholic guilt so stridently drive his motivations that he ends up hurting himself, and brings everyone else down with him.

The penultimate episode of Born Again‘s second season, “The Hateful Darkness,” directed by Iain B. MacDonald and written by Heather Bellson, traces the fallout of being Matt’s friend. Karen Page is in prison, Kirsten McDuffie’s in the legal battle of her life, and Jessica Jones is pulled back into the superhero scene of New York City. “The Hateful Darkness” is mostly set-up for next week’s finale, but as each piece moves into place—or, in the case of poor, departed Daniel Blake—removed from the board entirely, it’s Matt’s crusade that drives them.

To the degree that “The Hateful Darkness” has a discrete arc, it’s Karen dealing with her prison sentence. She’s talked a big game throughout this season, insisting that the resistance needs to take more extreme measures and berating Matt for wanting to spare Bullseye, the man who killed their friend Foggy Nelson. Now, she gets to walk the walk, having been caught at the end of last week’s episode.

Although more three-dimensional than her comic book counterpart, Deborah Ann Woll’s Karen Page has suffered just as much as her four-color predecessor. That steeliness allows her to stand up to the pressure of her sentence, whether it’s staring down Fisk or, in a compelling twist on the classic Daredevil moral, taunting Matt’s ex Heather Glenn with stories of their undying love. Karen has inner strength, to be sure; but she also believes that she and the protesters have finally struck a killing blow against the Fisk administration, and she just needs to wait it out while his entire legal system crumbles.

She’s not the only one who sees things this way. The episode checks in with Mr. Charles, easily the most disappointing element of Born Again’s second season. We here at Den of Geek dearly love Matthew Lillard and would never side with any loudmouth filmmaker who bad mouths him. But there’s no question that he’s been mishandled this season, forced to play a bland and imprecise government operative. With no sense of identity or direction for Mr. Charles, Lillard has to play his standard party guy character, which clashes with the series’ tone.

In addition to some more oblique discussion with Jessica Jones about the actions of her husband Luke Cage, Mr. Charles reveals that the U.S. government no longer considers Wilson Fisk a useful ally. That leads the way for Governor McCaffrey (the also-great Lili Taylor, just as squandered as Lillard) to remove Fisk as mayor. She’s briefly interrupted by a masked man who tries to kill her, who in turn is interrupted by a masked man killing him. It’s Bullseye, having been set free by Matt (remember what we said about him making bad decisions?) and still playing the hero in his own violent way.

Those within the Fisk administration also feel the impending doom, which leads Buck Cashman to finally deal with Daniel Blake. Daniel Blake has been one of the more successful parts of Born Again’s two seasons, showing how a genuinely good kid gets seduced by the promise of power offered by Fisk’s persona. His friendship with BB has been his one remaining tether to decency, but by the time he recovers that good side in this episode, it’s too late. He lets BB go and pays the price, first with a beating and then with a bullet in the head from Buck.

Daniel’s not the only person to take a bullet in “The Hateful Darkness.” Matt also gets tagged, but not in costume. In his latest big, terrible decision, Matt emerges from hiding to stand alongside Kirsten as co-councilor for Karen Page. The reveal of Matt entering the courtroom indulges in legal drama tropes, but it doesn’t do much more than baffle the judges (including one played by Deirdre Lovejoy of The Wire). However, it does lead to an action scene in which Cherry and Angie Kim, who join Brett Mahoney as the good cops apparently unspoiled by the many bad apples, do battle in a parking garage against AVTF vigilantes.

The shot of Matt limping away from the fight leads into the closing scene, in which he enters a church to beg Saint Jude, patron of difficult cases, to pray for “consolation for his tribulations.” As always, Charlie Cox does a great job playing Matt at his most desperate, and the red lighting of the scene, juxtaposed against Daniel’s final moments, adds drama to the closing, especially when Jessica sidles up next to him ready for the fight.

The prayer and montage elevate “The Hateful Darkness” above the standard place-setting chapter. Not by much—there are still too many uninteresting threads (see: Heather Glenn’s visions of Muse, again). But enough that the episode serves as a critique of Matt’s particularly self-defeating brand of heroism, and the many people who get hurt in his pursuit of good works. How many more need to suffer? I guess we’ll find out in the finale next week.

Daredevil: Born Again streams new episodes on Tuesdays at 9pm EST on Disney+.

How Daredevil: Born Again Sneakily Introduced a New Captain America

This article contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again season 2 episode 6.

Early in episode six of Daredevil: Born Again‘s second season, we’re confronted with what could have been the most upsetting moment in a brutal season of television. A vehicle full of armed thugs rolls up on a suburban house, and throws a grenade through the window… which gets picked up by an adorable little girl in a fairy princess costume.

What follows is delightful and unexpected. The camera stays on the little girl playing with the object of destruction while the soldiers get pummeled by some unseen force outside. When the carnage ends, we see the source of the pummeling, the little girl’s mother, Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter). Had we known this was Jessica’s house, we wouldn’t have worried about the little girl—not so much because she’s the daughter of Jessica Jones, but because she is Captain America. Or, well, she will be.

One of the last pages of 2006’s The Pulse #13, written by Brian Michael Bendis and penciled by Michael Gaydos shows the font page of the Daily Globe, with a headline that declares, “Avengers Baby Born.” Much to the chagrin of J. Jonah Jameson, whose own Daily Bugle has a headline about Spider-Man being a menace, it’s a great headline, and not just because the baby’s father is Luke Cage, then leader of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. It’s because the baby comes into the world surrounded by Avengers, including Iron Man, Captain Marvel (then using the moniker Warbird), and Captain America.

It’s also fitting because that child, Dani Cage, lives a life immersed in superheroes. She gets kidnapped in the Skrulls’ Secret Invasion, she’s threatened by Jessica’s arch-enemy the Purple Man, and she has the unbeatable Squirrel Girl as a nanny. More importantly, Danielle Cage grows up to be Captain America.

In the 2015 event Ultron Forever by Al Ewing and Alan Davis, a team of Avengers from across time are assembled by Doctor Doom to do battle with Ultron, who has supplanted Odin as the new All-Father. In addition to the current-day Black Widow and Vision, the team includes the future Captain America, Danielle Cage. In a later story, Danielle pursues her arch-enemy, the Golden Skull, to the present, where she fights alongside the U.S.Avengers, the weird off-shoot team led by Bobby da Costa a.k.a. Sunspot of the New Mutants.

While Luke Cage was indeed a one-time leader of the Avengers, he’s not often counted among Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, nor is Jessica. And yet, their daughter more than makes up for lost time. Danielle is a true believer in heroic principles, given to declarations such as, “I am the shield!”

Dani’s exuberant embrace of the Captain America legacy represents a break from most futuristic stories. In stories such as Earth X, The Last Avengers Story, or even the recent Avengers: Twilight, Captain America is broken and disillusioned, no longer able to hold onto the dream, overwhelmed by the awful state of the world around him. But when Dani took on the mantle, she did so believing that the world could be a better place… and that she had the power to make it happen.

That perspective makes her debut in Daredevil: Born Again so notable. Viewers first meet Dani at a dark moment in the heroes’ lives, with Wilson Fisk using his position as Mayor of New York City to send his Anti-Vigilante Task Force on the city. So violent are these people that they’re willing to attack a mother at home and throw grenades at little girls.

This world needs something to believe in. As we saw in Born Again, Daredevil and Jessica are trying to rekindle hope. But the greatest hope might be in the future, in a little girl who carries a princess wand today but might tomorrow carry the shield.

Daredevil: Born Again releases new episodes every Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET on Disney+.

Zorro/Django: We Need to Make Antonio Banderas and Jamie Foxx Happen

In one of the most powerful moments of Quentin Tarantino‘s Django Unchained, the title character strides across a plantation to face down Big John Brittle, one of the notorious Brittle Brothers. In a shot-reverse-shot, we watch as Django pulls out his pistol and fires at the disbelieving Big John, killing him. In the type of pulpy action movie kiss off that Tarantino adores, Django sends his adversary off to the afterlife by declaring, “I like the way you die, boy.”

Django, of course, does not die. But he hasn’t exactly lived on either, except on the comic book page. In 2013, DC Comics released an adaptation of the film, followed by a 2015 series from Dynamite Comics that saw Django team up with his pulp hero predecessor Zorro. Now, in a delicious reversal, that comic is leading the way to a new movie, one that might see both Jamie Foxx and, more surprisingly, Antonio Banderas reprise two of their most important roles.

Thus far, Foxx has only played Django once, in the 2012 Tarantino movie, after taking up a role originally offered to Will Smith. Like Inglourious Basterds before it and Once Upon a Time… In Hollywood afterwards, Django Unchained rewrites history via cinematic tropes, using Spaghetti Westerns to imagine Django’s quest for revenge against his enslaver. The film is pure Tarantino, from the good (poetic cinematography applied to grindhouse plots), the bad (Tarantino’s acting as a particularly dumb Aussie), and the deeply uncomfortable (excessive use of racial slurs). Even amid some incredible performances from Samuel L. Jackson, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Christoph Waltz (who took home his second Best Supporting Actor Oscar), Foxx holds the screen as the raging, but undeniably cool, Django.

Banderas has worn the costume of Zorro twice, first in the excellent 1998 actioner The Mask of Zorro and again in its substandard 2005 sequel The Legend of Zorro, both of which were directed by Martin Campbell. The two Zorro films play as legacy films, with Anthony Hopkins portraying Don Diego de la Vega, the original Zorro, and Banderas as Alejandro Murrieta. After spending 20 years in prison, Don Diego escapes upon learning that his daughter Elena (Catherine Zeta-Jones) still lives, and begins training Alejandro as his successor. As Zorro, Alejandro woos Elena and defeats his enemies, delivering justice before Don Diego dies.

Even if The Legend of Zorro disappoints, affection for The Mask of Zorro remains strong, especially the chemistry between Banderas and Zeta-Jones. And perhaps inspired by the impending return of Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz, stars of another late ’90s genre fave, The Mummy, many are hoping they’ll be back on screen again.

One would think that Django/Zorro provides the perfect excuse for a reunion. Co-written by Tarantino and Matt Wagner, who wrote the Zorro comic for Dynamite, and illustrated by Esteve Polls, Django/Zorro takes place shortly after the events of Django Unchained, and finds the bounty hunter working alongside Zorro after the Mexican hero hires Django as a bodyguard for his famous alter-ego. The series perfectly blends the two characters and their mythos, resulting in an adventure that’s sometimes dashing and sometimes brutal, all pure pulp pleasure.

There’s only one problem: the Zorro in this story is not Alejandro Murrieta, but rather Don Diego de la Vega, the character played by Hopkins. No, it’s not a big problem, and certainly a writer like Brian Helgeland, who also penned awards-winners LA Confidential and Mystic River, can figure out a way to happen.

Moreover, we’re willing to suspend disbelief a bit if that’s how we get Foxx back with his six-shooters and Banderas back with his whip. After all, these stories are pulp fantasy through and through, the types of stories where the hero gets to say something like, “I like the way you die.”

Welcome to Derry Season 2 Will Explore an It Tale Inspired by a True Story

Derry’s long history of violence and bloodshed will be explored further in the second season of Welcome to Derry, with a particular focus on the Bradley Gang. The gang were referenced in It’s historical interludes, linked to a particularly terrible massacre in the 1930s, but Steven King never really expanded upon the incident in the book.

All that’s about to change, as Welcome to Derry creator Andy Muschietti has told Deadline that season 2 will jump back in time to Pennywise’s Great Depression era exploits.

“We’re now working on it, and it’s so much fun,” Muschietti said. “For the ones of you who read the books, probably the Bradley Gang sounds familiar. The Bradley Gang was a gang of bank robbers that — not accidentally, but they were on their way somewhere and they stopped in Derry to buy some ammo and something horrible happens.”

King based the Bradley Gang on the real-life Brady Gang, a short-lived group of Depression era criminals who were gunned down brutally and publicly by law enforcement in Bangor, Maine, close to the fictional town of Derry. One of the few reasons the Brady Gang are remembered is that their robberies quickly fed fears of lawlessness during the Great Depression. However, King’s spin on the gang has them ambushed and gunned down by Derry’s townsfolk, sparking a new Pennywise feeding cycle.

Though the Bradley Gang will be central to the plot of Welcome to Derry season 2, it will also seek to explore a much bleaker time in Derry’s history that would naturally have been a veritable buffet for everyone’s favorite dancing clown because fear, chaos, and trauma were likely to be in abundance.

“It’s fascinating because the thing that is so much fun in this stage of development is that we’re facing an era which is the Depression era that changes dramatically the setup of things,” Muschietti explained. “There’s no suburban comfort — the trope of the kids that live in suburbia and they ride their bikes and suddenly one of them disappears is nothing like this. This is in 1935. It’s a very dire situation. People are very poor. They’re struggling to survive, so the setup will be very different.”

Spider-Man: How Gwen Stacy’s Death Changed Comics Forever

“Someone close to me is about to die!” shouts Spidey on the cover of 1973’s Amazing Spider-Man #121. Even those who have never cracked open that issue know that the death in question doesn’t come for J. Jonah Jameson, Mary Jane Watson, Aunt May, or any of the other faces adorning that cover. It comes for Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker’s longtime girlfriend.

Someone just as close to Spidey has also died. Writer Gerry Conway has passed away at the age of 73, leaving behind a legacy that includes co-creating the Punisher, Robin Jason Todd, Carol Danvers, and many others, as well as tons of great comics. But Conway’s greatest, and most complicated, contribution to pop culture might be writing “The Night Gwen Stacy Died.”

Spider-Man’s Last Stand

Conway broke into the comics industry in 1968 at the age of 16, initially working on horror and Western comics for DC before moving over to Marvel a few years later. He took over Amazing Spider-Man in 1972, writing the series from issue #111 through #149 in 1972, picking up from Stan Lee. It was there that he would make his greatest contribution to the character, writing the two-part story that saw the death of Peter Parker’s innocent girlfriend.

Revisiting Amazing Spider-Man #121 and 122 today, it’s amazing how modern they feel. The first issue opens with Harry Osborn suffering from LSD poisoning, while Peter suffers from a virus (thanks to an adventure in Canada in previous issues) that leaves him disoriented. Likewise, Norman Osborn had completely forgotten his activities as the Green Goblin… that is, until the sight of his son begging for help causes him to crack, and the Goblin identity comes to the fore, thirsting for vengeance against Peter Parker.

That revenge occurs at the end of issue #121. Goblin, his knowledge of Spidey’s secret identity restored with the rest of his memory, throws Gwen Stacy off the George Washington Bridge (well, penciler Gil Kane drew the Brooklyn Bridge, but the dialogue identifies it as George Washington). In desperation, Spidey shoots a web to catch her, and manages to grab her ankle. But the inertia from the fall is too much, and Gwen’s neck breaks. Issue #122, “The Goblin’s Last Stand” traces the fall-out, in which Spider-Man seeks his own revenge, eventually battling Green Goblin to the death—a death that comes when our hero leaps out of the way of the Goblin Glider and lets it slam into his foe.

These scenes have been recreated time and again, in homages and films and television shows, so much that we might lose sight of the brilliance of the storytelling. From his conception, Spider-Man has been the hero overburdened by great responsibility. Even if some of co-creator Steve Ditko‘s objectivist philosophy turned Peter into an ungenerous possessor of great power, Spider-Man has always felt like his abilities complicated his life instead of turning him into a conquering hero.

From Silver to Bronze to Today

Such inner-conflicts are the calling card of the Marvel Heroes. When Stan Lee combined the melodramatic dialogue he developed while writing teen romance comics with the mythic monsters that Jack Kirby created throughout the 1950s, something special happened. Against the paragons of DC Comics, the Thing, Hulk, and Iron Man were heroes with feet of clay, people for whom having power was not all fantasy.

“The Night Gwen Stacy Died” and “The Goblin’s Last Stand” took it one step further. The story does indeed show how having superpowers has complicated Peter’s personal life, estranging him from best pal Harry even before Gwen’s death. However, the story goes on to suggest that Peter is misusing his power. After all, it’s ultimately him, not the Green Goblin, who kills Gwen. And it is not him who kills the Goblin, who died by his own hand. Moreover, Peter very nearly beats Goblin to death, coming so close to crossing a line that he cannot help but pause and check himself.

By the end of these two issues, Conway and his co-creators have pushed Spider-Man to the brink and stripped away part of his life. It would not be the last time. Throughout the 1990s, Spider-Man, like all of his fellow superheroes, would get grim and gritty. Spidey would be buried alive in “Kraven’s Last Hunt,” turned into an animal-like being in “Torment,” and lose his identity in the Clone Saga, all while dealing with nasty mirror images such as Venom and Carnage. Instead of the bright-colored explorers in the Fantastic Four or the shining Avengers, Spider-Man would rub shoulders with the likes of the Punisher, Wolverine, and Ghost Rider, angry anti-heroes who represented the darker side of superheroism.

To be sure, the deconstructions of the 1980s supercharged this change in tone. There would be no Authority, Ultimates, or Identity Crisis without Watchmen or The Dark Knight Returns. But there would be no Watchmen or The Dark Knight Returns without “The Night Gwen Stacy Died.”

The Second Life of Gwen Stacy

Is that a good thing? In addition to being one of the few superhero characters who actually manages to stay dead—a title she now only shares with Uncle Ben, since Jason Todd, Bucky Barnes, and the Flash Barry Allen have left the grave—Gwen is one of the more famous examples of “fridging.” Based on the murder of Kyle Rayner’s girlfriend in Green Lantern #54 (1994), writer Gail Simone coined the term to describe the trope of killing a female character in order to motivate a male.

Had Gwen’s story ended with Amazing Spider-Man #121, then she would be little more than a famous dead woman. But in recent years, Gwen has been rediscovered and rehabilitated, known to most superhero fans as Spider-Gwen, a plucky hero in her own right (who also carries guilt for failing to save her partner, Peter Parker).

Among the many good things that Spider-Gwen has given us, it also allows us to revisit Amazing Spider-Man #121 and 122 with less of the nasty cultural baggage, and allow us to see it for the incredible piece of writing that it is.

Gerry Conway had an impossible task when assigned to write the worst moment in a superheroes life. He succeeded by telling a story that’s dramatic, tragic, and—despite all the masks and powers involved—is ultimately human.

Imposters Director and Cast Unpack the Toxic Relationship at the Heart of the Film

Appearances can often be deceiving. This goes double in a movie like Imposters. On the surface, it’s a horror film about a very literal bodyswap. But it’s also an interrogation of the false identities we often wear in real life, and how desperate we can become to believe the lies we tell ourselves about who we are.

Written and directed by Caleb Phillips, Imposters stars Jessica Rothe (Happy Death Day) and Charlie Barnett (Russian Doll) as a married couple forced to contend with any parent’s worst nightmare when their baby mysteriously disappears during his birthday party. And although the child is found relatively quickly — with a little unexpected help from a local town weirdo — tensions between the couple rise as Paul starts to suspect the son Marie brought back may not be the same as the one they lost. 

What follows is a genre-bending film that wrestles with ideas of parenthood and commitment, all while serving up a series of genuinely surprising twists. Though the premise of Imposters revolves around the truth of what happened to Marie and Paul’s son, the heart of its story is the marriage at its center, which appears to have been struggling well before his disappearance.

“I think there’s something horrifying in seeing people faced with the same choice repeatedly,” Phillips says. “As an audience member, the first thing I notice is patterns and cycles, and seeing these people make the same choice when presented with the same path is pretty upsetting to me. I don’t think I have a toxic love story in my life, because this [film] comes mostly from my parents, and trying to figure out why they stay together. That’s what I was processing while I was writing it — trying to make something cool and genre, but also [determining] what it’s about [at its core]? And at that moment, it was about my parents.”

In the film, Marie, like many other women, seems to have subsumed much of her identity into her roles as a wife and mother, whether or not the relationship she’s fighting for is actually good for anyone involved in it. 

“For myself and for Marie, I think that she really is who she is, and who she believes herself to be, is completely wrapped up in her husband and her kid,” Rothe says. “So the moment that either of those things go away, she’s completely lost her sense of self, and I think that that’s something that’s so incredibly relatable. Even though the things that she does and the ways that she goes about getting what she wants sometimes are maybe not the most sane, or [what] we all think that we would do, it comes from such a deep place of need and and desperation.”

According to Phillips, it’s much the same for Marie’s husband Paul, who’s struggling to determine the sort of man (and husband and father) he’s supposed to be.

“When your identity gets challenged – an entity you might not even know that you’ve held for so long — it can get really ugly,” Phillips says. “Sometimes I’m surprised at what I realize I identify as, like filmmaker, brother, son, and when that gets threatened, or I feel like I’m not living up to the identity in my head, I can feel these dark emotions come up.”

In Imposters, Paul is attempting to live up to an ideal he was already struggling to meet before his child went missing. 

“I think there’s a whole sort of martyr complex to that character,” he says. “It’s something I’ve seen in a lot of men, both of a certain generation and at my same age range — there’s this proclivity to suffer. You’re not really sure what they’re suffering for, but the act of suffering somehow makes them noble. But what if it’s not what’s good for you or for other people? It’s fascinating.”

For Rothe, part of the horror genre’s appeal is that it offers a space to get into the ugly, less socially acceptable sides of her character’s psyche.

“I just love the opportunity to get into the muck with a character, whether that’s physically or emotionally,” Rothe says. “Those kinds of really deep, dark, visceral feelings that it’s not acceptable, necessarily, to portray or wear on your sleeve as humans walking around in the world. It’s such as a gift as an actor. Acting is truly my therapy. What I’m trying to say is like, give me all the situations where I can scream and cry and be covered in blood and just go balls to the wall. And I think that that’s something that horror really provides, and especially the kind of scripts that Caleb writes, or the Happy Death Day films, they’re just characters who, because of the situations they’re in, [have] a spectrum of emotion that’s much wider and more visceral.”

Imposters premiered March 15 at the 2026 SXSW Film & TV Festival.

20 ’70s Horror Movies That Still Feel Uncomfortable Today

The 1970s produced some of the most unsettling horror films ever made, and many of them still feel uncomfortable many decades later. Unlike modern horror, which reframes and reuses trends from the past, these movies often relied on realism, bleak themes, and raw presentation.

These low budgets, practical effects, and controversial subjects created a sense that audiences were watching something they maybe weren’t supposed to see. The decade also reflected real-world anxieties, from violence to social collapse, which made the horror feel disturbingly grounded. These movies aren’t classics of horror just due to their legacy, but for how they were initially constructed.

The Exorcist

The film’s intense depiction of possession, combined with grounded performances, makes it feel disturbingly real. Its use of shocking imagery and themes of faith and helplessness continues to unsettle audiences decades later, reinforced by its reputation as one of the scariest films ever made.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

Its documentary-like style and grimy visuals create a sense of realism that still feels uncomfortable. The film’s raw violence and use of unsettling imagery contribute to a lingering feeling that what you’re watching is dangerously close to reality.

Last House on the Left

The film’s brutal realism and lack of stylization make its violence particularly hard to watch. Its grounded approach removes any sense of escapism, leaving audiences with a deeply uncomfortable and emotionally draining experience.

The Hills Have Eyes

This film’s depiction of survival against a savage, isolated family feels disturbingly plausible. Its harsh tone and unflinching violence create a sense of dread that lingers long after the film ends.

Don’t Look Now

Blending grief with supernatural horror, the film creates unease through atmosphere rather than overt scares. Its editing and imagery build a constant sense of dread, culminating in a deeply unsettling conclusion.

The Wicker Man

The slow buildup of tension and the normalization of disturbing rituals create a uniquely uncomfortable experience. Its cheerful tone contrasts sharply with its dark themes, making the final act especially unsettling.

Carrie

Carrie’s mix of bullying, isolation, and sudden violence creates an emotional discomfort that goes beyond horror. The film’s climax is shocking not just for its brutality, but for how inevitable it feels.

Suspiria

The film’s surreal visuals and intense use of color create a dreamlike but deeply unsettling atmosphere. Its stylized violence and eerie soundtrack make it feel disorienting in a way that still holds up.

Black Christmas

Its use of unseen threats and disturbing phone calls creates a constant sense of vulnerability. The film’s refusal to fully explain its killer adds to its lasting unease.

The Omen

The idea of evil hiding within a child creates a deeply unsettling premise. Combined with its serious tone and eerie events, the film maintains a constant sense of dread throughout.

Halloween

The film’s quiet, stalking presence creates tension that feels uncomfortably real. Its minimalistic approach makes the violence feel sudden and personal rather than exaggerated.

Dawn of the Dead

Beyond its zombie horror, the film’s bleak view of consumerism adds an unsettling layer. The sense of societal collapse feels grounded, making the horror feel disturbingly plausible.

Donald Sutherland in Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Invasion of the Body Snatchers

The film’s paranoia-driven narrative creates constant unease. Its suggestion that anyone could be replaced at any moment makes it feel deeply unsettling even today.

Phantasm

Its dreamlike logic and unexplained elements create a sense of disorientation. The film’s refusal to follow conventional storytelling makes it feel unpredictable and unsettling.

The Amityville Horror

Based on a supposed true story, the film taps into fears of domestic spaces becoming unsafe. Its gradual escalation builds discomfort through familiarity turned threatening.

The Brood

The film’s body horror elements are tied to psychological trauma, making its disturbing imagery feel deeply personal. Its themes of anger and manifestation add to its lasting discomfort.

Tourist Trap

The use of mannequins and uncanny visuals creates a constant sense of unease. Its eerie tone and unpredictable moments make it particularly unsettling.

Let’s Scare Jessica to Death

The film’s ambiguous reality and psychological tension make it quietly disturbing. Its slow pace and eerie atmosphere create a lingering sense of dread.

Martin

The film blurs the line between reality and delusion, making its protagonist difficult to understand. Its grounded approach to vampirism creates a uniquely uncomfortable tone.

Messiah of Evil

Its eerie atmosphere and strange, dreamlike sequences create a constant sense of unease. The film’s lack of clear answers makes it feel disorienting and unsettling.

The 15 Most Annoying Sitcom Characters of the Last 20 Years

A sitcom has plenty of exaggerated characters, meant to mirror certain aspects of life, but taken to the extreme. That is, understandably, a way to generate conflict through inter-personal issues, but some characters take their ‘flaws’ a bit too far. We don’t want perfect characters, but their presence shouldn’t drag the scene.

This makes them less fun, entering the dangerous area of annoyance. When a character crosses that border, we don’t laugh, but groan at their presence. This can happen to main characters as well as passing ones, but they are all equally memorable for the wrong reasons.

The Big Bang Theory, Sheldon Cooper

Sheldon’s rigid personality, lack of empathy, and constant need to be right make him exhausting for those around him. His behavior is often played for laughs, but his selfishness and social blindness regularly push beyond charming into frustrating territory.

How I Met Your Mother, Ted Mosby

Ted’s romantic idealism often turns into self-centered decision-making. His repeated mistakes and tendency to ignore others’ feelings make him difficult to root for, especially as the series progresses and his behavior becomes increasingly repetitive.

Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Gina Linetti

Gina’s self-absorbed attitude and refusal to take anything seriously make her divisive. While intentionally chaotic, her dismissive behavior toward coworkers and lack of accountability often make her feel more irritating than funny.

Modern Family, Manny Delgado

Manny’s overly mature persona evolves into pretension and self-importance as he grows older. His dramatic tendencies and constant romantic brooding become repetitive, making him increasingly difficult to enjoy in later seasons.

Parks and Recreation, Tom Haverford

Tom’s obsession with trends, status, and personal gain often overrides basic responsibility. His selfish decisions frequently create problems for others, making his charm wear thin despite his comedic energy.

Two and a Half Men, Alan Harper

Alan’s freeloading and constant self-pity define his character. His unwillingness to take responsibility for his situation makes his behavior feel less sympathetic and more aggravating over time.

New Girl, Jess Day

Jess’s quirky optimism is central to the show, but her naivety and emotional overreactions can feel excessive. Her tendency to insert herself into situations sometimes creates more problems than solutions.

Silicon Valley, Jian-Yang

Jian-Yang’s disregard for social norms and tendency to antagonize others make him consistently unpleasant. His actions often escalate conflicts rather than resolve them, reinforcing his reputation as one of the show’s most aggravating presences.

The Middle, Sue Heck

Sue’s relentless optimism and lack of self-awareness are core to her character. While endearing to some, her constant enthusiasm and obliviousness can become overwhelming across multiple seasons.

2 Broke Girls, Max Black

Max’s constant sarcasm and reliance on crude humor can feel one-note. While it defines her personality, the repetition of the same style of jokes makes her character wear thin for some viewers.

The Goldbergs, Beverly Goldberg

Beverly’s overbearing parenting and refusal to respect boundaries drive much of the show’s conflict. Her constant interference, though comedic, often crosses into exhausting territory.

Superstore, Mateo Liwanag

Mateo’s competitiveness and tendency to belittle others often overshadow his more sympathetic traits. His need to appear superior creates frequent tension with coworkers.

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Titus Andromedon

Titus’s self-centered tendencies and dramatic personality drive many jokes, but his unwillingness to grow or take responsibility can make his behavior frustrating over time.

Black-ish, Dre Johnson

Dre’s stubbornness and tendency to overreact often create avoidable conflicts. His refusal to compromise or listen makes his character feel repetitive in certain storylines.

The Ranch, Colt Bennett

Colt’s immaturity and poor decision-making define much of his arc. His repeated mistakes and lack of accountability can make him more frustrating than relatable.

15 ’80s Movie Stars Living Their Life On Set

While we often like to be fooled by the magic of cinema, you might be shocked to discover that actors are people too. They need to eat, rest and have a day off like the rest of us. This has been true since the 80’s, but with movies so iconic it is hard to keep it in mind.

These are just some of the moments where actors, staff, and everyone involved in the movie-making business took a moment to breathe, take a silly picture, and remember their lives outside the set. It not only makes them relatable, these pictures give us nostalgia even when we never saw them before.

Nightmare on Elm Street Cast

It’s not often that you’d see a killer and his victims chilling togther, but that’s the power of cinema for you. Sadly, Robert Englund, the actor that plays Freddy Krueger, had to keep the makeup at all times.

Halloween Without A Mask

When wearing a mask for too long, you might forget where your mouth is. Here, we have the actor playing the silent assassin, Michael Myers, breathing freely without the mask.

Jason Catching Up With The News

The iconic slasher villain, Jason Voorhees, needs something to do when he isn’t chasing teenagers at summer camps. We think this picture is mostly staged, since reading anything has to be complicated with that mask on.

Gambling Gremlins

You might be fooled into thinking that this is a still from the Gremlins movie, but not quite. Well, it is an image from its production, but here we see one of the creature’s puppeteers adjusting its position.

The Beauty And The Fly

The Fly is quite the grotesque film, filled to the brim with body horror and themes of becoming something else. It’s good to know that the cast had time for levity in between harrowing shots.

Texas Chainsaw Gang

Playing the role of a chainsaw-wielding madman, with a hard-to-breath-in mask to boot, has to take a toll on anyone, particularly on the hot climate of Texas. Fortunately, the cast had the time to sit down and enjoy regular breaks.

The Thing’s Artist

What makes The Thing still be relevant after all these years are its practical effects, created by the master of the craft, Rob Bottin. One can image that, once you get used to the horrific imagery, the props end up being used as toys by the cast.

Han Solo’s Day Out

Harrison Ford was known to be critical of the script in the Star Wars movies, something that likely led to tensions on set. Of course, that can’t have always be the case, since we have plenty of pictures of the cast having fun while filming.

The Cast Of Better Off Dead

The classic dark comedy of the 80’s, Better Off Dead, has characters fight, compete and try to end it all in a constant teenage struggle. As expected, the cast were all friendly with each other, something shown here with them howllering.

Getting That Beetle Juice

Michael Keaton did a stellar job when portraying Beetlejuice, the high-energy entity that haunts the characters of the film. All that energy had to be subdued during the make-up process, since the creature wouldn’t be the same if it looked human.

Bare-chested Bruce Campbell

In the Evil Dead movies, Ash has to face all sorts of horrific nightmares, and takes a lot of damage in the process. Of course, no harm was done to the actor, who we see here having some fun with the make-up department.

Cast Of Tron

The real curiosity of how Tron was filmed, at least for today’s viewers, is that more things were practical than what you might expect. The suits, many props and some background details were actually there, as we see in this picture, albeit with less neon lights.

Marty McBite

Filming Back to the Future was arduous work, and like any healthy person, the cast needs to eat to recover their stregth. Here, we see Michael J. Fox having some well earned rest before returning to the scene.

Cast Of RoboCop

The villains of RoboCop are meant to be ruthless, greedy and evil, so we cheer for the hero when they get what’s coming to them. Of course, they are actually all charming people in real life, as shown in this group photo.

The Set Of Honey, I Shrunk the Kids

Joe Johnston was the mind behind many effects in 80’s movies, from large sets to tiny constructons. Here, we see him in a break, but never too far from his work.

15 Lost Websites from the 2000s People Still Think About Today

The early years of the internet were a time of discovery, where we still thought and wondered what could be done with such a tool. Today, we know that it’s all algorithms and AI bots talking to each other, but in a simpler time, we dared to dream.

By dreaming I mean looking at cat memes, stick figures fighting, or staying up all night doing that time’s equivalent to doom scrolling. Because the internet is and was a silly place, but it’s time to wear those pink tinted glasses, and think about websites that made us happy as kids.

eBaum’s World

eBaum’s World was a defining hub for viral videos and internet humor in the 2000s, curating content before social media dominated discovery. It still exists today, bringing memes curated by people instead of algorithms.

StumbleUpon

StumbleUpon turned browsing into a game, sending users to random sites based on their interests. At its peak, it drove massive traffic across the web, but it shut down in 2018, marking the end of a uniquely chaotic discovery tool.

Pointer Pointer

Pointer Pointer was a simple but oddly addictive novelty site that matched your cursor position to a photo of someone pointing at it. It still exists, but like many gimmick sites, it feels like a relic of a more playful internet.

PopCap Games

PopCap Games defined casual browser gaming with titles like Plants vs. Zombies and Bejeweled. While the company still operates under EA, its dominance in quick, accessible web games faded as mobile gaming took over the space.

ThinkGeek

ThinkGeek was once the go-to store for internet culture merchandise, especially for tech and gaming fans. After being absorbed into GameStop, the standalone site shut down in 2019, ending its run as a niche online institution.

Newgrounds

Newgrounds was a cornerstone of Flash animation and indie games, launching countless creators. The site still exists and remains active, but its cultural peak was tied to the Flash era that defined early 2000s internet creativity.

Something Awful

Something Awful helped shape early internet humor and meme culture through its forums and articles. While still online, its influence has diminished as newer platforms absorbed the kind of community-driven content it once pioneered. It is affectionately called by its users as a retiring home for millennials.

Miniclip

Miniclip was one of the most popular browser gaming hubs, known for simple, addictive Flash games. It still exists today, but its focus has shifted heavily toward mobile, leaving behind the classic web experience many remember.

Albino Blacksheep

Albino Blacksheep thrived on bizarre animations and viral Flash content, becoming a staple of early internet humor. While the site still exists, its relevance faded alongside the decline of Flash-based media.

Neopets

Neopets was a massive virtual world where users raised pets, traded items, and played games daily. It once had tens of millions of users and high engagement, but its popularity declined over time due to competition and technical changes.

Homestar Runner

Homestar Runner was a hugely popular animated web series that thrived in the early 2000s. While it never fully disappeared, updates became infrequent, and its cultural presence faded compared to its peak popularity.

Myspace

Myspace once dominated social networking, allowing deep profile customization and music discovery. Its decline came rapidly after Facebook’s rise, turning it into a much smaller platform that no longer resembles its original cultural impact.

Television Without Pity

Television Without Pity became famous for detailed, sarcastic TV recaps and active forums. It shut down in 2014, leaving behind a style of commentary that influenced modern online TV discussion.

Hamster Dance

Hamster Dance is often considered one of the earliest viral internet phenomena, built around a simple looping animation and song. It still exists in archived forms, but its impact belongs firmly to the early web era.

Stickdeath

Stickdeath gained notoriety for its dark humor and violent stick-figure animations. It became a defining example of edgy early internet content, but like many Flash-based sites, it faded as the web moved away from that format.

Michael Can Inspire a Different Type of Theatrical Experience

Even before it hit theaters, we knew Michael would be a divisive film. Not only is it about someone who was controversial by the end of his own life, but it makes a strong choice to avoid even the suggestion of allegations about its subject. Furthermore, like most musical biopics, it sacrifices basic cinematic standards in favor of delivering maximum enjoyment to fans, in the form of recognizable trivia and pop song bangers. One need look no further than the divide between the 38% critics rating and 97% fan rating on Rotten Tomatoes to see proof.

Yet, Michael has found a new way to divide movie fans. Reports have been coming in of fans singing along with the King of Pop’s hits, and even dancing in the aisles. Such loud behavior isn’t usually considered part of the cinematic experience, but with films such as Michael—to say nothing of actual concert films, such as Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour or the James Cameron co-directed Billie Eilish: Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour Live in 3D—suggests that maybe it should be.

Outside of an Alamo Drafthouse, proper moviegoing behavior isn’t as cut and dry as we’d like for it to be. Generally, we’re all agreed that attendees should be quiet when a feature is playing, and should avoid distracting fellow audience members. However, almost every screening has at least one person who checks their phone, talks to their seatmate, sits in a seat assigned to someone else, or commits some other violation of the cinematic social contract.

And that doesn’t even address edge cases. Is it acceptable to look at your phone during trailers? What about the soda and truck commercials that continue to play, even 15 minutes after the movie was supposed to begin? Can you turn on your flashlight for a minute to find your seat if you come late? Is it more distracting to climb over people to get to an exit and text your babysitter “Yes” when they ask if your kid can have ice cream, or would it be better to quickly type those three letters from your seat?

As much as we’d like to believe that there are hard and fast rules for these things, cinema has never been a pure sanctuary. It certainly didn’t begin that way, as crowd participation was expected during the first part of the silent era, when filmmakers such as Georges Méliès used movies like a magic trick and Mack Sennett’s Keystone Studios riled up viewers with slapstick chaos and shots of bathing beauties. When Buster Keaton’s projectionist jumped from the audience and onto the screen in 1924’s Sherlock, Jr., he only illustrated a blurred line between spectacle and spectator.

Even when the incredible success of D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation moved cinematic displays from nickelodeons and roadshows to movie palaces, stringent expectations weren’t in place. Films would play as part of hours-long programs, consisting of not just the “A” feature, but also a “B” feature, serials, cartoons, and newsreels. Audience members would regularly arrive and leave mid-showing, and committing various other disruptions.

That changed with the arrival of Psycho in 1960, when Alfred Hitchcock demanded that ushers not seat anyone after the film began, in order to preserve that movie’s mid-film shift. However, filmmakers have never completely left behind the desire to play to the crowd, whether in the form of William Castle’s carnival barker tricks, interactive films like Mr. Payback, or fourth-wall breaks in Funny Games, I, Tonya, and Deadpool.

If this trip through the history of cinematic presentations makes you squirm, you’re not alone. This writer also prefers theaters to be silent and audiences to be respectful, no matter what. Moreover, most people at least accept that quiet observance should be the norm, even if they violate that norm from time to time.

However, the explosive response to Michael proves that some people want to be part of the movie. And they’re not alone either. Fan participation screenings aren’t new, ranging from showings of The Rocky Horror Picture Show and The Room to sing-along releases of The Greatest Showman and K-Pop Demon Hunters to those weird rowdy screening of Cats. Furthermore, 4DX and 3D upgrades promise more immersion into the film, even if they don’t provide space for the viewers to talk back at the picture.

For cinematic purists (see: this writer, again), these special screenings transform the movies into something other than movies. These showings are more like concerts and amusement park rides than they are proper films. Lest that sound condescending, one need only look at the comments from people singing and dancing at showings of Michael.

While it is easy to find commenters decrying dancers as suffering from “main character syndrome,” it’s just as easy to find those who disagree. A video posted to r/MichaelJackson is filled with comments expressing support, claiming that “critics will hate this” and asserting that dancing captures the spirit of the performer. Likewise, a New York Times article on the response to the film includes a teen reproaching her mother by saying, “Mom, this is not a concert.”

Judging by these comments (and, you know, the quality of the movie), Michael isn’t trying to be a proper film. The same could be said of Rocky Horror, The Room, The Greatest Showman, and so on. As such, these types of not-quite movies deserve their own space, special screenings where people can sing and dance and shout and leave others to watch the movie their way, in peace.

Michael is a divisive movie. It’s time to let it divide.

Michael is now playing in theaters worldwide.

House of the Dragon Season 3 Trailer Breakdown: James Norton As Ormund Hightower Revealed

This article contains spoilers from the novel Fire & Blood that will likely spoil details from House of the Dragon season 3.

House of the Dragon has some work to do in its third and penultimate season.

Following an abbreviated second outing that concluded right before the real battles started, some viewers were left wondering if the HBO series can live up to the massive expectations set forth for the first Game of Thrones spinoff. It certainly doesn’t help HotD‘s case that one viewer in particular is very dissatisfied with the direction of the show. And that’s not even to mention the fact that fellow spinoff A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms reminded us all of how fun Westeros can be.

Based on the action-packed first trailer for season 3, however it appears as though Rhaenyra (Emma D’Arcy), Alicent (Olivia Cooke), and company are ready to wage many battles – including the battle to win back fans’ affection.

Read on for a breakdown of the most striking images from the House of the Dragon season 3 trailer and our book-informed analysis of what it all might mean.

Who Is The Dragon in the Vale?

The House of the Dragon season 3 trailer doesn’t shy away from one of the series’ most controversial adaptation choices tight from the get-go. Around the six-second mark, we catch a glimpse of a dragon soaring over the unmistakable craggy mountains of the Vale of Arryn. In season 2, Rhaenyra’s dragon-less step-daughter/cousin Rhaena Targaryen (Phoebe Campbell) learned of an untamed dragon stalking the Vale from Warden of the East Lady Jeyne Arryn (Amanda Collin). This is undoubtedly that dragon. But who, exactly, is that dragon?

Due to a quirk of adaptation, it’s not entirely clear. George R.R. Martin’s historical tome source material features a lowborn “dragonseed” known only as Nettles claiming a wild dragon called Sheepstealer. After fighting for Daemon Targaryen (Matt Smith) and Team Black in the Dance of the Dragons, Nettles and Sheepstealer would retire to the mountains of the Vale, never to be seen again. Given Rhaena’s lack of a dragon and contrived presence in the Vale, it’s become increasingly clear that she will be assuming Nettles’ book storyline. Does that make this dragon Sheepstealer, Rhaena’s book dragon Morning, or another dragon altogether? That remains to be seen.

The Battle of the Gullet

As previously mentioned, House of the Dragon season 2 concludes just before a handful of major battles get underway. The biggest of those battles, both in terms of scale and consequential character death, is the Battle of the Gullet.

The Gullet is a stretch of water in The Crownlands that separates the islands of Driftmark and Dragonstone with Massey’s Hook (an eastern peninsula of Westeros). Due to its narrow features, the Gullet has been where House Velaryon has instituted a naval embargo of King’s Landing on behalf of Queen Rhaenyra. Ser Tyland Lannister (Jefferson Hall), with the help of the Triarchy’s ships, is en route to lift that embargo.

As for that consequential character death…

Why Is Rhaenyra Crying?

You’d cry too if your eldest son and heir to the Iron Throne was just killed in battle. Yes, Jacaerys Velaryon meets his end in the Battle of the Gullet after a crossbow bolt takes down his low-flying dragon Vermax. In the book, Jace is then lit up with arrows and his body sinks into the sea. Based on the presence of a skull in front of Rhaenyra, we imagine it will play out a little differently in the show.

James Norton as Lord Ormund Hightower

House Hightower is obviously central to House of the Dragon‘s story. Ser Otto Hightower (Rhys Ifans) served as the Hand of the King for Viserys I (Paddy Considine) and his daughter Alicent married the king and helped set events in motion for this continent-spanning civil war by crowning her son King Aegon II. Season 2 even introduced Alicent’s brother Gwayne (Freddie Fox) to keep the Hightower vibes going.

Despite the Hightowers’ importance, we have not yet met the head of the household and the Lord of Oldtown. That changes with the introduction of James Norton as Otto’s nephew Lord Ormund Hightower in season 3. Ormund isn’t seen “onscreen” much in Fire & Blood but as the general of the Reach’s forces, he is present for many key events, including the arrival of Alicent’s youngest son Daergon and his dragon Tessarion into the war.

House of the Dragon has clearly opted to elevate Ormund as a character and to do so it has turned to beloved British actor James Norton, who can be seen in Happy Valley, Grantchester, and most recently, Netflix’s House of Guinness.

Aegon’s Murderous Motivations

Written as a historical text gleaned from unreliable primary and secondary sources, Martin’s Fire & Blood presents a fascinating adaptation challenge. When different sources provide conflicting information, House of the Dragon has had to essentially choose which one is right, which has led to many (but not all) of Martin’s issues with the series. The season 3 trailer provides a glimpse at one such headache.

Fire & Blood never makes explicit that King Aegon II’s brother Aemond (Ewan Mitchell) was responsible for his fiery injuries at Rook’s Rest. Nor does it heavily imply that Aemond seeks to sit the Iron Throne permanently and not merely in his convalescing brother’s stead. House of the Dragon, however, leans into the drama and finds Aemond professing his empirical ambitions. Now Aegon is articulating that he views his brother as an enemy, not an ally.

Lord Cregan Stark’s Winter Wolves

Here we get a thrilling look at some very rowdy old dudes. These drum-banging senior citizens are part of Lord Cregan Stark’s “Winter Wolves” contingent. Recall that Jace convinced Cregan to join the war on the side of Rhaenyra. But with winter coming (is winter ever not coming for these dudes?), Cregan couldn’t send any able-bodied men away from the North. Thankfully, even the elderly are fierce fighters in the North and Cregan and friends will participate in a battle or two this season.

Alicent Prepared to Flee

You know who we don’t see a lot of in this trailer? Our old friend Alicent Hightower. We have to imagine that that’s because she spends the early portion of the season following through on Rhaenyra’s offer to flee with her daughter Helaena before Rhaenyra sacks King’s Landing. And the latter parts of her season arc are likely deemed spoiler-y to even book readers as her story (everyone say it with me now) deviates from the book’s plot line.

Skirmish at Harrenhal

There appear to be two significant moments featuring the desolate, haunted castle Harrenhal in this trailer. Near the end of the clip, we see Daemon Targaryen, fully kitted out in his dragon armor, battling two hapless Green knights. Before that, we view Aemond Targaryen prowling through a mossy hallway with his sword drawn.

Combine those two scenes and we have rough confirmation that Harrenhal will again be changing hands from Daemon to Aemond this season, as it does in Fire & Blood. Does that mean Aemond and Daemon will cross paths? Or will the show save their inevitable showdown for later? We’ll bet on the former, given House of the Dragon’s penchant for getting characters together whenever possible.

Who Is Giving Birth?

As a story about a Targaryen civil war, there are naturally a lot of blond people in House of the Dragon. Somewhat surprisingly, however, there aren’t quite as many blonde women of child-rearing age as one might think. That means that the brief glimpse we get of a character in labor can be only Rhaenyra Targaryen or Helaena Targaryen (Phia Saban). A closer look at a screengrab confirms that it is indeed Helaena giving birth.

While it’s possible that this moment is merely a Harrenhal-induced hallucination for Aemond, it’s equally as likely that Helaena is secretly pregnant throughout season 2 and will be giving birth this season. In Fire & Blood, Helaena and her brother-husband Aegon have three children: Jaehaerys, Jaehara, and Maelor. The lattermost child has not yet been featured on the show, much to George R.R. Martin’s consternation. In fact, the absence of Maelor was the first adaptation change he publicly criticized, which kicked off the souring relationship between him and showrunner Ryan Condal.

Based on this trailer, it seems as though George might have finally gotten his way.

House of the Dragon season 3 premieres Sunday, June 22 at 9 p.m. ET on HBO Max.

James Gunn Confirms The Authority Isn’t Coming to the DCU, Yet

In 1998, Warren Ellis and Bryan Hitch introduced the Authority, a new supehero team with one goal: to build a better world. And with members like Apollo, the Doctor, and Jenny Sparks, the Authority had the ability to do it. Moreover, because they existed in the WildStorm Universe and not the DC Universe, no one could really stop them.

Well, almost no one. After initially announcing The Authority as one of the projects in development for Chapter One of his and Peter Safran’s new DCU, James Gunn has confirmed on Threads that the project is no longer in development… for the moment. Though clarifying that he was never planning to be the one who writes and develops The Authority, Gunn went on to say that the “script wasn’t quite there but more importantly, it didn’t work in terms of the larger DCU both in terms of the story and practical concerns.” He ended by saying that the possibility of an Authority movie remains, but “not soon.”

Given his interest in the relationship between superheroes and government agencies and in the more unsavory side of the capes and tights life, Gunn’s plans for an Authority movie make sense. What doesn’t make sense is putting the Authority into the mainline DCU, even if it has happened already in the comics.

When The Authority #1 debuted in 1998, WildStorm was Jim Lee‘s studio, part of the independent publisher Image Comics. However, just months after the issue hit comic stands, Lee sold WildStorm to DC Comics, which initially allowed it to be a separate subsidiary. By 2010, however, DC had shuttered WildStorm and, with the New 52 reboot in 2011, WildStorm characters were fully integrated into the DC Universe.

It’s never been a great fit. The series began as a satire of mainstream superhero comics, giving the Justice League something like a neoconservative global policy (even if their social policies were more liberal, as demonstrated by the genuinely sweet romance between Midnighter and Apollo). Like the Ultimates series that Hitch and Mark Millar (writer of the second Authority run) would do at Marvel, the Authority played like a thought exercise riffing on established characters.

Need proof? Look no further than “What’s So Funny About Truth, Justice, and the American Way,” the Joe Kelly story that pits Superman against the Elite, a DC Universe version of the Authority. Or the sequel miniseries Superman and the Authority, in which Grant Morrison (who has their own rocky history with the characters) turns Apollo and Midnighter into superfans of the Man of Steel.

That latter comic best illustrates the problem with putting the Authority into the DCU. Because the team began as a satire of established heroes, the Authority must always play second tier to the actual Justice League. They can’t show what would happen if the Justice League decided to improve the world by taking proactive action against baddies, because the actual Justice League is there to stop them.

So, for now, it’s not a bad thing that Gunn isn’t bringing the Authority into the main DCU. But the groundwork is definitely there. Not only does he have in place organizations such as ARGUS and Lex Luthor’s PlanetWatch, the latter a riff on the WildStorm team StormWatch, but Superman includes in its cast charter Authority member the Engineer.

As these building blocks and Gunn’s comments show, The Authority isn’t dead—it’s just stalled. They will arrive when the time is right, when the DCU needs to become a better world… or else.