Rocky’s Voice Decision Makes Project Hail Mary Even More Brilliant
This article contains Project Hail Mary spoilers.
The hype around Project Hail Mary was building for quite a while before its release. Fans of Andy Weir’s bestselling sci-fi novel were very excited to see its big-screen adaptation, which also marks the first feature film directed by Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse producers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller since 2014’s 22 Jump Street.
Ryan Gosling stars in the movie as Ryland Grace, a molecular biologist-turned-middle school teacher who ends up on a quest to save humanity from the root cause of a dimming Sun. As he arrives at Tau Ceti in his spacecraft, the Hail Mary, to investigate why it hasn’t been affected like our Sun and so many other stars, Grace starts to believe he may be able to save the Earth by joining forces with Rocky, a rock-like alien on a similar mission.
Rocky’s lead puppeteer, James Ortiz, was revealed to be the voice of the beloved character just a month before the movie debuted, ending months of speculation and surprising many who had assumed a celebrity would be hired for the role. In a meta moment, the movie cleverly addresses this assumption by having Grace first use his computer to test out Meryl Streep as the voice of Rocky’s translated alien language. Though Grace seems charmed by Streep’s dulcet tones, he ultimately opts for Ortiz, and it’s soon clear why.
When celebrities lend their voices to puppets or animated characters, it can be a marketing boon for the studio. But it can also be a distraction. Somewhere in the back of your mind, your suspension of disbelief might have taken a knock because your brain knows that Mario is actually Chris Pratt, or Zendaya is Meechee. With no celebrity voice to distract from Project Hail Mary’s material, we don’t separate newcomer Ortiz from Rocky, and, as a result, we’re deeply affected by Rocky’s upsetting backstory, his dreams of reuniting with his mate, and the harm he suffers after saving Grace from certain death.
Social media has been awash with posts from people attending Project Hail Mary screenings, admitting they openly wept about the possible fate of a character who doesn’t even have a humanoid or animal face, and that’s down to the extraordinary puppeteering and voice work behind Rocky, who seems just as real as Gosling himself. Having been physically on set with the Barbie actor as he puppeteered, Ortiz’s delivery is heartfelt and touching, even when his lines end with “question” or “statement,” as the computer’s translation of the alien’s context dictates.
It takes you back to the time when artists like Jim Henson and Frank Oz would more regularly voice big characters rather than A-list actors, which is no accident — Rocky was designed by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop alum Neal Scanlan, and his VFX company built all the Rocky puppets in Project Hail Mary. Scanlan and Ortiz worked together throughout the film’s production to bring Rocky to life onscreen, and Ortiz told Inverse that he initially asked Neal for directions. “He said, ‘No, no, no, James. Think of it like this: You’re Frank Oz, and I’m making Yoda for you.’”
Ultimately, Project Hail Mary uses the same techniques to make Rocky feel so alive that Oz, Henson and co. used with the likes of the Muppets, Sesame Street, The Empire Strikes Back, or The Dark Crystal, proving that the old ways can still be the best ways. Lord, Miller, Scanlan, and Ortiz really dropped the mic on this one.
Everything We Saw at SXSW 2026: I Love Boosters, Wishful Thinking, The Comeback, and More
The braintrusts that have presided over SXSW since nearly its inception have always smiled on the festival for its contrasts. It’s a fest where south meets west, and music meets film, meets technology, meets comedy, meets plain ol’ innovation. And in no other year has that felt more like a lived-in ethos than 2026, which saw everything happening everywhere and all at once (heh).
With the film, TV, music, activation, and cornucopia of other moments all occurring simultaneously in Austin, it was a whirlwind that can nearly overwhelm. Yet the Den of Geek team was there for almost all of it, covering what we can, and bringing it to you in this handy, dandy round-up.
Movies
The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist
At the turn of the century, the world was excited by the prospect of new technology. The internet was a shiny toy, the dot com bubble hadn’t burst, and the iPod (never mind the iPhone) was still a glint in Steve Jobs’ eye. Filmmaker Daniel Kwan and technology ethicist Tristan Harris remember those days as a bit like a lost kingdom. After all, the world it has wrought has very little good cheer left in the public for new tech, especially with the AI revolution that is now commencing.
“With social media, we were not great stewards of that technology and how it rolled out,” Harris observes in the Den of Geek studio. “We created the most anxious and depressed generation of our lifetime, even though some of the people who were building it—the people who started Instagram, they were my dorm mates at Stanford—they didn’t intend for that to happen.” Which raises the question of why should folks have any confidence that many of the same companies and technology leaders will do better with the far more powerful prospect of artificial intelligence.
That conundrum is something which both men are confronting in the new Daniel Roher documentary, The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist, which Kwan is also a producer on. As the title suggests, the film examines both the most pessimistic and rosiest predictions for AI’s future, and everything in between. All possibilities are running rampant in Silicon Valley while billion-dollar companies dash madly toward being the first to achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI).
Yet the film also interrogates what tools can be put in place to create better stewards in the next generation. As Oscar-winner Kwan notes, “I think Big Tech has broken our social contract that we have as a society with technology. They have used our world as a playground to basically consolidate more power and more resources. The technology that they’re building—even though a lot of the architects and the technicians building this stuff, they have the greatest intentions and the greatest ideals of what this technology can do—the fact that it is being deployed within this current system, within this current incentive structure, it is taking a neutral technology and turning it into an extractive one.” – David Crow
Amazing Live Sea Monkeys
As the large, colorful gates open to Yolanda Signorelli’s Maryland estate, she’s without electricity, feeding woodland creatures tiny crackers – an unexpectedly intimate introduction to the woman at the center of The Amazing Live Sea Monkeys. Directed by Mark Becker and Aaron Schock, the documentary uses the nostalgia of comic books and the ‘60s to showcase an oddly complex legal saga and the history of the beloved “instant life” toy while uncovering lesser-known details about its creator, Harold von Braunhut. At its core is a David-and-Goliath-style battle between Signorelli, often called the “mother of Sea-Monkeys,” and Big Time Toys, which began licensing and distributing the product in 2007.
Through interviews with Signorelli, her lawyer, journalists, former collaborators, and illustrators behind the brand’s imagery, the film tells the story while keeping the people behind it at the center. Signorelli’s love for animals and the sea monkeys shine through all aspects of the film; Schock even told us that revealing the “sea monkey secret formula” was always a concern of Signorelli while filming. Throughout the documentary, Becker and Schock never shy away from examining von Braunhut’s various controversies in vivid detail. At the same time, the filmmakers didn’t want to lump Signorelli and her passion into the worst of what her former husband had done. It was complex, captivating, and perfectly fit for a SXSW premiere. – Darcie Zudell
American Dollhouse
John Valley doesn’t want to reinvent cinema with his movie, American Dollhouse. The story of a struggling woman named Sarah (Hailley Laurèn), who inherits her childhood home only to be beset by unstable neighbor Kelly (Kelsey Pribilski), follows in the tradition of horror greats, including Psycho, Peeping Tom, and Black Christmas. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have bigger things on its mind.
“I’m obsessed with how a slasher can be minimalist, but yet a container for huge, modern ideas,” Valley tells Den of Geek. “I stuck to the conventions and tropes, and kept telling the cast that it’s just a meat and potatoes slasher film, but we also tried to find some new, modern life in it.”
Part of that work fell on Pribilski, who had to embody an adult who has reverted to a childlike state in frightening ways. “I thought about how an eight-year-old acts. They’re a little bit animated because we as adults have learned to contain our emotions,” Pribilski reveals. “It was about knowing when to go bigger. We had to choose very carefully the moments for me to go into ‘grizzly bear’ mode, as John would call it.”
As Pribilski got to play big moments, it fell on her co-star Laurèn to keep things grounded in reality. “Sarah is a full person, and it was important to me that, when she makes a decision, it doesn’t come out of nowhere,” she says. That approach makes Sarah a formidable opponent, even for a killer as strange as Kelly. “Sarah’s a loyal fighter, for herself and the people she loves. She’s not going to just go down.”
Thanks to the work of Pribilski and Lauren, American Dollhouse adds a great new killer and final girl to the slasher tradition. – Joe George
Black Zombie
In a pop culture saturated with zombie shows like The Walking Dead and The Last of Us, many have forgotten the roots of Z-culture. Writer-director Maya Annik Bedward is not one of them. Right down to the title of Black Zombie conjuring the racist shadow of the nearly century-old Hollywood film White Zombie (1932), Bedward’s haunting documentary looks at more than a hundred years of appropriation, reinvention, and evolution of a concept that’s rooted in the vast sweep of African diaspora, and the Black Haitian experience of revolution in particular.
“In Haiti, everyone knows about the zombie, and in Haiti, stories of zombies and zombification are regularly talked about,” says Bedward. “It’s adjacent to vodou, but it’s not an everyday practice. Zombification is these stories of ‘I saw zombies in the field,’ and very connected to these ideas of enslavement.” These are the roots which inspired the white fiction that in turn gave the world their beloved modern flesh-easters. Black Zombie observes, critiques, and even at times celebrates this transition—within limits as the othered monster has increasingly become a symbol for tearing down sinister systems. Or just a fear of the status quo breaking… – DC
Brian
Multiple castmates in Will Ropp’s directorial debut, Brian, were student body presidents in high school; a connection they didn’t make until SXSW. Ben Wang, who plays the titular character running for student body president to impress his crush, says he drew from his own awkward quirks when portraying the role. Edi Patterson and Randall Park play Wang’s parents, who care a little too much that their son finally made a friend. William H. Macy, who plays Brian’s therapist, talks Brian through his various panic attacks and struggles with mental health that cause him to lose roles in drama club, freak out his classmates, and annoy his friends. Meanwhile, his cool English teacher, portrayed by Natalie Morales, just wants to help Brian develop his party platform without indulging his inappropriate attraction to her.
It’s a coming of age movie about mental health and the messy aspects of high school, but even more than that, the script by Mike Scollins is effortlessly funny in a way that will have you quoting Patterson’s and Park’s one-liners long after the first watch. Speaking of Patterson and Park, they got to have a lot of fun improvising during some dining room table scenes. Brian’s a good time, but one that will yank its audiences’ right back to high school in a visceral and emotional way. – DZ
Chasing Summer
Directed by Josephine Decker and written by leading lady, Iliza Shlesinger, Chasing Summer is a romantic comedy that is sexy, realistic, and overwhelmingly nostalgic.
Jamie (Shlesinger) returns to her Texas hometown after a breakup, shocked to find that while the small hamlet may look the same, the people within it have changed. She picks up her old job at the roller rink, now owned by her sister (Cassidy Freeman), and meets Harper (Lola Tung), her young co-worker. Harper convinces Jamie to attend a party, where she meets a much younger Colby (Garrett Wareing). The two pursue a questionable fling while Jamie rekindles relationships with old high school classmates, including her ex-boyfriend, Chase (Tom Welling). The rest of the story is a sticky recreation of summer love that invokes the refreshing feeling of stepping into AC.
At times predictable, the film also has moments of shock, including a soap-opera-level reveal that will leave middle-aged women everywhere swooning. Itis a retrospective on summers of days past, and the inevitability of moving on. It’s conventional, easy, and delivers the promise of a classic romcom. – Alexandra Hopkins
Crash Land
What happens when a group of amateur stuntmen try to make a “real movie” so they can prove their worth to a town that hates them? Crash Land, directed by Dempsey Bryk, answers that very question.
“It came out of COVID,” Bryk says. “I was stuck with my brother and my entire family… living behind the couches in the living room, as you do, and I was watching this Jackass marathon on loop and the idea blossomed out of there.” The film evokes classics of the genre – think Napoleon Dynamite, Superbad, and Bottle Rocket – against a Canadian backdrop of charming chaos.
“There was a process of trying to make it not like anything else after being so inspired your entire life by the things you love, and then you have to try to find your own voice,” Bryk says.
As Crash Land follows this group of boys becoming men one wipeout at a time, it simultaneously tells another coming of age story. The spirit behind Crash Land is the much more successful story of Dempsey Bryk and his brother Billy, who plays the emotional catalyst of the movie. Through his influence, the characters crash and land in a world that is fun, endearing, and unexpectedly touching. – Sophia Rooksberry
Drag
Horror movies often tend to revolve around similar, oftentimes outlandish, concepts: A deranged killer, a disturbing monster, a haunted setting. But Drag, the debut feature film from Raviv Ullman and Greg Yagolnitzer, finds a scary story in an everyday, all-too-human problem. Yes, it’s a movie that’s really about the terrifying specter of lower back pain.
The film stars Lizzy Caplan and Lucy DeVito as a pair of frequently-at-odds siblings who find themselves in increasing trouble during a house robbery gone wrong. When one of the pair throws their back out mid-heist, the other must help her escape by dragging her from the house’s upstairs bathroom down to the waiting car. Painfully uncomfortable (and often downright grisly) acts of body horror ensue, with plenty of gross-out details in full close-up even as they discover that the man they’ve come to rob is not everything he appears to be. – Lacy Baugher
Drift
SXSW needs an Action Documentary screening section solely for Drift to exist in. Described by director Deon Taylor as a real life Catch Me If You Can, the documentary stars real-life action hero Isaac Wright as he recounts his career going to unprecedented heights for his art.
“The documentary is a lot more than just my artwork,” Wright says. “It has to do with my life and what I feel like my artwork really represents and a full portrait of what I think the goal of life is.”
Under the artist name Drift, he climbs to the very top of the country’s tallest buildings capturing the most breathtaking and adrenaline-spiking photos, slowly working toward his dream of summiting the Empire State Building.
“We went to the Instagram and these beautiful photos are just so captivating that it’s really overwhelming, and wondering why the hell he’s up there and what he’s doing was my initial reaction,” Roxanne Avent Taylor, the film’s producer, says.
The documentary answers those questions in an exploration of the human spirit, as the occasional illegality of Drift’s climbs resulted in a multi-year battle with law enforcement across multiple states.
“I believed that everyone could connect to the human story based on the fact that we’ve all been through something,” Taylor says. “We’ve all been misrepresented or someone has tried to tear down your character in some way.”
On its surface, Drift is an action thriller come to life. At its core, Drift is a tear-jearking testament to a freedom that only the birds and the film’s namesake have experienced. – SR
Family Movie
When watching Family Movie, a chipper-oddball indie directed by Kevin Bacon and starring Kevin Bacon, as well as wife Kyra Sedgwick, daughter Sosie Bacon, and son Travis Bacon, one gets the sense that this is not what a real family flick with the Bacons would look like. At least you’d hope so! But given how mirthful this splatter-comedy is when their fictional doppelgängers are forced to deal with a murderer on the set of their horror movie-within-a-horror movie, you nonetheless feel like you’re sitting across from the gang during a lively game night.
“I think the movie definitely reflects on all our personalities individually and how we relate to each other,” Travis explains. “There’s definitely some little moments like that, but we’re still acting.”
Kevin later adds that screenwriter Dan Beers was able to collect some surprisingly accurate depictions of interpersonal dynamics after interviewing them each separately. Says the director: “When we got the first draft of the script, we were like, ‘Holy shit, how did you know that?!’ And it’s not like it’s pieces of dirt… it’s just ways of being.” – DC
Forbidden Fruits
A title like Forbidden Fruits suggests a heavy drama, thick with Biblical overtones and meditations on the nature of sin. Yet, one look at the new movie starring Lili Reinhart as the leader of a witch cult of mall girls promises the exact opposite, presenting itself as a spunky horror comedy.
However, according to director Meredith Alloway, religion weighs heavily on the story. “I love the idea that women are told that we’re quite literally the origin of evil and sin,” Alloway tells Den of Geek, a theme that goes all the way to the source material, the play “Of the woman came the beginning of sin, and through her we all die” by Lily Houghton, who cowrote the screenplay with Alloway.
Alloway continues, “When I read the play, I see all these women reclaiming that. Witchcraft and being in a coven are ways to make that narrative ours. I think when women get together and set an intention, whether it’s magic or literally just talking at a sleepover, that is really powerful.”
As Apple, Reinhart gathers a team of women to join her coven, including Lola Tung as Pumpkin, Victoria Pedretti as Cherry, and Alexandra Shipp as Fig,” all characters who are more than they initially appear.
“No one’s playing a stereotype,” says Pedretti. “There are a lot of cues that might lead you to misjudge these women before you get to know them. Each character ends up surprising the audience with their humanity.”
“I think we all play very complex human individuals who just so happen to be born in a female body in this lifetime, who are trying to navigate the structures of our world,” adds Shipp.
In other words, the characters are richer and more complicated than one might think, just like Forbidden Fruits itself. – JG
The Fox
Ever wanted to get in bed with a fox voiced by Olivia Colman? Well, Jai Courtney got to in Dario Russo’s The Fox, a magical realism comedy about what happens when people try to change themselves for their partners. Emily Browning reluctantly agrees to marry Courtney’s character, Nick, while secretly having an affair with her boss (Damon Herriman), who is also cheating on his wife (Claudia Doumit). In an effort to win their partner back, Nick listens to a fox he was moments away from killing in the woods, leading all the characters down a hole where they literally lose themselves.
Russo directed, wrote, and scored The Fox, so naturally he had a very specific vision for the fantasy and comedy elements of the film. Russo says he finds it really annoying when characters in films deliver an over-exaggerated reaction to talking animals, so in this universe, talking foxes are the least out-of-the-ordinary thing. Though they didn’t really act alongside Colman, Doumit and Browning were obsessed with her narration; Browning says she listened to a recording of Colman’s voice acting over and over again on a run one time. The film is as ambitious as it is mystical, but it never loses its ability to make fun of the chaos and camp of it all. – DZ
He Bled Neon
With all its neon lights and gleeful indulgence of vice, Las Vegas has always made for a popular movie setting. Still, Vegas-native and He Bled Neon producer Nate Bolotin felt there was a certain kind of movie that Sin City had not yet played host to.
“Twenty years ago, my step brother and best friend passed away. I got a text message from a mutual friend, just like how it happens in the movie actually, and had to go back and bury him and reconnect with the people that I had lost touch with. Someone came up to me at the funeral and said ‘hey, I think there’s some foul player here’ but we never went too deep. Fifteen years later or so it just clicked: we haven’t seen a Vegas revenge noir thriller in a world outside the Vegas strip.”
True to Bolotin’s real life experiences, He Bled Neon picks up with successful businessman Ethan (Joe Cole) receiving the fateful text and returning home to Las Vegas where he reconnects with his old crew (which includes characters played by Marshawn Lynch, Rita Ora, and Ismael Cruz Cordova) and begins to unpack the mystery of his brother Darren’s (Paul Wesley) death.
He Bled Neon aces the set-up, largely thanks to the colorful sensibilities of director Drew Kirsch and electronic soundscapes of composers Joe Trapanese and DJ Zhu. Once the revenge plot moves into the desert and grimy environs outside the strip, however, the film loses its distinctive sense of place and settles into a disappointingly conventional crime story. – Alec Bojalad
Hokum
Irish filmmaker Damian McCarthy became a SXSW Midnighter hero when 2024’s Oddity took home the festival’s Audience Award. Now he’s returned to Austin with some extra star power in tow. The horror auteur’s next spooky effort, Hokum, stars Severance’s Adam Scott as Ohm Bauman, an American novelist who absconds to a remote Irish inn to scatter his parents’ ashes and finish his latest book. Of course, it just so happens that this particular inn contains a honeymoon suite that is said to be haunted by an ancient witch…
Speaking of hauntings, Hokum’s first act is haunted by a weak characterization of Scott’s Ohm, whose lifetime of unaddressed grief has apparently manifested itself as a need to be a real dick. Once the movie gives way to the charismatic actor’s charm and McCarthy begins to flex his horror muscles, the back half blossoms into a pleasingly macabre experience. It’s also quite dark. Literally.
“It’s dark in the film, and it was literally dark when we were in there making it,” Scott told Den of Geek. “It was pretty clear that this was going to be unsettling. As an actor, since your control is limited, you never know really how something is going to turn out at the end of the day. Having so much faith in Damian and seeing all the components they put together on set, I knew there was a chance that this could work.” And indeed Hokum does work. – AB
I Love Boosters
Three projects into his burgeoning film career, it’s fair to say that Boots Riley has developed a house style. For a lesser creative, that level of one-note fixation might begin to grow stale. Thankfully, the marriage of the surreal with leftist politics is a note that this rapper, songwriter, and record-producer-turned-filmmaker knows how to play quite well. And he continues to do so in I Love Boosters.
Keke Palmer stars as Corvette, an aspiring fashion designer who ekes out a living as a “booster,” pinching high-end textiles and selling them to her neighborhood at a discount. Together with her friends Sade (Naomi Ackie) and Mariah (Taylour Paige), Corvette sets her booster sights on high-end fashion entrepreneur Christie Smith (Demi Moore) to close the fashion gap between the haves and have-nots.
Like Sorry to Bother You before it, I Love Boosters’ premise is merely a jumping off point for all the vivid imagery and offbeat twists to come. The movie that a ticket-buyer expects to see at minute 0 is very much not the movie they experience by minute 60 or so. Unlike Sorry to Bother You, however, Boosters’ absurdist twist isn’t a completely out-of-left-field human-animal hybrid situation but a far more mundane science fiction tool that we won’t spoil. Despite the relatively conventional sci-fi trappings of its back half, I Love Boosters feels satisfyingly anarchic and bizarre all the way through. – AB
Imposters
The idea of changelings, body snatchers, or other false creatures that are somehow swapped into existing families without any of their members being the wiser is nightmare fuel from time immemorial. Imposters takes this idea and runs with it, crafting a story that wrestles with ideas of parenthood, commitment, and fear.
The film stars Jessica Rothe and Charlie Barnett as Paul and Marie, a couple forced to contend with any parent’s worst nightmare when their baby mysteriously disappears. While everyone is convinced the resident Town Creep is responsible, Marie’s not so sure, and when she turns to the mysterious Orson (Bates Wilder) for help, he sends her to a mysterious cave in the woods. But the child Marie brings back from the forest may not be the son she lost.
A genre-bending film that’s full of the sort of twists even seasoned moviegoers will likely not see coming, that explores the all-too-human pain of love and loss through a filter that’s covered with no small amount of blood. – LB
Kill Me
At first glance, Kill Me seems to ask the question, “What if Charlie Kelly woke up in a bathtub of his own blood?” But with a deeply emotional and revelatory performance from Charlie Day, the horror-dramedy becomes so much more. Sure, our main character, Jimmy, lives in a dingy apartment a la Charlie and Frank, and his frenetic energy while trying to solve his own murder attempt harkens back to a Pepe Silvia obsession… but that’s not a bad thing. The audience is immediately comforted by the familiarity of Day’s impeccable comedic timing right before adjusting to the sobering reality that his character has a history of trying to take his own life—making him the perfect choice to carry the emotional weight of this film.
Jimmy meets his match in Allison Williams’ 911 operator, Margot. She grounds both him and a film that turns into an unlikely whodunit. Williams has also become something of a scream queen over the last decade (starring in Get Out, M3GAN, The Perfection), but pure horror this film is not. Similarly to Day, she brings the authenticity and depth needed to be Jimmy’s “straight man” as she navigates the hijinks of solving a maybe-murder while healing from her own trauma.
It’s a feat to address subject matter as serious as suicide while ensuring the audience knows they’re allowed to laugh—and a lot for that matter. Director Peter Warren tactfully displays both ends of the spectrum that people with mental illness can experience: the dramatics of suicide attempts but also the mundanity of ordering the same meal every day for months. In his own words, “Depression and mental illness are incredibly dangerous but can also be dumb and annoying. It’s like stepping on a rake a million times in your head.” – Britt Migs
Lainey Wilson: Keepin’ Country Cool
Amy Scott is the director behind Counting Crows: Have You Seen Me Lately? and Sheryl, proving an affinity for documentary storytelling about some of the music industry’s most iconic names. Now, she is bringing the story of modern country idol Lainey Wilson to Netflix.
Lainey Wilson: Keepin’ Country Cool is set to premiere globally on April 22. It follows the country star on her ascent to major stardom while traveling the country on the “Country’s Cool Again Tour” in 2024.
“After a while, it was apparent that we weren’t chasing the tour, we were chasing Lainey,” Scott says. “Her life is all over the place. Her life is not a straight line, so we just tried to hold onto that mechanical bull ride.”
While being jostled around the country and holding on for dear life, Scott and her team discovered the heart of Wilson’s music and her musical persona. Not only are her powerful vocals and charisma emblematic of industry titans like Dolly Parton, but her compassion and grit are what give her music, and this documentary, their spirit.
“Vulnerablilty can come in many different flavors,” Scott says. “It can be vulnerability about struggles, but vulnerability also is when you can be funny and have a really unguarded, self-deprecating nature, and we realized early on that (Lainey) is really, really funny.”
Throughout the documentary, Wilson is seen constantly songwriting when she isn’t rehearsing or performing. She has spent her career banking songs for upcoming records, using her determination and open heart as fodder for the future of her skyrocketing career; Scott’s latest project delivers all of these details in a way that is careful, exciting, and, of course, incredibly cool. – SR
Leviticus
The land down under has long been a reliable source of uniquely upsetting films, from Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975) to Lake Mungo (2008), but Australian horror has enjoyed a renaissance as of late, thanks to hits such as The Babadook (2014) and Talk to Me (2022).
Director Adrian Chiarella continues that tradition with his debut, Leviticus, which stars Joe Bird of Talk to Me and Stacy Clausen as two gay teens forced to participate in a conversion ritual by a fundamentalist pastor. The ritual releases a malevolent entity that takes the form of the person the victim most desires, which, for the boys, is one another.
“When I started thinking about things that were personal to me as a gay man, I knew that homophobia was something that I wanted to tackle in a film,” Chiarella tells Den of Geek. “There’s a clue in the word: homophobia is a fear. So I started digging deeper into what that might look like through the lens of this genre.”
The stars of Leviticus followed Chiarella’s lead by playing the reality of their characters’ plight. “I think that horror films are, in a way, dramas with horror elements because the emotions are so real and raw,” observes Bird. “It’s not like I was filming a horror film in one scene and a romance film in others. These were just real, natural people going through this experience.”
Chiarella adds, “I knew the horror element wouldn’t work unless you were really invested in the connection between these two lead characters.” To that end, he sent Bird and Clausen out on various field trips to build their characters. Those trips included visits to the country because, like any other good piece of Australian horror, the terror in Leviticus comes from the landscape. – JG
Mam
Part of the appeal of film festivals like SXSW is the chance for audiences to take in both mid-budget blockbusters bound for big theaters and the indie-est indies that ever indie-d. Projects like Over Your Dead Body and I Love Boosters occupy the former space on 2026’s SXSW roster. Mam is very much part of the latter.
Directed by Nan Feix, Mam is an unabashed love letter to Vietnamese cuisine, New York’s Chinatown, and love itself. It’s also a novel blend of fictional narrative and documentary. While Mam is fully scripted, it recounts the real life story of chef Jerald Head as he moves to New York from Texas and tries to make it in the culinary world. Playing Head and his wife and business partner Nhung Dao Head are Head and Nhung themselves, who now own and operate Mắm on Forsyth Street.
Shot in a scant 16 days (usually after a shift at the restaurant, Head revealed in a post-screen Q&A), Mam wears its lowkey indie status on its sleeve. The rough-around-the-edge film is unlikely to have a second life outside of Austin. But for 81 pleasant minutes, it made festival-goers in Alamo Drafthouse’s auditorium 5 very, very hungry. – AB
Manhood
What is likely to earn points as the most unusual and eyebrow-raising documentary at this year’s festival (or perhaps almost any other) is Daniel Lombroso’s Manhood, a sober look at the growing popularity of “male enhancement” cosmetic procedures (read: penis enlargement). It’s a subject ripe for ridicule or late night comedy, and yet the film takes a clinical lens that flits between aloof and sympathetic, depending on the interviewee. All are part of a larger line, though, of dudes willing to sell their house or risk their mortgages to increase their girth.
Astutely setting the film primarily in the Dallas and Miami areas of the South, Lombroso pulls at a thread from a previous documentary—his depressingly prescient study of the then fringe elements of the alt-right in the Atlantic’s White Noise (2020)—to draw a link between the manosphere culture of supplemental pills and Joe Rogan-like podcasts, and a lot of the guys desperate to add a few inches at any cost. Yet there’s perhaps a bit more empathy for the younger and more vulnerable parties who get taken for a ride and permanently disfigured by grifters with white coats and needles stuffed with filler.
The film could draw a stronger link in its thesis between the modern culture that its title obviously evokes and the guys on the table, but it finds both pathos and condemnation to varying degrees for alleged “medical” predators, and the type of souls who end up thinking they need to have this procedure done. One wishes to spend more time with the partners who often shrug they don’t even care. – DC
Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice
Writer-director BenDavid Grabinski might have been too young to make movies in the ‘90s, but he was definitely watching them. And nowadays he appears to be determined to bring a flavor of them back, complete with a hard-swaggering, high-concept genre exercise starring Vince Vaughn at his most confident. A movie about gangsters, parties, and time travel, Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice is a bit like if Swingers, Go, and Back to the Future had a half-forgotten love child who we’re now only meeting as an adult. And that’s meant as a compliment.
As the title suggests, this is a love triangle served in four parts after gangster Nick (Vaughn) time travels about half a year into the past in order to stop his slightly younger self (also Vaughn) from murdering their best friend Mike (James Marsden) for the affair he’s carrying on with Nick’s unhappy wife, Alice (Eiza González). It’s a gonzo premise that is treated with just enough seriousness to give meat to the idea of considering second chances—whether through the magic of a proverbial “undo” button, or where you’d even want to hit it to fix a bad mistake. As González notes in our studio, “I always connect with moving forward. I think there’s something beautiful about the chaos. Some of the craziest, most beautiful things that happened in my life have come from real terrible circumstances and bad moments”
Still, in its heart, this movie is all about the vibes, as indicated by its structure being based around the “PARTY,” “AFTERPARTY,” and “AFTER-AFTER-AFTERPARTY” which its main quartet crashes while trading barbs in a screenplay with more wisecracks than there are bullets. And trust us, this movie has a whole lotta bullets. It’s bravado and muscular mischief and suggests Grabinski is one to watch. – DC
My Brother’s Killer
This documentary solves a murder case gone cold. My Brother’s Killer, directed by Rachel Mason, traces the 36 years since the brutal murder of 25-year-old William “Billy London” Arnold Newton in West Hollywood.
This film captures the violence, trauma, and grief gay men experienced during the AIDS epidemic, as well as their resilience. Through archival material and dozens of interviews with those connected to the case, including her own mother, Mason uncovers shocking information.
“It was a terribly violent time and I think that’s another undocumented part of gay history,” Mason says. “Sadly, it is hard to always focus on the negativity and sadness, and the resilience of gay culture is the most amazing thing. In the sea of death, you also have this vibrancy, and I really wanted to showcase that. It doesn’t always have to be dark, the fight can be joyful in a strange way.”
Billy was an adult filmmaker, poet, and illustrative artist—he was also deeply loved by the people around him, a feeling evident throughout the documentary. This documentary is more than a true crime film, it showcases the struggle of representation and provides recognition and closure for those involved. – AH
Normal
Full disclosure: We were not able to actually see director Ben Wheatley and screenwriter Derek Kolstad’s new action movie starring Bob Odenkirk—the deceptively titled Normal—in Austin. However, we were able to speak with all three men, who have described the movie as a kind of inversion of High Noon. In that classic Western, Gary Cooper stood alone as a sheriff willing to face up bad men while all the people who loved him turned their backs in fear.
“It’s ultimately taking those themes, the sense and the appeal, and wrapping it around small-town Americana,” Kolstad observes about their new film. But it’s also doing so in a modern context with the America of today, setting the stage for an action spectacle apropos of the scribe behind John Wick.
For his part, director Wheatley appreciates that he has brought a British sensibility to the proceedings, saying, “An outsider’s perspective is always interesting. Not to say it’s better than worse from any other point-of-view, but I think there’s a long history of people coming from the outside to film the States and to see it with different eyes.” It also might be befitting of the neo-Western. While genre icon John Wayne famously detested High Noon back in the day, refusing to believe a small town wouldn’t support a good man in need, Normal’s viewers might be much more open to the idea. As Odenkirk quips, “He should meet some small towns.”
Over Your Dead Body
When it comes to filmmaking, the concept of “escalation” can be just as important as acting, scripting, or even turning the damn cameras on in the first place. Few movies at the 2026 SXSW Film Festival understand the importance of raising the stakes better than action comedy thriller Over Your Dead Body.
Based on the 2021 Norwegian film The Trip and directed by The Lonely Island’s Jorma Taccone, all Over Your Dead Body knows how to do is escalate. Things start relatively simple with husband and wife Dan and Lisa (Shrinking’s Jason Segel and Ready or Not’s Samara Weaving) repairing to a remote cabin upstate to save their dying marriage… and also to kill each other. Dan and Lisa’s murderous plans are complicated by a cascade of interlopers and extenuating circumstances, leading to mass amounts of blood, gore, and perhaps even some rekindled romance.
Over Your Dead Body’s commitment to ratcheting absurdity means that its first act runs a bit dry. But once two prison escapees (Timothy Olyphant, Keith Jardine) and their guard conspirator (Juliette Lewis) enter the narrative, the movie really gets rolling and never looks back. And like any good partnership, Segel and Weaving excel in dabbling in the other’s home turf of horror and comedy, respectively.
“I’m just so proud to have made a remake that I feel like has teeth,” Taccone says. “It’s dark, it’s fucked up, and it’s more gory than the original, weirdly. It has its own tone, and I just feel very proud that we could make something that I like equally to the original.” – AB
Pizza Movie
In a shameless throwback to the stoner comedies of the 2000s, Pizza Movie is the type of slouched and underachieving good time that is destined to best be seen in a crowded theater or even rowdier dorm room. Which isn’t to say it’s dumb. Writers-directors Nick Kocher and Brian McEllhaney take some boldly clever swings in their high-concept (ahem) where a couple of college screw-ups (Stranger Things’ Gaten Matarazzo and Sean Giambrone) indulge in an experimental drug they find in their dorm room. However, the thing has such potent magical properties, it not only gets them high but causes them to break the space-time continuum with time-loops and fourth-wall breaks. They’re like a pair of blitzed Punxsutawney co-eds.
The only cure? Pizza, of course, which is down in the lobby if they can get down there in time—or face severe consequences. It’s a deliberately, heavily-baked concept, which Kocher describes as based on a true story. “In college, we had the idea. Everyone’s ordered food when they’re not fully sober and it’s difficult.” You can say that again, dude. – DC
Power Ballad
It is said that success is the child of many fathers while failure is an orphan. But that doesn’t mean every papa gets the credit they deserve, particularly in fields as competitive (and lucrative) as songwriting. Such is the appealing conceit of John Carney’s latest bittersweet laugher that looks into the music business with as much affection as there is contempt. They, in fact, walk hand-in-hand when Paul Rudd’s washed up wedding singer Rick meets Nick Jonas’ former boy band heartthrob searching for reinvention, Danny. The two jam and jive during a joyous night over drinks in Ireland, including when Rick shows a few of the pieces he’s working on, particularly a poignant ballad that’s only missing a bridge.
Six months later, the song has it, as does Danny who’s introduced it to the world as an instant sensation—and as a piece of musical magic he wrote solo. A bit of a music industry “Book of Job,” where Rudd’s hurt and aggrieved Rick must deal with the eye-rolls and second-guessing of nearly everyone in his life, from his bandmates to even his wife and daughter. There’s a lot of humor in the scenario, but plenty of pathos as Rudd gives one of the finest performances of his career. He’s a man losing his sanity and his even-keel, to the point where he must travel from the Emerald Isle to the City of Angels. – DC
Pretty Lethal
The loftiness of chasing perfection, and the physical demand of what many consider the highest performing art, has always made ballet a compelling subject for filmmakers. Storytellers often wish to track the psychic or physiological toll of achieving révérence—or at least contrasting it with gonzo, blood-splattered spectacle. Pretty Lethalattempts both in a daffy B-crowdpleaser that essentially Die Hards five prima ballerinas when they’re trapped in an eastern European den of iniquity run by a vamping Uma Thurman.
The movie gets a lot of mileage out of its balletic heroines being decidedly not John McClane (or Ana de Armas in a John Wick movie, for that matter). Instead, they nervously use their on pointe routine to “Waltz of the Flowers” for a blood-soaked defense in a bar involving knives, shattered wine bottles, and knives in the slippers. Says star Maddie Ziegler, “We sort of came up with a style we’re calling ballet-fu, which was really fun. Because we referenced if you put a bunch of feral cats in a box, that was what we were doing to survive. But I think we used our strengths to our advantage,” complete by combining the input of stunt coordinators and ballet choreographers. Grace is harmony. – DC
Ready or Not 2: Here I Come
In an age of so-called “elevated” and sober-minded horror cinema, it is a blessing from Mr. Le Bail that we have Radio Silence ready to turn up the gore and fun. The filmmaking collective behind Ready or Not, Abigail, and the best Scream movies made in this century return to their own blood-red haunts and splash new buckets of crimson in the delightfully sinister Ready or Not 2. Like its predecessor, this is a grinning romp suffused with eat-the-rich gallows humor as we revisit the Bride in the splattered dress (Samara Weaving) mere moments after she parted brutally with her groom for good. (He was in the process of trying to sacrifice her to Satan. As apparently one does in country estates.)
Unfortunately for Grace, there are plenty of other Devil-worshipping billionaires out there. It turns out to be a blessing for the audience, though, as she inevitably slaughters them alongside sister Faith (Kathryn Newton) during a new hide-and-seek game at a country club that looks suspiciously like Mar-a-Lago. As director Gillett acknowledges, “All of the institutions that we engage with, if you follow them fall enough, you’re probably going to find some form of corruption.”
The movie doesn’t quite reach the same highs as the first movie since we know the punchline this time, but the climax at an elite Satanic altar is every bit as giddy as the combustible billionaires last time, and Samara Weaving still knows how to deliver a killing parting shot. – DC
The Saviors
Filmmakers don’t get to choose whether their films will be “timely” or not. Movies take a long time to make and time itself, as you might have noticed, has a tendency to Inexorably March On. Rarely has there ever been a better case study of that phenomenon than the unusually (and completely accidentally) timely comedy thriller The Saviors.
Adam Scott and Danielle Deadwyler star as Sean and Kim, a couple in a failing marriage who look to supplement their income by renting their shed to Amir and Jahan – a brother and sister from an undisclosed Middle Eastern nation played by Theo Rossi and Nazanin Boniadi. While Amir and Jahan seem nice, they’re also suspiciously interested in the president of the United States’ whereabouts and appear to be building some sort of dangerous device. But this can’t be what Sean and Kim think it is, right? They’re not bigots and this isn’t a mediocre season of 24… right?
Due to a confluence of events like a pandemic, two Hollywood work stoppages, and the general improbability of getting a movie produced at all, The Saviors took 10 years to make from conception to premiere. And in that 10 years, the world shifted away from Obama-era progressive optimism to a more overt return to Islamophobia with the United States even entering war with Iran just two weeks before the film’s premiere.
“You know, there was a period in those 10 years when I thought the world had changed a bit, and maybe we should focus on a different project,” director and co-writer Kevin Hamedani says. “And then the world changed again, and suddenly The Saviors is even more timely, unfortunately.”
The Saviors’ incidental resonance to current events only enhances what is already a compelling narrative. Scott and Deadwyler shine as two ostensibly progressive individuals who need answers but don’t want to seem like Bradley Whitford’s “I’d have voted for Obama a third time if I could” character in Get Out. Hamedani and the script deftly guide the audience through those choppy waters, always leaving enough breadcrumbs so that the viewer doesn’t fully feel like Bradley Whitford either. The end result is a nifty little thriller that feels like The ‘Burbs for the Airbnb age. – AB
Seekers of Infinite Love
Though Seekers of Infinite Love may one day be a cult comedy, right now it’s literally a comedy about a cult… but also about family
Hannah Einbinder (Hacks), John Reynolds (Search Party), and Griffin Gluck (American Vandal) star as a trio of siblings who must rescue their sister from the clutches of the Peoples Temple-esque the Seekers of Infinite Love. Helping them on their mission is ex cult member-turned-cult deprogrammer Rick (Justin Theroux) and his wardrobe of tactical vests.
According to writer/director Victoria Strouse, Seekers’ cult angle emerged unexpectedly late in the writing process of the script, which was featured on 2008’s Black List.
“I’m utterly fascinated by siblings and I think some of the complexities in sibling relationships, [it] kind of ends up talking so much about all human relationships,” she says. “As I was working on it, I became really interested in cults, this idea of a secondary but corrupt family.”
That fascination with family shines through with Einbinder, Reynolds, and Gluck evoking a believably agitated sibling unit, if not a believably genetic one with their diverse mix of heights and hair colors. While the end result could have used a little more cult whackiness to fully live up to its comedic potential, it’s hard to be disappointed with time spent on a road trip to oblivion with four very funny actors. – AB
See You When I See You
Before 2025’s SXSW title The Baltimorons, indie filmmaking titan Jay Duplass had not directed a movie since 2012’s The Do-Deca-Pentathlon, opting to help shepherd other storytellers’ visions alongside his brother and producing partner Mark Duplass. But when fellow producing family Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon brought the script for See You When I See You his way, he knew he had to get behind the camera once again. “It just felt big and scary and like I couldn’t say no,” he says.
It’s easy to see why the project appealed to Duplass. Written by comedian Adam Cayton-Holland, and based on his memoir Tragedy Plus Time, See You When I See You is an intensely personal story about Cayton-Holland’s PTSD following the death of his sister by suicide. Cooper Raiff (director and star of Cha Cha Real Smooth) steps in as the film’s Cayton-Holland analogue, Aaron, and does marvelous work unpacking the young man’s confused journey through grief.
Outside of some creative visual choices representing Aaron’s struggle to reclaim happy memories of his sister, See You When I See You doesn’t have much new to say about the grieving process. Ultimately though, that’s a feature, not a bug, as the rhythms of pain should resonate with anyone who has experienced real tragedy. Even if those experiences involve significantly less Third-Eye Blind and Sum 41 than Aaron’s. – AB
Sender
What’s the strangest thing you’ve ever been sent in the mail? The answer to that question can range from the mundane—a gardening hat you didn’t order—to the truly bizarre. Actor David Dastmalchian, for one, tells us he was mailed dirty underwear more than once by an anonymous…. fan? “It was accompanied by a really bizarre letter,” the actor grimaces.
That’s obviously immediately creepy, yet writer-director Russell Goldman’s Sender takes an initially more innocuous stance before turning the screws. And according to Goldman, this too is based on real-life. “[Folks will] send you cheap objects that are related, most likely, to your search history online and any cookies or data can take from what you’re looking like. They send it to your home so they can write reviews in your name that are five stars, so those products can then get a boost on the algorithms.”
Sender takes that conceit to its most ominous, Hitchockian extreme when Britt Lower’s Julia receives a mysterious package from an even more mysterious, and threatening, source. – DC
Sinner Supper Club
Described as a “gay mumblecore ghost story” directors of Sinner Supper Club, Daisy Rosato and Nora Kaye, deliver exactly what is promised. Shot on an iPhone within six days and rooted in improvisation, the film is a scrappy documentation of a NYC-based friend group on the fritz during a heat wave.
Gathered in a small apartment for Genevieve’s (Genevieve Simon) “eviction funeral,” tensions arise amidst the group over things big and small. On top of navigating their shared-traumatic experience, the death of a best friend, nothing seems to go right — a melted ice cream cake, the power going out, and worst of all, an uninvited partner is brought to the gathering. The night culminates in an unexpected, yet restorative, paranormal experience.
Sinner Supper Club explores the surrealness of grief from an intrinsically queer perspective. It delivers comedic beats and moments of grief with the fluidity of a high-budget film. While there are moments of hesitance from the actors, the ensemble cast delivers a performance where you feel dropped in the middle of their hangout. – AH
They Will Kill You
The idea for They Will Kill You blossomed after director Kirill Sokolov stayed in an eerie hotel that he believed to be inhabited by a cult of old women. The fictionalized and much gorier version stars Zazie Beetz as the new housekeeper at a decadent hotel with a history of mysterious disappearances. As Sokolov brings her violent journey through the mysterious building to the big screen, the company explores countless genres, from mystery to slapstick to fantasy.
“Kirill was always reminding us that yes, there’s action, and yes, there’s comedy, but also, at least for me, the most important thing was the truth at the moment,” Myha’la, who plays Beetz’s sister, says. “Then, if it feels truthful and honest and real to me and us in this moment, the comedy is going to come in the edit.”
The highlight of the movie is the performances from actors like Patricia Arquette, Tom Felton, Heather Graham, and the aforementioned sister duo. They expertly balance multiple styles and tropes, giving the movie an edge in an arguably oversaturated genre.
“It is genre-defying because it is a love story about two sisters, and that’s really at the core of everything, and then you mix in the brilliant Kung Fu and gore and martial arts and heroism,” Felton says. “It’s a unique blend. I don’t think a film has ever been made quite like this.” – SR
Time and Water
“The future we were warned about is no longer distant, it is here.” This is the message that Oscar-nominated director Sara Dosa shares in her newest documentary Time and Water. Through archival material and the writings of Icelandic author, Andri Snær Magnason, Dosa puts together an expansive story focused on generational memory and humanity’s relationship with nature.
Centered on Magnason’s own family ties, Time and Water captures the vast existence of Icelandic glaciers and the tremendous loss felt by the author as he witnesses the disappearance of these titans, and the passing of his grandparents. The audience is transported through the passing of time and experiences the indelible impression humans make on the world and people around them.
“There is something radical about love, especially in a time that is so polarizing,” Dosa says. “Wherever we can center love and joy amid the doom and the apocalyptic stories abound, I think it could inspire hope…I think it can give a sense of a light in the dark to keep people working toward the change that we so badly need.”
Time and Water is a stark wake-up call, not only to protect the planet we call home, but to cherish our time with loved ones. The future is now, and Dosa captures the course we took to get here. – AH
Wishful Thinking
It sometimes feels impossible to be happy—even with someone you love—when there’s so much bad news in the world. So imagine the pressure Julia and Charlie (Maya Hawke and Lewis Pullman) are under in Wishful Thinking, a supremely clever and wholesome romantic comedy where the fate of Portland, Oregon, if not the world, rests on the straining romance of two young people at a crossroads in their life. As it slowly dawns on them, when things are good in their domestic life, Julia is suddenly up for a promotion at work, and Charlie’s crypto investments are skyrocketing. When they’re unhappy with each other, literal earthquakes can occur.
It’s a shrewd use of magical realism to entertain wish fulfillment—like literally getting rich off crypto after a particularly sexy date night—but also comment on the pressures we put on each other in the modern world, particularly for those who are as socially entangled and plugged in as the film’s Gen-Z antiheroes. It’s an indie rom-com about the challenge of early adult romances, complete with a big swing ending. But it finds an innovative way to engage these elements, especially when Hawke and Pullman are simpatico—and perhaps even more so when they’re not. – DC
Woodstockers
We were delighted to welcome film and TV mainstay Corbin Bernsen back to the Den of Geek Studio at SXSW to chat about his indie TV pilot, Woodstockers. This time, Bernsen–who is the showrunner, writer, and star– was joined by his son, Oliver, who directed the pilot episode (he also had a feature-length directorial debut, Bagworm, play at the festival).
The delightfully funny dramedy puts the audience in the headspace of an aging hippie confronting life, death, and a bygone era and its legacy set against scenic upstate New York. Our conversation was introspective as the Bernsen’s grappled with deep conversations on set, Corbin’s own career journey, which launched during that period in 1967, and their excitement for independent filmmaking in the television space. Their commitment to the form paid off: Woodstockers took home an Audience award. Now that’s Flower Power. – Chris Longo
Television
Are We Still Married?
Indie TV pilot Are We Still Married? stars Dustin Milligan as Jack, a husband who has been turned into a vampire via a bite from a mysterious bat, and Taylor Misiak as Laura, his wife who isn’t sure whether we should let him back in the house. While that is undoubtedly a bold genre concept, the inspiration for the story came from a real life experience for writer/director Kit Steinkellner (who also created the Facebook Watch series Sorry For Your Loss).
“My husband did get bit by a bat,” she tells Den of Geek. “It was that kind of crazy thing that doesn’t happen except when it does. He got a rabies shot and was OK. I don’t know how you process trauma in your marriage but comedic bits are our go-to. So we just started cracking vampire jokes. At a certain point, he was like ‘but if I were a vampire, you would let me back in the house, right?’ I paused and he didn’t like that pause.”
Through the safety of her closed kitchen window, Laura peppers Jack with questions about vampirism that he doesn’t have the answers to (the bat didn’t exactly explain all the rules of this whole thing). Steinkellner and the actors make beautiful work of the premise, both having fun with the genre silliness of it all while also delving into the pathos of a loving marriage interrupted by a truly unforeseeable calamity. Coming in at just 15 minutes long, Are We Still Married? serves as a compelling proof of concept for whatever direction, and medium, Steinkellner wants to take the story from here.
“I did write a feature inspired by this that was on this past year’s Blacklist. At the same time, in having this conversation with South by, a part of the independent pilot requirement is to submit a series bible. I’ve actually not done this with other ideas before but I have pretty thoroughly explored both options. Ultimately I just want to keep telling this story.” – AB
The Audacity
Have you ever wondered where the wunderkind techbros of Silicon Valley get the audacity? Thankfully so has Jonathan Glatzer, a former writer on Succession and Better Call Saul and now the creator and showrunner of AMC’s fittingly named The Audacity.
“For years, I thought of audacity as a kind of superpower that we all have, but few of us actually employ because it involves crashing through norms of behavior. Most of us are not bulls in China shops, but in Silicon Valley, it is kind of regarded as an attribute. There’s a lot of broken dishes around there, but that’s what they like: move fast and break things,” he says.
Through its first three episodes, The Audacity doesn’t move fast, but it does break some things. Billy Magnussen (a compelling character actor probably best known for Game Night and Made For Love) steps into the megalomaniacal shoes of Hypergnosis CEO Duncan Park. Eager to prove that he’s much more than the product of some well-timed good luck, Duncan leverages his relationship with his therapist Joanne Felder to gain some (flagrantly illegal) advantages over his competition.
The Audacity excels as a slice of life look at the excesses (and yes, audacity) of Silicon Valley’s elite in the rapidly expanding AI era. While its early episodes come off as more of a vibe in search of a story, the level of talent both behind and in front of the camera suggests that it has plenty of room to grow. – AB
The Comeback Season 3
Since The Comeback first premiered in 2005, Valerie Cherish has always returned to TV when it needs her the most. The first season of the HBO comedy found the aging sitcom diva played by Lisa Kudrow trying to navigate the brave new world of reality TV, recording her comeback as Aunt Sassy on new sitcom “Room and Bored.” In 2014’s season 2, Valerie attempted to get in on the Bravo-fication of the medium by pitching a pilot to Andy Cohen. Now, with The Comeback’s third and final season, Valerie is set to tackle television’s gravest challenge yet: artificial intelligence.
“[The Comeback] began with what everyone thought was the first extinction event [of TV], which was reality TV, eliminating scripted television for the more economical – no rules, no unions,” Kudrow says. “Happily that wasn’t the end. [Co-creator Michael Patrick King and I] were having lunch and he was like ‘What about this: Valerie is finally offered the lead in a multi-camera sitcom but it’s written about AI.’”
The Comeback season 3’s eight episodes present yet another comedic masterclass of industry satire and character-building. There’s never been someone quite like Valerie Cherish on television and there is unlikely to be ever again. The fading superstar is desperate for fame yet uniquely ill-equipped to handle it, spending much of her adult life flourishing in front of sitcom studio multicams while putting her foot in her mouth in front of documentary single cams.
The Comeback’s satire is so subtle as to be barely visible. Really it’s the story of a singular character who refuses to let her story end regardless of how many times the industry tries to close the book… and all the humiliation she endures with a grin because of it. Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King give Valerie Cherish the ending she so richly deserves, but we’ll miss her all the same. – AB
The Dark Wizard
The history of rock climbing is rife with larger-than-life characters and adventure sport trailblazers, but few loom as large as Dean Potter. A climber, high-liner, BASE jumper and all around Yosemite Valley Renaissance man, Potter set speed records and free soloed daunting walls at an unprecedented caliber for the duration of his career. Now, Peter Mortimer and Nick Rosen – documentary filmmakers and Potter’s old friends – are bringing his story to HBO Max with their new docuseries, “The Dark Wizard.”
“His aura and myth dominated the sport, both because he was pioneering all these crazy things … but there was also a much broader story there, the behind the scenes and what was going on in his personal world that was really compelling that no one had really heard about,” Rosen says.
“The Dark Wizard” not only details Potter’s Herculean feats and the impact he had on the climbing community, but also his mental health journey that took place behind the closed doors of an alpha facade.
“It’s unbelievable seeing all these Olympic athletes talk about their mental health and the struggles,” Mortimer says. “That just was not happening back in the time.”
The only documentation of Potter’s internal dialogues were in his journals, which his sister donated to the filmmaking duo so they could platform the realities of his life. Using stylistic images and animations from these diaries, alongside interviews with Potter and his inner circle, Mortimer and Rosen crafted a chilling recapitulation of the climber’s life. – SR
Margo’s Got Money Troubles
Margo’s got money troubles, sure. But she’s also got some big expectations to meet. The Apple TV dramedy entered the 2026 SXSW Film & TV Festival as the undisputed TV headliner, thanks to the involvement of two prestige studios (A24 and the aforementioned Apple TV), a legendary TV showrunner (David E. Kelley), and a high-powered cast that would fit right in at this year’s Oscars ceremony (Elle Fanning, Michelle Pfeiffer, Nick Offerman, Nicole Kidman, and more). Still, it’s one thing to have a lot of expensive toys; it’s another thing entirely to know how to play with them. Thankfully, Margo’s Got Money Troubles puts forward an eight-episode experience well worthy of its creative firepower.
Based on a novel of the same name by Rufi Thorpe, Margo stars Elle Fanning as the titular young woman with money problems due to an unexpected pregnancy following a tryst with her douchey literature professor. Anticipating little help from her ex-Hooters waitress mother (Pfeiffer) or professional wrestler estranged father (Offerman), Margo gets creative (and sometimes nekkid) to pay the bills. Margo’s Got Money Troubles is Juno for the OnlyFans generation. It’s also the rare “prestige” episodic experience that doesn’t feel like a two-hour movie script that got out of hand. That’s all thanks to a preposterously charming lead performance from Fanning and her equally likable supporting cast. – AB
Chuck Norris’ Death Is the End of a Very Particular Millennial Humor Internet Era
Death once had a near-Chuck experience. So goes one of the best Chuck Norris facts, an online repository of tall-tales about the bearded action star. Since 2005, Chuck Norris has been defined less by his ’80s action movies, his incredibly popular TV show Walker, Texas Ranger, or his conservative politics, and more bite-sized factoids that remain the best of 2000s “that’s so random” internet humor.
With his death at the age of 86 comes an opportunity to look back, not at the man, but at the legend, as it was told in aphorisms about a man who didn’t read books, but stared them down until he got the information he wanted.
Chuck Norris may have lost his virginity before his father did, but Chuck Norris Facts had a much more predictable origin. In 2005, users who saw ads for the family comedy The Pacifier began posting jokes about its tough-guy star Vin Diesel on the forums for Something Awful, a standard of 2000s humor. Inspired by the “Walker, Texas Ranger Lever” bit on Late Night With Conan O’Brien, in which the host could pull a lever to play a random clip, users replaced Diesel with Norris and internet history was made.
Chuck Norris can speak Braille, which is just one of the reasons that he made a better subject than Diesel. Born in 1940, after which roundhouse kick-related deaths have increased 13,000 percent, Norris studied Tang Soo Do while stationed in South Korea during his service in the Air Force. After leaving the service, Norris founded a martial arts studio and competed in tournaments, which allowed him to rise in prominence.
In 1968, he had a minor role in the Dean Martin comedy The Wrecking Crew, which modern viewers may know it as the movie Sharon Tate goes to see in Once Upon a Time… In Hollywood. But his breakout came with 1972’s Way of the Dragon, starring Bruce Lee. Shortly thereafter, Norris started getting his own lead roles in low-budget action flicks such as Good Guys Wear Black (1978) and A Force of One (1979), and then graduating to studio pictures with Silent Rage (1982) and Lone Wolf McQuade (1983).
As we all know, Chuck Norris doesn’t hunt, he waits. So he waited until he found his true home with Cannon Films, the infamous ’80s schlock house operated by Israeli cousins Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus. Norris’s stiff screen presence and martial arts expertise paired well with Cannon’s outrageous concepts, and so the collaboration resulted in a string of hits, including Mission in Action (1984), Invasion U.S.A. (1985), and The Delta Force (1986).
Those pictures were enough to keep Norris a household name through the ’80s, and when his star began to dim in the 1990s, along came Walker, Texas Ranger, which aired 203 episodes and a TV movie between 1993 and 2005.
Given that incredible and unlikely success from a man who could obviously execute a roundhouse kick (so fast that it once broke the speed of light) but who lacked acting chops, Chuck Norris encapsulated the random nature of millennial humor. His entire career felt like a pop culture joke, something that came from a half-remembered episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 that somehow perfectly encapsulated the ability of Baby Boomers to succeed despite obvious shortcomings.
A famously friendly person, Norris took the jokes in good humor and even supported their creation, which made them even better. For a while, anyway. A staunch conservative, who spread his reactionary views in his syndicated newspaper column C-Force, he also used the jokes in a 2007 ad to endorse presidential candidate and former Arkansas mayor Mike Huckabee.
Certainly, Norris’s attempts to turn the jokes into calls for stronger border control and fewer gun restrictions could change the way we look at them. But, then again, the jokes were never about Chuck Norris himself; they were always about the legend. The legend of a person who killed two stones with one bird.
So Chuck Norris may have died today (actually, he died ten years ago; the Grim Reaper is just scared to tell him), but the jokes live on, and the boogeyman still needs to check under his bed for Chuck Norris.
Seekers of Infinite Love: Hannah Einbinder and Justin Theroux Talk Cults and Uncomfortable Touching
It’s a truth universally acknowledged that we’re all obsessed with cults. Whether it’s because we’re fascinated by their bizarre internal hierarchies or just really convinced we ourselves would never find ourselves ensnared by such a group, we’re all still fascinated by everything that cults stand for. But Seekers of Infinite Love isn’t your standard cult movie. Rather than plumb the depths of a group of indoctrinated followers and the inevitable creeps who lead them, this is a film about a dysfunctional family who must find a way to deal with their own mistakes, regrets, and frustrations in order to save one of their own.
The story follows three grown siblings on a road trip to find their younger sister, who has been brainwashed into joining a doomsday cult known as the Seekers of Infinite Love. Unbeknownst to its followers, the group’s pony-tailed leader (Greg Kinnear) plans to convince them all to participate in a mass suicide event in just a few days, meaning that author Kayla (Hannah Einbinder), lawyer Zach (John Reynolds), and degenerate gambler Wes (Griffin Gluck) must put aside all their own issues to track her down as soon as possible. With some help from an expert cult deprogrammer (Justin Theroux) who has some secrets of his own, the group sets out to track down Scarlett (Justine Lupe), and each is forced to confront many of their own demons and emotional hang-ups along the way.
If this movie sounds a little bit like a slightly more deranged take on Little Miss Sunshine, it’s probably not an accident, and Seekers of Infinite Love is ultimately grounded in the family dynamic at its center.
“It really started with siblings,” writer/director Victoria Strouse tells Den of Geek when asked about the origins of the film at SXSW. “It was wanting to capture that dynamic. I’m utterly fascinated by siblings, and I think some of the complexities in sibling relationships — because everything is so right there on the surface — kind of ends up [speaking] to all human relationships. It’s just that you get to it so much faster, because siblings don’t really lie, or they lie all the time, but in that even there’s a truth. So it started there, and as I was working on it, I became really interested in cults, in this idea of a secondary but corrupt family. And I love a road trip movie, so it all kind of just came together.”
Though it’s primarily a film about a dysfunctional family who are all “seekers of infinite love” in their own ways, the concept of cults — and ways these groups are capable of indoctrinating their members to potentially dangerous ideology — looms large over its story. The film’s cast is seemingly well-versed on the subject, mentioning the UFO-focused Heaven’s Gate, the murderous Manson family, self-help-group-turned-sex-slave-cult NXIVM, and Love Has Won, a group that followed a woman who referred to herself as “Mother God,” as cults they’re knowledgeable about.
But for Theroux, who plays deprogrammer Rick, his approach to building connections is a bit more… immediate.
“I think one of the keys to Rick was that he would get uncomfortably close to people when he would talk to them,” he said. “Just lots of eye contact and touch, like in that scene we were just describing, where we… find out a certain thing, I immediately go to Griffin [the former American Vandal star who plays family hot mess Wes] and start rubbing his back. And unwanted touch is one of my least favorite things in the world, so I knew that I could immediately key into anyone by just touching them gently.”
Whether or not his methods work on Scarlett is a question that only the film itself can answer, but, according to the man who plays him, Rick seems to have a family favorite already.
“There was a lot more of you touching me that got cut out of the movie,” Gluck adds. “It sounds crazy. But this was always a thing that you did anytime we were in a scene together. Cause I’m your…I think Rick sees me as his son.”
“When I was editing, I was like, ‘Wow, he does touch Wes a lot,” Strouse confirms. “But it ended up being one of my favorite unplanned throughlines.”
Seekers of Infinite Love premiered March 12 at the SXSW Film Festival.
Project Hail Mary Ending Explained: Author Andy Weir Open to Sequel
This article contains Project Hail Mary spoilers.
Ryland Grace never saw himself as a hero. It’s also fair to say no else did either. No one human, anyway…
When the Ryan Gosling protagonist is shipped off on the last rocket out of Earth, Ryland isn’t so much being elevated as he is sacrificed by his superiors. He’s considered the most qualified man left alive to study astrophage—and perhaps discover a solution for how to stop these damned little space “dots” from dimming our sun until we enter a new Ice Age. He also is single, without a family, and frankly expendable. “They’ll remember you as a hero,” Sandra Hüller’s Eva Strait coldly promises Grace as he’s put into a chemically induced coma. Succeed or fail, Ryland is on a one-way ticket to his doom, and all without the good grace of making that fate his own choice.
Which is, of course, the beauty of the final movements of both author Andy Weir’s 2021 source material novel and the new sci-fi film it inspired from directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller. Because like Weir’s The Martianbefore it, Project Hail Mary is an ebullient story about human ingenuity, survival—and, eventually, heroism.
This is crystallized during the Project Hail Mary ending where after making friends with a new, genuinely selfless alien whose home world is as threatened as Earth, Grace is faced with a similar conundrum like the one from years earlier. His new best buddy, Rocky—an adorable rock-shaped alien who is more engineer than scientist, and who has no real real concept of either relativity or radiation poisoning—has given Grace some of his alien ship’s astrophage, which will allow Ryland to return home, after all. Yet what neither space traveler realizes is that taumoeba—the alien microbe Rocky and Grace discover that can eat astrophage and keep the microscopic threat from dimming their home solar system’s stars—also has evolved to eat through the xenoite containers that Rocky made to contain the substance. In other words: it will cause yet more radiation poisoning on Rocky’s ship, killing the alien who will die alone, scared, and unable to save his world.
Ryland could return to Earth a hero, or he could send his taumoeba discovery back via small satellites and use what’s left of his astrophage supply to go save Rocky. He at last makes the heroic choice willingly.
It’s ultimately a happy ending, too, since not only does Grace live up to his surname and save an extraterrestrial BFF, but Rocky’s grateful species of Eridians are able to build biosphere replicating Earth’s climate (at least if you live in northern California). It’s basically a luxurious biological preserve for humans, but it still leaves Ryland happy because he can nerd out with fellow science enthusiast Rocky, and pass that enthusiasm down to the next generation. At the end of the day, Grace will always be more teacher more than action hero.
Nonetheless, there’s a curious note at the end where Rocky offers to help build for Grace a ship that might be able to take him back to Earth. The Gosling character suggests he’ll consider it, but not too quickly. He has a class to teach.
It’s an ambiguous note for the story, seemingly suggesting that Grace might not want to go home. Perhaps he is happy so long as he has some bluish gray skies, beachfront property (though digital, it might be), and pupils to teach. Yet when we recently caught up with author Andy Weir the open-endedness of the conclusion meant something else entirely: room for a sequel.
Project Hail Mary 2?
“I didn’t define that,” Weir says when asked if he ever thinks Ryland Grace gets back to Earth. “So I respectfully decline to answer because I might write a sequel someday and I might want to talk about those things. Right now, I don’t define things that are outside the pages.”
It’s an intriguing answer, which at a glance could suggest there are already pages in the science fiction writer’s office featuring the further adventures of Grace and Rocky. However, Weir insists that is not the case.
“I am not working on a sequel right now,” Weir confirms. “The book I’m working on right now is a new standalone story that’s not a sequel to anything else. I have absolutely thought about sequel ideas for Project Hail Mary, but I don’t feel like I’ve got something that’s good enough to run with yet. But I’ve got some bits and pieces. Some ideas.”
With regard to his next novel, Weir only cryptically adds, “I don’t talk about those until they’re published because I might change my mind and ditch major things. So I don’t want to commit to things. I will tell you that it’s science fiction, and it’s a new standalone novel. It’s not a sequel to anything.”
Be that as it may, it creates a curious prospect over whether we have not seen the last of Gosling’s Ryland Grace or his hard-nosed best friend. One imagines that with enough astrophage, Grace could get back to Earth one day easily enough. Or perhaps he might find the courage to go somewhere altogether new. Like Ryland’s grace under pressure, the moment may (or may not) eventually present itself.
Project Hail Mary is in theaters now.
Kill Me’s Charlie Day and Allison Williams on Being a Comedy King and Scream Queen
Allison Williams has done and will continue to do excellent work in movies and television shows across eras and genres. But no audience will ever forget the moment her character Rose Armitage turned to her boyfriend Chris, who frantically begged her for keys to escape the mad scientist’s house trapping him, helped up the missing object, and asked, “You know I can’t give you the keys, right, babe?”
That scene from the generation-defining film Get Out continues to shape our perceptions of Williams as an actor, even in her most recent movie, Kill Me, which made its debut at SXSW.
“When I watched it for the first time with an audience, I actually felt the legacy of the other parts I’ve played,” Williams tells Den of Geek. “The audience was doubting me in a way I could feel around me. There was like suspicion around [her character] Margot in a way that we didn’t really think about or emphasize at all while we were working on the movie. There was a hangover there. I have a reputation with this group of people.”
Such is the burden of being a Scream Queen, a title she’s earned through her great work in Get Out, M3GAN, and The Perfection. It’s a burden that her Kill Me co-stars Charlie Day and Giancarlo Esposito know well, even if the two of them are better known for different types of roles.
Those past performances all enrich the tapestry of Kill Me, a comedy thriller written and directed by Peter Warren. Day stars as Jimmy, a depressed man who wakes up after what appears to be a suicide attempt. As he and 911 operator Margot (Williams) investigate further, with the help of his psychologist (Esposito), they uncover a knottier chain of events.
While Kill Me certainly plays on the comedy chops that Day has been developing for more than two decades on It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the film also asks him to deal with subject matter not often associated with humor.
“I was psyched to try some serious stuff. Often, I would ask if we had to go for a joke in some parts, if we could be a little more serious,” Day recalls. “But you also need humor, otherwise it would just be a slog. The movie holds the two together so well, it hits that narrow target.
“But I love making comedy. As soon as we finished, I asked, ‘Can I stop crying?’ It was fun to do both genres.”
For Giancarlo Esposito, whose work as Buggin’ Out in Do the Right Thing or Mike Giardello in Homicide: Life on the Street has been overshadowed by his performance as villains such as Breaking Bad‘s Gus Fring, Kill Me gave him a chance to be someone who helps other people.
“It felt great to find a new balance and play someone who really wants to know about another human being. He knows that Jimmy needs help, but he can’t force people to take it. He can only suggest to them and try to get them to see that Jimmy’s his own worst enemy. To me, it was a very fine balance, and I’m pleased that the movie was written so well. That made it easy to just flow into the character. I didn’t need to push Jimmy, but to really just be concerned about him.”
“And I could be concerned about Charlie because he’s got a lot of stuff going on,” Esposito jokes. “Anyone who speaks so fast, it’s easy for me to say, ‘Wait a minute, slow down, take a deep breath, let me get into you a little bit. Let me understand you.’ Charlie’s portrayal was so committed that I had no choice but to sit there and listen.”
The cast also found the central conceit helped them get into character, as they were just as curious about the mystery as anyone in the movie. “It’s an interesting concept to have your main character try to solve the misadventure of their own death,” observes Esposito. “And I thought it could be any one of the characters pointed to in the script, which is a tribute to the writing.”
Where Williams also found herself trying to guess the ending when she first read the script (“I wrote my guesses in the margins!” she reveals), Day took the story as it was.
“I just went for the ride,” he admits. “I wasn’t making any assumptions or tried to solve it. I was just like, ‘Where is Peter taking me here? Where are we going?’ I read it fast, which is rare for me. Usually, scripts are laborious hell to get through because there’s a lot of stage direction, with people describing a whole doorway. This one was a page-turner, I ripped through it.”
As Esposito’s comments suggest, the actors trying to balance the seriousness and humor of Kill Me take their lead from their writer and director, Peter Warren. However, he had a long tradition to help guide him.
“Depression and comedy have a long, storied history together, for a number of reasons,” he explains. “Depression and mental illness are incredibly serious, incredibly heavy and incredibly dangerous. But they can also be dumb and annoying because it’s like your own brain is trying to kill you. It can feel like a stupid problem to have, like you’re stepping on a rake inside your own head a million times a day.
“So sometimes you have to laugh to get through it and see the absurdity of the whole thing. And I think it would have been a dishonest portrayal of depression to take it so seriously, because you have to find those moments to feel the lightness and give yourself permission to laugh.”
According to Esposito, the pleasure of Kill Me also involves the joy of seeing two people who need one another make a connection. “There’s a relief as Jimmy and Margot form this trauma-bonded relationship. You feel like it’s finally happening after they’ve both had a need. This movie is so wonderful because you get to experience real people having their needs met, however it has to happen.
“It’s funny because these things do happen, and that brings a levity to this movie that people are going to enjoy,” he predicts.
Esposito also points out that the joy comes from seeing a relationship formed by two people who are “mirror images” of one another, something that the film illustrates through the similarities between Margot and Jimmy’s apartments.
“I remember you were appalled by the condition of Margot’s apartment,” Day points out to Williams, who immediately agrees.
“I had to stop myself from tidying it. I had to remind myself that it was a live set and I can’t move things because it’s not real, it’s a set,” Williams says. “It was very messy because Margot’s a mess.”
The same is true of Day’s character Jimmy, which did put him back on familiar ground, as his Sunny character Charlie Kelly also lives in a dump. “No one sees me as refined,” he sulks for a moment, before accepting, “It’s because they know I’m not.”
That’s just a reminder that a movie like Kill Me can help Day, Williams, and Esposito all change the types of characters they play, but it can’t change who they really are.
Kill Me premiered at the 2026 SXSW Film Festival on March 12.
Adult DVD, Gogol Bordello, Amie Blu: The Best Music We Caught at SXSW 2026
Taking in all the music at South by Southwest is a bit of a marathon. You find yourself waking up thinking, “I couldn’t possibly drink again tonight. My ears are still ringing; how can I be expected to step foot in another loud club? My voice is gone — I couldn’t hoot and holler for another band if I tried.” But then you catch a second wind. And a third. A well-timed Celsius and an Arrachera taco from the strategically placed TacoWëy food stands get you feeling right as rain. The combination of electrifying talent and FOMO propels you from one set to another until you find yourself at closing time, knowing it will hurt again in the morning, but soldiering on all the same
I cannot lie; the common refrain amongst locals and longtime attendees is that attendance is down. The literal gaping hole where a centralized convention center once stood/will stand is a reminder that SXSW is missing a centrifugal force. Meanwhile, the film, television, and technology sectors of SXSW feel like they’re taking up more of the oxygen. That said, we didn’t let that prevent us from traversing downtown, 6th Street, South Congress, and East Austin in search of familiar favorites and fresh finds.
Here are the most notable acts that the Den of Geek staff enjoyed at South By Southwest 2026.
Adult DVD
When I chatted with the Leeds-based dance punk band Adult DVD on Monday afternoon, they had been awake for over 24 hours. After their gig the night before, the lads had spent the wee hours riding mechanical bulls at Buck Wild. I was chuffed when they happened to saddle up next to our group at Casino El Camino for some pints (OK, I’ll stop with the Brit speak) and cigarettes after we had just caught their second show of the festival at the British Music Embassy. Their laid-back charm was particularly endearing after an afternoon set plagued by in-ear and monitor issues, which momentarily frustrated the band even if it ultimately didn’t affect their sound. It’s par the course for the tight stage turnovers at SXSW, and they rose above it.
Still, it was a relief when everything came together for Adult DVD Monday night at Swan Dive; their infectious, funny rave-ups finally popped the audience. Sweat dripped, bodies bumped up against each other. Moves were busted. For a kid who longed to experience a prime house set at the Haçienda in Manchester in the late ‘80s, or a DFA dance night on the Lower East Side in the early 2000s, this might be as close as I’ll get.
If I were a writer for the NME, my hyperbolic headline would be “I’ve seen the future of indie sleaze, and its name is Adult DVD.” And look, I realize it can be intoxicating to rub shoulders with bands you admire, but I promise this isn’t that; this was Den of Geek’s unanimous favorite band of the festival. The band is working on their debut album with Fat Possum Records as I type and I’m smashing the preorder button first chance I get. I’ve been walking around singing “BILL MURRAY, BILL MURRAY IS LOST IN JAPAN/TOM HANKS, TOM HANKS SAYING CATCH ME IF YOU CAN” into strangers’ faces. Look it up and you will be too. – Nick Harley
2charm
Sometimes you have to take a risk and tell your millennial bosses that the must-see artists at SXSW are two shirtless guys from Melbourne doing pushups onstage in Ugg boots. I’m talking, of course, about 2charm, the indie sleaze “gooner pop” duo. We caught them at Seven Grand Whiskey Bar on Sunday night, and their 1 a.m. set delivered exactly the second wind we needed. I first discovered 2charm back in October with their single “boyfriend,” and they followed it up with their debut album star scum city in February. What I didn’t realize before seeing them live is just how choreographed their performances are. Every song has its own set of moves, and at times it felt like I was playing Just Dance Sweat Mode, trying to keep up during my favorite track, “girls.”
Yes, it really is all about girls, but the men of Den of Geek were just as into the set. I don’t know if I can definitively say they were the best act we saw at SXSW as a group, but I can say with complete confidence that they were my favorite of the festival. Consider me charmed. – Darcie Zudell
Merrick Winter
I saunter into a scene I don’t feel quite cut out for, my first time in a church in 10 years and it’s arguably the most beautiful music venue in all of Austin. With nothing but an artist title, two ears, and a dream, I sit second pew. Central Presbyterian Church has walls 70 feet high built out for the echoing melodies of Merrick Winter.
Winter combined vocals akin to Caamp (Ohio mentioned!), and Elliott Smith adjacent songbooks to take this audience on a train ride. No, seriously, he beckoned us to take the California Zephyr if we hadn’t already in the title track of their latest full body of work, The California Zephyr. His stance on flying: “Hell no. Sorry…God.” Winter was quick on the draw to thank his audience. Maybe it was the Holy presence or just his London charm. – Riley Clark
Sofia and the Antoinettes
I don’t envy the position that Sofia and the Antoinettes were in on Thursday. As the third name on the lineup of Rolling Stone’s Future of Music Festival, the London-based singer and her three-piece band were facing a crowd in desperate need of a second wind after two acts had already played and Lola Young’s performance was still hours away. Within seconds, that second wind blew right through Sofia’s Old Hollywood hair and revived the crowd with haunting melodies and poetic lyricism. She charmed the crowd with cheeky anecdotes about past lovers and the internal inspirations behind her music. I felt the presence of Jeff Buckley, Phoebe Bridgers, and Nick Drake onstage beside her as existential bridges swelled and I found myself hoping the set would never end. – Sophia Rooksberry
Gogol Bordello
Fresh off a connecting flight and the dreamy haze of sitting on a Florida beach, I was snapped right into the high-seed neon chase of SXSW by Gogol Bordello’s opening night performance. Listed as a “high sensory experience” online, the Lower East Side punk outfit’s performance delivered an encounter so steeped in flashing lights and mania, I thought I was being beamed up. Led by singer Eugene Hütz, the seven-piece band engaged and enraged through songs from their newest album, We Mean It, Man!
Deciding the crowd wasn’t living up to expectations, Hütz ordered the forming mosh pit to “Start swaying motherfuckers.” He was happily obliged when Puzzled Panther jumped on stage to perform a personal favorite off the album, “From Boyarka to Boyaca.” Fans new and old crowded the three-storied venue, jumping, pushing, and screaming the night away. The performance was capped in a delirious crowd and a spontaneous sidewalk performance outside the venue. After nearly 30 years under pressure, Gogol Bordello has burst forth as a gem of post-punk revolution. – Alexandra Hopkins
Geordie Greep
After the dogged pace of SXSW, the Tuesday night set from Geordie Greep was uniquely brain-melting. Greep’s jazz-influenced guitar freakouts and his impossibly tight band are almost maddeningly idiosyncratic. It was a smart choice to simply project Greenwich Mean Time on the screen behind him as he performed; never has such a bugged-out midnight showcase felt more like 5 a.m. – NH
Didjits
South By’s only scorching hot day, reaching a high of 99, required plenty of hydration. Rick Sims was having none of it. “It’s full of vodka,” he joked, holding up a full water bottle to the packed backyard at Hotel Vegas. Or not. Who knows. Who cares? The longtime Didjits frontman offered us a reprieve from the late afternoon sun, drawing in the crowd with his abrasive antics and thundering riffs.
His Didjits journey dates back to the early ‘80s, but Sims seems energized by his much younger touring bandmates—who offered smirks and winks as they watched their fearless leader trade middle fingers with fans, heckle the crowd (“Austin bitches!”), and spunk off the neck of his guitar into the crowd mid solo on multiple tracks. Sims fed off the adoration of the punk-mad scene in Austin. And from the moment we saw him strut on stage—with a frilled blazer, puffed shoulder pads, dark, round glasses, and seductively shaking his old ass and wiggling his tongue, we gave it right back. Middle fingers up for a punk legend. – Chris Longo
Amor Vincit Omnia
It’s 11:30 p.m. on Sunday. I’m bloated from barbeque, exhausted, and severely dehydrated, yet somehow still being pulled toward the stage at Low Down Lounge by two blond Icelanders asking, “Do you wantttt it?” Amor Vincit Omnia’s sound is compelling in a way that’s energetic enough to have you shaking your head, yet hazy and vibey in a way that makes you want to stretch your arms wide and just float. I saw their set completely sober, but their blend of folk textures and electronic noise still made me feel like I was on a cloud.
Things took a turn from intriguing to unforgettable when the pair pulled out small egg shakers and moved across the stage in perfect sync. It was so specific and totally captivating. The set clicked into place during “Rvk Amour.” Before playing, they asked, “Who loves being in love?” and the room lit up. Amor Vincit Omnia may not deliver perfection, but they sure do deliver a feeling that got me excited for the rest of the night. Definitely an artist to watch. – DZ
Grocery Bag
For some cruel reason, Texas temperatures dipped below 60 degrees on March 16 and 17. Leave it to Austin’s own Grocery Bag to bring the heat at a chilly outdoor performance at Zilker Brewing. Their staggering 10th performance of the festival didn’t show a hint of fatigue. Guitarist Dillon Aitala bounded across the stage in overalls while bassist Logan Kerman stood out with memorable riffs. Friends of the band packed the crowd and made it obvious that the formidable psych garage band could play 10 more shows and they’d all be as memorable and well-attended. – NH
Amie Blu
Amie Blu and band did nothing short of impress. There is no better sight than a female vocal lead standing foreground to a male band—a promise of a solid quintet dynamic. Billboard House welcomed Blu to Mohawk Outdoor where audience members ducked the beams of scorching sun like vampires. As soon as Blu took to the stage, a cool air swept through the venue and parted crowds merged into one. Was it magic or just the lullaby of music to my ears? The South East Londoner fits snugly into the Indie Pop category with a sound of the likes of Mk.gee and Faye Webster. The 23-year-old was wise beyond her years, serenading ye olde truths in her sung poetry and sporting loafers. Amie Blu, if you’re reading this, my deepest sorrows for the loss of your kitten. – RC
Mugger
Hardcore punk band Mugger pummeled me into adorant submission. With a devil-may-care attitude and melodic yet brutally heavy riffs that would make Turnstile blush, they were by far Den of Geek’s collective favorite Austin-based act. Just when I thought the band couldn’t be any better, lead singer Anna Troxel donned a luchador mask halfway through their set and essentially transformed into a punk superhero. This band should be on everyone’s radar. – NH
Chalk
I discovered Chalk while absentmindedly listening to my Discover Weekly playlist on Spotify a few months ago. Their song “Conditions” scratched my Irish alt-rock itch with a tinge of nostalgic new wave elements, and it became a regular feature in my rotating playlists. You can only imagine my surprise when I wandered into the British Music Embassy sometime around midnight to find the very same band dominating the stage.
The trio was mostly playing tracks off their new album, Crystalpunk, which dropped two days prior to their first SXSW set. Chalk’s new album fuses my beloved dejected hardcore sound with techno dance beats and autotuned vocals. “It’s like if Charli XCX made punk music,” I screamed in my friend’s ear as “Béal Feirste” washed over the crowd, another track off the debut album that turned me from a fair-weather Discover Weekly fan into a diehard daily listener. If my ear is correct, Chalk is on its way to becoming the biggest musical name out of Ireland since Fontaines D.C. – SR
Gus Baldwin and The Sketch
Another Austin punk band? Look, I promise, we checked out other genres, but something is fucking happening in the scene here! Gus Baldwin and The Sketch are so powerful that a cowboy hat just materialized on my head. The Sketch are like if Parquet Courts listened to more AC/DC. And out of every band we caught at SXSW, Gus Baldwin is the best frontman, full stop. – NH
Cashier
Hat tip to the official SXSW playlist for putting me on to the Lafayette, Louisiana four-piece Cashier. Leading into the festival I had tracks “Part From Me” and “Maybe I Was Wrong” on repeat so aggressively you’d think there was a monetary prize for landing in the top one percent of an artist’s Spotify Wrapped. I was both thrilled for the band yet dismayed for my newfound fandom to see a line out the door of Chess Club for their gig.
Eventually we pushed through and were met with a wall of bodies and crunchy, swirling riffs. In their recent EP release, the band is quoted as saying their work is a celebration of rock guitar. A no frills stage presence led by vocalist and guitarist Kylie Gaspard allows you to ruminate on any range of influences from grunge and hardcore, to pop punk and ‘00 alternative. It feels less celebratory and more like a coronation: the Southern rock revival has indeed spread from Asheville to Lafayette, and westward to Austin. – CL
Elijah Johnston
At the legendary Continental Club, Elijah Johnston was lucky he wasn’t pulled from the stage. Not because he wasn’t up to performing or captivating the crowd. On the contrary, the whip-smart lyricist was dropping winning, earworm choruses left and right. However, it was Athens in Austin night at the Continental, a showcase for Athens, Georgias’s ever-lively music scene, and Johnston confessed that he actually had been living in Atlanta for quite some time. Shhhh, Elijah — we won’t tell if you don’t. – NH
Slomo Drags
You’ll never know who you might meet when you’re catching a breather. “I like your hat,” was all it took to get me to talk to Ty, whose partner’s band was playing inside. I was asked if I had seen any Austin bands. I sure did, hence why I was very interested in hearing more. Ty says lead singer Jackson Albrachtis a mixologist in town and crafts some of the best cocktails you can imagine. I would love to fact-check this, but I’m gonna go out on a limb and say I think he might actually craft better songs!
According to Albracht, SXSW is dead, but thank God he and his band are here to resuscitate it. They make top shelf indie rock filled with funk and hooks galore. Adam Mason is one of Austin’s best guitar players and all-around Swiss Army Knives, even mixing it up in Ben Kweller’s band alongside Superbad star Christoper Mintz-Plasse, but here, he’s holding it down on bass. During their performance, I wondered where the glorious keyboard licks were coming from; the Chess Club stage necessitated that Ty’s partner, Bowman Maze (of Sometimes a Legend), sit criss-cross applesauce in the corner of the stage. These guys don’t suffer drunk repeaters or fools, but they love anyone who sings along. – NH
CDSM
Remember Adult DVD? From above? Surely you’ve listened to them by now. For this band, think moodier, but every bit as dancey, with 100 percent more saxophone. Kinda reminds us of the Voidz. Remember when we said Adult DVD’s Tuesday night show popped the fuck off? Afterward, a buzzed-up group of attendees spilled out into the street, and we met Tyler, who told us about his band, CDSM from Atlanta. It was serendipity; when the Adult DVD gang was asked about their favorite set that they caught at SXSW, they didn’t hesitate to say CDSM. Listen to Adult DVD’s advice — these guys rule. Buy their shirts, records, and stickers. They played 14 shows in eight days; they deserve it. – NH
Beloved The Next Generation Star Crushes Fan Hopes for Star Trek: Legacy Series
Star Trek, in general, is in a bit of an odd limbo at the moment. Despite the fact that we’ve still got two seasons of Star Trek: Strange New Worldsleft before the show’s final credits roll and a full second season of Star Trek: Starfleet Academy has already been filmed, it’s the first time in a decade that there’s no new Trek series in production, or even greenlit.
But while the franchise is at something of a holding pattern, Star Trek certainly has plenty of options for the future, including but not limited to a third season of Starfleet Academy or the much-discussed Strange New Worlds follow-up that’s going by the name of Star Trek: Year One. But, the idea that most fans seem to be clamoring for is Star Trek: Legacy, a Picard sequel series that would focus on the continuing mission of the starship Enterprise under the command of Jeri Ryan’s Seven of Nine. But, according to one of the actors involved, it’s unlikely the series will ever get made
“First of all, Legacy is never gonna happen,” she said, to a surprised exclamation from her former onscreen husband, Jonathan Frakes. “You know, you hate hearing the truth. There is not a single studio in America that is gonna make a series where most of the leading actors are over 70 years old. I’m sorry, but that’s just the truth. It’s just Hollywood.”
To be fair, while the concept of Legacy does connect heavily to The Next Generation, given that one of the other presumed major characters involved would be Jean-Luc Picard’s son Jack Crusher (Ed Speelers), it doesn’t necessarily need the OG crew to show up all that often. In fact, Picard itself set up its own mini next generation of characters who could easily populate such a story, introducing Geordi La Forge’s daughters Sidney and Alanda, alongside Troi and Riker’s daughter, Kestra. (Heck, technically, Data’s “daughter” Soji is still out there!) Sure, we’d all undoubtedly love appearances from the Troi-Rikers, LaForges, and maybe even PIcard himself, occasionally, but they’re also not required for the show to work.
But, in many ways, Sirtis does have a point. The Picard finale aired back in 2023, and any momentum this potential project has largely sputtered by this point. Former showrunner Terry Matalas is busy with other projects, including but not limited to Marvel’s VisionQuest. And Paramount itself is undergoing some fairly massive internal upheaval in the wake of the company’s merger with Skydance and its ongoing attempt to purchase Warner Bros. It’s definitely not ideal conditions for a show like Legacy to get a chance, and that’s without considering Sirtis’s valid observations about the ageism that’s all too common in certain corners of Hollywood.
Still, this is Star Trek, and hope springs eternal. After all, most of us would never have guessed a show like Picard would have ever existed at this point, let alone run for three seasons and bring back the bulk of the original Next Generation cast for its grand finale. Anything is possible in this universe.
Over Your Dead Body Review: Samara Weaving Delights in ‘Murder Your Spouse’ Comedy
Dan does not love his wife. That would be apparent to anyone if they gave him the time of day. The Jason Segel character clumsily drops into conversation to every co-worker within earshot that he and the little lady are going to a cabin in the woods this weekend. More desperate still, are his lamentations about what he’d do if she got lost hiking up there. I’ve warned her not to go out alone, but she won’t listen!
Nobody pays Dan much mind, however. Nobody except the wife, Lisa (Samara Weaving), who dryly observes her husband the way an entomologist might consider an ant trying to roll a particularly jagged cookie crumb uphill. When he sheepishly serves her what he insists is “your favorite meal,” a rare steak with special peppercorn seasoning from Ohio, and out by a frigid lake that looks straight from The Godfather, Part II, she makes sure not to blink while stating “this isn’t ceviche.” Despite being introduced as a film director at the start of the story, Segel’s Dan has no idea what kind of movie he’s really in. But Lisa knows, and it is a devilishly amusing flick whenever Weaving’s mirthless grin spreads and the wife’s own murder games commence.
Based on a Tommy Wirkola movie I have not seen, Over Your Dead Body is still absolutely a Jorma Taccone joint: a new genre offering from one-third of the Lonely Island iconoclasts of SNL fame, as well as the director of comedy cult classics MacGruberand Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping. While certainly more grounded in a dramatic and even faintly thriller aesthetic, Over Your Dead Body views its characters and their problems from a skewed vantage dripping with contempt, and maybe a light seasoning of Midwest pathos. Dan and Lisa clearly deserve each other, and when they find themselves in a double-blind Patricia Highsmith scenario wherein both spouses are planning to whack the old ball and chain, the only real mystery is how bad it will get for both parties.
…Given their temperaments, it’s pretty likely things will play worse for Dan. After all, when he goes in with the chloroform, he’s still the one who wakes up in in the next scene tied to a chair.
Taccone’s structure, descended from Wirkola, is deviously knotty. Despite almost all of the present-tense action occurring in the cabin and its accompanying grounds, the filmmaker and screenwriters Nick Kocher and Brian McElhaney jealously guard the details and context of this scenario, withholding critical information until it can at last be delivered like a twist within a twist, and each served with a side of mean-spirited giggles. When Dan first reaches the chloroform, we discover in a flashback Lisa much more elegantly has mentioned to her friends that her stupid husband is forcing her to go hunting for the first time this weekend. Cut to the present with her calmly holding a shotgun in her lap while reciting to her bound hubby: “Officer, I’m sorry. I told him we shouldn’t go out there in the dark, but I tripped and… it went off.”
Soon enough the twists, flashbacks, and structural gags are piling up to excesses of warm bodies in a Groucho Marx state room. There are more secrets, betrayals, and skeletons in this marriage than either participant can count—and the latter becomes literal after the unhappy couple discovers their swanky cabin has unintended visitors, including escaped convict Pete (Timothy Olyphant) and his runaway prison guard Allegra (Juliette Lewis).
Weaving is certainly having a moment in Austin this year, as Over Your Dead Body marking her second genre-bender to slay at the Paramount Theatre during SXSW. As with Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, Over Your Dead Body raises the question about why Weaving isn’t (yet) a bigger star since Lisa’s playful vindictiveness is strangely beguiling. Whether it is eviscerating Dan with a withering gaze or twisting the knife via lethal one-liner, the actor is feasting, on ceviche or otherwise, just as Taccone enjoys leaning into the Aussie actor’s background to carve out down under slang and eccentricities.
Segel is also used to good effect, inverting the lovable sad sack routine he’s practiced for nearly 20 years since How I Met Your Mother and Forgetting Sarah Marshall, but here for a protagonist so self-pitying that he thinks he’s still being a nice guy because he cooked his wife a fancy dinner before planning to send her to the bottom of a nearby lake. The slippery silliness of the script allows Taccone and company to lightly toy with the idea that this movie is also something of a rom-com where a couple in a rut gets some much needed excitement by working through their problems. In a certain sense, it’s as if their three unwelcome visitors in the cabin are just a manifestation of the couple’s ennui.
Fortunately, the ever bemused Taccone never loses sight that Dan and Lisa’s biggest common interest is a shared awfulness. If this is an extreme version of therapy, it’s not going to be completed without some physical and psychic scars.
Hence Taccone keeps the tone sleek and frothy. The remembered slights and disappointments are given texture by Weaving and Segel, but the movie is at heart a slightly more grounded SNL Digital Short, just this time playing in Hitchcock’s sandbox where murder isn’t so much a sin as a puzzle worth solving together. Where the movie does hit a snag in its scheming, though, is the more gruesome, elongated action set pieces, which feel part and parcel for Wirkola’s previous filmography. The Norwegian filmmaker has a tendency to lean on shock and schlock, and it working in his favor. But here it can come across as excessively cruel or garish when contextualized with Over Your Dead Body’s happy-go-lucky table-setting. There are several particularly brutal moments near the climax in which characters are threatened with heinous suffering, or are then inflicted with said pain, that are tonally discordant and jarring.
Such sequences can blemish and needlessly elongate an otherwise idyllic weekend in the country with these murder mates, but they do not particularly diminish what is an unabashedly winsome good time in the theater, especially with a rowdy crowd who can live vicariously through the vigorous couple’s counseling.
Over Your Dead Body premiered at SXSW on March 14 and opens in U.S. theaters on April 24.
David Tennant is Returning to Doctor Who Again But Not The Way You Think
Although seemingly endless questions continue to swirl about Doctor Who’sfuture — Who’s the next Doctor? How will the forthcoming Christmas special clean up the Billie Piper-shaped mystery from the season 15 finale? — fans can take comfort from one eternal truth: There’s no uncomfortable Whoniverse situation that cannot be improved via copious application of former Doctor David Tennant. Just…maybe not in the way that many of us were likely expecting.
Tennant is by far the most popular modern-era Doctor, and with good reason. He’s returned to the series twice since he originally turned in his TARDIS keys in 2010, reprising his role as the Tenth Doctor for the 50th anniversary special “The Day of the Doctor,” and playing the Fourteenth incarnation of the famous Time Lord for a trio of 60th anniversary episodes in 2023. And now he’s set to return to the franchise again, this time in a brand new series of audio adventures for Big Finish.
For those who don’t know, Big Finish is a longtime publisher of Doctor Who stories in audio format, and regularly features arcs with former Doctors, companions, and ancillary cast members. (Notable participants include everyone from Paul McGann and Jodie Whittaker to Michelle Gomez and Colin Baker.) Tennant has already done multiple Tenth Doctor adventures with Big Finish, in stories that have reunited him with former cast members like Piper, Catherine Tate, and Alex Kingston.
This latest effort will be comprised of 15 new audiobook adventures featuring Tennant’s Tenth Doctor. The first 12 stories have a planned bimonthly release schedule starting in the summer of next year, and the final three will be packaged together as part of a box set centered around stories in which Tennant’s Tenth Doctor interacts with other incarnations of the character. Where any of these stories will slot into the show’s existing canon remains to be seen, but the prospects—particularly for those Doctor team-ups—are thrilling.
Given the current state of the franchise, many fans were already speculating (or wishcasting, depending on your perspective) that the Christmas special might see yet another Tennant return to help lead the show into the post-Disney era, especially since his Fourteenth Doctor is currently enjoying retirement with Donna Noble’s family. And, to be fair, it makes a certain amount of sense — Tennant and Piper were wildly popular as a duo, and reuniting them is potentially a neat solution to an unwieldy problem that would likely bring in viewers in droves. Yes, it’d be fan service of the highest order, but definitely fan service in pursuit of a good cause.
But, like so much else involving Doctor Who at the moment, we’ll just have to wait and see. At least we’ll still always have Ten.
Ready or Not 2: Kathryn Newton Explains Getting ‘Parent Trapped’ by Radio Silence
Since breaking out with their segment “10/31/98” in the first V/H/Santhology from 2012, the filmmaking collective known as Radio Silence has established itself as masters of outrageous, gory horror. From Ready or Not to their two Scream entries to Abigail, a Radio Silence film promises vibrant characters, witty banter, and so, so much blood. But when prepping their latest, Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, the directors drew from an older, much more family-friendly source of inspiration.
“There was a screening of the first movie, and we knew that we wanted Kathryn Newton to be the sister of Samara Weaving‘s character, Grace,” says Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, who co-directed Ready or Not 2 with Tyler Gillett. “So we just invited Kathryn to the movie, and we went out to dinner after and, she and Samara were snickering together within 30 seconds of meeting.”
“I was fully Parent Trapped!” shouts Newton.
Working from a script by Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy, Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett, Ready or Not 2: Here I Come picks up right where the first movie ends. Newlywed and newly widowed Grace has survived the deadly game of hide and seek that her in-laws forced her to play as part of the devil’s bargain that secured their fortune, only to find that a new conglomerate of rich families will now hunt her. Worse, they’ve forced Grace’s sister Faith to play along too.
Thus Weaving and Newton were needed to dwevelop the immediate rapport of sisters, something that went even better than the filmmakers expected.
“She invited me over, and she has puzzles,” Newton enthuses of her Parent Trap rendezvous. “She does puzzles that are, like, a thousand-pieces. And she’s got a cat! … She just opened up and made it really easy to love her and fall in love with her. I want to be around her all the time. They wrote in where we’re handcuffed together, so then I got to be next to her, and no one thought it was weird.”
Parent-trapping stars to create instant chemistry is the type of old-school movie trick that horror filmmakers have used for years. But for genre veterans Elijah Wood and Sarah Michelle Gellar, the latter of whom plays evil rich woman Ursula Danforth and the former who plays “the Lawyer,” horror has changed a great deal in recent years.
“I feel like it’s more respected than it’s ever been. I think people understand that you can do so much more and it isn’t just written off as just horror,” observes Gellar. “When you’re looking at our Academy Awards, and Sinners is up there, you realize that the genre offers great roles. I also think that the genre has opened up in its ideas. They don’t have to be just straight slasher films these days. I think of Ready or Not 2 as a drama; it’s comedy; it’s horror; it’s a love story. You’re really able to cross genres now.”
Adds co-star Wood, “I think it’s great seeing horror and genre in general being respected. It’s not sidelined or considered ‘B’ cinema. I think it’s given real budgets and great actors and really great roles,”
“Wait, there are budgets? Wait, you got paid for this?” interjects Gellar, before turning to her directors and saying, “We need to talk later.”
Of course, the new normal doesn’t mean that Wood and his co-stars have forgotten their roots. As seen in the trailer, Wood’s character gets to loudly, and quite often, declare “Hail Satan!,” echoing the famous words from the climax of Rosemary’s Baby.
“It was pretty awesome,” Wood admits. “When you first utter it out loud in front of a group of people, it feels a little like, ‘Oh fuck, what did I just get to say?'”
“We were both behind the monitor thinking, ‘Oh fuck, what a crazy, crazy choice!” says Gillet of Wood’s delivery. “It was so committed. It was like he’s done this before,” he adds, with a bit of suspicion.
Without missing a beat, Gellar picks up on her director’s sinister suggestion and says: “Well, Elijah and I take our roles very seriously. We did a lot of research.” And then, allowing her own register to turn dark promises, “We’ll tell you about it some time.”
That’s a creepy turn for a conversation that began by invoking Disney movies, but such delightful combinations are a hallmark of a Radio Silence movie and, as Gellar and Wood suggest, the future of the genre.
Ready or Not 2: Here I Come opens in theaters on March 20, 2026.
Daredevil’s Charlie Cox Insists He’s Not in Spider-Man Movie, Just Like Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield Did
When a canister of toxic waste splashed into his eyes, young Matt Murdock lost his ability to see. But between his natural talents, the effect of the chemicals, and the cruel tutelage of his mentor Stick, Murdock enhanced his other senses. So acute are his hearing and smell, in fact, that he can tell when someone is lying just by listening to the increase of their heartbeats and the odor of sweat on their brows.
That talent sure would be handy when listening to Daredevil star Charlie Cox talk about the new Marvel movie Spider-Man: Brand NewDay. “I’m not in the movie,” Cox told Jimmy Kimmel when the host brought up the subject of the new Spidey trailer. In doing so, Cox echoes the words of Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield, both of whom told people they were not in Spider-Man: No Way Home, a movie that co-starred Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield. Also appearing in No Way Home? Charlie Cox as Matt Murdock.
Cox appeared on Kimmel to talk about a different Marvel property, season two of Daredevil: Born Again. The second season of the Disney+ series finds Daredevil leading a resistance against the former Kingpin of Crime and current governor of New York, Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio), who has used his Anti-Vigilante legislation to declare martial law on the city and send militarized police to attack citizens. The new season brings back not just Deborah Ann Woll as Karen Page, but also Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones, marking her first appearance in the MCU.
The season also sees Daredevil wearing a black costume inspired by the Back in Black comic book storyline by Charles Soule and Ron Garney, and, for the first time in the show, with the “DD” logo on the chest. “It’s been a long time coming,” admitted Cox, after pointing out that the logo consists of “interlocking Ds” and not “double Ds” (“That would be a very different kind of show,” quipped Kimmel). He said, “I’ve been asked about it since I was cast in April of 2014,” and assured viewers that the decision wasn’t arbitrary. “They wound the logo into the story, so there’s a reason for it,” he promised, and then became spoiler-phobic again to add, “I’m not sure how much of that I can give away yet.”
In both his comments about Born Again season two and Brand New Day, Cox is upholding a long-standing Marvel tradition. Actors in Marvel movies are strictly forbidden from revealing any spoilers about their movies. An older performer with less investment in the franchise (like, say, Ian McKellen) might violate that rule, but most actors make it very plain that they are not allowed to say much about the movies.
Still, it’s hard to believe that Daredevil won’t make some sort of appearance in Brand New Day. Not only does the movie let Spider-Man stay in New York City, the same place where Matt Murdock lives, and not only are Daredevil and Spidey frequent allies in the comics, but the trailer is chock-full of Daredevil stuff. So Daredevil must be in Brand New Day, right?
To his credit, Cox acknowledges the game he has to play when dealing with spoilers. “If I was in the movie, I would also say ‘no,’ to be clear,” he told Kimmel. “But I’m not in the movie.” And he said it with such confidence and conviction that it would take someone with superhuman senses to know if he’s lying. Or, we can just wait until Spider-Man: Brand New Day comes to theaters on July 31, 2026.
Daredevil: Born Again season two debuts on Disney+ on March 24, 2026.
New X-Files Star Danielle Deadwyler is Keeping Ryan Coogler’s Secrets Safe
The truth about Ryan Coogler‘s reboot of The X-Files is out there. Just don’t look for it around star Danielle Deadwyler. We at Den of Geek did our best to get something out of her when she came to promote her new movie The Saviors at SXSW, but Deadwyler wouldn’t budge.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Deadwyler insists. “I can’t answer none of your questions.” Sharing our frustration is Kevin Hamedani, who directs Deadwyler in the new comedy thriller The Saviors. “I have begged her to give me a crumb, a sign—something!” he laughs, all to no avail. Danielle Deadwyler is committed to saving the surprise of the new series.
In that way, she’s much like her character in The Saviors. Directed by Hamedani, who co-wrote the script with Travis Betz, The Saviors stars Deadwyler and Adam Scott as Kim and Sean, a suburban couple who rents their garage to a pair of siblings from the Middle East, Jahan (Nazanin Boniadi) and Amir (Theo Rossi). As Sean begins to investigate their new guests, he enters a spiral of conspiracy that affects everything, not least of which, his troubled marriage.
That combination of mundane problems and strange happenings allows Deadwyler to keep Kim grounded in a type of reality, a process she was willing to discuss with Den of Geek.
“Compounding these real problems helps you understand that the political is so personal that it seeps into the very fabric of your being,” she explains. “The way you engage with the person who you purport to love in any capacity shifts the way that you treat others outside of your domestic space. So it’s a matter of how you treat yourself, how you think you actually are in relationships, including the internal relationships that are slightly outside of you.
“You have that self, and then you have family, and then you have everyone outside of that. It’s challenging: who we are as people, who we think we are, who we show beyond the border of our selves, and who we show beyond the border of who we are in our diving home space.”
Challenging borders has always been a theme in The Saviors, ever since Hamedani began working on the script a decade ago as what he calls “a couple hundred grand little indie film in my dad’s backyard.” However, The Saviors started moving quickly toward production… at first. “Suddenly, this little script was making rounds around town, and it got on the Black List. And so it seemed to be going really fast at the start,” Hamedani recalls. “But casting and financing, as every indie filmmaker can tell you, is a slow process, and then you’re scheduling actors, and then we had COVID, and then we had the strike.
“The stars have to align, where all your actors are in LA for a month, and you have to run and gun it. When we found that window, we went for it, after 10 years.”
For better or for worse, the themes of The Saviors haven’t grown less relevant over the past decade.
“It’s a little haunting and tragic,” observes Hamedani. “You know, there was a period in those 10 years when I thought the world had changed a bit, and maybe we should focus on a different project. And then the world changed again, and suddenly The Saviors is even more timely, unfortunately.
“But I think that highlights that the mistrust between cultures and fear of your neighbor will continue to persist. It’s not a timely thing. It’s just who we are as human beings, and it highlights that we should continue to tell these stories more and try to understand your neighbor a bit better and realize we’re not all that different. As corny and cliché as that might sound, it’s the fundamental problem going on right now, even before we started writing the script.”
Hamedani’s choice of setting further helps that timelessness, as The Saviors takes place in a nondescript neighborhood. “It’s suburban America,” he says. “It’s not Seattle, where I’m from, although that plays a role in constructing the world through my experiences. It’s suburbia in America.”
No one understands that tension between reality and imaginary better than Rossi, who must play Amir both as he is and as his neighbors perceive him. “I’m a lunatic, so it’s kind of easy to differentiate the personalities,” he quips, before turning to the specifics of his craft.
“It’s just preparing more than one character. You’re preparing what version you’re going to show to the people you’re reacting to within the moment. So to Kim, he’s one version of himself. To his sister, he’s another version. And then there’s the version that wants to do the mission, do the thing he needs to do. So what face are you going to show?
“It’s a type of code-switching, kind of what we all do one way or another in our lives. We’re different versions of ourselves for different scenarios that we’re in. His is just on a really high level, so I just looked at it by asking who I was in a scene and just broke it down like that.”
As Rossi’s comments suggest, The Saviors is a twisty thriller that keeps the audience guessing. In fact, it kept the stars guessing too. “I think what Kevin and Travis did so brilliantly was make a film that keeps swerving one way and then another,” Rossi observes before admitting his own moment of recognition. “When I was reading it, it was a shock at the end. I just thought to myself, ‘What is happening?'”
Deadwyler initially says she also didn’t see the last twist coming, before turning to something more mystical.
“There’s a dream sequence in the movie that indicated the truth to me,” she recollects. “I love dreams. I’m attached to dreams. Dreams are an indicator of things to me, they are admonitions to our waking life. So when we hit this surreal moment while getting to wherever the hell we get to at the end of the film, I know that a dream is an undercurrent of something that’s going to happen. One of the things that first drew me to the film was the way it toyed with the dream world in its storytelling.”
So will dreams be a big part of the investigations the FBI agents do in the new version of The X-Files? We don’t know, and Deadwyler isn’t saying, but we want to believe.
New Action Movie Pretty Lethal Smashes Ballet Stereotypes
When Timothée Chalamet claimed that “no one cares” about ballet anymore, an angry social media backlash put him firmly in his place. Let’s just hope he never has to encounter the fictional ballerinas in Amazon’s new action film Pretty Lethal, whose defensive skills could probably pirouette and jeté the Marty Supreme actor into the next millennium.
Written by former ballerina Kate Freund, Pretty Lethal follows a dysfunctional ballet troupe on their way to a prestigious competition who end up fighting for their lives after their bus breaks down and they run into an armed Hungarian mob. Luckily, they’re helped in their efforts by Uma Thurman’s ballet prodigy-turned-innkeeper Devora Kasimer and her henchmen. As the gang slits throats and breaks bones to survive, their predicament escalates into some elegant and beautifully choreographed carnage.
Director Vicky Jewson tells Den of Geek at SXSW that she was drawn to the movie because she hadn’t seen ballet in an action context before, and she was struck by the years of training, dedication and sacrifice—not to mention the high pain threshold—it takes to perform.
“The symbol of a ballerina is such a fragile, delicate image,” explains Jewson. “We got to subvert that completely and smash that stereotype.” She points to a scene in the film where Maddie Ziegler’s ballerina, Bones, talks about performing while sick and injured with bleeding feet, and Ziegler’s co-star Avantika agrees that it really highlights the grit that permeates a ballerina’s life and career. “When you’re walking down the street, you can notice a ballerina by their grace and strength,” she says. Thurman adds, “Having known people who are real performers and ballerinas, they have completed entire hours-long performances on broken bones. Show me a football player who runs across the field with a broken ankle.”
Stunt coordinators and a ballet choreographer worked with the cast, including Avantika and Ziegler, to develop a style called “ballet fu” for the movie, and the results are truly impressive. “We’re up against a bunch of big Hungarian men, so we had to decide what our strengths were and how we could weave through them with elegance and grace to survive,” Zeigler explains.
But it’s the teamwork and camaraderie among the ballet troupe, not the violence, that creates an irresistible “X factor power force,” says Thurman. “That is one of the things I love about what these incredible, brave young women did in this movie.”
Pretty Lethal will be streaming on Amazon Prime Video from March 25, 2026.
Every Saw Movie Ranked from Worst to Best
In 2004, James Wan’s debut feature film Saw arrived amongst a slew of splatter and slasher movies dismissed as “torture porn.” The film having little in common with the likes of Hostel and Wolf Creek didn’t seem to matter, and would go on to matter even less as the Saw sequels upped the gore factor.
Despite being lumped in with that corner of the horror genre at the time, Saw would outlive it by blossoming into a 10-movie franchise that almost always cleaned up at the box office, and when the Jigsaw story seemed to be running out of juice, attempts were made to reinvigorate the franchise before it finally put original star Tobin Bell front and center in 2023’s smash hit, Saw X.
While we wait for an 11th installment, let’s take a look back at all the Saw movies so far and decide which ones are the gleaming reverse bear traps, and which are the rusty blades of the franchise.
10. Saw V
Saw V picks up immediately after the events of Saw IV, as FBI agent Peter Strahm (Scott Patterson) manages to escape his watery death via an ingenious tracheotomy and sets out to expose Jigsaw’s new successor, Mark Hoffman (Costas Mandylor). He doesn’t quite manage it, unfortunately, so RIP to a real one.
The lore-heavy Saw V has ended up at the bottom of this ranking for many reasons. The group trap is an interesting concept (dang it gang! just work together!) and it’s fun to finally see Hoffman emerge from the shadows to be positioned as an insidious villain, but the movie feels utterly weighed down by its backstory as the more visceral stuff you’d expect from the franchise takes a backseat. Interminable chatter slows the film’s pace to a crawl, while the necessary flashbacks pile up into a mountain of homework.
The closing “gotcha!” moment is truly ridiculous, too. At no point would Hoffman have known that the man about to expose him wouldn’t listen to the entire final tape! At this stage in Saw’s evolution, Jigsaw himself was also starting to feel like an afterthought. This was perhaps the first installment to really expose itself as annual Saw churn.
9. Saw IV
Saw IV manages to alter the structure of the franchise, and I’ll give it props for that. The Saw movies couldn’t just keep relying on being grisly torture porn with a fun twist at the end; they needed something new, and Saw IV found the answer: make the continuing story a crime saga.
This franchise entry plays with the audience’s notion of exactly when all these events take place, as we learn that John Kramer (Tobin Bell) planned his eventual demise and left a trail of clues to draw those investigating his crimes to their own deaths. A casual Saw viewer would get whiplash from this one, as the story takes place at the same time as Saw III, pre-dating Kramer’s autopsy, which the film begins with.
The final moments reveal that Detective Hoffman, present at the autopsy, was never in any danger; he was Jigsaw’s accomplice all along, and also that the real test for our hero, Officer Rigg (Lyriq Bent), was not to try to save everyone in the past. And also dispose of Eric Matthews (Donnie Wahlberg). And also frame Agent Strahm. And also… I’m mentally exhausted just trying to write this out so it makes sense, and that’s why I can’t really rank Saw IV any higher. It’s probably the twistiest Saw of all, which could be considered a bonus, but it’s also a lot. Too much!
8. Spiral: From the Book of Saw
In 2021, Lionsgate and Twisted Pictures decided that the Saw franchise needed a spinoff. An intriguing concept; Spiralis more of a police procedural in which Detective Ezekiel Banks (Chris Rock) tries to track down a Jigsaw copycat killer.
Disposing of the industrial-grime aesthetic the Saw movies are known for, Spiral is a slick, tightly paced cat-and-mouse thriller, but it just doesn’t quite work. It doesn’t feel enough like a Saw movie for people who love Saw movies, and the plot is too formulaic for anyone expecting a half-decent Se7en knockoff instead. No one wins in this scenario! We also saw this reflected at the box office, where Spiral became the lowest grossing installment in the franchise.
7. Jigsaw
After the Saw movies had stretched the ongoing Kramer story way too thin and wrapped up with a “final” chapter, there was a rethink about how to keep the franchise going. Initially, the idea of reviving it seemed promising, especially with the Spierig brothers (Predestination) at the helm. The problem is that the revival didn’t go far enough to stand out from the crowd, despite having some great kills and a decent atmosphere.
Catching up with Logan (Matt Passmore), a different Kramer apprentice from a barn game that took place 10 years prior, Jigsaw still relies on connections to past events that feel totally underwhelming in the end. I refer to this as “the Spaceballs entry,” because the killer’s motivations are so convoluted that they might as well be revealed in the manner of Rick Moranis’ Dark Helmet villain: “I am your father’s brother’s nephew’s cousin’s former roommate,” just about sums it up. The desperation to link everything back to Kramer falls completely flat. A swing and a miss!
6. Saw VI
A much stronger entry than IV and V, Saw VI was a welcome course correction for the franchise that stopped trying to catch the audience up with excessive lore homework and actually focused on a clear moral journey that aligned with John Kramer’s philosophy. It’s so much less chaotic and random as a result—and hits a little differently after the real-life killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
We follow insurance executive William Easton (Peter Outerbridge) who has denied life-saving coverage to many people, and who Kramer specifically had a problem with, given that he was one of them. Easton’s co-workers also become targets for Hoffman’s incarnation of Jigsaw, adding more bodies to the pile in a massively distressing shotgun carousel sequence. It all wraps up with the family of one of Easton’s dead clients deciding his stomach-churning fate, and Hoffman finally escaping his own Jigsaw test.
5. Saw II
Saw II is bloodier than the first movie and really cements the formula the franchise would become known for, featuring a number of grotesque traps for its first group activity (the needle pit is particularly iconic) while handling the necessary gore and tension quite masterfully.
It starts out by subverting expectations, as John Kramer is immediately caught by cop Eric Matthews. Of course, Kramer has set up a complete horror show for Matthews, revealing footage that confirms his son—along with seven other people—is trapped in a house under the threat of a nerve agent and that Matthews will have to play Kramer’s game in order to rescue him.
Crafty Kramer has neglected to mention that the footage of the house and its occupants was recorded days ago and that everyone is already dead, aside from his accomplice, Amanda (Shawnee Smith), and Matthews’s son, who has been inside a safe at the factory the entire time. It’s a clever reveal that isn’t too ludicrous, which is something that these films occasionally find to be a tough balancing act.
4. Saw: The Final Chapter
I can already sense that some of you are questioning the high placement of Saw: The Final Chapter, a.k.a. Saw 3D, on this ranking. Admittedly, it’s a little controversial. Yet I stand by it! The seventh movie in the franchise successfully manages to bring everything full circle with its revelation that Dr. Lawrence Gordon (Cary Elwes) survived the first movie and has been awaiting activation should any harm come to Kramer’s ex-wife. We find out Gordon is alive right from the get-go, and his return in the final minutes is super effective for the big twist, sticking Hoffman in the very bathroom where Gordon played his own game so many years ago and throwing away his only means of escape.
Saw: The Final Chapter is perhaps the goriest entry in the entire franchise (it had to be edited and resubmitted to the MPA six times to secure an R rating) and wears that proudly. Yes, it’s over-the-top, but this is what some of us pay money to see—let its 9% RT score be damned! A staggering 25 people meet their maker in this one, including a gang of white supremacists in an abandoned junkyard during a sequence that has to be seen to be believed. The 3D element, while ludicrous, also adds a silly, nostalgic element that hasn’t aged well, but still made for a fun time in the theater back in 2010.
3. Saw III
Saw III is darker, more unforgiving, and its gore is absolutely relentless, so I’m giving it two thumbs up! Featuring a killer screenplay by original Saw writer Leigh Whannell, the third movie in the franchise focuses on grieving father Jeff (Angus Macfadyen) who Kramer tasks with being able to forgive those who were involved in his son’s death. Spoiler: he can’t, and he ends up killing Kramer for also putting his wife in grave danger to prove a point.
No one comes out of this one in good spirits, to say the least, including Kramer’s protégée Amanda, who can’t quite get past the jealousy she feels seeing Jeff’s wife bonding with him. Dead, dead, dead. Good stuff! But honestly, the stomach-churning scene where Jeff has to deal with rescuing a guy from a grinding vat full of rotting pig carcasses is top-five material all by itself. Hang it in the Louvre.
2. Saw X
Did anyone expect the tenth Saw movie to be this good? The running joke about the franchise eschewing de-ageing effects by just putting Tobin Bell in a baseball cap is certainly stretched to its limit in Saw X, which is set almost two decades ago in Kramer’s story between the events of Saw and Saw II, and where we find Kramer travelling to sunny Mexico in the hope that an experimental procedure will cure his terminal cancer. When he finds out that the whole clinic is a scam, there’s hell to pay for everyone involved in the deception.
Putting Kramer at the center of the action was a masterstroke for anyone willing to suspend their disbelief about how old Bell looks, allowing us a good, long look at how Kramer’s motivations were evolving all those years ago and what he went through to try and beat his cancer. It’s possible to feel at least some sympathy for him, even though he’s been instrumental in the murders of so many people (which is mind-blowing) and you do genuinely want his scammers to pay for what they’ve done to him. Above all else, it’s a properly cohesive movie that benefits from the direction of Kevin Greutert, who had helmed a couple of previous installments and knew by this time what worked and what didn’t.
1. Saw
The simplicity of the original Saw still works today. More like a deftly written play than a gorefest, most of the movie takes place in one room, and most of its dialogue is between two imprisoned characters attempting to build trust in a horrifying situation. The final twist—that their captor is the dead man lying on the floor between them and that he is very much not dead—was incredible at the time and remains so. Hell, it’s up there with some of the greatest cinematic reveals in horror, along with The Sixth Sense, The Others, and, of course, the GOAT: Psycho.
Saw’s simple but clever concept suited its low budget. Made for around a million dollars, it racked up a hundred times that at the global box office, even as critics slammed it as half-baked, hokey, and desperate to emulate David Fincher’s more acclaimed thriller Se7en. Yet, it endured. Nine Saw sequels (and prequels, and spinoffs) later, fans are still waiting for the next one. James Wan’s little movie might seem rough around the edges and quite quaint now compared to the ones that followed, but Saw turned into that rare thing: a horror franchise that just wouldn’t die. It deserves its rightful place at the top of this ranking.
A24 Tries to Make Elevated Action With Bloodsport Remake
It’s hard to think of two movie companies more dissimilar than A24 and Cannon Films. The latter became famous in the 1980s as the home for direct-to-video action trash starring the likes of Chuck Norris and Michael Dudikoff. The former is synonymous with moody, arty films, particularly in the sub-genre known as “elevated horror.” With films such as The Witch and Hereditary, A24 replaced base genre scares with creeping dread and a suffocating tone.
Yet, the two worlds are colliding in perhaps the most unlikely A24 project yet. The distributor has teamed up with BAFTA-award winner Michaela Coel to remake Bloodsport, the 1988 Jean-Claude Van Damme vehicle. “I have long been in awe of fighters, and astounded by the discipline, intensity and isolation the sport demands of them,” Coel said in a statement. “I am excited to explore this world, especially so with A24 as my collaborators. LET’S FUCKING GO.” Coel’s clearly excited, but the rest of us have a question: can A24 make elevated action as compelling as elevated horror?
Believe it or not, Bloodsport may be the perfect film to attempt such a genre reinvention, as it is both incredibly odd and surprisingly influential. Directed by Newt Arnold, Bloodsport stars the Belgian Van Damme as the American Frank Dux, a captain in the U.S. Army. A practitioner of ninjutsu, Dux is invited to participate in a secret illegal fighting tournament called Kumite. Dux immediately abandons his post and travels to Hong Kong, where he fights and befriends fighters from a range of disciplines, and eventually faces off against champion Chong-Li (Bolo Yeung), who possesses the most amazing pair of pectoral muscles ever captured on screen. Also, future Academy Award winner Forest Whitaker is there, for some reason.
Even more absurd is the backstory behind Bloodsport. The movie has its origins in a 1980 article from Black Belt magazine, in which the real-life Frank Dux described his experiences in Kumite. After reading the article, writer Sheldon Lettich turned it into a story treatment, and eventually co-wrote the final screenplay with Christopher Cosby and Mel Friedman. However, since then, many of Dux’s claims, including everything about Kumite, have been debunked. Even weirder, Bloodsport is apparently Donald Trump’s favorite movie… as long as you fast-forward through the “boring” parts of this 93-minute film mostly about punching and kicking.
To be clear, all of this weirdness is a feature and none of it is a bug. The strange nature of the story and everything surrounding it only gives Bloodsport more propulsion, infusing an already lean and effective action structure with an almost mythic quality. Bloodsport helped advance a new martial arts craze in the U.S., and was a direct inspiration for the Mortal Kombat video games.
In short, it’s exactly the type of oddball movie that could lend itself to wild interpretations, even artsy-fartsy interpretations. And, as seen in I May Destroy You and Chewing Gum, Coel certainly knows how to play with genre. If she and A24 can use Bloodsport to inaugurate an era of elevated action, then the legacy of Cannon Films just got that much stranger.
Bloodsport is now streaming on Tubi.
Spider-Man: Brand New Day Looks to Directly Tie into Daredevil: Born Again
The first trailer for Spider-Man: Brand New Day assures us that Peter Parker is finally a friendly neighborhood Spider-Man. No more going to space with the Avengers, no more alternate realities, no more trips to Europe. Now that everyone’s forgotten who Peter Parker used to be, Spidey copes with his loneliness by crawling walls in New York City. Then again, New York City isn’t exactly the loneliest place in the world, especially in the Marvel Universe. Superheroes are bound to run into one another in the Big Apple.
More specifically, the Brand New Day trailer has a lot of stuff from the NetflixDaredevil show and from the Disney+ continuation, Daredevil: Born Again. Although Ol’ Hornhead doesn’t appear in the trailer, we do see Spidey getting the key to the city from Sheila Rivera (Zabryna Guevara), chief of staff to Mayor Wilson Fisk, and he teams up with the Punisher Frank Castle, as played by Jon Bernthal since season two of the Netflix show. Most surprisingly, the trailer shows Spider-Man fighting a band of ninjas dressed in red, which viewers of Daredevil season two and of The Defenders recognize as members of the Hand Clan.
Does this mean that Spider-Man and Daredevil will team up in Brand New Day? Peter had already met Matt Murdock in No Way Home, and got a look at his amazing reflexes. More importantly, Daredevil and Spidey have been linked since Marvel Comics promoted Daredevil #1 back in 1964 by slapping Spider-Man on the cover. As both street level heroes, the two have crossed paths and worked together time and again. When Matt Murdock gets a little too committed to his causes, as is his wont, and, oh, sets himself up as the new Kingpin or makes a deal with the Devil, Peter is usually there to beat talk some sense into DD.
Moreover, the two share some villains, including one big one hinted at in the trailer. Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime, first appeared in 1967’s Amazing Spider-Man #50, and still is a Spider-Man villain as much as he is an antagonist of Daredevil or the Punisher. Vincent D’Onofrio‘s take on Fisk as a wounded baby in a giant man’s body seems particularly well-suited to face off with Tom Holland‘s more boyish Spidey, and it’s bound to happen eventually.
Will Spider-Man get to meet Daredevil and/or Kingpin in Brand New Day? Probably not, because as the trailer shows, he seems to be meeting everybody else. In just this two-and-a-half minute teaser, we see Michael Mando back as Mac Gargan (now in his Scorpion gear!), Frank Castle in his Punisher Battle Van ™, and Boomerang against Spidey. On the less cape and cowl side of things, there’s a non-Hulked Bruce Banner, the new Director of Damage Control (Tramell Tillman of Severance and calling Tom Cruise “Mister” in Mission: Impossible fame), and Peter’s old friends MJ and Ned.
That makes for a pretty stuffed trailer, and it promises a pretty stuffed movie—especially when you consider that the film also has Sadie Sink, who is most likely playing Jean Grey of the X-Men.
How will Spider-Man handle a bunch of Daredevil cameos, tons of villains, and also the X-Men? Not easily, but that’s just life in New York City for Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man.
Spider-Man: Brand New Day swings into theaters on July 31, 2026.
Andy Weir Gives Update on Artemis Movie and Why He Wants Jenna Ortega to Play Jazz
If critics are to be believed (including this one), then both films adapted from sci-fi author Andy Weir’s bestselling books have been absolute winners. A decade later, Ridley Scott’s interpretation of Weir’s first novel, The Martian, is considered a modern classic of grounded science fiction storytelling. Meanwhile this week’s Project Hail Mary starring Ryan Gosling is receiving a near rapturous reception among critics and the earliest audiences.
Yet there is another book, one that Weir wrote between those two stories which hasn’t been adapted. Although it isn’t from a lack of trying. In some ways the most pulpy of Weir’s star-gazing stories, Artemis debuted on the New York Times bestseller list in 2017 where it introduced the world to Jasmine Bashara (“Jazz” to her friends), a young woman who despite being born in Saudi Arabia during the 2070s grew up since childhood on Artemis, the first and only city on the Moon.
Imagining the Moon as the ultimate tourist destination for the elite and starstruck, Artemis painstakingly speculates on what it would take to set up a permanent colony on our natural satellite, as well as how quickly an underworld of smuggling, vice, and otherwise ill-gotten criminality could spring up there. Or as Jazz might call it… a living.
The movie made a splash in Hollywood before it was published, with 20th Century Fox snatching up the movie rights on the heels of The Martian being a success for the studio. Furthermore, future Project Hail Mary directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller were tapped to helm the picture, with screenwriter Geneva Robertson-Dworet (Tomb Raider, Amazon’s Fallout) hired to write. However, a lot quickly changed afterward, including Disney buying Fox, and Lord and Miller parting ways with the Mouse House on Solo. In the aftermath, there hasn’t been much public movement on Artemis, which author Weir points to when updating us on the project earlier this month.
“I guess it’s probably on the backburner somewhere. I wouldn’t hold my breath for it,” Weir all but sighs. Yet in the same beat, he suggests he hasn’t given up hope for Artemis. “I know Lord and Miller have some really good ideas for it. I think it comes down more to, can we get someone to give us a big pile of money to make it?”
Project Hail Mary might very well be a good launchpad for the appeal since, like The Martian in the 2010s, it’s an original story steeped in relatively serious, “hard” sci-fi. And as Weir confides, he likes the contrast between Jazz and The Martian’s Mark Watney (played by Matt Damon in the movie) and Gosling’s Ryland Grace in Project Hail Mary.
“They’re all different,” Weir explains. “Like you can almost not call Mark a hero. He just is a guy who didn’t want to die. He didn’t save anyone… and Jasmine chose heroism kind of toward the end to undo a problem that she herself had created. And then Ryland is actually going out there and trying to save the entire human race, but would rather not be doing it. So they each have their own little way of backing into heroism.”
With that said, Weir seems intrigued when imagining who might play Jazz in a potential Artemis movie.
“That’s a tough call,” Weir muses. “I mean, it’d be pretty cool—and I have no say in any of this—but if someone like Jenna Ortega would do it. It would be pretty cool. Something like that.”
Jenna Ortega would definitely seem to continue the trend of Weir protagonists making juicy vehicles for modern stars, with Ortega coming off the continued success of Wednesdaylast year. Granted, Jazz is half-Saudi in the book. Still, Amazon’s audio book production of Artemis gained a lot of fanfare from listeners when it cast Rosario Dawson as the narrator of Artemis (and thus the voice of Jazz).
Whether Ortega or another star books a trip to Weir’s Artemis anytime soon remains to be seen, but if Project Hail Mary works for audiences, Lord, Miller, and Weir will now have a track record with getting original sci-fi off the ground in this decade.
Project Hail Mary opens on Friday, March 20.
How Dinosaurus Sets Up the Rest of Mark Grayson’s Journey on Invincible
This article contains spoilers for Invincible season 4 episodes 1-3.
Only in the world of Invincible can a red dinosaur monster trigger a crisis of conscience. But that’s exactly what happens when Invincible, the superhero alter-ego of teen Mark Grayson, meets Dinosaurus. A scalier, more crimson take on Marvel‘s Incredible Hulk, Dinosaurus may go to extreme ends in his pursuit of environmentalism, but he makes points that give Invincible pause on his superhero’s journey.
Voiced in both his human and raging lizard form by Matthew Rhys, Dinosaurus has a utilitarian approach to saving the world, as he’s willingness to let cities stay destroyed if it helps the environment and he’ll even let many people die if it leads to a greater good later on. For Robert Kirkman, who created the comic with artists Cory Walker and Ryan Ottley, co-showrunner Simon Racioppa, and Mark’s voice actor Steven Yeun, Dinosaurus offers more than a physical challenge to Invincible.
“I think what we’re trying to do is show that Mark is impressionable,” Kirkman tells Den of Geek. He’s young. He’s trying to find his way. He’s open to everything, for good or bad. You know those ideas are going to be rattling around in his head.”
“Hopefully, people understand that Mark is a different character each season,” agrees Racioppa. “I mean, he’s the same person, but he evolves. He’s changing. He takes the wrong path, he has a thought that turns out to be incorrect. He pulls himself back, but he’s not a perfect hero—he’s a kid, he’s 21 years old.
“Mark suddenly has all these powers, all these responsibilities. He’s going to make mistakes, and he’s going to be influenced by the things that happened to him. He should feel like a changeable character who’s just trying to put one foot in front of the other and figure out how to handle himself in this universe. And Dinosaurus affects that.”
To say that Mark has changed over the first three seasons of Invincible is an understatement. When we first met him, he was a mostly normal teenager who just so happened to be the son of Omni-Man, a benevolent hero in the tradition of Superman. But after his own powers began to manifest, and he took on the moniker Invincible, Mark learned that Omni-Man came not to protect Earth but to conquer it in the name of the Viltrum Empire. Since then, Mark’s had to battle not just his father, but a whole legions of Viltrumite invaders.
And yet, for Steven Yeun, the ideological confusion Mark experiences when listening to Dinosaurus is one of the more relatable parts about the Prime Video series.
“You come to an age where you find out things aren’t as they said, and you deal with it. And I think we’re going to want to watch Mark deal with it,” he says with a laugh. “He grew up being shielded from the complexities of the world. He has all of these ideals and traditions. And then, all of a sudden, it’s ripped from him.
“That can leave you pretty cynical, so I think all that is working through Mark at the moment.”
Yeun’s phrasing suggests that the confusion will be short-lived, but Kirkman knows better. “Anyone who is familiar with the comic book knows that Dinosaurus comes back in a big way, so there’s some pretty interesting consequences for Mark,” he teases. Because a big, red, philosophizing dinosaur will always leave an impression, in our world or in the world of Invincible.
New episodes of Invincible season 4 stream every Wednesday on Prime Video.
Dune 3: Is Robert Pattinson’s New Character Hero or Villain?
As with any sequel, part of the appeal of the first trailer for Dune: Part Threeis seeing all the familiar faces. The teaser gives us new looks at Paul and Chani, now older and weathered from the former’s role as Emperor. We see Lady Jessica’s face, covered in tattoos, and what appears to be the face of Duncan Idaho, somehow alive after his death in the first Dune. But the most interesting face is that of Robert Pattinson, who plays a suspicious new character.
Pattinson plays Scytale, a Face-Dancer who serves a key role in a conspiracy formed against House Atreides. Scytale is a mysterious character, one whose true nature and purpose are opaque to everyone. Yet, the trailer forces us to ask, “Is Scytale a hero or villain?”
Directed once again by Denis Villeneuve, who co-writes the script with comic scribe Brian K. Vaughn, Dune: Part Three adapts Dune Messiah, the second book in Frank Herbert‘s series. Set approximately twelve years after the first book, Messiah finds Paul seemingly all powerful because of Muad’Dib’s Jihad, and able to enact his vision for the future of humanity. However, a conspiracy rises against Paul, with roots that extend even into his inner circle.
One of the main players in that conspiracy is Pattinson’s character, Scytale. Scytale is a Face-Dancer, the term for shapeshifters within Herbert’s world. Shapeshifters are certainly nothing new to genre fiction, the unique history of Dune‘s reality requires a bit more explanation. Because Dune takes place several millennia after the Butlerian Jihad that destroyed all advanced computers, technology evolved differently.
Where the Bene Gesseret, the order that includes Paul’s mother Jessica, cultivated religious practices that gave them abilities such as the Voice and finger-talking, the Bene Tleilax practiced genetic modification. Eventually, the Bene Tleilax developed complete control over their bodies, allowing themselves to change their makeup on a cellular level, essentially shapeshifting.
Face-dancers aren’t completely new to those who only watch the Dune movies and haven’t read the books. Sister Theodosia, the Bene Gesserit acolyte played by Jade Anouka in Dune: Prophecy was a Face Dancer, who used her abilities to advance Valya Harkonnen’s (Emily Watson) plans. As seen in that show, Face Dancers are a pariah among the larger society, an issue that only grows worse in the 10,000 years between that show and the events of the first Dune movie.
Thus, when Scytale enters the story, he has good reason to doubt Paul’s empire. As such, Scytale serves an important thematic role for Dune: Part Three. Herbert wrote Messiah, in part, as a rejoinder to those who saw Paul as a more or less straightforward hero. In Messiah, the critique of charismatic leaders is more obvious, making Paul feel more morally ambiguous.
It’s hard to make your readers mistrust your main character. It’s all the harder for movie audiences watching glamorous Hollywood stars to criticize the actions of the protagonist, especially when he’s played by Timothée Chalamet. Fortunately, Pattinson is the ideal counter to Chalamet. A magnetic and handsome performer in his own right, Pattinson has built his career around his ability to play against type. From Tenet to The Batman to Mickey 17, Pattinson knows how to embody people who are weirder than they seem, who shouldn’t be fully trusted.
Does that ability mean that Scytale will be a villain in Dune: Part Three? The answer depends in part on how we view Paul, but it depends just as much as on what we see when we look at the face of Scytale, a face that’s always changing.
Dune 3 arrives in theaters on December 18, 2026.
How Robert Pattinson’s Zendaya Connection on The Drama Might Have Led to Dune 3
The Dune movies hold a singular place in Zendaya’s memory. She has, after all, starred in three of them. And as she admits to a wide assembly of press during a special event revealing the Dune: Part Three trailer, they mark a crucial part of her life.
“These movies have meant so much to me over the years,” Zendaya considers. “I literally have been able to grow up in my entire 20s doing them, so they have a special place in my heart, and all these people do as well.” The Emmy-winning star is referring to familiar faces around her on the day, including director Denis Villeneuve and co-star Javier Bardem, as well as perhaps some new ones like Anya Taylor-Joy and Robert Pattinson. Then again, as Pattinson reveals, their history between Dune movies might have been the competitive edge he needed to join the cast on Arrakis.
“I absolutely adored these movies, I saw them multiple times in the theater,” Pattinson reveals. “And I think I was talking to you [Zendaya] on the set of The Drama, and I was like, ‘How do I get into one of those Dune movies?’”
Pattinson is referring to his and Zendaya’s new peculiar, and most likely surrealist, dramedy from A24 and writer-director Kristoffer Borgli (Dream Scenario). An intimate character piece, it wouldn’t necessarily cause many to immediately think “Dune,” however Zendaya half-jokes that when Pattinson asked about the and movies, she said, “I know a guy.”
“It was a very unexpected call a few months later,” Pattinson adds about when the offer came from director Villeneuve. “And I kind of do think you had something to do with it.”
Zendaya is quick to point to Villeneuve as deserving the real credit, however the truth is it probably never hurts to have a good reference, which Zendaya and Pattinson probably qualify as for each other since the duo has three movies coming out this year, starting with The Drama, continuing in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey, and culminating in Dune: Part Three.
The third Dune film comes out on Dec. 18, 2026.
Dune 3: Denis Villeneuve Promises More ‘Muscular, Action-Packed Thriller’ for Finale
Denis Villeneuve was not supposed to make Dune: Part Threeso soon after the last film. As a story that’s “inspired” by Frank Hebert’s Dune Messiah—a curious word choice that the director uses repeatedly instead of “adaptation”—the film was always destined to feature a massive time-jump of about 17 years. While Villeneuve never intended to take quite so long a break off-screen, he did have other projects lined up after 2024’s Dune: Part Two, including a new cinematic portrait of Cleopatra and an adaptation of another sci-fi book by Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Yet on Monday evening in sunny Los Angeles, he sat in an auditorium revealing alongside actors Zendaya, Javier Bardem, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Robert Pattinson the first trailer for Dune: Part Three to a roomful of press, including Den of Geek.
“When we got back, I said to my crew I’m taking a break, that’s it. Bye-bye,” the French-Canadian helmer chuckles about the around-the-world press tour of the second Dune movie. During those festivities, he traveled from Abu Dhabi to Montreal, and saw 14,000 fans line up outside a Mexico City theater that only seats 5,000. The grandiosity of the reception impressed him, particularly after the day-and-date HBO Max release of the first Dune at the tail-end of the pandemic in 2021.
“And when I went back home, I kept waking in the middle of the night with those images,” Villeneuve explains. “I was supposed to do another movie in the meantime, but the image of Dune: Part Three, inspired by Dune Messiah, kept coming back, kept coming back. And I said ‘alright, let’s do it.’”
We now have an idea of what those images in his waking eye look like, too, thanks to a spectacular new trailer which reveals a galaxy at war with itself, and an Arrakis infected with a fanaticism that borders on hysteria. The chanting wails of Hans Zimmer’s now iconic score from the last two movies likewise return, but they’re more frenzied, feverish even, while the scale of the throne room dominated by Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) and his extended family evokes the Pyramids of old on the Earth that was.
It’s striking since the second Dune novel on which this is based, Messiah, has long been both celebrated and criticized for its more intimate scale. One could even call it a chamber piece about courtier intrigue and betrayals in a royal palace. Yet while Villeneuve promises a very different movie from the previous two entries, he also claimed it to be the biggest Dune, as well as his most personal.
“I said to myself that it’s a good idea to come back to this world not [with a sense of] nostalgia but of urgency,” Villeneuve emphasizes. “To go there with a critical eye and not to be self-indulgent. I said to my team that it will be a very different film, a very different Dune movie, have a different tone with a different rhythm, a different pace. If the first movie was more of a contemplation about a boy discovering a new world, and the second one is a war, then this one is a thriller. It’s more action-packed and more dense, more muscular than the other two films.”
That is demonstrated by the emphasis on the entire Atreides line being on the frontline of what Herbert described on the page as Muad’Dib’s jihad and genocides (which Paul never is revealed as participating in first-hand). In the sizzle reel footage, we see both Paul and his younger sister Alia (Taylor-Joy) lead Fremen into battle on distant worlds which evoke feudal East Asian societies.
While Zimmer has returned, noticeably cinematographer Greig Fraser has not, with the DP being replaced by Linus Sandgren, the Oscar-winning lenser on La La Land, Wuthering Heights, and No Time to Die. Villeneuve talked about how the two specifically sought out the grainy texture of celluloid, intending to utilize it in both ultra-wide 70mm presentations and IMAX… at least when they aren’t in the Arraki wastes.
“We decided, both of us, to shoot most of the movie in film,” Villeneuve explains. “I haven’t shot in film in years, and we shot the film in the 65mm, most of it, a big part of it is also shot in IMAX film, a first-time for me.” However, he adds, there is one glaring exception: “I kept the desert in digital because I love the brutality of the digital IMAX. So the movie is really meant to be an IMAX experience.”
Another noticeable change is the appearance of returning actors, including Chalamet and Zendaya. The director reveals he likes using some imagination and not utilizing too many prosthetic effects when instituting a time jump. “Aging actors is more tricky,” he admits with some understatement. However, he and makeup designer Heike Merker worked to achieve “subtler ways” to suggest aging in front of the camera.
Villeneuve might be aging some familiar faces, but he’s also relying on fresh ones as well, as indicated by newcomers Pattinson and Taylor-Joy joining old Dune veterans Zendaya and Bardem at the trailer event (not counting Taylor-Joy’s cameo in Dune: Part Two). Indeed, Taylor-Joy’s character might be among the most enigmatic of Herbert’s creations, as indicated by an ethereal iconography in the trailer juxtaposed with a manic anger on the character’s face.
“Alia has a very intense blessing/curse situation,” Anya Taylor-Joy says of the younger Atreides sibling. “She carries the weight and the wisdom of generations and generations in her head. She’s never in a singular conversation, she’s kind of everything everywhere all at once. And the one thing she really feels most strongly about is her love and devotion to her brother, because that is the only person who has ever made her feel like she makes sense. He’s understood her from before she was even born, and she would do anything for him to various degrees of insanity.”
Insanity might also be another word to describe Dune as well: a world in which the idiosyncrasies and indulgences of its leaders can result in tragic consequences, no matter how well-intentioned the choices might have once been. It’s a narrative world full of ambition, sand, and a dream of greatness. Funnily enough, Villeneuve’s trilogy features all three in spades.
Dune: Part Three opens in theaters on Dec. 18, 2026.
Green Lantern: The Damon Lindelof and Grant Morrison Dispute Reveals the Problem With Comic Book Adaptations
Damon Lindelof has done it again. He’s made the nerds mad. This time, it’s not because Lostended in purgatory or because he remixed Watchmen or because of, well, everything in Prometheus. It’s because he said that Green Lanternwas a stupid name. Those comments would have irritated Green Lantern fans regardless, but it especially stung because Lindelof is co-creator, along with Chris Mundy and fellow controversy-magnet Tom King, of the HBO Max series Lanterns. The comments drew the ire of many, not least of which was Grant Morrison, who took to their Substack to decry this “jockish dismissal of superhero conventions.”
Lindelof has already issued a mea culpaon his Instagram, admitting his comments were a joke on a comedy podcast and assuring everyone that he’s a huge fan of Hal Jordan. But here’s the thing: he was right. And here’s the other thing: Morrison’s right, too. Superheroes are inherently silly, and that silliness will only be magnified when trying to appeal to larger audiences.
In Comic Book Day…
Here’s the Green Lantern concept in a nutshell:
Millenia ago, an alien from the planet Maltus introduced evil into reality by witnessing the dawn of creation. To right this wrong, a subset of Maltusians designated themselves the Guardians of the Universe, tried and failed various ways of doing good before finally establishing the Green Lantern Corps. Members of the Green Lantern Corps, chosen for their honesty and bravery, are equipped with a lantern-shaped power battery and a ring, which they must recharge on the battery every solar cycle (read: 24 hours). The rings allow them to create whatever they can will, but initially and sometimes still do not work on anything yellow.
Of the 3600 space sectors patrolled by the Corps, Earth is in Sector 2814, where it is primarily guarded by Hal Jordan, but also by Guy Gardner, John Stewart, and a whole lot of other humans. The main bad guy looks like the Devil and/or David Niven and is called Sinestro. Other Lanterns include a squirrel, a mathematical equation, and a cannibal. Also, Hal Jordan went crazy one time and committed cosmic genocide, he dated a 13-year-old for a while, and, worst of all, was once played by Ryan Reynolds in a movie.
That’s a lot to swallow, at least for anyone not all the way bought in. But comic book fans are mostly bought in (Garth Ennis, who came up with the character “Dogwelder” as a bet to make a name dumber than Green Lantern, doesn’t count because he hates all superheroes who aren’t Superman). While the Green Lantern series struggled in sales from the 60s through the 80s, becoming a backup in The Flash for a while and later becoming a book co-led by Green Arrow, it has been a consistent favorite with multiple spin-offs since 1990. Green Lantern is a foundational concept in the DC Universe, something no respectable adaptation of the universe can go without.
In Mainstream Light…
But for everyone else, Green Lantern is a bit of a tough sell. Sure, mass audiences can accept that getting exposed to radiation gives you spider-powers or the ability to turn into a green monster instead of cancer, and sure, we can accept that an alien with nearly unlimited power would care for other people because he was raised in Kansas, but all of those properties have long existed in the wider imagination. They’re baked into our pop culture. Outside of the hippy song “Sunshine Superman” and Justice League cartoons, Green Lantern can’t say the same.
Thus, the team behind Lanterns is faced with an unenviable dilemma. How can they take a concept that has resonated with so many comic book fans for so long and make it appeal to mass audiences, audiences who don’t want to pour through dense lore in order to understand the main story?
Lanterns appears to be borrowing a page from other adaptations, hiring good-looking and well-known stars to play the part, and—as the MCU taught us—keeping those handsome mugs as unobscured as possible. But it also appears to be going even further, stripping all things green from the costumes, settings, and even the title.
No Weirdness Will Be in Sight
Whether or not it will work remains to be seen, but the whole Lanterns debacle underscores a truth that comic book fans must face. Our favorite hobby is weird. Our favorite characters are weird. And in many cases, that weirdness is exactly what we love about them.
However, weirdness is, by definition, outside of the mainstream. So we’re left with two options. We can take a lot of the weirdness out to make the concept appeal to larger audiences, which is what Lanterns appears to be doing. But what are we left with? Green Lantern fans are clearly irritated that, besides the cocky twinkle in Kyle Chandler’s eye and the seriousness brought by Aaron Pierre, the show seems to have nothing to do with the Hal Jordan and John Stewart they love.
The other option is to do what most people running DC adaptations have done: ignore Green Lantern. Stick to concepts that better match established tropes, and don’t even try to mess with the space police.
We cannot say if either option is better than the other. But if the James Gunn DCU, which just gave us a Superman who says “What the hey?” after being healed by his robots and which made an A-lister out of Peacemaker, cannot do it, then maybe no one can. And no amount of jokes or apologies from Damon Lindelof will change that.
Lanterns comes to HBO Max in 2026.
Sarah Michele Gellar Reveals the Real Reason Behind the Buffy Reboot’s Cancellation
Buffy the Vampire Slayer star Sarah Michelle Gellar says she fought an “uphill battle” since “day one” to get Hulu reboot series New Sunnydale made.
In a new interview with People, Gellar broke down the decision to cancel the show after the pilot and how she heard the news. The timing sounds absolutely diabolical; she was attending the world premiere of Ready or Not 2: Here I Come at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas, while New Sunnydale director Chloé Zhao was about to attend the Academy Awards, where her film Hamnet had been nominated for eight Oscars.
New Sunnydale and Ready or Not 2 are both Searchlight productions, and Gellar says they didn’t see the cancellation coming either.
“I got the call as we were stepping onto the stage for the premiere of [Searchlight’s] own movie,” she explained. “And it’s also the weekend of Chloé going to the Oscars as a best director nominee for Hamnet. For them to call us on the Friday of what should have been Chloé’s victory lap for an incredible film, and my world premiere of something that I worked very hard for is …that says something.”
Gellar alleges that the cancellation decision was ultimately made by one guy who just wasn’t a fan. “We had an executive on our show who was not only not a fan of the original, but was proud to constantly remind us that he had never seen the entirety of the series and how it wasn’t for him.”
She added, “That’s very hard when you’re taking a property that is as beloved as Buffy, not just to the world, but to me and Chloé. So that tells you the uphill battle that we had been fighting since day one, when your executive is literally proud to tell you that he didn’t watch it.”
Gellar says Buffy’s fans were “the only reason we were doing this show in the first place. We were doing it because everybody loves it. How do you do a show that’s beloved with someone that doesn’t love it?”
Deadline’s sources have reported that the exec in question is Disney Television Group President Craig Erwich. They also report that the pilot was even rewritten to address Hulu’s concerns that it “played too young” and lacked enough Buffy Summers. The new pilot script had been well received but didn’t seem good enough for Erwich, who has been leading development and strategy for Hulu’s original series since 2014. He has overseen the success of shows like The Handmaid’s Tale and Only Murders in the Building, and was previously involved in developing hits like 24, House, and Prison Break during his time at FOX.
New Sunnydale will not have the opportunity to be shopped elsewhere, as 20th Television, where Erwich has recently been given oversight, now owns the Buffy IP.