Actors Who Just Missed Out On Iconic Roles

Certain roles just feel tailor made for the actors that played them, but that’s mostly due to how we met the characters. In the planning stages of a film, many actors are considered and even offered the roles, but the final product is not always what the filmmakers envisioned from the start.

As such, we have plenty of examples of actors that could have been iconic characters, but had that chance pass by them either willingly or, as often is the case, due to a twist of fate. These are the famous stars that were almost even more famous characters.

The Matrix, Will Smith

Will Smith famously turned down Neo, later admitting he didn’t fully understand the pitch. The role went to Keanu Reeves, becoming one of the most defining performances of his career.

Titanic, Matthew McConaughey

McConaughey has said he believed he had secured the role of Jack Dawson, but Leonardo DiCaprio was ultimately cast, turning the part into a career-defining breakout.

Iron Man, Tom Cruise

Tom Cruise was attached to Iron Man for years during development. The project stalled, and Robert Downey Jr. eventually took over, launching the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

The Lord of the Rings, Nicolas Cage

Cage was offered the role of Aragorn but declined due to personal reasons. The part went to Viggo Mortensen, who became closely associated with the character.

Forrest Gump, John Travolta

Travolta passed on the role, which then went to Tom Hanks. Hanks’ performance became one of the most celebrated in modern film history.

Pretty Woman, Molly Ringwald

Ringwald turned down the lead role, which went to Julia Roberts, helping establish her as a major star.

The Dark Knight, Adrien Brody

Brody actively pursued the Joker role, but it went to Heath Ledger, whose performance became iconic and the last before his passing.

Pulp Fiction, Michael Madsen

Madsen was offered the role of Vincent Vega but declined due to scheduling, leading to John Travolta’s career-reviving performance.

The Avengers, Emily Blunt

Blunt was originally cast as Black Widow but had to drop out due to scheduling conflicts. Scarlett Johansson ended up taking the role.

Gladiator, Mel Gibson

Gibson was offered the lead role but declined, and Russell Crowe went on to win an Oscar for the performance.

La La Land, Miles Teller

Teller was initially attached to the lead role, but negotiations fell through, and Ryan Gosling was cast instead alongside Emma Stone.

American Psycho, Leonardo DiCaprio

DiCaprio was heavily linked to Patrick Bateman, but the role ultimately went to Christian Bale, whose performance became a tipping point in his career.

Pirates of the Caribbean, Hugh Jackman

Jackman was considered early for Jack Sparrow, but Johnny Depp’s take on the character ended up becoming the film’s defying feature.

Christian Bale in Batman Begins

Batman Begins, Jake Gyllenhaal

Gyllenhaal was considered for the lead role, but it ended up going to Christian Bale. Fans hope that the actor can have a second chanse in the now reset DCU.

The Hunger Games, Hailee Steinfeld

Steinfeld auditioned for Katniss Everdeen, but lost the role to Jennifer Lawrence due to, allegedly, being “too young.” Steinfeld was at the time the closest to the character’s real age.

Guardians of the Galaxy, Glenn Howerton

Howerton was a finalist for Star-Lord, but Chris Pratt landed the role. The impact this has had on Pratt’s career is undeniable.

Star Wars, Al Pacino

Pacino was offered Han Solo but declined due to not understanding the script, and Harrison Ford made the role legendary. Pacino has joked that he made Ford’s career thanks to this choice.

15 Times Nobody Bought That The Actor Could Play Their Sport

Actors aren’t athletes, that much is for sure. They also aren’t spies, super heroes or long-deceased historical figures, but we suspend our disbelief for long enough to enjoy a given film. But when it comes to sports, something we are so used to seeing on our screens, it gets harder and harder to meet the movie half way.

As such, there are many films that fail to convince us that an actor is the sports athlete they claim to be. It may be to no fault of their own, since it takes a village to create a character, but these few performances failed to convince us that they could actually play their given sport.

Escape to Victory

Despite featuring real football legends, Sylvester Stallone’s portrayal of a goalkeeper drew criticism. His movements and technique didn’t resemble professional play, making his big match moments feel staged rather than convincing.

The Blind Side

While the film was successful, some viewers questioned how convincingly Quinton Aaron portrayed elite-level football ability, particularly in action sequences that relied heavily on editing rather than authentic on-field skill.

The Fan

Wesley Snipes’s baseball scenes were often criticized for lacking the fluidity and technique expected of a professional player, especially by viewers familiar with the sport.

Trouble with the Curve

Some audiences noted that the hitting and pitching mechanics didn’t always feel authentic, with performances leaning more on drama than convincing baseball realism.

Summer Catch

Freddie Prinze Jr.’s portrayal of a top-tier pitcher was widely seen as unconvincing, with his mechanics and delivery lacking the realism expected at that level of play.

She’s the Man

Amanda Bynes’s soccer performance drew some skepticism, with viewers noting that the gameplay rarely matched the level expected of competitive athletes.

She’s All That

The brief soccer elements involving (once again!) Freddie Prinze Jr. were often cited as lacking realism, particularly in how casually the sport was portrayed.

The Room

Tommy Wiseau’s football scenes became unintentionally comedic, with awkward throwing and staging that didn’t resemble any real version of the sport.

High School Musical

Zac Efron’s basketball scenes were frequently pointed out as lacking the skill level expected of a star player, with choreography taking precedence over realism.

Angels in the Outfield

Some viewers noted that the baseball performances, especially from younger cast members, didn’t always convincingly reflect real gameplay despite the film’s fantasy elements.

Fever Pitch

Jimmy Fallon’s on-field baseball moments were brief but still drew attention for lacking the natural movement of someone experienced in the sport.

The Longest Yard

Despite a large cast, some performances in football scenes were criticized for lacking authenticity, especially compared to real professional gameplay.

Stick It

Gymnastics sequences sometimes relied on doubles and editing, leading some viewers to feel the performances lacked authenticity in key moments.

Bring It On

Though focused on cheerleading, some routines were criticized for not fully reflecting competitive-level precision despite the film’s popularity.

Hillary Swank and Clint Eastwood in Million Dollar Baby

Million Dollar Baby

Despite acclaim, some viewers pointed out that boxing mechanics and progression timelines didn’t always align with real-world expectations.

15 Movies That Lied About the ‘True Story’ Part

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

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

Saturday Night Fever

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

Bloodsport

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

Catch Me If You Can

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

The Conjuring

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

The Greatest Showman

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

Flamin’ Hot

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

Fargo

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

Pain & Gain

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

Braveheart

Braveheart draws from the story of William Wallace but takes extensive historical liberties. Key events, relationships, and even entire character arcs are inaccurate or invented.

Cocaine Bear climbs a tree

Cocaine Bear

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

Bohemian Rhapsody

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

Green Book

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

Argo

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

The Strangers

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

The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things

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

Remembering Little House on the Prairie’s Utterly Bonkers Series Finale

With a new Netflix adaptation of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Little House novels on the way, television fans are bound to recall the beloved series that aired 200 episodes and five movie specials between 1974 and 1983. The series starred Michael Landon and Karen Grassle as Charles and Caroline Ingalls, homesteaders in the late 1800s who raise their three daughters—Mary (Melissa Sue Anderson), Laura (Melissa Gilbert), and Carrie (Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush)—on a farm in Walnut Grove, Minnesota.

From the French horn strains in the opening theme to the life lessons Pa lovingly imparted on his daughters, Little House on the Prairie was a gentle, optimistic look at the American experiment. That is, until the final movie, in which all the characters gathered together and blew the entire town to smithereens.

An Off-Beat Reunion

The explosion happens in the 1984 TV movie Little House: The Last Farewell, which was shot to be the series finale but ended up airing a few months before the Christmas-focused penultimate film, Little House: Bless All the Dear Children.

Written and directed by Landon, who also directed the original 1974 TV movie and several episodes, The Last Farewell plays much like one would expect from a final episode. By the last season, Landon and Grassle had become guest stars in the series and Gilbert took the lead, with the show now focusing on Laura and her husband Almanzo Wilder (Dean Butler). The Last Farewell finds Charles and Caroline returning to Walnut Grove, only to learn that robber baron Nathan Lassiter (James Karen) has bought the line and plans to run a railroad through the town.

Most of the movie follows expected reunion episode tropes and plays to the show’s sentimentality. We get lots of scenes of Charles and Caroline catching up with old friends, familiar characters such as shopkeeper Nels Oleson (Richard Bull), jovial mountain man Mr. Edwards (Victor French), as well as Dr. Baker (Kevin Hagen) and Rev. Alden (Dabbs Greer). The couple spends time praising their daughter and son-in-law for their good work, and playing with the grandkids (one of whom is played by a young Shannen Doherty). And, of course, two generations of men share some wise words for their families.

Yet, even within the wholesome sheen of the movie, something feels off. Most obviously, there are the missing regulars from the show. Oldest daughter Mary had, by this point, moved on to become a teacher for the blind, but the movie only makes passing reference to Carrie and Albert (Matthew Labyorteaux), the troubled orphan adopted by the Ingalls. Nels explains that his wife Harriet (Katherine MacGregor) is ill and in the hospital, while daughter Nellie’s (Alison Arngrim) absence hardly gets that much explanation.

Little House, Big Boom

Even more strange is the mean-spirited tone of the entire thing. By this point, most viewers knew that Landon was far more unpleasant than the character he played on TV, but he gave Charles more bitterness than he ever had before. The entire story begins when Charles learns that Caroline’s Aunt Tess is coming to visit, news that makes him so angry that he gets into a fist fight. Later, he bullies himself back into his old house when he learns that the current owners, John and Sarah Carter (Stan Ivar and Pamela Roylance) are going out of town.

To be clear, the movie plays each bit of bad behavior as a joke, and the movie knows that Charles is out of line. But it also positions him as a lovable guy, someone whose manners haven’t quite caught up with society, but who still means well in the end.

That mixed messaging comes to a fore in the movie’s final moments. The townspeople have tried and failed to prevent Lassiter from holding to his claim on Walnut Grove. He had gone so far as to get help from the U.S. Cavalry (who were, of course, big fans of removing people from their land). So the citizens take the one option left to them: they blow Walnut Grove sky high.

The actual final sequence is not at all as glib as that sentence makes it sound. As a director, Landon takes his time showing the citizens wiring the buildings with dynamite and saying solemn goodbyes to one another. Before the first explosion, Rev. Robert Alden gathers them together to say a prayer. “Dear Lord, we bury a friend today,” he says through tears. “This town has been our friend.” And, of course, when all is done, the townspeople walk out together, singing “Onward Christian Soldiers.”

But until then, we have to watch as each character explodes their respective home. A weeping Mr. Edwards, not expressing a single concern for Old Man Tucker, destroys the mill. Nels grimaces as he makes the General Store explode. Dr. Baker stares stoically before blasting his house to pieces.

The Absolute Farewell

Adding to the shock of the final scene is the fact that the production did indeed blow up the actual buildings used to shoot the series. According to some reports, Landon wanted to put a definitive end on the series and prevent others from using the sets. According to others, he had struck a deal with the owners of the actual land and this allowed them to clear the space when they finished shooting.

Whatever the reason, the movie made us watch as actual settings were reduced to rubble, with only the chapel and the little house still standing.

In the days before the internet and pop culture news outlets like Den of Geek, The Last Farewell felt like a half-remembered dream or something a cruel boy made up to tease the girls who loved the show. Other shows had shockingly bleak endings: Sam never gets home in Quantum Leap, ALF ends with Gordon Shumway getting captured by the government, and the Ice Age kills everyone in Dinosaurs. But Little House on the Prairie presented itself as so pure, so wholesome, that the explosive ending couldn’t be real.

Yet, it absolutely was. And, like the rest of The Last Farewell, the explosion reminds us that nothing is as simple and pure as we remember, not even Little House on the Prairie.

Is Eli Roth’s Ice Cream Man Related to the Image Comic or Clint Howard Movie?

As the weather warms and the children are out of school, thoughts and ears turn toward that ubiquitous sound of summer: the ice cream man’s jingle. Even though few professions could be more joyful than bringing cold confections to children, the jingle always feels a bit too loud, the sellers a bit too friendly, the treats a bit too sweet. And so, like the equally innocuous circus clown, the ice cream man has become the subject of many horror stories, including the upcoming movie Ice Cream Man from Eli Roth.

The trailer’s juxtaposition of jaunty music, bright colors, and bloody carnage certainly feels in line with the 1995 Clint Howard cult classic Ice Cream Man or the anthology comic book by W. Maxwell Prince and Martin Morazzo. But does the movie have any connection to these properties, or are Roth and co-writer Noah Belson mixing up something new?

Eli Roth’s Ice Cream Man Isn’t a Remake of the Comic or Movie

Believe it or not, Ice Cream Man has no connection to the previous movie or the comic. Nor does it have any connection to the Masters of Horror episode, “We All Scream for Ice Cream,” in which William Forsyth plays a ghoul that turns his victims into frozen treats. That last one is pretty obvious, but it’s easy to see why the Roth movie might be connected to the other two properties.

Directed by Norman Apstein and written by Sven Davison and David Dobkin (he of Wedding Crashers and Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga), 1995’s Ice Cream Man stars Clint Howard as Gregory Tudor, a madman who terrorizes children with his disgusting concoctions. The malevolent smile that Orphan Black‘s Ari Millen gives as the titular character in the 2026 Ice Cream Man trailer certainly recalls the icky vibes of Howard’s Gregory, but it’s just a coincidence.

Even more surprising is the fact that Roth’s movie isn’t related to the series that Image Comics has been publishing since 2018. Each issue of Ice Cream Man brings the reader introduces the reader to a new town, where at least one deeply disturbed oddball lives. At some point, the odd-ball meets Rick, a smiling, affable treat peddler who also might be an eldritch horror toying with the pathetic mortals who surround them.

With its bright setting and killer kids, Roth’s Ice Cream Man looks like one of the stories from that series. And given that an adaptation of the comic has long been in the works, first as a Quibi series and currently as a more traditional project produced by Smallville creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, the confusion is understandable.

However, Roth said that he’s had the idea for this story for over two decades, making his Ice Cream Man an original work.

Eli Roth’s Ice Cream Man Trailer

So what is Roth’s Ice Cream Man all about? The trailer gives us basically everything we need to know.

Everything seems peaceful in the town of Bayleen Bay, until the ice cream man arrives. Baseball players and playground kids all rush to his truck to get the treats, and he hands them out with a smile. However, something in those cones makes the children murderous.

The trailer only gives us little glimpses at the havoc: a girl stands over her mother with a hacksaw, a child makes snow angels in blood, a kid pops a utility blade while walking from the truck, and a boy brings an axe down on a teen. But given that Roth is hyping the film as his most “insane film to date,” the full scenes are sure to make you feel worse than a lactose-intolerant person with a half-gallon of butter pecan.

Eli Roth’s Ice Cream Man Release Date

In addition to Millen, Ice Cream Man stars voice actor Benjamin Byron Davis, Karen Cliche of Flash Gordon and Roth’s Thanksgiving, and experimental filmmaker Sarah Abbott. It will be distributed by Iconic Events Releasing on August 7, 2026.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II Is a Silly Superhero Kids Movie, and That’s Still Okay

Thirty-five years ago, some comic book fans left the theater absolutely disappointed, while a group of cartoon fans left utterly thrilled. These two groups both claimed to be fans of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and both had a deep appreciation for the adventures of Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello, and Raphael. But those who came to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze hoping for a faithful adaptation of the indie comics by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird were frustrated in the spring of 1991, while those who loved the cartoon were satisfied.

And both were right. Yes, the Ninja Turtles made their debut in gritty black and white comics that parodied Frank Miller‘s Daredevil run. But they became pop culture sensations because of the kid-friendly cartoon show and the toy line that preceded it. And more comic book properties would do well to remember their youngest audience members.

From Comic to Cartoon

Few characters split their audience like TMNT. On one hand, the series started as a riff on a decidedly harder-edge take on a Marvel hero. Miller reinvigorated Daredevil by importing elements from hard-boiled fiction and Manga, resulting in bloody scenes of Bullseye and Elektra beating each other to death. The first Ninja Turtles comics that Eastman and Laird self-published as Mirage Comics followed suit, with the heroes killing their enemies and crushing the Shredder to death.

That said, the first turtle truly appeared when Eastman doodled a picture of a turtle with ninja weapons expressly because he thought it was funny and he wanted Laird to laugh. Because, you know, they’re turtles. It’s silly.

Of course, the first comics and the 1990 film didn’t completely forget the goofier side of the turtles. It takes only a couple issues before the comic starts introducing alien brains and alien dinosaurs and other wonderfully weird aliens. Less extreme but no less goofy, the movie pauses so Mike, Leo, and Don can riff on cool catch words to share during their victory.

But Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II goes even further, fully becoming a childlike romp. Secret of the Ooze sends away serious Canadian actor Elias Koteas as Casey Jones and replaces him with young martial artist Ernie Reyes Jr. as Keno, the human lead. While Reyes gets to do the fight scenes, which play more like karate exhibitions than they do actual battles, the Turtles indulge in bits. Sure, they get in some kicks and punches, but the camera devotes more time to Mikey (puppeteered by Michelan Sisti and voiced by Robbie Rist) whipping around a yo-yo or Donatello (performed by Leif Tilden and voiced by Adam Carl) doing a Three Stooges gag.

Even the film’s overall plot borrows heavily from the cartoon and sillier parts of the comic book series, albeit presented slightly askew. Seeking more information about the green slime that made them into ninja teens, the Turtles investigate Professor Jordan Perry (David Warner) of TGRI, which plays like an off-brand of cartoon and comic elements Baxter Stockman and TCRI. The movie brings Shredder (played by François Chau and dubbed by David McCharen), gives him a pair of mutant monsters in Tokka and Rahzar (animal sounds provided, of course, by Frank Welker), and turns him into the hulking Super Shredder (wrestler Kevin Nash)—all derivations of concepts from cartoon.

A Childlike Mutation

Some could argue that Secret of the Ooze went the most cynical route for its adaptation. It left aside the edge of the first movie to embrace the most-kiddie parts of the franchise. But instead of doing the cartoon or even the Archie Comics series, the movie throws up some reasonable facsimiles and assumes kids are too dumb to notice the difference.

Yet, that attitude doesn’t account for the level of artistry on screen. The Turtle suits designed by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop may be a bit more janky than those for the 1990 movie, but they still look great, and the performers still make them believable. That’s even more true for Tokka and Rahzar, which are incredible and intricate puppets, expressive and genuinely frightening when they need to be. Even the fight scenes, which are mostly flatly lit and accompanied by the tackiest synthesizer music, look great. Reyes can do all of his character’s moves, which means that we get to see Keno actually flipping and punching and kicking the bad guys, without the hyper-editing or CG crutch that we get in modern movies.

In fact, the creatures are so good that we forgive the movie for showing no interest in a coherent story or thematic depth. Sure, the script by Todd W. Langen gestures toward ideas about identity and destiny, and, yes, director Michael Pressman sometimes slows things down to let two characters talk like people. But mostly the movie shuffles from set piece to set piece, because it really exists as a showcase for cool puppets and karate moves.

Nowhere is that more clear than the most infamous element of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: the part where the fight spills over into a Vanilla Ice concert, inspiring the one-hit wonder to come up with “Ninja Rap.” Is the song good? Absolutely not. But is it exactly the sort of extremely obvious pop culture reference that would appear in the average Saturday morning cartoon show? Yes!

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II gave the kids exactly what they wanted, hand-waving the things that grown-ups care about (theme? emotions? nah!) and going straight to the sugary nonsense that the target audience craves (martial arts! puppets! hip hop!). And today’s comic book movies need to remember that lesson.

Kids First

In some cases, it’s absurd to say that modern comic book movies need to keep the target audience in mind. Peacemaker has his own TV show, Spider-Man‘s about to team up with the Punisher and the Hulk to save Jean Grey, and Daredevil runs around each week in a costume that comes directly from a specific run of the comics. But those are examples of movies/shows taking the comics seriously, not examples of them being silly.

None of those are really for kids. Daredevil and Peacemaker are filled with F-bombs and graphic violence, and even the PG-13 MCU Spider-Man movies have plenty of mid-level curse words and punishing beatings. Worse yet, they’re about what the superhero feels and big ideas about masculinity, responsibility, and sacrifice. Kids don’t want to see that. They want to see people in bright costumes do cool things.

Even if it went too far in one direction, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze knows that superhero stories are fundamentally for kids. It embraced that truth and built the movie around it, all puppets and high kicks and novelty songs. The movie’s never as rewarding as, say, a Christopher Nolan Batman movie, but it will fill a kid with a sense of wonder, just like it’s been doing for 35 years.

The Boroughs Trailer: Stranger Things Happen to Old People Too

In the 2003 spy thriller The Recruit, Al Pacino’s CIA officer Walter Burke has a catchphrase. He’s “a scary judge of talent,” he says, before committing a string of inadvisable crimes. The Duffer Brothers, no matter what their perceived narrative crimes were during the five-season run of Stranger Things, also seem to be a scary judge of talent.

First, they got behind Haley Z. Boston’s hit Netflix horror show Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen, and next month will see their names slapped on The Boroughs, because they, like us, probably believe that The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance was an incredible series cancelled too soon, and its showrunners should get another project asap.

Jeffrey Addiss and Will Matthews are indeed the creators of the upcoming sci-fi show, which now has a first trailer that seems a little Cocoon-y, a little Batteries Not Included-y, a little Stranger Things with old people-y, and hopefully also has puppets. We can dream!

With a stacked cast that includes Alfred Molina, Geena Davis, Alfre Woodard, Denis O’Hare, Clarke Peters, Bill Pullman, Carlos Miranda, Jena Malone, Seth Numrich, Alice Kremelberg, Ed Begley Jr., Dee Wallace, and Jane Kaczmarek (phew!) The Boroughs looks much more like the kind of series you’d expect “from the executive producers of Stranger Things” than their last Netflix delivery. Staring in awe at stuff? Check. The promise of Spielbergian wonder? Check. A sweeping score that tells you supernatural shenanigans are afoot? Check. Locked and loaded.

Here’s the official logline for your perusal: “In a seemingly perfect retirement community, a grieving newcomer’s monstrous encounter inspires him to join a misfit crew of unlikely heroes who uncover a dark secret that proves their ‘golden years’ are more dangerous, and they are more formidable, than anyone expects.”

All eight episodes of The Boroughs will be available on Netflix on May 21st.

Soderbergh Reveals Wild Plan to Split James Bond Into Two Universes

“The name’s Bond, James Bond.” “What! My name is also Bond, James Bond, but from a different, sexier universe!” is almost certainly not dialogue that Black Bag director Steven Soderbergh would have chosen to add to his James Bond movies had he been given the reins to the spy franchise many years ago. Still, he had some ideas that would have at least made it possible.

“I had pitched in 2008 the idea to Barbara Broccoli of a parallel franchise,” Soderbergh revealed to The Playlist. “Set in the ’60s, R-rated, violent, sexy. Fictional backstory to real historical events, different actor, different universe.”

Soderbergh recalled wanting to make this Bond project on a low budget, which would have been an interesting approach given the franchise’s notable costs and showy action set pieces. Broccoli was intrigued by the idea, he said, but it didn’t get any traction, and though the auteur would get another chance to pitch a bigger budget Bond movie post-Skyfall, he couldn’t quite let go of his first idea.

“So, when I got back into the conversation [a few years] later, then I was pitching a twofer. Which was, ‘Yeah, I’ll do the contemporary extravaganza. But I also want to do the other one, after,’” he said, adding, “I was like, ‘I want to do both, I have ideas for both. But it’s all or nothing. You’ve either got to do both of them, you can’t have just one or the other,’ and I think that was just—that was a little aggressive.”

Two swings and two misses from Soderbergh, then, but perhaps he was ahead of his time when wondering if an iconic character could be played by two separate actors in different movie universes with different vibes at the same time. Would audiences be fine with that these days? Well, we’re about to find out, not through the shaken martinis and classic British cars of James Bond, but over at the Batcave, where Bruce Wayne is to be played by Robert Pattinson in the Elseworlds-partitioned Batman films and an entirely different actor in Andy Muschietti’s The Brave and the Bold over at DC.

Hunger Games Prequel Trailer Features Ralph Fiennes as Another YA Novel Villain

Ralph Fiennes is one of the greatest actors of his generation. He started with the Royal Shakespeare Company and later won a Tony for playing Hamlet on Broadway. He’s been twice nominated for Best Actor and once for Best Supporting Actor by the Academy Awards, and has starred in some all-time great movies, including Schindler’s List, The English Patient, and The Grand Budapest Hotel. But for a certain generation of movie watchers, Fiennes is first and foremost Lord Voldemort, the evil wizard from the Harry Potter franchise.

With the first trailer for The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, Fiennes is ready to expand his legend among a certain type of book reader. The trailer heavily features the actor as Coriolanus Snow, the Panem president previously played by Donald Sutherland and Tom Blyth. And he promises to be the most terrifying take on the leader yet.

Fiennes is hardly the only new face with a familiar name. Based on the novel from last year, Sunrise on the Reaping bridges the gap between the mainline Hunger Games series and the 2023 prequel The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, in which a young Snow mentored Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler) through the tournament.

As such, it is filled with new actors playing younger versions of characters we met in previous films. The trailer offers glimpses of Joseph Zada (looking a lot like Roger Daltrey, and not just because The Who’s “Love, Reign o’er Me” plays over the action) as a still-idealistic Haymitch Abernathy. Jesse Plemons takes the place of Philip Seymour Hoffman as future game designer Plutarch Heavensbee, while Kieran Culkin is already in fine mugging form as Caesar Flickerman, the role Stanley Tucci plays in later films. Equally well-suited is Elle Fanning as Effie Trinket, with all the energy that Elizabeth Banks gave the character.

We also see a trio of new actors playing tributes who appeared as grown adults in Catching Fire. Maya Hawke replaces Amanda Plummer as Wiress, Kelvin Harrison Jr. played the younger version of Jeffrey Wright’s Beetee Latier, and we briefly see Lili Taylor as Mags Flanagan, who Lynn Cohen played in the later movie.

Seeing these characters with fresh, hopeful faces only highlights the sense of dread the trailer invites. The characters all have the fire of revolution in their eyes, and even Plutarch Heavensbee, whom Hoffman played with exhaustion and resignation, seems to have more hope and spark.

Of course, we who have seen or read the mainline Hunger Games stories know that it all comes to naught. This resistance will fail, and won’t achieve anything close to its goals for another quarter-century, when Katniss Everdeen joins the Games. Yet, even those who don’t know the rest of the story can sense things will go badly just by watching Fiennes as Snow, thoroughly unimpressed with those who would stand against him.

Snow may not care about the young people who plot revolution, but Fiennes knows how to make even apathy look compelling. And that means a whole new generation of fans are about to learn why Ralph Fiennes is a legend.

The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping comes to theaters on November 20, 2026.

Marvel Reacts After Fans Spot Multiverse Clue in Daredevil: Born Again

This article contains spoilers for Daredevil: Born Again, season 2, episode 4

A “blink and you’ll miss it” moment from the fourth episode of Daredevil: Born Again season 2 has drawn the watchful eye of more than one person.

During the latest installment of Marvel’s revived Daredevil series, “Gloves Off,” Mayor Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio) took part in a televised boxing match at Fogwell’s Gym. He’d told his wife Vanessa (Ayelet Zurer) not to come as he feared her life might be in danger, especially with the dangerous Benjamin “Bullseye” Poindexter (Wilson Bethel) still on the loose.

But Vanessa ignored his plea and showed up at a pivotal moment, distracting Fisk. When Bullseye finally made his move, Fisk intervened, lashing out with his championship belt to stop Vanessa from getting hit with a glass statue. Unfortunately, a shard of glass struck Vanessa, and she bled out in the ring.

As Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) chased down Bullseye, eagle-eyed viewers spotted someone notable observing the chaos, as the familiar silhouette of The Watcher appeared in the broken gym window behind Matt. Unsure whether The Watcher’s silhouette was a coincidence, most fans agreed it was a fun Easter egg regardless.

A powerful cosmic being fully introduced in Marvel’s animated series What If…?, Uatu The Watcher (voiced by Jeffrey Wright) exists outside of time and space, observing the alternate realities of the multiverse and helping viewers understand how small changes can dramatically alter events across the MCU. Was Vanessa’s death one of those changes? Or was The Watcher’s appearance simply a bit of accidental pareidolia?

After much discussion online, Marvel TV boss Brad Winderbaum decided to add a little fuel to the Watcher fire. Though he didn’t exactly confirm that The Watcher’s presence was deliberate, he did post a screenshot of the potentially multiversal moment, captioned “Always watching…” and tagged with the What If… hashtag.

Daredevil has been at the heart of several explosive What If… stories in the pages of Marvel Comics over the years. In “What If Daredevil Had Killed the Kingpin?,” Matt murders Fisk, with the tale exploring the limits of Matt’s moral and ethical code. Interestingly, Matt and Karen Page’s relationship in Born Again season 2 is somewhat strained by Matt’s reluctance to kill in support of their grassroots rebellion against Fisk.

We’ll definitely be keeping a closer eye on Daredevil as Marvel’s massive multiversal movie, Avengers: Doomsday, approaches!

Noah Kahan: Out of Body Turns The Artist’s Success Story Inside Out 

When Noah Kahan took the stage at Venue 6 during the 2026 South by Southwest Music Festival, it was quite the full-circle moment. He once was unable to sell enough tickets in Austin, Texas, prompting shows to get canceled last minute. But in March, the singer-songwriter returned for a secret acoustic set following the premiere of his Netflix documentary Noah Kahan: Out of Body, which earned the festival’s Audience Award.

The director of the documentary, Nick Sweeney, says when he heard Kahan was interested in making a documentary, he immediately wanted to get involved. He describes Kahan’s lyrics as “cinematic.” 

“It’s almost like the way that he writes is the musical equivalent of an establishing shot,” Sweeney says.

Noah Kahan: Out of Body director Nick Sweeney

The documentary arrives at a time of mounting pressure for Kahan. Though he signed with Republic Records in 2017, he didn’t really break through to a wider audience until five years later, when he began promoting his music on TikTok. During quarantine, Kahan started posting songs he had written in isolation, and by the fall of 2020, he was teasing a track titled “Stick Season.” That song would soon become his most popular single. 

Two years later, his studio album propelled his career to new heights, but in the years since, Kahan has yet to release another studio album. The pressure to follow the success of that project with his next album, The Great Divide, which comes out April 26, is a major point of contention in the film. 

More than the pressure to stay on top, Kahan grapples with feeling almost completely disconnected from his own success. Despite earning a Grammy nomination, selling out world tours, and collaborating with major artists, Kahan said, at the time of filming, he was in one of the lowest places of his life mentally.

That disconnect between fame and self-perception inspired the documentary title, Out of Body, which Sweeney says has a few different meanings. 

The film opens with Kahan performing at Fenway Park. After two sold-out shows, he’s seen on the way home, overtaken by excitement, banging on the windows, as if he’s stepped outside of himself in the moment. But even within that high, Kahan reflects on his tendency to dissociate and, at times, completely shut down.

Out of Body also pushes into territory Kahan has rarely explored in his songwriting, including his history of disordered eating and body dysmorphia.

“I wanted to put a lot of it into the film,” Sweeney says. “Noah was saying that when he was young, he used to google artists with depression to see if there were artists that had depression and were successful. I thought that was so sweet and sad… I think a lot of the reason why he wanted to make this film and touch on some of the things that he’s dealing with around his body, his family, and his mental health was so that the equivalent of him today, who’s googling that would be able to see that there is somebody that’s going through that.”

Being from a small town has long been a source of inspiration for Kahan’s songwriting. For Sweeney, one of the most meaningful parts of filming was traveling to Strafford, Vermont with Kahan and his brother, Simon. Together, they explored rural Orange County, Vermont and met the people in the community that shaped Kahan’s perspective and complicated feelings about leaving his hometown.

“I think the people are really honest,” Sweeney says. “They don’t bullshit, and it was really fun to include.”

One of his fondest memories filming came from a cold winter day in Strafford, when Sweeney was greeted by two girls sitting in an igloo. Born and raised in Melbourne, the filmmaker had never seen an igloo in person. “I didn’t even know they were real,” he says. 

Involving Kahan’s family in the documentary was also important for Sweeney. The singer writes about his family dynamics, particularly with his parents, in many of his songs. Sweeney got to showcase what fans may not think about, which is his family’s reaction to hearing details of their trauma go viral on TikTok. 

“There’s this one scene where Noah and his brother are talking in a donut shop, and his brother’s like, ‘It was so weird seeing everybody in the audience singing along to the lyrics about mom and dad’s divorce,” Sweeney says. 

Kahan’s songs “Growing Sideways,” “Stick Season,” and “Call Your Mom” explore his relationship with his parents, as well as their relationship with each other. Rather than continuing to process those emotions solely through songwriting, Sweeney says the film created space for Kahan to confront them more directly.

In doing so, it also gave the artist an opportunity to, in a sense, apologize for working through deeply personal aspects of his upbringing and his parents’ divorce in such a public way.

“I really related to that,” Sweeney says. “I think a lot of us do. That feeling of wanting to be a better son or daughter… Noah finally comes to terms with these issues and has these conversations that I think he’d been needing to have for a long time… He’s also moved away from home, so he doesn’t even know where home is at this point that we’re filming him.”

Noah Kahan: Out of Body shows an artist revered for his vulnerability at his most vulnerable, and it’s a project Sweeney says he’s proud to have been part of. It also marks his first documentary centered on a musician, which is a space he’s eager to return to.

“I would love to do more music documentaries,” Sweeney says. “I have my eye on a couple of specific artists, but I could never say who because they don’t even know that I have my eye on them.”

Noah Kahan: Out of Body premiered at the SXSW Film & TV Festival on March and is available to stream on Netflix now.

15 Actors Who Laid it All on the Line for a Flop

Actors often put in extraordinary effort for roles that never find an audience. It doesn’t matter if it’s extreme physical transformations, intense method preparation, or emotionally demanding performances, these efforts don’t always translate into box office success.

In many cases, the work itself is widely praised, even if the film around it falls short. These are the performances that stand out despite everything else, proving that commitment and talent don’t guarantee a hit. They also offer a reminder that even in flawed or overlooked movies, there can still be something truly impressive worth recognizing.

The Machinist, Christian Bale

Bale dropped to an extreme weight for the role, committing fully to the character’s physical decline despite the film’s limited box office impact. He later had six months to transform into Batman, making it one of the most grueling body transformation journeys in Hollywood.

Joker: Folie à Deux, Joaquin Phoenix

Phoenix underwent intense preparation and musical performance demands just like he did for the first film, but the sequel faced mixed reception and struggled to match expectations.

Alexander, Colin Farrell

Farrell committed heavily to the historical role with extensive preparation, but the film’s reception and box office performance fell short.

The Northman, Alexander Skarsgård

Skarsgård underwent intense physical training and stayed in character throughout filming, though the film underperformed relative to its budget. Seems only his brother gets to be a viking.

The Last Duel, Jodie Comer

Comer’s layered performance required navigating multiple perspectives of the same events, widely praised despite the film’s financial disappointment. Adam Driver and Matt Damon also give outstanding performances, making this a flop worth watching.

Silence, Andrew Garfield

Garfield underwent significant weight loss and immersive preparation, but the film performed very poorly despite critical respect.

The Green Knight, Dev Patel

Patel delivered a restrained, introspective performance in a physically demanding shoot, but the film’s box office remained modest to low.

Blade Runner 2049, Ryan Gosling

Gosling committed to a subdued, atmospheric performance, though the film underperformed relative to its incredibly high production cost.

The Fountain, Hugh Jackman

Jackman underwent physical transformation and intense preparation for multiple roles, but the film struggled commercially.

Pan, Hugh Jackman

Jackman embraced a highly stylized, musical villain role, though the film was widely considered a box office failure. Not to mention an overall bad movie.

The Lone Ranger, Johnny Depp

Depp underwent extensive makeup and character work, but the film’s production issues and reception overshadowed the effort. Seems the Sparrow only strikes once.

The Mummy, Tom Cruise

Cruise performed many of his own stunts and committed physically, but the film failed to launch its intended franchise. They should’ve brought Brendan Fraser back.

Cats, Idris Elba

Elba committed to performance capture and musical elements, though the film became a notorious box office disappointment and source of constant mockery.

Babylon, Brad Pitt

Pitt’s performance required capturing multiple eras of Hollywood, though the film failed to find a broad audience.

Amsterdam, Christian Bale

Bale again transformed physically and vocally, but the film underperformed and received mixed reactions.

Why The Boris Karloff Mummy Is Still the Most Haunting

There is no music on a moonless night during a crucial scene in The Mummy of 1932. There is almost no music in the movie at all beyond a derivative, if ever effective, use of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake in the opening credits. But on this bleak evening in the old Egyptian Museum of Cairo, there is the ceaseless chant of Boris Karloff’s pained diction. In the shadows of gloom, he repeats breathlessly, hopefully, “Anck-es-en-Amon.”

It’s a spell, a lure, and one given menacing implications as Karloff is lit from beneath in such severe splotches of black, you can barely see the meticulously wrinkled skin of his superb makeup job. There is also something sweet about his pained inflections. The words lull and hypnotize as they draw a young woman named Helen (Zita Johann) ever closer to a desolate place where, surrounded by the last treasures of a ruined kingdom, a revenant from the past seeks to embrace her as his Anck-es-en-Amon. Together they’ll consummate a 3,000-year love story. It’s simultaneously ghoulish and entrancing.

The power of this scene like so many others in cinematographer Karl Freund’s rare directorial effort has echoed through the decades, to the point that The Mummy still influences our modern pop culture idea of Ancient Egypt and the shriveled corpses it’s bequeathed us. Nearly a hundred years old, the original Mummy is certainly a relic too. Long displaced as the Mummy film by Stephen Sommers’ direct remake of roughly the same story in 1999—where a long dead priest named Imhotep awakens in the early 20th century to search for the reincarnation of his lost love Anck-es-en-Amon—what Universal Pictures passed off as horror in 1932 is now a source of camp and high-adventure fun. These days we think less of the Mummy’s pain and more of Brendan Fraser’s not-quite Indiana Jones dueling Imhotep to save the girl.

And beyond the more staid and hushed pace, the 1932 movie has plenty of other affectations of its era that play less comfortably in the 21st century, including the grotesque implications of Imhotep being able to put Egyptians of Nubian heritage under his thrall and service.

So, yes, the original Mummy film is a product of its time. However, when accepted on its own merits and its specific context, it remains perhaps the only film about Ancient Egyptian corpses rising from the grave to set a tone that is at times genuinely unsettling, and at others eerily romantic. Not only did the O.G. Mummy set the standard for mummy movies, it also arguably shaped our understanding of vampires and Dracula as well…

Ancient Origins

When The Mummy was rushed into production by producer Carl Laemmle Jr. 95 years ago, it was viewed quite a bit like the Dracula clone. It was meant to duplicate the success of Bela Lugosi’s vehicle which also launched the original Universal Monsters cycle in 1931, as well as James Whale’s Frankenstein from the same year, which gave the world the Karloff. Initially screenwriters Nina Wilcox Putnam and Richard Schayer sought to even place the general outline of this plot into a film about Alessandro Cagliostro, a now largely forgotten 18th century alchemist, magician, and confidence man who convinced the last 18th century courts of France that he was an immortal. Presumably Imhotep’s hypnotic (and Dracula-adjacent) powers would have been more pronounced in this version of the story.

However, Laemmle ultimately found himself wanting to capitalize on the still thriving revival of Egyptomania which followed on the heels of King Tutankhamun’s tomb being discovered a decade earlier by Howard Carter. The greatest archaeological discovery in history, King Tut’s resting place was the first and still only pharaonic tomb discovered to be almost entirely untouched by looters since its sealing 3,300 years ago. It gave us a wealth of knowledge about New Kingdom culture, history, treasures… and at least one imagined superstition about the Pharaoh’s Curse, which plagued the dig following the freakish death of its benefactor, Lord Carnarvon, six months later.

The actual “Curse of the Pharaohs” was invented by the British and American press, of course. And among them was American journalist, writer, and adventurer John L. Balderston. He saw firsthand the removal of King Tut’s treasures from afar—only the UK’s Times got exclusive access to the excavation, hence a reason for embellishments about a “curse”—and lived in Egypt for more than a year. Balderston also saw its effect on pop culture, with newfound Egyptomania seeping into fashion, Art Deco architecture, and eventually the Hollywood where he landed as a screenwriter at Universal. He was at first brought out to California to adapt his own 1927 Broadway version of Dracula, which itself was a riff on Hamilton Deane’s 1924 British play of the same name. Ironically, very little Bram Stoker was involved in either.

The vampire movie proved such a success, Balderston was tapped to rewrite what became The Mummy. Producer Laemmle selected Balderston because of Dracula, and the scribe dutifully rehashed plot elements from the Lugosi classic, including a kindly old professor—now Dr. Muller and played again by Van Helsing actor Edward Van Sloan—who would dare to believe in the supernatural. There are also ancient charms to ward off evil and a living corpse obsessed with the bodies of much younger, pretty things.

Yet what Balderston also brought to the material was a genuine understanding of Ancient Egyptian culture and modern colonized Egypt, albeit from a distinctly Western, early 20th century perspective. Unlike virtually every Mummy film made after, Balderston’s script does not mix up Egyptian gods Thoth and Osiris, or Anubis and Seth. He sprinkles in a real understanding of that mythology, including by making Anck-es-en-Amon a priestess of Isis. Even the name Anck-es-en-Amon is based on Ankhesenamun, the real bride of King Tut (and his half-sister), whose fate was far more tragic than what Balderston dreamed up. Meanwhile the name Imhotep is nicked from the real priest and architect who designed the very first pyramid in the Old Kingdom for the Pharaoh Djoser.

There is a sense of respect to the past in The Mummy (1932), as well as a Western sense of suspicion of the Near East, given the white characters’ aversion to modern Egypt. It creates a mystique that is the perfect backdrop for a movie wherein Karloff plays as much a doomed lover as he does a classical monster.

A Face to Die For

Most folks who watch The Mummy for the first time now are shocked by how little we see of Karloff in the traditional Mummy makeup, complete with bandages and rotting flesh. It’s really only the first 10 or 11 minutes that open the movie on a dig in 1921 Egypt (a year before Carter walked into Tutankhamun’s tomb). It also is the most evocative sequence in any Mummy film ever made.

On a starry night in Egypt, several archaeologists, including nervous old Dr. Muller, sit in a tent basking in the discovery of the fabled Scroll of Thoth and a strange Mummy who was found with it. This Mummy, unlike any other they have seen, shows signs of having been buried alive. There’s also a foreboding curse, of course.

Director Freund’s restraint and minimalism has as much to do with the chilling success of this sequence as Jack Pierce’s unforgettable makeup design. Karloff spent eight hours in the prosthetics chair so that Pierce—the genius who gave us the still definitive Frankenstein Monster countenance—could individually place one bandage of cotton after another on his flesh, using spirit gum to hold in the shriveled skin. Apparently each piece of linen was treated with acid to give it that decrepit look.

Yet Freund almost exclusively shows Karloff motionless in this getup. There is a single shot where, as a young and foolhardy archaeologist opens a forbidden box and reads forbidden words, Karloff’s eyes open slowly. That single, weary, movement, devoid of music or any other audio harbinger, reaches into the subconscious of the viewer. It’s a manifestation of the half-dreamt fear of anyone who’s stared too long at a corpse. But even then, Freund doesn’t show Karloff walk. We see only a hand as it reaches toward a table, and a bandage as he shuffles out of the tent. Instead of the monster, we focus on a young victim’s growing madness as Dr. Norton (Bramwell Fletcher) goes the way of Renfield, laughing maniacally to the grave.

For the rest of the picture, Karloff’s Mummy is able to reconstitute some passing resemblance of normality as he goes by the name of Ardith Bay, an Egyptian whose skin knows a million wrinkles, and whose eyes burn with an intensity of rage that would be foreign to the Frankenstein Monster or even Lugosi’s Dracula.

Love Never Dies

In the end, though, the movie really belongs not to the mummy, but to Helen Grosevnor, Zita Johann’s severely underrated heroine. Barring Elsa Lanchester’s iconic (if housebound) Bride of Frankenstein, Johann enjoyed the greatest role of any woman in a Universal Monsters picture. While functionally the same as Helen Chandler’s passive Mina Seward in Dracula, Johann has a captivating sense of destiny and agency, even when under Imhotep’s sway.

Both her attraction and repulsion of Imhotep are palpable when eyes are locked with Karloff, and it is her sense of division between the modern Helen and the genuinely reincarnated Anck-es-en-Amon that informs the real dramatic conflict of The Mummy. Entire sequences of Helen’s many past lives in the Middle Ages and as a kind of Joan of Arc were filmed and deleted, as it detracted too much from the central story: a woman and her Mummy suitor whom she does not entirely dissuade. At least until the ending.

While not-Van Helsing and not-Jonathan Harker (again also played by David Manners from the 1931 Dracula) attempt to save the day again at the end of The Mummy, the men prove hapless and ineffective. What spares Helen from becoming the Mummy’s undead bride, complete with a case of human sacrifice while dressed in an entirely pre-Code, pre-censorship costume, is that Helen prays to her goddess Isis for protection. It is Isis who strikes down Imhotep, and the ancient pagan ways that win out in our Abrahamic world. There is a sense of tragedy and regret, on both Helen and the viewer’s part, for the ultimately rejected affections of Imhotep…. but he is a mummy.

A reason this dynamic works so well is the casting. Karloff is still underappreciated for his dramatic attributes. He gives Imhotep a pitifulness that might have eluded Lugosi, and which no filmmaker bothered adding to another mummy movie until Sommers and actor Arnold Vosloo 70 years later. Karloff does it better though. Meanwhile Johann was ultimately overlooked all-round Tinsel Town.

A future grand dame of the stage, Johann came to Hollywood reluctantly and purely for the money. She also came as a genuine occultist who believed in things like reincarnation. It was perfect casting. Unfortunately, despite Freund being a great visualist—before The Mummy, he DP’d Fritz Lang’s Metropolis and allegedly saved Dracula from being a complete stagebound disaster when director Tod Browning was rumored to be out to lunch—he proved a tyrannical and problematic director. He bullied and derided Johann, who soon left Hollywood for New York, never to return.

Despite their off-screen troubles, Freund’s gift for composition, presentation, and even the occasional, purposeful camera movement (a rarity in the talkies of the early ‘30s), paired exceptionally well with his stars’ presence and Pierce’s exquisite makeup designs. They made an enchantment that if you listen carefully still haunts.

Ironically, the magic was not repeated in most of the now bog-standard mummy movies of the 20th century. Freund and Balderston’s approach was too romantic, leisurely, and even Egyptian in the ancient sense for some viewers. The sequels Universal eventually made in the 1940s were dime-novel adventure stories with the shambling corpse audiences expected. Hammer Studios copied them to slightly better effect in the 1950s and ‘60s. It is perhaps not surprising, though, that the one to finally displace the 1932 film remade its doomed Gothic romantic structure, at least in the broad strokes. But even before 1999’s The Mummy, you can see Imhotep’s dusty fingerprints on so many of the Dracula movies that likewise followed.

To this day, many audiences hold the misconception that Bram Stoker’s novel is a Gothic love story between a dark prince and his lost reincarnated love. However, that image largely stems from Francis Ford Coppola, who in turn probably nicked it from Dan Curtis’ 1970s Dracula TV movie and its own daytime soap forebearer, Dark Shadows.

Yet all of the above was likely influenced not by Lugosi or 1922’s iconic Nosferatu. It comes from the structure of The Mummy, and an old wraith still calling out a lover’s name from the dark of a tomb.

15 Movie Scenes That Were Cut for Being Too Disturbing

It is widely known that not every second film for a movie makes it to the final cut, although the reasons why vary greatly. Even in films known for pushing boundaries, certain scenes cross a line that studios, test audiences, or filmmakers themselves decide is too much.

It can be excessive violence, bleak implications, or imagery that lingers a little too long; what matters is that these moments are often removed to keep the film watchable. In some cases, they resurface later in extended editions, offering a glimpse at just how far the original vision went. These are the scenes that were simply too disturbing to stay in.

The Exorcist

The infamous “spider-walk” scene, showing Regan contorting down the stairs, was removed from the original release for being too shocking, later restored in extended versions.

Zootopia

An early version featured predators forced to wear shock collars, including a disturbing scene of a child being shocked, which was cut for being too upsetting.

Cold Mountain

A deleted scene showed Natalie Portman’s character taking her own life after tragedy, removed because it made an already bleak film even harsher.

Event Horizon

Extended footage featuring graphic violence and disturbing imagery was largely cut, with much of it now lost or unreleased.

The Butterfly Effect

An alternate ending involving a far darker outcome for the protagonist was removed from the theatrical cut due to its disturbing implications.

King Kong

The infamous “spider pit” sequence, showing sailors being devoured by creatures, was cut for being too horrifying for audiences at the time.

American Psycho

Several extended violent scenes were trimmed or removed to avoid an even harsher rating and audience backlash.

Se7en

More explicit versions of the crime scenes were reportedly toned down, as early cuts were considered too disturbing even for the film’s dark tone.

RoboCop

The original death scene of Murphy was even more graphic before being edited down to meet rating requirements.

The Black Cauldron

Disney cut several darker sequences involving undead creatures to make the film less terrifying for younger audiences.

Alien

Some extended gore and creature effects were trimmed to maintain pacing and avoid overwhelming viewers.

Paranormal Activity

Multiple alternate endings, some significantly darker, were created but not used in the theatrical release.

Fatal Attraction

A more psychologically bleak ending was replaced with a more conventional climax after audience feedback.

Alien in The Abyss

The Abyss

A major subplot involving global catastrophe imagery was cut from the theatrical version, as it was considered too heavy and disruptive.

Suicide Squad

Several darker character moments were removed to shift the tone after concerns about audience reception.

15 Movies That Became Popular Years After Flopping

Even for the greatest films of all time, finding a real audience can be hard, particularly when they are products ahead of their time. While they may initially fail, through word of mouth, home video, streaming, and late-night TV, they can get a second chance, and this time, they connect.

Over the years, many once-forgotten releases have grown into cult favorites or even widely recognized classics. These are the movies that prove a rough start doesn’t mean failure forever, sometimes, it just means the audience wasn’t ready yet, or maybe it wasn’t even born.

The Shawshank Redemption

A box office disappointment on release, it became hugely popular through cable and home video, eventually regarded as one of the greatest films ever.

Blade Runner

Underperformed initially but gained a massive following through home releases, becoming a defining sci-fi classic.

Fight Club

Disappointing theatrical run, but exploded in popularity on DVD, becoming one of the most discussed cult films of its era.

The Big Lebowski

Modest box office returns turned into a major cult following, with festivals and ongoing fan engagement.

Donnie Darko

Struggled in theaters due to its dark and confusing premise, but gained a strong following through DVD and late-night screenings.

Office Space

Flopped theatrically but became a workplace comedy staple through home video success, where it found its real home.

Heathers

Failed commercially at first due to it being hard to market, later becoming a cult classic known for its dark humor.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show

Initially a flop, it became a phenomenon through midnight screenings and audience participation. A risky movie required risky viewers.

Hocus Pocus

Underperformed in theaters but grew into a Halloween staple with a devoted fanbase, which warranted a sequel many years later.

The Iron Giant

Poor marketing led to a weak theatrical run, but it became beloved through home video and word of mouth, making it one of the most beloved animated films.

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World

Flopped in theaters but gained a large following over time, especially online. The brand expanded greatly thanks to the movie, including videogames and a ‘sequel’ animated show.

Jennifer’s Body

Initially underperformed and misunderstood, mostly disregarded due to its cast. It was later reevaluated and embraced as a cult favorite.

The Boondock Saints

Barely released in theaters, but became widely popular through home video as both a straight action film and a satire of one. Its cult following was such that a sequel was made, with plans for a third.

Idiocracy

Limited release and poor box office, later gaining popularity through home media and cultural relevance. Now regarded as a window to a possible future.

The Thing

Initially a box office failure, later regarded as one of the best horror films ever. Watching it today, it’s hard to believe it ever failed as a film.

15 Movies That Looked Like Hits on Paper But Failed Anyway

Some movies seem destined for success long before they hit theaters. With big-name stars, established franchises, massive budgets, and experienced directors, everything about them suggests a guaranteed hit. On paper, they check every box audiences and studios look for.

And yet, sometimes, it just doesn’t come together. Call it poor reception, weak marketing, bad timing, or simply missing the mark, these films failed to deliver at the box office despite all the right ingredients. Looking back, they serve as a reminder that even the safest bets in Hollywood can still go wrong in surprising ways.

The Lone Ranger

A Disney blockbuster with Johnny Depp and a proven director still collapsed under its massive budget and mixed reception.

John Carter

A huge-budget sci-fi epic from Disney failed to connect with audiences despite scale and source material potential.

The Flash

Heavily marketed as a major DC reset, it still underperformed despite hype and franchise importance, forcing the DC cinematic brand to go into a complete reboot.

The Matrix Resurrections

A return to an iconic franchise failed to capture the original’s appeal and didn’t meet financial expectations.

The Mummy

Designed to launch a cinematic universe with a strong brand appeal and starring Tom Cruise, it failed both critically and commercially.

Solo: A Star Wars Story

Despite the strength of the Star Wars brand, production issues and (mainly) audience fatigue hurt its performance.

The Adventures of Pluto Nash

A big-budget sci-fi comedy starring Eddie Murphy became one of the most infamous box office bombs.

Green Lantern

A superhero film with franchise potential failed due to weak reception and underwhelming execution, particularly on the script and effects departments.

The Last Duel

Directed by Ridley Scott and starring major names, but struggled to attract audiences, likely due to release timing and lack of audience.

The Golden Compass

Based on a popular book series, but underperformance halted planned sequels. Fortunately, the TV adaptation of the same book series, His Dark Materials, found better footing.

Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time

A video game adaptation with blockbuster ambitions that failed to launch a franchise, likely due to limited brand recognition and lack of care for the source material.

Snow White and the Huntsman

Despite strong visuals and cast, it didn’t meet the expectations set for a fantasy franchise starter.

Warcraft

Based on a hugely popular game, but struggled in key markets despite global recognition. It ended up being more focused on being faithful than in telling a proper story.

Edge of Tomorrow

Praised critically but initially struggled due to confusing marketing and title issues. Also a poor adaptation of its source material, All You Need Is Kill.

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

A stylish spy film with strong leads that failed to draw a large audience. While well put together, it lacked something to make it stand out.

13 Times a Real-Life Event Forced a Movie to Change

Movies are the product of real people living in the real world. As such, the subject and the timing of any given film are as important as the craftsmanship that went into making them. This is why, sometimes, changes need to be made.

It need not be a huge change; maybe it’s just how a movie is marketed, or the alteration can simply be the release date. Whatever the case, at least with these movies, changes needed to be made due to circumstances outside their fictional worlds.

Gangster Squad

A theater shootout scene was removed and reshot after the 2012 Aurora shooting, delaying release and significantly altering the film’s climax.

Spider-Man

A teaser featuring the Twin Towers was pulled after the September 11 attacks, and shots were digitally altered or removed.

The Watch

Originally titled Neighborhood Watch, the film was renamed and marketing altered after the Trayvon Martin case made the premise feel insensitive, since he was shot by a ‘volunteer neighborhood watch.’

Phone Booth

Release was delayed due to its sniper plot following real-life sniper attacks, as the subject matter became too close to reality.

Dr. Strangelove

A pie fight ending was cut after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, as it was deemed inappropriate and contained lines referencing a president being struck down.

Arlington Road

Marketing and tone were reconsidered after real-world violent events made its themes more sensitive, even though the nature of the violence was completely different.

The Good Son

Its darker elements were softened after real-life child crime cases drew public attention.

Jaws

The mechanical shark constantly malfunctioned, forcing Steven Spielberg to rewrite scenes and rely on suspense instead of showing the creature.

Trespass

Originally called Looters, it had a name and release date change due to real-life looting in the Los Angeles area, following civil unrest

World War Z

The third act was completely reworked during reshoots partly due to concerns about tone and global sensitivity tied to real-world crises.

The Crow

After Brandon Lee’s death on set, the film was rewritten and completed using doubles and effects.

All the Money in the World

Following allegations against Kevin Spacey, his scenes were reshot with Christopher Plummer shortly before release.

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

After Sean Bean’s character died in the first film, plans for expanded flashbacks were minimized due to actor availability and narrative adjustments.

The Audacity Creator Talks Silicon Valley: “They’re Stripping Away Aspects of What It Means to Be Human”

Succession and Better Call Saul producer Jonathan Glatzer has written for some legendarily complex and problematic characters in his career, but his new AMC show, The Audacity, presents an even more damaged crop of figures.

The new drama series follows Silicon Valley manchild Duncan Park (Billy Magnussen), the data-mining CEO of a tech company called Hypergnosis, who is delulu enough to think he’s an absolute genius. But when he discovers that his therapist Dr. Joanne Felder (Sarah Goldberg) has been patiently listening to his musings while insider-trading with information that he and others have provided in their sessions, it’s not long before the opportunistic Duncan decides he should get in on the game.

The Audacity is packed with infuriating tech bros who live up to the show’s title. “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,” Glatzer tells Den of Geek at SXSW. “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.”

Glatzer says the idea of audacity becoming an attribute fascinated him, so where better to explore it than in Silicon Valley, the beating heart of audacity in America? He’s also mindful that we’ve seen various tech titans onscreen before, so The Audacity expands its story to include tech and innovation’s wannabes and also-rans. “I wanted to meet their spouses, their kids, and their psychiatrists. And from there, it’s just putting them all into this bubble that is Silicon Valley and letting them collide with each other.”

Silicon Valley may be a world that encourages audacity from an innovative standpoint, but Glatzer says it can get in the way of people’s humanity.

“I think that there’s a disruption culture in Silicon Valley that sometimes forgets that we’re all people,” he says. “Now they’re talking about disrupting death, which is extraordinary, and I don’t think that that’s a good idea. I think we kind of live within the brackets, and that gives life meaning. There are many things they’re doing where they’re stripping away aspects of what it means to be human. I think that if there is any kind of message for the show, it is to those people and to all eight billion of their customers that we have to hang on to our humanity.”

The Audacity will debut on AMC on April 12, 2026.

The Drama’s Ending is As Sweet As You Want It to Be

This article contains full spoilers for The Drama.

Except for a few particularly illiterate trailer watchers, everyone going into A24‘s The Drama knew they were in for a bad time. The film stars Zendaya and Robert Pattinson as Emma and Charlie, soon-to-be newlyweds who fall apart after the former confesses that, as a middle schooler, she planned a school shooting, and only failed to complete it because another shooter launched an attack before her.

What follows is a cringe comedy as the couple and all their friends manage to make everything worse. Emma’s maid-of-honor Rachel (Alana Haim) takes offense at the revelation, which prompts her to get her friend fired, exacerbating tensions. Charlie continues to obsess over Emma’s confession, driving himself to the point that he breaks down and has a near-affair with his co-worker Misha (Hailey Gates).

And, yet, somehow, The Drama ends on a high note, promising a happily-ever-after for Emma and Charlie. Maybe.

Like writer/director Kristoffer Borgli’s previous films, Sick of Myself (2022) and Dream Scenario (2023), The Drama deals with social judgments and mob mentalities, often portraying communities as irrational and cruel. However, by limiting its focus to a couple and their immediate friends and family, the film has more humanity and, thus, more compassion towards its characters.

That compassion is clear in the final scene, in which Charlie—still wearing his tux from the failed wedding earlier in the day and still showing signs of the beating he took from Misha’s boyfriend (Michael Abbott Jr.)—arrives at a late night diner. Before it all went wrong, he and Emma had joked about making the diner their first stop as husband and wife, which makes Charlie’s post-wedding visit feel pathetic. Even worse, Emma arrives shortly thereafter, a puffy orange jacket over her white dress, and ignores him to march to the counter.

Yet, after ordering her food, Emma plops down in the booth across from Charlie and introduces herself. The two share some awkward but adorable small talk, before giving each other warm, forgiving smiles.

Some may argue that the final scene betrays the black comedy that proceeded it. After all that Emma and Charlie have said and done to one another, how could they pretend that everything’s okay? But that reading reinforces the very behavior that the film has been critiquing.

Everything falls apart when Rachel, and then Charlie, refuse to forgive Emma for her plans. Borgli visualizes that change of mindset by taking Charlie’s P.O.V. throughout the film. Where we once saw Emma as Charlie first saw her, a kind and sheepish bookstore clerk played by Zendaya, we see her as he imagines her now, the awkward and militant kid ready to kill (portrayed by Jordyn Curet). Every time that Borgli reuses a shot from earlier in the movie and replaces adult Emma with school shooter Emma, he shows us how Charlie literally cannot imagine his would-be wife as anything but a killer.

However, Borgli also uses other visual tricks to remind the viewers that our memories and perceptions are unreliable. Throughout the film, even while he and Emma are still in love, Charlie will be telling his best friend Mike (Mamoudou Athie, providing a welcome sense of calm to the proceedings) about some shared moment from the couple’s past. As he talks, Borgli will cut in shots of the two playing together, or of Emma giving him a loving smile. Borgli continues the practice later in the movie, but now he pairs Charlie’s praise of Emma with insert shots of her looking frightening or getting too angry over small things.

In these moments, The Drama illustrates the way people in a relationship edit their perceptions of their partner, both of the past and the present. At no point in the film do Charlie or Emma see one another as they are. Instead, they see each other as they want to see them, a fluid perspective created according to how they feel and need in the moment.

The film offers no firm objective truth for any of the characters stand, and even less for those of us watching the story play out on screen. For that reason, one could certainly argue that The Drama‘s last scene isn’t real. We could very well be watching Charlie’s fantasy, even if Emma is indeed at the diner, but brushed right past him.

Or, we could read the final scene as Charlie and Emma editing their relationship once again, this time to see the best in one another. Not unlike the ending of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), in which Joel and Clementine (Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet) understand that they’ll likely hurt one another again but still decide to stick with one another, the ending of The Drama finds Charlie and Emma committing to each other, flaws and all. They choose to see the best in each other, even if they know they’re bound to find the worst in each other again.

What is the actual truth of the scene? That’s up to you as a viewer. But the promise of a happy ending, or at least the attempt to have a happy ending, is there for The Drama audiences, if they want it.

The Drama is now playing in theaters.

American Horror Story Season 13 Is Shaping Up to Be a Timeline-Shifting Coven Follow-Up

As regular viewers of the FX anthology series already know, American Horror Story can be something of a mixed bag. Over the past 15 years, the series has tackled everything from serial killers and aliens to vampires, witches, ghosts, and famous true crime cases, with varying degrees of success. The show’s later seasons, in particular, have struggled to recapture the magic of the earlier outings, which saw its stars — most notably Oscar winner Jessica Lange — racking up awards season nominations and hardware. (In fact, if you haven’t seen them, you should probably just skip AHS: Delicate and AHS: Double Feature entirely.) 

But the franchise certainly seems on an upswing again with its forthcoming 13th season, which will bring back many of the franchise’s most popular regular players, including Sarah Paulson, Kathy Bates, Angela Bassett, Evan Peters, Emma Roberts, Billie Lourd, Gabourey Sidibe and Leslie Grossman, while adding Arianna Grande (who starred in Murphy’s wildly underrated Scream Queens) to the mix.

But, and perhaps most importantly for fans: Lange herself will be back this season, for the first time in a regular capacity since season 4’s Freak Show

Lange’s long-awaited return is probably already enough to get the most lapsed of AHS viewers to return to the fold. But now that it appears the show is going to return to the world of one of its most popular installments? Heck yeah, sign us up.

Creator Ryan Murphy has been cagey about what sort of story this Avengers: Doomsday-level season is likely to tell. But thanks to the events of American Horror Story: Apocalypse, any Coven follow-up has plenty of options. The ending of Apocalypse essentially erased or rewrote many events across the anthology’s interconnected timeline. The witch Mallory (Lourd) was sent back into the past, where she killed Michael Langdon (Cody Fern), the Antichrist child born at the end of the series’ original installment, Murder House

His death not only prevented the apocalypse of season 8’s title, but also resurrected many dearly departed Coven characters, including Paulson’s Supreme with Cordelia Foxx, and her fellow witches Misty Day (Lily Rabe), Zoe Benson (Taissa Farmiga), and Queenie (Sidibe). It also revived Lange’s Constance Langdon, the grand dame of the infamous Hollywood murder mansion. Basically, at this point, any character who wasn’t already canonically a ghost at the end of the show’s first season is probably back on the table for a potential appearance in this presumed sequel series. 

Set images from Murphy’s production company have confirmed that Paulson and Roberts are reprising their respective Coven characters, and while there’s no official word about whether Lange is returning as Constance, the set images that have been shared sure look a whole lot like it. (That is not a Fiona Goode hairdo, is what I’m saying.) Does this mean we won’t see Fiona again? Never say never — if Madison Montgomery can be sprung from her department store hell, there’s no reason to assume Fiona can’t be similarly freed from her eternal prison of knotty pine.

Mallory has already been theoretically established as Cordelia’s successor and the next Supreme witch, so the question of what new danger or drama arises at New Orleans’s infamous Robichaux Academy is still up in the air.

But we won’t have to wait that long to find out — Murphy has already confirmed the new season will arrive in September, just in time for spooky season. 

Luis Guzmán Looks Back on His Filmography: Super Mario, Community, and The Limey

For most of its cast and audience, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie offers a chance to make childhood real again. The film recalls those carefree days of sitting in front of a Nintendo Entertainment System or one of its successors, being dazzled by the fantastic adventures in the Mushroom Kingdom.

Not so for Luis Guzmán, who voices Wart in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie. “We were too poor back then,” he tells Den of Geek. “My kids played the games, but I never really had the ability for it. But I would sit down and just watch how they manipulated all that stuff. When they’d leave the room, I’d sit down and give it my best attempt. But everything I know about the Super Mario universe came from my kids.”

If anyone can be forgiven for not being a super-fan of the property, it’s Luis Guzmán. The Puerto Rican character actor has a career that spans more than 40 years. He has worked on everything classics by auteurs such as Paul Thomas Anderson and Steven Soderbergh to pop culture phenomenons like Community and Wednesday.

“I’m just happy to have a job,” Guzmán says of those breaks. “I’m happy to be working with great people, and I’m always happy to have a foundation for my career. They’re all building blocks to where I am now. I’m very humbled to have been part of them, though.”

That humility is clear in his response to a subplot in the sitcom Community, in which Greendale Community College erected a statue of Guzmán, recognizing him as the school’s greatest former student.

“I got a call from the Russo Brothers, and they said they were sending someone up to my place to make a mold,” Guzmán recalls. “I wasn’t sure what was going on. And I didn’t find out until after the fact that they were making a statue of me as the most famous alumnus of Greendale College.

“I was very honored. Not so much because it’s a statue of me, and not to be egotistical by any means. But I saw it as an homage to the Guzmán legacy.”

Guzmán also responds with humility when asked if that connection to the Russo Brothers could lead to an MCU appearance. “I don’t like calling people like that, and I’m doing so much stuff right now. If it happens, it happens,” he says demurely. But then, a wry smile crosses Guzmán’s face, and he gives a little wink as he continues. “But I’m sure that it will happen sooner or later, now that you mention it.”

Until then, Guzmán hopes that roles in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie and Wednesday will inspire younger generations to look back into his filmography.

The Limey was very special to me,” he says, pointing out the 1999 Steven Soderbergh film, in which Terence Stamp plays an aging English gangster avenging the death of his daughter. “That has one of my favorite lines, when I’m outside with Terence Stamp, and I say, ‘You know, you could see the sea out there, if you could see it.’ To me, that is a very iconic line in my career, you know?

“I love that movie. I love what Steven did with it. And I got to work with some of the OGs, you know: Peter Fonda, Lesley Ann Warren, Bill Duke, Terence Stamp. I learned so much from just being in the same space as they were. I wish people would take notice of that movie, because I think it was really special.”

As important as those screen legends were to his career, it was Guzmán’s kids who helped him with his latest role, as Wart in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie.

“They were so excited, saying, ‘Wart’s finally coming out in the movie!’ It was a huge surprise to them.

“The told me that Wart is a baddie, and I always look at that as a positive. Because I know the baddie is going to have an impact on the story, it’s part of the legacy. And he does really move the story along.

“What I liked about Wart is that he’s a really cool guy in this story. He’s sitting there cutting up an apple and talking about how apples are really good nutritionally, but I’m also bad and I don’t let them forget it.

“I feel like audiences were really waiting for him to show up, and I’m happy to do it for my kids.”

With that last observation, Guzmán perfectly encapsulates his legacy as an actor: always popping up in surprising places, always willing to do the work, and always thrilling the audience.

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is now playing in theaters.

Maitreyi Ramakrishnan Talks Never Have I Ever and Why We Need More Teen Dramas Today

Though actress Maitreyi Ramakrishnan’s latest role sees her playing a superhero that can talk to crows on The Boys, her breakthrough performance was as the lead of Netflix’s Never Have I Ever, a charming teen comedy that follows the coming-of-age journey of an Indian American girl in Los Angeles. Ramakrishnan played Devi Vishwakumar, an ambitious teen left reeling in the wake of her father’s death, and the show was consistently praised for its diverse cast and thoughtful depictions of teenage life, grief, friendship, and romance.

Never Have I Ever ended after four seasons in 2023, with a sweet and largely happy finale that included Devi getting into Princeton and officially starting a relationship with her former nemesis-turned-crush Ben Gross (Jaren Lewison). But that hasn’t kept fans from asking Ramakrishnan whether the show might continue someday, although the actress has done her best to draw a line in the sand about this possibility, often telling journalists that, in her mind, Devi is dead. From her point of view, saying goodbye to this character was a decisively final act, and one that’s meant to help fans move on.

“My fans have made me compilation videos of all the times I’ve said that I think she’s just dead. I’m so glad people are seeing that,” she tells Den of Geek. “Not because — and let me be so clear here — me saying ‘I hope Devi’s dead’ is not me telling people ‘Hey, don’t talk to me about Never Have I Ever.’ I love the show. I’m so proud of it. I love to continue to talk about it because the show is amazing. But it also ended when it needed to. You never want to watch a show and say, ‘Wow, those later seasons are not as great, but those beginning seasons are awesome.’ No! I can say confidently, top down, Never Have I Ever is amazing.”

For Ramakrishnan, the series is best kept alive post-finale by its fans and their theories about what happened next to its characters. Particularly because the Netflix show concludes at a place where viewers can embrace whatever ideas they want about the characters’ futures.

“Honestly, I love seeing people’s TikToks of them fantasizing about what Devi’s up to,” she continues. “It’s good! I’d rather take your guys’ fanfic than make something canon for everyone. Except for the fact that Devi is canonically dead. That’s my fanfic. What’s yours?”

One of the reasons Never Have I Ever became so popular is that it’s a teen-focused series that took the experience of being a teenager seriously. Yes, it featured characters who aren’t often centered in this particular genre, and it reckoned with some very adult issues. But at the end of the day, it treated its subject matter with respect and trusted its audience to come along for the ride.

“We all have a teen in our hearts. We’re not very far off from your younger selves, you know?” Ramakrishnan says. “I do think there are some good teen shows out there, but I think it’s kind of the same effect as like – and I put this in quotes because I don’t agree with this term – but “the chick flick” of it all. I love a rom-com, as do most people! And I can’t remember who said this recently, but if you want to go pound for pound, you want to make it a numbers game, look at the numbers from Mama Mia to like Barbie at the box office. Look at the point-proof evidence of a show like The Summer I Turned Pretty or Never Have I Ever, where the viewership is insane.”

After all, the viewer numbers don’t lie. And neither do the diverse experiences that Ramakrishnan has had with the show’s fans in the real world. 

“One of my favorite things about Never Have I Ever is that a lot of people watch it who might have [initially] assumed, oh, that’s the brown girl show, that’s the show for brown girls. But, actually no, because I have some crazy fan interactions with people you wouldn’t expect,” she says.

“I was in Atlanta in the middle of the summer, and the show’s already been out and done for over a year. This group of like four white boys with their curly hair perms and gold chains come up to me in the middle of a peach picking farm and say, ‘Miss? Sorry, but are you Maitreyi Ramakrishnan?’ And I go, ‘Yeah, hi,’ and they get all excited like, ‘Yeah, bro! I knew it was her, I told you! It’s literally Devi, oh my God, Devi’s my GOAT. I was such a Devi in high school!’ And I was like what the fuck?

“I wish I had moments like those recorded because it just shows me that these are experiences everyone had at that age. It’s a testament to a good show. When a good show, with good writing, is given the space and resources to create a story, you’ll feel the results on the back end.  And maybe, if we invest in good writing and creative human — notice I said human! — thoughts, you get a good show, because that’s what it’s about.”

As Never Have I Ever has more than proven, good stories have the ability to transcend genres and speak to all sorts of viewers. 

“Just watch what you want to watch. I think people are too worried about what other people think, you know?” Ramakrishnan says. “Never Have I Ever was just a damn good show. The writing is spectacular. The acting was funny as hell. Mindy [Kaling] and Lang [Fisher, showrunners] ran that show like a tight ship, and it still shows because people are still talking about Never Have I Ever today.”

As for what’s next for the young woman who played Devi, Ramakrishnan is busy filming the second season of Prime Video’s Legally Blonde prequel series, and is set to lead a feature comedy set in the raucous world of collegiate Bollywood dance competitions.

“Right now, I’m working on Elle season 2, which is very good and very exciting. See, bring back teen shows!” she laughs. “But it’s been a blast and is very, very fun. And then I have a movie coming out, a dance movie, like Bring It On or Step Up, and it’s with Netflix. It’s also the first time I’m getting to lead a film, which is very exciting. I’m really ready for that movie to come out in particular because I think it’s gonna be a big hit, like genuinely.” 

But, for the most part, the actress is still taking her career as it comes.

“I have a lot of aspirations and dreams, but I’m also open to the dreams I don’t know that I have yet,” Ramakrishnan says. “Especially in my job, I don’t know what is going to come into my inbox tomorrow. I didn’t know The Boys was going to come into my inbox, for example. And I would love to do more action and things that center around powers or magic. I’ve been on a real fantasy kick. Powers, magic, all that jazz. I’d love it.” 

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Stars Kurt and Wyatt Russell Break Down Their Time-Bending Moment

The following contains spoilers for Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season 2 episode 7.

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters has what is probably the best stunt casting on TV right now. This isn’t an insult, by the way. And not even entirely accurate; it’s actually more like a very human sort of special effect. The sci-fi series, which revolves around the titular organization that tracks the movements of Godzilla and other prehistoric Titans, spans two time periods and features several generations of a family whose origins are tied to its founding. And at the center of all of this is Lee Shaw, an Army officer who plays a key role in both of the series’ timelines, as the show explores questions of legacy, regret, loss, and sacrifice. 

Father-son duo Kurt and Wyatt Russell play the character at two very different stages of his life: Wyatt as a younger Lee during the 1950s-set portions of the story, and Kurt as an older version forced to live not only with the consequences of his younger self’s actions, but the world that the Monarch he created has helped to make. The show has, obviously, leaned into the remarkable physical resemblance between the two Russells, but, and perhaps most importantly, it has also used their dual performances to craft a shockingly layered portrayal of a complicated man who sacrifices much of his life for the benefit of others. 

The obvious downside to the fact that the Russells are playing the same character is, of course, that it means they can’t act opposite one another at any point in the show. Or, well, that would be the case if Monarch weren’t a series that’s proven itself willing to play fast and loose with the rules of time, space, and even physics at various points. In season 2’s seventh episode, “String Theory,” both versions of Lee manage to cross paths across multiple decades, and the older man must stop his younger self from rescuing Keiko (Mari Yamamoto) when he discovers that she, too, is trapped in the interdimensional portal realm known as Axis Mundi along with him. 

“It was something we discussed even before we started shooting the first season. I was adamant about wanting something like this to happen,” Kurt Russell tells Den of Geek. “We actually tried something in the first season that was so powerful that they called me and they said, ‘We can’t do this. It just takes the whole show into a whole different direction.’ And then in season 2, I was once again immediately like, let’s make this happen. So we started talking about possible ways to do that, and the way they… what they came up with to do that was really right in the zone of what the show is. In the end, I really liked everything that episode 7 has to offer.”

“Sting Theory” takes full advantage of Legacy of Monsters’ time-bending premise to pull off a twist that would, on almost any other show, be impossible. While testing out his machine to summon Titans, Dr. Suzuki and the 2017 edition of Lee accidentally manage to contact the time-displaced version of Shaw’s younger self. Trapped in the mysterious portal realm after Monarch’s failed Operation Hourglass mission — the one we saw take place during the show’s first season that would ultimately cost Lee 20 years in the real world — the younger Shaw initially assumes he’s talking to his superiors before learning he’s speaking to his older self.

​​“We knew Kurt and Wyatt had always wanted to work together, and I think that this show was a really exciting opportunity for them in that regard,” Monarch executive producer Tory Tunnell says. “I don’t think they anticipated playing the same character, and they’ve had so much fun with that. You see Lee getting a scar in the past timeline, and then Kurt having the physical scar, of course. But you also see the emotional scars born of the past tense that carried into the present tense. We also knew that we wanted to get them onscreen together, which is a challenge when they’re playing the same person. So that was something we were thinking about. What do we have in our toolbox? Is there a way to achieve that? And [still] have it be something that doesn’t just feel like it’s a trick or an event for an event’s sake? But [this] actually feels really baked into our storyline; it feels inevitable that you would need a moment like that.”

And while their two versions of Lee are technically separated by both decades and an interdimensional rift, the actors playing the character still found a way to tie their performances together on set.

“It was cool,” Wyatt Russell says. “The way we did it was, I was there when he was doing his part, and we had this command trailer where you could see and watch, because it was important for us that we were in each other’s ear. Having nothing against the set PA was who was reading, but obviously it’s not the same. It doesn’t elicit the same responses. We had a lot of fun being there for the other while we were doing our respective lines.”

While the duo’s unexpected interaction is entertaining enough for fans from a meta standpoint, it’s equally important within the emotional context of the series’ second season, which shows us a Lee who not only acknowledges his love for Keiko, but recognizes that he can’t risk the future — not to mention the existence of her grandchildren — by interfering with the established timeline to to save her. (And prevent her from missing over fifty years in the real world.)

“It was one of my favorite moments, getting to work with Wyatt in that regard and also getting to connect that character to itself,” Kurt Russell says. “That’s one of my favorite moments of the whole season, and it’s when he’s running down the three things about why not to [interact] with Keiko. And his [younger] character is still struggling with the impossibility of this all taking place. It was three things, but instead of saying “and what’s the second one?”, he says “What’s behind door number two?” And it works because only Lee would say that. So when he hears that, he remembers so many more things, and it’s [confirmation] that this is actually taking place, it’s not some wild screw-up. It’s happening, and it has to be dealt with perfectly. Otherwise, it’s all over.”

The anguish inherent in this interaction — in which younger Lee must leave Keiko behind, and his older self must essentially force him to do it, despite knowing what she has meant and still means to him — is a lot. But it’s also the kind of storytelling that makes Monarch unique in both Legendary’s Monsterverse and TV’s larger sci-fi landscape.

“I think one of the things we were most proud of in season 1 is when people would say to us, ‘I came to watch a really fun monster show, and I didn’t expect to have a moment where I was almost crying,” Tunnel says. “I think having that tenderness is something we’re always looking to achieve, these really tender moments like this that will break your heart.” 

New episodes of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters premiere Fridays on Apple TV.

Corbin Bernsen On Embracing a Roger Corman Spirit, Working With His Son in Woodstockers

To hear him tell it, Corbin Bernsen became an actor when his father, producer Harry Bernsen Jr., recruited him to be in the 1974 Blaxploitation flick Three the Hard Way, starring Jim Brown and Fred Williamson.

“The script said, ‘A pair of naked young limbs, thrashing in the backseat of a Rolls Royce,'” Bernsen recalls to Den of Geek. “I went and did it, made out with this girl, and met Jim Brown. I had this Camaro that I’d really worked on, and my dad wanted to buy it from me so we could blow up for the movie, send it 20 feet in the sky.

“They gave me a production van at the end, which was just a van, and my dad handed me nine hundred bucks at the end of the night. And I’m like, ‘Okay, this is my career.'”

In fact, Bernsen’s credits go back even further, to a 1967 movie that stars Elvis Presley as a rich kid masquerading as a water ski instructor in Florida. “I’m credited in Clambake,” he says with a shrug and a laugh. “But I’m also credited with studying judo or karate with Bruce Lee. If you go look it up, it’s there. And I’m just like, ‘Okay…’ I think I might have been there with my mother [actress Jeanne Cooper], who was involved in Roger Corman movies. I might have been there as a baby.”

Those family connections continue up to the present, with his new independently-produced series Woodstockers, written by himself and Joshua Michael Stern, and directed by his son, Oliver Bernsen. In Woodstockers, Bernsen plays Lenny, a former hippie who responds to the end of his marriage and the death of his best friend by going back to Woodstock to relive his most beloved memories.

“I am Lenny,” Bernsen admits. “I’m not everything Lenny is; I have a wonderful wife and I have kids who all get along, not a daughter who’s remote from me. But the thing Lenny’s going through about the resolution of one’s life, I’m definitely going through.

“I’m the bloodforce of Lenny, and in the show, we’re just changing the story about who he is. If we can make Woodstockers the way I want to do it, which covers all four seasons, it can be the four seasons of a man’s life. We can shoot all these beautiful seasons and make them all very distinct. The next season we do will be winter, and in the frozen cold he gives up smoking. Lenny’s just stuck in ice for six episodes of white nothingness.

“I’m very interested in taking the way my life changed via Lenny into the process of doing this project. It all started with me realizing at 71 that you’ve got to reckon with your life.”

Part of that reckoning for Bernsen involves bringing in his son Oliver to write the screenplay and direct Woodstockers. Fortunately, the prospect was equally compelling for the younger Bernsen.

“For me, the fun in anything is how much a story you can tell through someone’s life, and have it inform the character,” says Oliver. “I think that the greatest thing a director can do is pull life into fiction and blend them to create a surprising new character. I know very well what’s true of my father in real life and what’s not true, and I got to massage that a bit when making Lenny. I used my perspective of someone who isn’t 71 to comment on what he may have done wrong or done right.

“That dialogue is what’s exciting to me, to tell a geriatric story through the lens of a young boy. That’s dynamic storytelling.”

Corbin adds, “When Oliver accepted to do this, it just hit me that I would be seeing what Oliver thinks of me, as a father, as a Woodstocker.”

While that personal element did, at times, make for interesting situations on set, as when Oliver had to push his father harder while shooting a scene in which Lenny smokes pot (“I was like, ‘You wrote it, man! You’ve got to rip that bong!'” Oliver laughs), both Bernsens saw Woodstockers as a unique opportunity.

In part, Woodstockers allowed the elder Bernsen to get back to his roots, acting in indie movies produced by Roger Corman. Bernsen’s earliest memory as an actor begins with 1976’s Eat My Dust!, a car chase cheapo starring Ron Howard and produced by Corman. “I played a gas station, and I remember my line: ‘Ethyl lead? ethyl no lead? or Ethel Nordock, my high school teacher.’ That was my line to Ron Howard.

“Roger told Ron Howard, ‘Be in this movie, and I’ll let you direct the next movie,’ which was Grand Theft Auto. So I remember that as the first time really being on a set and really doing it.”

Those types of gambles are reflected in the creation of Bernsen’s current project. Woodstockers doesn’t follow a traditional production model, where a network or a streamer like Netflix orders a series and gives the creators money and space to make it. Instead, the Bernsens simply made the show on their own, and are considering distribution routes.

“This notion of indie TV isn’t something that’s really been done before,” says Oliver. “It’s a great testing ground for people, giving them a place they can explore.”

Corbin adds, “It also goes back to my earliest days. I was a little bit younger than Oliver is now, but I was still around the world because of the relationships I had during the Roger Corman days, the days of the true indie. We’d go out to Zuma Beach to do The Creature from the Black Lagoon or whatever it’s called. There was a spirit of people coming together.”

“You know, I love L.A. Law, I love the big things that I got to work on with eight thousand trucks and craft services and all of that. But there’s something exciting about bringing that independent thing they did in Roger Corman’s day.

“And that’s why I wanted to be part of Oliver’s show,” Bernsen says of Woodstockers. “For me, I want to get down there. I would like us to be pioneers.”

Clearly, the pioneer spirit has served Bernsen well, whether it’s making a TV show with his son or letting his dad blow up his car with Jim Brown.