2026 TV Preview: What’s Next for Star Trek, Marvel, DC, and More

This article appears in the new issue of DEN OF GEEK magazine. You can read all of our magazine stories here.

A hulking hedge knight. A sociopathic superhero. A rock star revenant. Suffice it to say, television is about to have some big characters in 2026. As was the case for our last rotation around the sun, genre storytelling looks to remain a majority priority for the TV medium this coming year. With traditional cable bleeding subscribers and corporations continuing to consolidate, networks and streamers increasingly want the same thing that movies want: Big. Sure. Things. And where does that lead them? Back to us (geeks).

Yes, while it may be bad news for folks who appreciate the art of a good sitcom or procedural, TV is increasingly the home to vampires, aliens, super-powered beings, and all other manner of genre creations. The 2026 calendar has some major geek benchmarks, from a fresh Star Trek to the next effort from Stranger Things creators the Duffer Brothers. Allow us to walk you through those upcoming offerings now.

Holly Hunter in season 1, episode 1 of Star Trek: Starfleet Academy streaming on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Brooke Palmer/Paramount+

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy

January 15 on Paramount+

Star Trek has continually reinvigorated itself by bringing new generations to the forefront. This aspect takes center stage in the upcoming Paramount+ original series Star Trek: Starfleet Academy. The show is set in the 32nd century period introduced by the recently concluded Star Trek: Discovery, with Starfleet Academy reopening after a 120-year hiatus to welcome a new class of promising cadets. This move comes after the United Federation was fractured by a cataclysmic event known as the Burn, with the cadets playing a vital role in the organization’s rebuilding process.

“It felt like this generation particularly is facing so many deep challenges. What I think everybody is trying to figure out now is how do we get back to hope,” co-showrunner Alex Kurtzman tells Den of Geek. “I always feel like Star Trek is a compass that points us towards our better angels and the people that we want to be. For a generation of kids who are inheriting a lot of problems created by the generations before them, it feels very relevant now. But it’s also a really funny, really fun, emotional show.”

The young cast is joined by several familiar faces, including Robert Picardo reprising his Star Trek: Voyager role as the Doctor and Tig Notaro returning as her Discovery engineer character Jett Reno. Leading the ensemble is Academy Award-winner Holly Hunter, playing Captain Nahla Ake, who is also the newly-installed chancellor of Starfleet Academy. For the veteran actor, getting to witness and join in on the effusive energy on set was crucial in helping her develop her performance.

“I just found so much of my characters through each of these actors,” Hunter says. “I kept being able to reveal more about who she is through my interactions with each of them because they’re all so incredible. The energy on the set was so much fun and so unleashed and alive. You’ll see that in the show!” – Sam Stone

Peter Claffey as Ser Duncan the Tall in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

January 18 on HBO

Based on George R.R. Martin’s three “Tales of Dunk and Egg” novellas, Game of Thrones prequel series A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms follows the mismatched duo of dim-witted but good-natured hedge knight Ser Duncan the Tall a.k.a. “Dunk” (Peter Claffey) and his young, bald-headed squire Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) as they traipse across a postwar Seven Kingdoms looking for adventure.

“[This show] allows us to lean into the thing that I think a lot of Game of Thrones fans love, which is the odd couple pairings. That is essentially our show,” showrunner Ira Parker tells Den of Geek. “Everyone loves Brienne and Pod. Everyone loves The Hound and Arya. Game of Thrones was at its best when it could figure out who were the two least likely people to be in a scene together. That is my favorite stuff.”

Dunk and Egg present a unique casting challenge. Not only is the duo quite visually distinct—a nearly seven-foot-tall gentle giant and a pre-pubescent boy—but their adventures, beginning with 1998’s The Hedge Knight, take on a warm tone that represents the World of Ice and Fire at its most wholesome. Still, this all remains a George R.R. Martin joint.

“It’s just a very easy story to fall in love with,” Parker says. “It is lighter as an entry point, but it’s still Westeros—anything can happen to any character. It can get quite dark.” – Alec Bojalad

(L-R) Frank Castle/The Punisher (Jon Bernthal) and Matt Murdock/Daredevil (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television's DAREDEVIL: BORN AGAIN, exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

Daredevil: Born Again Season 2

March 4 on Disney+

Daredevil: Born Again is an example of fan service backed up by great quality storytelling. The first season brought back many of the beloved actors from the Netflix Daredevil series that aired between 2015-2018, including series star Charlie Cox as the titular blind lawyer-turned-vigilante. The show is gritty and takes risks that other Marvel projects sometimes shy away from, and the long-form format of episodic storytelling has been the perfect avenue for this hero.

The second season will bring back more famous actors from the Defenders franchise, most importantly Krysten Ritter from the Jessica Jones Netflix series that aired between 2015-2019. Expect a lot of Jon Bernthal as the Punisher, as well, in anticipation for his upcoming standalone special that’s waiting for a release later in 2026 and appearance in Spider-Man: Brand New Day. – Shawn Laib

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 10: Gillian Jacobs and Steven Yeun appear onstage during the Probably The Best Invincible Panel In The History of Invincible Panels at New York Comic Con at Javits Center on October 10, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Valerie Terranova/Getty Images for Prime Video)

Invincible Season 4

March 2026 on Prime Video

“One of the things that’s most exciting about Invincible for me is that it’s an escalating show,” Invincible creator Robert Kirkman says of the heightened expectations for the series heading into season 4. “The scale and the scope of the fights and the conflicts and the things that are happening always seems to get bigger, and it’s always growing and it’s always working towards something. I’m really excited about getting to season 4 because everything from the first minute of season 1 has been working towards a lot of the events that happen in season 4.”

The season 3 finale was a turning point for Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun). For the first three seasons, Mark has been as much of a passive hero as possible, avoiding deadly conflicts or fights that would put his family or friends in harm’s way and trying to save the largest number of people possible. A near-fatal altercation with Conquest (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) during the last episode caused an epiphany for Mark that should spearhead a whole new Invincible during season 4. – SL

Homelander in The Boys season 5 poster.

The Boys Season 5

April 8 on Prime Video

TV’s bloodiest, boldest, and most thoroughly unabashed satire of the superhero genre finally comes to a close with a fifth season that surely will be filled with more of the same shock value that fans have come to know and love. The Boys pokes holes in cultism and makes fun of the way corporations run America, but the final act will obviously be about one man/monster’s fate: Homelander.

Antony Starr’s performance has been Bryan Cranston-esque as people find ways to love a character who is obviously a supervillain to the highest degree. Whether or not Homelander lives or dies, and whether Billy Butcher is triumphant, is really beside the point. Vought’s biggest lab rat has already done incomprehensible damage and he enters season 5 as the de facto President of the United States. What could possibly go wrong? – SL

The vampire Lestat crowd surfs.

The Vampire Lestat

TBD on AMC

In a world where adaptations often go awry, AMC’s Interview with the Vampire has gotten everything right. The TV version of Anne Rice’s gothic novels has been a fantastic deep dive into the dark fantasy genre, with plenty of courage to explore diversity regarding race relations and sexuality. The first two seasons only covered the material in Rice’s first book in the series. The upcoming third season will use the same name as the second novel and dive deeper into the life of Lestat de Lioncourt. 

The theme and aesthetic of the season will be slanted toward rock music, something that composer Daniel Hart talked to Den of Geek about at San Diego Comic-Con 2025. “I feel right at home. It is a thrill, it’s been a great challenge… to do something this ambitious, to take swings this wild and to do something I don’t usually do, which is be in the writers’ room and be in production on set with Sam [Reid], with the band, making sure everything looks right and sounds right.” 

Sam Reid, who portrays Lestat, revealed what viewers can expect from the charismatic vampire this season. “Rock music, live performances have kind of an inherent sexuality that feels necessary, and you just have to go with it. Lestat is a hypersexualized character anyway, kind of a slinky, feline predator anyway. So if he’s going to do this, he’s kind of going to do it. Sometimes, I basically close my eyes, hope for the best, and just wing it.” – SL

Aaron Pierre as John Stewart and Kyle Chandler as Hal Jordan in Lanterns.

Lanterns

TBD on HBO

The MCU used to be the king of the superheroes, but DC has really started to dig into that media monopoly in recent times. Lanterns is the latest DCU project with a ton of potential, and it’s easy to see why with a simple look at the cast and crew. Damon Lindelof is one of the creators of Lanterns and there aren’t many showrunners with a more impressive pedigree. The Leftovers, Lost, and Watchmen litter Lindelof’s resume, demonstrating his greatness and ability to work within a wide range of genres and themes. Watchmen is the series that fans should check out if they want a closer look at what Lanterns might feel like in pace and aesthetic as Lindelof moves more toward the superhero genre specifically. 

The HBO series will star Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights) and Aaron Pierre (previously known for Krypton on SyFy and 2024 action breakout Rebel Ridge) as Green Lanterns Hal Jordan and John Stewart – two superpowered detectives who are at very different points in their lives. The age-juxtaposed buddy mystery is nothing super novel in media, but with so much credibility in the script, cast, and crew, Lanterns should be a new favorite even for people who aren’t into superheroes but want a thriller in the vein of True Detective. – SL

Matt Smith as Daemon Targaryen in House of the Dragon season 3.

House of the Dragon Season 3

TBD on HBO

The second season of Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon concluded on an unsure note. Rhaenyra, Daemon, and the rest of Team Black will have to move forward without the blade and the dragon of Rhaenys Targaryen. Team Green will continue to rely on the menacing eye of Aemond after King Aegon II was burnt up in the Battle of Rook’s Rest.

Fans who were waiting for a big battle to serve as the climax of season 2 should get that bloodshed when the third season begins. The Battle of the Gullet is expected to launch in the first part of the season, presumably in the premiere episode as we saw the naval forces joining vicinities during the season 2 finale. The intensified action this season might make up for the lack of fighting previously, but we can never be certain what happens next in the land of dragons and betrayal. – SL 

Spider-Noir First Look from Prime Video.

Spider-Noir

TBD on MGM+

With so much Spider-Man content nowadays, it’s no surprise that Sony is capitalizing on the ubiquitous nature of the crawling hero’s popularity in the 21st century. Spider-Noir is set in the same animated universe as the acclaimed Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse films and features Nicolas Cage as the alternative version of Spider-Man from the Spider-Man Noir comic books. A black-and-white aesthetic and a setting of 1930s New York City gives this a darker tone than most other Spidey stuff. Other great actors lending their voices to the project include Lamorne Morris and Brendan Gleeson. – SL

HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 06: (L-R) Ross Duffer and Matt Duffer attend Netflix's "Stranger Things" Season 5 World Premiere at TCL Chinese 6 Theatres on November 06, 2025 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix)

The Boroughs

TBD on Netflix

Stranger Things fans won’t have to wait long for a spiritual successor to the Netflix megahit, or at least a science fiction story made by the same people. The Duffer Brothers are producing The Boroughs, a tale of mismatched, retired heroes who join forces to stop an alien threat in New Mexico. Expect a lot of the Duffers’ signature tropes like outcast characters, good surviving over evil, and fantastic ensemble acting. Bill Pullman of Independence Day, Alfred Molina of Spider-Man 2 fame, and Clarke Peters from The Wire star. – SL

The Wildest Stranger Things Finale Fan Theories

Vampires, wormholes, and time travel – oh my! There are some pretty out-there theories about the kind of twists we might see in the series finale of Stranger Things later this month. You may have even seen a few kicking around online yourself by now.

Some of these theories sound more realistic than others. Still, they’re all good fun to ponder, and given that online fandom hasn’t been frothing like this since the WandaVision/Mephisto era of television, we’ve been on all the big Charlie Day in Always Sunny red string pin boards and keeping track of the main Stranger Things fan theories so you don’t have to.

Without further ado, then, here are some of the biggest fan theories on how Stranger Things will end…

Whether the Gang Wins or Loses is Based on Points from Eddie Munson’s D&D Game

In this theory, posted before season 5 started streaming, Eddie Munson’s season 4 Dungeons & Dragons game is key. Vecna had 15 hit points left in that game, so the gang needed to get more than 15 to beat him. Erica rolled a d20 and won. Previously, Dustin rolled 11, but that was not enough to win. Therefore, Eleven is not enough to beat Vecna. But with her sister, Eight, they make 19. They need 1 to win: Henry. He must join forces with Eleven and Eight to conquer the Upside Down and the Mind Flayer.

It sounds vaguely plausible at first, especially now that we’ve witnessed the reintroduction of Eight, but as people started to take the theory apart, they found flaws in the logic. As one commenter pointed out, “the d20 doesn’t get rolled for damaging hit points, it gets rolled for checking if an attack hits or not…” and the consensus was ultimately that the theory fundamentally misunderstands the rules of D&D. It’s still a fun one, but probably a bit of a reach.

Vecna is Creating a Wormhole to Time Travel

This is the dominant theory going into the next batch of season 5’s episodes.

We’ve already seen Hawkins’ science teacher, Mr. Clarke, explaining the concept of wormholes, telling the kids that wormholes could theoretically facilitate travel across massive distances, dimensions, or even through time itself. On his chalkboard, we also see that a similar hourglass/tunnel-shaped sketch that Will Byers drew based on his Vecna visions.

In season 5 so far, Vecna is targeting 12 children for capture, who some people say represent the “anchor point” hours on a clock (clocks being a common Vecna motif), and that he will use the kids as a kind of human clock to open a wormhole and rewrite time. Some also posit that the impenetrable wall we saw in season 5 is a circle with points laid out like a clock.

Though this theory is unsubstantiated, a big chunk of the Stranger Things fandom is pretty convinced that we will see Vecna or the gang have to rewrite or reset history to save the day. Robin’s joke about Back to the Future’s flux capacitor MacGuffin in season 5 has only added fuel to the fire.

Hopper Will Propose to Joyce Using Jonathan’s Ring

In a twist based on emotional stakes rather than timey-wimey plot machinations, some fans think that the engagement ring given to Jonathan isn’t for him to propose to Nancy, but for Hopper to propose to Joyce. This is based on repeated references to the number 37 showing up in various romantic scenes between Hopper and Joyce (“Jopper”, if you’re shipping).

One eagle-eyed fan says that 37 minutes and 37 seconds into the 37th episode of Stranger Things, we see a close-up of the engagement ring in Jonathan’s hand. It’s all connected! Or, y’know, not. We’ll see.

Eleven Will Merge With the Upside Down

Could Eleven (or maybe even Will now that he has powers) literally merge with the Upside Down, becoming a living bridge or anchor between dimensions? All we know is that our gut says “maybe”.

This idea builds on the show’s repeated depiction of kids acting as conduits for supernatural events, combined with Eleven’s unique psychic connection to the Upside Down and other dimensions. It’s speculated that any climactic confrontation in the finale might not even involve a physical fight in Hawkins or the Upside Down but rather a metaphysical struggle, with Eleven existing inside the dimension itself to manipulate or seal it.

Vampire Eddie Munson Will Kill Vecna

Wewww, okay. An extremely fun one that has been doing the rounds for a while theorizes that after Eddie was attacked by Demobats at the end of season 4, he became transformed into the vampire Kas, who Mike said originally killed Vecna in Eddie’s D&D game. Even when the Duffer Brothers said Eddie was dead and wouldn’t be coming back, fans suggested they were just being sly. Of course, he wouldn’t really be Eddie, he’d be the undead Kas the Bloody-Handed, the vampire lieutenant of Vecna! Eddie is dead, but surely Kas lives. Perhaps he would initially be controlled by Vecna, but then turn on him and save everyone in the finale?

This is actually one of our favorite theories because it’s also the Duffers’ favorite wild theory, and they have personally debunked it.

Connecting with the Child Version of Vecna Is the Only Way to Win

This is an original one from us – hey, we’re fans too – and is based on a comment from the Duffer Brothers about one of their main reference points for season 5’s story: a horror movie from the year 2000 starring none other than Jennifer “from the block” Lopez.

The Duffers say that they spent hours in the writers room discussing The Cell, where Lopez’s child psychologist Catherine accesses the brain of a serial killer and finds that the only way to escape is to murder the child version of the killer in his twisted mindscape. The brothers describe the movie as “the closest thing we could think of that parallels what we were doing” in season 5.

Perhaps the only way to stop everything that’s going down in Hawkins is to connect with a younger Henry Creel. Perhaps!

Vecna Isn’t the Real Villain

Some Stranger Things fans still suspect that Vecna isn’t the real villain of Stranger Things, despite being presented like one. Vecna (or 001, or Henry, or Mr. Creel if you’re nasty) may be a powerful but corrupted human who is just a straight-up pawn for the Mind Flayer at the end of the day. This theory, to its credit, also draws on the show’s horror and D&D nods by suggesting that a human villain alone could not plausibly create or rule over a cosmic dimension-spanning threat.

If true, this interpretation would frame the show’s final confrontation as a battle against a far older, more cosmic-level evil. It would also allow for a potential redemption arc for Vecna, portraying him as a victim of corruption rather than a purely malevolent figure. This could also be backed up by the Stranger Things play, The First Shadow, which explores Henry’s childhood and what happens to him after he first takes a trip to Dimension X.

Wake Up Dead Man Review: Rian Johnson Mystery Loses Knives Out Edge with Serious Turn

“No one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise, the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is lost, and so are the skins; but one puts new wine into fresh wineskins,” Jesus tells his disciples, according to Mark 2:22. That teaching of Jesus doesn’t make its way into Wake Up Dead Man, the latest of director Rian Johnson‘s Knives Out mysteries starring Daniel Craig as Southern-fried detective Benoit Blanc. Several other teachings do appear in the movie, which brings Blanc to Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude after the murder of its domineering priest Monsignor Wicks. In other words, poor Blanc must deal with all manner of church folk.

Despite its absence, Jesus’ teaching from Mark 2 might be the most relevant to Wake Up Dead Man. Because for his third outing in cinematic sleuthing, Johnson tries to pour something different and substantive into the franchise. Unfortunately, this new wine doesn’t always sit well within the wineskins of the established Knives Out model, sometimes stretching the seams for unsatisfying results.

On a plot level, Wake Up Dead Man sure feels like a standard Knives Out adventure. Craig returns as Blanc, looking all the nattier for the long locks he now sports, and inserts himself in another insular community of big personalities. Biggest of all is the Monsignor, played by a glowering Josh Brolin with his own wild mane. The son of a wayward woman he refers to only as the “Whore Harlot” (Annie Hamilton), Wicks inherited his position at Perpetual Fortitude from his grandfather and uses it to fight a fierce battle against what he sees as the encroaching threat of loose morals and general secularism.

Aiding the Monsignor’s fight is the close coterie he’s assembled around him. There’s the newly-divorced wife-guy Dr. Nat Sharp (Jeremy Renner), a sci-fi writer turned religious acolyte Lee Ross (Andrew Scott), a disabled cellist hoping for a miracle cure Simone Vivane (Cailee Spaeny), dutiful lawyer Vera Draven (Kerry Washington), and the younger brother she was forced to raise, would-be conservative grifter Cy Draven (Daryl McCormack). Of all these, none support the monsignor and his mission more than officious administrator Martha (Glenn Close), who gets help from the groundskeeper who adores her, Samson (Thomas Haden Church).

Blanc arrives in the Perpetual Fortitude community after Monsignor Wicks gets stabbed to death midway through his Good Friday service, brought in by local police chief Geraldine Scott (Mila Kunis). He’s more than willing to consider each of the acolytes a suspect, but they all point the finger at Perpetual Fortitude’s newly-installed associate priest Reverend Jud Duplenticy (Josh O’Connor).

A former boxer who joined the priesthood after a horrific incident in the ring, Jud is fundamentally a fighter. But because he fights with the church for more love and acceptance in the Church, he feels conflicted. “We need less of this,” he says throughout the film, putting up his dukes as if about to punch; “and more of this,” he adds, spreading his arms to mimic Christ on the cross. But when faced with a belligerent like Wicks, he knows how to throw a jab.

Were Wake Up Dead Man to unfold its plot in the manner described above, it would play out more or less like the previous Knives Out stories, the 2019 original film and its 2022 sequel Glass Onion. But instead the movie begins with Jud, who narrates the story of his coming to Perpetual Fortitude and the events leading up to the monsignor’s death. Blanc doesn’t arrive until 30 minutes into this 140-minute film, making it feel more like an episode of Columbo or Johnson’s recently canceled Peacock series, Poker Face.

The shift makes Blanc a supporting character in Jud’s story, a point underscored by his discomfort with the religious setting. Although he introduces himself to Jud as a man who “worships on the altar of rationality,” and quickly unleashes a homily citing the many misdeeds of the church, he cannot be help but won over by the young priest, who listens and accepts the critique while explaining his own faith in non-condemning ways. Blanc never gives up his skepticism nor Jud his belief, but the two respect one another’s means for being decent human beings.

Admirable as this understanding certainly is, it diminishes the tension of the narrative. Not only does Blanc have no character arc in Wake Up Dead Man, but even the central mystery gets les attention than Jud’s internal conflict. Whereas previous Knives Out movies gave their oddballs plenty of screen time, here the side characters get only the barest of plots and are reduced to a handful of glances and lines. The young Spaeny has already developed enough screen presence to suggest depth with a single stare, but Renner and Scott feel wasted in their one-note characters.

One also feels Johnson’s disinterest in the mystery elements with the film’s construction. Handsomely shot by cinematographer Steve Yedlin, Wake Up Dead Man has several striking images. The motif of a light shining on an empty church wall where a cross used to be resonates each time, and Johnson occasionally allows the visuals to get surreal as they match the spiritual subject matter.

But the movie lacks the tight sense of geography enjoyed by the other Blanc mysteries. Those films largely took place in a single house, but Wake Up Dead Man encompasses the entire church grounds, and Johnson doesn’t always delineate the relationship between certain spaces. As a result, it’s not always clear how places and events connect to one another, a problem for viewers who want to follow Blanc’s lines of logic.

Still, it’s hard to hate what Johnson does put on the screen. By this point, Craig has so fully developed Blanc that he makes his presence known even in a diminished role and he makes the most of every opportunity to do a goofy pratfall or deliver an idiosyncratic observation. Likewise, Johnson gets maximum effect from O’Connor’s face, turning the same beaming boyish smile that made his character in Challengers such a convincing grifter into a countenance that radiates with kindness.

Is a sincere call for Christian charity what people want from a Benoit Blanc mystery? The answer to that question depends on your response to a moment midway through the film when Jud phones a parishioner to get a key piece of information. If you are moved by Jud’s decision to ignore the mystery to comfort the grieving woman, then you’ll love the way Wake Up Dead Man has matured the series. But if you, like Blanc, get annoyed that mystery has been subordinated to religious devotion, then you’ll feel that Johnson has broken his own franchise.

Wake Up Dead Man streams on Netflix on Dec. 12, 2025.

John Cena: The WWE Legend Who Never Feared Risks or Failure

How does one sum up the career of a pro-wrestling icon like John Cena, especially when he is always claiming we can’t see him? By remembering what once was, and not by the end—which by many standards has been flat and featured unnecessarily convoluted stories for someone who was not on every TV show each week.

Cena is finishing up his legendary WWE career at Saturday Night’s Main Event on Dec. 13 in Washington D.C., his opponent still unknown. And unlike many who have hung on too long, Cena has found a viable career as an actor, showing some range, going from comedies, like Ricky Stanicky and Blockers, to action (Freelance and Heads of State), to drama, in Legendary—definitely a less mainstream movie and early proof that he could act. So it’s not as if the world is done with Cena. He just swears he is done in the ring. Though in pro wrestling, retirement rarely sticks. Just ask Ric Flair, Shawn Michaels, or The Undertaker.

The Time Is Now. 

The above has been one of the multiple catchphrases / T-shirts for Cena through the years. It fits.

“I’m not going out on my own terms. If I could do this in infinity, I would do it… I made a promise to the fan base when I started that when I got a step slower, I gotta walk away,” Cena said during a WWE podcast in November 2025. At the time he was doing the media rounds, saying goodbye one city at a time. “Yeah, I could probably squeeze out more matches, but at what cost? I do harm to myself, I do harm to the product, and you as a fan—who’s allowed me the opportunity for over two decades to spend time with you—you leave feeling bad or sad. No, I want everyone to be happy.”

Certainly WWE and its owners, TKO Group Holdings, are happy. There have been plenty of moments to exploit Cena’s last ride financially, with merchandise unique to every stop alongside ever-increasing ticket prices.

If you check the closet of your favorite WWE fan, you might find lots of other Cena sayings on brightly colored T-shirts: Word Life; Hustle, Respect, Loyalty; The Champ is Here; Rise Above Hate; Never Give Up; My Time is Now!; You Can’t See Me! These were words to live by for some, and eye-rolling cliches to others.

For the uninitiated, Cena was born April 23, 1977, and grew up in West Newbury, Massachusetts, the second of five boys, but he was so heavily into football that he never really understood the love of pro wrestling that his father, John Sr., had for the performance art; John Sr. would even act as a manager at ringside in New England. 

John Jr.’s rebelliousness against the traditional white-picket fence life, with his love of rap music, funky clothes, and his tricked-out Chevy Nova, forced him into the gym at age 14—and 125 pounds—just to be able to protect himself. By 18, he was entering small-time bodybuilding contests.

After graduating from Springfield College, a Division III NCAA school, where he studied exercise physiology and played on the offensive line in football, he wanted a change of scenery and took off for Los Angeles. There he landed a role in 2000’s Manhunt TV show as Big Tim Kingman, a reality show (which WWE co-produced) where the contestants were dropped off on an island and challenged to survive against hunters with paint guns. 

While employed at Gold’s Gym in Venice, California, someone suggested wrestling and directed him to the LA-based Ultimate Pro Wrestling school. His sculpted look, complete with square jaw, blue eyes and blond Mohawk on his six-foot-one, 240-pound frame helped him stand out.

One of his best friends there was Samoa Joe (Joe Seanos), whom he credited as one of  the grandfathers of Cena’s Thuganomics. 

“Way back in the early days when we started, we would stay awake on road trips by freestyling. When we weren’t on road trips we would be at his house and his mom would cook us Samoan BBQ and we would eat so much we would pass out. We would sit around outside and freestyle,” Cena told SlamWrestling in 2005 during an appearance in Calgary.

His schooling in the WWE style of wrestling started in Ohio Valley Wrestling where he was the Prototype. It was a promising class, featuring future stars such as Dave Bautista, Randy Orton, and Brock Lesnar.

In 2002, he debuted in the WWE, initially as a clean-cut, small town hero. That morphed through a combination of his desires and his skills into the gangsta Cena with bling, throwback jerseys, and baggy pants. He admitted to Men’s Fitness in 2005 that the transition took guts. 

“I’m not afraid to fail. A lot of the guys get shook up about doing things wrong. I get shook up about not trying enough shit. I’m not afraid to try something new and look stupid. As soon as they let me rap on Smackdown, I ran with it. That doesn’t mean I’m any better or smarter than anyone else—just more likely to take chances.” His rap album, You Can’t See Me, dropped in May 2005. 

But the respect didn’t come his way from the look or the at-times weak-looking, hokey in-ring shenanigans that might involve rap; it came from the muscle. The visual of Cena with the 500-pound Big Show on his shoulders probably did more for his career than anything else. 

“He is one of the strongest guys I’ve stepped in the ring [with],” Orton told his hometown St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 2009. “Pound for pound, I think he is the strongest. The way he trains, his discipline, he keeps getting better every year.”

Cena always maintained it is an honest physique. “I never have tried steroids, but no matter how much I say that, nobody is gonna believe it, so I’ve given up,” he said in WWE Unscripted. “I’ve been accused of taking anabolics since I was 16. As a matter of fact, I had a urinalysis in prep school because I went from about 150 pounds to 225 in a matter of like six months.”

Come 2004, Cena was in the WWE main event picture, winning the world titles on both brands on numerous occasions. In a worked sport—never call it “fake” in front of wrestling fans—he holds the most world championship title reigns at 17 (14 WWE championships and three World Heavyweight championships if you are counting), and only just became the 25th person to complete a WWE Grand Slam, meaning he’s won every title available.

In the age of sports entertainment, fans never felt obliged to cheer for the hero simply because he’s the hero—and this was in the PG era of WWE, having moved past the groundbreaking rude, crude Attitude Era of the late ‘90s and 2000s. As the villains tried so hard to be popular, and sell their own merchandise, Cena had a polarizing effect on the WWE fan base. Many women and children adored him, shrieking and celebrating his every move and catchphrase; others had a more complex reaction, often refusing to wholeheartedly support Cena.

“Any reaction is a great reaction. That’s what you’re out there for—to get a reaction, whether it’s positive, negative, or in between,” said former WWE agent Gerry Brisco. “He’s doing his job. He’s getting you involved in it, whether you boo him or cheer him.”

In 2018, Cena received the Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award for his many charitable efforts, including visiting U.S. troops, anti-bullying, and fighting cancer. But the real salute goes to his neverending support of the Make-A-Wish Foundation history, and he was the first to grant 500 wishes and that number continues to climb.

In pro wrestling terms, a “babyface” is the good guy, with fans coming to support their hero against the villain, known as a “heel.”

“Babyface and heel. I hate those terms. As long as you have something that you can hold on to, people will attach themselves to that. It’s really not even a clean-cut distinction anymore,” Cena ranted to this writer in 2009.

Yet time and time again, Cena was brought up by his peers as the epitome of a babyface.

“I’m lucky enough to kind of be myself, so if it was one of those things, let’s say playing a superhero on TV, and I’m really not that way in real life,” he told me. “My work ethic, my value system, everything is pretty much as is that you see on TV, that happens off camera. It’s pretty easy, it’s not too much of a stretch for me. If you meet me outside of this, I’m pretty much the same way as I am on television.”

That quote didn’t age well, as fans are more likely to see him as the homicidal yet true-to-his-beliefs Peacemaker in the DC Universe than WWE, or in a movie playing an overprotective father (Blockers). He gained a whole different audience through Total Bellas, a reality show on E! that had him engaged to Nikki Bella.

Cena himself aged reasonably well, putting most 48-year-olds to shame. He was upfront about a hair transplant in 2024 too. “As I was trying to hide my hair loss, the audience was bringing it to light,” he told CNN. “I saw their signs that said ‘The bald John Cena.’ They pushed me into going to see what my options were.”

Since 2016, Cena has been rather sporadic in his in-ring appearances, even more in regard to actually wrestling and not just popping the crowd. As happened with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, there was some resentment from both fans and wrestlers about non-full-time wrestlers parachuting into WWE—in fact, that was part of the storyline between Rock and Cena for WrestleMania in 2012 (naturally, billed as “Once in a Lifetime”) and again in 2013. Cena delivered a zinger against the Rock’s periodic demands for attention: “Then he left and came back again, then he left again, then he came back again.”

Cena went bad near the start of the end run, when he turned on Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes at the Elimination Chamber special in Toronto last March. That same Rock had apparently, in storyline purposes, convinced Cena to be a villain … and then we couldn’t see Rock any longer, so the tale had no conclusion.

But this one does. 

Barring a plot twist—this is pro wrestling, after all—the last time the WWE Universe will see John Cena in the ring, wrestling, is Dec. 13. 

Upcoming Movies in 2026: The Most Anticipated Films of Next Year

It feels strange to be talking about 2026 movies when we haven’t even escaped 2025 yet, but here we are! What makes the coming 12 months notable is that it might be the first full calendar year in which the cycle of film production and distribution has not been suffering residual effects from the pandemic in 2020/2021 or the writers’ and actors’ strikes in 2023. As a result, one glance at the upcoming release schedule indicates that 2026 could be the most packed year at the multiplex in a long time.

Even narrowing this list down to fewer than 20 entries was difficult, and the films we list below show the breadth of releases coming our way: everything from Gothic romances to mythological epics to make-or-break superhero spectaculars. As William Goldman famously said, nobody knows anything, so each of the movies in our survey holds the potential for massive success or catastrophic failure. Whatever happens, we’ll be there for each one.

Jack O'Connell in 28 Years Later Trailer
Sony Pictures

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple

January 16

After taking (ahem) 23 years off between installments, Danny Boyle and Alex Garland are continuing 28 Years Later‘s sordid legacy in faster succession, albeit this time with fresh blood. Candyman and Hedda helmer Nia DaCosta picks up the directorial reins in 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, a movie which filmed simultaneously with last June’s zombie showdown. The new movie continues the story of Ralph Fiennes’ enigmatic good(ish?) doctor obsessed with memento mori and what happens to young Spike (Alfie Williams) when he falls into a band of “Jimmies,” led by Jack O’Connell’s eerily chipper and self-christened St. Jimmy.

In an exclusive preview with Den of Geek, DaCosta hinted, “You have these two trains on a track, essentially, that are going to collide. They’re going to end up with these two worlds in a clash, because you kind of feel that Spike and Kelson are going to interact again.”

Warner Bros. Pictures

Wuthering Heights

February 13

The always-provocative filmmaker Emerald Fennell is following up her Oscar-winning Promising Young Woman and divisive Saltburn with a splashy adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic 1847 Gothic romance, and it stars no less than Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff. The castings are already raising eyebrows, with the latter earning accusations of whitewashing a literary character of famously ambiguous origin. But by working from source material that was considered scandalously edgy in its time, we can expect Fennell to welcome it all while amping up the tale’s eroticism and psychological melodrama—and with lots of heaving chests and Charli XCX songs if the trailer is anything to go by. In other words, don’t expect your high school teacher’s Wuthering Heights.

Jessie Buckley in The Bride!
Warner Bros. Pictures

The Bride!

March 6

Maggie Gyllenhaal’s second outing as a director is a wild pivot from 2021’s The Lost Daughter: it’s been described as a musical, a satire, and an homage to The Bride of Frankenstein. Set in 1930s Chicago, the film finds Frankenstein’s Monster (Christian Bale) asking Dr. Euphronius (Annette Bening) to create a companion for him, which arrives in the form of the Bride (Jessie Buckley). What happens from there involves murder, mayhem, and, er, social change. It seems a gamble by Warners, but a bold one given the amount of talent involved, as well as the fact that Mary Shelley reworkings seem to be in season if Poor Things and Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein are anything to go by.

Ryan Gosling in Project Hail Mary
Amazon MGM

Project Hail Mary

March 20

Phil Lord and Christopher Miller are at last in the director’s chairs again for a live-action film after they were dismissed from Solo: A Star Wars Story in 2018. (Their last completed live-action effort, 22 Jump Street, came out in 2014.) This time, though, the newly Spider-Verse emboldened duo is adapting Andy Weir’s sci-fi bestseller. The movie stars Ryan Gosling as a man who wakes up on an interstellar ship with no recollection of how he got there. And soon he learns that he is the last hope for humanity. The marketing promises a high-concept adventure with plenty of thrills, humor, and that ol’ Gosling charm. The Weir connection also suggests this is particularly well-suited to the screen. See Ridley Scott’s adaptation of The Martian for more.

Rosalina in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie
Universal Pictures

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie

April 3

After 2023’s The Super Mario Bros. Movie became the most successful video game-based movie of all time (nearly $1.4 billion worldwide), there was no doubt that Illumination and Nintendo would immediately greenlight a sequel. And while the plot remains under wraps, any gamer with passing familiarity with the Nintendo Wii’s beloved Super Mario Galaxy is already expecting gravity-bending visuals and out-of-this-world shenanigans for the plumber brothers. Chris Pratt, Anya Taylor-Joy, Jack Black, Charlie Day, and Keegan-Michael Key are all returning to their signature roles from the first film, while Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic are again directing.

Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep in Devil Wears Prada 2
20th Century Studios / Disney

The Devil Wears Prada 2

May 1

It’s time to get the devil her due, because Miranda Priestly is back in the long-rumored and hoped-for The Devil Wears Prada 2. Story details remain relatively tight-lipped, but we do know that despite having very different lanes of journalism in their purviews, Meryl Streep’s ice queen and Anne Hathaway’s Andy Sachs wind up in the same room again. The Dave Frankel-directed film also features the return of fan-favorite characters played by Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci.

Karl Urban as Johnny Cage in Mortal Kombat II
Warner Bros. Pictures

Mortal Kombat II

May 8

Mortal Kombat II has certainly risen in the ranks of expectations. A sequel to the pretty-looking but somewhat divisively-received 2021 reboot of the franchise, Mortal Kombat, this sequel was originally pegged to be an October release date. But after enthusiastic test screenings and buzzy word-of-mouth, WB apparently got bullish about the Simon McQuoid-directed joint and moved the fighter to May of next year. It probably helps that the intended R-rated spectacle is bringing in a lot of fan-favorite characters and setups, including Karl Urban as an over-the-hill Johnny Cage who gets recruited into the titular tournament after his career as a movie star falls on hard times.

“The point where we find Johnny in this movie is very relatable to everybody, because he’s on the back foot in life,” Urban tells us in an exclusive cover story interview. “His career is in the tank, the world’s forgotten him, and he’s at a real low point. His confidence has been knocked, and it is at this very juncture that he is called upon to be at his best and to use his skillset to defend Earthrealm.” That leads to stunt work which the star teases has both humor and dexterity. “You also see specifically Van Damme, who in my opinion, was phenomenal, and Jackie Chan, who I drew huge inspiration from for the tone of some of Johnny Cage’s fights.”

The Mandalorian and Grogu Movie
Lucasfilm / Disney

Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu

May 22

It will be nearly seven years since a Star Wars movie blasted across the big screen by the time this comes out, which is hopefully long enough for the bad taste left by The Rise of Skywalker to have disappeared. Either way, director Jon Favreau and co-writer Dave Filoni’s new film is set to answer a hard question for the franchise: will vast amounts of people come out for a story that requires viewing at least one, if not two, shows that aired on Disney+? A little Pedro Pascal charisma, even in a mask, can’t hurt. Meanwhile, the Lucasfilm braintrust appears to be betting that there’s enough good faith—and enough fans still in love with Baby Yoda—to restore this aging franchise to cinematic glory.

Steven Spielberg at Hamnet premiere
Photo by Rodin Eckenroth / Getty Images

Untitled Steven Spielberg Movie

June 12

While Steven Spielberg is not the box office or cultural powerhouse that he was in previous decades, there is no question that the mind races with possibilities at the thought of what this movie could be. Here’s what we know: it’s a science fiction film, reportedly having something to do with UFOs, that’s based on an idea Spielberg personally had before handing it off to his go-to blockbuster scribe, David Koepp. Keep in mind that Spielberg also dreamed up the original concepts for Close Encounters and E.T. Furthermore, the cast—including Emily Blunt, Colman Domingo, Josh O’Connor, and Colin Firth—is top-notch. And the idea of Spielberg returning to a genre that has provided us with so many classic films is enough to get us there opening day.

Woody and Buzz in Toy Story 5
Pixar / Disney

Toy Story 5

June 19

What do you do when you make a near-perfect trilogy of animated films? Why, you keep going, of course! And if you thought that Toy Story 4 was a risky add-on, then you’re probably even more fretful over Toy Story 5. But Pixar, in a bit of a slump these days, is going back to its original franchise one more time with Woody, Buzz, Jessie, Forky, and all the rest returning. This time, the gang must fight for Bonnie’s attention with a tablet named Lilypad (Anna Faris)—setting up a clash between toys and tech that has no doubt gripped many households in recent years.

Milly alcock in superman ending
Warner Bros. Pictures

Supergirl

June 26

In some sense, Supergirl might be more of a test of James Gunn’s DC Studios than even 2025’s Superman. While that DCU kickoff had a lot to prove, Supergirl is the first follow-up to gauge how much audiences bought in, including to a cliffhanger of Milly Alcock’s party gal Kryptonian. Luckily, this spinoff is based on one of the best superhero stories of the decade, Tom King and Bilquis Evely’s Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, which finds a far more haunted Kara Zor-El than CW fans might remember. It also comes from director Craig Gillespie, who’s had success in left-of-center genre-benders like I, Tonya, Cruella, and Lars and the Real Girl. Together with Alcock and Jason Momoa (as… Lobo?!), this one could have a whole different vibe.

Matt Damon wearing ancient Greek armour in the first look at Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey

The Odyssey

July 17

How do you follow up a three-hour, billion-dollar-grossing, Best Picture-winning historical drama about the invention of the atomic bomb? With an epic film based on an ancient Greek myth, naturally. Fantasy and mythology movies tend to sink at the box office unless the name Tolkien is attached to them, but if anyone can turn Homer’s landmark of Greek literature into box office gold, it’s Christopher Nolan, who did the same for a tormented nuclear physicist in Oppenheimer. As usual, the cast—led by Matt Damon as Odysseus—is stacked, and Nolan is perhaps the only director aside from James Cameron whose name alone puts butts in seats. Whatever The Odyssey ends up being, we don’t expect to call it modest.

Spider-Man
Sony Pictures

Spider-Man: Brand New Day

July 31

Following up the $1.9 billion-grossing Spider-Man: No Way Home is no easy feat, but the MCU’s Tom Holland-led iteration of your friendly neighborhood webslinger seems to be one of the few bright spots of Marvel’s post-Infinity Saga daze. The usual rumors persist about villains, storylines, multiverse variants, and the like, but all we really know is that Spidey will once again be supported by other MCU favorites like Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk and Jon Bernthal’s Punisher, while the identity and exact nature of the main antagonist remain unknown. Destin Daniel Cretton (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings) replaces Jon Watts behind the camera for this one, and Stranger Things’ Sadie Sink joins returning cast members Zendaya and Jacob Batalon. Perhaps most interestingly, it’s speculated that this is Holland’s last non-Avengers stint in the red and blue suit.

Tom Cruise and Iñárritu at Governors Ball
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Untitled Cruise/Iñárritu Film

October 2

We know even less about this movie than Spielberg’s, but it’s notable for two reasons: it’s a new work by Birdman and The Revenant director Alejandro G. Iñárritu, and it’s Tom Cruise’s first original film in eight years, following his recent run of Top Gun/Mission: Impossible sequels. The supporting cast is also excellent, including Jesse Plemons, Sandra Hüller, Riz Ahmed, John Goodman, Michael Stuhlbarg, and others. Shot in VistaVision, it’s said to be a black comedy about a man who sets out to save humanity after nearly destroying it. And that’s all we’ve got—except that the pairing of star and director may indicate a new phase of both their careers.

Joseph Zada as Haymitch Abernathy in The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping. Photo Credit: Murray Close
Lionsgate

The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping

November 20

With the success of 2023’s The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, Lionsgate and director Francis Lawrence adapting Suzanne Collins’ next prequel novel, Sunrise on the Reaping, is a smart bet. Set some four decades after Songbirds & Snakes, and just 24 years before the events of The Hunger Games (2012), this film stars Joseph Zada as a young Haymitch Abernathy (Woody Harrelson in the original movies) as he competes and (no spoiler) wins in the 50th Hunger Games. Yet the trials and tragedies he faces along the way have made this novel a fan favorite since its publication. Once again, the story’s young tributes will be supported by all-star veterans, including Jesse Plemons, Ralph Fiennes, Kieran Culkin, Elle Fanning, and Glenn Close. Meanwhile, Mckenna Grace plays Maysilee Donner, a young tribute who has captured the minds of millions of readers.

Poster for Avengers: Doomsday

Avengers: Doomsday

December 18

This is it: high noon for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. This is the one that features the return of Infinity War/Endgame directors Anthony and Joe Russo, Robert Downey Jr. coming back not as Iron Man but Doctor Doom, the inclusion of the OG Fox X-Men cast, the rumored appearance of everyone from Chris Evans to Ryan Reynolds… and it all adds up to either a Hail Mary pass of titanic proportions or a glorious relaunch to box office dominance. Don’t let the reports of an unfinished script or extended reshoots fool you; Marvel can pull this off—they’ve done so in the past—but the question is whether the Avengers brand still has the power to bring the MCU back from its recent decline.

Timothee Chalamet in Dune 2 Review
WB

Dune: Part Three

December 18

Denis Villeneuve’s first two Dune movies were arguably the most epic, visionary genre releases since Peter Jackson bestowed The Lord of the Rings on us 20 years earlier. But concluding a trilogy has been the downfall of many a filmmaker, and Villeneuve faces a formidable task here. The movie will ostensibly be based on Frank Herbert’s Dune Messiah, a very different story from the original and in many ways a more difficult one to imagine as a film. But if Villeneuve keeps the core of the novel—the willful self-destruction of Paul Atreides—intact, he can stick this landing like a breaking Shai-Hulud. We’re rooting for him all the way.

Robert Eggers on Nosferatu Set
Focus Features

Werwulf

December 25

With his four previous movies, writer/director Robert Eggers has proven himself as the master of grim, atmospheric period horror (yes, even The Northman was a horror story in its own way). He immerses us in barbaric worlds of the past like no other filmmaker currently working. Having conquered the most seminal of vampire tales with Nosferatu, he’s now turning his attention to lycanthropy with what he himself calls “the darkest thing I have ever written,” an original werewolf story set in 13th-century England. Blood, gore, mud, and disease? Sounds like Eggers is going to have us howling in terror when this thing crawls toward holiday theaters.

A24’s The Drama Trailer Dares You to Pretend Robert Pattinson and Zendaya Have No Rizz

Robert Pattinson and Zendaya are two of the most attractive people in Hollywood. And one’s wedding day is such an important event, an event that involves so many professional beauticians and photographers, that even schlubs look like stars for a bit. So why in the world do Pattinson and Zendaya look so weird in the trailer for their upcoming film, The Drama?

Set to the ’90s earworm “I Love You Always Forever” by Donna Lewis, the trailer largely features the soon-to-be newlyweds played by Zendaya and Pattinson shooting their engagement photos. When the photographer tries to get the duo to warm up, she asks them what they like about one another, to which they respond with sweet nothings. Yet every couple of seconds, we see images suggesting something deeper and darker going on between the two, including shots of Zendaya slapping Pattinson while in bed, and the two starring at each other in fear. As a result, the incredibly charismatic couple look stiff and weird.

The trailer isn’t giving away the reason for the disconnect, which likely be the focus of The Drama. Movies about marriages have taught us that all sorts of things can go wrong on the way to matrimony, whether it be feuding parties (Bride Wars, You Are Cordially Invited), interlopers interrupting (My Best Friend’s Wedding, Palm Springs), or whatever the heck happened in Very Bad Things.

All possibilities are on the table for The Drama, given the force behind the camera. Not only is The Drama an A24 film produced by Ari Aster, a guy who really loves stories about things going horribly wrong, but it’s directed by Norwegian filmmaker Kristoffer Borgli. Borgli specializes in high-concept films that go to absurd places, as demonstrated by his English-language debut, Dream Scenario. Dream Scenario starred Nicolas Cage as a nondescript man who somehow started appearing in the dreams of other people, making him a minor celebrity.

For most American moviegoers, Dream Scenario gives us our best idea of what The Drama can be, for better or worse. Although that film had a fantastic performance from Cage and some compelling visuals, it devolved into a fairly trite comment upon cancel culture, falling well short of the premise’s potential.

Will The Drama be able to avoid that film’s mistakes? The stars’ recent work provides no clear path. Although Pattinson and Zendaya are two of the most compelling actors working today, and both will appear together soon in both Dune: Part Three and The Odyssey, not everything has hit. Zendaya already did a tense relationship drama with Malcolm & Marie, alongside Pattinson’s Tenet co-star John David Washington—a film roundly mocked by viewers and then forgotten. Pattinson appeared as another husband in a doomed relationship in Lynn Ramsay’s Die My Love, but reception to that film has been very mixed.

Yet even in a bad movie, Pattinson and Zendaya have enough star power to draw an audience. Will that audience come, even if the couple is trying to be as weird as possible? We’ll find out when The Drama hits theaters.

The Drama releases April 3, 2026.

Ella McCay Review: A ’90s Dramedy Throwback Without the Drama or Comedy

Why do they not make movies like the old days? It’s a refrain we hear time and again, be it among critic groups, awards voters, or vocal Letterboxd users looking for a fight. The broad sentiment can go back to the silent stars of yesteryear, reminiscing about an era before the pictures got small, but these days it’s more generally associated with the type of winsome, adult-skewing, and proudly middlebrow dramas that were a dime an Oscar-winning dozen during the ‘80s, ‘90s, and somewhere into the mid-2000s—all while IP tentpoles encroached ever further across the movie release calendar.

Kids who grew up in those decades remember it fondly, and those who were adults at the time hold on to it even tighter since they were the ones making ‘em. James L. Brooks is one such moviemaker, and he has the Oscars to prove it, courtesy of classics like Broadcast News and As Good as It Gets. Alas, it’s easier to forget he was also there for the dramedy’s decline when would-be, feel-good, weepy-laughers like Spanglish and How Do You Know withered on the vine until only a maudlin husk was left.

It gives me no pleasure to report, then, that Brooks’ intended triumphant return to the director’s chair at the age of 85 via Ella McCay recalls more of the filmmaker’s latter saccharine era than his early successes. Right down to its title, Ella McCay is meant to be something of an anachronism, remembering a time when audiences would turn up to pictures named after characters like Erin Brockovich or Jerry Maguire (the latter also produced by Brooks). Granted, both of those were vehicles for movie stars, but if Ella McCay does one thing right, it’s to convince the viewer that Emma Mackey deserves a chance to become one. Unfortunately, this movie is not it.

Among Ella’s strongest assets is a game ensemble, led by a French-English actress gifted enough to convince any viewer that she is an all-American working gal trying to make her way in a skeptical man’s world that’s still as condescending and unserious as when Mary Tyler Moore had to conquer the same paper tigers in another Brooks Boomer touchstone of the TV variety.

Ella McCay seems determined to be a kind of heir (or perhaps bookend?) to that seminal series where another generation of women must push, scrabble, laugh, and proverbially scream their way to the top. And in moments where Mackey literalizes this by hollering her frustrations at the urging of her tough-as-nails Aunt Helen (Jamie Lee Curtis with equal parts twinkle, steel, and syrup), McCay finds the right equilibrium between charm and schmaltz.

That alchemy fizzles, though, whenever Ella leaves auntie’s home, and even worse when the movie abandons its eponymous character for its litany of supporting players and surplus of subplots, none of which are as funny as Brooks’ creaky screenplay believes.

Julie Kavner, another Brooks veteran, attempts to hold it together with the kind of godmotherly voiceover narration that might have followed around Meg Ryan or Macaulay Culkin once upon a time, and she introduces us to Ella (Mackey) on the precipice of triumph and sorrow. When we meet her, she is the lieutenant governor of an unnamed state in 2009 (back when “we all still liked each other,” according to a narrator who doesn’t seem to remember birthers). Ella apparently earned her post due to her tireless work ethic and by being the wonk behind a smooth talking empty suit with that retail, human touch, Governor Bill (Albert Brooks, appropriately avuncular even when showing his hidden shark fin).

It seems Governor Bill is about to be appointed to the Obama administration’s cabinet, which means wunderkind Ella is going to achieve something she is told she could never do on her own: power. It should be her crowning moment, alas she has 99 problems that explain why she cannot enjoy it, and the men in her life are all of them—especially husband Ryan (Jack Lowden). Friendly, outgoing, and hopelessly needy, the incoming first husband is apparently dim enough to not know the nepotism of appointing a spouse or family member to a government position is illegal (at least back then). Worse, we are informed a journalist is sniffing around the fact that the new governor and her husband used to take long lunches in a state capital apartment, which is just tawdry enough to derail an ambitious agenda.

That alone should probably be enough to fill the dramatic and humorous heft of a busy new governor’s plate. But Brooks’ script also makes the inexplicable choice to jump back and forth between the past of Ella’s teenage years with her unfaithful, deadbeat Dad (Woody Harrelson) and the even odder choice to shoehorn in a tangent about Ella’s little brother Casey (Spike Fearn) in the present. In a bizarre approximation of comic relief, or for that matter the human condition, Casey spends his days dominating sports betting websites and suffering from an agoraphobia so severe that he presumably has never left the house in his whole life. Otherwise there would be no way to account for the character acting like a sheltered eight-year-old while interacting with his sister, the cops outside, or his ex (Ayo Edebiri, so wasted that one wonders if she has gambling debts of her own to explain the appearance).

Ella McCay not only struggles to balance these narrative threads but seems eerily convinced of their mirth since the film pauses time and again for a round of audience laughter that never comes. Nearly every big beat—be it Curtis or Kavner gesticulating a punchline with the waving hand motions for a phantom laugh track, or a running gag about Ella’s nerdy passion and fortitude putting all the other lazy politicians to sleep—feel like bits that came from a different medium and decade. Indeed, Kavner worked with Brooks on the sitcom classic Rhonda, but given how inauthentic most of the characters read on screen, this stuff might better play on Mork and Mindy. I’d certainly buy a few of them are from different planets.

Obviously the movie is attempting to reach for a screwball energy that Brooks used to weave in and out of his darker, more grounded workplace insights. But that only works if the movie is actually funny. As it is, everything simply comes across as screwy.

There is some notion about offering a paean to the bridge-builders, and those who know how to get things done in a world that still functioned by the rules of the road, but it seems mostly stitched together by Kavner’s treacly voiceover narration, and admittedly the handful of performances that work even when they’re handed groaners: Curtis, Albert Brooks, Mackey, and Kumail Nanjiani in a role so superfluous it doesn’t even register in the synopsis.

Sometimes it’s a shame they don’t make ‘em like they used to. But sometimes it’s a blessing.

Ella McCay is in theaters on Dec. 12.

Whistle: Inside Shudder and Dafne Keen’s Sinister New Curse Movie

This article appears in the new issue of DEN OF GEEK magazine. You can read all of our magazine stories here.

Every generation gets the monster it deserves. For the Victorians, it was mad scientist Victor Frankenstein or regal bloodsucker Count Dracula; in the 1980s, Jason Voorhees and Freddy Krueger violated safe suburban and summer camp spaces; and the 2000s saw the rise of torture porn franchises such as Saw, which reflected a nation’s debates about “enhanced interrogation” techniques.

With their new horror film Whistle, director Corin Hardy and writer Owen Egerton give teens of today their own nightmare in the form of visions summoned by an Aztec death whistle. A ghastly object with a grinning skull on one end and a thick, ugly pipe protruding from the other, the whistle is (loosely) inspired by real artifacts, and in this movie, it brings death via monstrous apparitions to anyone who hears its call. Nasty as these visions are, it’s the whistle itself that first strikes fear into the heart of the viewer.

“I knew it was like a leading character,” Hardy explains about the titular object. “It’s on screen throughout the movie and needs to hold up. So we went through maybe 50 or 60 designs, googling ‘death whistle’ and finding some pretty strange, creepy-looking things. Some are very simple bone carvings, others are elaborate or abstract.”

Image from the Shudder Movie Whistle
Michael Gibson, Courtesy of Independent Film Company / Shudder

Hardy went so far as to enlist the help of Spanish designer Daniel Carrasco, whose credits include Crimson Peak and The Substance. Carrasco helped Hardy go through the designs, a process the director likens to “auditioning a cast member.”

“I didn’t want just an object that looked evil, with a nasty face. I wanted something that could take on a different personality in different types of light,” Hardy says. “Throughout Whistle, you see different environments, sometimes flames are reflecting on it, or sometimes light from a pool. Sometimes, I would light it with a torch to give it a vacant look. It could almost look enticing.”

The whistle looks particularly enticing to the teenagers who populate Whistle. Logan standout Dafne Keen stars as Chrysanthemum, Chrys for short, a troubled youth who comes to live with her cousin Rel (Sky Yang) in a steel town after a personal tragedy. As Chrys tries to navigate her new environment, she finds a kindred spirit in the sweet Ellie (Sophie Nélisse), but must also contend with a pair of jock bullies (Jhaleil Swaby and Mika Amonsen) and mean girl Grace (Ali Skovbye).

Things only get worse when Chrys is assigned a locker that previously belonged to a basketball star who died under mysterious circumstances. There she discovers a whistle inside, which, once blown, will cause six teens to face the unthinkable (or, at least unthinkable for adolescents with their whole lives ahead of them): a vision of their predestined deaths from decades down the road racing up to them in the here and now.

But then, forcing the young and seemingly invincible to face their mortality is the central appeal of teen horror.

Says Egerton: “One of the fascinating things about being in high school is that you start to discover that maybe you’re mortal, and you find something that represents death and begin flirting with it, whether it’s a Ouija board or drag racing.” In the screenwriter’s mind, this attraction to death extends from a youth’s embrace of life. “There’s just so much passion and heart and confusion happening in high school,” he continues. “I think Corin and I are both drawn to stories that have just as much death as they do life, and there’s a lot of that in high school years.”

For Hardy, Whistle’s high school setting forced him to rethink his approach to casting.

“This is different from everything I’ve done,” says the director, who previously helmed the Conjuring spinoff The Nun and served as showrunner for the action series Gangs of London. “I was looking at films like The Breakfast Club or The Lost Boys and searching for a group of up-and-coming actors who bubble with energy together. I wanted people who would make me feel excited about the prospect of seeing them do a movie together.”

Hardy found those newcomers in Keen, still hot off reprising her role as X-23/Laura from Deadpool & Wolverine, as well as appearing in Star Wars series The Acolyte, as well as Nélisse, one of the standouts in Showtime’s Yellowjackets. But Whistle isn’t just about the kids, as Hardy has assembled an impressive cast of veteran actors, including genre mainstay Nick Frost as a likable teacher and Michelle Fairley of Game of Thrones fame as a cancer patient with a connection to the whistle.

Image from Shudder movie Whistle of curse
Michael Gibson, Courtesy of Independent Film Company / Shudder

Like every great horror movie, the true appeal of Whistle comes in the nasty deaths its titular instrument calls forth. Whistle doesn’t just follow Final Destination and Fear Street in its themes of young people facing mortality, but also in the creative ways it dispatches its vivacious stars. One standout set piece sees a victim pursued through an elaborate labyrinth by their older self before perishing of old age while only 17. Another recalls a classic Nightmare on Elm Street kill, with the victim’s parents pounding on the door as the monster twists the teen’s body into horrific configurations.

Memorable as they are, neither the kills nor the cast of future genre greats are the true stars of Whistle. Rather, it’s the titular object itself, which beckons horror fans to give it a try.

Whistle opens in theaters on Feb. 6. This article contained reporting by David Crow.

Marvel’s Wonder Man: A Timeline of the Iconic Ionic Hero

This article appears in the new issue of DEN OF GEEK magazine. You can read all of our magazine stories here.

“For now they kill me with a living death.” – King Richard III, William Shakespeare.

Death and rebirth have been the only constants in the ever-shifting life of Simon Williams, a.k.a. Wonder Man. Long before Marvel Comics killed Dark Phoenix or Captain Marvel, Wonder Man was offed in the Silver Age pages of The Avengers and brought back in the Bronze Age. And then killed again. And brought back again. And… well, you get the idea.

To show you how Simon went from a dead corporate supervillain to a living showbiz superhero, we’ve enlisted comic book luminaries Steve Englehart and David Michelinie, along with Andrew Guest, showrunner of Marvel’s Wonder Man on Disney+, to narrate this timeline of Wonder Man milestones.

1964: The Avengers #9

Simon Williams, who undergoes an ionic energy procedure to gain superpowers from Baron Zemo, debuts as a vengeful competitor of Tony Stark. Williams fights back and dies in battle alongside the Avengers.

Showrunner Andrew Guest on the real-life origin of TV’s Wonder Man: “Destin Daniel Cretton turned to his producing partner Jonathan Schwartz and said, ‘We should do a show where Trevor Slattery goes to Hollywood.’ But there was a competing project where Stephen Broussard and Brian Gay were doing a Wonder Man series set there. At a certain point, they were like, ‘Well, maybe it’s the same show!'”

1975-1976: The Avengers #131-151

At first, Wonder Man only returns as a zombified member of the Legion of the Unliving. Twenty issues later, he finally makes his long-standing return to life, switching to the side of good by eventually joining the Avengers.

Writer Steve Englehart: “I was intrigued by the idea of a guy who had been dead and who, when he came back to life, knew it. Bringing back Wonder Man was just something I wanted to explore; I wasn’t told to do it.”

Showrunner Andrew Guest on Wonder Man’s complex comic book history: “We made every effort to make this a no-homework show. If somebody has never seen another piece of Marvel material in their lives, you don’t need that to start caring about these characters.”

1979: The Avengers #181 

Struggling to acclimate to the Avengers lifestyle, Simon tells his burgeoning bestie Beast that he wants to become an actor. This opens up a new chapter for Wonder Man, one that still defines him to this day.

Writer David Michelinie: “He wasn’t the kind who goes around looking for bad guys to fight, so he needed something else to pursue. I thought a struggling actor would be more realistic and believable than an instant Oscar-winning superstar. It would also be more fun to write—and, I hoped, to read.”

1984-2025: West Coast Avengers, Force Works, and More

An established actor and Avenger in the ‘80s, the specter of death claims Simon yet again in the ‘90s. Luckily, he’s resurrected within the same decade and hasn’t died again… yet!

Writer Steve Englehart: “Editor Mark Gruenwald and I designed Wonder Man’s red and green costume, with the ‘W’ and ‘M,’ and we both thought it was fantastic.”

Showrunner Andrew Guest on the MCU Wonder Man’s look: “This was an opportunity where Brad Winderbaum [Wonder Man EP and Marvel development exec] was particularly excited to do an old version of this character’s costume. Every time they’ve done a project, they have to reimagine it, but this time it’s his real comic book look.”

2026: Marvel Studios’ Wonder Man

Simon Williams (Yahya Abdul-Mayeen II) lives in an MCU where Wonder Man is the struggling actor’s favorite film from the 1980s. Now the property is getting a big Hollywood remake, and auditioning alongside Simon is the former “Mandarin,” Trevor Slattery (Ben Kingsley).

Showrunner Andrew Guest on Simon and Trevor: Midnight Cowboy was one of the first things that occurred to me when I thought about these two characters because I wanted them to feel like outsiders, and I love that relationship.”

Wonder Man premieres Tuesday, January 27 at 9 p.m. ET on Disney+.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple – Nia DaCosta Reveals Exclusive Secrets in Horror Sequel

This article appears in the new issue of DEN OF GEEK magazine. You can read all of our magazine stories here.

Six months ago, 28 Years Later brought the rage virus crashing back into the cultural conversation, furthering director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland’s not-zombie-but-still-zombie hold on the subgenre after an 18-year absence. Now, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is on the horizon, helmed this time not by Danny Boyle but Nia DaCosta, right on the tail of her most recent success, Hedda. Of course, both 28 Years Later and The Bone Temple were shot back-to-back, accounting for the films’ releases happening so close to one another, so Boyle, Garland, and Sony were already fully aware of what they had when it came to DaCosta’s talents. And why wouldn’t they, given her takes on films like 2021’s Candyman and The Marvels?

With The Bone Temple right around the corner, Den of Geek sat down with DaCosta to learn more about not just the upcoming film but her involvement with 28 Years Later, what drew her to the franchise, and the collaboration process between the series newcomer and veterans like Garland and Boyle. As it happens, this franchise played a critical role in DaCosta’s cinematic career, too.

28 Days Later is one of the most important films to me in terms of my journey into becoming a filmmaker, wanting to make movies, wanting to be scared, and wanting to scare people,” DaCosta explains. While the storyteller is at a point where she’s looking to write and direct for herself, that doesn’t keep her away from picking up a good screenplay. “I still love reading scripts. When I encounter a great one, like I did when I read the 28 Years Later scripts, and there’s a possibility that I could direct it, I’ll totally grab at that.”

As for taking the helm of a franchise so important to fans, DaCosta—a fan herself—had a relatively straightforward approach when it came to discussions with the studio: “The conversation started when I came in to talk to the producers. The first thing I said was, I am not going to make a Danny Boyle movie. No one else can. It would be stupid to try. I want to make this movie the way I see it. And so for me, that meant creating these distinctive worlds between the Jimmies and [Dr.] Kelson and certain tonal things.” 

While fans are not yet incredibly familiar with Jack O’Connell’s Sir Jimmy Crystal and his band of ne’er-do-wells, aka the rest of “the Jimmies,” we did get a glimpse of them at the very end of 28 Years Later when they sprang to the rescue of Alfie Williams’ Spike. Jimmy Crystal and his enthusiastic gang of jogging enthusiasts will play a much more pivotal role in The Bone Temple, as will Ralph Fiennes’ Dr. Kelson.

“The first movie, maybe, says a lot about his solitude in our film,” DaCosta notes of Fiennes’ Kelson. “In my film, at the Bone Temple, we get to characterize that as loneliness, and we get to see more of how this man survives on his own, how it feels, and why that might push him to do really risky things like engaging with an Alpha in the way that we see him engage with Samson.”

Samson, the infected Alpha we met in 28 Years Later, will also play a much bigger role in The Bone Temple. Because of this, DaCosta collaborated with Boyle throughout the creative process from the start. 

“It was really important to me that I inherited a character who had the right starting point,” she explains. “[Boyle] really listened when I had thoughts or feelings about how those decisions would impact my movie. But really, I think because he also loves the second film and loves what it was doing, he didn’t want to do anything that would hinder that at all.”

She continues, “In terms of designing Samson the character, there were some things I had to change from his movie to my movie, in part because… certain things that worked in Danny’s film would not look right in mine. We’re doing things differently.” 

One of the “things” the director is referencing is a specific appendage of Samson that sent the internet ablaze after 28 Years Later was released in theaters. DaCosta was not surprised by the reaction, noting succinctly that “penises bring people together.”

Samson, like Kelson and the Jimmies, will play more of a role in The Bone Temple than he did in 28 Years Later. As many have gleaned from the trailers, his story is intrinsically tied to Kelson’s, with the Jimmies off doing their own thing right up until they aren’t. The collision between the two parties is inevitable, but it was the juxtaposition between them that really intrigued DaCosta as a filmmaker. The cruelty of the Jimmies clashing against Kelson, who DaCosta sees as the emotional heart of the film, gives opportunity for real contrast.

“You have these two trains on a track, essentially, that are going to collide,” says the director. “They’re going to end up with these two worlds in a clash, because you kind of feel that Spike and Kelson are going to interact again. I wanted to really lean into the sort of dark serenity that Kelson’s been able to find in the apocalypse, and also the cruelty, the violence, the mercurialness, the erratic energy of the Jimmies. So while we are hoping that Spike and Kelson come back together, we’re also nervous about what that will mean.”

As photos have already revealed, Sir Jimmy Crystal and his band are not the only ones with a bleak side in the apocalypse. While thus far we have only seen the doctor’s respect for the dead via his worship of the concept of memento mori—hence the mountain of skulls from which The Bone Temple earns its title—we’ll also get the opportunity to see a darker side of the healer. 

“This is another thing about getting to know Kelson more. You’re like, ‘What a dark-sided freak he is!’” DaCosta says with a laugh. “But when you actually talk to him and engage with him, you realize the beauty of his point of view in life. [Through] memento mori, you understand that he’s basically a humanist, and I think a part of that is being curious and being hopeful.”

With the Jimmies’ inevitable collision with Kelson and, by proxy, Samson, comes a duality to the visuals within The Bone Temple. It wasn’t enough for the emotionality and dialogue to differentiate the characters; DaCosta insisted that the film be shot that way as well. As such, the visuals and style differ depending on which set of characters is the focus of the scene. 

“[For Kelson’s world], I was imagining just beautiful sunlight; it’s summer, green grass; there’s the red of the poppies that he grows,” DaCosta says of the flowers the doctor uses to make his own opiates. “Essentially, the steadiness, stillness, of a river. You hear the river like you’re sort of on a relaxing vacation, except it’s the apocalypse.”

Conversely, the first time we meet the Jimmies in the new movie, the gang is in what DaCosta describes as a decaying urban space. “They’re reminded of everything that’s been left behind. [Those scenes were] a lot of really unsteady camera, a lot more cutting… then in terms of how we colored it, there’s a warmth to Kelson’s world, and there’s a coldness to the Jimmies’ world. I really wanted to contrast their worlds based on their characters.”

Coldness and warmth, light and dark, these are all hallmarks of the larger 28 Days franchise’s deadly grace. But with The Bone Temple marking the penultimate chapter of a new trilogy, it remains to be seen which will dominate when worlds collide.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is in theaters on Jan. 16.

Mortal Kombat II: Exclusive Inside Look at ‘The Best Version of MK Ever Made for Cinema’

This article appears in the new issue of DEN OF GEEK magazine. You can read all of our magazine stories here.

The day that Karl Urban most anticipated and dreaded on the set of Mortal Kombat II is one and the same. Along the desolate plains occupied by Outworld’s nomads and outcasts—or at least a dizzying replica of their Tarkatan Colony built by an armada of moviemakers and artisans living in Australia’s Queensland—Urban’s fast-talking wiseacre, Johnny Cage, is going face-to-face with Baraka (CJ Bloomfield).

In the context of the film, it is an important moment for Urban’s newcomer antihero. A washed-up, has-been actor of 1990s glory days gone by, this Johnny has long given up on his movie star dreams when he is recruited into the titular life-and-death tournament that will decide the fate of Earthrealm. Furthermore, Urban recognizes that this mid-movie sequence is the turning point for Johnny, the human being. He needs to “give himself over to believing in the character of Johnny Cage.” The man must become the myth.

All of which is fine and good, but after nearly half a year of preparation, this is finally, and perhaps most crucially, the setup where Urban will perform Cage’s iconic, nether-region-obliterating fight move… And the hamstring-straining split that goes with it.

“The thing that I most looked forward to doing was the classic nut punch,” Urban says with a wry chuckle. “Johnny Cage has got this great fight with Baraka, and a little spoiler, there may be a nut punch involved. It was a lot of fun to do but also very tricky because it required an extraordinary degree of flexibility to pull it off.” The New Zealand actor, in fact, prepared meticulously with his stunt double Garreth Hadfield for the day. “We worked for months on basically stretching and training, and developing the muscle set needed to be able to execute the nut punch correctly and, most importantly, not damage myself.”

It’s a punchline with countless hours of setup, and its flawless delivery, like much else in Mortal Kombat II, seems designed to leave longtime fans and newcomers alike giddy with the strange, brutal world of Mortal Kombat. Indeed, when we catch up with Urban for the second time in as many months, the veteran actor of franchise darlings like The Lord of the Rings trilogy and the Star Trek reboot films, plus Amazon’s The Boys, still appears high off the early reception of what he considers to be “the best version of Mortal Kombat” ever made for the cinema.

“The scale of the production was as big, if not bigger, than anything that I worked on in Lord of the Rings,” Urban observes. “When you walk onto the set of [alien realm] Edenia, and it fills the largest soundstage at the Village Roadshow Studios in the Gold Coast, and you see the quality of the craftsmanship, you’re under no illusions that you’re in a film that’s as big as it gets.”

It seems the studio agrees. Despite Mortal Kombat II initially being slated to release earlier this year on Oct. 24, Warner Bros. surprised the industry and anxious fans both by delaying the movie after it played extremely well in front of audiences. What once was a fall genre gamble is now a bona fide summer movie event, occupying the second weekend in May and the season’s first action spectacle.

While allowing some sympathy for diehards who have to wait a tad longer, the picture’s star delights in the 2026 shift.

“The reality is if we had opened up on the original October [date], the next weekend would’ve been Halloween, there would have been a massive dropoff, and the perception was it might have had something to do with the film, and that couldn’t be further from the truth,” Urban says. “The studio recognized they really have a magical film here, it’s tested through the roof, the response to the trailer has been phenomenal, and they want to get some breathing space, so I was very happy with the move.”

As it turns out, even this ‘90s throwback character and characterization can still get that summer blockbuster moment when the movie hits—and splits— hard enough.

Tati Gabrielle in Mortal Kombat II Exclusive
Simon Westlake / Warner Bros. Pictures

Choose Your Fighter

Helmed by returning director Simon McQuoid, who made his feature debut in 2021’s Mortal Kombat, and penned by new screenwriter Jeremy Slater (The Umbrella Academy), Mortal Kombat II is as much a second stab at reinventing the franchise as a continuation of that 2021 picture.

“What was so great about the first one was that it really showed what was working, what wasn’t, and what the fans really responded to and loved. So we very much had our marching orders on this one,” Slater says about what he found while coming into the project. He and McQuoid were especially taken by the prospect of expanding on the first film’s universally praised wuxia opening sequence, wherein legendary Hiroyuki Sanada’s Scorpion enters into a life-altering blood feud with Sub-Zero (Joe Taslim), both of whom return in the sequel.

Says the director, “My goal was the next film to feel like a full feature [version] of the first film’s opening scene… let’s just let it rip and swing for the fences in this one.”

A major factor in that swing is being allowed to explore the element fans craved last time but which had been kept off the table in 2021: filmmakers would at last introduce the central tournament between colliding worlds. For those without an encyclopedic memory of 1990s brawlers, those worlds include our own dimensional reality—the Earthrealm—and its confrontation with the invading forces of Outworld, a hellish land which has already conquered other planes of existence like the once bucolic (but now occupied) Edenia.

The differences of these interdimensional disputes are decided each generation by the Mortal Kombat tournaments, fateful struggles which implanted the terms “fatality!” and “flawless victory” into the nerd lexicon. They’re also tournaments that invite eclectic heroes and villains from all sides into the arena, which is perfect for building up fighting-game rosters and old-school martial arts movie ensembles alike.

“Sonya Blade and Raiden are the ones that find Johnny and bring him into the world of Mortal Kombat,” Urban says of how his character is partnered up with returning fan faves played by Jessica McNamee and Tadanobu Asano. “So obviously there’s a massive culture shock and a head spin for Johnny, who suddenly comes out of the real world into a reality that blows his mind.”

Unlike other modern Hollywood franchises, however, by design Mortal Kombat must constantly be widening and winnowing its cast of characters.

“The tricky thing is because it’s Mortal Kombat, the fights are to the death,” Slater points out, “and that makes any tournament very complicated when you have a lot of good guys, a lot of bad guys, and are figuring out the calculus of who needs to fight who at what point in this movie. Who needs to survive, and who is sadly not going to make it out?”

Even Mortal Kombat co-creator Ed Boon was surprised by who died and who survived. While likening reading the various drafts to watching Game of Thrones, Boon cryptically smiles, “There were some choices that they made and then later changed that I was really glad about. I was thinking, ‘Oh, I don’t want to see this person die!’”

That might also be because like the tournament structure, another core demand from longtime MK fans is being met because many more characters from the various other realms in the games are making the jump to the big screen, including franchise big bad and Outworld Emperor, Shao Kahn (Martyn Ford), and several key Edenians whom he earlier displaced after a previous round of Mortal Kombat: the Princess Kitana (Adeline Rudolph) and her childhood friend Jade (Tati Gabrielle).

“There are the trials and tribulations of any sisterhood and fights between our loyalties and our values,” Rudolph teases of the particularly fraught dynamics between Kitana—who becomes an unlikely ally to Earthrealm in the games—and Jade, who is now a ninja assassin of ambiguous allegiance. Crucial through it all was the actresses’ ability to approach these heightened and operatic narrative arcs with what Rudolph deems genuine empathy. It probably didn’t hurt that the duo also worked together for years on Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.

“When you know someone so well as a person, and you adore them like with Tati, it’s nice to be on set and feel free to not be hesitant about any notes or things you might need, or things you want to give,” Rudolph says. “Having that chemistry there already was nice because we got to skip the building chemistry and go straight to building character.”

Meanwhile, Gabrielle fulfills a childhood dream since not only did she select Jade while growing up with Mortal Kombat games, but she also emulated her in real life.

“Jade [was my favorite] since I was a kid,” Gabrielle says about her fandom for this world. “When I was young, I would always play as Jade, because, one, I saw myself in her, and two, I’m a Black woman who does karate. I did karate for 12 years, and I also used the bo staff, that was my weapon of choice.”

Towering at six feet and eight inches, Shao Kahn actor Ford also grew up a fan of the classic Mortal Kombat II game, albeit perhaps more for Baraka than the Outworld emperor. Nonetheless, he found it strangely easy to get into character.

“Four hours in the [makeup] chair and you see yourself training, and then you put the costume on, it almost became a cheat code to be honest,” Ford says. “Being in prosthetics, and having the hammer, and the weight? … that was something you couldn’t replicate in the training rooms.”

Simon McQuoid on Mortal Kombat II Set Exclusive
Simon Westlake / Warner Bros. Pictures

Enter the Cage

While every Mortal Kombat character is some fan’s preferred fighter, be it icy-gloved Sub-Zero or obscure D’Vorah, there is a reason Mortal Kombat II has reframed itself around Johnny Cage, an O.G. avatar back when Mortal Kombat was associated with blood-drenched sprites in arcade cabinets. But for director McQuoid, the secret to casting an actor like Urban was his ability to make someone initially created to be a quipping homage to Jean-Claude Van Damme feel sincerely human.

“Look at what he did with Bones in Star Trek,” says McQuoid. “You could say that Bones was one of the broader characters in Star Trek, always one-liners and jokes and such, and the way Karl sort of kept a lid on that made it funny, made it a joy to watch, but it felt like it was a real character. He’s done the same thing with Johnny.”

For Urban, the appeal for taking on the role was seeing what McQuoid was developing—a vision he suggests is far above what has been delivered by any Mortal Kombat movie to date—as well as Slater’s screenplay, which imagines Johnny being of a certain age and past his expiration date.

“The point where we find Johnny in this movie is very relatable to everybody, because he’s on the back foot in life,” Urban considers. “His career is in the tank, the world’s forgotten him, and he’s at a real low point. His confidence has been knocked, and it is at this very juncture that he is called upon to be at his best and to use his skillset to defend Earthrealm.”

It is a universal fear of obsolescence that allows the quips, flips, and splits to shine brighter when Johnny rekindles his old smartassery. According to the actor, this vision of Cage is a guy who was almost another Schwarzenegger or Stallone but never quite made it. As an actor who came up in the ‘90s working on television productions in New Zealand, the setup allowed him to similarly indulge fantasies of being a Hollywood action star back in the day.

Says Urban, “I feel like I really benefited from the tail of the ‘70s and the ‘80s, and the ‘90s of having these iconic actors, whether it be the Eastwoods or Paul Newman, or Harrison Ford or Stallone or Schwarzenegger… all these guys. And as it pertains to Johnny Cage, you also see specifically Van Damme, who in my opinion was phenomenal, and Jackie Chan, who I drew huge inspiration from for the tone of some of Johnny Cage’s fights.” The aforementioned Baraka sequence specifically harkens back to the humor and devil-may-care conviviality of Chan’s best choreographed work.

There are even several films-within-films shot for Mortal Kombat II, which became so infamous on the page that co-stars rolled up on their day off to watch Urban film scenes of the aptly titled Uncaged Fury.

“There’s an air of ridiculousness about it because you know I turn up on set and I’m wearing this preposterous ‘90s MC Hammer-esque wardrobe, and all of the cast had turned up to watch it because on paper it read like it was going to be something special. And the way that the fight coordinators had choreographed it was just 100 percent accurate to low-budget ‘90s action movies. There’s definitely splits in there, and splits in the air too, I believe.”

Continue?

When Mortal Kombat mastermind Ed Boon steps into our studio, it’s been 33 years since the original game hit arcades. In the interim, he’s seen the brutal, crazed universe grow exponentially. But perhaps a bit like Shao Kahn, the creator still has bigger realms left to conquer. The game-maker tells us he hopes that Mortal Kombat can one day become a “forever franchise” in the same way folks think about Marvel Comics’ or DC’s roster of characters.

Mortal Kombat II’s ascension to R-rated blockbuster status is a big step in that journey, but for the people making it, the film remains a specific creative endeavor for the here and now.

“I feel like I’m a caretaker for Johnny Cage,” Urban muses. “Johnny Cage is a legacy character, and by that I mean Johnny Cage, and the roles of Kitana and Liu Kang have been played by other actors previously, and they will be played by other actors in generations to come. That’s what is gonna give it its longevity. The popularity of the games and what they mean to people is far greater than any one interpretation.” That might be, but like a caffeinated kid with a roll of quarters, Urban and company seem ready to hit that continue button, as this game is only beginning.

Mortal Kombat II opens on May 8.

Netflix CEO’s Theater Take Isn’t Democratic, It’s Out of Touch

It took less than 24 hours for Netflix to start changing its tune. In the days leading up to the streamer’s acquisition of legendary studio Warner Bros., Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos insisted that the company would maintain WB’s theatrical strategy. But on a call with investors on December 5, 2025, Sarandos said (via Deadline), “My pushback [to theatrical releases] has been mostly in the fact of the long, exclusive windows, which we don’t really think are that consumer friendly.”

It’s not the first time that Sarandos has used that type of language, suggesting that there’s something elitist or unfair about theaters, something that Netflix can solve. When one hears Sarandos talk about theaters and the needs of the common people, one cannot help but think about Lucille Bluth pricing bananas. In the same way that Lucille was so out of touch that she thought one banana would cost 10 dollars (in 2003!), Sarandos’ comments about the theatrical experience suggests that he knows little about the average moviegoer, and thus has no idea about what they want or need.

Sarandos’ most pointed statements about theaters came earlier this year, when he framed his resistance to theaters in populist terms. As part of the TIME100 Summit, Sarandos (via Variety) said that “the communal experience” is “an outmoded idea… for most people.” There are some people who love theaters, Sarandos allowed, but only in certain areas. “If you’re fortunate enough to live in Manhattan, and you can walk to a multiplex and see a movie, that’s fantastic. Most of the country cannot.”

One has to wonder what part of the country Sarandos is talking about. This writer has never been to Manhattan, let alone New York City, nor has he ever been to Los Angeles. This writer has lived his entire life in Michigan and North Carolina, and not the major metropolises of those parts of what execs might call “fly-over country.” And yet, this writer loves to go to theaters, and always has.

This past summer in Kalamazoo, Michigan, a fan screening of Superman, limited only to Amazon Prime subscribers, was completely sold out. As of this writing, the Monday night subtitled screening of Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution—which is less a movie and more a compilation of the anime’s second season, combined with a sneak peak of season three—is currently half sold out in Greensboro, North Carolina, of all places, despite the fact that it can all be seen streaming on Crunchyroll.

Nationwide box office receipts for hits like Zootopia 2, Wicked: For Good, Sinners, and A Minecraft Movie suggest that these are not random examples. All across the country, people go to movie theaters, not just in Manhattan and other urban locales.

If Sarandos has any case, it’s in terms of economics and not distance. Even in these not-so-major metropolises, tickets run from $10 to $15 dollars a piece. Add in popcorn and sodas, and a family night out to Zootopia 2 can run nearly $100 dollars. But, then again, so does seeing the local hockey or baseball teams (not NHL or MLB level, I assure you), and a round of mini-golf or bowling isn’t going to be much cheaper, even if you run through McDonald’s first for dinner.

Of course, all of us not in the rarified walking distance to theaters that Sarandos talks about know that you just grab some snacks at Meijer before going to the theater instead of buying them at the theaters (just be nice to the staff and it isn’t a problem, especially if you clean up after yourself, which you should be doing anyway!). Subscription services such as Regal Unlimited and AMC A-List make the price even easier to deal with.

Which isn’t something one can say about Netflix. The ad-supported version of Netflix starts at $7.99, but the standard version of the service runs $17.99 a month, while the premium version, which allows streaming in 4K, costs $24.99 a month. If you want to add users to the account (no more password sharing!) that runs from $6.99 to $8.99 a month extra. And these are just the latest prices, which went up in January of 2025—less than six months after the previous price hike.

It’s those numbers that truly undercut Sarandos’ claim. Those prices aren’t “consumer friendly,” nor is the streamer’s tendency to raise its prices without actually improving the experience. It’s just a business trying to get as much money as it can. So when Sarandos talks about the needs of the audience, as he did in an announcement regarding the Warner Bros. acquisition (via Deadline), no one should be confused.

“I think over time the windows will evolve to be much more consumer friendly… to meet the audience where they are,” he said. But it’s clear that Sarandos has no idea where that audience is, and even less of an idea about how they watch movies.

For that reason, it’s somewhat heartening to hear Sarandos change his tune again, on another investor call on Monday, December 8 (via Deadline). Acknowledging that the purchase gets Netflix “a motion picture studio with a theatrical distribution machine,” Sarandos said: “When this deal closes, we are in [the theater business]. And we’re going to do it.” He even went so far as to state that, had the deal closed earlier, Weapons, Superman, and other WB hits would have released the same way they did, first to theaters and then to HBO Max.

It’s hard to know how much we should trust that rhetoric this time around, given the change in language from just before the weekend. But we hope that he’s serious about keeping WB’s model in place. Because then, Netflix would be meeting audiences where they are at: in movie theaters, all across the country.

Marvel Should Bring Back Taskmaster, But in a Radically Different Way

This article contains spoilers for Thunderbolts*.

All of the Thunderbolts have it rough, but none worse than Taskmaster. Less than 18 minutes into the film, during the first action set piece, Taskmaster gets shot in the head and therefore doesn’t get to participate in all the cathartic sharing that the others enjoy later in the movie.

However, Taskmaster’s actor Olga Kurylenko isn’t so sure the character’s truly gone. “The thing is with Marvel, you never know,” she told Deadline. “The superheroes die all the time, and they’re never dead… In one in one story, you disappear, suddenly you come back.”

Kurylenko is certainly right about the revolving door in the superhero afterlife, and she’s certainly right to suggest that fans would like to see Taskmaster come back, but she misses one thing. If Taskmaster does return, the character must be very, very different from the one that Kurylenko played.

Taskmaster has a rabid fan base, one that would likely mystify MCU fans. Sure, Taskmaster posed a formidable threat to Avenger Black Widow, as she could emulate the fighting style of Black Panther, Captain America, and other superheroes. But she largely served as a living manifestation of the red remaining in Natasha Romanoff’s ledger. The brooding figure said nothing, wore a ski mask in Black Widow, and died immediately in Thunderbolts*. Why would anyone care about her?

One need read only a handful of Marvel Comics to get an answer. In fact, just the character’s first appearances in 1980’s Avengers #195-196 get the point across. The final image of Avengers #195 is a gloriously-rendered splash page by penciler George Pérez and inker Jack Abel showing Wasp looking in terror at Taskmaster, holding the unconscious bodies of Ant-Man and Yellowjacket.

“My monikers Taskmaster, Shuggy, and I run a little operation,” declares the man born Tony Masters, in wonderfully overwritten dialogue by David Michelinie. “My schtick is teaching the teachers, an’ I’ve just decided that you an’ your sleepyhead partners here would make perfect visual aides for my next class. It’s one o’ my favorites, Dumplin’. I call it… Dismemberment 101!”

Decked in orange and blue (provided by colorist Ben Sean) and carrying weapons that recall other Avengers (eg, Captain America’s shield, Hawkeye‘s bow, Swordmaster’s blade), and staring out from a grinning skull mask, Taskmaster cuts an impressive figure. And in Avengers #196, we see how he can mimic the fighting style of anyone he sees, even possibly besting Captain America. It’s only through the advance programming of Jocasta (think Vision, but a lady) that Taskmaster gets distracted enough for Wasp to take him down.

In short, Taskmaster is a mouthy, arrogant, amoral jerk, and he’s an utter blast in all of his appearances. Across his many appearances, including those outside of comics—such as his turn as a jerky gym teacher in the Ultimate Spider-Man cartoon series—Taskmaster has built up a strong following. And that following was thoroughly disappointed by the version in the MCU.

To be clear, the problem here isn’t with Kurylenko, or even the fact that the character is a woman. Toni Masters could work just as well as Tony Masters. No, the problem is that Black Widow took an arrogant mouthy jerk and turned him into a silent zombie, and gave the Taskmaster an awful costume to boot. When Ghost gunned down that version of Taskmaster, she did the world a favor.

Taskmaster can and should return to the MCU. He’s one of the great villains of the Marvel Universe and he has a fantastic design. But if Taskmaster does come back—as a man, woman, or anything in-between—the character must be closer to the comic book version we all love.

Spider-Man: The Spider-Punk Spinoff Has to Get One Thing Right

Daniel Kaluuya and his screenwriting partner Ajon Singh don’t have much to say yet about their upcoming Spider-Punk movie. In a recent conversation with Deadline, Kaluuya, who first voiced the character in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, said only that he and Singh are in the “finishing stages” of the script and when asked about more info, he just said, “TBD.”

Truthfully, they don’t really need to say much. Unlike the majority of people who make a Spider-Man film, Kaluuya and Singh don’t have to contend with mountains of comic book backstory or even a major supporting role when fleshing out their character. Spider-Punk has been around in Marvel comics for just over a decade, and he only had a few minutes of screentime in Across the Spider-Verse.

And yet, that limited amount of attention was enough to set in stone one element of Spider-Punk, an element that’s become increasingly difficult to do in our current political climate. Spider-Punk must be absolutely anarchist, and against capitalism and the police in particular.

Although Hobie Brown has existed in the mainline Marvel Universe since 1969, when he debuted as the Prowler, the Spider-Punk version is relatively new. Created by Dan Slott and Olivier Coipel, Spider-Punk first appeared in 2014’s Amazing Spider-Man #10, part of the Spider-Verse crossover that inspired the hit movies. A back-up story by Jed MacKay and Sheldon Vella in 2015’s Spider-Verse #2 really established the character, then called the Anarchic Spider-Man.

Hobie gained his powers while squatting in a property owned by Norman Osborn, the slum-lord-turned-fascist president. Joined by Captain Anarchy (his world’s version of Captain America, represented by Karl Morgenthau a.k.a. Flagsmasher instead of Steve Rogers) and the tattooed Robbie Banner a.k.a. Hulk, the Anarchic Spider-Man resists the Kingpin’s businesses, Osborn’s police, and even the Nazi punks Kraven and the Hunters.

Surprisingly, a lot of that back story makes it into Spider-Punk’s introduction in Across the Spider-Verse. Rendered in unstable newsprint, Hobie brags about “antagonizing fascists” and staging “unpermitted political action/performance art pieces” and, um, briefly being a runway model. Amidst the collage of images accompanying his backstory, we see Hobie and his pals defacing the Kingpin’s advertisements, punching cops, and leading riots. We even notice the blue laces on his boots, indicating ACAB sentiments.

While Spider-Verse leaves space for poking fun at Hobie (“I thought you didn’t believe in labels,” quips Miles Morales after Spider-Punk calls anyone who wants to be a hero an “autocrat”), it’s also quite clear in the character’s morals. He hates the police, he mistrusts government.

Obviously, those sentiments are unpopular in popular culture. Cop shows remain mainstays on television and military action makes up a good chunk of film and video games. Moreover, studio heads seek increased profits by appeasing conservative forces in power, as demonstrated by Disney suspending Jimmy Kimmel and Paramount head David Ellison seeking President Trump’s approval. The consolidation of Warner Brothers into Netflix only makes things more difficult.

Yet, if Kaluuya and Singh are going to do anything with Spider-Punk, they must be anarchic, they must be against the police. Obviously, it isn’t up to them, and their bosses—the global megacorporation Sony—will have to approve it. But if they don’t make a Spider-Punk who hates cops and capitalism, then they aren’t making Spider-Punk at all.

Kristen Stewart Says Directors Need to Steal Their Movies, and She’s Right

You probably know Kristen Stewart as the star of such Hollywood films as Underwater, Panic Room, and, of course, the Twilight franchise. But did you also know that Kristen Stewart starred in a pair of movies for French auteur Olivier Assayas, Clouds of Sils Maria and Personal Shopper? Did you catch her committed role in director Rose Glass’ deliriously beautiful Love Lies Bleeding? Have you seen her directoral debut from this year, The Chronology of Water?

Probably not, and for Stewart, that’s not just a problem unique to her. “We’re at a pivotal nexus because I think we’re ready for a full system break,” Stewart told the New York Times, “and I mean that across the board, and also specific to the world I live in, which is very exclusively the entertainment industry.” In response to the domination of blockbuster tentpoles and safe franchises, Stewart proposes a unique fix: “I think we need to, sort of, start stealing our movies.”

Few people are better qualified than Stewart to speak on the state of the industry. Although only 35 years old, Stewart has been working in Hollywood for nearly three decades, first appearing on screen in an uncredited role in the 1999 Disney Channel movie The Thirteenth Year. In the years since, she has starred in one of the most successful franchises of the 2000s and also one of the most forgettable with 2012’s Snow White and the Huntsman. And if she needs to reach out beyond her own experience, Stewart can consult her father-in-law Nicholas Meyer, the guy who revitalized Star Trek by directing Wrath of Khan.

That perspective allows Stewart to see changes in the movie industry. And she doesn’t like what she sees. Even despite the good work done by unions (“trust me, we would not survive without them,” she emphasizes), it has become “so impossible for people to tell stories,” Stewart contends. She describes the current state of the industry as a “capitalist hell, and it hates women, and it hates marginalized voices, and it’s racist, and I think that we need to figure out a way to make it easier to speak to each other in cinematic terms.”

Although she notes that some filmmakers are in the “exclusive and rarified, novel position” to tell interesting stories, they are almost all male, such as her Crimes of the Future director David Cronenberg and Spencer director Pablo Larraín.

It’s hard to disagree with Stewart’s observations. In the United States, the highest-grossing films are all tired franchise entries, such as Lilo & Stitch, The Minecraft Movie, Zootopia 2, and Jurassic World: Rebirth. Although Ryan Coogler got a rare hit from a non-white filmmaker in Sinners, all of the other filmmakers getting their movies in theaters are men: Paul Thomas Anderson with One Battle After Another, Zach Cregger with Weapons, and Josh Safdie with Marty Supreme. The few exceptions this year, such as Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet, only prove the rule. And the recent purchase of Warner Brothers by Netflix only further consolidates the industry, making change harder.

And so Stewart wants to look out for herself. “The next movie I wanna make: I want to do it for nothing, I want to make not a dollar, I want it to be a smash hit, do you know what I mean?” she revealed. “I’m just trying to think of some weird Marxist, communist-like situation, that other people can definitely think, ‘Oh, of course, this psycho is saying that,’ but I think it’s possible.” For the future of cinema’s sake, we hope she’s right.

The Chronology of Water is now in limited release in some cities.


Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’s Voyager Nod Better Be More Than a ‘Member Berry

Starfleet Academy may take place at the furthest point we’ve seen thus far in the Star Trek franchise, but the first clip of the new series points firmly to the past. Set in the 32nd century, after the events of Star Trek: Discovery, the footage finds the show’s hero ship the USS Athena entering a dangerous bit of space called the Badlands. Although we first saw the Badlands in Deep Space Nine, the area is most associated with Voyager, as a skirmish in the region led the ship to being stranded in the Delta Quadrant.

Such franchise nods are nothing new to the current era of Trek, nor to Starfleet Academy in particular. In addition to bringing back Robert Picardo as the Emergency Medical Hologram from Voyager, better known as the Doctor, the series features several characters who belong to classic Trek races. But the most exciting part of the Badlands reference in the clip isn’t that the Athena is going to a place we know from before, but rather that it’s going to someplace that the characters don’t know. It’s exciting because the Athena is exploring and gaining information, and the bridge crew is using its expertese to deal with the problem that arises, all qualities in short supply in nü-Trek.

The clip’s emphasis on exploration and expertise goes against much of what we’ve seen so far for Starfleet Academy. As a spinoff of Discovery, Starfleet Academy seemed likely to repeat that series’ emphasis on universe-ending stakes and big emotional moments. Furthermore, setting the story at a school seems to invite wild emotions, lots of romance, and interpersonal drama, qualities emphasized by the newly-released poster for Starfleet Academy.

Don’t get us wrong, there’s certainly room for Star Trek to explore emotions. The primary tension in the Original Series put Kirk between McCoy’s irascible feelings and Spock’s cold logic, requiring the Captain to chart a path that values both instinct and reason. But, over time, logic became the de facto good in Star Trek stories, and emotion was something to be mistrusted.

Discovery and other nü-Trek entries found something new to explore in the Star Trek universe by emphasizing emotional intelligence, but their stories too often featured characters resolving deep-seated trauma with a conversation and a good hug. Not only did that approach fail to honor the truth of those emotions, but it downplayed the reason these characters were in Starfleet in the first place: that they were experts who did their jobs at the highest possible level, people with years of training, not just fuzzy feelings.

Certainly, we’re bound to get some more fuzzy feelings in Starfleet Academy. The primary cast of young stars play characters who don’t yet have that expertise and still have plenty of baggage as they sit under the tree that groundskeeper Boothby planted in the 24th Century.

L-R Zoe Steiner as Tarima, Sandro Rosta as Caleb, Bella Shepard as Genesis, George Hawkins as Daren, Kerrice Brooks as Sam and Karim Diane as Jay-Den of Starfleet Academy streaming on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Nino Munoz/Paramount+

But when we see the Athena search the Badlands for information, or when we see Captain Nahla Ake (Holly Hunter) respond to a threat by consulting information from her bridge crew and making informed, professional decisions, we have hope that these emotional kids will have good teachers to guide them, teachers who rely on their expertises and love to go exploring.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy premieres on Paramount+ on January 15, 2026.

Stranger Things Costume Designer Got More Than She Bargained for With One Piece of Jewelry

After honing her craft on films like Her and A Wrinkle in Time, California native Amy Parris landed what many people would consider a dream job when she became the lead costume designer for Netflix’s hit sci-fi series Stranger Things in season 3.

Parris approaches costume design as a form of storytelling, and that has definitely been evident in her work on the show since then. The Scoops Ahoy uniforms, the Hellfire T-shirts, Max’s skate and rock-inspired looks, Dustin’s hats… they’ve all been key to selling the authenticity of Stranger Things’ 80s setting. Not only that, but many of those looks have also been iconic in their own right.

However, when Parris sits down with Den of Geek to discuss Stranger Things’ final volume and promote the show’s partnership with Tide, she reflects on a small costume detail from season 4 that got way more attention than she expected.

“The high school guidance counselor’s necklace! It had a little clock on it, like a clock-key pendant,” Parris says, recalling Ms. Kelley’s (Regina Ting Chen) season 4 costume. “Some fans saw it and immediately started speculating that she might be connected to Vecna, which definitely wasn’t my intention. I just liked the idea of using the clock symbol throughout the series. I even printed a clock-patterned fabric for Virginia Creel’s dress, though we didn’t end up using it. The Duffer brothers were like, ‘You don’t really have to put the clock everywhere,’ but I added the necklace anyway. I didn’t expect it would spark that much speculation.”

For Parris, moments like this highlight how costume design can take on a life of its own once it reaches fans. “It’s funny. Something so tiny, just an accessory, can completely change the way people interpret a character,” she says. “I love that fans notice these little details, even if they’re not meant to be clues. It reminds me that costume design isn’t just about making something look good on camera. It’s about storytelling, symbolism, and sometimes, the unexpected ways the audience connects with the world we’ve built.”

Parris is more than aware that one of season 5’s costumes has already caused a stir with fans, albeit differently than Ms. Kelley’s necklace, and that’s Eleven’s shorts-over-joggers and cropped sweatshirt look, partially inspired by Josh Brolin’s costume in The Goonies. But she says fan confusion over Eleven’s looks is pretty typical. “I saw a comment from somebody who was like, ‘Why did she look like she got dressed in the dark?’ And I’m like, ‘That’s the point! You’re doing it. You’re paying attention to the story.’ She should not look straight-up fashionable, because how would she know how to do that? She’s from another dimension!”

Certain Stranger Things cast members are more keen to collaborate with the costume department and put their own stamp on a character’s arc through their clothing, Parris tells us, citing Winona Ryder as particularly influential over the look of Joyce, Will Byers’ frantic mom. Ryder wanted to keep Joyce wearing a lot of the same clothes throughout the show because she’s a broke, single mom who isn’t really focused on fashion.

“The mall’s gone, so Joyce is recycling a lot of pieces,” Parris explains. “We’ve already seen a jacket from seasons 1 and 2 come back and an outfit that she wore in season 4. I mean, the town is under quarantine. Where would any new clothes even come from?”

One collab between Parris and Maya Hawke, who reprises the character of Robin Buckley in season 5, also became a real-life callback to Ryder’s youth. “Maya wanted to pay homage to a Winona look that she wore as herself in the early ’90s: a Tom Waits shirt with a black belt and denim jeans. She really wanted to recreate that image because she was finally in scenes with Winona this season.”

You may be obsessed with the little details in Stranger Things, but are you ‘digging back into photos of Winona Ryder from decades ago and recreating them’ obsessed? Luckily for us, Parris is.

Avengers: Doomsday’s Emotional Stakes Will Need to Rely on One Thing

What does Avengers: Doomsday have in store for people who are emotionally invested in the MCU?

Actually, let’s back up for a minute: what did Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame have in store for fans who were emotionally invested in the MCU? Cap and Tony settling their differences, reuniting Cap and Bucky, Gamora pushing through her complicated feelings for Thanos, the sweet romance between the Vision and Scarlet Witch, bringing back the fallen after the blip, Iron Man and Black Widow’s sacrifices. It goes on. There were plenty of emotional stakes in those two movies, which is part of the reason they were so damn successful.

Now, let’s ask ourselves again what Avengers: Doomsday has in store for people who are truly invested in the MCU: seeing some incredible team-ups that might include the Fantastic Four, the Thunderbolts, and Cap’s Avengers, most of whom were left in a pretty standard if geopolitically intriguing spot after their own movies. There’s also the return of the X-Men, which is sure to offer some consistently vital stuff between Professor X and Magneto. The movie will also properly introduce Doctor Doom to the MCU, as we’ve only seen the back of him in a post-credits scene thus far. It’ll likely introduce some new emotional stakes we can’t yet fathom.

That sounds fun! Personally, I’m really looking forward to seeing all of that, but what is the beating heart of this movie? What’s the catharsis and payoff that fans have been waiting for since Endgame bowed? Looking over the Doomsday roster (Shang-Chi! Where tf has he been?!), the real heart of the forthcoming Marvel flick will inevitably rest on the relationship between two characters, Loki and Thor.

The brothers’ encounters have spanned countless pages of Marvel Comics over the decades and have been absolutely key to the cinematic universe as well. There’s a reason that the God of Mischief keeps lurching back to life in the MCU, despite all of Kevin Feige’s best efforts to kill him: fans love Tom Hiddleston as Loki, and they love Chris Hemsworth’s Thor. Seeing them together onscreen is always gold, and we shouldn’t take their reunion in Doomsday lightly.

Bringing the duo back together next year will finally bring one of the MCU’s most defining relationships full circle. For many years, their story has swung between betrayal and redemption, culminating in Loki’s sacrifice and Thor’s grief. Now, Thor, somewhat broken by years of guilt and failure but reenergized by becoming a father, will meet a Loki who has evolved far beyond the trickster he once knew. This (we assume) will be the Loki who has literally held the multiverse together. Their reunion might naturally be joyful and surprising, but it will also be about recognition. They are now both the people they were always destined to be, despite everything that’s happened.

With all the big teams colliding in Doomsday, these two can ground the overwhelming scale of its conflict. And as multiversal threats escalate through to Secret Wars, Thor and Loki’s bond can provide the human core that anchors a sprawling story and continues the MCU’s overarching theme of choosing who you become, not who you were.

It will be really cool to see the Thunderbolts, the Fantastic Four family, Cap’s Avengers (once again, Shang-Chi, everybody!), and the X-Men together in Doomsday, but if Marvel handle it right, Loki and Thor, who will appear as the longest-serving MCU characters in the mix, can give the movie a strong enough heartbeat to weather superhero fatigue or any disinterest in seeing more of some post-Endgame characters who have failed to inspire too much excitement.

Of course, there could be other characters in Doomsday whose appearances are being kept secret, but right now, Thor and Loki really are endgame.

The Boys Season 5 Trailer Gives Us the Ultimate Supernatural Reunion

The Boys creator Eric Kripke is fond of bringing back actors from his other hit show, Supernatural. In previous seasons of Prime Video’s violent superhero series, we’ve seen appearances from Supernatural alums Jim Beaver, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, and even Jensen Ackles, but Kripke has saved the biggest Supernatural reunion of all for the final season of The Boys by adding Ackles’ co-star and fellow Winchester brother, Jared Padalecki, into the mix.

Ackles and Padalecki haven’t acted alongside each other since Supernatural wrapped in 2020 after 15(!) seasons. In the season 5 trailer for The Boys, we get a little tease of Ackles’ revived Soldier Boy and Padalecki’s secret character, who may play a key role or be killed hilariously within minutes. You just never know with The Boys!

The Boys Season 5 Trailer

When we last left Billy Butcher and the gang in season 4, Homelander had been trying to consolidate control and grasp political power with the help of Sister Sage. This plan inevitably worked, and presidential candidate Robert Singer was framed for Victoria Neuman’s death. Singer wasn’t responsible, of course. Butcher was the one who took her out after being shot full of supe-enhancing drugs.

Martial law was then declared, and everyone started to fall into Homelander’s homicidal grasp. The Boys’ morale was already dire when Butcher revealed he was dying, but it got worse when they were either scattered or captured under Homelander’s new regime.

All this sets up a bloody endgame in Season 5, where The Boys feel they have nothing to lose by trying one last time to rid the world of Homelander and Vought once and for all.

Check out the Season 5 trailer below…

The Boys Season 5 Story

Here’s an official The Boys Season 5 synopsis from Prime Video:

“It’s Homelander’s world, completely subject to his erratic, egomaniacal whims. Hughie, Mother’s Milk, and Frenchie are imprisoned in a ‘Freedom Camp.’ Annie struggles to mount a resistance against the overwhelming Supe force. Kimiko is nowhere to be found. But when Butcher reappears, ready and willing to use a virus that will wipe all Supes off the map, he sets in motion a chain of events that will forever change the world and everyone in it. It’s the climax, people. Big stuff’s gonna happen.”

The Boys Season 5 Release Date

The Boys season 5 will begin streaming on Prime Video on April 8.

Foxy Shazam Frontman Eric Nally on Scoring the Peacemaker Season 2 Intro

“God knows I’ve had some rough fucking years.” So say the lyrics of “Oh Lord,” but it’s been a very good year for Foxy Shazam, the rock band behind the now-famous song. Now, after 21 years of being on the scene, frontman Eric Nally says they’ve been “ready, prepared, and inspired” for big things, and they’re primed to collect. 

It was a wild summer for the indie group, one that included being called director James Gunn’s favorite band and “objectively the greatest rock ‘n’ roll band in the world”; performing the theme for the fictional pop-punk group the Mighty Crabjoys on the Superman movie soundtrack; and lending the aforementioned “Oh Lord” to the opening credits dance sequence of Peacemaker season two (which they performed at San Diego Comic-Con in support of the show). Plus, they released two studio albums in 2025: Animality Opera in March and their tenth album, Box of Magic, in October. 

“We kind of always have done this,” says Nally, speaking to Den of Geek from Cincinnati, his hometown where he still lives. He says he’s appreciative and grateful for the additional attention, but rather than being intimidated, he and the self-described genre-fluid sextet are feeling steady while enjoying the glow of more “fuel on the fire.”

Nally is correct that, since forming in 2004 and releasing their debut album The Flamingo Trigger in 2005, Foxy’s blend of glam and pop rock, along with a kinetic stage presence and Nally’s own powerful Freddie Mercury-esque vocals and theatricality, has garnered them attention and accolades. In the wake of their sophomore album Introducing (2008), they toured with The Strokes and Panic! at the Disco. When their self-titled third album, featuring “Oh Lord,” hit the Billboard chart in 2010, they were named on Spin’s list of “10 Bands You Need To Know,” and comparisons to Queen, Meatloaf, and My Chemical Romance rolled in. Their song “I Like It” from The Church of Rock and Roll (2011) charted at number five on Mainstream Rock charts, while their song “Unstoppable” played during the Super Bowl XLIV telecast. 

Nally says “people can expect the unexpected” with Foxy Shazam, and as such, they’ve earned a reputation for switching up styles. Whereas audiences might be polarized by changing things up with every album, it’s become expected from them. Still, the band’s hiatus from 2014 to 2020, following the release of Gonzo, was really unexpected. 

During this time, Nally provided the soaring vocals in the chorus for Macklemore and Ryan Lewis’ hit “Downtown,” and stole the show both in the video for the song — riding in bare-chested on a chrome eagle chariot led by motorcycles — and at the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards. 

The band returned with a revamped lineup of Nally, pianist Sky White, trumpeter/backing vocalist Alex Nauth, bassist Existential Youth, guitarist Devin Williams, and drummer Teddy Aitkins. Foxy Shazam released three more albums on their own EEEOOHAH label (Burn, The Heart Behead You, and Dark Blue Night) before this year’s one-two punch of Animality Opera and Box of Magic

Nally says the close proximity of releases was intended to show what Foxy Shazam is capable of, especially considering the impending attention within the DC Universe. And he wanted to separate the vibes of the spring and fall albums as a contrast.

“The more records we do, as different as they may be, the thing that’s similar is that they’re not similar,” he says. “But this was the first year I was like, let’s give people two examples of Foxy Shazam so they can see that they’re in contrast, and let them know we can do that. We can do this and everything in between.”

For example, Animality is a “raw, unfiltered burst of energy” recorded in Nally’s basement studio and without much money. Meanwhile, Magic was knocked out at EastWest Studios in Los Angeles, where the Beach Boys recorded Pet Sounds. The album is “friendly, positive, and all about building good vibes” with the intention to appeal to a mass audience.

That range highlights the Cincinnati personality of Foxy Shazam. Also home to The Afghan Whigs, Nally says there’s a bizarreness, randomness, and modest, polite entertainment, or even “Midwest charm” of what he calls the overlooked underdog city. It allows him to embrace his own weirdness, but project that oddness out there. In a way, Nally unintentionally highlights the quirkiness of an extraterrestrial immigrant raised in the Midwest who is likewise polite and modest. After all, Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster hail from another Ohio city, Cleveland, also where Gunn filmed the movie. 

Speaking of Gunn, Nally says, “When people like James Gunn or Macklemore come to me, they’re like angels … and we make something beautiful.”

About a year after Gunn used “The Church of Rock and Roll” in the first season of Peacemaker, Nally and the director connected on social media, became friends, and proceeded to share songs back and forth. So when it came to using “Oh Lord,” rather than suggesting another song or writing a new track for Peacemaker, Nally said there was already a built-in trust.

“James has a way about his music selection that separates him from other directors,” says the singer, who adds he connected with the usage of the Walkman and the “Awesome Mix Vol. 1” in Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy. “[His] creative decisions are intentional, and they support the story in a way that is different.”

Along with collaborating with Gunn and Lou Lou Safran on the Mighty Crabjoys song, which breathed life into the fictional DC Universe band, Nally had a cameo appearance in Superman, and Foxy performed “Oh Lord” in the Peacemaker second season finale (in a joyful scene leading up to a darker cliffhanger).

With the band existing in this universe, and within the DCU—the Mighty Crabjoys existing across the multiverse, based on the band’s cameo in Peacemaker—it’s reasonable to wonder if Foxy Shazam has more music to come in the superhero world. Nally says there are projects in the works, but nothing he can talk about, aside from teasing “to look out for new music.”

As for now, Nally says Foxy Shazam is ready for what comes next. And, to quote another lyric from “Oh Lord,” they will “keep on keepin’ on.”

Another Men in Black Movie Might Happen for Some Reason

If there is one sure thing in the movie business, it’s that studios love a known quantity. Throw in a little nostalgia, a popular IP, and maybe a familiar bankable star or two, and pretty much anything can happen. This is how we have ended up with five Toy Story movies, six Transformers films, and whatever number we’re up to now in the world of The Fast and the Furious. So, it probably won’t surprise anyone to learn that Sony’s considering bringing back the Men in Black. (After all, they’ve done it before!)

According to Variety, Chris Bremner, the writer of similar IP-based sequels like Bad Boys for Life, has been tapped to come up with a script for a fifth Men in Black installment. It’s unclear what shape the film’s story might take — and unknown whether original stars Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones could be convinced to reprise their roles as Agents J and K, whose entertaining chemistry and sharp performances are pretty much the entire reason the first three films in the franchise work. (Your mileage may and likely will vary on precisely how well as the series goes on.) 

Smith has kept a fairly low profile since the whole Oscars ceremony controversy back in 2022, though he did appear in Bremner’s Bad Boys: Ride or Die sequel in 2024, so his involvement could be a reason for the actor to take part. Plus, if Smith is still in some sort of career rehabilitation phase, there are certainly worse choices he could make than returning to one of his more memorable roles in a popular franchise. Though let’s be honest, a whole lot is going to hinge on whether or not Sony can get Tommy Lee Jones to say yes to this. His most recent string of projects has been… let’s just call it eclectic, so the odds feel decent, if not entirely great. There’s no point in Smith being involved if Jones isn’t, though I suppose one or both of them could conceivably pop up in some kind of pass-the-torch mentorship role.

Granted, the studio has tried that already and it didn’t quite take. Neither Smith nor Jones took part in Men in Black: International, Sony’s attempt to reboot the franchise back in 2019 that brought in big names like Chris Hemsworth, Tessa Thompson, and Emma Thompson to play agents from the MIB’s U.K. branch. It’s a possibility that the reported fifth film could be something similar to this attempt, but MIB: International was both a critical and a box office disappointment, and it seems unlikely that anyone would choose to try to make fetch happen again with this particular angle.

Look, we all know what the people want, and it’s the OG MIB duo. So if we have to do this Men in Black thing again, for whatever, let’s hope Sony finds a way to give it to them. 

Star Wars Is Coming Back to Theaters, Without Jabba or a Subtitle

Fifty years ago, theaters welcomed a movie that changed culture forever, a movie that combined multiple genres into one unique space opera, a movie that was not called “Episode IV” or “A New Hope.” That movie was called Star Wars and it’s coming back to theaters.

As announced on StarWars.com, “a newly restored version of the classic Star Wars (1977) theatrical release — later renamed Star Wars: A New Hope, and then Star Wars: Episode IV–A New Hope— will play in theaters for a limited time.” Yes, you read that right. The film coming back to theaters is just called Star Wars and it’s the classic version, which means that it will not have any of the nonsense that George Lucas and Disney added later. No Jabba the Hut deleted scene, no Greedo shooting first, and certainly no Maclunkey.

Even though Star Wars is as prominent as ever, it has been a long time since anyone has been able to see the original movie. As part of the film’s 20th anniversary in 1997, Lucas brought Star Wars and its first two sequels, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, back to the theaters, but only as revised “Special Editions.” These films featured digital additions such as robots and stormtroopers wandering in front of the camera and extended new scenes, including a deleted scene in which Han Solo meets with Jabba the Hutt and steps on his tail for no good reason.

The Special Editions suck. Not only do they clutter the screen with nonsense that disrupts the compositions, but the extended scenes rarely make sense within the narrative. And yet, Lucas insisted that the Special Editions were now the only versions of the movie, making the 1993 Laserdisc release of the original trilogy the highest quality release available.

(NOTE: before anyone gets grouchy in the comments, it is true that a DVD set did release with non-altered versions of the movies as special features. But those non-altered versions were VHS quality, worse than the quality of the Laserdiscs).

Not only did Disney hold to Lucas’s decree when they acquired the Star Wars property, but they added their own nonsense in the form of the word “Maclunkey,” which Greedo started shouting in the Disney+ streaming release.

With the announcement that the original Star Wars is coming to theaters, fans hope that Disney will release high-quality versions of the non-altered movies to home video. A 4K copy of the original films has long seemed impossible, but not now.

Yet another question remains: what do they mean by “original” Star Wars? Most believe that even in 1977, Star Wars began with a title crawl that read “Episode IV: A New Hope.” But that wasn’t the case then, when the crawl just started with the words “It is a period of civil war.” The title wasn’t added until the movie was re-released to theaters in 1981, after the release of The Empire Strikes Back and its title crawl, which began with “Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back.”

So are we just getting the original Star Wars? Or the original original Star Wars? Frankly, as long as it doesn’t have Han Solo stepping on Jabba the Hutt’s tail, we’ll take it and we’ll be happy.

Star Wars is back in theaters on February 19, 2027.

Classic WB Movies Whose Theatrical Events Were Extremely ‘Consumer-Friendly’

It’s official! Or at least as official as these sorts of things can be before ever increasingly corporate-compliant regulators in D.C. give the next black hole of resource-consolidation its rubber stamp. Yep, Netflix is buying Warner Bros. Discovery.

To put that another way, the company that started as a DVD rental mailing service has grown gargantuan enough in the streaming era to buy out one of the last remaining (and biggest) movie studios in the world, Warner Bros. Pictures—plus all the attendant accessories that come with it, including HBO and HBO Max (Netflix is not picking up cable networks like CNN*). The company that began by hawking WB’s wares (among others) will now own and decide the fate of a 103-year-old studio which counts Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz (though technically an MGM picture), The Dark Knight, and The Lord of the Rings among its library.

Technically consolidation is the name of the game in 21st century media, as decreed by Wall Street arithmetic, but given Netflix’s infamous indifference (if not outright hostility) toward the theatrical experience, it is fair to understand why so many cinephiles are repulsed by the news. Not that Netflix leadership seems to mind.

With the confidence of someone who just won the game of Monopoly for realsies, Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos felt no need to assuage those fears Friday morning when he told Wall Street investors he following about theatrical releases: “My pushback has been mostly in the fact of the long, exclusive windows, which we don’t really think are that consumer friendly.” The implicit upshot is that Sarandos seems determined to fracture the demands of movie theater owners who are seeking to maintain an at least 30-45 day theatrical window. 

Soon Sarandos will have the ability to dictate whether Matt Reeves’ The Batman 2 or future Dune movies have only the token seven or 14-day windows of most modern nominal Netflix films. Granted, the failure of Disney and Marvel Studios’ Black Widow doing a day-and-date release strategy in 2021 recently confirmed the limitations of such a move with even big tentpole releases. It leaves money on the table. But given Netflix refuses to release even Rian Johnson’s Knives Out movies or Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein in a wide theatrical release, they have shown no compunction about leaving money on the table as long as it starves competition they deem an antiquated business model (i.e. movie theaters).

With that in mind, we here at Den of Geek thought it would be nice to take a moment to look back at WB’s century of moviemaking and consider just how “consumer-friendly” it really is (or was) when studios made movies with the intent of dominating the culture for months on the big screen, instead of a weekend on your phone…

The Jazz Singer (1927)

Anyone watching The Jazz Singer today might not take notice of a moment 20 minutes in when Al Jolson’s Jack Robin settles down the applause he earns for singing “Dirty Hands, Dirty Face” and goes into “Toot, Toot, Tootsie (Goo’bye).” Instead of cutting to intertitles to portray Robin’s dialogue, as was done earlier in the film—and in every other film of the silent era—the camera keeps rolling and we hear Robin say, “Wait a minute, you ain’t heard nothin’ yet!”

Contrary to popular belief, The Jazz Singer wasn’t the first talking movie. Innovators had been trying to meld sound and movement ever since moving pictures were invented in the late 19th century. But The Jazz Singer was the first feature film with that much synchronized talking, a feat so incredible that the film not only became a smash hit, but it also convinced other studios to follow the lead of Sam Warner (who died the day before The Jazz Singer’s premiere) and embrace sound films. To get a sense of what a revelation it was, watch not only the scene in question but a recreation of audiences’ reaction to hearing the song in Dameien Chazelle’s Babylon. – Joe George

Little Caesar (1931)

The Jazz Singer may have made Warner Bros. into a major studio, but at the start of Hollywood’s Golden Age, they still lagged behind MGM in terms of prestige. But prestige isn’t the only way to sell tickets. Warners soon established itself as the home of gritty crime pictures, the forerunners to what would later be called film noir. And few were as infamous as the Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Edward G. Robinson two-hander, Little Caesar.

Directed by Mervyn LeRoy and based on the novel by W. R. Burnett, Little Caesar follows childhood friends Caesar, aka “Rico” (Robinson), and Joe (Fairbanks) as they move to the big city of Chicago. While Joe pursues his dream of being a dancer, Rico makes his way up the criminal ranks, growing more violent as he rises. Distasteful as Rico’s brutality may be to Joe, moviegoers loved it and Little Caesar became a smash hit. So popular was Little Caesar’s bloodlust that it, along with Warners’ other gangster hit from that year, The Public Enemy, plus 1932’s Scarface, forced Hollywood to adopt the Motion Picture Production Code (aka the Hays Code), leading to a long period of movie censorship. – JG

Captain Blood (1935)

While the fantastic image of “pirates” goes back to at least Daniel Defoe’s mythmaking about the “Golden Age of Piracy” in the early 18th century (or Robert Louis Stevenson’s further exaggerations a century later in Treasure Island), much of the imagery we associate with pirates today comes from this movie: the swashbuckling verve of Errol Flynn, the cantankerous crews partying on a rowdy Tortuga and throwing pieces of eight in the air; someone with a peg leg!

Before Jack Sparrow, there was Captain Blood, and his movie was such a sensation in 1935 that it made Flynn and leading lady Olivia de Havilland overnight sensations, leading to the even better…  – David Crow

The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)

Even more so than Captain Blood, our vision of Robin Hood and his Merry Men are shaped almost a century later by Flynn’s emerald green tunic and oh, so tight tights running around a technicolor Sherwood Forest while outwitting the dastardly sheriff and rotten old Prince John.

When someone makes a swashbuckler to this day, it is often done in homage or reaction to the iconography of Michael Curtiz’s direction, which burned into multiple generations’ imaginations the silhouettes of a hero and villain’s shadows dueling to the death on a castle wall, or Robin and Marian (de Havilland again) swearing devotion to each other on a castle’s balcony. It was one of the early technicolor wonders of its age, releasing a year before The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind. – DC

The Maltese Falcon (1941)

Of course when one thinks about Golden Age Warner Bros., it is easy to focus entirely on their gangster pictures. A version of this list could be nothing but Bogie and James Cagney movies. Yet we think it worth singling out The Maltese Falcon, because in addition to being another of Jack Warner’s “tough guy” movies, The Maltese Falcon holds the distinction of inadvertently creating another genre/movement of cinema: film noir.

Often cited as the movie that synthesized the tropes and archetypes we associate with what would become a much more common narrative in the post-WWII years—the world weary and cynical detective, the malevolent femme fatale who leads men to their doom, and the bleak ending—the film made Humphrey Bogart a movie star and didn’t just strike an audience’s fancy, but burrowed into the growing disillusioned subconscious of an entire generation. To this day, folks still are chasing Bogie in the trenchcoat. – DC

Casablanca (1942)

Why is Casablanca such a perfect film? There remains eternal debate since it was a studio programmer largely built by assignment and commercial interests, as opposed to any singular artistic vision or obsession. Even so, Casablanca really is a perfect, heart-rending love story filled with such brilliant dialogue—courtesy of screenwriters Julius and Philip Epstein—and character work, not least of which includes Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, and Claude Rains, that folks quote it to this day, even when they don’t realize it.

“Round up the usual suspects;” “play it again, Sam;” “we’ll always have Paris;” “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship;” “A kiss is just a kiss…” But the movie is more than a collection of lines that were meme-ified 70 years before memes existed. It’s that they built an actual funny, tragic, and stirring WWII romance during a moment when the war was literally still happening, the future was unwritten, and the problems of three little people didn’t amount to a hill of beans. Their tiny hill, nonetheless, could amount to a movie magic that is eternal. – DC

A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)

Another turning point that WB was right at the vanguard of is the emergence of naturalistic, method acting in the American cinema. While the acting method goes back to Russia in the 19th century, and the American stage in the early 20th century, it didn’t enter the mainstream American zeitgeist until Marlon Brando stood in a sleeveless undershirt screaming “Stella!” in A Streetcar Named Desire.

The contrast between Brando’s bombastic, slurred new school intensity and Vivien Leigh’s Old World, faded grandeur as poor Blanche made A Streetcar Named Desire go off like an atom bomb for moviegoers who went back again and again to see Brando’s louse reveal the kindness of strangers. – DC

Rebel Without a Cause (1955)

Obviously, teenagers have existed as long as people started measuring their ages in years. But the concept of the “teenager” as a distinct group developed in the 20th century, and the movies were right there to cater to them. For the first half of the 1900s, cinema’s answer to the bildungsroman were wholesome pictures about courtship and first jobs, such as the Andy Hardy series starring Andy Rooney and Judy Garland. Where The Wild One (1953) and Blackboard Jungle (1955) brought juvenile delinquents to screens, it was James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause that turned the troubled teen into a romantic hero.

With his red jacket, rolled up blue jeans, and untamed hair, Dean embodies cool as Jim Stark. But director Nicholas Ray wastes no time in peeling back that exterior to reveal the tender heart within. Whether romancing fellow outcast Judy (Natalie Wood), standing up to bully Buzz Anderson (Corey Allen), or confronting his bickering parents (“You’re tearing me apart!” belonged to Dean long before Tommy Wiseau made it a punchline), James Dean turned the plight of the American teen into high tragedy, and the cinema screen was his spectacular stage. It shaped generations of cool to come, beginning with the kids it catered to in ‘55. – JG

My Fair Lady (1964)

When we think of golden age musicals, we tend to think of either Arthur Freed’s technicolor factory at MGM or RKO’s Fred and Ginger hoofers from an earlier era. However, the last gasp of the golden age was marked by the epic mega musicals of the 1960s. It ended in disaster by 1969, but when an aged Jack Warner led the way with George Cukor’s luscious adaptation of Lerner and Loewe’s My Fair Lady, it was the second biggest hit of 1964.

More stagebound than the even bigger Sound of Music that would come a year later (from the now also defunct 20th Century Fox), My Fair Lady still soared in its day thanks to both its songbook and brilliant casting. Yes, Audrey Hepburn was dubbed, but she makes for what I’d argue is a fiery Eliza Doolittle. Meanwhile, Rex Harrison’s Henry Higgins has such a lasting pop culture tail in audiences’ minds that he echoes to this day in the personality and voice of Stewie Griffin on Family Guy. And that influence was achieved by a three-hour roadshow presentation that did not seek to mildly divert a viewer’s attention while they folded laundry. – DC

Bonnie and Clyde (1967)

Once again, we come back to the power of a gutsy gangster picture, but now in an entirely different context. By 1967, old Hollywood was in its death throes, New Hollywood was only beginning to emerge, and Jack Warner was gone. So it was the perfect time to take a gamble on relative young guns like director Arthur Penn and stars Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway.

Bonnie and Clyde was among the first movies to mark the turning of the sensibility tide, and it did so by offering a gangster film with no moralizing. This is a brief, brutal, bloody fun ride until it turns just bloody. Seeing the titular characters gunned down on the big screen changed a medium and its audiences forever. – DC

Dirty Harry (1971)

In 1971, Americans were scared. The Zodiac Killer committed horrific murders and despite the fact that he openly mocked law enforcement with letters sent to newspapers, the police could not identify him, let alone stop him. Their fears unresolved, Americans sought solace in the movie theaters where they found a cop violent enough to meet these turbulent times: Dirty Harry Callahan.

Rewatching Dirty Harry today, when pop culture is inundated with super cops who kill criminals without compunction, it’s remarkable to see how well Clint Eastwood plays the title character’s moral conflict. Callahan does what he must to stop the unhinged hippie known as Scorpio (Andrew Robinson), a man crazy enough to hijack a bus full of children. But when Callahan tosses his badge into murky water in the final shot, minutes after gunning down Scorpio, any sense of relief the audience may have had is replaced by a different unease, the sense that we’ve replaced killer criminals with killers in blue. – JG

The Exorcist (1973)

Audiences did not just go to see The Exorcist during the holiday season of 1973, and the ensuing early months of ‘74. They went to experience battle with the Devil himself. Watch the above local news stories from the time period. The Exorcist sold more tickets than Avatar or Avengers: Endgame.

Part of that is a testament to director William Friedkin’s blending of documentarian verisimilitude with shock-horror imagery so heinous it still disturbs half a century later. But it is also a testimonial to the power of hearing about “the scariest movie ever made,” a film which challenged many Americans’ religious and secular anxieties alike, and finding the nerve to stare into the abyss. It left folks vomiting, traumatized, and most of all possessed by the power of cinema. – DC

Blazing Saddles (1973)

There had never been flatulence in an American movie before Blazing Saddles. That shattered-barrier is a kind of charming time capsule for the state of cinema after 40 years of self-censorship. But it only begins to explain why Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles played and played, and played in its heyday. And plays still.

A depressingly still timely caricature about the inherent racism of American life then (the Old West), now (1973), and in the decades to come (what is the “sheriff is Near” scene but a prophecy of birtherism in the Obama Years?), Blazing Saddles has a lot on its mind thanks to Brooks and Richard Pryor’s fearless screenplay. It also is just demented enough to win all audiences’ over with its unhinged, go-for-broke mania that is so preposterous it ends by breaking the fourth wall and all the characters escaping the Warner Bros. lot. Along the way, they even do live-action variations on WB Looney Tunes classics. – DC

All the President’s Men (1976)

Warner Bros. may have built its reputation on stories about working-class hustlers and gangsters, but it is still a Hollywood movie studio and therefore concerned with spectacle and glamour. Not even the New Hollywood movement could completely change that, not when dreamboats like Robert Redford were involved. But with All the President’s Men, director Alan J. Pakula and screenwriter William Goldman used Redford and Dustin Hoffman to make a movie so immediate that it almost felt like the evening news.

Based on their book of the same name, All the President’s Men follows Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward (Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Hoffman) as they chase down the story of the Watergate scandal, an event that occurred just four years earlier. Certainly, Redford and Hoffman retain their movie star charm, and Pakula knows how to shoot scenes of the duo meeting informant Deep Throat (Hal Holbrook) for maximum thrills. Yet the spectacle only underscored the importance of those unprecedented times, and the film helped viewers make sense of the history happening around them. It also defined the modern image of the movie journalist to this day. – JG

Superman: The Movie (1978)

In 1978, you will believe a man can fly. This simple but firm aspiration repeated on the poster for Superman: The Movie speaks to both the innocence of a world without superhero movies, as well as Richard Donner’s determination to make a grand epic about the guy in a red cape. On another level, it also speaks to the power of a studio’s marketing machine being used for good in support of such an actual artistic aspiration—at least on the part of Donner and Christopher Reeve, if not necessarily the producing Salkind family.

Superman was sold on the promise, and later fulfillment, of wonder and astonishment. And it made an event out of the sight of Christopher Reeve being held up by wires as he caught Margot Kidder in one arm and what seemed like a helicopter in the other. This, too, marked a turning point in American culture and the birth of a new genre that would come to define the next century’s cinema. – DC

The Shining (1980)

This entry could honestly have been any number of Stanley Kubrick movies. That’s because the one thing about latter-day WB—at least in the days before AT&T and then David Zaslav got involved—is that it knew how to cultivate long, fruitful relationships with auteur directors. One of the best examples of this is Kubrick, who came to Warners in 1971 to make his controversial and initially X-rated A Clockwork Orange. Kubrick never really left the studio either, helming while there Barry Lyndon, Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut.

We picked The Shining for the list because it’s the one that contemporary critics generally sniffed at. Why was the great master of 2001 and Dr. Strangelove “lowering” himself to do a horror movie? Incredulously, Shelly Duvall and Kubrick both were nominated for Razzies. But then, the Razzies’ taste for “worst of the year” has always sucked. Audiences though? In 1980, millions came back time and again transfixed by Kubrick and Jack Nicholson’s aloof portrait of madness, and the quickened descent that leads to a snowbound hell. There is an unnerving magic when you sit in a darkened theater and enter the Overlook Hotel that both seduces and repels all moviegoers. You might even come to wonder which of the other strangers in the dark are ghosts… – DC

Gremlins (1984)

Warner Bros. can’t claim that it birthed the blockbuster. That honor belongs to Universal for Jaws and 20th Century Fox for Star Wars. But Warners did make one of the most enduring entries in the early blockbuster era with Gremlins. Thanks to its combination of cuddly hero Gizmo and monstrous enemy Stripe, Gremlins was a merchandising goldmine, following Star Wars’s practice of making movies a phenomenon that went far beyond the theater.

Part of Gremlins’ appeal came from its blending of tones. Originally conceived as a dark horror movie by screenwriter Chris Columbus, the man who would later make family classics such as Home Alone, Gremlins introduced audiences to Mogwai, mythical creatures that would turn into rampaging beasties if fed after midnight. The production process softened Columbus’ script, first when Spielberg inserted his family-friendly sensibilities and then when director Joe Dante injected it with Looney Toons slapstick. The result was a movie that made going to the cinema into a proper cultural event for the whole family, raising a new line of Gen-Xers on Spielbergian fairy dust. – JG

The Lost Boys (1987)

As in the folk tales and books that preceded them, movies mostly kept vampires consigned to crypts and castles. Bela Lugosi and Christopher Lee stalked Gothic hallways, the threat they presented kept far in the past, no matter how giant they appeared on the movie screen. With The Lost Boys, director Joel Schumacher brought bloodsuckers into the 1980s and projected them in all their neon glory for a hip Gen X.

Jason Patric plays teen Michael Emerson, who comes to Santa Cruz with his newly-divorced mother Lucy (Dianne Wiest) and his younger brother Sam (Corey Haim). Drawn in by the beautiful Star (Jami Gertz), Michael finds himself part of a gang led by the alluring David (Kiefer Sutherland)—a gang, he learns too late, of vampires. When David turns Michael, it’s up to Sam and his new friends the Frog Brothers (Corey Feldman and Jamison Newlander) to restore his humanity. These plot points might fit any creaky classic by Universal or Hammer, but The Lost Boys gives them a gloss that’s pure ‘80s. It defined a new image of cool for moviegoers of the day. – JG 

Batman (1989)

We could run the risk of including too many of WB’s superhero films on this list. A quirk of the rise of IP movies is that only those who hold said intellectual property can make those movies—which leaves superhero flicks these days relegated to either being a WB or Disney joint. Still, when the studio picked eccentric wunderkind Tim Burton to helm their vaguely experimental Batman summer tentpole, nothing was so safe, rote, or predictable back then.

Burton was the one-time Disney animator fired from the Mouse for being too weird, and he’d since proven the latter part true by making movies like another ‘80s gonzo gamble, Beeetlejuice (also a WB release). The studio then trusted the kid when he said he wanted Mr. Mom to be his dark, brooding, and Gothic Batman. The studio was all behind it as well, creating the biggest marketing campaign for a film ever upon release. If you were alive in 1989, Batmania was inescapable. The logos; the T-shirts; the visage of Jack Nicholson grinning at you on the TV. All of it sold a grandiose dark fantasy that blended old WB aesthetics like noir and gangster pictures with Prince music and German Expressionism. It was the biggest movie of the decade. – DC

The Fugitive (1993)

In these days of 72-inch LED screens and prestige shows, one can almost understand why Netflix would consider the theater obsolete. But one need only look at The Fugitive to see how wrong that opinion is. On the surface, The Fugitive follows the basic elements of the 1960s television series: Dr. Richard Kimble is unjustly sentenced for murdering his wife, but a train derailment allows him to escape. He subsequently goes on the run, searching for the one-armed man who actually killed his wife while being hunted by a law enforcer named Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones). The movie’s script by Jeb Stuart and David Twohy has the same premise, and even makes time for Kimble to do a good deed, just like he did on random episodes of the show.

But everything in 1993’s The Fugitive is pure cinema. There’s bonafide A-lister Harrison Ford giving perhaps his best dramatic performance as Kimble, alongside Tommy Lee Jones in an Academy Award-winning turn as Gerard. Even better is Andrew Davis’ direction, which shoots the material for maximum impact while capturing the frigid brutality of winter in Chicago like only a Midwesterner could. From the spectacle of the train wreck and Kimble’s daring waterfall escape to the one-liners that Gerard trades with partner Cosmo Renfro (Joe Pantoliano), The Fugitive demonstrates what movies do better than any other medium, and it still works best on a big screen. – JG

L.A. Confidential (1997)

One more gangster/noir picture we feel deserves a shoutout is Curtis Hanson’s sterling crime epic, L.A. Confidential. As much a love letter to the type of movies WB made back in its early glory days, L.A. Confidential adapts (and honestly improves upon) James Ellroy’s epic novel to offer a scuzzy but seductive portrait of the City of Dreams that were turning out crime pictures and Doris Day musicals alike in the 1950s, which is when this movie is set.

With three titanic performances among its leads, including then young and unknown Russell Crowe and Guy Pearce, L.A. Confidential hit moviegoers like a ton of bricks in ‘97. So much so, it won Kim Basinger an Oscar and was the only film viewed as a nominal threat to the actual Titanic movie’s awards hype that season. – DC

The Matrix (1999)

There isn’t always a 1:1 relationship between how influential a film is and how often it gets parodied or referenced. But in the case of 1999 sci-fi action thriller The Matrix, it’s pretty close. The Matrix was an utterly inescapable cultural force at the end of the 20th century. Blending Y2K anxieties with an exploration of this state-of-the-art technology called “the internet,” the Wachowski siblings’ film spoke to audiences in a way that few other films could and became an enduring cultural meme because of it. 

It helped, of course, that the experience of watching it absolutely whipped. Even for young viewers who didn’t fully understand the “real world vs. Matrix simulation” lore at its center, The Matrix is simply a thoroughly thrilling experience. The Wachowskis pioneered new technologies like the 360-degree slow-motion “bullet time,” while incorporating gunplay-centric martial arts long before a certain John Wick (it’s certainly not a coincidence that Keanu Reeves stars in both) made it famous. Like many of its successful sci-fi peers, The Matrix would go on to spawn a franchise with middling results. But before something can become “IP,” it’s gotta wow folks in the theater. The Matrix did that and then some. – AB

Harry Potter (2001 – 2011)

Reading has rarely been viewed as a group activity. And yet, countless Millennials got to experience literature together thanks to the behemoth that was the Harry Potter books. By the time Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire—the fourth book in the series about the boy wizard—rolled around in 2000, midnight release parties at Barnes & Noble and/or Borders Books had become the hottest ticket in town. And that enthusiasm naturally extended into Warner Bros.’ eight-film adaptations of J.K. Rowling’s wizarding opus. 

There was no moviegoing experience in the 2000s quite like Harry Potter. Arriving with admirable regularity and featuring little-to-no casting turnover, the Harry Potter movies capitalized on a legitimate worldwide phenomenon. They also reminded us of how inextricable from our lives the theatergoing experience can be. Many of the same viewers who were brought to the Sorcerer’s Stone by their parents in 2001 probably brought a date to The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 in 2011. That’s what it’s all about, baby. (Trying to impress girls with your Harry Potter knowledge). – AB

Mystic River (2003)

Another filmmaker synonymous with WB is Clint Eastwood. That relationship began with the aforementioned Dirty Harry, but it took hold with Eastwood as a director when he made The Outlaw Josey Wales for the studio in 1976. Among their finest collaborations is Mystic River, a symphony of childhood tragedy and regret set in the crime-ridden Boston of Dennis Lehane’s typewriter.

A generational epic that stars Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, and Kevin Bacon, Mystic River is the type of adult drama that adults actually went to the movie theater for en masse once upon a time. It also features some of the best work in Penn and Robbins’ careers. – DC

V for Vendetta (2006)

Another film which speaks to the power of audiences turning up week after week, as well as why it was good to have a studio still willing to take curio risks with some of the stranger comic book and graphic novel stories in their library, is V for Vendetta. While the original comic’s writer Alan Moore understandably disowned the commercialization of his tale (and the fact that a distinctly anti-Thatcher book was retooled for American audiences in the 21st century), this V for Vendetta, which is largely filtered through the prism of the Wachowski siblings who wrote the screenplay and produced the picture, offered a modern portrait for resistance that’s still subversive and leftist enough to make it a mystery how this thing got through the studio system.

When younger audiences turned up in 2006, the portrait of Natalie Portman’s transformation from frightened, compliant citizen to a radicalized freedom fighter who drops off the grid to help a man whom propagandistic news networks label a terrorist felt like a blast of fire. Curiously, the film was claimed as a rallying cry as much by the right as the left. Media literacy issues aside, the fact the movie became a touchstone across the political landscape is a testament to both it and the power of a well-made, well-acted, and well-publicized film that I personally recall joining friends to see week after week. It’s the difference between a story catching fire and disappearing into the doomscrolling aether. – DC

The Dark Knight (2008)

Oftentimes we go to the cinema to be surprised. Other times, however, we know exactly what we’re going to get and the experience is no less thrilling. As someone who was 18 years old in the summer of 2008, it’s hard for me to articulate just how much of a “sure thing” we all knew The Dark Knight was going to be.

Then-young gun director Christopher Nolan had bought an immense amount of goodwill with audiences thanks to the previous caped crusader film, Batman Begins, and his indie darling Memento. After the shock of his casting (and then processing of his untimely death) had subsided, Heath Ledger already seemed certain to turn in a legendary performance as the Joker from the trailers alone. Add in a captivating marketing campaign, led by Ledger’s Joker’s “Why So Serious?” taunt, and the expectation was that The Dark Knight would be no less than the greatest superhero movie ever made. 

So then we all went to see it, and it was the greatest superhero ever made. – AB

Inception (2010)

One more director-studio partnership worth singling out further is Christopher Nolan’s time at WB before corporate players like Jason Kilar and David Zaslav got involved. Nolan of course became a golden boy at WB after popularizing the term “reboot” with his pair of 2000s Batman classics. But it is also a testament to the filmmaker and the studio that they worked hard on the back of that in turning Nolan’s name into a brand unto itself, similar to Spielberg in the 1980s or Hitchcock in the mid-20th century.

The film that crystallized this is Inception, an original, mind-bending sci-fi epic that the studio began cryptically marketing a year in advance with the deconstructed sounds of Edith Piaf. In the summer of 2010, there was no better fun to be had in a movie theater than going back to see Inception for a second or third time and debating the logics and rules of dreams-within-dreams with friends, figuring out together whether Leonardo DiCaprio was asleep or awake at the end. What really mattered is even in an era of IP, original, auteur-driven spectacles could still dominate our shared dreamscapes. – DC

Wonder Woman (2017)

It’s a truth universally acknowledged that cinema, over the past few decades, has largely been dominated by superhero films. And like it or not, most of those movies have been headlined by men. While Superman and Batman have been popping up on the big screen since the 1940s in both serials and feature productions, it took us all the way until 2016 for the third pillar of DC’s famous trilogy to show up in theaters, and her first live-action appearance was essentially as a glorified cameo in a movie about two men fighting. (Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice). Sigh

But while we still had to wait another year for Diana Prince to actually get a movie of her own, boy, was the end result worth it. Directed by Patty Jenkins, 2017’s Wonder Woman was not just a movie; it was a cultural moment, an experience that allowed female fans the world over to finally see themselves as something more than love interests and supporting figures in the genre they had loved for so long. It helped that the movie was legitimately great—you either got emotional and cheered during that No Man’s Land sequence or you’re lying—but it’s difficult to overstate what Wonder Woman’s arrival meant to women at the time, who packed into theaters and took endless photos in front of the lobby posters with arms in Diana’s crossed bracelet pose. (It’s me; I’m women.) -– Lacy Baugher

Barbie (2023)

Come on Barbie, let’s go party. Which is precisely what we all did in the summer of 2023. Look, it’s doubtful that any of us expected a movie based on little more than a line of dolls to be particularly good, let alone the cultural event of the year, but that’s what we all get for underestimating Greta Gerwig. Mixing smart writing, sharp humor, a hefty dose of nostalgia, some light feminist politics, and a surprisingly incisive understanding of our contemporary moment, Gerwig and star Margot Robbie somehow managed to make a movie that spoke to every woman in the audience, no matter her age. And women everywhere responded by showing up—wearing pink, sipping themed cocktails, and attending repeat viewings with their mothers, daughters, and best friends—and embracing a pitch perfect media rollout by a studio that actually made an “event film” the reason for the moviegoing season.

Further bolstered by the unexpected internet-fueled cultural phenomenon known as Barbenheimer— a joyous, meme-fueled counterprogramming boost that paired Barbie with Universal Pictures and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, which released that same day—the film soared to unprecedented heights, becoming the first film solely directed by a woman to make a billion dollars at the box office. Yes, it helped that Barbie’s actually a great movie. But the summer of Barbenheimer is a rare and necessary reminder that it’s the shared experience of seeing movies together that makes it so magical. — LB

Sinners (2025)

Warner Bros. has provided plenty of superb moviegoing experiences over the years, but rarely has a moviegoing experience been so…educational as Ryan Coogler’s 2025 music-tinged vampire thriller, Sinners. A “blank check” effort following the massive success of both the Creed and Black Panther franchises, Sinners is an intensely personal creation for Coogler. The film contends with Jim Crow bigotry of the 1930s and revives the blues music legacy of Coogler’s family, all the while indulging cool-as-hell genre action. 

But more than any of that, Sinners is a movie movie—so much so that Coogler collaborated with Kodak to present a 10-minute video explainer on how to actually watch the thing. Filled with breakdowns on aspect ratios, film strips, and digital projections, Coogler’s clip walks viewers through the many formats in which they could experience his movie. In a time when the theater experience was more endangered than ever, Coogler’s brief film class paid dividends, with Sinners generating $365 million in box office receipts and creating a cinematic experience that a young generation of filmgoers wouldn’t soon forget.

It is the most satisfying artistic and commercial success in a year where WB has dominated both ends of cinema, be it the former with One Battle After Another or the latter via The Minecraft Movie. – AB

*Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this article incorrectly noted CNN was going to Netflix in the deal.

Peaky Blinders Movie Release Will Test Netflix’s Theatrical Strategy

By the order of the Peaky Blinders, it looks like we’re all going to be heading to the movie theater in early 2026. Netflix has announced that the long-awaited feature film installment of its historical gangland franchise is getting a two-week limited theatrical release ahead of its streaming premiere. 

Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man will officially hit theaters on March 6, 2026, a full two weeks before it arrives on Netflix. The film will see Oscar-winner Cillian Murphy reprise his role as gang leader Tommy Shelby, one of Peak TV’s most enduring (and appealing) anti-heroes, and the role that helped solidify his career. 

The first incarnation of the Peaky TV show (it’s now set to return for a second run that will chronicle a later generation of the family) ended on a bittersweet note, as Murphy’s Tommy faked his own death and literally rode off into the sunset, claiming what was likely the closest thing to a happily ever after any of us could have expected for his character. Alas, nothing gold can stay. Per the freshly released synopsis — our first real hint of anything to do with the film’s story — The Immortal Man will be set in Birmingham in 1940, as Tommy “is driven back from a self-imposed exile to face his most destructive reckoning yet.”

“With the future of the family and the country at stake, Tommy must face his own demons and choose whether to confront his legacy or burn it to the ground,” the synopsis continues. Not for nothing, but this is basically the plot of literally every season of Peaky Blinders to some degree, so get ready to retread some familiar territory, even if the prospect of Tommy having to tell his family he’s still alive adds some definite emotional stakes.

But while it makes a certain amount of sense for Netflix to release some of its buzziest films in theaters, particularly if they’re heavy awards season contenders like Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein or Rian Johnson’s Wake Up Dead Man, the logic behind a cinematic outing for The Immortal Man is… less clear. After all, it’s not like the average random moviegoer will suddenly decide to see this film out of the blue, given that it’s based on a show they’ve maybe heard of and six seasons of previous content they probably haven’t seen. 

Is the Peaky Blinders fandom really that massive? Will they be so eager to see how Tommy Shelby returns that they’ll storm theaters for the chance to find out two weeks ahead of its streaming release? Is Netflix angling to get Murphy into any sort of awards-season talk? (The fact that this movie is releasing in March sort of dispels that notion out of hand.) It’s truly a mystery. 

But The Immortal Man is also an intriguing early test for Netflix, whose recent purchase of Warner Bros. means the streamer will soon have to start thinking about the prospect of theatrical releases in an entirely new and different way. If the Peaky movie performs decently in theaters, could we start to see more Netflix original films end up at the multiplex, beyond the obvious auteur-driven tentpoles? Will audiences show up for something they can just watch at home in two weeks, particularly if, like The Immortal Man, there’s nothing particularly cinematic about the property or the way it was filmed? (As much as some of us — read: me — would probably love to see Tommy Shelby in IMAX, that’s not what’s happening here.) We’ll have to wait and see.

Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man will be released in theaters on March 6, 2026, before premiering on Netflix on March 20, 2026.