“2025 Was a Warm-Up” Marvel Rivals Creators on Leveling Up the Game

It’s been just over a year since NetEase Games launched the enormously popular online hero shooter Marvel Rivals and the game has only grown over the ensuing months. The title has teams of heroes and villains from across the Marvel multiverse battling against each other as part of a cosmic chaos that dueling versions of Doctor Doom have unleashed on reality. While the core game revolves around objective-based 6v6 online combat, it has also unveiled new game modes across its run, thrilling tens of millions of players worldwide.

While in Los Angeles for The Game Awards 2025, where NetEase announced the sixth season for Marvel Rivals adding Deadpool and Elsa Bloodstone to the playable roster, Den of Geek sat down with the Marvel Rivals team. The developers reflected on the first year of the game’s lifecycle, including how they strategized building upon its launch foundations and keeping the experience fresh for players. Moreover, NetEase is not only committed to ensuring the game’s future remains bright, but are excited for players to see what the team is cooking up next.

“2025 was more of a warm-up period for us,” Marvel Games executive producer Danny Koo declares. “Next year, we’re going to have bigger plans. We’re not going to slow down. We’ve already planned more than a year ahead and I can’t wait for our players to see it.”

And what a warm-up it was.

In its first year, the game released five seasons of new content. This bolstered the playable roster from its launch number of 33 to 45, with two more formally announced and set to join the fight soon, along with hundreds of new costumes for the cast and new stages to duke it out in. But one of the big standouts from the year was a PvE mode based on the Disney+ animated series Marvel Zombies, that saw a small group of heroes blast through hordes of zombies while moving to defeat their undead leader, the Queen of the Dead. Timed not only with the animated series’ premiere but also in time for Halloween, the new game mode expanded what Marvel Rivals could and can be.

“We saw Marvel Zombies and knew it was a good story that we could collaborate with on the Marvel IP side,” explains NetEase Games publishing and marketing lead Yachen Bian. “A lot of players really loved the PvE mode. I also think that we chose very good timing. We made it for Halloween but it also was good timing for the lifecycle of the game. We provided players with something new that refreshed their experience for the first year.”

Koo notes that the team had considered creating a PvE mode for a while but couldn’t settle on the right narrative context until they watched a special advance screening of the animated series. Realizing the show’s concept fit their game’s ethos perfectly, the Marvel Rivals team was able to assemble a prototype of the Marvel Zombies game mode in about six months, experimenting with the new player skills for the PvE mode. This was followed by an 18v18 competitive mode which encourages players to try new playable characters and makes the gameplay even more fast-paced and frenetic as the larger teams do battle.

“In the next year, we want to provide more game modes,” Bian teases. “It’s why we have prototypes in the game, like PvE and 18v18. We want to give the players more choices of different game modes beyond the basic gameplay because your fundamental experience might be very different. When you’re fighting against zombies, it’s quite different from fighting against other people.”

Marvel Rivals is NetEase’s title with the largest global audience to date, with over 40 million players in territories from the Americas and Europe to Asia and Oceania. After initially promoting its launch at major gaming events throughout 2024, the development team has been positively overwhelmed by the rapidly growing community. This has only fueled the team to match the fans’ passion with their own dedication towards continuing to support the game and take it to new heights.

“That process has brought the team together even closer,” observes Koo. “It’s a lot of hard work and it always feels different and exciting. This game is releasing new content every week. Even my own team comes in every day asking what’s new today. Everyone’s excited. They want to continue to make this happen. Everyone wants to make this the biggest game possible.”

Judging by the team’s achievements and continued success after over a year in an increasingly crowded market, NetEase Games has taken great strides towards reaching this ambitious goal with Marvel Rivals. But with plenty more Marvel projects set to premiere and launch throughout 2026, you can bet that Marvel Rivals is going to reflect the ever-evolving state of Marvel as the game officially dives into its second year.

Developed and published by NetEase Games, Marvel Rivals is available now for PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, and PC.

The Best Movies of 2025

It’s been a tumultuous year. When 2025 began, the state of things already felt in upheaval. Whether it be technology, trade, or just pop culture, everywhere you looked was chaos. Obviously that’s only gotten turbo-charged by year’s end as we now take stock of bidding wars, great storytellers taken from us too soon, and whatever the heck is going on with AI.

But what can get lost in such tidings are the stories of goodwill; the moments of grace; the pauses we must savor while embracing our commonality and fellowship. The big screen remains one of the last great touchstones for such gatherings, and though its popularity might diminish, cinema’s power has never dimmed. There have been a number of great cinematic experiences this year that have tied us together, and plenty more underseen or underappreciated that deserve better attention. So with that in mind, here’s a toast to the best films of the year that was.

Frankenstein

25. Frankenstein

Guillermo del Toro has been chasing the dream of Frankenstein since he was six years old. It shows in a passion project that is gorgeously wrought and acted, if perhaps not quite as exquisite as the del Toro fantasias it’s already inspired earlier in his life. As a standalone interpretation of Mary Shelley, however, it is the most aesthetically sumptuous retelling since the days of James Whale and features a performance by Jacob Elordi as the Creature that’s more fragile than Christ cast in stained glass mural. We wouldn’t call him a monster, nor necessarily even Shelley’s fallen angel of the page, but it’s a turn that makes the movie a worthy addition to the Frankenstein canon.

Will Arnett in Is This Thing On

24. Is This Thing On?

Bradley Cooper steps again behind the camera and for the first time without directing himself as lead. He should do so more often since Is This Thing On? feels like a small but sweetly intimate palate cleanser after Maestro’s excesses. It also casts Will Arnett in a paradigm-shifting role as a standup comic trapped in what at first appears to be a wistful drama. As Arnett’s middle-aged finance bro confesses the first time he picks up a mic at the Comedy Cellar, he has no idea why he’s doing this but he thinks he is going through a divorce. The first clue was he’s living in the city and his wife and children are not. Dammit if the audience doesn’t laugh.

Apparently much of the “comedy” was improvised by Arnett, who himself had never done standup until Cooper cast him to lead this story and placed a camera at what seems to be centimeters from his face. It’s compelling, as is the larger exploration of the catharsis of art. But as with every Cooper directorial joint to date, the film is most interested in the interplay between creativity and intimacy, and how much more messy that can become after 20 years of marriage and waylaid dreams in the case of Arnett’s Alex and an excellent Laura Dern as estranged wife Tess.

Wes Anderson directing Benicio del Toro in The Phoenician Scheme

23. The Phoenician Scheme

More than a decade after The Grand Budapest Hotel, Wes Anderson’s latest feels like a return to form for the master of the symmetrical frame. That’s because while the lines remain obsessively straight in cinematographer Bruno Delbonnel’s storybook compositions, the characters inhabiting them feel refreshingly human. A full-chested Benicio del Toro domineers the frame even while rarely raising his voice above a monotone whisper. Luckily, this familiar Anderson contrast takes on pathos when del Toro’s industrialist is reunited with an estranged daughter and prospective sister of the cloth, Liesl (Mia Threapleton, terrific). 

Strained dynamics between lousy fathers and adult children is familiar terrain for the helmer but new fault lines are unearthed this time, perhaps because the director is now closer in age to del Toro’s Zsa-zsa than Threapleton’s Liesl. It also gives dramatic heft to Anderson’s acerbic style which is downright giddy in this yarn about cheats, scoundrels, and deep cut cinema references.

cast of It was Just an Accident

22. It Was Just an Accident

Writer-director Jafar Panahi filmed It Was Just an Accident on the streets of a Tehran still patrolled by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. That act of bravery is itself an eye-opening achievement considering the film’s depiction of a repressed theocratic state where citizens are unable, whether physically or mentally, to move past lifetimes of oppression.

This is manifested in a loaded allegory wherein disparate strangers are connected only by the suffering they felt as wards of the government’s torture chambers. Now they think they’re able to turn the tables when they kidnap one of their lead interrogators. The only problem is no one is certain since they only ever heard his menacing voice through a black bag or blindfold. The politics of the film are not subtle, and the melodrama is a bit thick, but the authenticity is so palpable the film won the Palme d’Or.

Cast of the Ballad of Wallis Island

21. The Ballad of Wallis Island

Director James Griffiths and stars/writers Tom Basden and Tim Key previously made a version of The Ballad of Wallis Island as a short film in 2007. Waiting nearly two decades to turn the concept into a feature proved apropos for the wistful dramedy. While on the one hand this movie works as a satire of many a creative’s worst fear—being trapped on an isolated island with a worshipful fan—on the other it is a far more deliberate meditation on the music and cultural touchstones that shape us… and how those touchstones can become anchors dragging at our feet.

Such is the alternating lifestyles of both folk singer Herb McGwyer (Basden) and eccentric millionaire Charles Heath (Key). Charles has invited Herb to play an intimate concert of old 2000s hits for longtime fans on a hard-to-get-to island. Only when Herb arrives, he discovers the intimate audience consists of one lonely dude: Charles. Also Charlie invited Herb’s ex-girlfriend and achingly missed collaborator, the now married Nell Mortimer (Carey Mulligan). It’s a setup that can go many ways, and yet all of the collaborators, including a warmly reflective Mulligan, take it to a place that is never anything less than amusing and cozy. Be warned though, even warmth can burn.

David Corenswet and Rachel Brosnahan as Superman and Lois Lane

20. Superman

A quarter century on since a pair of claws and organic webshooters reinvented the modern superhero movie, the world of capes and cowls runs the risk of growing stagnant. There was even apprehension this time last year about one of the genre’s new darlings taking a stab at a character that has stumbled every other big screen suitor since the 1980s. Yet James Gunn’s Superman turned out to burst with an energy and joy that eludes most masked things nowadays, and it has gone a long way to restore confidence in not only men-in-tights summer tentpoles, but in the cinematic appeal of kindness unto itself.

David Corenswet makes for a Clark Kent who is unapologetically buoyant and bubbly, and Gunn in turn has the wisdom to juxtapose that square-jawed goodness against Rachel Brosnahan’s pitch perfect take on a Lois Lane. She’s her own Girl Friday. Known for his sense of irony and occasionally twisted humor, Gunn eschews both impulses while embracing an ebullience in a movie that has concern for everyone—even a squirrel in peril. The film features a number of the drawbacks which bedevil many modern superhero movies, including a surplus of characters and universe-building, but a picture that has the confidence and restraint to spend 20 minutes between Lois and Clark debating the finer points of ethical journalism, or the merits of punk rockery, really does know how to fly.

Miles Teller and Elizabeth Olsen in Eternity

19. Eternity

The best love triangles to watch (if not experience) are those without an easy answer. In which case, ooh boy is Elizabeth Olsen’s Joan trapped in a good one during Eternity, David Freyne’s charming throwback to the high-concept rom-coms of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Like Robert Montgomery or Rex Harrison before her, Joan discovers her problems are only beginning when she gets to the afterlife and learns that in addition to reclaiming her youth, she must choose between her beloved husband of the last 67 years, Larry (Miles Teller), and that first great love who died during the Korean War and has waited for her ever since: Luke (Callum Turner).

The setup is strong, but it is the gentle amiability that Freyne cultivates in this deliberately paced laugher which ingratiates and beguiles. All three lead performances are played with empathy and affection, with Teller going against type as a nebbish sweater-vest on feet. Still, it’s really Olsen’s picture as a woman faced with an impossible choice and wisdom that seems to far exceed the years on her face. Freyne and co-writer Pat Cunnane’s screenplay never seek to downplay the potential tragedy or bittersweetness of their scenario, but those touches only heighten the absurdity of the rest of the material, with Zazu Myers’ retro Mediterranean chic production design becoming its own kind of cozy hell for a party of three.

Ethan Hawke in Blue Moon

18. Blue Moon

At Sardi’s restaurant, the legendary Broadway haunt in New York City’s Theater District, the caricatured portraits of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein hang in pride of place above the bar. As they should; this is the pair who invented the modern Broadway musical with Oklahoma! Nonetheless, it’s tragicomic that the portrait of Lorenz Hart, Rodgers’ first lyricist with whom he wrote songs like “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered,” “The Lady Is a Tramp,” and of course “Blue Moon,” is located somewhere else entirely removed from his legendary co-writer. Hart is forgotten—another face in a sea of well-blended countenances.

Richard Linklater recognizes this bitter irony in Blue Moon to such a degree that he and writer Robert Kaplow set their biographical study of Hart on a single evening at Sardi’s: the night Oklahoma! opened. With the grinning melancholy of a reflection in a martini glass, Blue Moon could have been a play but works beautifully as the rare type of adult drama they don’t make anymore. In a single night, it infers a lifetime of regrets and slights for the five-foot-flat, closeted genius who nurses a severe problem with drink but a great gift for wordplay. It also gift wraps Ethan Hawke one of the best roles of his career. He’s the clown aware of how his opera ends.

Emma Stone kidnapped in Bugonia

17. Bugonia

If the last few years have proven anything, it’s that Americans seem to be living on different planets. So leave it to Yorgos Lanthimos to make their accusations explicit in this deeply cynical allegory for the 21st century. The original idea actually hails from Korean filmmaker Jang Joon-hwan, who wrote and directed the same story 22 years ago in the little-seen Save the Green Planet! Even so, the acerbic filmmaker of The Lobster and Poor Things, working with Will Tracy who previously wrote The Menu and large swaths of Succession, make a compelling case for this story belonging in a post-Trump, post-facts West where one conspiracy theory nutter (Jesse Plemons) kidnaps his hometown’s pharmaceutical CEO queen bee (Emma Stone). Now he demands that she confess she’s an alien and take him to her leader.

By happily playing like a kid who’s found his dad’s gun with imagery of the terminally online, misogynistic loner and an untouchable C-suite aristocrat who knows how to bury secrets and bodies, Lanthimos makes the angriest movie of his career. It pairs nicely, too, with Plemons’ high-wire act of playing both a ghoul and a deeply damaged antihero, and Stone going full reptile, if not necessarily alien, with her Ripley in Alien 3 buzz cut and pitiless stare behind a media-trained smile. And yes, the ending is satisfying.

Matt Smith and Austin Butler in Caught Stealing

16. Caught Stealing

After nearly two decades of chasing awards and prestige, it’s nice to see Darren Aronofsky return to his roots and do a throwback thriller so retro that he went ahead and set it in the ‘90s. Based on Charlie Huston’s book of the same name (and which Huston adapted for the screen), Caught Stealing is a sprightly exercise in swagger over substance as it presents a hell of a week in the life of Hank (Austin Butler), a bartender in a pre-gentrified, sleazy Lower East Side. Hank has a chip on his shoulder because a drunk driving accident stole his baseball career, but the other shoulder is outright black and blue after Ukrainian mobsters get done with him.

See, the mobsters are on the lookout for Hank’s drug dealing neighbor Russ (Matt Smith in a glorious mohawk that was already out of fashion in 1998), but somehow a case of misplaced aggression leads to a sordid tale of booze, duffle bags stuffed with money, murder, and a very cute kitty. And I haven’t even mentioned the Hasidic hitmen played by Liev Schreiber and Vincent D’Onofrio that invite Hank over for Shabbat.

Caught Stealing isn’t particularly deep, nor does it need to be. It’s just the type of highly entertaining potboiler that used to be Hollywood’s bread and butter, and that still goes down smooth thanks to Aronofsky’s kinetic pacing and sharp eye for period aesthetics. Whether it’s watching Butler smolder with an otherwise underutilized Zoë Kravitz, or simply go along for the ride while Schreiber and D’Onofrio introduce him to Matzo Ball Soup whilst between shootouts, Caught Stealing’s is as playful as Alphabet City is scuzzy.

Elle Fanning and Predator in Predator: Badlands

15. Predator: Badlands

If this list was based purely around onscreen buddy chemistry, then Predator: Badlands would be up there with a plasma caster. Admittedly Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi) and Thia (Elle Fanning) make for a pretty odd coupling. He’s a galaxy-hopping Yautja out to prove his apex bona fides one severed head and ripped spine at a time; she’s a gabby Weyland-Yutani robo-gal lacking an off-switch—or for that matter legs. Yet when she pulls this banished Predator runt out of some tall grass with a sing-songy optimism that even disembowelment cannot dampen, genre sparks fly.

Much of this is a testament to the instincts of writer-director Dan Trachtenberg, who has said the idea of Predator: Badlands sprang from the mental image he had of a Predator carrying a bisected robot around its shoulders like a backpack. But more than a poster-ready silhouette, Trachtenberg conjures the old-fashioned sincerity of blockbusters past, even as he sacrifices the testosterone-drenched machismo of the Predator brand specifically for something that feels a little more Amblin-esque in nature. Fanning also deserves many flowers since she is practically having a conversation with herself half the movie, and has enough boundless charisma for that to be in the film’s favor. She gets to be a synthetic Scarecrow to Schuster-Koloamatangi’s brooding and brutish Dorothy. If only she had the legs to dance along a yellow brick road of glowy green blood.

Daniel Craig and Josh O'Connor in Wake Up Dead Man

14. Wake Up Dead Man

Up until now, each of Rian Johnson and Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc mysteries have, like the original title promised, kept their knives out. They are satires seeking to weigh, judge, and most definitely devour its cast of rich and affluent suspects, even if only one of them gets carted off to prison at the end. Which makes Wake Up Dead Man both a departure and a genuine grace note for the filmmakers in every sense of the term. Using a kooky locked room mystery to partner the writer-director’s intense skepticism—as exemplified by Blanc at his grayest—with a lifelong need to believe in kindness and forbearance, a la this film’s true protagonist Father Jud Duplenticy (Josh O’Connor), Wake Up Dead Man is a hymn to the harmony which can exist between faith and reason.

Both aspects are approached with warmth and intelligence by a screenplay still good-humored enough to keep audiences entertained by the mystery of a monsignor slaughtered in some impossible manner. But it is the compassion the film has for Father Duplenticy’s own need to empathize and protect his flock that gives the thing its soul—that and O’Connor’s eyes pleading, even while staring into the countenance of a murderer.

Paul Rudd in Friendship Review

13. Friendship

Tim Robinson’s brand of comedy can be an acquired taste. Reliant on evoking cringes until your muscles hurt, his gags have always been punishingly cruel. Now that sadism has been elevated to a joyous place in Friendship, a new laugher written and directed by Andrew DeYoung that gets a lot of mileage out of our familiarity with Paul Rudd. After all, Paul Rudd is a cool dude, and his onscreen Austin is indeed the coolest with his Anchorman-era ‘stache and I Love You Man smile.

But it’s only after audiences are encouraged to recognize Robinson’s needy and pathetic Craig is more than just a clinger, but also a kind of milquetoast 2020s Travis Bickle, that the penny drops. Friendship is a comedy told from the delusional POV of the villain. So watching him destroy his marriage to Kate Mara, his heinous job at a parasitic tech company, and eventually even his bromance with Rudd offers a biblical degree of schadenfreude. Also just wait for the toad glands scene.

Jesse Buckley in Hamnet Review

12. Hamnet

It is still a matter of scholarly debate whether there is any correlation between Hamlet, William Shakespeare’s four-hour classic that grapples with death and the riddle of mortality, and the fact that the Bard had a young son named Hamnet who died three years before the first Danish prince trod the Globe Theatre’s boards. It’s fair to say Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet disposes of such obtuse pedantry within seconds while suggesting the greatest tragedy of Shakespeare’s life was the family he left behind in Stratford.

Told solely from the perspective of neglected wife Anne Hathaway—here called by her nickname Agnes and pronounced “Anyers” in early modern English—Hamnet is as meditative and discreet as you’d expect from the filmmaker of Nomadland. It also is exquisitely devastating courtesy of Jessie Buckley’s heart-rinding turn which can express entire folios in a single, strained glance. While the film indulges Zhao’s preference for the natural world, taking on an even storybook and pagan quality when Agnes first meets the local poet and tutor (Paul Mescal) in the woods, it’s when Hamnet finally goes to London town, and Agnes and audiences see for themselves what Will has become, that the movie’s paean to the myriad complexities of motherhood finds its unutterable glory.

Jodie Comer in 28 Years Later

11. 28 Years Later

It may not have been a full 28 years since Danny Boyle and Alex Garland transformed the zombie subgenre forever, but it turns out we waited long enough for this grandly meaty, if curiously bucolic, exercise in horror. To be sure, Boyle announces early and with maximum wrath that he can still channel the frantic energy of his early oeuvre with the editing of a 2002-set zombie attack packing more fury than the rage-infected “zombies” carrying this series’ fateful virus.

But it’s the subsequent time jump that unveils the movie’s loftier and elegiac concerns. Abandoning the urban dystopia of the original for an agrarian serenity that is positively medieval, 28 Years Later is an adroit metaphor for a UK stuck perpetually in the past after the rest of the 21st century left it behind. The greatest horror is the future generations unaware of the world their elders have forsaken. Still, in its primeval return to an England where life ebbed and flowed with the turnings of the tide, there is also a deep appreciation for the difference between a good and bad death that feels transgressive in a movie playing with Hollywood money.

Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs Id Kick You

10. If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

The first time I saw Mary Bronstein’s If I Had Legs I’d Kick You was for a genre festival in Austin, Texas. In a weekend suffused with horror movies, chillers, and other assorted terrors, Legs was the most intense thing playing, bar none. It also might have been the funniest and most thrilling since the picture is a tonal and emotional magic trick. Such imagery also describes its apocalyptic vision of motherhood.

The best of the recent mom trauma movies to dominate arthouses, Bronstein’s Legs innovates the unreliable narrator conceit by immersing viewers in a grainy, 16mm trance state that suggests either sleep deprivation or delirium while taking on the perspective of Linda (Rose Byrne). Never once is the audience allowed to ascertain what is objectively occurring in the life of a mother with a child suffering from an undiagnosed illness, but by virtue of Bronstein refusing to ever show the daughter’s face (or give her a name), Linda’s sense of obligation takes on an oppressive quality that borders on demonic. It can also be darkly funny as Byrne provides a tour de force that flits between gallows humor and warm, inviting despair. It’s the performance of the year, synthesizing a tornado of impulses and brava choices. And it’s in service of a movie so twisted that it casts Conan O’Brien as the most humorless figure in the whole thing.

Tom Hiddleston and Annalise Basso in The Life of Chuck

9. The Life of Chuck

Stephen King is an author usually celebrated for his gift for suspense and terror. Yet his constant readers know him just as well for the soft humanism and moral certitude he laces throughout most of his writing. It seems safe to say that writer-director Mike Flanagan can be counted as one of those admirers. The filmmaker already has given us the best King adaptations made in this century, including Gerald’s Game and Doctor Sleep. Now The Life of Chuck can be added to the list. Like Rob Reiner and Frank Darabont before him, Flanagan has picked up one of King’s less well-known tales or short stories that is only the sentimentality—no pesky horror this time, please! Instead we’re in for entirely “good vibes,” even with an enigmatic mystery set during the end of the world.

Indeed, the apocalypse does appear to be nigh in one of the film’s disparate vignettes where disasters around the globe are said to be occurring. But Flanagan nor Life of Chuck give them any mind while focusing on the failed but enduring marriage of Marty (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and ex-wife Felicia (Karen Gillan). How this narrative connects with other chapters about a handful of days in the life of a mild mannered accountant named Chuck (Tom Hiddleston, Benjamin Pajak, and Jacob Tremblay, depending on the sequence) is perhaps the biggest mystery of all. But the logic of the narrative is far less important than the emotional truth it evokes every time one of the Chucks gives into the ache in his heart, or the twinkle in his toes. Some might call it saccharine, but I call it a sublime crowdpleaser that needs to find a bigger venue.

Alexander Skarsgard in Pillion Review

8. Pillion

While currently enjoying a UK release, Harry Lighton’s Pillion will not be released Stateside until February. It is perhaps for that reason the film has fallen under the radar in many end-of-year discussions. If so, it’s an injustice for what is is simultaneously the most unorthodox and unabashedly yearning love story we have had in some time. A cinematic encapsulation of the yearlong romance between a dominant (Alexander Skarsgård) and his sub (Harry Melling), Pillion seems destined to push buttons, even if the NC-17 cut of the film will apparently be reedited down to R in the States next year. 

The film is quite graphic in its leather-clad depiction of a relationship that on the surface is unquestionably imbalanced. But the more you get to know about Skarsgård’s Ray and Melling’s Colin, the more you appreciate a film that neither condones nor condemns what some would see as an erotic fantasy, and others a nightmare. For his part, Lighton chooses to depict a journey of one inexperienced partner learning a lot about love and himself in a tragicomic union where little is spoken due to Ray’s circumspect nature, but volumes are felt. Skarsgård has the more challenging role as a figure who could on paper read as a cipher, but the Swedish actor is able to wrap his arms around the ephemeral heart of a story, wrestling out a surprisingly droll sense of humor in the material. Well that, and maybe even a flickering of conventional affection, which complements the moist sadness in Melling’s eyes whenever his Viking god vanishes.

Michael Fassbender in Black Bag

7. Black Bag

More than one cynic has observed that marriages can be cold wars. Few though actually come with literal government surveillance equipment and the potential for a body count. If that sounds extreme, you absolutely must meet George Woodhouse and Kathryn St. Jean, Michael Fassbender and Cate Blanchett’s fascinating MI6 power couple in Steven Soderbergh’s slippery Black Bag. Benefitting from an erudite and underhanded screenplay by David Koepp (who hasn’t been this playful in years), Black Bag is another throwback, this time to when sharp thrillers could be seen as date night entertainment for adults who like their thrills served in a frosted glass.

Black Bag even begins with the dinner party from hell where the divinely played George and Kathryn invite all their coworkers in espionage, including a showy ensemble with Regé-Jean Page, Naomie Harris, Tom Burke, and Marisa Abela, to dine. Unbeknownst to the guests is that George slipped some truth serum into the roast. It certainly makes for lively table conversation. It also acts as an opening salvo for a story about the risks that come with trust, loyalty, and knowing your partner in a setting where the stakes are no less high than treason and summary execution.

Julia Garner in Weapons

6. Weapons

Writer-director Zach Cregger is adamant that his latest melding of horror and humor is not about anything specific. Or rather, it’s not about anything we can easily infer, as he so claimed in multiple interviews that acknowledged the personal tragedy which inspired the story but always included statements to the effect of “I have nothing to say with this movie.” That might be his public stance, but any piece of art that pertains the ghostly projection of an AR-17 floating above a classroom is screaming a whole hell of a lot in modern day America, whether the author cops to it or otherwise.

A return to high-concept mysteries that would sprinkle a dusting of the supernatural on top, Weapons takes fiendish pleasure in its centerpiece puzzle: Why would nearly an entire classroom of elementary schoolers rise from their childhood bedrooms and run into the dark at 2:17 a.m.? The answers discovered by their teacher (Julia Garner) and a grieving father (Josh Brolin) who would blame her for his son’s disappearance, are as satisfying as they are unexpectedly primal. This is achieved by casting an overwhelming pallor of ambiguity over the proceedings before a final, triumphant puncturing of that dark cloud. Still, the reason the film gnaws at the imagination is that like all catastrophes which invade our schools and communities, the consequences linger long after the danger’s abided. We suppose, apparently coincidentally, like the specter of an assault rifle over a once innocent but now desecrated school.

Murder in No Other Choice

5. No Other Choice

Over the last decade, Korean cinema has done a better job at pinpointing the rot of 21st century capitalism than almost all celluloid and digital Western fiction. So it tracks that when it came time to adapt Donald Westlake’s scathing satire of a deadly job market in The Ax (1997), the task would fall to Oldboy and Decision to Leave master Park Chan-wook. Relocating the tale to Seoul and in an even more ruthless era of automation and encroaching AI, No Other Choice offers a pitch black study of an upper-middle class maestro in paper production (Lee Byung-hun) who finds himself without a job and unable to claim the single musical chair left in his industry when three other out-of-work paper executives are all up for the same job. If only there was some way to… eliminate the competition?

Despite being an obvious student and product of Eastern cinema, Park has always had more than a touch of Hitchcock in his vision board, and he brings that out with a film that takes perverse pleasure in the haphazard homicidal daydreams that become action here. He outright makes a hero of a would-be killer that might seem nefarious if he wasn’t so endearingly clumsy in his desperation to keep the family home, pay for his daughter’s cello lessons, and buy back the family dogs that were given away. There is a wry physicality to Lee’s performance which never quite crosses over into comedy, but it tempers the darkness of the material nicely, especially when paired with Son Ye-jin as Lee’s devoted and inquisitive wife. Together they anchor an indictment of a system that pits the lower classes in a literal death struggle to be the lucky one who gets to keep their head above water. Then again, the movie is delightfully cynical about what happens to anyone who exposes their neck for the American suits on top.

Stellan Skarsgard and Elle Fanning in Sentimental Value

4. Sentimental Value

Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value is a far quieter film than the rest of the top five in this list, but it is no less a masterful achievement. An artful portrait of a family who can only communicate through art—and even then dysfunctionally—Sentimental Value draws with human lines when it introduces us to renowned Norwegian filmmaker Gustav Borg (Stellan Skarsgård) and his adult daughters Nora (Renate Reinsve) and Agnes (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas). By virtue of the haunted family home they have kept in the family for nearly a century, one comes to intuit their malfunction goes back generations, as evidenced by the over-the-hill Gustav wanting to make a final film that is about his suicidal mother… but as played by his estranged daughter. It’s a role Nora also promptly declines, leading to the intrusion of a well-meaning Hollywood starlet (Elle Fanning) who speaks neither Norwegian or Swedish but will attempt all the same to inhabit the mother and child both for an old man.

A film keenly concerned with characters and acting choices, even more so than Trier and Reinsve’s essay about arrested Millennial development, The Worst Person in the World, Sentimental Value lives and dies by what is never said by Gustav and his daughters, lest one of them is behind a camera or the other in front of it. Lilleaas therefore has the most challenging role since she is the only one of the three who grew up not to be an artist. Instead Agnes is a historian, which gives her a sense of perspective on her family’s ennui that the others lack.

Agnes also can see the warmth bubbling in this multigenerational tale, going so far as to extend empathy to interlopers like Fanning’s carefully calibrated performance of a good actor who is simply out of her depth and time zone. The metatextual quality of an actor’s film which is in large part about the neuroses that make great performances possible gives the picture a wry affability. Like Fanning’s character, we’ll never be family here but we enjoy sitting at their table and hearing the old stories that none of them fully understand.

Michael B Jordan in Sinners Review

3. Sinners

The fields of cotton can almost look angelic when towering over you on a 76-foot screen. Lined up in neat rows and captured with stunning 65mm IMAX cameras, the Mississippi of Ryan Coogler’s Sinners is vibrant and lush. It also is far more sinister than even the title suggests. When Michael B. Jordan’s dual characters in the film, twin brothers Smoke and Stack, are asked why they came back after making a fortune in Chicago, one answers that everywhere in America is a plantation and “we might as well deal with the devil we know.”

There is indeed an acute knowingness about Coogler’s Sinners which looks soberly at its setting despite washing it in nostalgia for a people and place, if not a time. Coogler has spoken candidly about how this horror movie originally stemmed from his family’s own complex history with Mississippi and stories his uncle passed down. The filmmaker in turn has mythologized them into a great American epic about being Black in the Jim Crow South, and the continuum that ties us all to that moment a hundred years on. But despite featuring such a sobering backdrop, not to mention literal vampires and a hefty body count, Sinners is exhilarating due its rapturous conviviality, a superb ensemble led by two sweating Jordan performances, and of course its music.

Tying into old Southern legends about the allure of a blues guitar playing at midnight in a crossroads, Coogler’s movie peaks when a revelatory Miles Caton croons in a juke joint in what is the movie moment of the year. He connects the past, present, and future of the Black American experience into a metaphysical communion so strong that the living and the dead must take notice. It’s a sequence so grand that it makes you almost pity when the vampires finally show up, though that too is executed with unforgettable showmanship.

Timothee Chalamet and Marty Supreme Review

2. Marty Supreme

Timothée Chalamet has described working on a Josh Safdie set as organized chaos, with the director cultivating a sense of spontaneity and surprise among his collaborators. For audiences, it’s closer to blind, grueling panic. In Marty Supreme, however, those same anxiety attacks take on a buzzy triumphalist high. As a film happily drunk on the arrogance of youth, Marty Supreme is a big American movie about a quintessential subscriber to manifest destiny fantasies: Chalamet’s Marty Mauser. Brash, impulsive, and entirely self-centered, he is in many ways the idol of his age, as demonstrated when the film culminates with Marty traveling to the still crumbled ruins of Tokyo to “drop another atomic bomb” on the competition in his chosen field of battle: table tennis.

The sheer absurdity of the crux of Marty’s talent and fixation—a game also known as ping-pong—and the absolutely nightmarish scenarios the character and Safdie create for him to chase it to the ends of the earth, makes for an experience equal parts farcical and operatic. The film flitters between sports movie formulae, gritty period piece naturalism courtesy of its meticulous recreation of 1952 Manhattan, and gangster flick dread. Through it all is an unbowed bravado that miraculously comes across as endearing instead of off-putting. Chalamet has indeed been searching for this material all his life. It’s a cinematic encapsulation of both the joy and disgust of unquenchable ambition, and for 149 minutes, it is absolutely spellbinding.

Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle After Another

1. One Battle After Another

There are no curves in the road. Nor is there a sharp turn or even a whisper of oncoming traffic. During the climax of Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, one driver is simply following another along a straight line of hilly desert terrain, and it is among the most suspenseful and adrenaline-soaked car chases of the century. Part of this is a credit to how PTA captures the action via pristine VistaVision lenses, but it better encapsulates just how propulsive and gripping cinema can still be when it is channeled by a talent as eager to entertain as he is to provoke.

One Battle After Another is that rare masterpiece of art and commerce; a lean, mean action movie (despite its nearly three-hour running time) that also offers a frank and unnerving depiction of corrupt ICE officials raining an illegal and murderous war down on the underground dissidents of yesteryear. Anderson claims the film’s political subtexts are coincidental since the movie loosely adapts Thomas Pynchon’s eulogy to faded 1960s revolutionaries. But the film’s purposeful structure of tying the flawed idealism of the past and the director’s own generation—represented by another top shelf descent by Leonardo DiCaprio into dimwittery—to that of future generations doomed to inherit our bullshit, a la Chase Infiniti’s teenage daughter conscripted to the culture wars, turns the film into a strangely optimistic and subversive call to the barricades.

Wrapped within that radical flag, One Battle After Another is also many other things: a stoner comedy, an emblem of feminine righteousness and fury personified by Teyana Taylor, and even a droll Coen-esque satire of the racist good ol’ boys who run the world like it’s a WASPy country club located on a Christmas tree farm. They’re even eating sugar cookies while ordering Sean Penn’s soiled GI Joe doll to squeeze Old Glory ever further up his behind.

But most importantly, and poignantly, Anderson’s latest is an addictive piece of cinema that will reward rewatches and debates for all the years, and battles, to come.

Avengers: Doomsday Teaser Shows the MCU is Poised to Repeat Comics’ Greatest Mistake

Captain America is back! That’s the message conveyed by the first teaser trailer for Avengers: Doomsday. Coming in at just over one minute long, the leaked clip (now running before showings of Avatar: Fire and Ash) finds Chris Evans playing Steve Rogers in a state of domestic bliss, complete with a young child. Though he may have put his star-spangled suit in storage, the final text promises it won’t stay that way for long. “Steve Rogers will return in Avengers: Doomsday,” it reads.

While that might be good news for those who stopped caring about the franchise after Endgame, it raises questions for those who hoped the MCU could continue to grow. After all, Marvel already has a Captain America in the form of Sam Wilson, to whom Steve left the shield. It seems unlikely that he’ll come to wrestle back the title from Sam, which means that we may end up having two Captain Americas in the MCU. Such a move isn’t unheard of, as both Steve and Sam are Captain America in the Marvel Universe. But here’s the thing: it’s a problem that there are (at least) two Captain Americas in the comics. And if the comics are any indication, that’s two too many.

The Legacy Conundrum

Legacy has always been part of superhero comics, especially in the DC Universe. Thanks to its many reboots, time jumps, and various Crises on Infinite Earths, the line regularly has established characters die, retire, and grow up, leaving established superhero identities for others to inherit.

Marvel uses a sliding timeline that perpetually keeps its main characters in their late twenties or early thirties, thus making reboots and time jumps less likely, but even they’ve come to embrace legacy. Over the past two decades, we’ve had various versions of Captain America, the Hulk, Black Widow, and more. And then there’s Miles Morales, a kid from an alternate reality called the Ultimate Universe who took on the Spider-Man name when his Peter Parker died and now has been integrated into the main Marvel Universe.

Wonderful as Miles is, he represents the problem with legacy characters. There was a legitimate story reason for him to become Spider-Man, as the Peter Parker of the Ultimate Universe died and so that world was without a Spidey. But then, he proved popular enough to stand on his own, so when Marvel decided to end its Ultimate Universe comics in 2015, they found a convoluted way to put Miles into the main universe, which means that there are (at least) two people called Spider-Man swinging around New York City on Earth-616.

Within that fictional NYC, the two Spideys don’t seem to be a problem. But in our world, it’s clearly a problem. If I were to tell you my favorite character is Spider-Man, what comes to mind? You think Peter Parker, your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man in the blue and red duds who has been played by Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland. But what about the other guy? If I want to tell you my favorite character is the main character of the Spider-Verse movies, do I say that my favorite character is Spider-Man? No, I say my favorite character is Miles Morales, which means that he is not the de facto Spider-Man.

Instead of elevating Miles to equal standing to Peter, the fact that he’s a Spider-Man in the same world as Peter Parker means that Miles is not, in fact, ever going to be Spider-Man.

Multiple Universes, Only a Few Identities

At this point, one might reasonably ask why Marvel didn’t just integrate Miles into the mainline universe by copying the Ultimate Universe? Our Peter Parker dies heroically, and now Miles steps up to carry on his legacy, making him the one true Spider-Man.

One need only look back at DC to see why this never happens. In 1986, the Flash a.k.a. Barry Allen heroically sacrifices himself to stop the Anti-Monitor in Crisis on Infinite Earths. Not only was it a powerful death, but it was easily the most exciting thing Barry Allen as a character had ever done.

He was replaced by his sidekick Wally West a.k.a. Kid Flash, who became the new Flash. Even better, Wally had incredible character development over several years and creative teams, a true rarity in mainline superhero comics, so that by the mid-’90s, he was fully established as the favorite version of the Flash. There was no need to bring back Barry Allen, because Wally did everything that Barry could do and he was a better character.

And yet, in 2008’s Final Crisis #2, Barry Allen comes back. And even though DC tried to keep both around, Wally was soon rendered unnecessary and Barry became the true Flash again.

Why did DC bring back Barry Allen, when they had a better Flash already in the Universe? Because some readers and writers like Barry best, and DC wants to sell comics to them. But they also want to sell comics to Wally fans, so they’ll keep Wally. And they also want to create jumping on points for potential new Flash fans, so every couple of years, they’ll make someone the new Flash, and keep them around, just in case.

As a result, the DC Universe is filled with Flashes, as well as Green Lanterns and Robins and Wonder Girls and, like, three Wildcats for some reason. It’s a mess.

Never Let Go

And now, the Marvel Cinematic Universe is ready to follow suit, bringing back Chris Evans as Captain America, for the same reason it brought back Maguire and Garfield as Spider-Man, which is the same reason that there are so many Flashes and Robins and Spider-Mans in comics. People have their favorites and they don’t want them to move on from them. And Marvel wants their money, so they don’t make them move on.

While there’s certainly something to be said for giving the people what they want, it does limit story opportunities, as we may see with Steve Rogers’s return to the MCU. Although we haven’t seen much of Sam as Captain America, he’s already staked out a position unique to himself, something that Steve could never do. Both The Falcon and the Winter Soldier and, to a lesser extent, Captain America: Brave New World have dealt with the fact that a Black man has become the symbol of America, an interesting spin on a well-established character.

Now, the Doomsday teaser does say that Steve Rogers, not Captain America, will return. So there’s a chance that Steve’s not coming back to be Cap. But he doesn’t have to pull on a uniform to undercut Sam. At best, his presence means that there’s going to be two Captains America running the MCU, which creates confusion in the minds of the audience. At worst, and most likely, Sam will be diminished as the also-ran, even if he gets to keep the Captain America title.

Avengers: Doomsday brings Steve Rogers back to theaters on December 18, 2026.

Avengers: Doomsday – Who Is Steve Rogers’ Child?

Even if old man Steve Rogers didn’t want to tell us about his post-Avengers: Endgame life, we all figured that he and Peggy Carter would spend some time kissing and hugging—I mean, you saw the way she looked at him when he came out of that pod in The First Avenger, right? In the first teaser for Avengers: Doomsday, we learn that their kissing and hugging has yielded a child; a little blond moppet that Steve cradles before putting on his red, white, and blue duds and punching Doctor Doom, probably.

Now, this might all be set-up, in which Steve leaves his happy home to join the battle and we never see his family again. But given that this kid’s mom is likely Agent Carter and given that the one thing we’ve actually seen Doom do so far is interact with some superheroes’ kid, namely Franklin Richards in The Fantastic Four: First Steps, the littlest Rogers may indeed be important. And while Steve is childless in the world of mainline Marvel Comics, there are enough Variants, alternate realities, and forgotten stories to give us with a few possibilities to consider as we look forward to Doomsday.

Ian or Ellie Rogers

The most likely identity of the MCU kid is a variation of Ian Rogers, as he follows in his father’s heroic footsteps and even takes on one Steve’s alternate identities, Nomad. Introduced by Rick Remender and John Romita Jr. in 2012’s Captain America #1, Ian was in fact a child created by the mad scientist Arnim Zola and sent to Dimension X. When Steve, who had become trapped in the Dimension, discovers the infinant, he frees Ian from Zola’s lab and raises the boy on his own.

Steve brings Ian with him when he finally escapes Dimension X, to live with him and Sharon Carter (Steve’s main squeeze in the comics). Eventually, Ian becomes Nomad and fights alongside Sam Wilson as Captain America and later, in an alternate future, with Steve and Sharon’s daughter Ellie. Ellie also becomes a hero, especially after Arnim Zola returns to create a dark, dystopian future. However, she does not adopt a code name or get a cool costume.

While very little of that lines up with the MCU’s status quo, Ian is the most prominent Rogers child and, therefore, seems most likely to be adapted into live action.

The Alternate Reality Oddities

Unsurprisingly given his importance in the Marvel Universe, Steve Rogers shows up in several alternate reality stories and in issues of What If…?, the anthology series that puts Marvel’s heroes in different scenarios. In several of these stories, Steve has become a proud papa. Sometimes, he just has “normal” kids named Rick or Nick or something with Sharon or Peggy. But often, he’ll pair up with another superheroine, leading to fun but unlikely progeny.

There’s Sarah Rogers, a.k.a. Crusader, the daughter of Steve and Rogue of the X-Men (except really Carol Danvers because she had control of Rogue’s body after Rogue took all of Carol’s memories, which is actually how she has super-strength and flight, and that’s the streamlined version) who carries both the shield and Thor’s hammer Mjolnir. In What If? Avengers: Dissembled, we meet the unnamed and creepy blond twins he has with Scarlet Witch, who seems cursed to only give birth to creepy twins.

The 2008 animated movie The Next Avengers introduced James Rogers, son of Steve and Natasha Romanoff, who leads a team made up of other Nepo-Avengers, including the son of Thor and Storm of the X-Men and the son of Hawkeye and Mockingbird.

Finally, we have Sharon Rogers from the video game Marvel Future Fight, who for some reason looks more like the daughter of Captain America and the Scarlet Witch than either of the two creepy kids that Steve and Wanda had.

Fun as these mashups are, MCU fans want to see Steve with Peggy, so they’re probably not going to be the baby Rogers we see in the Doomsday teaser

Red Skull

Even the most die-hard Peggy Carter fan would gladly take a Steve/Wanda pairing if it meant they didn’t have to deal with Steve Rogers’ son from the Ultimate Universe, and not just because this one becomes the Red Skull.

Launched in 2000, Ultimate Marvel took classic Marvel characters and rebooted them from scratch in the present. While that often meant just new versions of the standard characters we know, sometimes creators would come up with radically different takes. And sometimes, those radically new takes were terrible. And usually, those terrible takes came from Scottish writer Mark Millar, who sadly wrote a lot of Ultimate Marvel comics.

So Millar introduced the Ultimate version of the Red Skull in 2009’s Ultimate Avengers #1, penciled by Carlos Pacheco. In this storyline, Steve and his World War II crush Gail (not Peggy, for whatever reason) had one last night together before he went off to war. Not wanting a premarital pregnancy to tarnish Steve’s reputation, the U.S. government took the boy and raised him in a lab. Although he initially seemed like a second Steve Rogers, both in terms of strength and abilities but also in terms of moral clarity, the boy turned out to be a psychopath and murdered everyone. He flayed the skin off of his face and devoted himself to destroying everything his father stood for, at least until Steve killed him by crashing a jet into him.

So, yeah. We’re not getting this version of baby Steve Rogers in the movie, and that is a very, very good thing.

Who, then, is that baby who Steve Rogers is holding? We don’t know, but Marvel Comics gave the writers plenty of options to work with and one option we really, really hope they avoid.

Avengers: Doomsday brings Lil’ Baby Rogers to the screen on December 18, 2026.

Avengers: Doomsday – Captain America Return Supports an Endgame Fan Theory

This post contains rumors for Avengers: Doomsday, and sometimes rumors turn into spoilers.

Steve Rogers told us back in World War II: he can do this all day. Turns out, he will be doing it for all time, because the first teaser for Avengers: Doomsday is out and it’s all about Steve. The short teaser, which leaked earlier this week and is the first of four that will be attached to Avatar: Fire and Ash over the next several weeks, is all vibe and little plot. Set to a slow, instrumental version of Alan Silvestri’s score from The Avengers, we see Steve park his motorcycle in front of a nice ranch house, and go inside to cradle a baby. “Steve Rogers will return,” says the font on screen.

By this point, it should come as no surprise that Chris Evans would return to the role. Not only did he put a particularly foul-mouthed spin on Johnny Storm for Deadpool & Wolverine, but his fellow Avengers: Endgame casualty Robert Downey Jr. is back, this time as Marvel’s greatest supervillain Victor Von Doom. But the real question remains: why is Steve back for Doomsday? As expected, the internet has a theory. And this one is actually pretty good.

The big question surrounding Doomsday has been, “Why does Doctor Doom, the dictator of Latveria with a famously scarred face, look like Tony Stark?” Joe and Anthony Russo, also joining Downey Jr. and Evans in returning to Marvel, have said that there’s a legitimate story reason for the actor to play Doom, and that still leaves a lot of possibilities. The most obvious reason is that Tony Stark is Doctor Doom on some other Earth, and so the person that RDJ plays in Doomsday is a Variant of the Tony we know and love.

But the Steve Rogers focus in the first trailer, and the buzz about another trailer focusing on Thor, has led some to wonder if Downey Jr. is actually playing Victor Von Doom of Latveria from another reality, and that he’s chosen to look like Tony Stark to mess with the Earth-616 Avengers. And who better to mess with than Steve Rogers, the man who always admired Stark, even when they clashed?

So the next question is, why is Doom mad at Steve? And that’s where the rumors get interesting.

The prevalent rumor is based on the end of Avengers: Endgame, when Steve went back in time to return the Infinity Stones. Obviously, Steve changed things on his cross-time trek, getting to spend his life with Peggy instead of staying in the ice to be thawed out decades later. When the Joe Biden-looking Steve shows up at the end of Endgame to hand over his shield to Sam, we just assumed all was well, that he changed everything for the better.

But what if those changes had a cost? And what if someone else had to pay it? The prevalent Doomsday rumor suggests that something that Steve did while returning the stones and changing his past caused an Incursion in Doom’s reality. Incursions, MCU fans might remember, are when two Earths from different realities interact, resulting in the destruction of one or both. So great was the devastation left by the Steve-caused Incursion that Doom has launched a plan to get revenge, starting by modeling himself after Captain America’s greatest ally, Tony Stark.

That reading has its compelling and troubling aspects. On one hand, it allows Doomsday to tie directly into Endgame, assuring strict continuity between both. Further, it allows the story to focus on the core team, and give Robert Downey Jr. a good reason to come back without undercutting the power of Tony’s death.

On the other hand, it totally misses the point of Doctor Doom. Perhaps if his country Latveria is particularly destroyed, then Doom would go on such a mission. But generally, Doom is above such petty things as revenge. Moreover, Doom may not respect Steve Rogers or Tony Stark, but there’s only one man he truly hates, and that’s Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four.

But it’s not worth getting too angry about yet. Right now, all we have is a teaser and we’re still in speculation mode. All we know right now is this, that the universe is in danger and Steve Rogers is once again ready to stand up against bullies, just like he’s been doing since World War II.

Avengers: Doomsday comes to theaters on December 18, 2026.

James Cameron Is So Devoted to Practical Acting He Made His Avatar Star Puke

To the casual viewer, Avatar isn’t that different from your average video game. Incredible visuals, amazing creatures, and exciting action, sure, but none of it’s real. It’s all made by computers. Those viewers better not let the famously cantankerous director James Cameron hear it. While we may see only the digitally-rendered blue Na’vi version of Jake Sully on screen, Cameron insists that the character is entirely based on actor Sam Worthington‘s real performance. And Worthington has the upset stomach to prove it.

In an interview with Deadline that covered Cameron and Worthington’s long relationship making three Avatar films, the actor recalled being told to play disgust at a food he was given. “So I said to Jim, ‘Well, you got to just give me something disgusting.’ I think he mixed a concoction of fish oil?” remembered Worthington. “So when I drunk it, it did the exact thing you wanted. It was disgusting. But it was so disgusting it came flying out.”

Yet, even in this supremely and upsettingly physical moment, technology was still involved. “Of course, we’ve got head cams on, so all the liquid hit the head camera,” Worthington continued. “The problem was then, the head camera kind of set on fire. And me being me, I ran around the room, forgetting that it was connected to my head. When all I had to do was take the helmet off.”

Messy as it is, moments like these are exactly what Cameron wants to preserve, even as he pushes the technological limits of filmmaking. The Avatar series may have began as the story of human beings who use technology to create Na’vi versions of themselves to find a valuable element called unobtainium, but Cameron never wants the digital to supplant the physical.

Beyond Worthington’s stomach-churning moment, Cameron also pointed to Sigourney Weaver‘s performance in the second films The Way of Water and Fire and Ash as an example. After playing a human scientist in the first film, Weaver returns to the cast as a Na’vi teen.

“I still see in print media, all the time, ‘Sigourney voices Kiri,’ because they can’t imagine that she’s actually physically performing a 15-year-old at the age of 71, or 72 when she was doing it,” he said. “And it’s like, no, she didn’t do a voice part. She was on the movie for 18 months, performing every scene, including all the underwater work, all the work at the surface, riding the creatures, all that stuff. It’s a complete physical performance. It’s not just a voice performance, right?”

For Cameron, the physical is so important because it allows him to retain the human element in the art of filmmaking, even technologically advanced filmmaking, which cannot be done with AI. But for Worthington, the physical elements are much more simple.

“That’s the process,” he said of his on-set puking experience. “The process is always problem-solving. And it’s often something so out of the box it leads down to these kind of moments.” Those moments may not always be glamorous, but they are always human, which is what Cameron always wants in his films.

Avatar: Fire and Ash opens in theaters worldwide on Friday, December 19, 2025.

The MCU Needs to Ditch the Crazy, Powerful Woman Trope

Wanda Maximoff may be the villain of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, but that doesn’t mean she’s not right. Early in the film, when Stephen Strange charges Wanda with being reckless with her magical abilities, she points out that she gave Thanos the Time Stone, the one thing the Sorcerer Supreme must defend. “You break the rules and become a hero. I do it and I become the enemy,” she sneers. “That doesn’t seem fair.”

Wanda is right. Male heroes are lauded for gaining great power and doing things their own way, whether it’s Tony Stark disregarding the U.S. government or Star-Lord violating galactic treaties. But when women get power, they immediately go mad, proving not only that they cannot be trusted with great abilities, but also that they are fundamentally weaker than their male counterparts. It’s a problem that goes deeper than Multiverse of Madness, before the MCU, all the way to the heart of Marvel Comics.

Girl Power?

Women have always been part of the Marvel comics universe, which counted Sue Storm of the Fantastic Four as one of its first characters before adding founding X-Man Jean Grey and founding Avenger Wasp not too long afterwards.

Admirable as this inclusion may be, few would find much to cheer about in these early Marvel stories. Not only did the characters’ codenames diminish them—Sue was Invisible Girl until long after she had become a wife and mother, and Jean was (and often is again) Marvel Girl—but the dialogue that Stan Lee wrote over the pencils of Jack Kirby and other artists was often frankly insulting. Sue, in particular, would trip over nothing in the middle of battle, get easily captured by bad guys, or go off to sulk.

Later writers gave Marvel’s female characters more to do, but unpleasant tropes persisted. In 1970’s Avengers #83, a team called the Lady Liberators—consisting of Valkyrie, Medusa of the Inhumans, Black Widow, and Scarlet Witch—resist male oppression by taking over Avengers Mansion. Even though Wasp defeats the Liberators and even though they’re revealed to be mind-controlled by Thor villain the Enchantress, the issue trades in a lot of unpleasant stereotypes.

The most infamous example of Marvel misogyny may be Avengers #200, penciled by George Pérez and credited to four writers: then Marvel Editor in Chief Jim Shooter, Pérez, Bob Layton, and David Michelinie. The story involves Carol Danvers, then called Ms. Marvel, suddenly becoming pregnant with the child of a Kang the Conquerer variant called Marcus Immortus. The child ages rapidly to adulthood and reveals his identity, which, for some reason, convinces Carol to go into space with him.

Carol’s story was later called out and retconned in the fantastic Avengers Annual #10, and even Shooter, a man not famous for his apologies, admitted that it shouldn’t have made it to print. But that doesn’t take away the fact that the Marcus Immortus story, like many of the crazy women tales, has become one of the characters’ defining moments. And when a character gets adapted into other media, such as the MCU, those stories often travel with them.

A History of Hysteria

Jean Grey died a hero. Even though the Dark Phoenix Saga has been adapted into two movies, X-Men: The Last Stand and Dark Phoenix, that fact may come as a surprise. But it’s a crucial point that’s important for understanding what writer Chris Claremont and artist John Byrne were trying to do in Uncanny X-Men #129–138 (1980).

The story begins with Jean Grey pushing her telekenetic powers further than ever before to save the X-Men from dying in a crashing shuttle. The event draws the attention of a galactic force of nature called the Phoenix, who nestles inside of her and gives her even more abilities. Shortly thereafter, the psychic villain Mastermind undergoes a long campaign of manipulation, which eventually unleashes Jean’s new abilities and changes her into the Dark Phoenix.

When the Dark Phoenix destroys a planet full of people who look like broccoli for some reason, she’s held for trial by the Shi’ar Empire. When the trial and the Phoenix threaten to destroy the X-Men, Jean decides to sacrifice herself to save her beloved friends.

From Claremont’s perspective, the Dark Phoenix Saga was about Jean Grey facing down an incredible cosmic threat and eventually overcoming it, even if she lost her life. But to most people adapting the story, the Dark Phoenix Saga is about a woman who received great power and was overcome by it.

Sadly, that latter reading is more true of other stories by the saga’s co-creator, John Byrne. In the pages of West Coast Avengers, Byrne told how Wanda Maximoff a.k.a. the Scarlet Witch, still troubled by the loss of her husband Vision of their children Tommy and Billy, is manipulated by her father Magneto into turning against her teammates. Although a man is at the root of her heel turn, the implication is that Wanda is too weak, too susceptible to manipulation to handle her vast magical abilities. Years later, writer Brian Michael Bendis would double-down on that point, when Wanda suffers another breakdown and uses her reality-warping abilities to first destroy the Avengers and later to wipe out most of the mutants.

The list goes on: Sue Storm getting possessed by Malice, She-Hulk experiencing bursts of rage like her cousin Bruce, Rogue having too many voices in her head, and so on. Most major female characters in the Marvel Universe have gone mad with power at some point. And, in many cases, that becomes their defining story.

These stories stick in readers’ imaginations for obvious reasons. They have incredible stakes, and watching someone turn from good to evil always creates interesting drama. But when they become the defining stories of female characters, these stories begin to reinforce a trope, suggesting that we all are threatened when women gain power.

At this point, one might lodge a counter-argument. Isn’t it a good thing that the MCU adapts the comics? Isn’t that we love about seeing the Avengers get together or watching deep cuts like Shang-Chi and the Guardians of the Galaxy on screen?

Others may point out that male characters often go mad too. Marvel has given us Steve Rogers as a Nazi, Tony Stark as a secret agent of Kang, and Professor X doing all manner of shady stuff. How come we’re not worried about those?

The answer to the first charge is obviously “Yes.” But the MCU has never slavishly adapted the source material without making changes. Even when it copies direct moments from the comics, such as Captain America punching Hitler or the dead gods in Thor: Love and Thunder, the franchise re-contextualizes things for a new story or to update out-of-date social norms. Certainly, they can do the same, finding new ways to tell the Dark Phoenix Saga, Wanda’s madness, or other touchstone tales in a manner that gives the women agency.

The second charge brings up an even better solution to the problem of Marvel’s crazy women. The reason we don’t fret too much about the time Cap said “Hail Hydra” or Tony Stark served Kang is because they aren’t the defining stories involving those characters. Steve, Tony, Charles Xavier, and nearly every other male Marvel hero gets to have a whole range of experiences. So, sure, Peter Parker always goes a little nuts when he wears his black symbiote suit, but we forgive him because we’ve seen him do so many other things.

So if we want to keep stories about Jean losing her mind from the Phoenix or Wanda’s brain breaking when her dad starts messing with her, that’s fine—as long as they get a lot of other stories too, showing how they, like every other human being, has a variety of moods and mindsets.

Only then will crazy powerful arcs just be one more moment in the life of a superhero. Only then will it be fair.

The Muppet Show Is Returning at Exactly the Right Time

In 2026, it will finally be time to play the music. Now, more than any other point since Disney bought the rights to the characters in 2004, is the time to light the lights. This is the exact correct point for The Muppet Show.

So it’s a good thing that Disney is finally bringing back The Muppet Show. Not Muppets Tonight or Muppets TV or any other variation. As announced with a short clip of Kermit flipping the switch on the Muppet Theater, set to an instrumental version of “The Rainbow Connection,” the actual, original style of The Muppet Show is coming back, right when Broadway and musicals are bigger than ever.

For those who haven’t seen the series that made the Muppets into household names, which aired 120 episodes between 1976 and 1981, The Muppet Show was a variety show with backstage antics. Each episode of The Muppet Show featured a special guest star, who would come and perform various songs and sketches, sometimes with the Muppet performers and sometimes without. There would also be segments featuring Muppet performers without guests, most famously Fozzie Bear’s stand-up routine or Gonzo the Great’s daredevil stunts, and storylines involving the behind-the-scenes production of the show.

More the felt characters that Jim Henson and Frank Oz brought to life with their fellow performers, The Muppet Show was about the agony and ecstasy of putting on a show. Even if the kids first watching the series didn’t know or care who Joel Grey or Harvey Korman or Twiggy were, they remained invested in the series. They sympathized with Kermit stressing out over production snafus, laughed at Miss Piggy trying to steal the spotlight, and swooned when, despite everything going wrong, Elton John belted out “Crocodile Rock” alongside puppet crocodiles or when Gilda Radner played along with Dr. Bunsen Honeydew’s shenanigans.

That emphasis on performance is why 2026 is the perfect time to bring back The Muppet Show. Not only are musicals as popular as ever, with touring productions bring hits like Les Misérables and Hamilton all over the world and Wicked once again brining in big Hollywood cash. It’s also because performance has become a part of daily life. Social media apps like TikTok make it possible for everyone to put on a show from their bed room, and thus get the chance to experience the anxiety that comes from a performance gone wrong.

Granted, Disney has tried to tie the Muppets to the zeitgeist before, with very mixed results. The Jason Segel-led The Muppets managed to work as a nostalgia-filled early legacy sequel, and the recent Muppets Now translated The Muppet Show format to a streaming service conceit. But other attempts to update the franchise, especially the ill-conceived Office-style sitcom the muppets. suggested that Disney had no idea how to bring the characters up to date.

The heavy nostalgia of this first teaser for the new special suggests that Disney has realized that they don’t need to update the Muppets for our times, because our times have learned to love the showbiz razzle dazzle that The Muppet Show has always celebrated.

The Muppet Show airs on Disney+ on February 4, 2026.

Wonder Man Will Make Trevor Slattery Into More Than a Joke

Even though his Lear was the toast of Croydon, Trevor Slattery has never enjoyed respect, neither within the fictional MCU nor in the real world. Some fans still hate the fake out from Iron Man 3, which revealed that Iron Man’s feared magic-using terrorist arch-enemy is an actually an English actor called Trevor. Others like him, but only as a bumbling fool who undercut the racist tropes in the Mandarin character and then got to pal around with Shang-Chi.

According to Trevor’s actor Sir Ben Kingsley, all of that will change with the Disney+ series Wonder Man. The series will not only return Trevor to Hollywood, but also give him a chance at success. “A series of extraordinary events place him exactly in that space, which crowns him and compromises him at the same time,” Kingsley told Entertainment Weekly. “He’s pulled in two directions at the same time.”

Wonder Man will team Trevor with Simon Williams, a struggling actor portrayed by Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. When he learns that an idiosyncratic auteur plans to remake a ’70s children show about a fictional superhero called Wonder Man, Williams goes all out to earn the part, including hiring Trevor as an acting coach and, eventually, getting superpowers.

Wonder Man finally brings a long-standing member of the Avengers to the MCU, but it does so in a somewhat unexpected manner. The Wonder Man of the comics began as a likable lunkhead who gets tricked into fighting the Avengers, and promptly sacrifices himself to save the team. Long later, and after his memories were used to help create the Avenger Vision, Wonder Man is resurrected and his backstory is fleshed out, revealing that he was a nerdy scientist who gained super-strength during ionic-based experiments. Some time after his resurrection, and during his tenure with the Avengers, Wonder Man went to Hollywood to become a stunt man and, eventually, a leading man.

That Hollywood story is the clearest inspiration for the Wonder Man series, co-created by Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings director Destin Daniel Cretton and Andrew Guest, a writer for Community and Brooklyn Nine-Nine.

As a Hollywood story, Wonder Man will deal with the idiosyncrasies of show biz, Kingsely explained. “We look at the casting process, we look at the auditioning process, we look at the directing process, the writing process… We look at the ego traps. We look at the seductive side of fame. We look at everything that’s beautiful and good, and also everything that’s vulnerable and rather unhealthy, but in a very entertaining, non-judgmental way.”

Even more importantly for his character, Kingsley said Wonder Man presents a “fascinating” story, in which Trevor will be “faced with a terrible dilemma: he can reach his ambition, but it’s at a terrible cost.”

Hard choices and terrible dilemmas? Sounds like the sort of thing that would make for Shakespearean drama and a fitting role for someone who brought King Lear to the good people of Croydon.

Wonder Man streams on Disney+ on January 27, 2026.

Neon Has a Novel Approach to Promoting No Other Choice

Park Chan-wook’s No Other Choice is already one of the most talked-about films of the year after winning Best Director at the Sitges Film Festival and the International People’s Choice Award at TIFF. It’s also been selected as South Korea’s official submission for Best International Feature Film at the next Academy Awards, but distributor Neon isn’t letting the conversation around the movie slip away ahead of its limited December 25 release stateside.

The dark comedy thriller, which Park also co-wrote, adapts Donald E. Westlake’s 1997 novel The Ax and follows a middle-aged man called Man-su (Lee Byung-hun) who gets desperate after being laid off after 25 years. To support his family and secure new work, Man-su resorts to extreme measures to hobble his competition.

No Other Choice promises to be a razor-sharp social satire from the man who brought us Oldboy and Decision to Leave, which seems to have inspired Neon’s promotional team to set up a very targeted screening.

“This is truly a film that speaks to our gracious executive leaders and the culture they have cultivated,” Neon posted this week, along with an open invitation to all the Fortune 500 CEOs that promised them a private screening of the film that will spotlight “many parts of your humble mission to achieve corporate greatness.”

“From the unbearable weight you carry upholding your employees’ livelihoods, to the systems you strive to conquer for economic growth, to the conditions and resources you govern in times of strategic mergers and realignment – this is truly a film that speaks to you and the culture you have cultivated,” the invite continues.

Social media reactions to the screening invite were largely supportive, with comments like “marketing on point” to “Awesome. None of them will go. But still awesome.”

Though it’s unlikely that any Fortune 500 CEOs will show up, this screening of No Other Choice really would be like holding up a mirror to some of those who are responsible for the human cost of corporate greed, so it would be interesting to see if its themes moved any of them.

Probably not, but we can dream.

A Brief Note About the Comments Section

As it may have come to your attention in recent months, the comments section has not been as well-moderated as we—and perhaps especially you—would have liked it to be. This was partially due to behind-the-scenes technical issues with Disqus that did not present an easy solution.

We have now found one. Taking a page out of the patron saint of xenomorphia, we decided to nuke the old system from space. It was the only way to be sure. However, comments will not be gone for long. We plan to have the comments section reinstalled within the next 48 hours at which time, conversations can continue uninterrupted—and hopefully more unpolluted going forward. Unfortunately old discussions from the past five years will be lost, but it is in hopes that new ones can be saved. Apologies for the inconvenience and happy holidays.

The Den of Geek Team

First Look at Netflix’s Extraction TV Show Reveals Omar Sy’s Mercenary

Netflix has shared a first look at its upcoming Extraction TV series, Mercenary. The project is set in the universe of the streamer’s Extraction movies and stars Lupins Omar Sy as a mercenary who embarks on a dangerous mission to rescue hostages in Libya.

Boyd Holbrook (Narcos), Natalie Dormer (Game of Thrones), Waleed Zuaiter (Omar), and Ed Speleers (Star Trek: Picard) star alongside Sy in the upcoming action thriller series, which has been filming in Ireland but will continue shooting in Morocco for a while before it wraps. Louise Hooper (The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power) and Tim Southam (Foundation) are directing for showrunner Glen Mazzara, who was instrumental in producing early seasons of The Walking Dead.

Netflix is keeping the finer details of Mercenary’s plot underwraps for now, but the logline says that Sy’s character will be trapped between warring factions and ruthless killers, and that he must navigate life-or-death choices while confronting deep emotional wounds. The series aims to explore the trauma, betrayal, and moral conflicts of characters pushed to the edge.

The show is being produced by AGBO, the indie entertainment company founded by the Russo brothers. AGBO has guided the Extraction franchise from the outset and is also handling the forthcoming Marvel movies Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars, as well as a second season of Prime Video’s Citadel.

The Extraction movies have been big hits for Netflix, which is not only shooting the Mercenary show but also has another Extraction-universe feature film lined up in South Korea called TYGO, led by the popular Don Lee (Train to Busan) and Lee Jin-uk (Player 246 in Squid Game).

Starring Chris Hemsworth as Tyler Rake, the first Extraction film found his burned-out mercenary undertaking a brutal rescue mission in Bangladesh, while the second globe-trotting film doubled down on wild stunts and set pieces, featuring a long, seemingly unbroken fight sequence that wowed audiences. It also introduced Idris Elba as the franchise’s mysterious, Nick Fury-like stranger who convinces Rake to join a new mission after he almost died completing his last one.

Hemsworth will reprise the role of Rake in a third mainline Extraction movie, which director Sam Hargrave hopes to start filming in 2026 if Hemsworth can find room in his Avengers shooting schedule.

Colin Farrell Really Loves That “Piece of Shit” Oz Cobb

Colin Farrell is very fond of Oz Cobb, the crime boss he played in Matt Reeves’ The Batman and last year’s HBO Max spinoff show, The Penguin.

“I love that piece of shit. I love Oz. I love him,” Farrell told Hamnet actress Jessie Buckley during an Actors on Actors interview for Variety, explaining that he becomes so immersed in the role that he could sit and talk to her for 12 hours in the Penguin makeup and not break character.

Farrell revealed that he knew he’d become quite protective of Cobb when he considered pulling a kind of “Andy Kaufman-light” stunt on a chat show by giving an interview in-character, only to change his mind when he realized that he didn’t want Cobb to become a joke. This extended to meeting young fans while inhabiting Cobb, as he felt that too much behind-the-scenes access might undermine the character’s mystery.

The actor, who recently starred in Netflix’s dark comedy Ballad of a Small Player, also elaborated on how he was able to find the character of Cobb within himself after donning the DC villain’s mask.

“The last thing I want to say is that the mask allowed the real me to come out,” Farrell cautioned. “But I certainly have felt ugliness in me. I can feel moments of envy, or I can feel anger. It isn’t being born in the moment. It’s something from fucking seven generations ago. Because my face was covered, I was given permission — through being obscured, I was greenlit to experience a kind of revelation. When I saw the face, I started to feel a sense of sympathy.”

Despite the critical acclaim that was heaped on Farrell’s performances as Cobb, The Penguin was initially designed as a limited series, and though Farrell knows that “the powers that be” are considering a second season of the show, he doesn’t know if one would work in the current context of Matt Reeves’ Batman universe.

“It conveniently worked that the death at the end of The Batman and the devastation within Gotham opened up a power vacuum that then Oz could try and capitalize on,” Farrell told Comicbook earlier this year. “That was perfect for the parallel eight hours that we had.”

Whether The Penguin returns to our TV screens remains to be seen, but we’ll definitely see Farrell’s Gotham power player again in The Batman Part II, which is set to start filming next May.

A Classic Roger Corman Movie Is Getting a Remake

Beloved cult classic The Wasp Woman is getting a fresh reimagining nearly seven decades after its original release, but this time with a wildly different tone. Strangers with Candy duo Amy Sedaris and Paul Dinello are teaming up for a comedic remake of the 1959 sci-fi horror movie, with Dinello taking on writing and directing duties and Sedaris starring as the titular wasp woman.

This will be a modern twist on the cult film by legendary low-budget filmmaker Roger Corman. The original Wasp Woman was made quickly and on a shoestring budget, which was a system that often paid off for Corman. It follows Janice Starlin, the founder of a cosmetics company who, desperate to reverse aging and save her business, tests an experimental wasp enzyme serum on herself. Initially, the treatment appears to work, but it soon has horrifying side effects, causing her to transform into a violent, insect-like creature.

The film is campy and riddled with cheap effects, but its social commentary on vanity and aging was ahead of its time and helped it achieve cult status long before the likes of Death Becomes Her and The Substance. As a result, it’s not the first time The Wasp Woman has been remade, with Corman himself producing a TV version directed by Chopping Mall’s Jim Wynorski back in the 90s.

Dinello says that the project came about when Strangers With Candy producer Mark Roberts showed him the Roger Corman catalog and asked him if he was interested in doing a new spin on any of his films.

“A lot of that stuff is like Attack of the Crab Monsters, and that sort of ’50s feel,” Dinello told Variety. “It didn’t really jump out. But when I read the synopsis to Wasp Woman, it has elements of ’50s sci-fi, which I like. But it also has this very modern story about this former model, a supercharged businesswoman who’s dealing with aging and is willing to take a fringe product to try to salvage her looks or give her youth. When I read it, I immediately thought, ‘This is perfect for Amy.’”

Sedaris agreed, adding, “Are you kidding me? A wasp woman? And just the costumes alone, it seems like it’s going to be like a very artistic film. I’m into that, wardrobe and sets. It’ll be interesting to see who else we get to cast in this movie. I think it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

Fallout Season 2: Moises Arias on Norm’s Icy Choice

This article contains spoilers for Fallout season 2 episode 1.

The first season of Amazon’s video game adaptation Fallout ends on an unsure note for many of its characters. Cheerful protagonist Lucy MacLean (Ella Purnell) is left reeling from the reveal that her father Hank (Kyle MacLachlan) has secretly been a Big Bad this whole time. Meanwhile, the anosmic Ghoul (Walton Goggins) remains on the hunt for his missing family and young squire Maximus (Aaron Moten) finds himself back in the good graces of the Brotherhood of Steel but separated from his most useful traveling companions.

One character’s fate that seems pretty clear, however, is that of Lucy’s Vault-bound younger brother Norm (Moises Arias). After spending the season investigating a grand conspiracy involving Vault-Tec’s post-apocalypse bunkers, Norm stumbles into the mysterious Vault 31 and makes a starting discovery. Gathered in the otherwise empty silo are cryogenic chambers containing Vault-Tec junior executives from before the nuclear apocalypse. Selected for their loyalty to company sales executive Bud Askins, the frozen folk known as “Bud’s Buds” are periodically revived and clandestinely sent into Vaults 32 and 33 serve as leaders and contribute their superior pre-nuclear Vault-Tec traits into the gene pool.

Norm’s reward for uncovering this conspiracy is death by starvation. That’s because Bud, whose brain lives on in a robotic construct resembling a Roomba, cheerfully informs Norm that there’s no way out of Vault 31 without his help and he sure as hell isn’t helping. As the season comes to a close it seems as though Norm’s only reasonable option is to pry into one of those sleep pods and take a cold nap through Fallout season 2 to come. As Fallout season 2 episode 1 reveals, however, Norm isn’t going out so easily. He resolves to defrost the junior execs rather than join them and together, they will find a way out of this mess.

Norm’s decision is certainly a welcome surprise to audiences eager to dig deeper into the story of Vault 31. It’s also, it turns out, a welcome surprise to the actor playing norm.

“Of course [not being in season 2] crossed my mind but it was definitely something I was hoping not to read in that first script,” Arias tells Den of Geek. “I was very happy being able to discover what he actually does because I also had questions – I also was on the edge of my seat, wondering how he’d survive Vault 31. It’s very exciting that he does the unthinkable and has found a way to, perhaps, get out of this vault.”

Of course, springing the junior execs from their icy slumber now means that Norm has to deal with the most terrifying force in the Fallout universe: middle management. How he will convince “Bud’s Buds” to follow his lead will be one of season 2’s biggest challenges.

“I think he balances leadership and deceptiveness quite well as he goes,” Arias says. “That’s the only way he’s going to convince these ‘super managers’ that he is the hyper, super biological species of a manger that they are all waiting for. Of course, none of that is true. He’s learning on the fly how to lead but at the same time how to balance power.”

With Lucy, the idealist; Hank, the villain; and Norm, the survivor; The MacLean family continues to lead the narrative way in Fallout season 2. Given the show’s new California filming location to affect a New Vegas desert landscape, the actors behind the MacLean family don’t get to spend as much time together. Still, the bonds they built in season 1 continues to manifest in some distinct familiar traits.

“The first season was shot in New York. We all met up a little bit more just because most of us aren’t from there, and we’re in the same general area,” Arias says. “But now with the second season being shot in California, a lot of us are from here and it’s a much vaster city so it was harder to get together. When we did there wasn’t talk about work for the most part. But there was definitely excitement about what we had just read.”

Should Norm and company make it out of Vault 31 intact, a very uncomfortable MacLean family reunion may be in the cards. Until then though, Bud’s Buds will just have to be Norm’s Network.

The first episode of Fallout season 2 is available to stream on Prime Video now. New episodes premiere Wednesdays, culminating with the finale on February 4.

The Best McFarlane Toys Collectibles to Buy This Holiday Season From Walmart

This article is presented in partnership with Walmart.

Comics legend Todd McFarlane is widely known for his work on iconic properties like Spawn, Spider-Man, and his original creations, such as co-creating Venom and co-founding Image Comics. 

Since 1994, however, McFarlane has made a new name for himself as the creator of McFarlane Toys, a purveyor of illustrious and diverse line of figures and collectibles. With McFarlane Toys now expanding into and keeping up with fresh new IPs like the second season of the popular TV series Fallout and the latest installment of the Avatar franchise, Avatar: Fire and Ash, allow Den of Geek to guide you through the best McFarlane Toys collectibles to buy this holiday season at Walmart. 

All McFarlane Toys Collectibles

Fallout

The Ghoul 7” Deluxe Action Figure (Fallout TV Series)

The Ghoul 7” Deluxe Action Figure (Fallout TV Series)

$34.99

McFarlane Toys brings the wasteland to your shelf with The Ghoul from the Fallout TV series. The 7″ figure showcases intricate details, including the man formerly known as Cooper Howard’s radiation-scarred face, tattered clothing, and signature sidearms. The minutiae of this figure truly captures the rugged and off-putting presence of the newly iconic character. With second-to-none intricate joint articulation, including up to 22 moving parts, you can pose The Ghoul in various action stances, recreating all of your favorite Ghoul scenes from the TV series. The deluxe packaging includes a themed display base coming together at $34.99; you won’t find a deal like that in the wasteland. 

BUY HERE

Lucy Movie Maniacs 6” Posed Figure (Fallout Season 2)

Lucy Movie Maniacs 6” Posed Figure (Fallout Season 2)

$29.99

McFarlane Toys introduces the Movie Maniacs figure for Fallout protagonist Lucy MacLean in her season two apparel, emulating the pose of Nuka-Girl, as many long-time Fallout fans may recognize. The naive and sweet, but resourceful, vault dweller we’ve been rooting for from the beginning really shines through with this figure, as even the pose we see is an upbeat, ready-to-take-on-the-world head tilt as she toasts her Nuka-Cola to the unknown. This 6” collectible is a part of McFarlane’s Movie Maniacs line, a special line of figures known for their detailed and expressive portrayals of iconic movie and TV characters. Originally aimed toward horror icons, this line eventually expanded their range of IP’s to the world of Fallout.

BUY HERE

Avatar

Varang, Mangkwan Leader 7” Action Figure Collector Edition (Avatar: Fire and Ash)

Varang, Mangkwan Leader 7” Action Figure Collector Edition (Avatar: Fire and Ash)

$34.99

This 7” figure showcases the mysterious new Na’vi villainess Varang, leader of the Mangkwan a.k.a. the “Fire Navi” as many have dubbed them. As a collector edition, the item comes with premium packaging and accessories, making it a standout piece for display. The Na’vi anatomy is particular and unique but McFarlane Toys steps up and takes it even further for Varang with intricate sculpting and paintwork that enrich her Mangkwan warrior attire and commanding presence. Seeing as it comes with multiple points of articulation, an alternate head portrait, four extra hands, and four handheld accessories, the figure allows for a variety of dynamic poses. Whether you’re a fan of Avatar or a collector of top notch action figures, Varang is an impressive addition to any collection. 

BUY HERE

Jake Sully, Metkayina Final Battle 7” Action Figure Collector Edition (Avatar: Fire and Ash)

Jake Sully, Metkayina Final Battle 7” Action Figure Collector Edition (Avatar: Fire and Ash)

$34.99

Jake Sully, the chosen one, is now on the path to protect his family at all costs in the third installment of the Avatar franchise, Avatar: Fire and Ash, as we see this figure don warrior attire. It is also equipped with Sully’s dagger, axe, and rifle, mixing Na’vi culture and human culture, something that’s become a staple of this character. This 7” figure doesn’t skip out when it comes to detail either, with a special blacklight-activated bioluminescent paint deco to mimic the Na’vi’s own bioluminescent skin patterns. Between the paint deco, accessories, and up to 22 moving parts the posing for this figure can’t possibly get more immersive.

BUY HERE

Mortal Kombat

Sub-Zero vs. Mileena Action Figure 2-Pack (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

Sub-Zero vs. Mileena Action Figure 2-Pack (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

$69.99

The Mortal Kombat Klassic line from McFarlane Toys brings the iconic Sub-Zero and Mileena to life with incredible seven-inch detail and action-focused articulation. Sub-Zero, the lin kuei ninja warrior, comes equipped with his signature ice weapons and a severed frozen skull and spine, showing off his chilling victory to any who dare to witness. Mileena, the monstrous political assassin, is equally impressive, featuring her deadly sais and menacing presence with two switchable heads—one masked and one unmasked. These figures capture the essence of the original Mortal Kombat games, allowing fans to relive their favorite arcade and console moments. Each figure is designed with high attention to detail, making them perfect for both collectors and fans looking to own a piece of Mortal Kombat history. 

BUY HERE

Liu Kang vs. Reptile Deluxe 2-Pack 7” Figures (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

Liu Kang vs. Reptile Deluxe 2-Pack 7” Figures (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

$69.99

We continue this list with two of our most iconic kombatants, Liu Kang and Reptile. Both figures appear in their Klassic apparel with fighting accessories, swappable heads, and even a mini lore book within the package that helps you get familiar or reacquainted with these versions of the characters. Some may remember the legendary fight scene between these martial arts masters in the 1995 cult classic film Mortal Kombat, and with this deluxe two-pack, you can relive the magic all over again. These ultra-articulated and highly detailed 7” figures make for great hands-on items to recreate your favorite fatalities or admire their beautifully detailed frames on display as collectibles. 

BUY HERE

Raiden 7” Action Figure (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

Raiden 7” Action Figure (Mortal Kombat Klassic)

$29.99

Behold Raiden, protector of Earthrealm, in all his Klassic glory. This Mortal Kombat Klassic figure perfectly embodies Raiden, the eternal God of Thunder, as he appeared in the original Mortal Kombat games. The figure includes Raiden’s sleek white classic fighting apparel, multiple points of articulation, and swappable hands, allowing you to recreate a plethora of his electrifying moves and poses. The packaging itself speaks to everyone’s inner nostalgia with its classic arcade cabinet designs, where this journey all started. 

BUY HERE

X-Men

Colossus 1:10th Scale Collectible Figure w/Scene (X-Men #1) 

Colossus 1:10th Scale Collectible Figure w/Scene (X-Men #1) 

$29.99

From the horizontal skin ridges to the jet-black widow’s peak, this beautifully detailed figure brings the metallic mutant Colossus to life in impressive fashion down to the diorama base that recreates the epic comic book cover this piece takes inspiration from. The 1:10th scale figure celebrates the iconic X-Men #1 comic book cover, in which the team finds themselves facing off against Magneto while he’s in control of Asteroid M, nuclear weapons, and a lot of other mustache-twirling villainy to go up against. To this day, X-Men #1 holds the Guinness World Record for the best-selling single-edition comic book of all time, with sales of over 8.1 million copies. 

BUY HERE

Beast 1:10th Scale Collectible Figure w/Scene 

Beast 1:10th Scale Collectible Figure w/Scene 

$29.99

Based on the legendary Jim Lee cover art for X-Men #1, McFarlane Toys commemorates the legendary comic book with this 1:10th collectible figure, showcasing Hank McCoy, a.k.a. Beast, and a rocky diorama. This piece brings the intelligent and agile mutant to life with his iconic blue fur, claws, and fangs protruding as he prepares to go into battle against Magneto and his Brotherhood. The figure truly looks like a piece of the comic cover in 3D, which is enhanced by the sculpting and paintwork that mimic the colors and shading of the original cover. It all really enhances his fur, signature hairstyle, and primal physique. 

BUY HERE

Iceman 1:6th scale Collectible With Scene Red Platinum Edition (Marvel Tales #229)

Iceman 1:6th scale Collectible With Scene Red Platinum Edition (Marvel Tales #229)

$59.99

McFarlane Toys commemorates Marvel Tales #229 with the Iceman 1:6th scale collectible figure, a Red Platinum Edition that captures the essence of the iconic X-Men character. This figure showcases Iceman in his sleek, solid ice form with his hands out, beginning to unleash freezing blasts. From the intricate sculpting to the translucent finish and collectible character art card, this is a must-have that blends nostalgia with McFarlane’s spectacular quality. The included diorama base aids in recreating the cover of Marvel Tales #229, in which Iceman goes on a crazed frenzy after breaking from a foe’s mind control, leading to fellow heroes Spider-Man and Angel attempting to break their friend’s mind of the rampage it’s consumed with. With premium packaging and accessories, this collectible figure should appeal to X-Men enthusiasts and collectors alike. 

BUY HERE

New Odyssey Images Remind Anne Hathaway and Tom Holland Fans to Manage Their Expectations

Summer 2026 will welcome one of the most anticipated blockbusters of the decade: Christopher Nolan‘s The Odyssey, a big-budget adaptation of the foundational Greek heroic tale from the man who made the Dark Knight trilogy, filled with A-list stars and shot on IMAX cameras! The mind reels to think about the images we’ll see: clashes with mythical beasts, gods and goddesses interceding in human affairs, an incredible archery challenge!

In a new first-look published by Entertainment Weekly, shots from the film give us a taste of this epic adventure. There’s Matt Damon as Odysseus, standing ready for action with two warriors at his side! There’s Robert Pattinson as Antinous, his eyes darting around a shadowy room! There’s Tom Holland as Telemachus and Anne Hathaway as Penelope, uh… standing around and doing nothing.

Which is, in fact, true to Homer. As exciting as it is to have such big names in The Odyssey, fans of those two particular actors need to understand that Penelope and Telemachus have a very different role in the story.

Set after the decade-long Trojan War, The Odyssey mostly follows Odysseus, King of the city-state Ithaca, trying to make his way back home. Along the way, he’s beset by various forces that prevent him from returning, from the nymph Calypso, who has fallen in love with him and wants to keep him for herself, to an island full of cannibal giants.

His wife Penelope, however, has her own difficult task. She must wait in Ithaca for her king or pronounce him dead and move on, a task made more difficult by an onslaught of suitors who arrive and want to take her place. The impatience of her son Telemachus only further complicates things, as he doesn’t not know what his role should be in his father’s absence.

At first glance, it sounds like Hathaway and Holland got a raw deal. They have to lounge around a big party, while Damon and his co-stars get to do all the adventure. But that reading misses the thematic importance of Penelope and Telemachus.

The suitor plot that takes up half of The Odyssey isn’t just a simple question of romantic devotion. The question isn’t whether or not Penelope will stand by her man or dump him for any one of the hot guys who have come to woo her. Rather, it’s a question of social order, decorum, and hospitality. She must decide if she should maintain the status quo by holding place for Odysseus or if she should allow a new king to take his place, all while navigating the complexities of the host/guest relationship.

Likewise, Telemachus isn’t just a brat who isn’t going to respect his mom’s new boyfriend. He is told by the gods early on about his father’s heroics, yet still feels the call to action, to take up his own heroic quest. To do so too early or too late would have horrible ramifications not just for himself, but for all of Ithaca, as would Penelope’s decision.

Important as these roles are, they aren’t always the most visually stimulating. That’s why the two just seem to be standing about in the movie stills. But if Nolan has proven anything, he can make even a conversation exciting, which is good news for fans of Hathaway and Holland.

The Odyssey arrives in theaters on July 17, 2026.

The Quiet Decision That Made Drive a Masterpiece

Nicolas Winding Refn’s mid-budget crime drama Drive was released to positive reviews back in 2011. Its mix of graphic violence and minimal dialogue, combined with stylized visuals and an intoxicating synth soundtrack, led to a solid following with audiences looking for something different from the standard blockbusters at their local multiplex.

Ryan Gosling, who starred in Drive as a subdued LA getaway driver who gets tangled up with the wrong woman, had very few lines to say in the movie, which allowed the actor to use subtle physicality to convey his driver’s thoughts and emotions. However, on the page, the character was supposed to have much more dialogue, until Gosling made a significant change when discussing the script on the first day of shooting that would alter the movie’s vibe for the better.

“Ryan, who has a very specific process, said, ‘This is a character that doesn’t speak much, so I don’t think I’m going to say much of this dialogue,’” Drive producer Marc Platt told THR. “It was an independently financed movie, and I froze for a moment because I thought ‘people have put all [this money in].’ So I sweat it a little bit, which never happened to me [before].”

Platt says he understood Gosling’s choice to ditch most of the script’s dialogue as soon as the camera started rolling. “I knew in an instant that he’d made such a smart, intuitive, truthful decision. That character didn’t speak, and it made him so much more powerful.”

Gosling’s star power grew considerably after he delivered a strong central performance in the film. He would go on to star in La La Land and Barbie, both of which landed him Academy Award nominations. He’s only made one movie since Barbie, but he has two big sci-fi films on the horizon: Lord and Miller’s Project Hail Mary next year, and the standalone Star Wars movie, Starfighter, set for release in 2027.

New Steven Spielberg Trailer Has a Real War of the Worlds Feel

Something is very wrong in the world of Disclosure Day, the latest film from Steven Spielberg. The first trailer for the film gives us very little detail about the plot or even nature of the threat facing its characters. Instead, the teaser establishes an ominous tone, from the uncanny noises coming out of the mouth of a newscaster played by Emily Blunt to the sci-fi equipment surrounding Colin Firth.

But in our world, things are very right, at least for a moment, because not only is Spielberg re-teaming with blockbuster screenwriter David Koepp, but the duo are evoking the mood of one of the filmmaker’s mid-period masterpieces War of the Worlds.

For those who have forgotten about 2005’s War of the Worlds, or perhaps were turned off by the ending and thus put it out of mind, Spielberg turned the classic sci-fi tale into a powerful piece of post-9/11 art. Written by Koepp and Josh Friedman, War of the Worlds sets the H.G. Wells story in modern day Brooklyn, where deadbeat dad Ray (Tom Cruise) has his kids for a weekend, the same weekend in which Martians attack the Earth.

Even more than dramas such as Spike Lee‘s The 25th Hour or Paul Greengrass‘s United 93, which openly evoked 9/11 to great effect, Spielberg’s sci-fi tale captured the feeling of the attacks. The scenes of Ray and other Broolynites treating the first signs of invasion with bemusement, the total social breakdown that puts Ray and children in constant danger, even the hyper-militarization of the final act all reflect the unreal feelings of that era.

Powerful as it is, War of the Worlds suffers from a lack of conviction in its final act, in which Tom Cruise’s character pulls off an incredible feat and the American military fights the aliens. However, some (read: this writer) find the ending of the film discordant in a way that highlights the false triumphalism of the presidential administration of the time. War of the Worlds showed why it’s not the aliens that we needed to fear in the 2000s.

With Disclosure Day, Spielberg and Koepp seem ready to do the same for the 2020s. Instead of any plot details, the trailer introduces a variety of characters, including Blunt’s newswoman, Firth’s rich-looking guy, Josh O’Connor as a very earnest-looking man with a backpack, Colman Domingo as someone with an incredible voice, and more. The characters talk vaguely about people needing to know the truth and how there must be more out there than just “us.”

This combination of some nebulous truth hidden from the people, lots of screens, and combinations of the super rich and the devout cannot help but resonate in our time, when we can still mistrust media enough to know images aren’t always truth, and we feel the pull of various economic, religious, and ideological forces on our daily lives.

Yet, we often fail in trying to articulate what those forces are or what we should do about it. When we open our mouths to speak about it, only indecipherable noises come out… not unlike Blunt’s character in Disclosure Day.

Disclosure Day arrives on June 12, 2026.

It: Welcome to Derry Creator Reveals Season 2 Story Details

This article contains spoilers for It: Welcome to Derry season 1.

While HBO’s gruesome prequel series It: Welcome to Derry hasn’t officially been renewed yet, it almost certainly will be. The show has been averaging around 10.7M U.S. and 18.3M global viewers, so it’s pretty much nailed on for a second season at this point.

If you’ve already got a Welcome to Derry-shaped hole in your viewing schedule and are wondering what will go down in season 2, rest easy, because creator Andy Muschietti already has some details on what you can expect to see when the show inevitably returns to our screens.

First up, you can definitely expect that big, timey-wimey Pennywise twist to be explored further. In the series finale, it was revealed that Pennywise knows that Margaret will become the mother of Richie Tozier, played by Finn Wolfhard and Bill Hader in the movies, and that he has knowledge of both present and future events. Muschietti says that the series plans to flesh out how and why the villainous clown experiences time in a non-linear way over the next two seasons.

The story will be unraveled as we travel farther back in time, matching Pennywise’s 27-year feeding cycle. Season one covered 1962, 27 years before It: Chapter One. Season 2 will jump backward by another 27, and season 3 will be another 27-year jump.

“The pitch to Stephen King was we’re going to tell a story backwards, and it has to do with that hint,” Muschietti told Deadline, adding that future seasons will clarify whether Pennywise is travelling backwards in a linear way, or whether he’s omnipresent. More importantly, we’ll discover if any actions Pennywise takes affect the events of the It movies.

According to Muschietti, we also haven’t seen the last of the original Pennywise, Bob Gray, nor his daughter, Ingrid Kersh. There will be a lot more to discover about the pair in seasons 2 and 3.

“We are going to know more about the Bob Gray of things, and we are going to know more about Ingrid, because Ingrid was around in the 30s,” he explained. “I think it’s a pretty tragic character. She’s a very specific, very unique character, because she’s a victim, but she’s a perpetrator too. She’s tricked into thinking that her dad is still there somewhere in the shadows of that monster, and she wants to liberate him, but the only way to see him and try to liberate him is by creating all these baits [and] all this pain, because she knows that he will show up.”

All eight episodes of It: Welcome to Derry season 1 are available to stream on HBO Max now.

Rian Johnson Urges Star Wars to Take More Creative Risks

Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson, who has been out promoting his Knives Out threequel, Wake Up Dead Man, has also been chatting about the current state of Lucasfilm’s sci-fi fantasy franchise and what it might need moving forward.

The director understands that his 2017 flick remains one of the most debated installments in the Star Wars saga. To many fans, The Last Jedi’s bold decisions to paint Luke as a reluctant hero, kill Snoke off without much fanfare, and declare Rey’s parents as ordinary slid too far from expectations and tore down the franchise’s mythos instead of building on it. To others, those were all plus points, and The Last Jedi was right to risk alienating some of the audience to do something, well, different!

Johnson, who grew up a Star Wars fan himself, says he understands that when the franchise gets challenging, there’s “recoil” against it. “I know how there can be infighting in the world of Star Wars,” he told Polygon. “But I also know that the worst sin is to handle it with kid gloves.”

He added, “The worst sin is to be afraid of doing anything that shakes it up. Because every Star Wars movie going back to Empire and onward shook the box and rattled fans, and got them angry, and got them fighting, and got them talking about it. And then for a lot of them, got them loving it and coming around on it eventually.”

Indeed, some are old enough to remember the backlash to George Lucas’s Star Wars prequels, but for many younger fans at the time, those movies were their first exposure to the franchise, and there remains plenty of nostalgia for them. There will be a section of Gen Z and Gen Alpha whose love for Star Wars is really rooted in The Mandalorian. The upcoming Starfighter movie also aims to breathe new life into the franchise – set in a new era with new characters.

As for his own involvement in Star Wars, Johnson has moved on to other projects, but he’s still a fan of the franchise, and being a vocal advocate for risk-taking and creative evolution within the galaxy far, far away can’t be a bad thing in a Hollywood landscape where even big franchises like the MCU are falling back on legacy to keep fans interested.

Welcome to Derry’s Big Pennywise Twist Is an Absolute Headache

This article contains spoilers for It: Welcome to Derry season 1.

The season 1 finale of It: Welcome to Derry was heading towards a resolution of sorts over much of its runtime, at least within its 1960s setting. The good guys teamed up to put Pennywise back in his box for another 27 years, aiming to right the wrongs of the pillar-destroying military and save all the kids they could from his Pied Piper-esque Deadlights parade before guiding him into his big old nap.

Everything seemed to be unfolding with that aim in mind, until one particular moment when Marge (Matilda Lawler) ran into the blood-soaked dancing clown. Isolated from the others, Marge was vulnerable, and Pennywise was in a chatty mood, ready to deliver a twist so staggering it would reshape everything we know about the malevolent entity.

During the confrontation, Pennywise taunted Marge with knowledge she shouldn’t yet have. He addressed her as “Margaret Tozier,” a name that confused her because it wasn’t hers. He then continued, predicting her future: “First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes Richie in a baby carriage.”

Yes, Pennywise revealed that Marge is the mother of Richie Tozier, one of the Losers Club in the It films and novels, who ultimately kills It in the future. With this revelation, Pennywise established several things: It knows Marge’s future, and It also knows the sequence of her life events and how they lead to Its defeat.

While it might be more straightforward to assume that It can time-travel, that doesn’t appear to be the case here; it’s more than It doesn’t experience time the way that humans do. When Pennywise told Marge that “tomorrow, yesterday — it’s all the same for little Pennywise,” he revealed It’s non-linear perspective on time. For It, the past, present and future are all equally accessible, and It perceives its own future defeat by the Losers Club as already known and co-existing with current events.

Does It have this overview of time in the book? Mmm, yes and no. In Stephen King’s massive source tome, there’s a brief hint that It experiences time differently from humans, but King never explains this idea, let alone explores it. The creators of the show decided to pick up this suggestion and run with it, deliberately developing the creature’s non-linear time perception in that direction as a driving force for the show’s story.

Welcome to Derry is telling Pennywise’s story in reverse and is set to continue this narrative over two more seasons. As Pennywise goes back in time, he will try to kill the Losers Club’s ancestors so that they never exist, and they never kill him. He thinks he can undo his own demise by rewriting history.

This opens up the classic “Grandfather” time-travel paradox. If Pennywise had managed to actually kill Marge, he would have prevented Richie’s birth and ensured his survival. But if the Losers Club never kills It, why would It then try to kill Marge? If It succeeds, the events that motivated It to take action in the past never happen. If It fails, they do. This is precisely what makes “ancestor-killing” time-travel plots such a headache.

Of course, there are definitely ways to tackle the Grandfather Paradox in Welcome to Derry. A fixed timeline could be established where anything It does already happened, so It can’t actually prevent Its own death because any attempts to do so are already part of history. Then there’s alternate timelines or the multiverse, where killing an ancestor creates a branch universe where It lives, but the original timeline still exists where It dies. Perhaps It is so omnipresent that It can even retain knowledge of events that never come to pass, rendering the Grandfather Paradox somewhat moot.

However, if we were to consider this non-linear time-perception twist cynically, the most genuine way it makes sense is for the It franchise as a whole. If the creators of Welcome to Derry can wrap up the series with It undoing the future or creating an alternate timeline where It lives, the possibilities of expanding the story are limitless: more It movies, more It TV shows, more Pennywise, more franchise dollars.

Do fans want more, or could Welcome to Derry choose to scratch that Pennywise itch for good? Much like the dancing clown, time could be on our side either way.

Avatar: Fire and Ash Review – James Cameron’s Shallow Spectacle Still Earns Your Money

There is a moment early in Avatar: Fire and Ash where the copious and three-dimensional CG vistas of James Cameron’s Pandora are not picture perfect. It is after an action sequence in which one group of renegade Na’vi firebomb another tribe. Our heroes are thus blasted out of the sky and laid low along a heavily forested jungle floor. It is in this precise breath, or perhaps a blink that occurs between breaths, where a bioluminescent vine reaches out for the children of Jake Sully and Neytiri, that I clocked it: an incongruity; a computer-generated image which does not look quite photorealistic. As it turns out, even gods bleed.

Pointing this out, of course, is the definition of nitpickery. When so much else of Avatar 3 is as gorgeously realized and methodical as this third trip to Pandora tends to be, it can admittedly be jarring to catch imperfections out of the corner of one’s eye. But like a microscopic flaw in a jewel, it is only worthy of commentary to a point. The thing still shimmers in its king’s scepter when he waves it around declaring himself ruler of the world. In fact, there might be more visual inconsistencies that my feasting, 3D-bespectacled eyes simply missed while being overwhelmed. If there are any aesthetic quibbles to be had, though, they vanish like mist beneath a neon-tinged sunrise in a movie this uniformly rapturous across its gargantuan 197-minute runtime.

Whatever else you make of Avatar: Fire and Ash’s narrative cul-de-sacs about blue aliens once again rising up against the ravages of the human race, the threequel remains an aesthetic triumph and simultaneous indictment of so much else churned out of the Hollywood blockbuster machine. Why can’t the plains of Minecraft, or the wastelands of Deadpool and Wolverine’s Void look this eye-poppingly wondrous?

Then again, I am left to also wonder why I take it all for granted—so much so that I get distracted by the most trivial of blemishes when considering what to write about a movie with a running time longer than Oppenheimer and a stone’s throw away from Return of the King. It might be because while this has the scale of an epic, it frustratingly maintains the thematic depth and complexity of a children’s fairytale picture, and Disney’s Pocahontas to be specific.

To be absolutely clear, Fire and Ash is a good movie. It is also a step up from second film The Way of Water, which in many respects felt more like a showcase on a tech convention’s floor of what James Cameron’s digital innovations can now do with H20. One of the most damning critiques I’ve heard from colleagues about Fire and Ash is that it is The Way of Water all over again, but if so, it is a better iteration of the same story. This time we have some semblance of narrative momentum due to the travails of the only Sully child with any dimensionality: the adopted child Spider (Jack Champion).

Fire and Ash is genuinely Spider’s movie since he is the impetus upon which the entire plot pivots. After the events of The Way of Water, where the eldest son of Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña) died during a replay of Titanic, Neytiri has come to despise their humanoid “Sky Person” son, Spider. Also unable and unwilling to return to his Homo sapien heritage in the “civilization” corner of land that’s been deforested into a Blade Runner-esque hellscape, young Spider is effectively being banished by all sides to live with distant Na’vi relations. That is until the Sully clan’s floating transport is attacked by Varang (Oona Chaplin), a witchy Na’vi whose Mangkwan clan worships the flames of war and nihilism after a volcano wiped out their homes and neighbors some years ago.

It is this crossing of the paths which leads to the Christlike member of the Sully kin, Kiri (Sigourney Weaver, still bizarrely cast as a teenager), to call on Eywa to save Spider’s life after his oxygen mask is broken. Enter those aforementioned glowy vines and some New Age mysticism which turn this young man into an—ahem—half-breed who resembles a human but physiologically mirrors a Na’vi. It also captures the attention of Spider’s dastardly biological father, the returning sourpuss Col. Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), who continues to insist on his hatred for all things Pandora and Na’vi. But after so many years spent trapped inside a Na’vi avatar’s body, the crusty army man is starting to protest too much as he finds a soulmate in Chaplin’s Varang. The pair turn out to have a lot of the same interests in common: sweet nothings like genocide, no-quarter battle tactics, and maybe a dabble of blood stuff in the bedroom.

Their union is what truly endangers the waterbending tribes within which the Sullys now live, leading inevitably to another climactic battle between the technologically advanced Sky People, now with their own Na’vi death cult providing air support, and the virtuous aquatic tribes and their space whale bestie battalions.

It is an often remarked critique that the Avatar movies seem to generally lack the same lasting relevancy of Star Wars or Lord of the Rings in the cultural imagination, despite Cameron’s films making more money (at least when you do not account for inflation). But the density of Reddit posts and fan art notwithstanding, the charms of Avatar: Fire and Ash are obvious to anyone with eyes.

The CG worlds are sumptuous, even without the three-dimensional gimmicks added on. In an age where tentpole spectacles dominate the multiplex, here is a vision that honestly invites the audience to inhabit its daydream for maybe a quarter of your waking day. It’s a steep time investment, but its lack of self-awareness or self-effacement remains as novel and refreshing in 2025 as it did at the dawn of irony-drenched blockbuster “comedies” in 2009. It’s just a pleasure to visit Oz once in a while.

If the movies lack staying power in the imagination, it is probably because the screenplays that Cameron co-writes for this wonderland never match his visual inventiveness. Sixteen years since its inception, the Avatar films remain a pastiche of colonialist and white savior fantasies in the Dances with Wolves, The Last Samurai, and literal O.G. Pocahontas legend vein, the latter fanned by English soldier of fortune, John Smith.  But those derivative roots do not mean you cannot do interesting things with the fantasy, problematic though it might be.

In the case of Fire and Ash, Cameron and co-writers Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver introduce a variety of interesting wrinkles that would seem to channel real, troubling histories between European explorers/conquerors and Indigenous peoples in North and Central America. The villainous temptress Varang and her followers flirt with being a metaphor for the complicity and/or cooperation of some Native tribes and nations siding against their longstanding enemies during colonial inflection points. Think of the rival communities who sided with Cortez and the Spanish against the Aztec (mind you, in actual history it was the standalone Aztecs who did blood sacrifices, as opposed to their native enemies). Similarly, the potential tragedy of Spider, a young person caught between two worlds and civilizations that both reject him, is one of the most poignant narratives of frontier history. Look to the story of Cynthia Ann Parker, or for that matter, the real historical Pocahontas.

Avatar: Fire and Ash flirts with some substantively big ideas that could undergird its visual splendor. However, as with most Cameron screenplays, any dramatic or historically knotty idea is mostly straightened out or glossed over in favor of the commercial beats that he knows how to play to the hilt: star-crossed lovers on a doomed vessel! A grieving mother renewing her maternal instincts with a surrogate daughter! And yes, another iteration of the proud and noble Indigenous people, led by their own adopted white man, calling on mother nature herself to defeat the technologically advanced white devils who run the world.

Cameron plays those well-worn, and lucrative, beats incredibly well again, it’s just the novelty has worn a bit thin after a third bite at the apple. That isn’t to say it’s poorly done. It is, again, superior to The Way of Water if for no other reason than Chaplin’s evil sorceress Na’vi matches Lang’s scenery-chewing as Quaritch, and the two have some diabolical fun as Quaritch begins going native enough to be redressed by his superiors a la Lawrence of Arabia. The climactic battle is also more satisfying this time around since all of Pandora’s ecosystems get in on the anti-human action, suggesting that when the time finally comes, Cameron will definitely side with the orcas in their anti-yacht uprising.

Some of the audience-servicing still seems a little forced to a critic’s brain—especially the addition of another star-crossed young romance that this time involves one half of the coupling being played by a septuagenarian—but for family audiences looking for a visual distraction this holiday season, it will matter naught.

This thing is meant to be admired, consumed, and then like holiday lights forgotten about in a box until roughly the same time next Avatar season. One can be a grinch and wish for more—or, like a certain holiday movie classic, grouch that a few of those little lights are not twinkling—but such petty qualifications in the face of this million-watts-light-show leads to pedantry. Fire and Ash is more of the same, and in some areas better. Overwhelm your senses and then go back to forgetting about the blue people until Cameron and 20th Century Studios need to collect a couple more billion dollars from us in three to 20 years.

Avatar: Fire and Ash opens on Friday, Dec. 19.

The Best TV Shows of 2025

When it comes to the media landscape, a lot can change in 365 days.

Around this time last year, TikTok was banned in the U.S. (and still technically is if you believe Congress is a thing), Max was a couple months out from realizing that it’s good to have “HBO” in an entertainment brand name, and Netflix was not yet eyeing Warner Bros. with a lustful gleam. Meanwhile, you, dear reader, might have been on the couch, flipping through the streams and stumbling upon a new TV program where Noah Wyle plays a doctor. But wait, didn’t he already play a doctor in that ’90s thing? That was pretty good so maybe this will be as well. Lo’ and behold The Pitt was good. In fact, it might have been the best show of the year.

Point is that the more things change, the more they stay the same. Even as the market-movers play their corporate game of thrones and consolidate, there is always good television to be found for those who care to find it. And thanks to show’s like the aforementioned Pitt, that more than held true in 2025. Here are the best TV shows of the year – Pitts, Peacemakers, Pluribuses, and all.

Ncuti Gatwa in a blue denim suit and white t-shirt in the TARDIS

25. Doctor Who

Look, we all know that the Doctor Who season 15 finale was objectively not a great episode of television, even though it’s possible to argue that some of its worst sins were not entirely its fault. (Showrunner Russell T Davies is still on the hook for the way he wasted the return of the Rani, though.) But we also shouldn’t let a bad ending erase the fact that the rest of the season was actually pretty darn great. After all, before “The Reality War” came along and harshed everyone’s buzz with Ncuti Gatwa’s surprise regeneration into Billie Piper, most would have likely agreed it was, at least collectively speaking, one of modern Who’s best! 

After all, season 15 features some all-time bangers that run the gamut in terms of tone and subject matter. “Midnight” sequel “The Well” was a deliciously tense horror story, the Ruby Sunday-centric “Lucky Day” gave former companion Millie Gibson a chance to be a hero on her own terms, and meta-episode “Lux” was as much a love letter to the show’s fandom as anything else. But the real highlight of the year was “The Story and the Engine,” a fresh and visually striking hour that uses magical realism to explore how we (and the cultures we live in) are all defined by the stories we tell. A less-than-perfect ending to the season doesn’t erase all the good stuff that has come before it, and we should all take a moment to remember and appreciate that. – Lacy Baugher

El Eternauta. Ricardo Darín as Juan Salvo in El Eternauta. Cr. Marcos Ludevid / Netflix ©2025

24. The Eternaut

The Eternaut (El Eternauta) was a surprise global hit for Netflix when it launched on the streamer in April 2025, becoming the top non-English-language series worldwide. The Argentine sci-fi series was critically acclaimed, but more importantly, audiences everywhere became intrigued by its premise and locked in for the journey.

The show is set in Buenos Aires and tracks what happens after a mysterious snowfall wipes out most of the global population. We follow one friend group as they struggle to survive in the aftermath. They don’t know why it happened, but the dynamics between them are slowly shifting as they get closer to answers, so we’re never sure who will turn out to be a good guy or cause enough problems to spark further catastrophe. 

The Eternaut is based on the comic by Héctor Germán Oesterheld and Francisco Solano López, published in the 1950s. You wouldn’t be able to tell, though, because many of the book’s themes carry over seamlessly into the modern day, and the show’s world feels realistic and lived-in, even when monsters populate it. Oesterheld was “disappeared” by the Argentinian military dictatorship in 1977, but his work lives on. If you haven’t checked out this hidden sci-fi gem yet, we can’t recommend it enough. – Kirsten Howard

(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.

23. Daredevil: Born Again

Daredevil: Born Again shouldn’t be as good as it is. Not only does it come to an audience that has forgiven and forgotten any problems in the original Netflix run, but the series also underwent an extreme change in direction during production. Although new showrunner Dario Scardapane and the directing duo Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead got to shoot plenty of new material, they had to use much of what the previous regime shot. The result is an uneven season of television, with even more visible seams than the usual MCU product.

And yet, Born Again still manages to be powerful superhero fiction. Part of the appeal comes from its incredible core cast. Charlie Cox moves from charming to guilt-ridden to furious so effortlessly that we fully understand why people fall for the obviously not-okay Matt Murdock. Vincent D’Onofrio gets to put new spins on his take on Wilson Fisk as a baby in a giant man’s body as the Kingpin becomes the Mayor of New York. But the most incredible part of Born Again is the way it takes seriously Matt’s guilt about being a vigilante, making the audience actually fear for his soul when the series finally gives us what we want, Daredevil in costume. A devil’s bargain has rarely felt so rewarding. – Joe George

SUCH BRAVE GIRLS - The series follows Josie (Kat Sadler), her sister, Billie (Lizzie Davidson), and their mother, Deb (Louise Brealey), risking everything they’ve got for a single scrap of love and adoration. Still desperately trying to escape the reality of their cramped, crumbling, debt-ridden home, it’s a good thing Dev (Paul Bazely) and Seb (Freddie Meredith) are coming to the rescue.(Disney/Vishal Sharma)

22. Such Brave Girls

One of the perils of the streaming era is that there’s simply more quality television out there than anyone could feasibly hope to watch in a 365-day period. So don’t feel bad if you’ve never actually heard of the Hulu comedy Such Brave Girls — just take this as an invitation to please fix your life immediately. But, to be clear, this isn’t a show for the faint of heart. A bleak, biting, often deeply uncomfortable story of a dysfunctional pair of sisters beset by mental health crises, financial woes, relationship dramas, and the emotional malaise that often goes hand in hand with figuring out the person you’re supposed to become; it’s chaotic, brutally honest, and frequently unhinged in all the best ways. 

In its second season, the show takes even bigger swings, allowing its characters to unapologetically be the absolute worst versions of themselves in subplots that range from cruel to cringe. Real-life siblings Kat Sadler and Lizzie Davidson deftly navigtate the combative, occasionally hateful, but strangely moving bond between their onscreen counterparts without forcing either character to fit into the pre-determined boxes a lesser series might require them to, and the gloriously messy result is a series that feels unlike virtually everything else on TV at the moment. – LB

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3

21. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

It’s true, the shining star in Paramount+’s larger Star Trek universe got a little tarnished this year. Yes, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 3 was pretty uneven towards the end, what with that terrible documentary-style episode and the one where half the main crew got turned into Vulcans and subsequently became huge jerks for no real reason. Yes, there was often a frustratingly uneven sense of pacing throughout. And yes, the season’s larger arcs (literally everything involving Captain Batel’s condition) were repeatedly sidelined in favor of adventure-of-the-week style antics that didn’t always tie back to the show’s larger themes. And yet, despite these flaws, it seems important to acknowledge that most of this season was actually pretty great. 

The “Space Adventure Hour” Holodeck murder mystery. The creepy, almost unnameable evil at the heart of “Through the Lens of Time.” Ortegas getting stranded on an alien planet with a Gorn, a la Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “The Enemy.” These are genuinely great episodes — all for different reasons — which once again shows us the depth that this series is capable of when it tries. Successfully balancing weekly adventures and ongoing character subplots that frequently mix in fan favorites from The Original Series era is no small feat, and the fact that Strange New Worlds so frequently makes it look so effortless while having to serve so many masters is something I suspect a lot of us have begun taking for granted. If you ask me, any show is allowed a few clunkers when the bulk of its offerings are this strong. – LB

Peacemaker (John Cena) in Peacemaker season 2 episode 7.

20. Peacemaker

How do you follow a universally-praised blockbuster reboot of the world’s first superhero? If you’re James Gunn, and only if you’re James Gunn, the answer is obviously “With another season of Peacemaker.” Further, anyone who wasn’t Gunn would have probably used Peacemaker as little more than an expansion of the new DCU from Superman and as set-up for the sequel Man of Steel. While some of that does appear in Peacemaker’s second season, in cameos from the Justice Gang and Lex Luthor as well as the introduction of the planet Salvation, Gunn keeps the attention on the show’s main cast, including its Z-list protagonist.

Peacemaker season 2 uses comic-book multiverse shenanigans as a tool to challenge the maturation Chris Smith (John Cena, showing remarkable range) underwent in season 1. Offered the chance to simply go to a reality where he is adored by the public and loved by his family, Smith can avoid the hard work of repentance and reconciliation before him. Adding to the complex character work is a fantastic supporting cast consisting of Jennifer Holland, Danielle Brooks, Freddie Stroma, and more, as well as a heavy dose of superhero humor. Peacemaker will never challenge the Man of Steel as an A-list hero, but in the hands of James Gunn, he’s just as compelling and complex. – JG

David Mitchell wearing a mac and standing on a bridge in Cambridge for BBC crime comedy Ludwig

19. Ludwig

Cozy British mysteries are having something of a moment lately, their picturesque settings, rich character relationships, lack of overt gore and violence, and smart humor offering a welcome and convenient escape from… well, everything that’s happening in the real world. While 2025 saw several outstanding entries in this particular sub-genre of British crime television, including Death Valley, Art Detectives, and Murder Before Evensong, the buzziest of the bunch was almost certainly BBC One’s Ludwig (available on BritBox in the U.S.).

A mystery series that’s firmly aimed at non-mystery fans, it follows the story of a socially awkward puzzle setter named John Taylor (or “Ludwig” as he is known in the papers) who is forced out of his comfort zone when his police detective twin brother disappears and he must assume his identity to try and figure out what happened. Peep Show’s David Mitchell plays the oddball eponymous lead, whose logical mind (surprise!) also turns out to be remarkably skilled at solving murders. Yes, it’s the sort of mystery show whose premise you require to suspend a great deal of disbelief, given that multiple people are repeatedly required not to notice when John-pretending-to-be-James starts acting as though he’s never seen an episode of Law & Order before, let alone been to a crime scene. But the result is such fun you won’t care. – LB

IT'S ALWAYS SUNNY IN PHILADELPHIA -- "Frank Is In A Coma" -- Season 17, Episode 2 -- Pictured (L-R): Rob McElhenney as Mac, Charlie Day as Charlie, Glenn Howerton as Dennis, Kaitlin Olson as Dee, Danny DeVito as Frank.

18. It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

Few shows airing a 17th(!) season find their way onto a best-of-the-year list. Then again, not many shows make it to their 17th year in the first place. Thankfully FX comedy It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia has and TV is all the better for it. After a stretch of funny but ultimately dispensable installments in the show’s late teenage years, Rob Mac, Charlie Day, and Glenn Howerton’s demented creation became the best version of itself once again in 2025.

Save for the second half of its charming yet inessential crossover with Abbott ElementaryAlways Sunny season 17 features nothing but bangers. Everyone is at the top of their game here. Mac (Mac) salsa dances while under the influence of hot peppers. Dee (Kaitlin Olson) slaps some people. Dennis (Howerton) becomes a waxy-faced vampire. Charlie (Day) shaves his head. Frank (Danny DeVito) is cake. It all culminates in another one of the show’s hilarious, yet oddly touching finales. – Alec Bojalad

17. Murderbot

Apple TV‘s Murderbot features one of the most slam dunk elevator pitches of the 2025 TV season. They’ve got Alexander Skarsgård … and he’s a murderbot. Ok, the titular cyborg (made from machine parts and cloned tissue) at the center of Murderbot isn’t actually called that. He’s an anonymous security tool known as “SecUnit” who is purchased to assist some egghead hippies on a dangerous scientific mission. Unbeknownst to both his creators and purchasers, however, Murderbot has achieved autonomy and given himself a colorful new name.

Just like Martha Wells’ beloved book series upon which Murderbot is based, this is easy-breezy sci-fi capable of entertaining mass audiences. Skarsgård is as likable as ever as he balances the needs of protecting his charges and keeping up his ruse all the while bingeing episodes of his favorite show The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon. The first season’s 10 episodes flow together nicely, ending in a finale that promises expanded Murderbot adventures (or Diaries) to come. – AB

16. Task

A slow-burn affair for HBO, Task nevertheless became must-see TV by the time it wrapped its first season, which pit Mark Ruffalo’s priest-turned-FBI agent Tom Brandis against a gang of violent robbers. Focusing on three groups – the FBI task force headed up by Ruffalo, the stash house robbers, and the motorcycle gang they both despise – Task is a worthy prestige follow-up from Mare of Easttown creator Brad Ingelsby.

He’s very good at getting under your skin by creating flawed heroes and villains. Ruffalo is also on form throughout as a guy trying to work out how to live after his adopted son murders his wife. 
Despite its bleakness, Task is riveting. By the time you get halfway through it, you’ll be ready for 10 more seasons of misery as long as you get a couple of moments of levity along the way. – KH

Death by Lightning. (L to R) Michael Shannon as James Garfield, Bradley Whitford as James Blaine in episode 101 of Death by Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2025

15. Death by Lightning

While Americans, as a general rule, love period dramas, we don’t necessarily make all that many of them. Neither, for that matter, does anyone else. That’s slowly starting to change, thanks to the success of shows like The Gilded Age and Manhunt, but mostly, period dramas focused exclusively on American history are few and far between. This is a big part of why the Netflix drama Death By Lightning feels like such a breath of fresh air. 

Turning the story of a presidential assassination that almost everyone seems to have forgotten about  — President James Garfield was shot less than four months into his first term and died of sepsis several months later  — into a genuinely entertaining television series with real stakes and tension is an accomplishment enough on its own. But with the help of an all-star cast that includes Michael Shannon, Matthew Macfadyen, Nick Offerman, Bradley Whitford, and Betty Gilpin, Death By Lightning manages to feel as contemporary as anything on TV at the moment, wrestling with questions of power, progress, and political violence in ways that feel incredibly relevant to the moment we find ourselves in now. – LB

Gary Oldman in a dirty suit and tie on his mobile phone and eating a full English breakfast as Jackson Lamb in Slow Horses

14. Slow Horses

Rolling into the fifth season of Apple TV’s Slow Horses, you’d assume it might be starting to lose some of its charm, but the combined power of the returning cast and Will Smith’s sublime adaptation of Mick Herron’s spy thriller novels is still overwhelming. 

In season 5, a bloody massacre in London is paired with the hilarious trials and tribulations of obnoxious computer nerd Roddy Ho’s love life. It sounds like a recipe for tonal disaster, but somehow it works. Case in point: there’s an episode where Jackson Lamb (Gary Oldman) takes Ho to hide out in a glamorous rooftop restaurant. Complaining about the prices as they discuss how to take down a Libyan terrorist gang, Lamb is asked why he picked a place so out of whack with his character to lie low. As Lamb bluntly replies, no one who’s ever set eyes on him would expect to see him there. All this is taking place just a few moments after Ho has gone through yet another assassination attempt. It’s ridiculous, but it couldn’t be more fun if it tried. That’s the Slow Horses way. – KH

FX's Alien: Earth -- "Emergence" -- Season 1, Episode 7 (Airs Tues, Sept 16) -- Pictured: Alex Lawther as Hermit, Sydney Chandler as Wendy, Lily Newmark as Nibs.

13. Alien: Earth

“There is surprisingly little mythology in the Alien film universe,” Alien: Earth showrunner Noah Hawley observed in an interview with Den of Geek. “All we really know is that there’s this company called Weyland-Yutani, and it has a knack for putting its employees in terrible danger.” Hawley is right. Much of the appeal of Ridley Scott’s 1979 sci-fi classic comes down to the simplicity of letting an apex predator loose in a confined space amid a vacuum where no one can hear your scream. How can such a cinematic, elemental concept stand up to the episodic rigors of television? Pretty well it turns out!

Thanks to Hawley’s vision, a capable cast, and FX’s newfound Disney money, Alien: Earth presents some of the most compelling worldbuilding from an Alien story yet. Set just two years before Scott’s film, Earth imagines its title location as a playground for five megacorporations looking to achieve immortality. Young trillionaire Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin) and his Prodigy Corporation believe they’ve reached that goal with the creation of powerful, child-brained hybrids, led by the indestructible Wendy (Sydney Chandler). Those ideas combined with some genuinely thrilling and bloody action have made for a heady, enjoyable sci-fi experience. – AB

Squid Game S3 Lee Jung-jae as Seong Gi-hun in Squid Game S3 Cr. No Ju-han/Netflix © 2025

12. Squid Game

Thanks to Netflix’s creative (and frankly annoying) release strategy, Squid Game came close to airing two full seasons of television this year, with season 2’s Dec. 26, 2024 release date missing the cut by only six days. The fact that only season three’s six episodes premiered in 2025 might make its inclusion on this list controversial. The concluding arc to creator Hwang Dong-hyuk’s modern dystopian masterpiece was divisive to say the least.

We would argue it shouldn’t be, however. Aside from the aforementioned release model that made it feel like half a season, Squid Game season 3 was another pitch perfect round of dark storytelling. The central games, which are always equal parts thrilling and revolting, took on an added foreboding resonance as viewers were forced to contend with the introduction of the ultimate innocent contestant and the lingering question of whether Player 456 could actually survive the brutal gauntlet twice. Somehow a very cynical, at times angry show found room to get even angrier while still introducing the slightest bit of hope for a brighter future. – AB

Dying for Sex -- "You're Killing Me, Ernie" -- Episode 7 (Airs Friday, April 4 on Hulu ) --  Pictured: (l-r) Michelle Williams as Molly. CR: Sarah Shatz/FX

11. Dying for Sex

FX miniseries Dying for Sex didn’t receive quite the same attention as its franchise and IP-centric television peers and that’s a shame. This funny, touching, and bittersweet eight-episode series was one of the more pleasant and human experiences for the medium this year. Based loosely on a real-life story, Michelle Williams stars as Molly Kochan, a woman who receives a Stage IV breast cancer diagnosis. Faced with the prospect of death, Molly sets off on a journey of sexual self discovery.

Williams shines with a vulnerable performance and Jenny Slate chips in superb supporting work as Molly’s friend Nikki Boyer. Dying for Sex is ultimately a refreshingly blunt look at the most taboo of subjects – death and sex. By the time Rob Delaney enters the proceedings as a neighbor Molly finds herself equally repulsed and turned on by, it’s clear the show has something to say about both. – AB

FX's The Lowdown -- "The Sensitive Kind" Episode 8-- Pictured: Ethan Hawke as Lee Raybon. CR: Shane Brown/FX

10. The Lowdown

FX’s The Lowdown pulled off the near impossible in 2025: it made a journalist seem cool. Sure, it helps that said journalist is played by Ethan “I Once Rizzed Up Rihanna” Hawke. And sure, said journalist prefers to call himself a historian or, more haughtily, a “truthstorian.” But he writes investigative stories for printed publications so we’re going to take the W.

Created by Sterlin Harjo of Reservation Dogs fame, The Lowdown is clearly the work of someone who loves and cherishes detective fiction. Hawke’s Lee Raybon is an immensely appealing sleuth, his ability to suss out a rat being second only to his ability to take punch after punch from the local riff raff. As the central mystery surrounding the dynastic Washberg family and their corrupt dealings continues to unfold, Lee and the show around him never lose sight of what matters: the underdog. – AB

Rhea Seehorn as Carol Sturka in Pluribus

9. Pluribus

While the question of whether Apple TV’s Pluribus is the best TV show of the year is worthy of debate, we can likely all agree that it’s certainly the weirdest. (Complimentary.) The story of an apocalypse that brings about world peace and universal happiness by way of joining all of humanity into a single hivemind, it’s the sort of sci-fi series that delights in asking big philosophical questions about free will, individualism, and change. 

Better Call Saul’s Rhea Seehorn stars as Carol, a cynical romantasy author who is one of a handful of humans who are mysteriously unaffected by the great Joining that has changed the world. Desperate to find a way to reverse what has happened, she is forced to reckon with deep personal truths — like whether she may have actually been, in some part, responsible for her own misery in the world that used to be. – LB

8. The Rehearsal

The first season of Nathan Fielder’s The Rehearsal was a worthy follow-up to the Canadian satirist’s landmark Nathan For You docuseries. Still, it was hard to shake the feeling that the narrative, in which Fielder attempts to rehearse every encounter in his life, could have benefitted from a little more focus. That focus arrives in The Rehearsal season 2, with Fielder locking in to save the American aviation industry.

Over the span of six brilliant episodes, The Rehearsal season 2 identifies a problem (plane crashes), diagnoses its solution (lack of pilot communication), and rolls up its sleeves to fix everything (through rehearsal, of course). By the time you get to Fielder’s “Miracle Over the Mojave,” The Rehearsal‘s second season has truly entered into the “social advocacy comedy docuseries” genre Hall of Fame alongside pretty much just other Nathan Fielder projects. It’s a narrow category. – AB

Long Story Short (L to R) Abbi Jacobson as Shira Schwooper, Ben Feldman as Avi Schwooper and Max Greenfield as Yoshi Schwooper in Long Story Short. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2025

7. Long Story Short

It’s hard to make an animated comedy series more personal, elegiac, and melancholy than BoJack Horseman. With Long Story ShortBoJack creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg gives it a shot anyway. This 10-episode effort puts its viewers through the emotional wringer. Following the middle-class Jewish American Schwooper family over a span of 30-some years, Long Story Short doesn’t let the perpetual forward movement of time interrupt with its storytelling mission.

Whether it’s experiencing young Yoshi’s (Max Greenfield) bar mitzvah, checking in with an adolescent Shira (Abbi Jacobson), or jumping forward to a middle-aged Avi (Ben Feldman) after experiencing multiple personal tragedies, Long Story Short examines the quiet desperation of American family life from every angle. And of course: it’s very funny… as all families are. – AB

6. The Chair Company

When you click “play” on a new series from I Think You Should Leave creators Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin, you know you’re about to see something baffling, but The Chair Company exceeds all expectations in that regard.  The show’s inciting incident sees Ron Trosper (Robinson) falling to the ground after giving an important speech at work, thanks to a faulty chair. He’s so embarrassed by the humiliation, he decides to investigate the chair manufacturers and tumbles into a sprawling conspiracy. 

Each episode is like a 12-layer dip of cringe, surreal moments, and relentless twists, with Robinson at the center of a story that barely makes sense but still leads you to places you wouldn’t go with a gun. Of course, it’s been renewed for a second season. That’s just what Tecca wants. Don’t you get it? – KH

Helly R (Britt Lower) in the Severance season 2 finale.

5. Severance

Viewers want answers when it comes to mystery box storytelling. In the case of Severance season 2, that means resolutions to questions like “Who was Kier Eagan?,” “Why is Lumon doing all of this,” and of course “What’s with the goats.” At the same time, however, wrapping up any mystery just ends that mystery. How can a show like Severance keep its audience engaged without stringing them along?

Season 2 makes that tightrope act look absurdly easy. Yes, some questions are answered in this batch of 10 episodes on Apple TV (including the goat one, believe it or not!). But the season’s real strengths lie in the quiet moments between those discoveries. Between Ben Stiller’s revelatory direction, immaculate production design, and a pitch perfect cast led by Adam Scott, there is truly never a dull moment on the Macrodata Refinement floor. – AB

Adolescence. Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller in Adolescence. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2024

4. Adolescence

Extended single-take shots or “oners” are all the rage on television nowadays. So much so that another 2025 show (that you’ll be reading about on this list soon enough) built an entire episode, fittingly called “The Oner,” out of the technique. With so many talented filmmakers and performers getting in on the action, the standards for what makes an effective oner have been raised. It can’t just all be about logistical mastery – the lack of interruption within a scene has to play emotionally as well. Enter Adolescence.

Created by Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham, this four-episode Netflix series represents the most effective and affecting use of single take storytelling in some time. At the beginning of one unassuming day in an unspecified northern English town, police arrive at the doorstep of the Miller family to deliver unthinkable news: 13-year-old son Jamie (an astonishing Owen Cooper) is wanted for the murder of his classmate Katie. What follows are four excruciating installments examining a family and community’s pain, all without the relief of a single cut. – AB

Hector isn’t doing well they call Walsh to advise. (Warrick Page/MAX)

3. The Pitt

It might be hyperbole to say that The Pitt saved television this year, but I’ll be damned if I didn’t think that more than once while watching it. Amid a sea of low-effort streaming sludge and long-in-the-tooth franchise storytelling, only HBO Max’s The Pitt had the courage to step forward and say “what if it we just made an awesome ’90s medical drama?”

The Pitt obviously owes a lot to its med drama forefathers, particularly ER from which it borrows star lead Noah Wyle (and according to the Michael Crichton estate: a bit more than that). But its dedication to real-time storytelling and relentless plot movement is an entirely modern invention. These 15 episodes (released weekly obviously) just absolutely fly by. There’s always something going on at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. Glance down at your phone for a second and you’ve missed no fewer than 14 intubations. Take that, second screen TV culture! – AB

2. The Studio

Despite feeling as though his job is to destroy them, Continental Studio head Matt Remick (Seth Rogen) really loves movies. The TV show built around him, The Studio, also loves movies… but maybe not as much as it loves television. In addition to being a satirical love letter to Hollywood, even in its imperfect IP era, The Studio has a deep appreciation of what works for its small screen brother. In this case that means gags…lots of ’em.

Save for arguably the premiere and a two-part finale, The Studio‘s 10 installments are wonderfully episodic. One episode finds Matt continually ruining a “oner” on Sarah Polley’s film. Another finds him tussling with Ron Howard over the indulgent end of his flick. Then, just when he thinks he can have a breather on a date with a pediatric oncologist, suddenly he’s suffered a gruesome injury. It’s almost as if this story about movies continues to present situations saturated with comedy. If only there were some kind of term for situational comedy. Maybe then Continental Studio could break into the TV biz. – AB

Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) in Lucasfilm's ANDOR Season 2, exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Lucasfilm. ©2025 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved.

1. Andor

The success of Disney+’s Andor can be observed by its frequent use as a measuring stick. Across the entertainment landscape, any studio introducing a fresh new take on an existing IP plainly states that it’s intended to be the “Andor of [INSERT-FRANCHISE-HERE].” Marvel’s Secret Invasion was teased as the Andor of the MCU (and hooboy, that was a swing and a miss). More successfully, the aforementioned Alien: Earth has been pitched as the Alien’s Andor. Truthfully, however, there’s only one Andor and the show’s second and final season proved why.

Andor season 2 is quite simply a masterpiece of sci-fi genre storytelling. Imbued with authentic revolutionary spirit, the “conclusion” to Cassian Andor’s story (give or take a Rogue One) was a triumph. Diego Luna once again embodied Cassian as an unwilling folk hero who’s always there for the rebellion when it needs him. Meanwhile, the political analogies at play were more astute than ever with the villainous Dedra Meero (Denise Gough) and Syril Karn (Kyle Soller) finding out how little use fascism has for its adherents. Andor season 2 had friends everywhere and we count ourselves among them. – AB