With Daredevil: Born Again Season 3 currently in production, some set photos have recently emerged that should build even more excitement for the show’s return. While Finn Jones has already been confirmed to be reprising his role as Danny Rand, aka Iron Fist, the new images reveal Jones’ Danny alongside Mike Colter‘s Luke Cage as well as Luke’s daughter, Danielle. While the reunion of the Defenders in Daredevil: Born Again Season 3 is thrilling on its own, the reaction of fans should be a signal to Marvel that it might be time to revisit the idea of a potential spin-off for these characters.
‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Season 2 Brought Two MCU Heroes Back Into the Fold
It may have taken some time, but Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 doubled as a revival for Marvel’s Netflix shows with the return of the superpowered private investigator, Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter), as well as Colter’s Luke Cage, who appears via cameo in the Season 2 finale, “The Southern Cross.” The episode reveals that the character’s absence was the result of classified undercover work for the CIA at the behest of the morally ambiguous Mr. Charles (Matthew Lillard), but Charles released Luke from his obligations, replacing him with the volatile Benjamin Poindexter, aka Bullseye (Wilson Bethel). Season 2 additionally confirms that not only have Luke and Jessica rekindled their romance, but they also have a daughter named Danielle.
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Luke and Jessica’s final scene in Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 also ends with Jessica officially reopening her business, Alias Investigations, in Hell’s Kitchen. Pair that with the long-awaited return of Jones’ Danny Rand, first revealed in previous Season 3 set photos as reported by Entertainment Weekly, and Marvel TV has the perfect recipe for a spin-off series that could serve as a direct sequel to 2017’s The Defenders.
A ‘Heroes for Hire’ Spin-Off Could Fill In Even More Gaps From Marvel’s Netflix Era
In Marvel Comics, Heroes for Hire was a licensed small business run by Luke and Danny, where the duo offered their own brand of investigative and protective services. Besides being the perfect way for Colter, Jones, and Ritter to reprise their respective roles, a potential spin-off could fill in many narrative blanks — like what brought Jessica and Luke back together. Although the one-time couple did make amends inThe Defenders, the Jessica Jones Season 3 finale, “A.K.A. Everything,” seemed to indicate that they’d elected to remain on more platonic terms. Obviously, a great deal transpired with Luke and Jessica in the gap between the end of Jessica Jones and Daredevil: Born Again Season 2, so a Heroes for Hire spin-off could flesh out those details via flashbacks.
Similarly, a spin-off could reveal what Jones’ Danny Rand has been up to ever since Iron Fist ended after its second season in 2018. The last fans saw of him, he was searching for an individual named Orson Randall, who previously held the title of Iron Fist in the comics. Has Danny regained the mantle, or does it still belong to Colleen Wing (Jessica Henwick) after she gained the powers of the Iron Fist from Davos (Sacha Dhawan) in Season 2?
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Finn Jones’ Danny Rand Can Finally Suit Up in ‘Heroes for Hire’
A man holding his hand in a fist while it’s glowing in Iron Fist.Image via Netflix
A Heroes for Hire spin-off could also finally deliver on something else MCU fans have wanted for years: Danny Rand donning the Iron Fist costume for the first time in live-action. There were some teases and allusions to the costume in the character’s Netflix series, but over two seasons, Danny never had the chance to wear his full Iron Fist regalia. Other set images for Daredevil: Born Again Season 3 have revealed that Bullseye will wear his most comic-accurate suit yet, so Heroes for Hire could follow suit with a comics-accurate Iron Fist costume for Danny.
Marvel Television hasn’t officially announced any plans for a spin-off, but the concept makes all the sense in the world. With the original leads of Marvel’s Netflix shows now reassembled for Daredevil: Born Again Season 3, a Heroes for Hire series represents both the perfect payoff to their original arcs and a satisfying continuation of their stories in ways that fans have been waiting for.
The science fiction genre has seen the birth of numerous science fiction franchises over the years, from Star Wars and Star Trek to cult classics like Babylon 5. One of the most underrated is the Stargatefranchise, which officially kicked off with Stargate: SG-1. Showrunners Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner deserve credit not only for launching a series that continues to hold a dedicated fanbase 25 years after its inception but also for having that series serve as a launching pad for a whole franchise. While it’s common for shows like Peacemaker and Loki to spin out of feature films, SG-1 didn’t have the luxury of a streaming service or an era where genre fare was commonplace. Its origin story boils down to unexpected success.
SG-1 sprung into being due to a deal between Showtime and MGM Studios, with the latter owning the rights to the Stargate film. With Stargate proving to be a massive success at the box office, director/co-writer Roland Emmerichand his creative partner Dean Devlin pitched two more Stargate films. Each of the proposed sequels would have delved into the origin of various myths in Earth culture, and revealed that the chyrons on the Stargate were in fact coordinates to other alien worlds. “Whether it was Bigfoot, or the Yeti — we were going to tie everything together into a larger mythology. And it was going to be so much fun. It was going to be so wild,” Devlin said during an interview for the Dial the Gate podcast.
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The Stargate TV Series Brought Back Beloved Characters With New Faces
Those films never came to be as MGM saw more value in a television series. The network hired Wright and Glassner, who’d previously worked on the Showtime revival of The Outer Limits. Together, they crafted a story that took place roughly one year after the events of the Stargate films and saw the return of protagonists Jack O’Neill (Richard Dean Anderson) and Dr. Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks). O’Neill and Jackson become part of a specialized “SG” team that also includes tech genius Samantha “Sam” Carter (Amanda Tapping) and the mysterious alien warrior Teal’c (Christopher Judge). Throughout SG-1‘s entire run, the team would utilize the Stargate to travel to other worlds and confront interstellar threats such as the shapeshifting Goa’uld.
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Collider Exclusive · Sci-Fi Survival Quiz Which Sci-Fi World Would You Survive? The Matrix · Mad Max · Blade Runner · Dune · Star Wars
Five universes. Five completely different ways the future went wrong — or sideways, or up in flames. Only one of them is the world your instincts were built for. Eight questions will figure out which dystopia, galaxy, or desert wasteland you’d actually make it out of alive.
💊The Matrix
🔥Mad Max
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🌧️Blade Runner
🏜️Dune
🚀Star Wars
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01
You sense something is deeply wrong with the world around you. What do you do? The first instinct is often the truest one.
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02
In a world of scarcity, what resource do you guard most fiercely? What we protect reveals what we believe survival actually requires.
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03
What kind of threat keeps you up at night? Fear is useful data — if you’re honest about what you’re actually afraid of.
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04
How do you deal with authority you don’t trust? Every dystopia has a power structure. Your approach to it determines everything.
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05
Which environment could you actually endure long-term? Survival isn’t just tactical — it’s physical, psychological, and very much about where you are.
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06
Who do you want in your corner when things fall apart? The company you keep is the clearest signal of who you actually are.
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07
Where do you draw the line — if you draw one at all? Every survivor eventually faces a moment that tests what they’re actually made of.
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08
What would actually make survival worth it? Staying alive is one thing. Having a reason to is another.
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Your Fate Has Been Calculated You’d Survive In…
Your answers point to the world your instincts were built for. This is the universe your temperament, your survival instincts, and your particular brand of stubbornness were made for.
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The Resistance, Zion
The Matrix
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You took the red pill a long time ago — probably before anyone offered it to you. You’re a systems thinker who can’t help but notice the seams in things.
You’re drawn to understanding how the system works before figuring out how to break it.
You’d find the Resistance, or it would find you — your instinct for spotting constructed realities is the machines’ worst nightmare.
You function best when you have access to information and the freedom to act on it.
The Matrix built an airtight prison. You’d be the one probing the walls for the door.
The Wasteland
Mad Max
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The wasteland doesn’t reward the clever or the well-connected — it rewards those who are hard to kill and harder to break. That’s you.
You don’t need comfort, community, or a cause larger than the next horizon.
You need a vehicle, a clear threat, and enough fuel to outrun it — and you’re good at all three.
You are unsentimental enough to survive that world, and decent enough — just barely — to be something more than another raider.
In the wasteland, that distinction is everything.
Los Angeles, 2049
Blade Runner
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You’d survive here because you know how to exist in moral grey areas without losing yourself completely.
You read people accurately, keep your circle small, and ask the questions others prefer not to answer.
In a city where humanity is a legal designation rather than a feeling, you hold onto something that keeps you functional.
You’re not a hero. But you’re not lost, either.
In Blade Runner’s world, that distinction is everything.
Arrakis
Dune
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Arrakis is the most hostile environment in the known universe — and you are precisely the kind of person it rewards.
Patience, discipline, and political awareness are your core strengths — and on Arrakis, they’re survival tools.
You understand that the long game matters more than any single victory.
Others come to Dune and are consumed by it. You’d learn its logic and earn its respect.
In time, you wouldn’t just survive Arrakis — you’d begin to reshape it.
A Galaxy Far, Far Away
Star Wars
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The galaxy far, far away is vast, loud, and in a constant state of violent political upheaval — and you wouldn’t have it any other way.
You find meaning in being part of something larger than yourself — a cause, a crew, a rebellion.
You’d gravitate toward the Rebellion, or the fringes, or whatever pocket of the galaxy still believes the Empire’s grip can be broken.
You fight — not because you have to, but because standing aside isn’t something you’re capable of.
In Star Wars, that willingness is what makes all the difference.
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Ironically, SG-1 would contain many of the elements that Emmerich and Devilin had pitched for their potential Stargate trilogy. The Goa’uld’s highest-ranking members, the System Lords, were named after gods in various mythologies, including Apophis (Peter Williams) and Ba’al (Cliff Simon). It turns out that Ra, the alien warlord whom O’Neill and Jackson battled in the Stargate film, was also a member of the Goa’uld. Wright and Glassner also explored the possibility of the Stargate connecting to other worlds, allowing the show to put its own spin on mythological figures.
There were takes on Norse, Japanese, and even Babylonian gods, which gave the creators the ability to establish a rich universe and continue with the film’s theme of “ancient astronauts.” This also allowed the series to tackle religious themes, specifically how others do terrible things in the name of faith. Teal’c formerly served Apophis but wound up defecting to SG-1 in order to free his people, the Jaffa.
The New Stargate Cast Developed the Characters, Adding More Depth Over Time
A major draw of the series was the chemistry between the cast, especially Anderson and Shanks. Both step into the roles left by Kurt Russell and David Spader with ease; Shanks even won producers over with his pitch-perfect impression of Spader. But they also made the characters their own. Anderson constantly sought to make O’Neill a more flippant and approachable character than he was in the film, and he frequently had the chance to show how little regard the Colonel had for bureaucracy. Shanks’s performance as Jackson is equally compelling, as his intellect and compassion prove to be a solution to many problems the SG-1 team faces. Their interactions with Tapping’s Carter and Judge’s Teal’C make for some memorable dynamics; both O’Neill and Carter struggle with their feelings for each other, and Teal’C learns more about humanity.
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And unlike other sci-fi series, SG-1 knew how to balance its darker scenes with moments of levity. Watching the series, it’s clear that the SG-1 team cares deeply about each other, and, as it turns out, that care extended to the behind-the-scenes matters as the actors collaborated with the crew on shaping their characters. Anderson, for example, asked for O’Neill to be more sarcastic, while Judge felt Teal’c should be more stoic.
Stargate: SG-1 would last for 10 seasons and weather several changes. Shanks and Anderson would have reduced roles in later seasons, and the show shifted from Showtime to the SyFy Channel with Season 6. Despite this, the show received critical acclaim as well as stellar ratings. The feature-length SG-1 pilot “Children of the Gods” was one of Showtime’s biggest series premieres and, combined with Battlestar Galactica,the series helped put SyFy on the map. Naturally, given SG-1‘s success, spin-offs were soon put into production.
Two feature films, Stargate: The Ark of Truth and Stargate Continuum, were developed for a DVD release. The Ark of Truth serves as the grand conclusion to SG-1’s battle with the alien race known as the Ori, and Continuum finds them attempting to fix the past after Ba’al changes history so that the Goa’uld conquered Earth. Both films, despite being direct-to-DVD, take the SG-1 story and escalate it to cinematic heights — the danger feels bigger and the scope more epic.
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Stargate Led to Further Spin-Offs and Launched Genres Stars Into the Mainstream
Image via Showtime
There would also be spin-off series in the form of Stargate Atlantis, Stargate Universe, and the prequel Stargate Origins. Atlantis premiered between the Season 7 finale and the Season 8 premiere of SG-1 and follows a new team led by Lt. Colonel John Sheppard (Joe Flanigan) as they discover the lost city of Atlantis and wind up in a battle with the malevolent Wraith. Universe finds a team of scientists forced to board an ancient alien ship called Destiny after their base is attacked, and escape using a Stargate — but wind up in a distant galaxy.
Origins is rather self-explanatory: Catherine Langford (Ellie Gall) aims to save her father after he is sent through a Stargate. All of these series continued to build out the universe of Stargate, but only Atlantis matched SG-1 in terms of fan engagement and character development. The SG-1 crew would also appear in various episodes of Atlantis and Universe, especially Tapping’s Carter, who served as a major character in the former.
The Stargate franchise was home to many genre alums over the course of its run. Farscape alum Ben Browder joined SG-1 in its final two seasons as Cameron Mitchell, Jason Momoa had a recurring role on Atlantis as Ronan Dex, which is rather ironic given his future role in Aquaman, and Ming-Na Wen had a recurring (later regular) role on Universe. Other sci-fi alums who appeared in the franchise include Robert Picardo and Morena Baccarin. Baccarin’s fellow Fireflyalums Jewel Staite and Adam Baldwin also had recurring roles in Atlantis.
Though Stargate SG-1 has been off the air for years, its fanbase is still going strong. There’s been a “Gatecon” convention dedicated to the series, and rumors have swirled of a potential new Stargate installment once MGM became a part of Amazon. None of it would be possible without the groundwork that SG-1 laid, as it took the foundation of a cult film and built upon it to make one of the most interesting science fiction universes ever put on the small screen.
Martin Wood, Andy Mikita, William Waring, Bill Gereghty, David Warry-Smith, Brad Turner, Mario Philip Azzopardi, William Gereghty, Peter F. Woeste, Dennis Berry, Ken Girotti, Charles Correll, Jonathan Glassner, Robert C. Cooper, Allan Eastman, Bill Corcoran, Jeff Woolnough, Jim Kaufman, Allan Lee, amanda tapping
In 1995, one year after the NBC series premiered, Aniston actress began dating Tate Donovan. The pair called it quits three years later, and while they were working through their split, they were given a romantic arc on Friends.
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Though he had his ups and downs with Aniston, Donovan said all six of the main Friends cast “were amazing” to him during his time on the show. “They were fantastic,” he gushed.
Donovan isn’t the only one of the Golden Globe winner’s beaus to have appeared on the legendary comedy. Brad Pittmade a brief appearance on Friends in 2001, playing a former high school classmate of Rachel, Ross Geller (David Schwimmer) and Monica Geller (Cox).
Scroll down for a recap of the Friends cast’s dating histories through the years:
Jenni “JWoww” Farley isn’t letting wedding drama overshadow her newlywed bliss. Days after reports surfaced claiming certain “Jersey Shore” cast members were blindsided by being left off the guest list for her surprise wedding to Zack Carpinello, the reality star is pushing back against the controversy and defending her decision to keep the celebration intimate. While some former co-stars reportedly felt snubbed, JWoww says the reaction only reinforced why certain people weren’t invited in the first place.
RCF / MEGA
Farley recently addressed the growing controversy in a TikTok video, making it clear that she was frustrated by the public discussion surrounding her guest list. “It is infuriating” that she’s “now getting caught up in retweets and tabloids about who was invited and who wasn’t invited,” she said.
“If you were a true friend or family member, none of this would be public right now,” Farley continued. “You would’ve [come] to me. But you can’t come to me, because then you can’t play victim to your own fake ass narrative.”
The reality star explained that she and Carpinello intentionally limited the guest list to around 50 of their closest family members and friends. “These people that are sh-t talking and creating these anonymous threads and tabloids things are the whole reason why they weren’t invited,” she added. “You proved my point.”
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JWoww Focuses On Newlywed Life With Zack Carpinello
Jen Lowery / MEGA
Despite the headlines surrounding who wasn’t there, Farley and Carpinello are choosing to focus on the people who were.
“We’re still taking it all in,” the couple told Page Six while sharing photos from their wedding celebration. “Every moment [of the wedding] felt intentional and filled with love. It was a beautiful reminder of how fortunate we are to have such incredible people in our lives, and we couldn’t have asked for a better way to begin our marriage.”
The pair tied the knot on Wednesday at Madison Modern Social in Old Bridge, New Jersey, surprising guests who believed they were attending a screening of Farley’s upcoming project, “Nanny Cam.”
Several ‘Jersey Shore’ Stars Attended The Surprise Ceremony
A source previously told Page Six that Pivarnick was “angry” about being excluded from the intimate ceremony because she had been “working with her for years,” though Farley has declined to address any specific names publicly.
JWoww Says The Wedding Was Designed To Be Personal, Not A Production
ZUMAPRESS.com / MEGA
Farley has also opened up about why she and Carpinello chose to keep their wedding celebration so intimate. “We envisioned a small, meaningful celebration focused on the people who matter most to us,” Farley told PEOPLE. “We weren’t interested in throwing the biggest wedding possible. We wanted an unforgettable moment shared with our closest family and friends. The goal was creating memories, not creating a production.”
According to the reality star, every aspect of the ceremony was intentionally designed to reflect the couple’s relationship rather than meet outside expectations. “More than anything, we wanted the day to feel authentic to us,” she continued. “The surprise element, the family focus, and the intimate guest list all allowed us to create something personal and meaningful.”
JWoww And Zack Carpinello Made Sure Their Children Were Part Of The Celebration
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Farley and Carpinello also made it a priority to ensure their wedding day celebrated the family they have built together over the past seven years. The reality star shares daughter Meilani, 11, and son Greyson, 10, with ex-husband Roger Mathews, and the couple wanted both children to play a meaningful role in the special day.
According to PEOPLE, Carpinello gifted his stepdaughter a ruby birthstone ring, while Greyson received a soccer-themed present to commemorate the occasion. “This wedding is about our family, not just the two of us,” the newlyweds shared. “We wanted the day to celebrate not only our love story but also the family we’ve built together over the last seven years.”
By incorporating thoughtful gifts and making the children part of the festivities, Farley and Carpinello said they wanted Meilani and Greyson to feel “celebrated and included every step of the way” as they officially began this new chapter together.
Tia Mowry is living her best life with her new boyfriend by her side.
Years after the “Sister, Sister” actress divorced her ex-husband, Cory Hardrict, she found love again with her partner, Javone Williams, whom she described as super smart and “so wonderful.”
In March 2026, Tia Mowry opened up about how her “boundaries” had changed since separating from her ex.
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Tia recently sat down with SiriusXM’s “Today Radio Show” to discuss a range of topics, including her new relationship with Williams, a teacher, artist, and reader.
According to Mowry, their connection is so strong that they do things together that help push them to be better, like going to the “Buddhist temple” every week and reading before bed.
“He’s a wonderful human being,” Tia said. “His emotional intelligence, it’s amazing.”
Tia Mowry Reveals She ‘Manifested’ Her New Relationship With Williams After Speaking With A Friend
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Later in the interview, Mowry said that she “manifested” her new relationship with Williams after a friend of hers told her to “listen to music, put some candles on and just write out a list of what you would like in a partner.”
“I’m glad that it came around the time…because I really wouldn’t have known what I wanted three years ago. I really needed to sit in like solitude and like learn who I am first before I even figured out what it was and what it is that I want. So I did do that,” she said.
“And not only did I do that, I’m a huge believer in like neuroscience,” the mother of two added. “So I would literally close my eyes, and I would meditate about my partner, and I would meditate about the feeling that I would want to feel, and the feeling was my nervous system being safe, and that’s exactly what he does, like he’s amazing, like he’s so wonderful.”
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Tia Mowry Filed For Divorce From Ex, Cory Hardrict, In 2022
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Tia initially filed for divorce from her ex, Cory Hardrict, in 2022 after 14 years of marriage. The “Game” star cited irreconcilable differences as the reason for the split.
According to TMZ, she opened up about her separation from Hardrict in an Instagram post, saying she wanted to be honest with her fans about where things stood between them.
“I wanted to share that Cory and I have decided to go our separate ways. These decisions are never easy, and not without sadness. We will maintain a friendship as we co-parent our beautiful children. I am grateful for all the happy times we had together and want to thank my friends, family and fans for your love and support as we start this new chapter moving forward in our lives,” she wrote.
Tia Knew Her Relationship Was Over At This Moment
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Tia spoke with “TODAY” about her split and said that she could pinpoint the moment she knew things between her and her ex were over.
“I knew when I really started to focus on my happiness,” she said in 2022. “I feel like women, we tend to focus on everybody else’s happiness, making sure that everybody else is OK — meaning our children, our friends, our family.”
Tia went on to say that life is about more than those things, adding that when women begin focusing on themselves and “self-love,” they’ll recognize their value. “And it’s not easy. It’s a hard journey, but at the end of the day, I feel like it is so, so worth it,” she continued.
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Tia Must Be Feeling ‘Secure’ About Her New Relationship With Williams
MEGA
According to a previous report from The Blast, Tia told the media that, following her divorce, she was keeping certain aspects of her personal life private. She shared that she would only post about her relationship when she felt “secure” with where things were between them.
“If I am feeling secure about something, then I’m okay sharing, because everybody wants to say what they want to say. When you are secure with yourself, then you’re like, ‘This is just noise,’” she said.
The actress said that she’s normally a bit nervous posting about her love life, and to protect herself, she’s used to creating “a boundary.”
“So yeah, it’s all about what I feel secure about, and also just [what I’m] passionate about, that I’m open to talk about,” she added.
War dramas will always be popular, with the intensity and truth behind their stories a perfect way to captivate a global audience. Right now, one of the best war films of the year is proving popular on PVOD. The WWII drama-thriller Pressure, which stars Brendan Fraser and Andrew Scott, follows the 72 hours before D-Day, and somehow finds a fresh lens through which to look at one of the most-told war stories in modern media.
The success of Pressure will likely point people in the direction of other war epics, with one such gem about to make its way to a free streamer. Set in 1944 after the Battle of the Bulge, Hart’s War follows Bruce Willis as a senior-ranking Allied officer, Colonel William McNamara, alongside Lieutenant Thomas Hart (Colin Farrell), who is tortured at a German prisoner of war camp and gives up information valuable to the Allied strategy. McNamara then recruits Hart to defend Lieutenant Lincoln Scott (Terrence Howard), a black prisoner of war accused of murdering a white prisoner.
Hart’s War was first released in 2002 and is based on the novel by John Katzenbach. The film is directed by Gregory Hoblit, who is best known for directing 1996’s Primal Fear, and was one of the last movies he made to date. Hart’s War was sadly met with mixed reviews from critics, scoring just 60% on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, but it did earn a strong 3/4-star review from the great Roger Ebert. If you’re looking for your next gripping war drama, you’re in luck, as Hart’s War will be available to stream for free on Plex, starting July 1.
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Collider Exclusive · Action Hero Quiz Which Action Hero Would Be Your Perfect Partner? Rambo · James Bond · Indiana Jones · John McClane · Ethan Hunt
Five legends. Five completely different ways of getting out alive — with style, with muscle, with charm, with luck, or with a plan so intricate it probably shouldn’t work. Ten questions will reveal which action hero was built to have your back.
🎖️Rambo
🍸James Bond
🏺Indiana Jones
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🔧John McClane
🎭Ethan Hunt
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01
You’re dropped into a dangerous situation with no warning. What do you need most from a partner? The first few seconds tell you everything about who belongs beside you.
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02
You have to get somewhere dangerous, fast. How do you travel? How you get there is half the mission.
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03
You’re pinned down and outnumbered. What does your ideal partner do? This is when you find out what someone is really made of.
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04
The mission is paused. You have one evening to decompress. What does your partner suggest? Who someone is when the pressure drops is who they actually are.
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05
How do you prefer your partner to communicate mid-mission? Good communication is the difference between partners and a liability.
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06
Your enemy is powerful, well-resourced, and has the upper hand. How should your partner approach them? The approach to the enemy defines the partnership.
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07
Things go badly wrong and you’re captured. What do you trust your partner to do? Who someone is when you need them most is the only thing that matters.
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08
What does your ideal partner bring to the table that you couldn’t replace? A great partner fills the gap you didn’t know you had.
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09
Every partnership has a cost. Which of these can you live with? No one comes without baggage. The question is whether you can carry it together.
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10
It’s the final moment. Everything is on the line. What do you need from your partner right now? The last question is the most honest one.
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Your Partner Has Been Assigned Your Perfect Partner Is…
Your answers have pointed to one action hero above all others. This is the person built to have your back — for better or considerably, spectacularly worse.
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Rambo
Your partner doesn’t talk much, doesn’t need to, and will have assessed every threat in your immediate environment before you’ve finished your first sentence. John Rambo is not a man of plans or politics — he is a force of nature shaped by survival, loyalty, and a capacity for endurance that goes beyond anything training can produce. He will not leave you behind. He has never left anyone behind who deserved to come home. What you get with Rambo is the most capable, most quietly ferocious partner imaginable — one who has been through things that would have broken anyone else, and who chose to keep going anyway. You’ll never need to ask if he has your back. You’ll just know.
James Bond
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Your partner will arrive perfectly dressed, perfectly briefed, and with a cover story so convincing it’ll take you a moment to remember what’s actually true. James Bond is the most professionally dangerous person in any room he enters — and the most disarmingly charming, which is the point. He operates in a world of layers, where nothing is what it appears and every advantage is used without apology. You’ll never be bored. You’ll occasionally be furious. But when it matters — when the mission is genuinely on the line and the margin for error has collapsed to nothing — Bond is exactly the partner you want. He has survived things that have no business being survivable. He does it with style. That is not nothing.
Indiana Jones
Your partner will know the history, the language, the cultural context, and exactly why the thing everyone else is ignoring is actually the most important thing in the room. Indiana Jones is brilliant, reckless, and occasionally impossible — but he is also one of the most resourceful, most genuinely knowledgeable partners you could find yourself beside. He approaches every situation with a scholar’s eye and a brawler’s instinct, which is an unusual combination and a remarkably effective one. He hates snakes and gets personally attached to objects of historical significance, both of which will slow you down at least once. It doesn’t matter. What Indy brings is irreplaceable — and the adventures you’ll have together will be the kind people write books about. Assuming you survive them.
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John McClane
Your partner was not supposed to be here. He does not have the right equipment, the right information, or anything approaching the right odds. He has a sarcastic remark and an absolute refusal to accept that the situation is as bad as it looks. John McClane is the greatest accidental hero in the history of action cinema — a man whose superpower is stubbornness, whose contingency plan is improvisation, and whose capacity to absorb punishment and keep moving would be alarming if it weren’t so useful. He will complain the entire time. He will make it significantly more chaotic than it needed to be. And he will absolutely, unconditionally, without question come through when it counts. Yippee-ki-yay.
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Ethan Hunt
Your partner has already run seventeen scenarios by the time you’ve finished reading the briefing, and the plan he’s settled on involves at least two things that should be physically impossible. Ethan Hunt operates at the absolute edge of human capability — technically, physically, and intellectually — and he brings the same relentless precision to protecting his partners that he brings to dismantling organisations that shouldn’t exist. He is not easy to know and he will never fully tell you everything. But he will carry the weight of the mission so completely, so absolutely, that your job is simply to trust him — and the remarkable thing is that trusting him always turns out to be the right call. The mission will be impossible. He will complete it anyway.
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Did ‘Hart’s War’ Perform Well at the Box Office?
Colin Farrell as Lieutenant Thomas Hart and Bruce Willis as Colonel William McNamara on a cropped poster for ‘Hart’s War’Image via MGM
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Hart’s War didn’t manage to impress critics on the whole, but could it at least find some success at the box office? Sadly, the film was one of the biggest flops of 2002, scoring just $33 million in global revenue against a budget of $70 million. This is an undeniable disaster for a film led by Willis during the height of his Hollywood power, just three years after he starred in M. Night Shyamalan‘s The Sixth Sense. Hart’s War faced tough box office competition upon debut, including Black Hawk Down, A Beautiful Mind, and Peter Pan: Return to Neverland.
Hart’s War is streaming for free on Plex next month. Stay tuned to Collider for the latest streaming stories.
What a year Robert Pattinson is having so far. The actor starred alongside Zendaya in the critically acclaimed cringe comedy The Drama, which emerged as a word-of-mouth hit in theaters earlier this year. The Drama grossed more than $130 million worldwide against a reported budget of $28 million. Interestingly, Pattinson and Zendaya will appear alongside each other in two more movies this year — The Odyssey, directed by Christopher Nolan, and then in Dune: Part Three, directed by Denis Villeneuve. The latter film isn’t the first fantasy-adjacent threequel that Pattinson has starred in. Many years ago, Pattinson was at the forefront of the Twilight Saga franchise, also starring Kristen Stewart. Both stars have significantly distanced themselves from the series, which was immensely successful at the box office, but not exactly admired by critics.
Collider Exclusive · The Sorting Hat Awaits Which Hogwarts House Are You? Gryffindor · Slytherin · Hufflepuff · Ravenclaw
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Four houses. One destiny. The Sorting Hat has considered thousands of students — now it’s your turn. Answer honestly and discover where you truly belong at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
🦁Gryffindor
🐍Slytherin
🦡Hufflepuff
🦅Ravenclaw
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01
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What quality do you value most in yourself? Answer as honestly as you can — the Hat always knows.
02
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A friend is being treated unfairly. What do you do? How you protect others says everything about who you are.
03
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What does success look like to you? What you’re working toward defines who you’re becoming.
04
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What is your greatest fear? Fear is the most honest thing about a person.
05
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The rules say no. Your gut says go. What do you do? Every institution has rules. What you do with them is a choice.
06
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What kind of friend are you? Who you are to the people you love is who you really are.
07
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You look into the Mirror of Erised. What do you see? The mirror shows the deepest desire of your heart.
08
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The Sorting Hat pauses. It whispers: “You could do well in any house. But what matters most to you — truly?” This is your tiebreaker. The Hat always listens.
The Sorting Hat Speaks Your House Has Been Chosen
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After careful deliberation, the Sorting Hat has made its decision. This is the house your values, your instincts, and your particular way of being in the world were made for.
Gryffindor Tower · Scarlet & Gold
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🦁 Gryffindor
You have nerve. Not the reckless kind, but the deep, quiet courage that shows up even when you’re terrified — especially then.
Gryffindors don’t act because they’re fearless — they act because they understand that some things are worth being afraid for.
You stand up for people when it would be easier to look away.
You charge toward what’s right even when the odds are terrible.
Harry, Hermione, Ron — the heroes of Hogwarts’s greatest chapter — all called the tower with the scarlet and gold home. And now, so do you.
Slytherin Dungeon · Emerald & Silver
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🐍 Slytherin
You are driven, sharp, and utterly clear-eyed about what you want and how to get there.
Slytherin has long been misunderstood — painted as the house of villains when it is, at its best, the house of those who refuse to accept limits placed on them by others.
You are resourceful, strategic, and you play the long game.
You know your worth. You protect your own fiercely.
The dungeon common room with its view of the Black Lake is yours — and the ambitions that will take you further than anyone expects are yours too.
Hufflepuff Basement · Yellow & Black
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🦡 Hufflepuff
You are the kind of person that makes the world genuinely better just by being in it.
Hufflepuff is not the “safe” house or the “leftover” house — it is the house of those with the greatest heart and the most unwavering integrity.
You show up. You work hard. You don’t need glory or recognition — you do what’s right because it’s right.
Your loyalty never wavers, even when tested.
Nymphadora Tonks, Cedric Diggory, Newt Scamander — some of the wizarding world’s finest. And now you join them.
Ravenclaw Tower · Blue & Bronze
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🦅 Ravenclaw
Your mind is your greatest gift, and you’ve always known it.
Ravenclaws are the thinkers, the questioners, the ones who find a puzzle irresistible and a good book better company than most people.
Ravenclaw is not merely about intelligence — it’s about the love of learning, the pursuit of truth, and the rare courage to admit you don’t know something yet.
You see the world with unusual clarity and depth.
Luna Lovegood, Filius Flitwick, Rowena Ravenclaw herself — all extraordinary, all original. And so are you.
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Here’s How Long You Have To Watch ‘Eclipse’ on HBO Max
Eclipse was the only installment of the series to be directed by David Slade, who took over from Chris Weitz and Catherine Hardwicke. The movie grossed $760 million worldwide against a reported budget of $68 million, and received mixed reviews from critics. Everyone was in agreement that Eclipse marked an improvement over the series’ second installment, The Twilight Saga: New Moon. Eclipse now holds a 46% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Stuffed with characters and overly reliant on uninspired dialogue, Eclipse won’t win The Twilight Saga many new converts, despite an improved blend of romance and action fantasy.” You can watch the movie on HBO Max until July 1.The Odyssey will be released in theaters later in July, and Dune: Part Three will debut theatrically in December. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
If you are a TV fan, you’ve no doubt had to deal with the premature loss of a favorite show. Before the streaming era, shows like My So-Called Life, Freaks and Geeks, and Pushing Daisies all ended before their time. Then along came Netflix, the ultimate heartbreaker. Did you enjoy that take on Daredevil? Too bad, it’s gone. Were you a fan of Mike Flanagan’s The Midnight Club? Sorry, it’s over — go read the book. Were you impressed by Dark, so now you’re checking out 1899 because it’s made by the same people? I don’t know how to tell you this, but you’re not getting the answers to all of those questions the series asked. If you get involved with a Netflix series, you pretty much go in knowing the risks. You’re getting involved with a show that could break up with you at any moment, no matter how new it is or how good it’s going.
‘Mindhunter’ Was One of Netflix’s Best Series
Another victim of Netflix’s fear of commitment was Mindhunter, which ran from 2017 to 2019. But it was a show that had everything going for it. David Fincher was one of Hollywood’s elite film directors, creating such masterpieces as Seven, Fight Club, Zodiac, and The Social Network. Then came the news that he was working with Netflix on an adaptation of the 1995 true-crime book Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Serial Elite Crime Unit. Written by former FBI agent John E. Douglas, the book looked into the lives of real-life criminal profilers. For Fincher, who built a career on making crime thrillers, pairing him with this book and Netflix was a match made in heaven. It wasn’t his first time working with Netflix either, as he had already been an executive producer and director on House of Cards.
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Collider Exclusive · Universe Personality Quiz Which Iconic Universe Do You Belong in the Most? Star Wars · Lord of the Rings · Harry Potter · Game of Thrones · Star Trek
Five legendary universes. Five completely different visions of what the world could be — or already was. One of them is the world your instincts, your values, and your particular way of existing were built for. Eight questions will tell you which one.
🚀Star Wars
💍Lord of the Rings
🧙Harry Potter
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👑Game of Thrones
🖖Star Trek
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01
What gives your life its deepest sense of meaning? Every universe is built around a different answer to this question.
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02
Which kind of world do you most want to inhabit? The environment shapes who you become. Choose carefully.
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03
How do you prefer your conflicts resolved? The shape of a world’s conflicts tells you everything about its soul.
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04
Who do you want beside you when things get difficult? Your ideal companions reveal the world you were made for.
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05
What is your relationship with power? How you seek, wield, or resist power is the map of who you are.
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06
How does your universe treat good and evil? A world’s moral architecture tells you more about it than any map.
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07
What role would you naturally fall into? Every universe has archetypes. Which one fits you without trying?
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08
What do you ultimately believe about the future? The answer to this is the clearest window into which universe already lives inside you.
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Your Universe Has Been Chosen You Belong In…
Your answers point to the iconic universe your values, your instincts, and your particular way of seeing the world were built for. This is where you would find your people — and your purpose.
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A Galaxy Far, Far Away
Star Wars
You believe in the cause — in the idea that freedom is worth fighting for even when the odds are impossible and the empire is vast.
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You are drawn to the moral clarity of a universe where hope itself is a form of resistance.
You’d find your people in the Rebellion — a ragtag coalition of true believers held together by conviction more than resources.
Star Wars is fundamentally a story about ordinary people choosing to matter in an extraordinary conflict — and that is exactly your kind of story.
The Force may or may not be with you. But the will to use it for something larger than yourself certainly is.
Middle-earth
Lord of the Rings
You understand, in the deepest part of yourself, that the journey matters as much as the destination — and that the world’s beauty is worth protecting even at great cost.
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Middle-earth is a world of ancient wonder, deep friendship, and a darkness that only retreats when enough small acts of courage accumulate.
You would thrive here because you value the fellowship more than the glory — the road more than the arrival.
Tolkien’s universe rewards patience, loyalty, and the willingness to carry something heavy across a very long distance.
Those are not burdens to you. They are simply how you move through the world.
The Wizarding World
Harry Potter
You believe that love, loyalty, and doing what’s right are not naive sentiments — they are the most powerful forces in any world, magical or otherwise.
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The Wizarding World is a place of wonder hidden in plain sight, where learning is transformative and the bonds you form at school follow you into every battle.
You would flourish here because you take both the magic and the friendships seriously — and you understand that one without the other is incomplete.
Harry Potter’s universe ultimately rewards those who choose to stand for something even when standing is terrifying.
That choice — made quietly, without guarantee — is something you understand completely.
Westeros · The Known World
Game of Thrones
You see the world clearly — its power structures, its hypocrisies, its brutal arithmetic — and you are not paralysed by that clarity. You use it.
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Westeros is a world that rewards intelligence, adaptability, and the willingness to understand that every alliance is also a negotiation.
You would survive here — possibly thrive here — because you don’t confuse the world as it is with the world as you’d like it to be.
Game of Thrones is a story about what happens when the idealists and the realists collide. You are sharp enough to know which one lasts longer.
Winter always comes. You are already prepared.
The United Federation of Planets
Star Trek
You believe the future is worth building — that curiosity, cooperation, and the expansion of understanding are not just ideals but the most practical path forward for any civilisation.
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Star Trek is a universe where the questions matter as much as the answers, and where encountering something utterly alien is cause for wonder rather than fear.
You would belong here because you are fundamentally optimistic about what intelligence and decency can achieve — while being honest about how hard that achievement is.
The Federation is the universe’s most ambitious thought experiment: what if we actually got better?
You don’t just hope that’s possible. You think it’s the only thing worth working toward.
The series turned out as well as anyone could have expected, completely living up to the hype. It wasn’t just Fincher’s dark, slow-burn storytelling that made it work. He was also assisted by a stellar cast, including Jonathan Groff and Holt McCallany as FBI agents, and Cameron Britton in a quiet but creepy performance as serial killer Ed Kemper. Britton’s impression of Kemper was so spot on that the actor earned himself an Emmy nomination.
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Season 2 ended on a bit of a cliffhanger. An arrest had just been made in the Atlanta child murders, and the frightening scenes of the BTK killer were growing more intense. Season 3 looked to continue the macabre mayhem, except it never came to be. In early 2020, it was announced that the cast had been released from their contracts. Netflix put out a statement to TVLine, saying, “David is focused on directing his first Netflix film Mank, and on producing the second season of Love, Death and Robots. He may revisit Mindhunter again in the future, but in the meantime felt it wasn’t fair to the actors to hold them from seeking other work while he was exploring new work of his own.” That meant Season 3 would eventually come, right? No. In short, the show was unofficially cancelled, but getting fans to accept that would take some time.
David Fincher Has Had To Continously Answer Questions About the Status of ‘Mindhunter’
FBI agent Holden Ford (Jonathan Groff) holds a black and white photograph and sits next to FBI agent Bill Tench (Holt McCallany) in Mindhunter.Image via Netflix/ Denver and Delilah Productions
It was disappointing to hear, but not surprising. It had been a few years since Fincher had made a feature film. Let him go scratch that itch, and he’d be back. He went on to make Mank, which, unsurprisingly, won a few Academy Awards and earned Fincher yet another Best Director nomination. Later in the year, when being interviewed by Vulture, Fincher was asked if Mindhunter was over, and he replied, “I think probably.”
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“Listen, for the viewership that it had, it was an expensive show. We talked about ‘Finish Mank and then see how you feel,’ but I honestly don’t think we’re going to be able to do it for less than I did Season 2. And on some level, you have to be realistic about dollars have to equal eyeballs.”
Oof. That hurt. For anyone hoping the show would soon return, that seemed to be the clearest answer that it wasn’t coming back, except then a Netflix rep also had to tell Vulture, “Maybe in five years.” Dang you, Netflix. You make it impossible to let go! A few months later, in an interview with Variety, Fincher was again asked about Mindhunter, and he gave a similar answer: “I don’t know if it makes sense to continue,” he said. “It was an expensive show. It had a very passionate audience, but we never got the numbers that justified the cost.”
It’s Time To Give Up on Any Hope for More ‘Mindhunter’
mindhunter-season-2-holt-mccallanyImage via Netflix
That seemed to seal the series’ fate. Mindhunter cost too much money and not enough people watched, so Netflix pulled it. As much as it sucked, what could you do? Some things just aren’t meant to be, no matter how much you love them. Then, in what had to have been an attempt to one-up that Netflix rep, Fincher added, “At some point, I’d love to revisit it. The hope was to get all the way up to the late 90s, early 2000s, hopefully, get all the way up to people knocking on the door at Dennis Rader’s house.” Once again, fans were fed a bit of hope and then left hanging, like someone who’s been dumped in a relationship, only for the ex to keep popping up and telling you there’s a chance at getting back together. The hope continued to grow when, in 2021, Fincher signed an exclusive four-year deal with Netflix. Maybe, just maybe, that meant the series would return eventually. Spoiler alert: It didn’t.
“To me, Mindhunter is Fincher. The whole experience for me was the honor and privilege of getting to work with him. So I’m not a sports person really at all, but it’s like the [1997-1998] Chicago Bulls. Do you go for another season with the team? Or do you just do what the general manager says? But if the general manager believes that it should stop, you have to go with the general manager. And this is how I feel with David. The minute he says he wants to do another one, I’ll be there in a second. But I trust his vision and his instincts, and so I leave it always in his hands, as ever.”
At this point, it had been almost two years since Season 2 of Mindhunter. While Groff’s comment about being there to do another season in a second was enticing to hold on to, it also wasn’t feasible. Fincher had moved on, returning to feature films. The cast had moved on, too. Groff was also one of the leads in Knock at the Cabin, and Anna Torv appeared in the first season of The Last of Us. On paper, it seems easy to bring the show back. Well, everyone sounds like they still want to do it, so why not? Netflix surely has enough money. Look at how much money they spend on other shows just to cancel them. On top of that, look how popular true crime is now! Netflix is like a murder documentary assembly line. It’s not that easy, sadly. Resurrecting Mindhunter is not like making a movie. In terms of runtime, it’s like making three or four feature films back-to-back, which is a commitment that’s hard to live up to years later.
‘Mindhunter’ Is Over, It’s Time To Watch Other TV Shows
In an interview with the French outlet Le Journal du Dimanche in 2023, Fincher was, of course, once again asked about the status of Mindhunter. “I’m very proud of the first two seasons,” he said, before repeating:
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“But it’s a very expensive show and, in the eyes of Netflix, we didn’t attract enough of an audience to justify such an investment [for Season 3]. They took risks to get the show off the ground, gave me the means to do Mank the way I wanted to do it, and they allowed me to venture down new paths with The Killer. It’s a blessing to be able to work with people who are capable of boldness.”
That sounds like acceptance for Fincher. He did his best, but his relationship with the series is over, and he’s ready to move on. That means you, too, interviewers. Please, for the love of God, quit asking the man about Mindhunter in every interview he does. It’s getting to be absurd and makes it impossible to move on when we’re so often reminded of the one who got away.
That also means fans need to finally move on as well. There are other fish in the sea. For some, however, there’s just no escaping the hold that Mindhunter has on them. While there have been other petitions to bring back the show (along with several other shows), one petition to bring the show back received over 80,000 signatures, with a heartfelt plea from fans begging for a Seson 3, even without the involvement of Fincher. Unfortunately, despite the determination of the fans, it seems that Mindhunter‘s fate is sealed. It’s not coming back, it’s been over five years since that Netflix rep gave us some empty promises. It’s time to move on.
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Release Date
2017 – 2019
Network
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Netflix
Showrunner
Joe Penhall
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Directors
David Fincher, Carl Franklin, Andrew Dominik, Andrew Douglas, Asif Kapadia, Tobias Lindholm
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Writers
Joe Penhall, Jennifer Haley, Joshua Donen, Courtenay Miles, Carly Wray, Pamela Cederquist
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Leave it to Reese Witherspoon to channel New York class and Charleston charm at the same time. Flat sandals are having a serious moment, and Witherspoon just gave the style a cutesy, elevated twist. We found her polished look on sale for just $24!
Walking around New York City, Witherspoon wore white denim, a clean tee and a soft pink cardigan thrown over her shoulders. Brown toe-ring sandals pulled the outfit together, especially with the shiny gold detail that screamed ‘rich mom.’ These lookalike sandals have the same effect, and we’ve spotted them everywhere from Madison Avenue boutiques to Soho cafes.
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Get the Stratuxx Kaze Dressy Flat Sandals for $24 (was $34) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
These Stratuxx Kaze Dressy Flat Sandals mimic the classic brown color, strappy look and sleek silhouette, plus the gold-tone metallic accent that makes any outfit appear rich. Translation: you’ll look like an Upper East Side socialite no matter what you pair them with.
Kate Middleton‘s wardrobe usually leans more neutral, but the Princess of Wales is switching things up this summer. We’ve spotted her in purple, sky blue and most recently, yellow. But not just any yellow. She chose the classiest shade, and we found her polished yellow dress style for just $28 on Amazon! Middleton attended the […]
Comfort-wise, the cushioned footbed is built for actual city walking, not just brunch. Equally convenient, these luxe-looking sandals are designed to slip on in seconds, no bending, buckles or fuss required.
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Witherspoon makes comfy basics look expensive, and her New York City walk proved a timeless formula still works. A simple tee plus white denim and sophisticated everyday sandals you can actually walk in? That’s a celeb-approved combo worth copying.
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Get the Stratuxx Kaze Dressy Flat Sandals for $24 (was $34) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
In case you missed it, chunky sneakers are out in favor of a sleeker, more elegant alternative. Pamela Anderson put the trend into action, wearing a classy sneaker style that didn’t just complete her outfit, but made it. We found Anderson’s polished look for just $35 on Amazon! A few days ago, Anderson wandered around Saint-Tropez, picnic […]
We’re all used to a genre like science fiction getting tangled in its own ambition. A show with a fascinating premise becomes a lavish, multi-season story, and though a lot of great shows find their footing and fulfill the promise of a long narrative, others become weighed down by filler and the pressure to keep a story running indefinitely.
There are great sci-fi stories that have been told in a short, well-focused narrative. They build complex worlds, explore mind-bending concepts, and deliver great character development, all without a single wasted moment. Each of these is a complete, self-contained masterpiece proving that sometimes, the most profound journeys are the shortest ones. These are the nine greatest sci-fi shows with eight episodes or fewer.
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1
‘Childhood’s End’ (2015)
Milo Rodericks (Osy Ikhile) speaks to the Overlords at the end of the world on ‘Childhood’s End’Image via SYFY
Childhood’s End was based on Arthur C. Clarke‘s classic novel, and the adaptation is a stunning and faithful rendition of the story, told through a miniseries. The production design is gorgeous, and the show’s willingness to embrace the story’s philosophical nature makes it one of the most compelling sci-fi shows you’ll ever see. It’s a haunting, thought-provoking exploration of sacrifice and evolution, with characters you can easily empathize with and an ending that is as satisfying as it is sad.
Childhood’s End shows a seemingly peaceful alien invasion, where a mysterious alien race called “Overlords” arrives on Earth and ushers in an era of utopian peace, eliminating war, disease, and poverty. However, their true purpose turns out to be far more complex and terrifying than a simple conquest. Led by a compelling performance from Charles Dance as the alien leader Karellen, the three-episode miniseries excels in slow-burn dread, leading to an ending that feels inevitable and tragic. Childhood’s End proves that a powerful idea, done with love and precision, doesn’t need any more than a few hours to leave a permanent mark.
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2
‘The Lost Room’ (2006)
Peter Krause as Joe grabbing someone who is falling in The Lost Room.Image via SYFY
The Lost Room is pretty much a cult classic of the genre, and longtime fans know all about this stunning, lore-heavy miniseries. It’s a brilliantly weird and original piece of sci-fi that feels like an urban legend that’s come to life. This miniseries has three episodes, each with a runtime of around 90 minutes, showing a perfect understanding that the best sci-fi doesn’t need to explain everything — it just needs to make the ordinary and mundane feel a lot more magical. The Lost Room has gained a devoted following over time, with promises of a comic book continuation that never came to life but was welcomed with lots of excitement.
The Lost Room follows detective Joe Miller (Peter Krause), who, while investigating a crime scene at a rundown motel, discovers a key that opens any door — and not just any door at the motel, butanydoor in the world. He soon learns that the key is just one of a hundred everyday objects from Room 10 of the Sunshine Motel that gained impossible powers after a mysterious event in 1961. Some of those objects include a comb that stops time, a pair of scissors that can spin objects, and a bus ticket that transports you to New Mexico. Beautiful and haunting, The Lost Room is a perfect time capsule that will evoke the 2000s perfectly, but at the same time, it’s a timeless piece of sci-fi that’s still relevant two decades later.
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3
‘Bodies’ (2023)
The Netflix miniseries Bodies has a brilliant premise that hooks you instantly — the same dead body investigated across multiple timelines. Based on Si Spencer‘s DC Vertigo graphic novel, Bodies is a beautiful genre-bending series that starts as a gritty police procedural and expands into a dystopian sci-fi thriller. The story includes some intriguing time-travel dynamics, which can be confusing at times, but that’s why Bodies is also a perfect series to rewatch.
As mentioned, Bodies is about a dead body that appears in the same alley in London in four different years: 1890, 1941, 2023, and 2053. Four detectives from four different eras investigate the same murder, and as their cases intertwine, they uncover a conspiracy that involves one sinister man. The performances across the different timelines are uniformly excellent, with each detective bringing a unique perspective to the central mystery; a valuable addition to the roster is Stephen Graham, who portrays the mysterious Elias Mannix. Bodies is a perfectly paced, eight-episode puzzle box that rewards careful attention; it’s a brilliant, twisty ride.
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Collider Exclusive · Sci-Fi Personality Quiz Which Sci-Fi Hero Are You Most Like? Paul Atreides · Captain Kirk · Princess Leia · Ellen Ripley · Max Rockatansky
Five iconic heroes. Five completely different ways of facing an impossible universe. One of them shares your instincts, your values, and your particular way of refusing to back down. Eight questions will tell you which one.
🏜️Paul Atreides
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🖖Capt. Kirk
✊Princess Leia
🔦Ellen Ripley
🔥Max Rockatansky
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01
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How do you lead when the stakes couldn’t be higher? The way you lead under pressure is the most honest thing about you.
02
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What is your greatest strength in a crisis? The quality that keeps you alive when everything else fails.
03
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What is the thing you’d sacrifice everything else for? Your deepest motivation is your truest compass.
04
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How do you relate to the people around you? Who you are to others under pressure is who you really are.
05
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You’re facing a threat that no one else believes is real. What do you do? How you respond when you’re the only one who sees it defines everything.
06
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What has your heroism cost you personally? Every hero pays. The question is what — and whether they’d pay it again.
07
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How do you feel about the rules of the world you’re in? Every hero has a relationship with the system. What’s yours?
08
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When everything is on the line, what keeps you going? The answer is the most honest thing about you.
Your Hero Has Been Identified Your Sci-Fi Hero Is…
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Your answers point to the iconic sci-fi hero who shares your instincts, your values, and your particular way of facing the impossible.
Arrakis · Dune
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Paul Atreides
You carry a weight most people would crumble under — the knowledge of what you’re capable of, and the burden of what you might have to become.
You see further ahead than others and you plan accordingly, even when the vision frightens you.
You are driven by loyalty to your people and a sense of destiny you didn’t ask for but can’t escape.
Paul Atreides is not simply a hero — he is someone who understands the cost of power and chooses to bear it anyway.
That gravity, that willingness to carry what others won’t, is exactly you.
USS Enterprise · Star Trek
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Captain Kirk
You lead with instinct, warmth, and an absolute refusal to accept a no-win scenario — because you’ve always believed there’s a third option nobody else has thought of yet.
You take the mission seriously without ever taking yourself too seriously.
Your crew would follow you anywhere, not because you demand it, but because you’ve earned it.
Kirk’s genius isn’t tactical — it’s human. He reads people, bends rules with purpose, and wills outcomes into existence through sheer conviction.
That combination of warmth, audacity, and relentless optimism is unmistakably yours.
The Rebellion · Star Wars
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Princess Leia
You are the kind of person who holds the line when everyone else is losing faith — not because you’re fearless, but because giving up simply isn’t something you’re capable of.
You lead through conviction. Your voice carries because your belief is unshakeable.
You gave up everything ordinary the moment you chose the cause, and you’ve never looked back.
Leia is not a supporting character in her own story — she is the moral centre of the entire rebellion.
That same fierce, principled, unbreakable core is what defines you.
The Nostromo · Alien
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Ellen Ripley
You are not reckless, not grandiose, and not particularly interested in being anyone’s hero — you just refuse to stop when it matters.
You see threats clearly, you document the truth even when no one listens, and when the time comes you handle it yourself.
Ripley’s heroism is earned, not performed. She doesn’t have a speech — she has a flamethrower and a plan.
You share her composure under the worst possible pressure, and her refusal to pretend the monster isn’t there.
When it counts, you don’t flinch. That’s everything.
The Wasteland · Mad Max
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Max Rockatansky
You have been through fire that would break most people — and what came out the other side is something the world underestimates at its peril.
You don’t ask for help, don’t need validation, and don’t wait for anyone to tell you the rules no longer apply.
Your loyalty, when it finally arrives, is absolute — but it’s earned in silence and tested in action, not in words.
Max is not a nihilist. He is someone who lost everything and found, against his will, that he still has something worth protecting.
That bruised, stubborn, ultimately human core is exactly yours.
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4
‘The Silent Sea’ (2021)
Captain Han (Gong Yoo) standing on the left and looking at Doctor Song (Bae Doona) standing on the right in The Silent SeaImage via Netflix
The Silent Sea is a South Korean Netflix gem, and it’s a tight, claustrophobic thriller set in a dystopian near-future where Earth’s water supply has almost completely disappeared. The show is an adaptation of director Choi Hang-yong‘s short film The Sea of Tranquility, and he also wrote and created The Silent Sea. If you like sci-fi mysteries and thrillers, this show feels the most similar to Alien but borrows from the genre’s greatest hits and becomes a unique amalgamation of ideas and concepts.
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Bae Doona stars as Dr. Song Ji-an, an astrobiologist who joins a hand-picked team on a dangerous mission to the Moon. Their destination is the abandoned Balhae Lunar Research Station, where all the station’s researchers died five years earlier under mysterious circumstances. Gong Yoo co-stars as Captain Han Yun-jae, the mission’s stoic leader. Their retrieval mission starts pretty straightforward, but it quickly unravels into a nightmare of environmental horror, unveiling a disastrous biological secret. The Silent Sea is a tense, cerebral, and visually stunning entry that might help you venture away from a well-known English-speaking landscape.
5
‘The Peripheral’ (2022)
Chloe Grace Moretz in ‘The Peripheral’ as Flynne Fisher strapped to a metal machineImage via Amazon Prime Video
Based on William Gibson‘s novel,The Peripheral was released on Prime Video, and it’s a slick, mind-bending thriller that perfectly captures Gibson’s signature blend of high-tech paranoia and noir mystery. The show is a visual feast, with executive producers Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy and director Vincenzo Natali crafting a world that feels both futuristic and remarkably familiar. The show was canceled after one season, but mostly because the conversation about its renewal was meant to happen at the same time as the 2023 SAG-AFTRA and Writers’ Guild strikes.
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The Peripheral stars Chloë Grace Moretz as Flynne Fisher, a young woman in a near-future American rural community who makes ends meet by testing VR games. She stumbles into a simulation that is actually a portal to a future London, where she becomes entangled in a deadly conspiracy involving quantum computing, time manipulation, and powerful corporate factions. Despite its single-season run, The Peripheral delivers a gripping, eight-episode ride that rewards fans of dense, intelligent sci-fi with a rich world that they’ll love to explore and get into.
6
‘Constellation’ (2024)
Noomi Rapace and James D’arcy in the Constellation finaleImage via Apple TV+
Constellation is a fairly unknown Apple TV series, mostly because it was canceled after one season. It’s a haunting and visually stunning psychological thriller that lingers long after the credits roll, doubling as a meditation on grief and identity; it also tackles the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics. Constellation is a favorite for some well-known names and faces, too: Stephen King praised the show, calling it almost perfect and giving it his seal of approval. The cinematography is breathtaking, the atmosphere is tense and palpable, and the central mystery is interesting enough to make you binge-watch the show over a weekend.
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Constellation stars Noomi Rapace as Jo, an astronaut who survives a catastrophic disaster on the International Space Station and returns to Earth with no memory of some parts of her life. As she desperately tries to reconnect with her daughter, she learns more about the true nature of her return and existence, getting sinister visions of a life she’s unsure is her own. While the true nature of the show’s cancellation isn’t exactly known, Constellation remains a self-contained miniseries and a must-watch for fans of cerebral and emotionally resonant sci-fi.
7
‘Tales from the Loop’ (2020)
A robot standing in the middle of the field with people and a car around in Tales From the Loop.Image via Prime Video
Tales from the Loop was based on the evocative retro-futuristic art book of Simon Stålenhag; it was created and written by Nathaniel Halpern (Legion, Outcast), and it’s a sci-fi show unlike any other on this list. While its sci-fi premise obviously tries to describe the story as a futuristic narrative that uses tech to its advantage, deep down, the show is about human connection and the wonder and melancholy that define our lives. It’s a slow, meditative, and deeply emotional masterpiece that proves sci-fi can be gentle, poetic, and human underneath the layers of polished machinery.
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Tales from the Loop is set in the small town of Mercer, Ohio, which sits on top of “The Loop,” a massive underground machine built to unlock the mysteries of the universe; it’s comprised of eight episodes presented as an anthology that follows interconnected stories about the people living in the shadow of The Loop, in particular the couple Loretta (Rebecca Hall) and George (Paul Schneider), and their sons, Cole (Duncan Joiner) and Jakob (Daniel Zolghadri). The sci-fi elements are beautiful and strange, and the human stories are relatable; it’s a stunning series, or as The Verge‘s Joshua Rivera describes it, “so pretty it breaks your heart.”
8
‘Years and Years’ (2019)
The Lyons family sits around a table in Years and Years.Image via HBO
Russell T. Davies‘s prophetic six-part miniseries, Years and Years, is an interesting mirror to the real world that is less about predicting the future and all of its technological advancements than it is about holding a mirror to our present anxieties and how, despite a fairly advanced world, many of our worldviews still linger in a past life. This BBC and HBO collab is an eerily plausible and emotional drama that feels more like a documentary from a parallel timeline than a work of fiction. It’s one of the most underrated but most praised miniseries of the past decade.
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Years and Years follows the Lyons family in Manchester throughout the years; it begins in 2019 and ends in 2034, showing the family navigating a world rapidly descending into political chaos, economic collapse, and authoritarianism. Emma Thompsonis chilling and fantastic as a populist politician who rises to power on a wave of nationalism and fear (mirroring some familiar faces from real life). Years and Years is a scathing critique, a family saga, and a warning, all wrapped in a tight, six-hour package that will leave you shaken and profoundly moved.
9
‘Devs’ (2020)
Nick Offerman as Forest and Sonoya Mizuno in Lily Chan in DevsImage via FX
There is rarely a more perfectly constructed, intellectually daring, and visually stunning sci-fi miniseries than Alex Garland‘s Devs. Garland employs his signature slow-burn narrative in both writing and directing to create a hypnotic world of cold, brutalist architecture and spiritual seeking; the characters seek God through technological advancement, even playing God to stave off regret and loneliness that creeps up on them every single day. It’s a show that challenges, unsettles, and ultimately offers a strange, beautiful kind of hope.
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Devs follows Lily (Sonoya Mizuno), a software engineer at a quantum computing company, Amaya, owned by the reclusive CEO Forest (Nick Offerman). Lily’s boyfriend is hired into the company’s secretive “Devs” division, and one day after clocking in, he apparently dies by suicide; Lily doesn’t believe it, so she begins her own investigation into the event. Devs is a mesmerizing, slow-burning philosophical thriller that explores determinism, free will, and grief through a hard sci-fi lens. Offerman delivers a career-best performance as a man plagued by loss and obsession, while Mizuno proves worthy of taking the lead in such an ambitious show. Devs is probably the greatest short-form sci-fi series ever made, but it will test your patience often.
Harry Styles gave fans a brief scare during his latest Wembley Stadium performance after a routine concert moment appeared to go wrong. The singer was captured on video choking on water before falling to the stage during his signature “whale” spit interaction with fans, leaving concertgoers worried as London battled record-breaking June temperatures. While Harry Styles quickly recovered and continued performing, footage of the incident quickly spread across social media, with many fans expressing concern for the star.
Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
In footage shared on TikTok, Styles could be seen preparing for his well-known “whale” spit moment when he suddenly appeared to choke after spraying water into the crowd. The singer then dropped to the stage floor while continuing to cough for several seconds before eventually sitting upright and regaining his composure.
One concertgoer told the Daily Mail, “As Harry ran down the stage for the final time in preparation for his famous whale, he sprayed the crowd before he then started to cough. Managing to suppress his chokes, he performed the whale before falling to the floor, where he lay on his back and continued to cough and splutter. It was quite worrying, but he quickly got up to continue with the gig.”
The Wembley Show Took Place During A Historic Heatwave
London was experiencing unusually high temperatures at the time of the performance, with the UK recording its hottest June day for a third consecutive day. According to reports, temperatures reached 99.5°F in the capital, creating difficult conditions for both performers and fans packed inside Wembley Stadium.
Another attendee noted just how intense the heat was during the show. “After the first two songs, he took off his jacket and his shirt was already soaked with sweat,” they recalled. “And he was like ‘oh god look at that! I’ve only done two songs!’”
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Harry Styles Previously Urged Fans To Stay Hydrated
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Just days before the incident, Styles had addressed the soaring temperatures during another Wembley concert, encouraging fans to prioritize their health throughout the show.
“We’re going to look after each other, please try and stay hydrated. If you need anything at any point, please let me know, we can stop at any time,” he told the crowd. “It’s all good. We’re gonna look after each other, have fun, dance, get sweaty, sing, scream if you wanna go faster.”
Wembley Stadium also relaxed its water bottle policy during the heatwave, allowing concertgoers to bring reusable bottles into the venue while offering discounted water and free sunscreen to attendees.
Despite the frightening moment, Styles appeared unharmed and continued with the remainder of the concert, much to the relief of the 80,000 fans in attendance.
Harry Styles’ Record-Breaking Wembley Residency Continues To Draw Massive Crowds
Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
The onstage scare comes as Styles continues his hugely successful 12-night residency at Wembley Stadium, which sold out in record time. For the tour, the singer has divided the show into five distinct acts, taking fans through a carefully curated setlist that spans both fan favorites and newer material.
Styles typically opens the first act with “Are You Listening Yet” before closing the section with an emotional performance of “Fine Line” accompanied by a live string ensemble. The pace then picks up during the second act, featuring songs such as “Italian Girls,” “American Girls,” and a shortened version of “Keep Driving.”
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Fans are also treated to a more intimate experience when Styles moves to the X-Stage, while tracks including “Season 2 Weight Loss,” “Carla’s (Satellite) Song,” and “Aperture” have become staples of the show’s A-Stage performances.
Zoë Kravitz Fuels Harry Styles Engagement Buzz With Massive Diamond Ring
Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
Off stage, Styles has been making headlines for his relationship with Zoë Kravitz. While neither Kravitz nor Styles has publicly commented on their reported engagement, the actress once again put the sparkling diamond on display during a recent appearance in London.
The “Blink Twice” director co-hosted a Summer Solstice celebration alongside jewelry designer Jessica McCormack, stepping out in a flowing off-white midi dress paired with silver accessories and layered diamond jewelry. However, it was the eye-catching ring on her left hand that quickly drew attention.
Kravitz was first spotted wearing the diamond while out in London earlier this spring, and sources later confirmed to PEOPLE that she and Styles had gotten engaged.
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