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Milania Giudice Threw ‘Food’ and ‘Candles’ Before Arrest

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Teresa Giudice's Daughter Milania Shares Several Cryptic Quotes After News of Assault Arrest

The Real Housewives of New Jersey star Teresa Giudice’s daughter, Milania Giudice, was allegedly “throwing things” at her mother’s house before her assault arrest earlier this month, police claim.

Milania’s sister Gabriella Giudice called police in Montville Township, New Jersey, on May 14 to report that Milania, 20, was “acting erratically,” according to the arrest report obtained by Us Weekly on Tuesday, June 30. Gabriella, 21, told the dispatcher that her sister had been “throwing food [and] candles,” although the alleged victim was not named. No weapons or injuries were reported.

According to the report, Milania was placed in handcuffs at the time of arrest. Her vehicle was searched “before and after transport.”

The location of the arrest was listed in the report as Teresa’s New Jersey home.

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TMZ was first to report the arrest details. Us reached out to Milania’s legal reps for comment.

Teresa Giudice's Daughter Milania Shares Several Cryptic Quotes After News of Assault Arrest


Related: RHONJ’s Milania Giudice Shares Several Cryptic Quotes After Arrest News

Did Milania Giudice subtly address the news of her arrest? Some fans think so. “None of us sit high enough to look down on anybody,” Milania, 20, shared via Instagram Stories on Thursday, June 11, reposting the message from an inspirational quote account on the platform. “Be humble.” Teresa Giudice’s 20-year-old daughter posted the cryptic […]

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Us previously reported on June 11 that Milania — one of Teresa, 54, and ex-husband Joe Giudice’s four daughters along with Gabriella, Gia, 25, and Audriana, 16 — was taken into custody by Montville Township police after her involvement in a domestic violence incident that took place around 6:12 p.m. on May 14.

“She was released pending her next court appearance,” a statement from Chief Andrew Caggiano, obtained by Us, read. “A criminal complaint is merely an accusation. Despite this accusation, the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until she has been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.”

A hearing was held on May 19, but no plea was entered.

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Related: Inside the Giudice Family’s Legal Troubles: Milania’s Arrest and More

The Giudice family has had their share of legal troubles through the years. In June 2026, Milana Giudice — the third-eldest daughter of Real Housewives of New Jersey star Teresa Giudice and her ex-husband, Joe Giudice — made headlines for her arrest for assault. The arrest came years after Teresa and Joe, who also share […]

Milania broke her silence on the arrest on Monday, June 29.

“I have one thing to say, I’m going to save the rest for tomorrow. But that ‘mugshot’ of me, if you guys really believe. That’s AI,” she said in a TikTok video. “I ate down in my mugshot. I looked fire. I mean, nothing to be proud of.”

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Milania then noted that “s*** happens in life.”

“It is what it is, you gotta learn from it. Just become a better person and talk about it,” she continued. “I just was not in a good area in my life. That happens, I’ve been through a lot in life and some other stuff happened to me. Just because you guys think you know everything that happens in my life, you just really don’t.”

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Milania made her Bravo debut in 2009 alongside her family when The Real Housewives of New Jersey premiered, becoming known as Teresa and Joe’s wild child. She is currently a student at the University of Tampa, majoring in advertising and public relations.

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Legally Blonde Cast: Where Are They Now?

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Everything to Know About RHOSLC Alum Jen Shah's Legal Drama

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Sara Bareilles 'saw cocaine for the first time' while touring with Maroon 5

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The “Brave” singer has known the band members since college and opened for them early in her career.

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10 Most Ambitious Books of All Time

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Les Misérables - 1862 - book cover

Books certainly aren’t restricted the way movies generally are, though there are definitely experimental films that run for far longer than two hours. But books can be hundreds and hundreds of pages long, and some are in the 1000-to-2000-page range before the notion of splitting things into volumes has to be considered, which makes the time commitment to reading some books much more like watching a multi-season TV show or a lengthy video game than watching a film.

So, there are probably more ambitious and overall gargantuan books than there are movies. Some are classics, including a bunch below. There’s a mix of older and some slightly newer works here, but they’re included because they’re all among the most ambitious books of all time, with a lot of ground covered, so many words to read, and – for most of them – approximately 1000 or so pages you’ll need to physically turn to get through everything.

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10

‘Les Misérables’ (1862)

Les Misérables - 1862 - book cover Image via Penguin Classics

To start with an easy and obvious pick, here’s Les Misérables, which is famous for being very long and very heavy-going. There are almost two decades covered, with fictional characters existing and struggling during a tumultuous time in French history; namely, from the mid-1810s until the June Rebellion in Paris, which took place in 1832 (so not part of the French Revolution of the late 1700s, though that mistake does sometimes get made).

If you want to be flippant, you could also say Les Misérables is a novel about a guy who steals a loaf of bread, and then miserable (or misérable?) things happen. There are some tangents, lots of side characters and subplots, and just a lot of stuff that feels sprawling in general, but it is all rewarding and interesting, even if there are parts that don’t necessarily focus on the main plot, nor the truly “main” characters. It’s a classic for good reason, and one of those books everyone seems to agree, uncontroversially, is an essential one as far as world literature is concerned.

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9

‘House of Leaves’ (2000)

House of Leaves - book cover - 2000 Image via Doubleday

House of Leaves is written and presented in a way that’s meant to make you feel like you’re going more than a little mad, and it’s also impressively layered, to say the least. There are a few different accounts of a documentary called “The Navidson Record,” with analysis of the contents of said documentary being covered throughout, and it’s mostly about a house with a mortifying secret (or some kind of portal) inside.

There’s a lot more to it than it being a haunted house novel, though, with some parts of House of Leaves also being weirdly funny, other parts being just weird, and even more parts that manage to be scary in ways that aren’t necessarily related to “The Navidson Record.” It’s a probably unadaptable beast of a book that finds so many interesting and unique things to do with certain horror conventions, and stands as the kind of thing you do need to read if you want to believe it (and even then, believing might remain somewhat difficult).

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8

‘Underworld’ (1997)

Underworld - 1997 - Don DeLillo Image via Scribner

If Underworld progressed in chronological order, it would still qualify as quite ambitious, what with it being dense, covering a great deal of history (much of the second half of the 20th century), and being lengthy, at over 800 pages. Structurally, though, it’s all those things plus something told largely in reverse, starting with a story about a prized baseball from a match in the early 1950s, and then jumping forward to the 1990s.

It’s about people who had – or wanted to have – that baseball in their possession, but everything keeps jumping back, and though there are some people in it who are sort of main characters, Underworld goes off on tangents fairly often. It does so in a way that works unusually well, with there being something powerful about the novel overall, even if it sometimes feels hard to say just what exactly makes it feel such a way.

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7

‘The Second World War’ (2012)

The Second World War - 2012 - book cover (1) Image via Weidenfeld & Nicolson

The ambition here goes a little further than you might expect, since The Second World War covers some events that happened in the lead-up to 1939, which was the “official” start of World War II. It’s a way to set things up before the bulk of the book focuses on a very complex, sizable, and world-shattering event, with about as much detail as you can get when you’re doing only one book on the whole subject.

There are 50 chapters all up, and they’re about a whole range of different battles, events, and developments within the overall conflict. If you want more than an overview, it would, naturally, be better to find books that focus on a more specific part of the Second World War, but for a breathless recount of so much that happened during the biggest – and most impactful – event of the 20th century, you do get that here, condensed into a single book, which is undoubtedly impressive.

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6

‘Against the Day’ (2006)

Against the Day - 2006 - book cover Image via Penguin Press

Having a one book per author limit here makes things a bit difficult, because there’s an argument to be made that Gravity’s Rainbow is Thomas Pynchon’s most ambitious book, owing to it being his densest, or maybe Mason & Dixon, since that one is so stylistically surprising and singular. Both of them are long and sprawling for sure, but Against the Day is longer than either, and it feels like more of a conventional epic.

Well, a conventional epic in the sense that it spans a good deal of time and has many characters, but then the rest of it’s quite unconventional in the way you can usually rely on a Pynchon novel to be. It’s a work of historical fiction that spans 1893 to 1918, and has countless characters, some borderline fantasy/sci-fi elements, and cameos from real-life figures throughout. Against the Day is often bewildering and a bit exhausting, but it’s also extremely impressive and, for the most part, rather rewarding, if you’ve got the time and patience for it.

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5

‘Infinite Jest’ (1996)

Infinite Jest - book cover - 1996 Image via Little, Brown and Company

Infinite Jest is a psychological something of a novel. Not really a psychological thriller, but maybe a psychological dramedy would be the best way to describe it? Even then, it’s kind of a mystery just because of how confounding it is, and how little certain things seem to line up with everything else. You’re also dealing with non-chronological storytelling here, and a massive number of characters, with some of them being residents at a drug and alcohol recovery program, others being members of a tennis academy, and some other people being radicals/revolutionaries.

You need two bookmarks and probably about 30 hours (at a minimum) to read a book like this, and then re-reads are necessary if you want to even come close to getting a grip on most of it.

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And that’s before getting to the fact that Infinite Jest is over 1000 pages long (the font is small, and the style is such that most pages are filled with text), plus there’s all the footnotes to take into account, because they’re about the length of a short novel on their own. You need two bookmarks and probably about 30 hours (at a minimum) to read a book like this, and then re-reads are necessary if you want to even come close to getting a grip on most of it. As for understanding all of it… if you want to dedicate your life to reading and analyzing Infinite Jest, sure. No, not sure. Maybe. Godspeed.

4

‘Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy’ (2007)

Reclaiming History_ The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy - 2007 - book cover Image via W. W. Norton & Company
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Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the longest book here, at over 1600 pages, and it’s also a hefty-sized book with so many words per page. By comparison, the Kindle version of Reclaiming History (which doesn’t have to worry about being bound), is 5,919 pages, though that surely includes the approximately 1000 pages of footnotes. If you want to see them after buying a physical copy of the book, you can, but they come on a CD with each physical copy.

So, 2600 pages, and those pages have the number of words you’d probably find on two pages of a more regularly formatted book. And so many of those pages exist to refute every single conspiracy theory regarding the assassination of John F. Kennedy, with a decent chunk of those pages also serving as a comprehensive overview of the event itself, and the chaotic/eventful days that immediately followed. It’s exhaustive, but perhaps the ultimate resource for covering just about everything you could want from a book on the subject (there are fictional and even sci-fi-related stories about it, sure, but this is arguably the definitive non-fiction book about the event).

3

‘The Stand’ (1978/1990)

The Stand - book cover - 1978 (1) Image via Doubleday
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There are two versions of The Stand, and they both tell the same story, but the 1990 uncut version is much longer, and it shifts the events of the story forward by a decade. You got either an 800-ish-page-long book about a flu wiping out most of humanity and a battle for the human race’s future, or a book that’s about 1200 pages long about the same thing.

Stephen King went all out for both, since The Stand (1978) was easily his most ambitious book at the time, and remained so until arguably IT (1986), but then The Stand (1990) outdid IT, in terms of page-count and scale, so it’s about as big as a Stephen King book has gotten. There are other beefy ones, of course, and if you were to count The Dark Tower as one cohesive story, then that would technically be his biggest and most sweeping epic to date, given there are seven main books that make up the overall continuous story in that series, all of them published over a period of a bit over 20 years.

2

‘The Lord of the Rings’ (1954–1955)

The Lord of the Rings - book cover - 1955 (1) Image via HarperCollins
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The one book that will rank ahead of The Lord of the Rings here is a work of historical fiction, but then again, The Lord of the Rings almost is, too. It’s just a history that’s entirely fictional, and there’s an argument to be made that J.R.R. Tolkien inventing it all and planning everything so thoroughly, all the while doing more by way of world-building than just about anyone ever, is more astounding than doing a more conventional work of historical fiction.

There’s a narrative here about a war that’s building while two Hobbits undertake a dangerous journey to destroy a very important Ring, but there’s also so much more to The Lord of the Rings than just the main narrative. It could be only the narrative, and it would still be a classic, but it’s the way Tolkien makes Middle-earth feel so convincing and tangible that makes The Lord of the Rings particularly special. As corny as it might sound, you can almost believe that Middle-earth did really exist, at some point. Tolkien does an outstanding job at maintaining – and building upon – that illusion, so to speak.

1

‘War and Peace’ (1869)

War and Peace - 1869 - book cover Image via Wisehouse Classics
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War and Peace feels a little in line, ambition-wise, with Les Misérables, and they were both published in the same decade, too. War and Peace involves Russian history, though, even if France does factor into the plot and some of the conflict, seeing as War and Peace takes place during the Napoleonic Wars, and there’s a similar amount of time covered in Les Misérables, going from about 1805 to 1820, rather than that previously mentioned novel’s span of 1815 to 1832.

There are stretches of War and Peace that aren’t too narrative-focused, with Leo Tolstoy using some of his 1200+ pages to unpack history and philosophical ideas, too. Like with Les Misérables, it’s all compelling and well-written, so he more than gets away with it. War and Peace is famously huge, and beyond iconic, as an epic… maybe even the ultimate epic, so here it is, trumping all the other books, and standing, arguably, as the most ambitious piece of literature of all time.


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War and Peace

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Release Date

March 14, 1966

Runtime
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393 Minutes

Director

Sergey Bondarchuk

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Writers

Sergey Bondarchuk, Vasiliy Solovyov, Leo Tolstoy

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  • Cast Placeholder Image
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Supergirl Will Lose Warner Bros. Over $125 Million

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Supergirl Will Lose Warner Bros. Over $125 Million

By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

For most DC fans, the critical and commercial failure of Supergirl comes as quite a shock. After all, last year’s Superman was the breakout blockbuster of the summer, earning more at the box office than either of Marvel’s films (The Thunderbolts and The Fantastic Four: First Steps). It was directed by geek king James Gunn, the same man who runs DC Studios. He absolutely loved the script for Supergirl and pushed the movie’s production schedule up. With Gunn’s seal of approval, the spinoff featuring Superman’s cousin seemed destined for greatness. But as the opening weekend projections plummeted and the critical reviews came in, it soon became clear that this movie was a failure. 

What we didn’t know was how much of a failure. Now, we have the answer, and it’s actually much worse than you thought. According to Deadline, the movie is currently set to lose Warner Bros. a cool $125 million. That would be bad news for any blockbuster and in any circumstance. However, Supergirl bombing is that much worse because it’s not just losing the studio plenty of cold, hard cash; it’s also shaking confidence in Gunn’s ability to lead the DCU in its fight with Marvel for box office supremacy. Now, a sobering fact emerges: the DCU may implode long before we even see the new Justice League onscreen.

Playing The Blame Game

Right now, some of the film’s biggest fans are trying to make the movie into another culture war flashpoint. The more militant fans are claiming that Supergirl’s critics are misogynists and incels who just weren’t ready to see a strong woman on the big screen. However, it genuinely seems like Supergirl was doomed more by the forces of apathy than misogyny. The low opening weekend (lower than Morbius, yikes!) is an indicator of how few people actually bothered to see the movie. Plus, in a bit of Morbin’ (er, morbid) irony, Supergirl undermines much of its girlpower street cred because of a very prominent storyline about sex trafficking.  

But how did Deadline arrive at the conclusion that Supergirl will lose the studio $125 million? They looked at factors such as the production cost (somewhere between $170-$186 million) and the movie’s opening weekend box office ($68 million). They also considered how much the domestic publicity and advertising budget was ($120 million) and how much the movie needed to make in order to break even (about $315 million). Throw in the estimates for declining weekly box office, and you get a bleak conclusion: Supergirl is going to lose somewhere around $125 million, making this a very public, very expensive failure for Warner Bros.

The Canary In The Coal Mine

With this kind of box office loss, it’s unlikely that Supergirl will ever headline another future film in the DCU. However, there may be a downstream effect where this impacts larger projects in the future. For example, Supergirl is supposed to be a major character in Superman: The Man of Tomorrow; if audiences hate that film because of her presence, it could spell bad news for James Gunn. If that Superman sequel is a hit, then it will pave the way for Wonder Woman, The Brave and the Bold, and, eventually, a Justice League film. If it bombs, though, the DCU could die before the JL even team up onscreen.

All DC fans should care about Supergirl’s failure because this movie is effectively the canary in the coal mine for the entire cinematic universe. Considering how many skipped seeing Supergirl, how much worse will it be for future projects featuring even more obscure heroes and villains? DC Studios has already shot a Clayface film, and they are currently working on a Deathstroke and Bane movie and a TV show that pairs Jimmy Olsen up with Gorilla Grodd. These are big creative swings, and they might all connect. But even if they all turn out to be excellent, that won’t matter if hardly anybody is watching them.

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It’s worth noting that while critics dragged the DCEU for years, it produced about five commercial flops before Warner Bros. pulled the plug. Therefore, it might not be the end of the world now that James Gunn’s DCU has only produced one flop. However, superhero fatigue is dragging down box office earnings, and Gunn is facing stiff competition from Marvel in the form of Spider-Man: Brand New Day and Avengers: Doomsday. Supergirl losing $125 million right before WB gets new leadership potentially changes the game for Gunn, and not in a good way. He’s not going to get five strikes; in fact, he’ll be lucky to get more than one! 


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You Can Stream These 3 Great Cult Classics for Free in July

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Wil Wheaton, Jerry O'Connell, Corey Feldman, River Phoenix in Stand by Me

Affordability isn’t just a political buzzword — it’s a reality we all have to live in right now. Everything costs too much, from gas to mortgages and even subscription services like Netflix.

You know what doesn’t cost a single cent? Samsung TV Plus. Less well-known than other free streamers like Tubi and Pluto TV, Samsung TV Plus has a killer library of movies from different genres like action, thrillers and sci-fi.

This July, the platform added several cult classics that are worth watching, either for the first time or for the hundredth. From a haunting coming-of-age story starring River Phoenix to a ’90s comedy featuring Steve Martin and Diane Keaton, these films are perfect to stream on a lazy July afternoon.

‘Stand By Me’ (1986)

Wil Wheaton, Jerry O'Connell, Corey Feldman, River Phoenix in Stand by Me

Wil Wheaton, Jerry O’Connell, Corey Feldman and River Phoenix in Stand by Me.
Columbia Pictures. Courtesy: Everett Collection

We recently ranked Stand by Me as one of 1986’s best movies, and one could easily argue it’s one of the best films of all time. It’s that good, and it remains the picture the late director Rob Reiner is best known for to this day. While it’s set in 1960s Oregon, Stand by Me has a timeless quality to it that makes it universally appealing — and endlessly enjoyable.

Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman and Jerry O’ Connell star as four childhood friends who hear about a dead body lying near some train tracks just outside of their small town. Believing they will be considered local heroes if they locate it, they set out on an adventure to find and retrieve it. But their journey brings them unexpected perils and surprising revelations, some of which will change their lives forever.

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‘Father of the Bride’ (1991)

Father-of-the-Bride-Cast-MSDFAOF_BV008.
Buena Vista Pictures/ Everett Collection

We all could use a laugh nowadays, and there are no two men better suited to do it than Steve Martin and Martin Short. The duo is currently killing it — sometimes literally — on the hit Hulu TV show Only Murders in the Building, but they’ve collaborated a few times before. Their best team-up occurs in Father of the Bride, a 1991 remake of the classic 1950 film starring Spencer Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor.

Martin stars as George Banks, a family man who must come to terms with the fact that his firstborn child, Annie (Kimberly Williams), is getting married. He also has to accept the fact that, as the father of the bride, he has to pay for her wedding, including hiring a very expensive wedding planner, Franck, who wants to spend George’s money to realize Annie’s dreams. Not everything goes according to plan, but George will do anything — including hold the wedding afterparty at his small Pasadena house — to make sure his little girl gets the send-off she deserves.

Diane Keaton stars as George’s exasperated wife, Nina, and Kieran Culkin appears as the Banks’ young son, Matty. Directed by Charles Shyler and written by Nancy Meyers, Father of the Bride is a heartwarming comedy about a dad saying goodbye to his child and welcoming the adult woman she’s about to become. It’s funny, it’s sweet and it’s perfect to watch during the idle days of the summer.

‘Molly’s Game’ (2017)

A woman looks at a poker game in Molly's Game.

A woman looks at a poker game in Molly’s Game.
STX Films

Jessica Chastain won an Oscar for her performance in The Eyes of Tammy Faye, but she deserved one for her terrific work in the poker thriller, Molly’s Game. Chastain stars as Molly Bloom, a former professional skier who gets involved with illegal gambling when an injury sidelines her athletic career. At first, she partners with Dean (Jeremy Strong) and helps him run his illegal side hustle, but soon, she’s operating her own backroom poker games that attract the enigmatic Player X (Michael Cera) and various members of the Russian and Italian mafia. Molly makes a lot of money very quickly, but she also gets into trouble with the FBI, who want to put her away for a long time. Is this one game she can’t win?

Jermaine Fowler, Zac Efron and Andrew Santino in Ricky Stanicky


Related: 5 Must-Watch Tubi Movies to Stream Right Now (April 2026)

Tubi might just be the best ad-supported streaming platform, with such an impressive library that you might start rethinking your Netflix and HBO Max subscriptions. In April 2026, Watch With Us has added three new selections to our list of the best movies you can watch for free on Tubi right now. Our first pick […]

Molly’s Game is a lot of things at once: a sports movie, a crime thriller and a family drama about an estranged father and daughter. Kevin Costner stars as Molly’s distant dad, and his scenes with Chastain are the best ones in the movie. The film was written and directed by The West Wing and The Social Network‘s Aaron Sorkin, and his screenplay has his signature quick wit that won him multiple Emmys and an Oscar.

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Samsung TV Plus’ free July content isn’t just limited to cult classics. Below is a full list of all the movies available to stream this month at no extra cost:

Patriots Day
Midway
The Best of Enemies
La La Land
Tombstone
Father of the Bride Part II
Godzilla 91998)
The Descent
The Descent Part 2
I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997)
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
The Internship
That Awkward Moment
Pride
Kick-Ass
Gremlins
Gremlins 2: The New Batch
Reign of Fire
Underwater
Exodus: Gods and Kings

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Taylor Sheridan’s Hit 3-Part Spy Thriller Quietly Predicted One of Today’s Biggest Headlines

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Joe McNamara (Zoe Saldaña) covered in blood after a transport goes wrong in 'Lioness' Season 2.

There’s a reason why Taylor Sheridan‘s television empire has become so expansive. The tentacles of Sheridan’s artistic vision, notably the various spin-offs of his crown jewel, Yellowstone, have ostensibly become the backbone of Paramount’s entire streaming library. Regardless of his political beliefs, Sheridan has tapped into the American Midwest in a way that is often ignored by prestige TV. One of his most recent triumphs on the small screen, Lioness, sees Sheridan tackling a familiar sentiment in American media throughout the century: the war on terror. Initially positioned as a new take on government intervention in the Middle East, Lioness, starring Zoe Saldaña as the leader of a CIA program to thwart terrorist plots, focused on the drug cartel and its intersection with government affairs overseas. Without trying to predict the future, Sheridan’s writing has eerily mirrored real-life headlines involving U.S. action against the drug trade.

‘Lioness’ Season 2 Inadvertently Predicted Real-Life Political Events

Season 1 of Lioness follows Joe McNamara (Saldaña) as she leads a covert CIA unit comprised of women to thwart terrorist groups in the Middle East — a familiar concept, given the typical Sheridan touch, that makes it feel fresh and revelatory about top-secret military operations. Now heading into its third season, premiering on August 2, Lioness has unexpectedly embraced a new kind of drama thanks to its timeliness. Centered around the international drug trade, Season 2 features the Lioness squad embarking on an extraction of a kidnapped high-ranking government official and infiltrating cartels to serve the interests of political forces domestically. The squad’s target is Alvaro Carrillo (Marcus DeAnda), who becomes the focal point of the government’s various espionage tactics and their broader attempt to control economic interests internationally.


Joe McNamara (Zoe Saldaña) covered in blood after a transport goes wrong in 'Lioness' Season 2.

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Season 2 debuted on October 27, 2024, over a year before the United States launched a military strike in Venezuela and apprehended President Nicolás Maduro on charges of drug trafficking, a striking turn of events that has been one of the many political disputes dividing the nation. For those catching up with Lioness before its Season 3 premiere, Season 2 appears to be a dramatic reinterpretation of events ripped from the headlines, but Sheridan actually beat the political cycle to the punch.

Taylor Sheridan Taps Into the Heart of the Contemporary U.S. Military in ‘Lioness’

As a guest on The Joe Rogan Experience, Sheridan discussed his writing process for Season 2. However, he denied any attempt to predict the future and said the decision to center the season around such eerily timely matters was purely coincidental. If anything, his scripts were merely an educated guess about the current state of political affairs overseas. Despite his prominence in television as a voice for middle America, particularly audiences in red states, Sheridan has vowed that he approaches his work without a political agenda, with Lioness meant to be a literal dissection of the relationship between intelligence agencies and the military.

There’s been plenty of discussion surrounding Sheridan’s alleged political beliefs and how they are reflected in his Westerns, crime and war thrillers, and dramas about oil tycoons. Regardless of where he stands or whether he sympathizes with his characters, there’s no doubt Sheridan resonates with the mainstream public, and his wealth of new shows on Paramount speaks to the demand for more of his stories. Although it has been proven to predict real news stories, Lioness is rooted in an understanding of modern U.S. history and the nation’s dealings overseas, as the series echoes 2000s-era media coverage of the Iraq War and the murky divide between patriotic vengeance and the protection of the oil trade.

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Whatever your preconceived notions of Sheridan’s work, both seasons of Lioness end not with a sense of rah-rah jingoism, but instead with a sobering indictment of the American military-industrial complex. In Season 1, our idyllic heroes realize they’re only fighting over oil, and in Season 2, the grueling labor and hardships to overthrow the cartel are futile, as someone else on the ladder will take over Carrillo’s throne. Conservative or not, Sheridan has tapped into the cynicism of the American spirit in 2026.

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11 Comfy Chambray Shirts That Look Like Denim But Feel Softer

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LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 17: Cameron Diaz attends the London photocall for

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There’s something undeniably classic about a denim button-down — but not when it feels stiff, bulky or boxy. If you’ve ever peeled off a rigid jean shirt after a few hours, you’re not alone. That’s exactly why chambray has become a wardrobe staple: it delivers the same timeless look with a softer, lighter feel that’s actually comfortable to wear.

Think of chambray as denim’s easygoing cousin. It layers effortlessly over tanks in the summer, under sweaters in the fall and even doubles as a lightweight jacket when the office AC is working overtime. Whether you style one with white jeans, linen pants or a breezy midi skirt, these versatile shirts make getting dressed feel refreshingly simple. Ahead, we’ve rounded up 11 comfortable chambray shirts that give you the denim look without the stiffness.

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11 Comfortable Chambray Shirts to Replace Stiff Denim Tops

1. Our Favorite: Tired of denim tops that feel like cardboard by hour three? The soft chambray on this ruffled puff-sleeve top solves that, and the ruffled neckline does the styling for you.

2. Runner-Up: Stiff denim tops pull and pinch in all the wrong places. This soft chambray blouse keeps the western look but drapes like a favorite cotton tee, so you actually want to wear it.

3. Summer Style: Heavy denim shirts ruin a summer outfit faster than humidity. This soft jean alternative has a light, airy feel, so you can layer it over a tank in July without sweating through it.

4. Budget Pick: You don’t have to spend a fortune for the timeless denim-shirt look. This relaxed button-down delivers classic Western-inspired styling with a lightweight chambray feel, making it easy to wear tied over a tank, tucked into white jeans or layered with leggings for an effortlessly put-together outfit — all for just $14.

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5. Editor’s Pick: This breezy button-down is what we’d call boho boutique perfection. With its sun-inspired embroidery, relaxed fit and lightweight feel, it looks like something you’d stumble upon in a chic beach-town boutique. Still, it’s versatile enough to wear open over a tank, tied at the waist or with linen pants all summer long.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 17: Cameron Diaz attends the London photocall for


Related: Yes, Cameron Diaz‘s Exact Birkenstock Sandals Are Still in Stock

Cameron Diaz has spent the last few years quietly perfecting what the rest of Us are still trying to figure out: how to look effortlessly pulled-together without trying too hard. For summer, we’re recreating her effortless vibe, starting with her beloved Birkenstock Arizona slides that she has been spotted wearing in California. Of course, she’s […]

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6. Hampton’s Chic: Skip the stiff trucker-style shirt that wrinkles if you blink. This collared denim top keeps the clean lines but moves with you, which matters when you’re actually wearing it all day.

7. Year-Round Staple: Need something to throw over a tank when the AC kicks in too hard? This western chambray shacket handles summer evenings and over-conditioned restaurants without committing to a real jacket.

8. Total Classic: Plain denim shirts can read a little tomboy. The ruffles on this frilly jean shirt keep the look easygoing while adding the softness that stiff denim never manages.

9. Center of Attention: If you’ve sworn off rigid jean styles that never soften no matter how many washes, this embroidered oversized shirt is the antidote. It’s drapey from day one, with embroidery doing the heavy lifting in terms of style.

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10. Designer-Looking: If you’re after that effortless coastal-grandmother or Hamptons aesthetic, this linen button-down is an easy win. Crafted from breathable European flax linen in a soft chambray hue, this pick has the relaxed, borrowed-from-the-boys fit that looks just as chic with white denim as it does layered over a swimsuit or tucked into tailored shorts.

11. Everyday Essential: Every wardrobe needs an effortless denim shirt, and this oversized Madewell version checks every box. The relaxed silhouette, patch pocket and workwear-inspired details make it easy to style tucked into white jeans, layered over dresses or thrown on with shorts for an instantly polished look.

summer-fashion-finds-always-hot


Related: I‘m Always Hot — These 15 Amazon Finds Keep Me Cool in the Summer

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I run hot. Like, fan-on-all-year-round hot. As such, after years of living in Pennsylvania (where July humidity hits like a wet wool blanket), I’ve gotten ruthlessly picky about what I’ll put on my body when it comes to summer clothes. The good news? I spend most of my days perusing Amazon, and the online mega-retailer […]

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Lily Allen Claps Back At Criticism Of ‘West End Girl’ Tour

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Lily Allen seen at BBC Radio 6 Studios, London

British pop star Lily Allen has a few words to say to her critics. 

The singer is defending her current live concert series against complaints regarding ticket prices and the total length of the event, making it clear that she put a lot of work into it. 

The singer has been traveling since the spring for a special concert series centered completely on her most recent musical release, “West End Girl.”

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Lily Allen seen at BBC Radio 6 Studios, London
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Allen is standing up for her live musical production after an audience member openly complained about her short set on social media. During the show, she sang all fourteen songs from the record back-to-back while delivering a solo dramatic performance on stage. 

However, a fan who went to her London arena show expressed disappointment over paying £86 for a seat to see a performance that lasted under an hour without any crowd interaction or an opening musical group.

The pop star quickly fired back online to clear up the misunderstandings. Taking to X, she clarified that the event has always been explicitly promoted as a full performance of the specific album and also explained that she was a few minutes late due to a wardrobe emergency. 

Addressing her silence toward the crowd, Allen noted that keeping the imaginary barrier up is a deliberate creative choice that helps her act out the emotional themes of the music. 

“It’s my artistic choice not to talk to the audience; the fourth wall helps with the storytelling,” she explained. 

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The artist concluded, stating she never wants her audience members to feel cheated, writing, “I don’t want anyone to feel ripped off; everyone on this tour is working really hard to give people the best show we possibly can, and I’m extremely proud of it.”

What David Harbour Said About His Former Partner’s Newest Project

Lily Allen and David Harbour at 17th Annual CHANEL & Tribeca Artists Dinner in NYC
SIB / KCS / MEGA

Allen’s statements came a few weeks after her former partner, David Harbour, broke his silence on how he feels about “West End Girl.” He addressed the public chatter surrounding the record, which many listeners believed directly detailed the breakdown of their marriage. 

Listeners quickly pointed out a specific track describing a distant and unfaithful partner, leading to internet rumors about the television actor. However, the star admitted that while the situation felt “weird,” every creative individual has the right to use their personal hardships to make art.

“I do believe that it is the privilege of every artist to use their experience to create art, and so I respect her for doing that,” he said, per The Blast

Lily Allen’s High Spending Sparked Fan Backlash

Lily Allen is seen arriving at the Chiltern Firehouse, wearing a stunning Giambattista Valli dress
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As Harbour defended Allen’s creative liberty, the singer found herself on the receiving end of more backlash from fans who shifted their criticism from her music to her spending habits. 

According to The Blast, a video surfaced showing the pop star pulling stacks of money directly from an expensive handbag to buy a $15,000 bracelet and $25,000 diamond earrings. 

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This lavish shopping spree heavily frustrated social media users, especially since the musician previously confessed to entering professional therapy to treat a serious shopping addiction where she spent money recklessly.

Disappointed fans flooded the internet to label her behavior as deeply insensitive to regular working people given the tough global financial climate. 

Lily Allen Appreciated Fans For Supporting Her Newest Release

Lily Allen is seen leaving the Duke Of York Theatre, having starred in a production of The Pillowman
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This financial controversy and the criticism of her shopping habits occurred just months after the performer openly expressed her appreciation to her followers for supporting her music during a deeply painful period in her life.

Late last year, she revealed that the massive public reception to her heartbreak project offered a true sense of comfort as she processed her emotional wounds, per The Blast

The singer confessed she felt overwhelmed and thankful for the viral success of the tracks, while also disclosing that the painful separation had originally driven her to check into an expensive recovery clinic that cost thousands of dollars per week.

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David Harbour’s Alleged Fling Was Reportedly Booted From A Party

David Harbour at Kimmel
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While Allen was focused on recovering from the emotional damage caused by her failed relationship, she was seemingly surrounded by close friends who went to great lengths to defend her even in her absence. 

According to The Blast, a woman associated with Harbour following his split from Allen was reportedly asked to leave a private party full of Allen’s closest friends. 

Although the pop star herself was not present at the gathering, her tight-knit circle of allies quickly recognized the uninvited guest, and she was reportedly told to leave.

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Connor Franta Reflects On Coming Out 11 Years Later

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Connor Franta posing on the red carpet.

YouTuber Connor Franta came out to his hundreds of thousands of subscribers over 10 years ago, and today, he’s reflecting on the moment and sharing how that shaped who he is. In a new interview, the “A Work in Progress” author looked back on his video—which has over 12 million views today—and got candid about how the support from his family, friends, and the online community helped him navigate a challenging time in his life.

Speaking with PEOPLE, Franta, 33, looked back on his coming out video, saying that he told his audience of subscribers shortly after telling someone else in his life for the first time that he was gay. He called the experience “a very fast-tracked process,” adding that his coming out was very reflective of who he is as a person.

“I mean, in many ways that is kind of who I am as a person that once I want to go for something or once I accept something or I have a goal or a mission, it’s kind of hard for me to not just seek it out. So I think once I’d come out to one person and then my family and then my friends, it was like, ‘Well, why wouldn’t I just come out to everyone? This is just what it is,’” he said.

Why Did Connor Franta Choose To Come Out In A YouTube Video?

Connor Franta posing on the red carpet.
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By the time Franta came out, the content creator had been making videos online for years and had a dedicated group of fans. He told PEOPLE that keeping this part of himself “hidden” didn’t really make sense, adding that his “life was my career.”

“I think it was the perfect combination that everything was growing — content was king,” he said.

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Reflecting on it today, Franta is glad he chose to speak freely about his life, saying he was met with “unfiltered joy and support” from those around him, including his family, friends, teammates, and subscribers.

“The fact that I was welcomed, I think that shaped who I am today in many ways, and that my experience could have been completely different,” he said.

“I remember receiving not only positive from the community, but the gay community at large. I got a lot of messages and a lot of people offering me support or friendship. I remember I was five trending Twitter topics at the same time,” he continued.

Connor Franta’s Coming Out Video Has Millions Of Views

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For those who haven’t seen the video yet, Franta’s coming out post has racked up millions of views and nearly 160,000 comments since it was first posted over 10 years ago.

“2014 is truly the year that I have accepted who I am and become happy with that person, so today I want to talk to you guys about that and be open and honest and tell you that I’m gay,” the influencer said on camera.

He captioned the video, “I hope this doesn’t change a thing.”

And it clearly hasn’t, as the content creator has 4.73 million subscribers on YouTube and 3.8 million followers on Instagram.

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His loyal fanbase has only provided the YouTuber with more opportunities, such as partnering with Apple to run in the London Marathon, where he completed the trek in 3:30:42.

This Reality Star Recently Came Out As Bisexual

Speaking of coming out, The Blast reported on “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” star Layla Taylor recently sharing with her followers that she’s “gay and bi.”

On Jay Shetty’s “On Purpose” podcast, the mother of two said that she’d been living with the secret for some time, but finally felt confident enough to share it with others.

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“I’ll be d-mned if I’m not able to fully be who I am,” she said.

What Prompted Taylor To Speak About Her Bisexuality?

Layla Taylor posing on the red carpet.
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As the conversation continued, Taylor told Shetty that although she had previously only dated men, her recent breakup with Mason McWhorter prompted her to explore a new side of herself.

“Honestly, I went through a breakup at the beginning of this year, and I feel like for just a long period of my life, I was constantly living my life for other people,” she said. “Whether that was being a mom or I was in a marriage at one point, I was married. And I just feel like I was always fulfilling other people around me. And it honestly just caused me to never really focus on myself and never be able to really just sit alone with who I am as a person… And I think honestly that breakup was like a blessing in disguise because I feel like now I’ve been fully able to just focus on Layla. And yeah, just focus on who I truly am.”

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All 5 Toy Story Movies, Ranked by How Much It Will Make You Cry

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Buzz and Woody racing down a street on a remote control car reaching out and looking stressed in Toy Story.

Traditionally, as movie franchises chug along with one sequel after another, each entry gets worse and makes less money. The same can’t be said for Toy Story. The first film changed the face of animation when it came out in 1995. Arguably, the second and third films were even better. 31 years later, Toy Story 5 just had the biggest opening in franchise history.

What keeps us coming back is easy to explain — audiences care about the characters and the storylines they’re put in. The Toy Story movies make us laugh, but they are also emotionally devastating in the best way possible. Nostalgia and a deep love for these toys come to life have left fans weeping across generations.

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5

‘Toy Story’ (1995)

Buzz and Woody racing down a street on a remote control car reaching out and looking stressed in Toy Story.
Buzz and Woody racing down a street on a remote control car reaching out and looking stressed in Toy Story.
Image via Pixar Animation Studios

Putting the original Toy Story as last on the list doesn’t mean this one won’t make you cry. It still has plenty of heartbreaking moments. The premise of the first movie revolves around Andy receiving a new toy called Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen). With all of his buttons and cool features, he’s much more exciting than the simple Woody (Tom Hanks). For the first time since he’s been with Andy, Woody finds himself out of favor and left behind.

There is also Buzz’s sad origin story. Fresh out of the box, he believes he’s a real Star Command astronaut, only to learn that he is a toy. Accepting that he’s not who he thinks he is takes Buzz on a journey that moves from painful to heartwarming as he welcomes his role and becomes friends with Woody and the other toys.

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4

‘Toy Story 5’ (2026)

Jessie, Bullseye, Smarty Pants, and other toys in 'Toy Story 5'
Jessie, Bullseye, Smarty Pants, and other toys in ‘Toy Story 5’
Image via Pixar Animation

Before even seeing a single frame of Toy Story 5 outside the trailer, the latest entry has perhaps the saddest premise. The idea of a new, rival toy entering the scene isn’t anything new, but this time, our beloved characters are threatened by the most imposing antagonist of all: technology. How do toys from a bygone era compete with a smart tablet set on replacing them all?

That’s already depressing enough in a storyline pulled from our real society. What’s worse is watching what it does to both Jessie and Bonnie. The child who loves these toys so much is growing up, and her friends make fun of her for still being a child who plays with dolls. Lonely and wanting to fit in, Bonnie rejects them all, including her favorite, Jessie (Joan Cusack).

Left behind, Jessie returns to the home of her former owner, Emily, whom she has never gotten over all these years later. There will never be a going back to the past, but Jessie finds closure when she discovers a lunchbox belonging to Emily’s daughter. On the surface is the child’s name: Jessie. Throw in a bit of “When She Loved Me,” and it’s a tearjerker moment as the cowgirl realizes just how much she meant to Emily.

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Collider Exclusive · Oscar Best Picture Quiz
Which Oscar Best Picture
Is Your Perfect Movie?

Parasite · Everything Everywhere · Oppenheimer · Birdman · No Country

Five Oscar Best Picture winners. Five completely different visions of what cinema can be — and what it can do to you. One of them is the film that was made for the way your mind works. Ten questions will figure out which one.

🪜Parasite

🌀Everything Everywhere

☢️Oppenheimer

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🐦Birdman

🪙No Country for Old Men

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01

What kind of film experience do you actually want?
The best movies don’t just entertain — they leave something behind.





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02

Which idea grabs you most in a film?
Great films are driven by a central obsession. What’s yours?





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03

How do you like your story told?
Form is content. The way a story is shaped changes what it means.





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04

What makes a truly great antagonist?
The opposition defines the protagonist. What kind of opposition fascinates you?





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05

What do you want from a film’s ending?
The final note is the one that lingers. What do you want it to sound like?





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06

Which setting pulls you in most?
Where a film takes place shapes everything — mood, stakes, what’s even possible.





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07

What cinematic craft impresses you most?
Every great film has a signature — a technical or artistic element that makes it unmistakable.





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08

What kind of main character do you root for?
The protagonist is the lens. Who you choose to follow says something about you.





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09

How do you feel about a film that takes its time?
Pace is a choice. Some films sprint; others let tension accumulate slowly, deliberately.





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10

What do you want to feel walking out of the cinema?
The best films leave a mark. What kind of mark do you want?





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The Academy Has Decided
Your Perfect Film Is…

Your answers have pointed to one Oscar Best Picture winner above all others. This is the film that was made for the way your mind works.

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Parasite

You are drawn to films that operate on multiple levels simultaneously — that begin in one genre and quietly, brilliantly migrate into another. Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite is a film about class, desire, and the architecture of inequality that manages to be darkly funny, deeply suspenseful, and genuinely shocking across a single extraordinary running time. Your instinct is for cinema that hides its true intentions until the moment it’s ready to reveal them. Parasite is exactly that — a film that rewards close attention and punishes assumptions, right up to its devastating final image.

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Everything Everywhere All at Once

You want it all — and this film gives you all of it. The Daniels’ Everything Everywhere All at Once is one of the most maximalist films ever made: action comedy, multiverse sci-fi, family drama, existential crisis, and a genuinely earned emotional core that sneaks up on you amid the chaos. You are someone who responds to ambition, who doesn’t want cinema to choose between being entertaining and being meaningful. This film refuses that choice entirely. It is overwhelming by design, and its overwhelming nature is precisely the point — because the feeling of being crushed by infinite possibility is exactly what it’s about.

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Oppenheimer

You are drawn to cinema on a grand scale — films that understand history not as a backdrop but as a force, and that place their characters inside that force and watch what happens. Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is a film about the terrifying gap between what we can do and what we should do, told with the full weight of one of the most consequential moments in human history behind it. You want your films to feel important without feeling self-important — to earn their ambition through sheer craft and the gravity of their subject. Oppenheimer does exactly that. It is enormous, complicated, and refuses easy comfort.

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Birdman

You are drawn to films that foreground their own construction — that make the how of the filmmaking part of the what it’s about. Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, shot to appear as a single continuous take, is cinema examining itself through the cracked mirror of a fading actor’s ego. You respond to formal daring, to the feeling that a film is doing something that probably shouldn’t be possible. Michael Keaton’s performance and Emmanuel Lubezki’s restless camera create something genuinely unlike anything else — a film that is simultaneously about creativity, relevance, self-destruction, and the impossibility of ever truly knowing if your work means anything at all.

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No Country for Old Men

You are drawn to cinema that trusts silence, that refuses to explain itself, and that treats dread as a form of meaning. The Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men is a film about the arrival of a new kind of evil — implacable, arbitrary, and utterly indifferent to the moral frameworks we use to make sense of the world. It is one of the most formally controlled films ever made, and its controlled restraint is what makes it so terrifying. You want your films to haunt you, not comfort you. You are not interested in resolution if resolution would be dishonest. No Country for Old Men is honest in a way that most cinema never dares to be.

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3

‘Toy Story 2’ (1999)

Joan Cusack as Jessie from the Roundup Gang looking down from her stoop in Toy Story 2
Joan Cusack as Jessie from the Roundup Gang looking down from her stoop in Toy Story 2
Image via Pixar Animation Studios

In Toy Story 2, another new toy takes center stage. This time, it’s a cowgirl named Jessie. She, too, had a child owner she once loved, only to be abandoned. Now she’s a lonely, unplayed-with collectible. The sad montage of Sarah McLachlan‘s “When She Loved Me” played over scenes of Jessie going from a favorite toy to being forgotten is gut-wrenching.

Toy Story 2 is about being forgotten, whether in smaller or bigger moments. One scene finds Woody on a dusty shelf, where he discovers a penguin with a broken squeaker named Wheezy. He’s sat up here for years with no one, completely forgotten about. In a bittersweet moment, Woody, forever the hero, decides to give up a life with Andy to stay with the rest of the Round-Up Gang. This means saying goodbye to everyone he knows and letting Andy go. He’ll come back, but even if you know this, it’s a scene that’ll get the tears flowing.

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2

‘Toy Story 4’ (2019)

Woody and Buzz hugging in Toy Story 4
Woody and Buzz hugging in Toy Story 4
Image via Pixar Animation Studios

When Toy Story 4 was released, many fans weren’t accepting. The third film was the perfect ending, and a fourth risked messing it up. While it’s not as good as what came before, Toy Story 4 still excelled at going straight for the heartstrings. With the toys now living with Bonnie, Woody has to accept that he is no longer the favorite. As their scared owner enters pre-school, she creates a makeshift toy named Forky (Tony Hale) to get her through it. Built out of a spork, Forky doesn’t understand his worth. To him, he’s just trash and wants to throw himself away. It’s tragic to see Forky’s lack of self-worth, but sweet to watch him grow and realize how important he is.

At the end of Toy Story 4, Woody accepts that his time as an important toy to Bonnie has ended. It’s time for him to move on and save other lost toys with Bo Peep (Annie Potts). This means Woody must say goodbye, seemingly forever, to the other toys. They all gather around, hugging and laughing, but it’s the silent embrace with Buzz that really grabs you by the throat. As the RV pulls away, Woody and Bo watch, ready to begin their next journey. “He’s not lost, not anymore,” Buzz says.

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1

‘Toy Story 3’ (2010)

Buzz reaches out his hand to someone off-camera as he and Jessie look sad and scared in Toy Story 3.
Buzz reaches out his hand to someone off-camera as he and Jessie look sad and scared in Toy Story 3.
Image via Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Number one on this list is obvious. The original franchise came to a perfect end in 2010 with Toy Story 3. It’s the best of them all and has a double wallop of scenes that left audiences bawling their eyes out. The first comes during the film’s climax. When the toys end up in a dump, they find themselves on a conveyor belt headed for the fires of an incinerator. With no way out, the toys accept their fate and grab each other’s hands. In their final moments, all they want to do is be together. Would a kid’s movie dare kill them? Even if you know that they’re going to be saved, to see the love they have for each other as the music swells will leave you a mess. A writer can’t even type this out without getting misty-eyed!

Then comes the ending. The toys have been with Andy since the beginning of the franchise. Now that he’s off to college, he wants to give them to another child who can appreciate them. He takes them to Bonnie’s house and shows her how fun they are. At the bottom of the box sits Woody, Andy’s favorite toy of all. He hesitates. How can he let go of him? Seeing the look on Bonnie’s face, though, Andy hands him over, letting go of his childhood. He has grown up, but everything will be okay because another child has already fallen in love with the toys that mean so much.

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