Entertainment
20 Movies To Watch if You Love ‘Saving Private Ryan’
An epic war-scale movie about courage, bravery, and sacrifice, Saving Private Ryan is arguably one of the best epic war films around. While it has one of the most emotional opening scenes in film, the narrative is still one viewers were eager to watch, as a squadron of soldiers led by Captain John Miller (Tom Hanks) goes behind enemy lines in World War II with orders to save Private James Ryan (Matt Damon). It is a brutal telling of one of the deadliest wars in history, taking viewers into a violent and bloody battle where no one is safe.
From the eagerness of Paul Bäumer (Felix Kammerer) in All Quiet on the Western Front to the last stand seen in Fury, Saving Private Ryan isn’t the only film that will have viewers on the edge of their seats. These films are fast-paced and filled with action and consequences arising from various military operations. So, for viewers who enjoy intense fight sequences, interesting characters, and powerful stories, check out these movies that are similar to the ferocity seen in Saving Private Ryan.
Stanley Kubrick‘s Full Metal Jacket is a gripping war movie set during the Vietnam War and stars Matthew Modine as Private James “Joker” Davis who, along with Private Leonard “Gomer Pyle” Lawrence (Vincent D’Onofrio), are sent to boot camp where they endure intense psychological and physical abuse under a brutal drill instructor, shaping them into soldiers while pushing some to the breaking point. After graduating from the Marine Corps, Davis is sent to Vietnam, where he navigates the absurdity, violence, and moral confusion of the brutal warfare.
While Saving Private Ryan focuses on the chaos and sacrifice of combat, Full Metal Jacket explores how soldiers are psychologically shaped before battle and how that conditioning affects them in war. It offers a darker, more satirical take on military life, with unforgettable characters, sharp dialogue, and a deep focus on dehumanization and moral conflict. Full Metal Jacket ultimately conveys and explores the unsettling understanding of what war does to people—both on the battlefield and inside their minds. —Andrea Ciriaco
19
‘The Hurt Locker’ (2008)
The Oscar-winning war movie, The Hurt Locker, is recognized as one of the best war films of the 21st century and takes place during the Iraq War. Following the death of their Staff Sergeant, a bomb squad is assigned a new leader, Staff Sergeant William James (Jeremy Renner), who has a reputation for taking risks and seems to thrive on war. While the squad tries to adapt to James’ different kind of leadership, they can’t deny that the man has an uncanny talent for defusing bombs.
The Hurt Locker delivers the same intense realism and tension as Saving Private Ryan, but in a more modern-day war setting. The Hurt Locker zooms in on the moment-to-moment psychological stress of combat, showing how war becomes addictive and isolating. Its handheld style and focus on a small unit make the danger feel immediate and personal, while exploring how soldiers struggle to function both in war and away from it. The Hurt Locker is less about missions and more about the mental cost of surviving them, which pairs naturally with what Saving Private Ryan does so powerfully. —Andrea Ciriaco
18
‘Platoon’ (1986)
Charlie Sheen stars in Oliver Stone‘s 1986 war drama, Platoon, as Chris Taylor, who, in 1967, abandons college and enlists to serve during the Vietnam War. When Taylor finally lands in the middle of the battleground in Vietnam, his idealism begins to fade, and the reality of combat shakes him to the core. As Taylor fights to survive, in-house fighting between his hardened superiors and sympathetic comrades pits everyone in his unit against each other as well as against enemy troops.
While Saving Private Ryan shows the chaos and heroism of battle, Platoon dives into the personal toll of war, including fear, guilt, and ethical dilemmas that many veterans struggled to cope with after the war. Its gritty realism, intense firefights, and portrayal of the bond and tension between soldiers make it emotionally powerful and a must-see for anyone who loves war films. Both films present audiences with a raw, immersive look at combat, but Platoon has a heavier psychological focus on the morality and mentality of soldiers, ultimately setting it apart from other war movies. —Andrea Ciriaco
17
‘Braveheart’ (1995)
Braveheart is an epic historical war drama directed by and starring Mel Gibson as William Wallace, a Medieval Scottsman who revolts against the English after the love of his life is brutally murdered. After Wallace recruits his own army of men, he leads them into battle and eventually sparks an all-out war that threatens England, making him a wanted man, but before he is captured and executed for his actions, Wallace becomes an immortal symbol of freedom and hope for his beloved country of Scotland.
Braveheart features a brutal depiction of battle and embodies the emotional weight of fighting for something bigger than yourself. The movie explores the personal courage, sacrifice, and leadership of one man rallying people against overwhelming odds, effectively capturing the chaos, fear, and heroism of combat. Braveheart received ten Academy Award nominations, including Best Screenplay and Best Costume Design, and went on to win five of its nominations, notably for Best Picture and Best Director. —Andrea Ciriaco
16
‘Flags of Our Fathers’ (2006)
Clint Eastwood‘s Flags of Our Fathers is an intimate glimpse into the lives of five Marines and a Navy corpsman who were involved in planting the American flag on Mount Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima in 1945. A photo of the servicemen and their display of patriotism becomes an iconic symbol of victory for Americans, inadvertently making the men heroes, but despite the notoriety and glory, each of them still has to live with the traumatic aftermath and lasting effects of being on the battlefield.
Flags of Our Fathers explores the human stories behind the historical Battle of Iwo Jima, and examines the personal cost of heroism, the pressure of public expectation, and the emotional aftermath of war. The film is a thoughtful, realistic look at how ordinary soldiers endure extraordinary circumstances and the complex ways society honors or misunderstands those who put their lives on the line for their country. Unlike the majority of other war movies, Flags of Our Fathers tells the events of Iwo Jima through the American perspective, while its companion, Letters from Iwo Jima, provides the Japanese perspective of the battle, making Flags of Our Fathers a unique and fascinating war movie. —Andrea Ciriaco
15
‘Gladiator’ (2000)
Gladiator follows the story of Maximus Decimus Meridius (Russell Crowe), taking viewers back to the time of Ancient Rome and gladiators fighting in an arena for the entertainment of the empire. Once an honored general for Emperor Marcus Aurelius (Richard Harris), Maximus soon finds himself bound in chains after the Emperor’s son, Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix), murders his father. Jealous that his father wanted Maximus to be his successor, Commodus frames him. Maximus’ family is eventually sold to Proximo (Oliver Reed), a gladiator trainer. It isn’t long before Maximus is thrown into Rome’s Colosseum, fighting for his life and, eventually, taking on Commodus and killing him for the spectators.
While Ridley Scott’s historical epic is set in ancient times, it is still a compelling tale of strength and honor. Like Saving Private Ryan, it moves at just the right pace, so when the action sequences do happen, they are all out entertaining, if not wildly violent. Crowe’s performance as Maximus is magnificent, creating a quiet yet strong-willed person who wants revenge for the murders of his family while still wanting to fight for the freedom of himself and the other gladiators forced into slavery. Visually stunning and electric, Gladiator won five Oscars at the 73rd Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Actor for Crowe.
14
‘Narvik’ (2022)
A suspenseful tale of the true events that happened during the Battles of Narvik from April 9, 1940, to June 8, 1940, Narvik brings viewers into the tiny Norwegian port town as German forces are invading the country, intent on taking over the iron ore exports the village is known for. The movie follows Ingrid Tofte (Kristine Hartgen) and Corporal Gunnar Tofte (Carl Martin Eggesbø), a married couple who want nothing more than to live a normal life and to keep their family safe, even though they are now caught up in a war.
The film brings into question what a person will do under extreme duress if they are willing to stand up and fight for what they believe in. An emotional and impactful movie, Narvik has a way of making every decision made by the characters feel as though it is life or death, a moral obligation, and less of a strategic way of taking on the encroaching German forces. It is interesting to watch, as viewers aren’t sure if the characters are going to break under the emotional turmoil or continue to fight for their town.
13
‘The Patriot’ (2000)
Benjamin Martin (Mel Gibson) is a widowed farmer living in Berkeley, South Carolina, and a French Indian War veteran who wants nothing more than to stay out of another war, even though the British are coming and the American Revolutionary War is on his doorstep. But when British Troops come and disrupt his life, killing one of his sons, Thomas (Gregory Smith), he joins the ranks. Getting to one of the American camps, Benjamin meets up with Colonel Harry Burwell (Chris Cooper), who, knowing Benjamin’s fighting skills, tasks him with creating a militia unit and engaging in guerrilla warfare. Benjamin fights alongside his son, Gabriel (Heath Ledger), who is eventually killed, and does his best to win the war, one bloody battle after another.
The Patriot is like Saving Private Ryan as it is a war film filled with violent battles, hand-to-hand combat, and emotionally draining death scenes, just with an eccentric villain in Jason Isaacs’ Colonel William Tavington, who viewers can’t help but hate to love with his zero-remorse and guilt-free attitude. While it is not as thought-provoking as the squadron tasked with saving another soldier’s life, it is still wildly entertaining, with incredible acting and a strange juxtaposition of sentiment and brutality, a similar theme seen in Saving Private Ryan.
12
‘The Thin Red Line’ (1998)
Based on James Jones’ 1962 novel of the same name, The Thin Red Line brings viewers into the Pacific Theater of World War II and the Battle of Mount Austen, part of the Guadalcanal Campaign. The film looks into the lives of different United States soldiers from C Company, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, including Private Witt (Jim Caviezel), who went AWOL, and Sargeant. Welsh (Sean Penn), the commanding officer who found him and returned Witt to active duty, training for the battle to come.
From there, soldiers gear up for the Battle of Mount Austen, showcasing a violent war field full of machine guns, death, and a squadron who need to figure out their respective attitudes in life or death situations and war as a whole. The Thin Red Line is an emotional tale about a group of men who find love in unlikely places, namely in each other, as they try to overrun a Japanese bunker during the battle. It is powerful and takes viewers on a journey through an intense battle and sequences of bloodshed that are nothing short of heart-piercing moments.
11
‘All Quiet on the Western Front’ (2022)
All Quiet on the Western Front is based on the 1929 Erich Maria Remarque novel of the same name and brings viewers back to the start of World War I in 1914 Germany. It follows the story of Paul Bäumer, a young German man who, alongside his friends, enlists in the army. The film is interesting, as it shows Paul as an excited young man, ready to go to the front lines for his country and become a decorated war hero. He sensationalizes being a soldier but is quickly struck by the realities of warfare, the death and destruction it causes, and the body count growing every hour of every day. Instead of becoming the hero he dreamed of being, all Paul wants to do is survive and make it back home to his family.
The film shows the personal development of Kammerer’s character, first, as a young schoolboy who thinks it would be glorious and an honor to die for his country, and then realizes the truth, conditions, and horrific nature of where he is. It is a harrowing portrayal of soldiers and war, a grueling and emotionally taxing film that is as visually appealing as it is compelling. Like Saving Private Ryan, All Quiet on the Western Front explores the notion that war is something else altogether for those actually fighting and how the experience isn’t an adventure but something that will stay with you forever.
Entertainment
Austin Shepard Relapsed While Filming ‘Love Island’ Spin-Off
“Love Island” star Austin Shepard is getting real about his struggle with addiction. During a podcast appearance, the 27-year-old opened up about relapsing while filming the show’s spin-off, “Beyond the Villa.”
Austin Shepard is no stranger to the spotlight, as he was also the center of attention during the most recent season of “Love Island” after netizens called him out for reportedly sharing offensive content.
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Austin Shepard Relapsed While Filming The ‘Love Island’ Spin-Off

Shepard revealed that he was 11 days sober on the “Previously On” podcast by TMZ. The “Love Island” alum shared that before reaching that point, he relapsed by using opioids while filming season 2 of the show’s spin-off, “Beyond the Villa.”
“No one knew,” he shared. “I’m a pretty manipulative, functional addict until it becomes so unmanageable—like how it got. But I can bullsh-t for a while.”
Shepard likened himself to a “salesman,” adding that he tends to “wave and pretend everything is OK.”
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Austin Shepard Revealed His Co-Stars Noticed A Change In His Behavior
Elsewhere, during his appearance on the podcast, Shepard showed love to his co-stars, who noticed the reality star’s demeanor had changed while filming “Beyond the Villa.”
“Charlie started reaching out in the last month and was like, ‘Bro what’s going on?’” he said. “I just got pretty real with him, just telling him pretty much everything. He’s been wishing me love, giving me love. Same with TJ, Iris. They’ve been sending me love.”
Shepard also got real about the difficulties he’s faced while managing his sobriety.
“I know how this road goes,” he said. “I’ve had plenty of friends who are not here today that have sadly passed from it and it’s either death or a long life of misery.”
“That was my moment of clarity, finally,” he said.
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Austin Shepard Sought Professional Help
For Shepard, gaining clarity was just one of the things that helped him deal with his struggle. He also admitted to seeking professional help at another point during his journey.
“There was one night where I was sitting there, I was just going crazy,” he said. “I hadn’t slept in four nights. I was very sick. Just puking. It was horrible. I was like, ‘I need to go somewhere, medically.’”
The facility Shepard checked into gave him excellent care, he said, adding that the support of his family members has helped strengthen him.
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Shepard Faced Backlash After Sharing Controversial Posts
According to a previous report from The Blast, Shepard faced backlash from the “Love Island” viewers in the summer of 2025 after he reportedly shared offensive content on his social media channels.
“I want to take a moment to address my recent repost that has caused offense to some of you,” he wrote online. “As you all know, I have a very dry sense of humor, and I genuinely didn’t think before sharing that content.”
Shepard had been under fire throughout his stay in the “Love Island” villa, as eagle-eyed social media sleuths called the reality star out for his previous posts before joining the cast.
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“I recognize that my choice of content did not resonate well with everyone, and for that, I sincerely apologize,” Shepard shared. “I’m committed to learning from this experience and to being more mindful in the future. Thank you for your understanding and for holding me accountable.”
Days before his apology, Shepard made headlines after responding to a social media user who branded the Michigan alum a “racist bigot.”
“I’m going to give this attention only one time because this is, like, crazy,” Shepard said in response. “Are you f-cking dumb? Like, honestly, are you dumb? Do you not think?”
Another ‘Love Island’ Star Walks Back Controversial Post

Shepard wasn’t the only “Love Island” star in hot water. A previous report from The Blast states that Yulissa Escobar, who also appeared in season 7 of the competition series, was booted from the show during the second episode after old clips of her using a racial slur resurfaced.
Online, Escobar attempted to own up to her mistakes, sharing that she previously used the N-word while “not fully understanding the weight, history, or pain behind it.”
Escobar went on to say that while she meant no harm, she began to understand how serious her words were after being dismissed from the series.
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“I’ve changed a lot since then, not just in how I speak, but in how I show up, how I carry myself, and how I honor the experiences of others,” Escobar continued. “Growth means recognizing when you were wrong, even if it’s uncomfortable, and choosing to move forward with humility and accountability.”
Entertainment
Timothy Busfield's rep slams 'unproven' allegation that he sexually assaulted costar in the '90s
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Actress Claudia Christian worked with Busfield on the 1991 film “Strays” when she was 26 years old.
Entertainment
Courtney Stodden Says Leave Britney Alone Amid DUI Fallout
TMZ.com
Model and reality star Courtney Stodden wants everyone to leave Britney Spears alone following the pop star’s DUI arrest … and Courtney’s serious!
She told us, “I will come for you,” issuing a warning to those preoccupied with judging Britney.
As far as Courtney is concerned, Britney is a national treasure, and everyone’s time would be better spent focusing on their own mental health.
We caught up with Courtney as she hosted “TMZ After Dark” tour Saturday night, where she brought a classic Hollywood vibe to the bus.
Courtney told us she loves TMZ, saying “TMZ is a huge part of her Hollywood story” and brought necessary media attention to a time she was getting taken advantage of. Later, she took peanut butter shots with everybody at Jameson’s on Hollywood Blvd.
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She went full Y2K mode for the ride, having our amazing DJ, DJ Blue, blast early 2000s hits like Fergie and Britney Spears the whole way.
Courtney also brought her husband, Jared, along for the night. The couple got married in 2014, and when we stopped at Rainbow Bar & Grill, we asked them if they’d ever have kids. Courtney joked that she’s actually been “snorting birth control,” so it doesn’t look like she’ll be showing up with a baby bump anytime soon.
Later in the night at Saddle Ranch, Courtney rode her first mechanical bull ever. She had actually never been to Saddle Ranch before, but not only did she ride the bull — in the sexiest way possible — but she also did flips after she defeated it.
Courtney, thank you for the sexiest, most iconic ‘After Dark!’
Entertainment
10 Most Perfect Movies of the Last 10 Years, Ranked
A lot of movies, even the blockbusters, come and go with the year’s hype cycle. But these ones don’t. These 10 movies listed below are the ones you finish and immediately feel that little rush of certainty: they nailed it. The choices make sense. The tone never wobbles. The performances feel lived-in. The final beat leaves you satisfied and slightly wrecked, because the story didn’t cheat to get there.
This ranking essentially lists the films I consider perfect. The films I can throw on at any time and get the same full-body reaction: laughter that turns uneasy, silence that turns loud, romance that actually stings, dread that feels earned, with near-perfect story-building. Every entry here knows exactly what it’s doing from the first scene to the last.
10
‘Parasite’ (2019)
The first thing I love about Parasite is how fast it makes you care about the Kims as a unit. Ki-woo (Choi Woo-shik) and Ki-jung (Park So-dam), two smart kids trapped in a life that keeps shrinking and they’re hustling. When they slide into the Park family’s world, one job at a time, the movie makes the tension delicious because every little lie has a practical shape: a resume, a phone call, a perfectly timed performance.
Then the story tightens, and you feel your stomach sink because you realize how fragile the fantasy is. The house becomes its own engine, doors, stairs, hidden spaces, and the night everything changes is one of the most purely stressful sequences of the decade. You’re watching people sprint to keep control of a situation that’s already slipping, and the emotional punch comes from how quickly class cruelty becomes physical danger. By the end, you’re thinking about what hope costs when the system is built to deny it.
9
‘Oppenheimer’ (2023)
Oppenheimer is unexplainable. You start watching it for the exact moment when they create the nuclear bomb. And yet that moment comes but it’s just not enough because there’s so much that went on other than just tests. You follow J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) and the movie constantly keeps you inside his intensity, his ambition, his ego, his hunger to be understood, his need to matter. The early sections move like momentum you can’t stop: the recruitment, the Los Alamos build, the way the project becomes a city of secrets where everyone’s personal life gets swallowed by urgency.
And when the Trinity test arrives, the movie earns that dread through sheer buildup and human detail. People waiting, people pretending they aren’t scared, people betting their souls on equations. The aftermath is where it really gets under your skin: the celebration that feels wrong, the applause that feels like pressure, the way Oppenheimer’s face starts carrying a realization he can’t put back in the box. The hearings turn his life into a slow public stripping, and you feel the cruelty of watching a man used by power, then punished for having a conscience that finally caught up.
8
‘Moonlight’ (2016)
Moonlight shows you exactly how the world shapes a person before they ever get a chance to choose freely. Chiron (Alex R. Hibbert) starts as a quiet kid trying to disappear inside his own body, and Juan (Mahershala Ali) becomes a lifeline in the simplest way. Provides food, protection, a little dignity, a place to breathe. Paula (Naomie Harris) is both love and damage at once, and the film never turns her into a one-note villain. It shows what addiction does to a family, moment by moment.
Each chapter feels like a new skin Chiron has to grow. Teen Chiron (Ashton Sanders) carries the ache of wanting connection while being punished for vulnerability, and the beach scene with Kevin (Jharrel Jerome) stays unforgettable because it’s tender, specific, and honest about how rare that kind of safety can be. Adult Chiron (Trevante Rhodes) shows up armored, and that armor feels heavy because you remember the kid underneath it. The final conversation, in particular, lands so cleanly because the movie earned every second of silence.
7
‘Get Out’ (2017)
Get Out is perfect because it’s funny, tense, and furious in the exact right proportions, and it never wastes a scene. Chris Washington (Daniel Kaluuya) goes to meet his girlfriend’s family, and you feel the discomfort immediately because the micro-aggressions feel specific, awkward, relentless. Rose Armitage (Allison Williams) plays supportive at first in a way that makes you relax just enough to get caught, and the party sequence turns social small talk into a predator’s feeding ground. Then the story snaps into full nightmare logic, and every reveal feels like it was planted on purpose.
The Sunken Place feels scary because it matches Chris’s helplessness with an image you can’t shake. Rod Williams (Lil Rel Howery) brings comedy that never breaks the tension; it keeps your nerves stretched while giving you oxygen. And when Chris finally fights back, the release is pure adrenaline because you’ve been watching him swallow discomfort for so long.
6
‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ (2019)
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is a star-studded film. It feels like hanging out in a version of Hollywood that’s warm on the surface and anxious underneath. The film follows Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) as an actor watching his relevance slip, and the performance is so raw you can feel the humiliation when he cracks in his trailer and the pride when he nails a scene anyway. The other guy is Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt), who moves through the film like calm danger. He’s capable, loyal, amused by everyone else’s panic while still carrying a hint of mystery the movie lets you sit with.
The whole experience builds affection: the driving, the radio, the sets, the little day-to-day grind of making movies. Then the Manson shadow keeps creeping closer, and the tension becomes personal because the film has made you care about these people as people. Then there’s Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie) as well, who is treated with a gentle reverence by the film. It’s a historical yet satirical comedy-drama film that won Pitt an Oscar.
5
‘Lady Bird’ (2017)
This film follows that exact teenage feeling of wanting to escape your life while also wanting someone to prove your life matters. Lady Bird is perfection. It follows Christine “Lady Bird” McPherson (Saoirse Ronan) who talks big, dreams big, messes up loudly, and the movie never punishes her for being complicated. Marion McPherson (Laurie Metcalf) is one of the most accurate parent portrayals ever filmed too. And the audience gets her harp, loving, exhausted, proud, wounded, often in the same conversation.
What makes it hit is how many scenes feel like real memories. The thrift-store shopping that turns into a fight. The friendship highs that flip into jealousy. The way Lady Bird changes herself to fit a new crowd, then realizes what she traded away. The emotional peak of the film comes through accumulation of tiny moments so by the end of it all, you feel that ache of growing up: gratitude arriving late, love being real even when it’s messy, and the realization that leaving home doesn’t erase the home inside you.
4
‘La La Land’ (2016)
La La Land gets me every time because it commits fully to romance and ambition and then refuses to lie about what those two can do to each other. And I’ve never ever liked a musical before, by the way. The film follows Mia Dolan (Emma Stone) and Sebastian Wilder (Ryan Gosling). The two of them meet with irritation, then chemistry, then that bright rush of feeling seen. The movie makes their dreams feel concrete, auditions that humiliate you, gigs that pay bills but drain you, the loneliness of chasing a version of yourself you can’t fully explain to anyone else.
The love story builds with real sweetness, and that’s what makes the cracks hurt. Their fights aren’t random; they’re about time, ego, priorities, and the slow resentment that forms when two people keep asking each other to wait. The film literally leaves you smiling and wrecked at the same time, because it honors both love and sacrifice without pretending the cost is small.
3
‘The Lighthouse’ (2019)
The Lighthouse is the kind of movie you recommend with a warning, and then you secretly get excited when someone texts you afterward like, “What the hell did I just watch?” It follows Thomas Wake (Willem Dafoe) and Ephraim Winslow (Robert Pattinson). They are trapped together on a rock with rules that feel petty until they feel life-or-death. There’s work routines, insults, lectures, punishments. All this while Winslow starts as a man trying to endure the job and slowly becomes a man dissolving inside it.
The tension builds through repetition and humiliation. The drinking, the power struggle, the isolation, the weather trapping them in their own anger. Every conversation becomes a contest, and you can feel sanity fraying in concrete ways: lies exposed, guilt leaking out, paranoia hardening into certainty. The movie’s horror comes from watching two men turn each other into mirrors they can’t look away from. The movie makes you feel sick and exhilarated because the descent was so controlled and so relentless.
2
‘Arrival’ (2016)
This is one of the few sci-fi movies that’s literally about the concept of aliens arriving instead of how they destroy you. And that means Arrival makes you emotional through intelligence rather than spectacle. Louise Banks (Amy Adams) gets called in to communicate with aliens, and the movie treats language as an actual tool with actual stakes. Miscommunication means war, patience means survival. Ian Donnelly (Jeremy Renner) gives the story warmth and steadiness, and Colonel Weber (Forest Whitaker) embodies the pressure of military urgency that keeps trying to force a timeline onto something that doesn’t obey timelines.
The heptapod scenes hook you. You’re watching Louise earn trust one choice at a time: showing up, staying calm, refusing to treat the unknown like an enemy by default. Then the story reveals what it’s really doing emotionally, and it’s devastating because it’s so human. Arrival leaves you thinking about love, loss, and choice. The movie makes you live inside Louise’s perspective and accept what she accepts.
1
‘Portrait of a Lady on Fire’ (2019)
Portrait of a Lady on Fire is perfect for the first spot because it makes falling in love feel precise. There’s Marianne (Noémie Merlant) who arrives to paint Héloïse (Adèle Haenel) in secret. And the film builds intimacy through observation: glances counted, words weighed, time shared in silence before it becomes shared in truth. The island setting traps them in a small world where every gesture matters, and the quiet becomes charged because neither of them is allowed to be careless with feeling.
Their connection grows with a realism that hurts. Trust forming, humor appearing, desire arriving as something both frightening and inevitable. The painting itself becomes a record of attention, and the attention becomes love. When the story reaches its final emotional notes, it lets you sit in the consequence of what they shared and what the world will demand from them afterward. The last musical sequence is one of the most overwhelming endings of the last decade. The movie leaves you feeling that specific kind of ache you only get from a love story that told the truth all the way through.
Entertainment
Candace Cameron Bure recalls attending ‘dark and demonic’ S&M party with husband: ‘My eyeballs were popping out of my head’
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The “Full House” alum and proud Christian admits the moment is one of her most “shameful.”
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Misty Copeland, who was part of “Marty Supreme” promo, blasts Timothée Chalamet for ballet and opera comments
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‘There’s a reason that the opera and ballet have been around for over 400 years,’ the dancer said.
Entertainment
Erika Jayne’s ‘RHOBH’ Abuse Admission Tied to 2024 LAPD Report
Erika Jayne‘s shocking ‘RHOBH’ abuse confession is shedding new light on a frightening police response to her home … ’cause TMZ has learned the incident involved a suspect who refused to leave.
During a recent episode of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” EJ made the revelation during a tense conversation with Denise Richards and Sutton Stracke about Denise’s divorce from Aaron Phypers. After a photo of Denise with a “black eye” came up and Denise explained it, Erika said she had also experienced abuse in the past. She made it clear it did not involve either of her former husbands.
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Law enforcement sources tell TMZ … a male suspect — described as a black man and a friend of Erika’s — allegedly broke into her Los Angeles home on September 20, 2024, and refused to leave.
Our sources say the suspect was reported to be inside a bedroom at the residence, sparking a call to police, and a domestic violence report was taken.
We reached out to Erika’s reps … so far, no word back.
Entertainment
Rachel Zegler opens up about “Snow White” backlash: 'Temptation to speak doesn't always mean that it must be done'
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“I’ve said what I feel, and that will always be a testament to my core beliefs as a human,” the “West Side Story” actress said of her pro-Palestine social media post.
Entertainment
Quentin Tarantino’s Forgotten R-Rated Thriller Is Actually His Most Memorable
By TeeJay Small
| Published

As a budding film nerd in the late aughts to the early 2010s, no filmmaker fascinated me more than Quentin Tarantino. His use of over-the-top violence, foul language, and intricate storylines provided enough style, substance, and rule-breaking energy to make me seek out each and every one of his works. By the time Netflix started dominating movie-watching culture, I had already binged nearly every Tarantino flick via On Demand, Blockbuster video rental, or Playstation Store digital purchase.
While I enjoyed each of these films, one particular entrant into the Tarantino pantheon left me with more questions than answers. The film in question: 1997’s Jackie Brown. The movie is considered the third Quentin Tarantino project, since the filmmaker has a strange obsession with numbering his films and retiring when he gets to 10. It’s an excellent crime drama with a few humorous elements, and lots of the usual suspects for a Tarantino picture. Still, many elements of the film stand out like a sore thumb when compared to his other creations.
A Rare Tarantino Adaptation

For starters, Jackie Brown is based on a 1992 novel called Rum Punch. Tarantino rarely releases adaptations of existing works. When he does, he usually changes the source material so much that it becomes something new entirely. We’re talking about a guy who made a World War 2 movie that concluded with Hitler getting turned into Swiss cheese by a pair of machine gun-wielding American soldiers. In the case of Jackie Brown though, the only notable difference is the swapping of the title character’s race.
Jackie Brown is also a lot more subdued than other movies in the Tarantinoverse. Sure, there are guns, drugs, and bags of money changing hands, but there’s something much more subtle about the ways that the characters interact with each other. Samuel L. Jackson‘s Ordell seems to be a de facto guardian for a young woman, but hardly bats an eye when she’s killed off simply for being a nuisance. Robert De Niro also plays his role in a very stripped back, muted sort of way, free of the usual top-of-the-lung screaming that you’d find in a “best acting compilation” on YouTube.
Powerhouse Protagonist

One of the most jarring instances of restraint is the climax of Robert Forster’s growing attraction to Pam Grier’s title character. After a whole movie of flirting, longing, and stolen glances, the pair share a single peck on the lips and part ways, presumably never to see each other again. It’s raw, it’s genuine, and it’s distinctly unlike Quentin Tarantino.
The film doesn’t have buckets of blood raining from the ceiling like The Hateful Eight. It doesn’t feature a historical element that splits the narrative from our real world like Once Upon a Time In Hollywood. It does contain dozens of uses of the N word, a favorite for Quentin Tarantino, though even that is handled more tastefully than the director’s extremely awkward cameo in Pulp Fiction.
Not Your Typical Tarantino

None of this is to say that Jackie Brown is a bad movie. On the contrary, it’s actually fantastic, as long as you don’t go in expecting the usual over-the-top Tarantino insanity. I might have lamented how the shot composition feels dated in my teenage years, but today I can respect the film for creating a very distinct energy, which I haven’t seen captured anywhere else.

If you haven’t had the chance to see Jackie Brown just yet, now might be the perfect time, since it’s currently streaming for free on Plex. I wouldn’t necessarily place it among Tarantino’s greatest works like Inglourious Basterds or Django Unchained, but it has a very distinct identity that makes it well worth the price of admission. If you’re interested in getting into Tarantino’s back catalogue and don’t know where to start, this movie might actually introduce you to a few of his go-to tricks without wearing them out all at once.
Entertainment
General Hospital LEAK: 4 Major Deaths, 3 Baby Storylines, Character Recast & Abduction Plot!
General Hospital fans, we’ve got a brand new leak for you from a trusted source and there’s a lot to talk about including several deaths, multiple pregnancies, a huge recast, a couple of exits and a kidnapping. We know one of the pregnancies for sure is Portia Robinson (Brook Kerr), but two more are coming.
Again, anytime we have a leak, I always want to make clear, this is not a confirmed spoiler. It’s a leak from a source with ties behind the scenes at GH and they have a good track record.
From their leaks, we reported way ahead of time that Cyrus Renault (Jeff Kober) killed Sam McCall (Kelly Monaco), that Chad Duell was leaving, that Kirsten Storms was going out on a personal leave, and lots of other goodies. So, let’s jump in.
General Hospital LEAK: Three Pregnancies Coming to Port Charles
First, let’s talk babies. We know for sure that Portia is pregnant and Curtis Ashford (Donnell Turner) is the father of her child. But Portia’s still moving forward with her romance with Dr. Isaiah Gannon (Sawandi Wilson) and her divorce from Curtis.
Meanwhile, Jordan Ashford (Tanisha Harper) just asked Curtis to move in with her now that he gave the house to Portia. And she invited Isaiah to stay with her anytime. Meanwhile, Curtis agreed to move in with Jordan but she’s keeping a big secret.
She met with Britt Westbourne (Kelly Thiebaud) for her annual check up since Jordan’s only got one kidney. She told Britt she suspected she might be pregnant but they got interrupted before she could run a test on Jordan. So, she bought a pregnancy test but hasn’t taken it.
And she didn’t tell Curtis that she suspects she might be pregnant. That has me very suspicious that Jordan might’ve had a lover she was hooking up with right before she and Curtis starting hooking up at the beginning of 2026.
So, I expect Jordan might be the second pregnancy. As for the third, well, a brand new leak says that Britt turns up pregnant. We know that Jason Morgan (Steve Burton) exits by the end of the month and our leaker says he’s kidnapped.
We’ll talk more about that in a few, but first, let’s finish the baby talk. So, another leak said that Steve Burton wasn’t happy with his current storyline and they were considering putting Jason with a new love interest.
The latest leak says that he’s not getting a new partner—and I mean, that makes sense. An actor can want something but that doesn’t mean the showrunners and writers will consider or accommodate it.
So, the leaker says Britt will turn up pregnant with Jason’s baby. And here’s what’s kind of awful. This leak says that one of the babies won’t survive. I honestly don’t want to speculate too much on how that may happen but Jordan’s one kidney makes her high risk.

Director Cullum Kidnaps Jason Morgan on GH
Now let’s talk kidnapping. First, the leaker says Jason will teasingly tell his son Danny Morgan (Asher Antonyzyn) that he had his will updated. That’s funny up until Jason goes missing. We reported in a prior leak that Jason was going to be kidnapped.
We heard at the time it would not be by Jenz Sidwell (Carlo Rota) or Marco Rios (Adrian Anchondo). The latest leak says that it’s WSB Director Ross Cullum (Andrew Hawkes) who kidnaps Jason. And honestly, that makes a lot of sense. Cullum already threatened Jason when talking to Britt.
Cullum told Britt she had to cut ties with Jason and focus on Faison’s final project or else. And Britt didn’t stop seeing Jason. She’s just seeing him behind closed doors. But Britt also showed up at the Corinthos Coffee Warehouse.
Jason said her showing up was a bad idea and Josslyn Jacks (Eden McCoy) told her to sneak out so she’s not spotted. But I’m guessing since the WSB has all sorts of surveillance all over town, that Cullum will know that Britt’s still seeing Jason.
And this week, Marco tells Lucas Jones (Ryan Carnes) he’s willing to risk everything, even his relationship with his dad. Marco doesn’t want to lose Lucas. And he wants Marco to steal a dose of Britt’s meds. So, Cullum may take drastic action soon.
And he may snatch Jason but not kill him. Why would Cullum waste a potential asset since the WSB’s wanted him for a long time? Plus, Jason was a mercenary for Pikeman for a while and since Cullum’s dirty WSB, he probably knows all about that.
Four Deaths Coming to General Hospital
Okay, now let’s talk deaths because we’ve heard there’s four, aside from the baby that was in the latest leak. We know they’re going to kill off Robert Scorpio (Tristan Rogers) and Lesley Webber (Denise Alexander) offscreen, so I’d assumed those were two of the four.
But sometimes GH goes a little wild and takes out a bunch of characters. The Hook Killer, AKA Heather Webber (Alley Mills) killed several people as did Ryan Chamberlain (Jon Lindstrom). The Text Message Killer, Diego Alcazar killed many people.
They’ve also had a villain contaminate the water supply that killed several people and a hostage crisis at the Metro Court that took out people and a fire at the hotel as well. So, we could get four deaths off something big—like this cold fusion thing Britt’s working on.
I could see Sidwell dying, maybe Cullum, and Pascal getting a dirt nap would be fine too. And if they go that route, they might also kill off Marco and leave Lucas utterly devastated and position him for a reunion with Brad Cooper (Parry Shen).


Chase and Josslyn Exits Plus Recast Rumors
Also, the leaker re-confirmed that Josh Swickard is exiting as Harrison Chase and that Eden McCoy would exit as Josslyn. But the leaker also reiterated that General Hospital will be recasting the role after Eden McCoy leaves.
There have been no suggested exit dates for either of them and again, this is all still rumor until the actors or General Hospital officially confirms it. One last tidbit is a really wild one.
The leaker shared a while back that someone at ABC suggested they bring back Kelly Monaco as Sam. And then followed that up with additional info saying Frank Valentini rejected it. There’s a lot of rumored bad blood between them.
And now, the leaker said to listen for increasing instances of Sam being name dropped from April to June. So, I guess if that happens and we hear Sam’s name coming up over and over, that may be a red flag that part of the leak may come true.
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