Entertainment
33 Years Later, Sylvester Stallone’s 112-Minute Action Movie Is Still His Biggest Risk
Decades before becoming the schlockmaster behind movies like 2026’s Deep Water, Renny Harlin crafted many of the great works of 1990s action filmmaking. Besides Die Hard 2, the Finnish filmmaker also directed the amnesiac spy classic The Long Kiss Goodnight and the genre-killing Cutthroat Island, but his finest work was 1993’s Cliffhanger. A Sylvester Stallone vehicle set among the mountains, Cliffhanger had everything: magnificent vistas, avalanches, and an internationally organized theft of U.S. Treasury bonds during a Dark Knight Rises-esque plane hijacking. Cliffhanger might be “Die Hard in the mountains,” but Harlin got the most from the setting and its star.
Compared to Die Hard’s famously vulnerable portrayal of then-comedy star Bruce Willis, Sylvester Stallone’s 1980s run of action films had turned him into an invincible cartoon character. With massive muscles, immaculately coiffed hair, and a seeming inability to lose any fights onscreen, Stallone’s only real competition for the title of ‘80s action king was the similarly unbreakable Arnold Schwarzenegger. Even movies punctuated by sentiment or pain, like Rocky and First Blood, grew into franchises where those qualities were gradually phased out in favor of (mostly pretty awesome) adolescent power fantasies. But Cliffhanger was almost a classy take on the traditional Stallone character, with a screenplay that received the actor’s traditional rewrites.
Inside Sylvester Stallone’s Rewrite of ‘Cliffhanger’
Despite being best known as an action star, Sylvester Stallone has a strong history of writing and directing his films as well. From his mainstream breakthrough with writing and starring in 1976’s Rocky, Stallone took all creative elements of filmmaking seriously. It’s hard to miss his writing credits on ‘80s movies as varied as Rhinestone, Cobra (one of Stallone’s most brutal films), and Over the Top (as well as every entry in the Rocky and Rambo franchises). He could use his script-rewrite privilege on certain films to give himself more to do as an actor — bigger action scenes, punchier one-liners — while making sure the movies fit his public image as an actor. But by the early ‘90s, Stallone’s career was seeing as many lows as highs, especially in comedy films where he had little to no creative influence. Cliffhanger had been slowly brewing all the while. Before Cliffhanger came together, Renny Harlin and Carolco had spent years developing Gale Force, which would have cast Stallone as a man defending a seaside town against marauders at the peak of a hurricane.
As a film from the Carolco company that had produced all three Rambo films, it would have been right up Stallone’s wheelhouse. According to Entertainment Weekly, after spending nearly $2 million on scripts and treatments, Carolco scrapped Gale Force in favor of Cliffhanger.
Gabe is a classic Stallone character — stoic, isolated, and capable.
9 Kickass Movies That Pretty Much Just Copied ‘Die Hard’
With ‘Die Hard’ turning 30 this week and Dwayne Johnson doing his best John McClane in ‘Skyscraper’, we’re taking a look at the best movies that totally cribbed from ‘Die Hard’s playbook.
‘Cliffhanger’ Saved Sylvester Stallone’s Career
Cliffhanger’s long development and rough road to production (including multiple production stops due to Carolco’s failure to pay crew, according to the June 1993 issue of Spy magazine) followed several poorly performing movies for Sylvester Stallone. His attempts at branching out into comedy with movies like John Landis’ surprisingly funny flop, Oscar, and 1992’s notorious naughty old lady comedy Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot (a ’90s so-bad-it’s-good classic) revealed his limits. Cliffhanger, casting him as a tough and reliable mountain ranger fighting thieves in icy caves, reminded audiences of what made him such an effective action hero. In the movie’s vertigo-inducing prologue, we see what makes Gabe Walker tick, and why he walked away from the mountain ranger lifestyle, as his decision-making inadvertently leads to the death of his best friend Hal’s (Michael Rooker) girlfriend. As ridiculous as the scene can be, it announces the movie’s massive sense of scale and lets Stallone’s emotions anchor the whole film.
With a script majorly rewritten by Stallone, you might expect Cliffhanger to feature numerous scenes of Gabe Walker as an untouchable killer with remarkable survival instincts. And you’d be right — the reveal that he survived an avalanche plays like a gag. But the movie’s strength is spending time with its ensemble. Besides Stallone’s future Guardians of the Galaxy co-star Rooker, John Lithgow’s villainous Qualen is a great Hans Gruber type, and his henchmen are memorable too. Cliffhanger’s generosity of spirit, disaster movie energy, and excessive touches ensure that while Stallone comes off best, the entire film clicks as an ensemble action thriller. Considering how the ‘90s had gone for him up to that point, Cliffhanger’s a redemption story for Stallone, one he had to write for himself.
Entertainment
Social Media In Disbelief After Woman Dies In Brazil
It’s been nearly two days since a disturbing accident in Brazil went viral. Video of the incident has been seen by millions and reported internationally, especially given the shocking footage that shows Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas plummeting to her death.
RELATED: Prayers Up! Viral Video Shows 21-Year-Old Woman In Brazil Being Tossed Off Bridge Before Her Bungee Safety Cord Is Attached
What Happened In Viral Bungee Jump Incident?
The 21-year-old was allegedly on a group adventure that included a bungee jump experience at Skeleton Bridge in Limeira, São Paulo. At least three staff members are on video holding Maria before two of them throw her off the bridge. She was not attached to a safety cord. Newsweek reports that Maria Eduarda Rodrigues fell at least 131 feet and was pronounced dead on the scene. Before her death, she reportedly posted on social media about the adventure, sharing photos of the company in anticipation of her bungee jump, and commented, “Who was the crazy person who let me jump off a bridge?” At least 6 people have reportedly been detained for questioning, according to translated local reports.
Social Media Is STILL Going In Over Bungee Jump Video
As mentioned, people have viewed the viral video of Maria’s shocking death countless times. But watching isn’t the only thing people are doing. Many are sounding off across social platforms about how the fatal bungee jump played out. At times, the criticism and blame is on the workers who did the lifting and tossing without a safety cord. But other times, the victim herself is catching heat for not triple checking her personal security. Meanwhile, some are cooking up conspiracy theories that have suggested Maria was intentionally killed. But overall, there’s a deep sadness for both the 21-year-old and her family as people are swearing off the extreme sporting activity. Reports have said that her fiancé became ill at the scene of her death and had to be transported to the hospital.
See Reactions To The Bungee Incident From Online Users
Keep scrolling to see reactions pulled from Threads.
RELATED: Ashlee Jenae’s Fiancé Joe McCann Speaks Out After Authorities Reportedly Rule Suicide As Her Cause Of Death
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Apple TV’s Best Crime Thrillers Battle for #1 Streaming Spot
When The Simpsons takes your story and decides to do a full episode on it, you know you’ve got something that has quite accurately captured the public’s imagination, and that’s very much the case even now, as Apple’s latest version of one of cinema’s most compelling crime stories continues to win over viewers.
The new Apple TV limited series, Cape Fear, has officially overtaken Jon Hamm‘s darkly comedic crime thriller Your Friends & Neighbors to claim the No. 1 spot on the streamer’s charts, and that’s no small thing, considering Your Friends & Neighbors has been one of Apple TV’s biggest hits. It recently passed 200 days in the streamer’s top 10, but Cape Fear has now jumped ahead, turning the newest adaptation of the Robert De Niro crime-thriller classic into an instant streaming hit.
Who’s Involved in ‘Cape Fear’?
Created by Nick Antosca, Cape Fear stars Javier Bardem in the role of Max Cady, previously played by De Niro in Martin Scorsese‘s 1991 film and Robert Mitchum in the 1962 original. The story follows a terrifying ex-convict who targets the family of the lawyer he blames for his imprisonment. Apple has expanded the story into a 10-episode limited series, so it’s got plenty more room to breathe, even if the cast of characters all look haunted as hell in very fancy lighting. The series also stars Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson.
The timing could hardly be better for Apple TV. Cape Fear arrived as Your Friends & Neighbors wrapped its second season, giving viewers a new thriller to jump into just as the Jonathan Tropper crime drama finished its latest run. The remake had already opened strongly, debuting near the top of Apple TV’s charts and outperforming other recent titles including Widow’s Bay and Star City. Now, it has gone one step further by taking the No. 1 spot outright.
The series also comes with serious pedigree behind the camera. Steven Spielberg and Scorsese serve as executive producers, giving it a link back to the film that came before. Spielberg was originally attached to direct the 1991 movie before Scorsese took over, and that film became a major commercial success, grossing $182 million worldwide against a reported $35 million budget.
Cape Fear and Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2 are streaming now on Apple TV. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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June 4, 2026
- Network
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Apple TV
- Showrunner
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Nick Antosca
- Directors
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Amanda Marsalis, Morten Tyldum, Stephen Williams, Jon S. Baird, Jonathan van Tulleken, Reed Morano, S.J. Clarkson, Trey Edward Shults
- Writers
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Peter Blake, Alan Page Arriaga, Tara Shivkumar, Maria Jacquemetton, Diana Pawell
Entertainment
Heidi Montag’s Statement After Spencer Pratt’s Mayoral Loss
Heidi Montag publicly addressed her husband Spencer Pratt’s Los Angeles mayoral loss.
“I couldn’t love my husband more and be more proud of him. What an inspiration, what a hero,” the Hills alum, 39, wrote via X on Sunday, June 14. The statement was posted three days after Pratt, 42, broke his silence on the results of the election following a lengthy vote-counting process across L.A. county after polls closed on June 2.
“Are they done counting yet?” Pratt had written via X on Thursday, June 11.
Four days earlier, news broke of Los Angeles City Council member Nithya Raman overtaking Pratt to finish in second place behind incumbent Karen Bass. The leapfrogging from Raman, 44, secured her place in the election’s November runoff, knocking Pratt out altogether.
At the end of April, amid Pratt’s mayoral campaign, Montag had exclusively told Us Weekly that she was entirely supportive of her husband and his political aspirations. “I wouldn’t be here without him,” she told Us on April 30. “He is so, so incredible.”
At the time, Montag spoke in further detail about the “behind the scenes” support she receives from Pratt as she continues to grow her musical career. She explained to Us that she and Pratt work together as a team to chase their dreams.
“I mean, I’m the record label, so we have a lot of work to do,” she said in reference to releasing music independently. “It is more than just showing up and performing, which is awesome, and very hard work too.”
Pratt echoed his wife’s collaborative sentiment while speaking to Us for a May 27 cover story. “Heidi is an actual angel superhero,” he said at the time. “She is working so hard to continue putting out new music and paying for our kids’ food and working so hard to be, you know, the single [breadwinner].” (The couple, who married in November 2008, share two sons: Gunner, 8, and Ryker, 3.)
Despite Pratt’s failed mayoral hopes, the former reality TV star will continue to fight political powers that he believes are corrupt. “Now that the campaign portion of my mission of ‘Save Los Angeles’ is coming to a close, I’m moving on to the next more interesting phase,” Pratt said in a social media video titled “Save LA — Phase III,” and shared on Friday, June 12.
He said later in the clip, “You think you can get rid of me that easily? Hey morons, I didn’t get in this for political power. I got in this to expose this corrupt machine and nothing’s changed. I’m going to be lighting you up every single day and now I don’t have to worry about offending CNN viewers. I don’t have a campaign loss hamstringing me now.”
Pratt concluded, “It’s war.”
Entertainment
Oliver Tree Said Family Won’t Get a Penny After His Death
Oliver Tree stated seven weeks prior to his death that nobody in his family would “get a penny” if he died.
During an April 25 appearance on “The Zach Sang Show” podcast, Tree said, “I don’t believe that any of the wealth or the things that get made from it [a career] is mine. So when I die — I’ve set it up — my will is set up that when I pass, my family, no one’s going to get a penny.”
The late singer-songwriter died at the age of 32 on the morning of Sunday, June 14, after two helicopters collided in southwest Rio de Janeiro. CNN Brasil reported that Tree was one of six passenger fatalities. Us Weekly reached out to a representative for Tree at the time.
The interview expanded on Tree’s financial intentions, including what he wanted had he found a partner and started a family before his death. “If I have a wife or kids or anything, [they’re] not getting a f—ing penny,” he said during the interview. “I’ll get my kids through college. That’s the agreement. But there’s not going to be a silver spoon. They’re taken care of because my dad worked on some stuff in the 2000s. The idea is, when I die, all the money is going to go back to artists.”
The musician was known for his hit song “Life Goes On,” attracting more than 2 million social media followers who followed his humorous online content as well as his music. He had traveled to Brazil as part of a world tour, performing on June 6 in São Paulo. He was scheduled to perform in Lisbon, Portugal, on Monday, July 13.
CNN Brasil reported that Tree was killed when helicopters collided mid-air in Recreio dos Bandeirantes, a coastal area in Rio de Janeiro. The outlet added that there were no survivors and the crash caused further damage when loose copters hit an electric vehicle yard, setting fire to more than 20 vehicles.
Just hours before the incident occurred, Tree had shared a playful video that captured his time in Brazil. “Gringo’s 24 hours in Brazil,” Tree and a collaborator named Iae Break wrote in Spanish via Instagram on Saturday, June 14.
The clip included footage of Tree playing soccer, getting a haircut to upkeep his signature bowl cut and lengthy mullet, and cooking meat.
Tree’s podcast interview with host Zach Sang, 33, also included a conversation about how he hoped his artistic pursuits would create a legacy in the case of his death. “When I die, my art will continue to have residuals and probably be worth more than it is now. People will finally appreciate my stupid f—ing videos or my stupid f—ing songs,” he said. “That’s when people appreciate you, when you’re not there anymore. I have basically a committee that I’ve set up when I pass — and I plan to do it while I’m alive — where basically everyone will vote on who the money goes to each year.”
Entertainment
David Bowie’s 1983 Heartbreaking Song Predicted the Death of Romance
In the 1980s, David Bowie went through one of his many reinventions. With elements of disco and new wave, Bowie’s 1983 album, Let’s Dance, became an icon of the ’80s, but while most of the songs in it invite listeners to dance and let go, Bowie was going through different transformations, some of which were very painful. He suffered a devastating loss, changed his team, and found himself again in this new era, as he did every time he changed styles in his incredibly prolific career.
“Modern Love” is one of David Bowie’s greatest hits, and it’s one of those songs that can deceive the listener at first. Bowie’s upbeat voice and funky rock rhythm immediately make you bob your head, but as soon as you pay attention to the lyrics, it’s clear that the British singer was working through his own feelings of disappointment with the modern world and the perception of romance. Here’s why this classic dance song is actually one of Bowie’s most heartbreaking ones.
David Bowie Started Making ‘Let’s Dance’ in 1980, But a Tragedy Stopped Him
David Bowie’s album Let’s Dance came out in 1983, but Bowie had been working on the songs from the album for many years before it came out. In 1980, the singer had started working on the album, but then, in December, tragedy struck. As everyone knows, that year, former Beatle John Lennon was shot and killed just outside his home in New York. He was Bowie’s long-time friend and collaborator. Lennon even helped him write the song that became his first U.S. No. 1 hit. So, when he heard the devastating news that his friend had been murdered, he put all his plans on hold. He canceled his upcoming tour and fled to Switzerland, where he withdrew for several months, processing his grief and slowly trying to recover.
Who’s Your Perfect Classic Rock Band?
Lennon hadn’t only been his close friend; he was also his greatest mentor. Although they were only a few years apart, Bowie grew up listening to The Beatles, and Lennon was one of his most important inspirations. “A whole piece of my life seemed to have been taken away,” Bowie said about Lennon’s death, “a whole reason for being a singer and songwriter seemed to be removed from me. It was almost like a warning.”
But while the loss was a heavy thing to process, Bowie knew that, despite losing his mentor, he still had a lot to give. A couple of years later, he decided to go back into the studio. But the experience had changed him, and as such, his new album needed to reflect that.
Bowie’s “Modern Love” is About Disappointment, Not Love
“Modern Love” was the third single from Let’s Dance, and it’s a clear change of direction for Bowie. The British musician was channeling his disillusionment with romance, and the modern world in general, through this song. When he returned to the studio, Bowie was ready to shake things up. He broke a long-time partnership with producer Tony Visconti, hiring R&B legend Nile Rodgers instead, which caused a lot of tension with his then-collaborator. According to Visconti, Bowie chose Rodgers instead of him because “he wanted that elusive number one American hit.”
The Beatles’ 1965 Hit Song Was John Lennon’s Most Dangerous and Vulnerable Confession
This seemingly cheery song hides John Lennon’s deepest fears.
“I said, ‘Well, I guess we’re not going to work together anymore. But good luck. Congratulations. Let’s Dance is a big hit.’ I personally never liked it. It’s just not David Bowie,” the producer said. It’s understandable why he would say this, considering he worked with Bowie throughout the ’70s, and his music during that decade couldn’t be more different from Let’s Dance. But it would be a mistake to try to say that there’s a single “David Bowie style.” After all, Bowie’s essence as an artist was his ability to constantly change and grow with the times, and “Modern Love” was a great reflection of its time, and of what Bowie was feeling during that time.
In this song, Bowie condemns modern romance, claiming, “It’s not really work, it’s just the power to charm.” In the chorus, he also says, “I don’t believe in modern love.” This sense of dismay might also have to do with the fact that he had recently divorced, and going back into the dating world, he found himself disappointed with how romance had changed.
“Modern Love” is the opening track of the album, and introduces the world to this new chapter in David Bowie’s career, proving disco was yet another genre that the Thin White Duke expertly managed.
Entertainment
Only 3 Video Games Have Better Writing Than ‘The Last of Us’
Video game storytelling has evolved a great deal from the early days of text-based adventures, instruction manual backstories, and games whose only in-game story is a blurb of text before the title screen. Nowadays, video games have helped bring to life some of the most expansive and emotionally compelling stories of the modern era, making the absolute most out of the medium to get players invested in the characters and weight of the story being told. It’s reached a point where the stories being told in video games even rival the likes of film and novels in their abilities to tell powerful, compounding works of art.
Even since its release in 2013, The Last of Us has stood as the defining example of exceptional video game storytelling, with its mixture of dystopian worldbuilding, layered characters, and powerful emotional moments making it an icon of gaming story perfection. However, despite the game’s overwhelming stature and legacy, it is not the absolute highest point of what is possible with writing in the world of video game stories. While the number is small, 3 distinct masterclasses of writing prove to be even a step above the face of top-notch video game writing. It’s certainly subjective as to which story has a greater impact on each individual, but these three games are easily among the conversations of the best that video game writing has to offer.
‘Portal 2’ (2011)
The original Portal was already one of the most beloved and highly praised games of the 2000s, with its mixture of inventive, groundbreaking first-person puzzle solving with a shockingly compelling twist and story making it an instant classic. The prospect of a sequel to Portal, especially when the original game was so twist-centric, seems to be incredibly difficult to make interesting from a storytelling perspective. However, Portal 2 proves to build upon the narrative strengths of the first game, with even more memorable characters, greater examination of the already beloved characters from the first game, and a perfect mixture of stakes, comedy, and emotion. The story and writing especially have played a major part in the game’s sustained legacy as one of the greatest video game sequels ever made.
Considering so much of the charm and impact of Portal’s writing was its one-sided conversation with the game’s main villain, GLaDOS, it only makes sense for the game to lean into this strength with even more memorable characters to make the game so entertaining. Ellen McLain‘s GLaDOS is great as always, but some great additions in Stephen Merchant‘s Wheatley and J. K. Simmons‘ Cave Johnson really steal the show in terms of dynamic, hilariously well-written characters. Cave Johnson doesn’t even make a physical appearance in the game, only being heard through a series of audio logs during the middle of the game, yet he still feels more fleshed out and full of character than most fictional characters could even dream of. However, it isn’t just a more fine-tuned sense of humor and charm that makes Portal 2 so well written, as it also takes the worldbuilding presented by the initial game to tell a compelling new narrative of twists, stakes, and new perspectives.
‘The Walking Dead’ (2012)
It feels a little strange that one of the few video games to have better writing than The Last of Us is not only another post-apocalyptic zombie game, but one that only released a year prior and was based on pre-existing material. However, Telltale Games’ take on the legendary Robert Kirkman graphic novel series has made The Walking Dead manage to be better than any other adaptation of the material. This dynamic, character-driven game entirely centralizes itself around its story and characters, giving the player pivotal agency as they make dialogue decisions and influence aspects of the story and characters. On top of giving the game some loose replayability, it does a masterful job of getting players that much more invested in the story and characters, making it all the more emotional when characters do die and the stakes are raised.
While the Telltale formula has been utilized and placed onto an array of other franchises throughout the 2010s, the entire reason that these games existed was because of the monumental success and brilliance that was accomplished with The Walking Dead. There is a greater focus on the human element that feels severely missing from many other zombie video game stories, aligning with the heart of the comics while telling its own original story. Some have even made the comparison that this makes the game feel less like a true moment-to-moment video game and more of an interactive movie in some ways. However, the emotional weight of its writing and its many tearjerker moments wouldn’t be nearly as legendary if the game didn’t have these moments of player control and interactivity. It ironically beat The Last of Us to the punch by a year in terms of making a beautiful story of a human connection between a man and a young girl amidst a zombie apocalypse.
‘Disco Elysium’ (2019)
Especially compared to the other games mentioned, Disco Elysium didn’t have the overwhelming cultural dominance over video game culture that made them household titles, making its spot at the top of this list relatively confusing for those not familiar with the game. However, those who have experienced the sprawling, endlessly replayable brilliance of Disco Elysium and its powerful, infinitely memorable style of writing have been quick to scream the game’s strengths from the rooftops as the undeniable height of video game narratives. The game sees the player taking control of a troubled detective with no memory of his own identity or the world around him, piecing together a mysterious murder as well as the protagonist’s own identity. Disco Elysium then makes the growth and evolution of its lead up to the player, allowing them to influence the story to a degree that, while certainly explored in previous interactive games, is at a frankly unbelievable scale.
It isn’t just the scale and gravitas of its infinitely replayable story that makes Disco Elysium so compelling, but that each branching path and narrative choice adds to the overall experience and writing prowess of the game as a whole. Each interaction proves to be its own web of potential conversation points, with each path feeling enlightened and highly intelligent in its reflections of humanity and political ideology. Disco Elysium is the type of unrestrained, maddening perfection that simply couldn’t have been made from a traditional studio system, making the absolute most of its indie game roots to tell a story without filters and able to make powerful, experimental risks in its writing and gameplay. Each of these risks proves to pay off dividends, as Disco Elysium is the type of perfectly written narrative that could only truly work in the realm of video games, utilizing the strengths of the medium to weave together an unforgettable experience to those who witness its beauty and craft.
Entertainment
Patrick, Brittany Mahomes’ Son Reacts to Taylor Swift Photo
It looks like Patrick and Brittany Mahomes’ son, Bronze, adores Taylor Swift just as much as anybody else.
The toddler, 3, whose dad, 30, plays alongside Swift’s fiancé, Travis Kelce, for the Kansas City Chiefs in the NFL, was seen pointing at a photo of the pop star, 36, while recently walking with his famous parents through Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
A video, shared via the Chiefs’ Instagram account on Sunday, June 14, captured the adorable moment, including how an awe-struck Bronze uttered the word “Taylor” while pointing at the image.
Although the stadium played home to Patrick signing a contract extension with the Chiefs on Wednesday, June 10, it also once played home to part of Swift’s global Eras Tour, during which the photo was captured and hung upon the wall. (The Eras Tour began in March 2023 and wrapped in December 2024.)
The clip, which focuses on Patrick’s mindset as he approaches his 10th NFL season with the Chiefs, also captured Brittany, 30, posing for photos with Bronze and the pair’s two other children: daughters Sterling, 5, and Golden, 1.
Since Kelce, 36, and Swift got together in the summer of 2023, the Mahomes family, including the kids, have been spotted spending quality time with the engaged couple on multiple occasions. Bronze has joined Brittany in Arrowhead’s VIP boxes alongside Swift when the Chiefs have played.

Taylor Swift Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
Patrick’s voice narration over the social media video detailed how his family will play an important role in his next NFL season.
“To have my kids grow up here and around such great people … I’m glad I can extend and hopefully finish my career here,” Patrick was heard saying before reflecting on the season itself. “We had a long offseason, the guys are hungry and we want to do what we can to have more success than we had last year. Let’s go out there and do it. The goal is that we’re not done yet.” (The Chiefs missed the 2025 NFL playoffs.)
Patrick’s signing comes after NFL insider Adam Schefter offered his thoughts on the athlete’s return in 2026, indicating that his December 2025 ACL injury may take a toll on his performance. “The one thing that I think it’s important to remember for everybody is: We’re talking about a quarterback that tore his ACL,” Schefter, 59, said on The Pat McAfee Show on May 18. “It was five months ago on Thursday.”
The ESPN reporter continued, “I think the better question, the more relevant question is — we’re talking about a legendary, Hall of Fame quarterback — how much of Patrick Mahomes is he going to be in that opener? Is he going to be 80 percent? 90 percent? 100 percent? That’s hard to imagine that he could just step in there right away after such a significant knee injury and pick up right where he left off and be as great as he’s always been.”
Entertainment
6 Movie Masterpieces That Brought an Entire Genre Back to Life
Since the early days of cinema, film genres have risen and fallen in popularity as audience tastes and industry trends change, but every once in a while, there is a certain movie that manages to breathe new life into a genre thought to be long gone and forgotten. In fairness, there have been an abundance of movies that have contributed to the comeback of a genre. However, there are only a handful of hits, like Chinatown starring Jack Nicholson and Steven Spielberg‘s Jaws, that have single-handedly brought an entire genre back into the limelight.
Films like Francis Ford Coppola‘s The Godfather and Clint Eastwood‘s Unforgiven are among the few that have successfully attracted new audiences and renewed interest in their respective genres through a combination of innovative storytelling, modern filmmaking techniques, and fresh perspectives. From revitalizing musicals and creature features to bringing back westerns and science fiction, these are six landmark movies that demonstrate how a single successful film can reshape the cinematic landscape and spark a resurgence of an entire genre, making them masterpieces in their own right.
‘Jaws’ (1975)
Most people recognize Jaws for creating the summer blockbuster, but the 1975 thriller also revitalized audiences’ interest in monster movies. Known as a subgenre of horror and science-fiction, monster movies were originally introduced during the 1930s with iconic films such as Dracula, Frankenstein, and King Kong, and paved the way for future international hits, notably Godzilla, King of the Monsters!, which left a lasting impression on a young Spielberg. By the 1960s, the creature features had started to lose their momentum and were eventually viewed as B-list movies with low budgets.
Even though studios continued to crank out monster movies, nothing brought the spark back to the subgenre until Jaws swam into theaters, terrifying audiences in ways they had never experienced before at the movies. The key to the thrills of Jaws is the now-legendary score by John Williams and how viewers never see the massive man-eating great white shark in all its glory until mid-way through the film, resulting in one of the most shocking reveals in monster movie history. The overwhelming success of Jaws not only skyrocketed Spielberg’s career, but it also inspired a trend of hit creature features such as Ridley Scott‘s Alien, John Carpenter‘s The Thing, and another Spielberg classic, Jurassic Park, which, at one point, was the highest-grossing movie of all time.
‘Chicago’ (2002)
During the late 1920s, the innovation of sound introduced the era of the Talkies, which brought a slew of new possibilities in filmmaking and genres, including the movie musical. The genre was essentially established by lavish productions such as Footlight Parade and Gold Diggers of 1933 and popularized by stars like Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Judy Garland, and Gene Kelly during the 1940s and 1950s. While the movie musical was still going strong in the 1960s, its shift into mainly adapting stage shows, including West Side Story, My Fair Lady, and The Sound of Music, proved to be successful, giving the genre a second wind at the box office that lasted until the 1980s.
By the 1990s, the movie musical primarily carried on in Walt Disney Studios‘ animated features like The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast, but in 2002, the genre made a massive comeback to the big screen with the adaptation of the hit 1975 Broadway show, Chicago, starring Catherine Zeta-Jones and Renée Zellweger. The movie earned rave reviews from both audiences and critics and went on to win six of its Oscar nominations, notably for Best Picture and Best Supporting Actress. The success of Chicago resulted in a wave of more adaptations of popular shows and remakes such as The Phantom of the Opera, Rent, and Dreamgirls, ultimately creating a new generation of movie musical fans.
‘Star Wars: Episode IV- A New Hope’ (1977)
The science fiction genre dates back to the silent era, starting with Georges Méliès‘ A Trip to the Moon, followed by Frtiz Lang‘s groundbreaking feature film, Metropolis in 1927. Between the 1930s and 1950s, the majority of science fiction movies were low-budget B-movies but in 1968, Stanley Kubrick dazzled audiences with his classic 2001: A Space Odyssey, which led to many taking the sci-fi genre more seriously. While many credit Kubrick for reviving the genre, the immense success and popularity of George Lucas‘ iconic movie Star Wars: Episode IV- A New Hope, led to a cultural trend of big-budget sci-fi flicks with heavy special effects.
Star Wars, which remains to be a perfect sci fi classic today, was a surprise hit that earned rave reviews from critics, notably Roger Ebert, who gave the movie four out of four stars, calling it a technical watershed that went on to influence an array of future films. Star Wars, along with Close Encounters of the Third Kind, were two major box office hits that brought about a huge increase in a variety of science-fiction movies throughout the 1970s and 1980s, such as Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Blade Runner, and James Cameron‘s The Terminator, as well as more family-friendly films including Disney’s The Black Hole, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, and Spielberg’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
‘Unforgiven’ (1992)
The arrival of the Western genre came in 1903 with the silent film, The Great Train Robbery, and it continued to gain momentum throughout the silent era and eventually thrived during the Talkies with films such as Stagecoach, High Noon, and The Searchers, and evolved in the 1960s with spaghetti Westerns like Sergio Leone‘s Dollars trilogy starring Clint Eastwood. By the 1970s, the genre had started to die down but Eastwood, who is a Western icon in his own right, essentially revitalized the genre for mainstream audiences in 1992 with his Oscar-winning classic, Unforgiven.
While some claim that Dances with Wolves brought back the audience’s interest in Westerns, Eastwood is a Western legend and appealed to a wider audience who were familiar with his extensive and innovative work in the genre. Unforgiven also features a string of exceptional performances, notably Gene Hackman, who steals the show with his portrayal of the ruthless sheriff, Little Bill Daggett. Eastwood’s dark and raw depiction of the Wild West not only popularized the revisionist Western and established the neo-Western genre, but also led to a wave of modern Westerns, including Tombstone and Desperado, as well as later hits like Open Range, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, and the remake of the 1957 Western, 3:10 to Yuma.
‘Chinatown’ (1974)
Classic film noir was one of the most popular film genres of Hollywood’s Golden Age that reached its peak during the 1940s and 1950s with classics such as John Huston‘s The Maltese Falcon starring Humphrey Bogart, Billy Wilder‘s Double Indemnity, and Out of the Past starring Robert Mitchum, before eventually fading from the big screen by the late 1960s. While it wasn’t an exact revival, Chinatown did bring back the noir genre as the neo-noir genre which embodies all the traditional tropes and elements of the genre but with a modernized twist to appeal to a new generation of movie-goers.
The movie itself is a throwback to the classic film noir genre with its story of a private eye becoming entangled in a cryptic mystery and its authentic portrayal of Los Angeles during the 1930s. The movie earned eleven Academy Award nominations, winning only for Best Original Screenplay, but despite its lack of wins, Chinatown still took the industry by storm and set the first stepping stone in the rise of the neo-noir genre. After the landmark success of Chinatown, other iconic neo-noirs such as Night Moves, Martin Scorsese‘s Taxi Driver, and The French Connection followed suit, leading to a movement of notable neo-noirs being released during the 1980s and 1990s, notably Body Heat, David Lynch‘s Blue Velvet, and L.A. Confidential.
‘The Godfather’ (1972)
The gangster movie is another film genre that dates back to the early days of cinema and rose to stardom with classics such as The Public Enemy, Angels with Dirty Faces, and Little Caesar. Almost all the original gangster movies focused on a tough guy or mobster in some form of organized crime who, in the end, learns that a life of crime comes at a hefty price, and rarely went beyond the surface of the action and spectacle. The genre maintained a steady run throughout Hollywood’s Golden Age, but in 1972, Francis Ford Coppola redefined and revitalized the genre with his Academy-Award winning adaptation of Mario Puzo‘s best-selling novel, The Godfather.
Unlike earlier gangster movies, The Godfather gave an in-depth look at why many choose a life of crime, exposing the harsh realities of racism and discrimination that essentially left people with no other option to survive and provide for their families. Coppola didn’t downplay the negatives of organized crime, but he also didn’t glorify it. Instead, he revealed an authentic and heavy story through the perspective of a family man, hence why The Godfather resonated with the average movie-goer on such a deeper level than other gangster films. The Godfather essentially marked the return of the gangster genre, which flourished well into the 1980s and 1990s with modern hits like Brian De Palma‘s remake of the 1932 classic, Scarface, Goodfellas, and Donnie Brasco.
The Godfather
- Release Date
-
March 24, 1972
- Runtime
-
175 minutes
- Director
-
Francis Ford Coppola
- Writers
-
Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola
Entertainment
10 Underrated Spy Movies That Can Be Called Masterpieces
Spy cinema gets reduced to tuxedos, gadgets, rooftop chases, and clean victories way too often. And Men in Black’s popularity is probably to be blamed for it. The deeper corner of the genre, however, is much colder than that. It is people lying for countries that will deny them, loving people they might have to use, and carrying secrets that slowly turn their own faces unreadable.
These films deserve louder respect because they understand espionage as pressure on the soul. Some are dry and bitter. Some are romantic in a way that feels dangerous. Some are almost cruel in how calmly they watch people disappear into missions, causes, rooms, and files. If you’re about uncovering that deeper end of espionage, scroll down slowly.
10
‘The Tailor of Panama’ (2001)
The Tailor of Panama follows Harry Pendel (Geoffrey Rush), who is a charming British tailor in Panama, dressing politicians, bankers, diplomats, and crooks while quietly drowning in debt. Then Andrew Osnard (Pierce Brosnan), a disgraced MI6 operative with sweat, ego, and appetite written all over him, realizes Harry’s access can be turned into intelligence. Harry panics, invents sources, invents plots, and suddenly his little survival stories start moving governments.
That is the nasty brilliance of the film. It treats espionage as a marketplace where bad information becomes valuable once the right men want it. Rush makes Harry lovable and pathetic in the same breath, a man lying partly from fear and partly from the strange thrill of being listened to. Brosnan is even sharper as Osnard, and uses a Bond-like charm. Panama, in this film, therefore, becomes a place where colonial arrogance, money, sex, and fantasy all start feeding the same machine. The masterpiece angle sits in that ugly joke: a fake spy story can still create real damage.
9
‘Confessions of a Dangerous Mind’ (2002)
A game-show host claiming he lived a secret life as a CIA assassin sounds like a drunk Hollywood dare, which is exactly why Confessions of a Dangerous Mind has such a strange pull. Chuck Barris (Sam Rockwell) creates trashy television, chases fame, cheats on the woman who loves him, and keeps insisting that behind the silliness of The Dating Game and The Gong Show sat a second life of covert killings. The film never asks the viewer to relax into one clean truth.
That uncertainty gives the whole thing its sting. Rockwell makes Chuck restless and needy, someone who wants attention so badly that even guilt starts looking like another spotlight. George Clooney’s CIA recruiter slips into his life with deadpan menace, while Penny (Drew Barrymore) keeps representing the ordinary love Chuck is too damaged and self-mythologizing to receive properly. The spy material has guns, hotel rooms, dead drops, and paranoia, yet the deeper mystery is Chuck himself. Maybe he killed people. Maybe he turned fame, shame, and self-loathing into the most dramatic story he could tell about his own emptiness.
8
‘The Ipcress File’ (1965)
The Ipcress File follows Harry Palmer (Michael Caine) who feels like the spy who got stuck doing paperwork after everyone else took the glamorous assignments. He is working-class, sarcastic, near-sighted, and surrounded by British intelligence offices that look more like miserable civil-service rooms than fantasy headquarters. When kidnapped scientists begin returning with their minds damaged, Palmer gets pulled into a case involving brainwashing, interdepartmental politics, surveillance, and a word that sounds harmless until it starts breaking people: IPCRESS.
The pleasure here comes from how stubbornly unromantic the film is. Palmer cooks, shops, complains, watches, listens, and survives through attention. And yes, that was a thing before Kingsmen: The Secret Service. The canted angles, cramped rooms, tape recorders, files, handlers, and office rivalries make espionage feel like a job where boredom and danger share the same desk. The brainwashing material gives the story its sci-fi edge, but the lasting flavor is pure Cold War fatigue. Every superior seems to know half the truth, and Palmer has to keep his own mind intact while men above him trade human beings like departmental assets. This film is definitely underrated.
7
‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’ (1965)
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold circles the story of Alec Leamas (Richard Burton). He is a British agent burned out by years on the Berlin front, then Control sends him into one last operation designed to make East German intelligence believe he is ready to defect. Liz Gold (Claire Bloom), a young communist librarian who cares about him, gets pulled into the machinery of the plan, and that is where the film starts becoming genuinely painful.
Alec looks exhausted before the mission even properly begins, which tells you almost everything about this world. Alec drinks, snaps, waits, and lets himself look broken because the performance needs to convince enemies and allies alike. The genius is how little romance the movie gives to sacrifice. Spycraft here is meetings, traps, staged disgrace, ideological theater, and people used as pressure points. It’s an excellent watch.
6
‘Decision Before Dawn’ (1951)
Decision Before Dawn is the kind of war-spy film that sneaks up on you because its heroism feels so frightened and human. Near the end of World War II, American intelligence recruits German prisoners to go back behind enemy lines and gather information. One of them, nicknamed Happy (Oskar Werner), is a young German soldier who has lost faith in the Nazi cause and chooses to risk his life against the country that raised him.
That premise gives the film a moral tension most wartime thrillers would simplify. Happy is useful to the Allies, distrusted by almost everyone, and walking through Germany with the face and language of the enemy while carrying a choice that could get him killed from either side. The ruined streets, checkpoints, uniforms, false papers, train movements, and whispered contacts make the danger feel practical and the film never lets bravery feel easy so that whole thing is a nice hook.
5
‘The Deadly Affair’ (1967)
The Deadly Affair makes betrayal look middle-aged, tired, and humiliating. That sounds familiar until you zero-in and realise that most spy films make betrayal look exciting. It foll;ows Charles Dobbs (James Mason) as a British intelligence officer investigating the supposed suicide of a Foreign Office official, and the case drags him through old acquaintances, Cold War suspicion, and a private life that is already hurting him. His wife Ann (Harriet Andersson) is emotionally elsewhere, and Dobbs keeps chasing professional truth while his own home life keeps telling him things he does not want to hear.
That bruised domestic pain gives the mystery its real texture. Mason carries Dobbs with a quiet sadness that feels heavier than anger. He is intelligent enough to read lies in a case file and wounded enough to miss or tolerate lies in his marriage. The investigation moves through interviews, theater-world connections, old ideological loyalties, and people whose manners keep covering rot. The color-grading too, has this gray, drained feeling, as if the spy game has sucked glamour out of every room. Its greatness sits in how personal the coldness becomes. Dobbs solves pieces of the case while losing the comfort of thinking truth will make him whole.
4
‘The Kremlin Letter’ (1970)
The Kremlin Letter feels like espionage with the lights turned off and the rulebook burned. That’s epic. The premise basically is that a secret letter threatens to expose a dangerous arrangement involving American and Soviet intelligence, so a group of operatives is assembled to retrieve it from Moscow. They are less a noble spy team than a collection of specialists, predators, survivors, and compromised people who know exactly how filthy this work can get.
The film’s power comes from how little moral oxygen it gives anyone. The film is helmed by John Huston and he builds this world of blackmail, seduction, coded loyalty, torture, double-crossing, and professional cruelty where every conversation sounds like someone testing the floor for traps. The characters use charm, sex, language, family ties, and fear as tools, then look almost bored by what those tools do to other people. That emotional dryness is the point. The spy genre often sells control as elegance. This film sees control as contamination. Once people enter the operation, they start becoming part of a system that can digest almost any conscience and still ask for another favor.
3
‘Army of Shadows’ (1969)
Resistance stories often get polished into clean courage, and Army of Shadows refuses that comfort at every turn. That identity is what gives it a hook. That identity is why it sits at #3 on this list. In this film, Philippe Gerbier (Lino Ventura) is part of the French Resistance during Nazi occupation, moving through arrests, escapes, safe houses, coded messages, and missions where a single mistake can destroy an entire network. His comrades are brave, but their bravery lives inside dread, secrecy, exhaustion, and decisions that would ruin a person in any normal life.
The film hurts because every act of loyalty seems to demand another sacrifice. Gerbier’s escape is tense, yet the quieter scenes stay even longer: men waiting in rooms, a traitor being executed by people who hate that the task has fallen to them, Mathilde (Simone Signoret) carrying impossible responsibility while knowing the Germans can reach her through her daughter. These people fight fascism without the luxury of feeling heroic all the time. They simply keep moving, and the cost gathers in their faces.
2
‘Lust, Caution’ (2007)
Lust, Caution is exactly what the title is. The first time Wong Chia Chi (Tang Wei) understands how deeply she has entered the role, the film becomes almost unbearable. She begins as a student in Japanese-occupied China, drawn into a resistance plot to assassinate Mr. Yee (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), a powerful collaborator. Her assignment is to pose as a married woman, get close to him, and help lure him into a position where the group can kill him. The mission depends on performance, and the performance begins eating her life.
Wong is asked to use desire as a weapon, yet Mr. Yee is also a man trained by danger to distrust every tenderness offered to him. Their encounters are disturbing because power, fear, attraction, and suspicion keep changing places. The mahjong rooms, jewelry shop, resistance meetings, brutal intimacy, and occupied-city atmosphere all press on Wong until the mission stops feeling separable from her body. This is spy cinema at its most devastating because the secret operation does not merely risk death. It asks a young woman to become someone else so completely that returning to herself may no longer be possible.
1
‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’ (2011)
You can feel the silence of this movie watching people back. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy follows George Smiley (Gary Oldman) as a retired British intelligence officer brought back after Control’s failed operation suggests a Soviet mole has been living near the top of the Circus, the British Secret Service. The suspects are senior men with old loyalties, old resentments, and enough history with Smiley to make every glance feel loaded. Nobody runs through the street shouting secrets. They sit in rooms and let decades of betrayal rot the air between them.
That restraint is exactly why the film is so gripping. Smiley listens more than he speaks, and Oldman makes that stillness feel active, almost predatory in its patience. Peter Guillam (Benedict Cumberbatch)’s sacrifice, Ricki Tarr (Tom Hardy)’s doomed romance with Irina, Jim Prideaux (Mark Strong) carrying the wound of the botched mission, Control’s paranoia, and Bill Haydon (Colin Firth)’s charm all feed into a mystery about friendship as much as treason. The mole hunt is brilliant, but the ache underneath it is even sharper. These men gave their lives to institutions that trained them to distrust love, then acted shocked when betrayal learned to speak their language.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
- Release Date
-
September 16, 2011
- Runtime
-
127 minutes
- Writers
-
Bridget O’Connor, Peter Straughan, John le Carré
Entertainment
Charles Barkley Goes Viral Again Over Sydney Sweeney
Charles Barkley has made the headlines again after making another eyebrow-raising comment about a celebrity attending an NBA Finals game.
The basketball analyst drew attention during Game 5 of the championship series when he reacted to actress Sydney Sweeney’s appearance in the crowd.
The moment quickly became a talking point online, especially since it came just days after Barkley sparked controversy with remarks about rapper Cardi B during another Knicks playoff game.
Sydney Sweeney was among the high-profile celebrities who traveled to San Antonio to watch the New York Knicks take on the Spurs in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
The Idaho-born actress appeared courtside wearing a white Knicks shirt as she cheered on the team during the pivotal matchup.
Sweeney was seated alongside boyfriend Scooter Braun, a New York native who has also been supporting the Knicks throughout their playoff run.
During ESPN’s coverage of the game, Charles Barkley appeared surprised to see the “Euphoria” star in attendance.
“Sydney Sweeney is here? Everybody’s a New York Knicks fan now,” Barkley remarked.
The actress was later featured in a celebrity montage showing famous Knicks supporters who made the trip to Texas. Other notable faces included Timothée Chalamet, Spike Lee, John Turturro, and Ben Stiller.

Charles Barkley’s comments arrived shortly after he faced backlash over another celebrity-related remark during the Knicks’ playoff campaign.
Just days before mentioning Sweeney, the longtime analyst stirred controversy when he made comments about halftime performer Cardi B that referenced the rapper’s chest.
As The Blast reported, the controversy began when the Hall of Famer reacted to the rapper’s halftime appearance and quipped, “I don’t know if those B’s. Those might be Cardi D’s,” referencing her chest size during the broadcast.
The remark quickly went viral, prompting a flood of reactions online. While many fans laughed off the joke as classic Barkley humor, others called it inappropriate, with some critics labeling the comment “diabolical” and even suggesting he could be “fired” from ESPN over it.

Rather than back down, Charles Barkley embraced the controversy surrounding his viral Cardi B joke and said he would be more than happy if ESPN decided to show him the door.
According to The Blast, the NBA analyst addressed the backlash during an appearance on “The Dan Patrick Show,” where he laughed off the criticism.
Barkley revealed he still had six or seven years remaining on his contract and joked that being fired would actually work in his favor.
“I’m hoping they fire me,” he said, adding that he would “love” to be paid for the remainder of the deal without having to work.
Barkley also made it clear he has little patience for critics upset over the joke. “People can’t take a joke?” he said before doubling down further by telling those without a sense of humor they can “kiss my *ss. My whole *ss, not just one cheek. The whole *ss.”
Barkley Roasts Ice Spice After Viral McDonald’s Altercation

Cardi B isn’t the only star Charles Barkley has spoken about in recent times. The Blast reported that the 63-year-old had the “Inside the NBA” crew in stitches after turning a sponsored McDonald’s segment into a running joke about rapper Ice Spice’s recent altercation at one of the chain’s restaurants.
As the panel prepared to discuss NBA playoff action, Barkley suddenly quipped that McDonald’s was serving “slappy Happy Meals,” referencing reports that Ice Spice was allegedly slapped during a late-night visit to a Los Angeles location.
When Shaquille O’Neal asked what he meant, Barkley replied, “You see Ice Spice got slapped at McDonald’s?” before joking, “What you doing at McDonald’s in the middle of the night, Ice Spice? Come on, stop that. Get it to go.”
The comments sent O’Neal, Ernie Johnson, and even members of the production crew into fits of laughter.
Barkley later doubled down, telling the panel, “A slappy Happy Meal over there. Let Ice Spice eat in peace!” while joking that she “should have slapped her in the face with a Big Mac.”

Weeks later, Barkley earned praise online after speaking candidly about homophobia in professional sports while paying tribute to late NBA trailblazer Jason Collins.
During an emotional discussion on “Inside the NBA” following Collins’ death at age 47, Barkley argued that society still had a long way to go when it came to acceptance.
“If another guy did it, it would still be a big deal because we live in a homophobic society,” Barkley said per The Blast, referring to another active athlete publicly coming out as gay.
He also dismissed the idea that there are no other gay athletes competing at the highest levels of sports, adding, “Anybody who thinks we ain’t got a bunch of gay players in all sports, they’re just stupid.”
Barkley’s comments quickly drew praise across social media, with many applauding him for using his platform to challenge stereotypes and support the LGBTQ+ community.
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