Entertainment
8 Perfect Miniseries That No One Remembers Today
A miniseries is a perfect kind of viewing: you can binge-watch it within a day, and you don’t have to wait for another season after the first one ends on a cliffhanger. It’s a standalone story that satisfies the craving for a long watch, but finding the perfect show for the entire group is the most challenging part.
If you’re not interested in watching some of the well-known and raved-about miniseries but would rather dive into something a little more obscure but still good quality, here are the stellar miniseries that are 10/10, but no one remembers today. For fans of some long-forgotten and buried content, this list could help extend your watchlist.
‘The Escape Artist’ (2013)
It’s rare for David Tennant to pick a bad show, and The Escape Artist is just one more proof of that. This three-part BBC miniseries is a perfect crime thriller gem that stars Tennant as a tenacious, vulnerable defense attorney and Toby Kebbell as a vicious, chilling villain. With only three episodes, it seems overly short, but each episode is presented as a different genre, keeping viewers glued to the screen; it runs like a longer feature film, combining everything from thriller and horror to character drama and tragedy.
The Escape Artist follows Will Burton (Tennant), a brilliant barrister who specializes in defending the accused and has never lost a case. However, after he successfully acquits a charismatic sociopath named Liam Foyle (Kebbell), Foyle becomes obsessed with him, launching a psychological terror campaign against Burton’s family, culminating in a second murder trial—this time with Burton as the accused. The show is a suspenseful legal thriller that was potentially forgotten because of a fairly generic title but is definitely worth a watch—a forgotten classic that deserves to be rediscovered.
‘The Good Lord Bird’ (2020)
The Good Lord Bird is one of Showtime’s most brilliant and overlooked series; in fact, many people have probably never heard of it until now. Fans of Westerns and/or Ethan Hawke will have the time of their life with this seven-episode series based on history, and its 98% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes further proves the show’s worth. Even if you’re not too keen on Hawke, this show will make you a fan; he delivers a career-best performance in a series he also created and produced. The Good Lord Bird doesn’t fall into the trap of being a dry history lesson, rather embracing a mischievous, quirky, and strange energy that makes a 19th-century story feel urgent and alive.
The Good Lord Bird is told from the point of view of Henry “Onion” Shackleford (Joshua Caleb Johnson), a fictional enslaved boy and follows him meeting the radical abolitionist John Brown (Hawke) in the years leading up to the American Civil War. After a chance encounter, Onion is swept into Brown’s eccentric and violent crusade against slavery, from the “Bleeding Kansas” conflict to Brown’s legendary attack on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry. The Good Lord Bird was released at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and suffered from a lack of publicity, preventing it from becoming the lockdown hit it deserved to be. The series was largely overlooked and faded from the cultural conversation, but its rave reviews are justified and make watching it worthwhile.
‘Show Me a Hero’ (2015)
If you like The Wire or anything that David Simon created, you’ll love the HBO miniseries Show Me a Hero with Oscar Isaac in the lead. It feels like a masterclass of socially conscious storytelling, and it was based on a true story about the youngest mayor ever elected in New York. Isaac delivers a layered performance as the troubled mayor, bringing to life a story about a big moment in American history that’s rarely been heard of before this miniseries. Show Me a Hero is an empathetic and frustrating portrait of a system in crisis, and it has a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Show Me a Hero is a six-episode miniseries about Nick Wasicsko (Isaac), the youngest mayor elected in Yonkers, New York, in 1987. When a federal judge orders the predominantly white, middle-class city to construct 200 units of public housing on its east side as a desegregation measure, it ignites a political firestorm. Despite Wasicsko being elected on a platform that opposed the plan, he finds himself supporting it and struggles to balance his relationships with politicians and the public. Despite being an HBO production with a major star and a cult creator, Show Me a Hero is vastly underrated. Aside from Isaac, the incredible ensemble cast includes Alfred Molina, Catherine Keener, Winona Ryder, and Jon Bernthal.
‘Catch-22’ (2019)
Joseph Heller‘s seminal novel Catch-22 may have felt impossible to put to the screen until Hulu created a miniseries based on it. The iconic characters of John Yossarian, Milo Minderbinder, and Doc Daneeka were brought to life in this darkly comical and visually stunning masterpiece; unlike the 1970 feature film starring Alan Arkin, the series does a better job of encapsulating some of Yossarian’s most important moments, including the feeling of being stuck in the “catch-22” situation. Nothing can fully depict how it feels to read Heller’s novel, but this series complements it beautifully.
Catch-22 has six episodes that follow Capt. John Yossarian (Christopher Abbott), a WWII US Air Force bombardier who doesn’t want to be a part of the war at all. He is trapped by the infamous “catch-22”: a soldier can be grounded for insanity, but asking to be grounded for insanity proves he’s sane enough to understand his mental health, so he has to keep flying. As his missions become more dangerous and the bureaucracy more absurd, Yossarian must find a way to survive in his increasingly maddening surroundings. The cast is stacked with stars, including George Clooney, who executive produced the series; critics praised it for being an “almost perfect series,” capturing both the humor and the tragedy of Catch-22. For unknown reasons, the show remains swimming in a sea of underrated series, but fish it out and give it a try—you’ll love it.
‘The Honourable Woman’ (2014)
Those who’ve seen The Honourable Woman with Maggie Gyllenhaal probably remember it in a fairly fresh and positive light—it was made during a decade defined by intense political series, and it feels just as relevant some twelve years later. Written and directed entirely by Hugo Blick, The Honourable Woman is a dense slow burn that captivates the attention easily. Blick, in an interview for the BBC said, “To a backdrop of the seemingly irreconcilable, this is a story about personal reconciliation,” adding that he is “certainly not offering any actual, specific answers to such a complex and emotionally provocative issue.” Using the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a backdrop for a story of personal struggle feels like Blick just couldn’t win, which may be why the show was sent to the back of the TV schedule after airing.
The Honourable Woman follows Nessa Stein (Gyllenhaal), the daughter of a murdered Jewish arms dealer who has reinvented her father’s company into a telecommunications empire dedicated to connecting Israel and Palestine. As she navigates the sensitive politics of the Middle East, she is kidnapped, and in the aftermath unravels a conspiracy involving several intelligence agencies and her own family’s dark secrets. The story jumps between present-day negotiations and flashbacks to her childhood and the kidnapping, slowly revealing what really happened. Gyllenhaal won a Golden Globe for this performance, and critics called the show “most satisfying” and “intricate.”
‘Bodies’ (2023)
Bodies is one of Netflix’s most ingenious sci-fi thrillers, but it went as quietly as it came. Based on a graphic novel by Si Spencer, Bodies is a masterclass in complex storytelling. It depicts different timelines with a distinct tone and aesthetic, yet they all feel cohesive and connected to follow the story’s unusual thread. The show respects its audience’s intelligence, rewarding close attention with dozens of “aha” moments. The cast is uniformly excellent, with Stephen Graham delivering a chilling performance (as always). Bodies is the kind of miniseries that demands an immediate rewatch.
Bodies follows four detectives in four different time periods—1890, 1941, 2023, and 2053—as they discover the same dead body on Whitechapel Street. As they investigate, they discover a centuries-long conspiracy that connects them to each other. They can’t see how and why they are connected, but going toward the solution turns out to also mean preventing a dystopian future. Bodies never really cracked the top 10 for longer than a week, but word of mouth still keeps it on the top for dedicated mystery fans. Interestingly, the four detectives seem to represent four different genres: Victorian Gothic, wartime noir, modern police procedural, and sci-fi thriller, giving the series a very interesting shift from episode to episode.
‘The Lost Room’ (2006)
The Lost Room is a cult phenomenon that never went beyond its few episodes, despite devoted fans begging for a revival for so many years later. The Lost Room has exceptional world-building that focuses on things called Objects, which all have a specific, consistent power. The show’s creator, Christopher Leone, co-created the show with the idea of everyday objects possessing supernatural powers, and reviewer David Yates interestingly connects its lore with the origins of creepypasta in his review of the show.
The Lost Room follows detective Joe Miller (Peter Krause), whose young daughter disappears while he’s investigating a mystery. He discovers that Room 10 of the Sunshine Motel exists outside normal space and time and that the room’s ordinary objects possess impossible powers. Joe must find a way to get his daughter back before a secret society of collectors, who hunt these everyday objects, find him and stop him. The Lost Room is a SyFy original, and while it’s rarely available to watch today, it remains a word-of-mouth sci-fi legend that deserves another chance 20 years later.
‘ZeroZeroZero’ (2019–2020)
ZeroZeroZero was based on Roberto Saviano‘s nonfiction book, the same author whose novel inspired the critically acclaimed series Gomorrah. It’s an operatic, globe-spanning masterpiece with a 94% critics’ rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus calling it “an addictive thriller whose greatest weakness is that it is at times too withholding.” The series was shot in five countries across the globe and stars Gabriel Byrne, Andrea Riseborough, and Dane DeHaan as the Lynwood family; they give brilliant, career-best performances, together with a sprawling international cast. ZeroZeroZero is a nihilistic, stunningly shot crime epic that will stick with you long after watching it.
ZeroZeroZero opens with the leader of the Calabrian mafia ordering a single massive shipment of cocaine—5,000 kilos of the purest grade (000). The series follows this cargo as it travels across three continents and three overlapping perspectives: the corrupt Mexican cartel that makes it, the Italian syndicate that distributes it, and the Lynwood family, a fading American shipping dynasty from New Orleans that serves as the deal’s broker. As the shipment travels from Monterrey across the Atlantic, the story unfolds in a non-linear fashion, jumping between timelines and continents, forcing viewers to piece together the complete picture through the world’s grim, vicious, and devastating underbelly. ZeroZeroZero got lost in the shuffle of the streaming wars, and despite its massive budget and a cast of major stars, it failed to reach mainstream audiences—but it’s worth the time.
ZeroZeroZero
- Release Date
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2020 – 2020-00-00
- Network
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Sky Atlantic
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Andrea Riseborough
Emma Lynwood
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Giuseppe De Domenico
Stefano La Piana
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Harold Torres
Manuel Contreras
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Entertainment
Prime Video’s 6-Part Psychological Thriller Is So Good, You’ll Finish It in One Weekend
David Cronenberg is one of the most important names in horror history, as the description “Cronenbergian” is often applied to innovative works of bodily terror. Cronenberg has many films that have been accepted as classics, but few are more iconic than the 1988 masterpiece Dead Ringers, which starred Jeremy Irons as identical twins. While it’s hardly the first instance in which an actor played twins on screen, Dead Ringers was a bold and subversive look at the grotesque world of medical malpractice. There is never a point in rebooting a classic property without a fresh take, and thankfully, the Prime Video reimagining of Dead Ringers is a totally distinct entity.
Although gender-flipping leading characters has become common within contemporary reboots, Dead Ringers inverts the original material with a feminist slant, given that it’s a story in which the two main characters are gynecologists. That narrative has a different connotation within the new version, as Rachel Weisz plays twin sisters who have sought to control and subvert bodily autonomy through their research. Beverly and Elliot Mantle share a unified interest in revamping the birthing process, but have very different means of executing their goals. Cronenberg’s film was a breakthrough for its time, but the series has been updated to address the radically different landscape for medical research in the 2020s. Dead Ringers is an homage that doesn’t feel like a clone; ironically, the show’s best virtue is that it isn’t identical.
‘Dead Ringers’ Is a Fresh Take on a Horror Classic
The most important aspect of any new take on an established piece of material is using the possibilities of a different medium, and Dead Ringers is retooled to work as a series that can’t rely as heavily on shock value. Cronenberg’s film had to build up to its most visceral scares, but that momentum could never have been sustained over the course of six episodes. As a result, Dead Ringers is able to retain a consistent sense of unease by showing the casual danger of what the Mantles do, as any procedure they perform has the potential to go wrong. It’s because the depiction of medical care feels so authentic that it becomes more shocking when the twins begin to diverge from their accepted policies; it’s evident that they are not only driven by passion to help women find peace, but also out of a desire to see what the human body is capable of. This could have easily felt exploitative, but Weisz brilliantly shows how both Beverly and Elliot have found tranquility through their profession; to them, surgery is just a form of art.
The TV Adaptation of ‘Dead Ringers’ Is Even Bolder Than Cronenberg’s Original
This thrilling reimagining delves into its disturbing subject matter far deeper than its predecessor.
The most challenging conceit in Dead Ringers was that the show had to ensure that both characters were distinguishable from one another, which is much harder to do in practice than it is in theory. Keeping two versions of the same actor straight in a series is already difficult, and Weisz has to do many scenes in which she has chemistry with herself. Although there are a few overt physical distinctions when it comes to body language and hairstyle, the difference between the Mantle sisters is in their conduct; Elliot uses foul language, manages a drug addiction, and engages in more social activities, whereas Beverly is more refined and constantly refers to her twin with disparaging language. They’re two distinct characters, but Weisz also makes them feel linked in a manner that is thematically sound. Since Elliot and Beverly represent two different sides of the same coin, it would make sense that they could only unlock their true potential while working together.
‘Dead Ringers’ Has the Best Performance of Rachel Weisz’s Career
Weisz pulls off an impossible challenge of making her characters both intimidating and slightly empathetic, as the series deals with the ways in which institutions have been corrupted by private equity. It’s an unfortunate reality that many of the most advanced medical innovations have been funded through donors, and the Mantle sisters are forced to take capital from the private investor Rebecca Parke (Jennifer Ehle), who has her own agenda. The consequence of this is that the backers funding the Mantles’ research don’t put safeguards in place that account for their erratic, potentially volatile behavior. Cronenberg’s films have always had a political edge, but Dead Ringers had the ambition to address the changing economic context of the original film’s thesis.
Horror television often runs into a sustainability issue, as audiences may not want to stew in such uncomfortable emotional places for the same extended amount of time that they would in a film. Thankfully, Dead Ringers is filled with mystery and dark comedy, as there is an inherent playfulness in the notion of women dedicated to preserving life while often courting death. It’s the rare reboot that works for multiple audiences; it’s both suited to those who can appreciate the homages to Cronenberg and those who want to see something with fresh eyes. It can be hard to tell which horror shows are actually worth investing in, but Dead Ringers is more than just a gimmick. It’s frightful, innovative, and thought-provoking television, and may end up spawning the same cult appreciation that the original film did.
Dead Ringers
- Release Date
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2023 – 2023-00-00
- Network
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Prime Video
- Directors
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Sean Durkin, Lauren Wolkstein, Karyn Kusama
Entertainment
6 Great HBO Shows With Glaring Plot Holes
Plot holes are kind of impossible to avoid in storytelling, and honestly, at times, the audience is willing to play along. If the story is good enough, a few logical leaps here and there don’t really matter. However, things get messy when writers push that limit a little too far. HBO, for all its prestige and reputation, is no exception. In fact, some of the network’s most iconic series are also the biggest offenders when it comes to obvious inconsistencies and unresolved arcs.
That doesn’t necessarily make them bad, though. If anything, it makes their success all the more fascinating. After all, it takes a truly great story to keep the viewers hooked even when the cracks in the plot are right there in plain sight. Here is a list of successful HBO shows that serve as perfect examples of that.
6
‘Westworld’ (2016–2022)
Westworld started as one of HBO’s most ambitious shows with a premise that instantly hooked the audience. The sci-fi series, created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, is about a hyperrealistic Wild West theme park populated by android hosts, where wealthy guests can indulge in their darkest fantasies without consequence. The show was meant to be a philosophical exploration of free will, consciousness, and what it truly means to be human. Now, Westworld Season 1 perfectly set up this concept with a gripping and layered central mystery. However, as the show expands its world, it begins to lose the plot big time. The storytelling begins increasingly convoluted, and timelines start blurring into each other to the point where the rules of the show’s own universe start feeling inconsistent.
Characters are repeatedly killed and revived without clear stakes, major arcs are unresolved, and key plots like the fate of the Outliers never receive a satisfying payoff. The thing about Westworld is that it isn’t necessarily a bad show, but its tendency to constantly reinvent itself comes at the expense of the story and characters. Each season turns the status quo upside down and makes the audience feel that the show is more interested in escalating its complexity than in actually following through on already-established ideas.
5
‘Euphoria’ (2019–2026)
Euphoria has been one of the most talked-about shows of the last decade. The controversial teen drama, created by Sam Levinson, stars Zendaya as Rue Bennett, a high-schooler battling addiction along with a group of her friends and classmates, all navigating their own struggles with identity and trauma. The series takes place in a hyper-stylized world that instantly became its signature and mirrored the chaos that its characters live in. The show has been widely praised for its performances, cinematography, and raw depiction of teenage life. However, for all its strength, the drama has also faced consistent criticism for gaps in its storytelling. Euphoria Season 2 in particular feels messy, inconsistent, and clearly prioritizes shock value over any semblance of character arcs.
Some of these issues include Nate’s (Jacob Elordi) sudden fixation on Cassie despite hating her throughout Euphoria Season 1. Entire character arcs are dropped, like Kat’s (Barbie Ferriera) being reduced to a side character or McKay (Algee Smith) being written out with no explanation. However, Rue’s storyline with Laurie (Martha Kelly) and the fact that she escapes that dangerous situation without any consequence is easily one of the biggest plot holes in the series. Some might argue that all of these loose ends will be solved by Season 3. That doesn’t take away from the fact that the show struggles with its own stakes. Euphoria thrives on how it makes the audience feel in the moment, but once they step back, the cracks in the narrative are impossible to ignore.
4
‘Game of Thrones’ (2011–2019)
Game of Thrones has practically defined prestige television for the better part of the last two decades. The series, based on George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire novel series, takes place in an expansive, fantastical world and centers on the intense power struggle between the seven kingdoms for the Iron Throne. There’s no denying that the show has already gone down in pop culture history for its meticulous storytelling and unmatched worldbuilding. However, as the series moved beyond its source material, logic took a backseat to the spectacle, and that proved to be a major mistake. The later seasons destroyed the legacy that the show had spent around eight years constructing.
Entire storylines felt rushed or abandoned, including Cersei’s (Lena Headey) pregnancy and the prophecy of “The Prince That Was Promised.” Even major narrative arcs like Jon Snow’s (Kit Harrington) true lineage and Daenerys’ (Emilia Clarke) descent into madness ultimately had little impact on the outcome of the story. By the end, it felt like the show was just leaning on convenience to wrap things up, and in doing so, it set up many ideas that were never fully explored. The notorious ending of Game of Thrones raised more questions than answers and is widely considered one of the worst series finales of all time. Despite a rushed finish, though, Game of Thrones is still an undeniable landmark in TV history, with two spinoffs already airing and several others in the works.
3
‘The Leftovers’ (2014–2017)
The Leftovers is a show that fully embraces ambiguity, but that is no excuse for all the plot holes it has left behind. The series, created by Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta, begins with two percent of the world’s population suddenly vanishing without explanation. However, the show isn’t about where they went, but it focuses on the people left behind as they grapple with grief and faith in the wake of a phenomenon that just can’t be explained. The show’s deliberate refusal to provide easy answers gives it its emotional weight, but also tends to get frustrating at times. The Leftovers often sets up certain storylines only to abandon them in the middle. For example, Kevin Garvey’s (Justin Theroux) repeated resurrections are never grounded in any clear logic.
Not to mention the entire situation with the Guilty Remnant feels like one of the show’s most interesting elements until the viewer realizes that their larger purpose is never actually explored. Even broader world-building elements like the earthquakes or the surreal hotel world are introduced with weight but never really explained in relation to the overall narrative. Sure, some of this is intentional, but there is a fine line between leaving things to the audience’s interpretation and careless storytelling. Despite all that, though, there’s no denying that The Leftovers is one of HBO’s most emotionally complex stories.
2
‘True Detective’ (2014–Present)
True Detective Season 1 is peak TV, but unfortunately, it goes downhill from there. The HBO crime anthology begins with Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson as two detectives trying to solve a disturbing ritualistic murder case. Each subsequent season has introduced a new cast and case, with the most recent one being True Detective: Night Country starring Jodie Foster and Kali Reis. For all its ambition, though, the one thing the show has struggled with is consistency.
True Detective Season 2, in particular, is often criticized for being overly convoluted and weighed down by too many characters and subplots that ultimately go nowhere. It often feels like the show is focusing more on mood and character rather than telling a believable story. Its best moments have always come from the dynamic between its detectives and philosophical dialogue, but even then, the show’s glaring plot holes are hard to miss. Even at its messiest, though, True Detective is undeniably a great watch.
1
‘The Last of Us’ (2023–Present)
The Last of Us quickly established itself as one of HBO’s biggest hits and set the gold standard for video game adaptations. The post-apocalyptic drama follows Joel (Pedro Pascal), who is tasked with escorting Ellie (Bella Ramsey) across a post-apocalyptic United States to a revolutionary group known as the Fireflies. Now, what raises the stakes is that this teenage girl may hold the key to curing a fungal infection that is slowly taking over humanity. The drama series is far from a typical zombie show, though, because it leans heavily into character-driven storytelling.
However, for a show that attempts to remain grounded in realism, there are plenty of moments where its internal logic starts to crack. Plenty of Joel’s decisions make little sense from a practical point of view. Even the broader stakes, such as the Fireflies’ plan to immediately operate on Ellie without exploring any other alternatives, feel rushed and oddly underdeveloped. A lot of moments in the show rely entirely on convenience or shock value. One can overlook these gaps thanks to the cast’s brilliant performances and the emotional payoff of it all, but they do make it harder to fully buy into the world at times.
The Last of Us
- Release Date
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January 15, 2023
- Network
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HBO
- Showrunner
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Craig Mazin
- Directors
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Craig Mazin, Peter Hoar, Jeremy Webb, Ali Abbasi, Mark Mylod, Stephen Williams, Jasmila Žbanić, Liza Johnson, Nina Lopez-Corrado
Entertainment
5 Years Later, Rebecca Ferguson’s Sci-Fi Movie Is One of the Best on Streaming
Some sci-fi movies are too strange, too sincere, or just too out-of-step with the moment they arrive in. Reminiscence was probably all three. Lisa Joy’s feature directorial debut had a very specific kind of dreamy, flooded-neon melancholy that never really clicked commercially, but it has started finding new attention on streaming. Earlier this year, coverage noted that the film was drawing fresh viewers on HBO Max, which makes sense for something this mood-driven and weirdly romantic.
The cast was never the problem. Reminiscence stars Hugh Jackman, Rebecca Ferguson, Thandiwe Newton, Daniel Wu, Cliff Curtis, Angela Sarafyan, Natalie Martinez, Brett Cullen, and Marina de Tavira. The story follows a private investigator who uses memory-exploration technology to help clients revisit their past, only to become obsessed with finding a vanished woman. It’s pure tech-noir pulp, just draped in a more mournful and romantic register than audiences maybe expected.
Is ‘Reminiscence’ Worth Watching?
Collider’s review of the movie stated that Reminiscence is an ambitious but ultimately disappointing attempt to fuse classic noir with futuristic sci-fi, undone by shallow thematic execution. Lisa Joy’s heavy-handed narration and underdeveloped class commentary talk down to the audience rather than trusting the visuals or story to do the work. Despite its intriguing premise and atmospheric setting, Reminiscence ends up feeling like stylish texture without substance, culminating in a forgettable and emotionally hollow conclusion.
“What’s more frustrating is that the class commentary is merely window dressing. It kind of positions Mae’s story as a consequence of class conflict, but it doesn’t have much to do with Nick. It’s simply the world he inhabits, and while he doesn’t need to be a class warrior or anything like that, his perceptions of the world exist separate from his personal journey to find Mae. He doesn’t see the world one way and have that perception changed through his relationship with Mae, so it’s just Joy embracing her own cleverness by showing a sci-fi world that emphasizes class conflict. However, she doesn’t do the work to connect that world to her protagonist’s story, so it all feels hollow. Reminiscence is texture without purpose.”
Reminiscence is streaming now.
- Release Date
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August 20, 2021
- Runtime
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116 minutes
- Director
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Lisa Joy
Entertainment
Gayle King Addresses Savannah Guthrie’s Today Show Return
Gayle King is throwing her support behind Savannah Guthrie and her Today show comeback as the investigation surrounding her mother Nancy’s disappearance continues.
Speaking to Us Weekly at the Breakthrough Prize event in Los Angeles on Saturday, April 18, King, 71, said she was happy to see Savannah back on air despite the difficult circumstances she’s facing.
“Listen, we’re just glad Savannah’s back, but of course, our hearts are still aching and still breaking,” King told Us. She added, “There are no words to describe what she’s going through.”
The CBS Mornings presenter also urged anyone with information about what happened to Nancy to come forward.
“I’m still hoping that somebody will do the right thing,” King continued. “Somebody, somebody out there knows something, and it’s shocking to me after seeing Savannah open up her heart, after looking at the video that we all saw, and after the million dollars reward that there has not been some resolution in this case.”
She added, “So I am just here wishing her well and cheering. I’m glad that she’s back.”
Savannah, 54, returned to Today on April 6 after two months away dealing with the disappearance of her mother Nancy, who was reported missing in Arizona on February 1.
“Good morning, welcome to Today on this Monday morning. We are so glad you started your week with us, and it is good to be home,” she told viewers during her first episode back.

Savannah and Nancy Guthrie. Photo by: Nathan Congleton/NBC)
Savannah took a step back from the show at the time, traveling from New York to Arizona amid the police investigation into her mother’s disappearance. During Savannah’s absence from Today, Hoda Kotb filled in for her.
Savannah and her siblings Annie Guthrie and Camron Guthrie have pleaded for the public’s help in finding their mother since she disappeared, offering a $1 million reward for information leading to her recovery.
In one video released by Savannah, Annie and Camron via social media, they begged for Nancy’s safe return.
“We received your message and we understand,” Savannah said in a video shared on February 7, while flanked by and holding the hands of her siblings. “We beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her. This is the only way we will have peace. This is very valuable to us and we will pay.”
On February 10, the FBI released photos and video footage of a masked individual at Nancy’s home. However, no suspects have been officially identified since her disappearance.
Entertainment
Rebecca Ferguson’s Forgotten 115-Minute Sci-Fi Sequel Is Quietly Climbing Global Streaming Charts
Men in Black: International is one of those franchise reboots people more or less decided on immediately, which meant it never got much room to become anything else. But streaming is often kinder to movies that arrive with baggage, and that seems to be happening here. Earlier this year, the film started drawing renewed attention on Starz in the U.S., while overseas streaming charts have also shown it popping up in places like France. That doesn’t make it a full-scale global juggernaut, but it does mean the movie is finding a broader second life than its original reputation might suggest.
Men in Black: International stars Chris Hemsworth as Agent H, Tessa Thompson as Agent M, Liam Neeson as High T, Emma Thompson as Agent O, Rebecca Ferguson as Riza Stavros, Kumail Nanjiani as Pawny, and Rafe Spall as Agent C. On paper, that’s a really appealing sci-fi comedy ensemble, especially with Hemsworth and Thompson reuniting after the Thor movies.
Is ‘Men in Black: International’ Worth Watching?
Collider’s review stated that Men in Black: International really came down to the sheer appeal of its two stars. The dynamic helps carry the movie through action scenes and story beats that might otherwise feel pretty flat. The review also pointed out that touches like the broader world-building, some fun support from Pawny, and the natural pull of the central duo gave the film a sense of missed opportunity. It may not fully come together, but there’s still enough there to make it an entertaining watch.
“As Agent H, Hemsworth is basically ramping up the most dick-ish of Thor Odinson’s personality quirks, but weaponizing well-timed smirks or winks—or, let’s be honest, an unbuttoned button—to make us still like him. Thompson has the harder role; Agent M is extremely competent and a bit of a fangirl for the Men in Black at the same time. Thompson combines those two qualities into pure, crackling energy. That’s the funny part, really. Thanks to the combination of Hemsworth + Thompson + the world-building, I’d watch the hell out of a sequel to this movie despite feeling cold about it overall.”
Men in Black: International is currently streaming.
- Release Date
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June 12, 2019
- Runtime
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115 minutes
- Director
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F. Gary Gray
Entertainment
‘Olympus Has Fallen’ Star’s ‘Landman’ Replacement Is Taking Over U.S. Streaming
Aaron Eckhart fans are currently gearing up for a turbulent flight, as The Dark Knight star’s next project opens in theaters on May 1. An action-packed survival thriller from Deep Blue Sea director Renny Harlin, Deep Water follows a flight from Los Angeles to Shanghai that, while coasting over the middle of the Pacific, enters a terrifying storm that sends everyone on board into the cold ocean below. Just when things couldn’t get worse, along come the sharks. Alongside Eckhart, the movie also stars the likes of Ben Kingsley (Iron Man 3), Angus Sampson (Insidious), Lucy Barrett (Charmed), Kelly Gale (Plane), Richard Crouchley (Evil Dead Rise), and more.
In anticipation of Eckhart’s latest release, fans have been flocking to one of his lesser-spotted recent projects. Thieves Highway, a 2025 neo-Western that made very little impact upon arrival, is perhaps one of the more underrated entries in Eckhart’s impressive catalog, thanks simply to it falling so far under most radars. Directed by Jesse V. Jackson, who also worked with Eckhart on the 2024 conspiracy thriller Chief of Station, Thieves Highway also featured performances from the likes of Devon Sawa, Brooke Langton, and Lochlyn Munroe.
At the time of writing, and seemingly against the odds, Thieves Highway has risen to the very top of the Hulu movie streaming charts in the U.S., outperforming the likes of Gaten Matarazzo‘s new comedy Pizza Movie, the original The Devil Wears Prada, and Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice. A synopsis for Thieves Highway reads:
“Lawman Frank Bennett uncovers a massive smuggling operation after a deadly confrontation. Cut off from cell service and without his truck, he’s forced to take on a dangerous gang led by a deranged ex-military commander.”
What Did Critics Say About ‘Thieves Highway’?
So under-seen that it doesn’t even have a rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, those who did catch Thieves Highway in 2025 responded with mixed reviews. Whilst some praised the movie’s gripping lead performance, saying, “Eckhart anchors the film with a world-weary, classic sense of morality,” others were not so impressed with the project as a whole, saying, “Johnson and Mills do some fun maneuvering with their characters and Eckhart is a sturdy enough lead. But the storytelling takes too many shortcuts and the overall lack of suspense keeps us one step ahead.”
Thieves Highway is streaming on Hulu. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates, and check out Eckhart’s next movie, Deep Water, in theaters on May 1.
- Release Date
-
May 1, 2026
- Runtime
-
106 minutes
- Director
-
Renny Harlin
Entertainment
Steve Kerr Mulls Over Career After Warriors Playoff Loss
The Golden State Warriors’ future is looking murky after the team’s loss in the NBA play-in tournament, and head coach Steve Kerr seems to know it.
“I don’t know what’s gonna happen next,” said Kerr to players Stephen Curry and Draymond Green in a huddle on the sideline. “But I love you guys to death. Thank you.”
The heartfelt moment — picked up by a TV microphone — came in the waning seconds of a 111-96 loss to the Phoenix Suns on Friday, April 17, ending the Warriors’ season.
The final buzzer marked the end of Kerr’s contract with the Warriors, and the 60-year-old said after the game that he’s going to take a few weeks to mull over his future.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen,” Kerr said to reporters. “I still love coaching, but I get it. These jobs all have an expiration date. There is a run that happens, and when the run ends, sometimes it’s time for new blood and new ideas.”
He continued, “I don’t want to walk away from Steph. I’m definitely not going and coaching somewhere else next year in the NBA. I would never walk away from Steph. But all this stuff has to be aligned and right. Those are all discussions that will be had.”

Head coach Steve Kerr, Stephen Curry and Draymond Green hug during the final moments of an NBA play-in tournament game Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Curry, 38, joined the Warriors in 2009. Green, 36, was drafted by the team in 2012. Kerr took over as head coach in 2014, and together the three helped build one of the most dominant dynasties in NBA history.
In the 12 seasons since Kerr joined Curry and Green in Golden State, the Warriors have won four NBA titles (2015, 2017, 2018, 2022). They’ve reached the playoffs eight times and played in six NBA Finals.
“If [my time is done], then I will be nothing but grateful for the most amazing opportunity any person could have to coach this franchise in front of our fans and to coach Steph Curry, [Draymond Green], the whole group,” Kerr said. “It may still go on. It may not. I don’t know at this point. But we all need to step away a little bit and then reconvene.”
Both Curry and Green have expressed interest in continuing to play for the Warriors. While Curry still has one more season on his contract, Green has the option to opt out of his contract with his player option for next season.
Despite the option, Green reiterated after Friday’s game that he wants to remain in Golden State.
“Hopefully I’ve done enough to still be here,” Green said.
Entertainment
Summer House’s Kyle Reacts to Ex Amanda and West’s PDA
Summer House star Kyle Cooke has seen his estranged wife, Amanda Batula, kissing West Wilson — which might have been a bridge too far.
“Was not prepared to see that,” Cooke, 43, wrote via Threads on Saturday, April 18, responding to the Summer House chain. “And that. And that 🤢.”
Cooke’s costar Mia Calabrese replied, “Kyle, I left you for 1 hour….”
The Bravo show’s thread had been abuzz since Batula, 34, and Wilson, 31, were spotted at the New York Yankees vs. Kansas City Royals baseball game on Friday, April 17. The duo even packed on the PDA when the stadium’s Kiss Cam panned to their seats.
Batula and Cooke were married for four years, announcing in January that they had separated. She confirmed her romance with Wilson just three months later.
“We’ve seen the growing online speculation, so while this is still very new, we wanted to provide some clarity. It was never our intention to purposely hide anything,” West and Batula wrote in a joint statement last month. “Given the complicated relationship dynamics involved and the scrutiny that comes with being on a reality show, we needed a little space to process things privately before speaking on it.”
They continued at the time, “We’ve shown up for each other as friends over the years, through all the highs and lows, and what’s developed recently was the last thing either of us expected. Our connection grew out of a genuine, longstanding friendship, which made it especially important for us to approach this with care.”
Cooke and his Summer House costars were shocked by the reveal, including Ciara Miller. The former nurse, 30, dated Wilson in 2023 and was close friends with Batula. She told Glamour in a Friday profile published before the MLB game that she found out about their decision to go public t less than one hour before the statement was shared online.
“It’s one thing to experience hurt behind closed doors,” Miller told Glamour. “To experience it so publicly is like another layer, and then to have to see what you thought was your life still play out in season 10. It’s a major mindf***.”
As for Cooke, he was recently seen kissing The Real Housewives of Orange County alum Meghan King on Thursday, April 16.
“Kyle didn’t know Meghan prior to being at the same event last night. She had pursued him the second she saw him,” a source exclusively told Us. “It’s nothing serious, but they did hang out all night even after the event was over, and made out several times in public.”
Entertainment
Nicole Kidman Recalls the Moment She Found Out Her Mom Died
Nicole Kidman is reflecting on the moment she was told her mother Janelle Kidman had died right before she was about to go on stage to accept an award.
Speaking to Variety on Saturday, April 18, Nicole, 58, detailed how she found out about the loss at the Venice International Film Festival as she was preparing to accept a best actress award for her role in Babygirl.
“I was about to go out on stage, and I found out that my mother had passed,” Nicole told the outlet. “I went right back to my room in Venice, was getting into bed, and I was completely devastated.”
Nicole added that as she digested the sad news at the time, she thought to herself, “‘I’m not sure how I’m going to move forward or function now.’ She was so much a part of my existence.”
In September 2024, the Big Little Lies actress left Venice early to make her way home to Australia after learning of Janelle’s death.
Speaking to Variety on Saturday, Nicole also described her “harrowing” attempt to leave Venice in the middle of the night trying to return to her home country.
“I remember getting into a boat in the canal, literally at night, trying to find my way to the airport, and then turning around going, ‘I can’t even do this,’” she said. “Then I went back to bed. And I was alone. My husband wasn’t there, my children weren’t there. I was there to win an award, which should’ve been a beautiful thing. That there is the contrast of life.” (Nicole was married to Keith Urban at the time, with whom she shares daughters Sunday Rose, 17, and Faith Margaret, 14. Nicole and Urban finalized their divorce in January.)

Janelle and Nicole Kidman. (Photo by James D. Morgan/Getty Images)
At the time, Babygirl director Halina Reijn confirmed Janelle’s death as she read a statement on behalf of Nicole during a Venice International Film Festival panel.
“Today I arrived in Venice to find out shortly after, that my beautiful, brave mother Janelle Ann Kidman has just passed,” Reijn, 50, read on Nicole’s behalf. “I am in shock and I have to go to my family, but this award is for her, she shaped me, she guided me and she made me.”
The statement continued, “I am beyond grateful that I get to say her name to all of you through Halina, the collision of life and art is heart-breaking, and my heart is broken.”
Less than a week after their mother’s death Nicole and her sister Antonia, 55, took to Instagram to share a joint post thanking friends and fans for their condolences and well wishes.
“My sister and I along with our family want to thank you for the outpouring of love and kindness we have felt this week,” Nicole and Antonia wrote. “Every message we have received from those who loved and admired our Mother has meant more to us than we will ever be able to express. Thank you from our whole family for respecting our privacy as we take care of each other ❤️”
Entertainment
Prime Video’s Near-Perfect Action Hit Is Exactly What John Wick’s ‘Ballerina’ Should Have Been
Having clearly appealed to fans across demographics, a new Prime Video movie is proving to be a major hit for the streamer amid much bigger titles. It was released in the wake of star-driven tentpoles such as The Wrecking Crew, led by Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista, and Mercy, the sci-fi mystery starring Chris Pratt and Rebecca Ferguson. Both films dominated the Prime Video streaming charts for several weeks before the all-female action movie came out of nowhere to take the number one spot. It remains one of the top 10 movies on the global Prime Video leaderboard, and recently passed a major milestone.
The movie, directed by Vicky Jewson, features a quintet of young women as ballerinas who must defend themselves against a sinister adversary played by Uma Thurman. The five protagonists are played by Lana Condor, the star of Netflix’s To All the Boys trilogy; Iris Apatow, who played a supporting role in the Netflix series Love; Millicent Simmonds, who starred in A Quiet Place and its sequel; Maddie Ziegler, who rose to fame after appearing in a couple of Sia music videos; and Avantika, who played a supporting role in the Mean Girls remake.
Here’s the Action Movie That’s Ruling Prime Video’s Streaming Charts
The movie in question is Pretty Lethal. It premiered on Prime Video on March 25 and, according to FlixPatrol, has spent more than 20 days on the streamer’s top 10 charts. Pretty Lethal received mixed reviews and is now sitting at a 56% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The aggregator website’s consensus reads, “Starting off with a fun hook and diluting it with a plethora of clichés, Pretty Lethal doesn’t reach its full operatic potential but doles out enough balletic action to remain reasonably en pointe.” In his review, Collider’s Ross Bonaime praised the film’s action sequences and noted its similarity to other movies produced by the original John Wick‘s co-director David Leitch. He wrote, “In one particularly inspired choice, these ballerinas decide to stick a razor blade between their toes and utilize their dance moves to fight off their attackers. Many of these fights are blunt and full of big, wild moments that mostly carry the film, despite its fairly weak narrative.” Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
-
March 25, 2026
- Runtime
-
88 minutes
- Director
-
Vicky Jewson
- Writers
-
Kate Freund
- Producers
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Kelly McCormick, Mike Karz, Piers Tempest, Bill Bindley
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