Entertainment
After ‘Resident Evil,’ Milla Jovovich Finds Her Biggest Challenge Yet
Summary
- Collider’s Perri Neiroff chats with Milla Jovovich for Protector.
- In this Q&A, Jovovich takes us behind the scenes, from her first reading of the script to the final days of production.
- She discusses the most challenging action sequences of her career, going “back to basics” after CGI’s hold on Hollywood, serving as a producer, and why Protector is so special to her.
In Protector, star and producer Milla Jovovich’s Nikki is called a “force of nature,” and there’s just no better way to describe Jovovich’s presence on screen. No matter the movie, no matter the role, whether it be The Fifth Element or Alice in Resident Evil, Jovovich commands the screen with a ferocity unique to her. This time, however, she tells Collider’s Perri Nemiroff, the job was personal: “I needed to tell this story.”
From director Adrian Grünberg (Rambo: Last Blood), Protector is an action movie that will appeal to fans of Taken, with propulsive fight sequences, and the “reigning queen of kick-ass” herself leading the charge. For Jovovich, who plays special ops soldier Nikki Halsted, and a mother who will stop at nothing to save her kidnapped daughter (Isabel Myers), it’s a powerful story that resonated with her own personal life.
In a recent Q&A with Nemiroff, Jovovich hit the stage to highlight the team that made their low-budget, 23-day shoot a reality, from condensing the script to a tighter 90-minute feature, all the way to the editing process. She shares her experience not only as the star, discussing why Protector is the most challenging action of her career, but also as the producer. “It’s the first movie I’ve ever taken from point A to point Z, and I am really proud of it,” she says, explaining how involved she stayed throughout, from evolving the script on set to handling the simpler matters at 4:00 in the morning. “It was the chance of a lifetime, and I never expected that I could do something like this.”
You can watch the full conversation in the video above, or read the transcript below.
Milla Jovovich Goes “Back to the Basics” With ‘Protector’
“There’s been such an overwhelm with big visual effects movies.”
MILLA JOVOVICH: We literally locked the picture less than two months ago. So, it’s been this whole year just editing and doing the soundtrack and scoring and editing and more scoring and color grading and editing and re-editing.
PERRI NEMIROFF: Not to jump ahead to the score, but it’s got an A+ score. I feel like the theme for your character almost has this booming The Shining-type feel. I just really enjoy those sounds!
JOVOVICH: Yeah, we definitely wanted Nikki’s theme to be strong, so when you hear that dun, dun, boom, you know it’s going to go down. You know something’s going to happen.
I need that to play every time I walk into a room.
Going back to the beginning now, from the perspective of an actor, when this material first came your way, is there anything about it that made you stop and go, “I would have something to gain from this as an actor who’s always looking to challenge myself in new ways and evolve my craft?”
JOVOVICH: When I got this script, definitely, for me, it always has to resonate, and, like, “What can I bring to it?” in a sense that immediately I can feel that this is something I could really bring something to. The script was very different when I got my hands on it. It was beautifully written, but it was all in Korean, and it was kind of translated. I don’t know, it kind of felt a little bit translated by ChatGPT, maybe, but the essence of it was so powerful, which is really like the relationship of the nightmare the parent goes through when their child is taken from them. In a way, for me, what I found that I could do with this is I sit up at night thinking of what I would do to somebody that took my kid, and here’s my opportunity to make a movie where I can actually put that out there, and get that out of my system, while also highlighting something that is so prevalent in this country and so prevalent everywhere right now in some of the highest circles of society.
Now, to look at the other hat that you wear on this production, you’re not only the star of this movie, you’re also a producer on it, and I’m always curious to hear about this part of the process. When the material comes your way, at what point do you figure out, “I can best serve this movie by not only starring in it, but also serving as a producer, too?”
JOVOVICH: When I realized that it needed to be rewritten to condense it, to get to the meat of it, and simplify it so that the concept would be able to be something that would come across to an audience in like 90 minutes. It was much more sprawling. The original took place in Bangkok and many other places, so I wanted to bring it to a place where we could make it for the amount of money that we had, as well, but also make it well.
I’ve been very lucky to work with our DP and the cameraman, Vern Nobles, on many of the films I’ve made in the past with my husband, and he happens to live 15 minutes away from our house, so we called Vern and said, “Listen, there’s this film, and we need you because we need cameras.” And he just happens to collect cameras. He literally has, like, 15 cameras in his garage, so he took his U-Haul. He had just worked with the director, Adrian Grünberg, on Rambo: Last Blood, and he said, “There’s this great director that I think would really bring a lot to the film because we have a very short shooting schedule, and we need someone who knows what they’re doing, who knows how to shoot action really well, and who knows how to keep to a budget and keep to a timeline.” And of course, that’s super important. So, we were able to bring this team together that was very close, that had worked together before.
A lot of films, I feel like they start, and nobody really knows each other. It’s like starting a new company. By the time you wrap, it’s like a well-oiled machine, but at the beginning, it’s like everyone’s still getting to know each other. Here, we had that core team that knew how to work together. We had experience of over 10 years working together, so I think that really helped.
And of course, having such an awesome cast and being able to get such great actors, being able to shoot in Las Cruces, where so much of this actually happens, it was incredible to really be able to take this film and make it as gritty and raw and realistic as possible. I think there’s been such an overwhelm with big visual effects movies, and I’m part of the problem. [Laughs] I’ve done a lot of them. So for me, it was actually really fun to go back to the basics and really use the practical effects, really make sure that my fight sequences were something that a woman trained as I was in the special ops in the military, using our close friends, who were military advisors on other films that I had been on to really develop the character from the ground up, and make sure that the style of fighting that Nikki had was something that a woman could do. It wasn’t just about, “Let’s do some wire work and fix it in post and do some Hong Kong flips and some butterfly kicks and some crazy martial arts,” which, actually, on my first day, there was a lot of that, and I was like, “Okay, guys, calm down. This is different. This character needs to be real, and I want to portray her in a way where any woman watching this with that military experience, any woman, let’s say in the military, watching this with her experience, would be like, “Yeah, I could do that.”
Obviously, it’s a movie, and obviously it’s action-packed, and it’s supposed to be exciting and fun to watch Nikki kick ass, but it’s really rooted in reality, which I love. It’s got that gritty feeling to it, that raw, practical, we-did-it-ourselves feeling. I mean, when I was hanging upside down, that wasn’t makeup. I literally was a newborn baby, like purple and blue. [Laughs] That was not makeup. That was for real.
There was something Adrian said in our press notes about that that really wowed me. He was saying that you can hang upside down for about 1.5 minutes and then you start to get dizzy, but you did it for 4.5 minutes-worth of the cameras rolling. How? How do you do that?
JOVOVICH: Well, I felt fine, first of all. I wanted to get it because it was 2:00 in the morning, we had to wrap in a few hours, and it was one of the most important scenes in the film. It’s so beautifully shot, as well. It’s such a great sequence. I really wanted to get it right. So, a lot of it was just because I was hanging upside down, and every time they would put me down, everyone would disperse. Everyone would go get coffee, go to the craft truck, and talk, and this and that, and it would take like half an hour to get everybody back and get me up there again. So at one point, I was like, “No, no, no, just keep rolling. We have two cameras.” So at this point, I’m talking to the other actor, Manny. I said, “Manny, at this point, take my head, but be aware of where the camera is. Just turn my head, and don’t block me because light is there.”
It was just really so much in a way like you would do it on stage. It was just one long scene, and we just continually reset so that at the end it was almost choreographed in that sense to where we knew each beat so that the cameras and we were all in sync, and we could just get it done.
‘Protector’ Has the Most Intense Action Milla Jovovich Has Ever Done
“Let’s make it brutal. Let’s make it real.”
I have so many stunt-specific questions. You leaned into this a little bit before, but I love digging into the specifics of what it takes to fight like someone with this kind of military background. Given all the action movies you’ve done, do you come into this project mostly prepped, or are there any specific things you really have to brush up on to get just right for this kind of person?
JOVOVICH: For me, the action was some of the most challenging I’ve ever done in a film, period, because it was really happening. It wasn’t like, “Oh, we’ll do it in post. We’ll fix it in post. Oh, it’s a green screen. Let’s just get the double in.” But yeah, I have 30 years of experience of being an action hero, and so I come with that experience. I think what really sets this movie apart for me was that, as a producer, I had the ability to really tailor the action sequences to Nikki’s character, so it wasn’t just kind of redundant and didn’t feel generic in that way. It felt real, and it felt different from the movies I had made before. It felt like, “That’s Nikki Halsted. That’s the way she fights.”
There were a lot of things that I learned and that we all learned when we had to fix the way we were looking at it, which was this isn’t about taekwondo. This isn’t about wushu. This isn’t about big flourishing stuff. This is about tight combat. This is about using your mind. This is about really taking people by surprise. This is really about using your wits, being sharp, and being fast. People, I think, really underestimate the element of surprise. In most fights, number one, you end up on the ground, but in reality, you have to do what people don’t expect because you win half the battle just by putting people off, and I think that’s what she does in the end is using her skills, but at the same time, using her brain to be able to really have the element of surprise on her behalf, and using it to the best of her ability.
So many follow-up questions! You emphasized before that some of the stunts you did in this movie were some of the most difficult of your career, and it made me want to ask this. Of all the movies you’ve made, is there any particular stunt from a past film that you would deem the toughest, and how does the toughest in this movie compare to that?
JOVOVICH: Well, this isn’t the first time I’ve hung upside down. But again, in the past it has been easier because we had more money, we had more time, we had more cameras. We had more freedom. The action sequences, for instance, in the Resident Evil movies, we would have days to do them. On this, we would have a few hours. We shot for 23 days, and literally, over three weeks of that were nights. So, it was really hard for me on my body, because when you’re shooting nights, and then it’s six-day weeks, you have that one day to recover, and usually that one day was spent talking to my military advisor, Natalie Mallue. She’s a lieutenant colonel in the Army.
We were lucky because we got to shoot a lot of it in the order that you see it in, and so there was a lot of thought that went on, where it was like, “Okay, now I’ve shot this, so are we going to just go by what’s in the script? But maybe we need to change it.” So there was a lot of just talking with the director, and talking to the writer, and being able to, on the spot, change dialogue, change where Nikki’s coming from, what she does in a certain situation. Like that whole scene with Sullivan, where I shoot his kneecaps off. That was something that happened literally on the day, because of the fight where I said, “I don’t like to repeat myself.” I was like, “Let’s do that again.” [Laughs] Because at this point, this guy is pissing me off. He’s not answering my questions, and now he’s down on the floor, and she’s going to kill him anyway because he deserves it, so let’s make it brutal. Let’s make it real.
Also, I’m not one for just gratuitous violence in that sense. I love fantasy. I love sci-fi. I love horror. I love the fun of it. But this movie, I did not want the violence to feel gratuitous; I wanted the violence to feel satisfying and validating, and I wanted every person watching it to go, “I would have done the same thing.” It’s just something that comes from your gut, where you just want to destroy somebody.
‘Protector’ Is Personal
Jovovich shares why this is more than an action movie for her.
Of all the ambitious set pieces you have to do in this movie, going into filming, which did you think was going to be the most challenging for you, and ultimately, was it, or did a different one catch you by surprise?
JOVOVICH: This is a question for the audience because I’m really interested, coming from the writing and the editing: did you guys see the ending coming?
AUDIENCE: No.
JOVOVICH: Good. [Laughs] For me, through the editing process, that was one of the things, there was always talking with the other producers about, “How much do we show? How much do we show?” And so many times in cinema, and especially, I think, not to say anything adverse about Western cinema, but it almost feels like people feel like they need to spoon-feed it to an audience, and I really felt like I wanted people leaving the theater with questions. I didn’t want to put this big bow on it. This is a woman who’s suffered such trauma in her life, and I think in the end, it wasn’t about the action sequence; it wasn’t about killing the bad guy at the end. That happens, but actually, that’s not the end of the movie. That’s not the reality. The reality is what it is, what you saw, and that was so hard.
For me, being a mother of three girls, obviously, it was something that I really felt like I needed to tell this story. It was really important for me when my eldest daughter watched the movie to see it because I did it for her, and I wanted her to know how hard it was for me to make, because I was thinking about her the whole time. The scene where I finally find her, I was just sitting on my phone and looking at all these pictures of her as a baby and growing up and getting ready to do the scene. Emotionally, it’s crazy because I’m not a method actor in any way, but at the same time, I feel like every character you do leaves an impression on you, and changes you because you do end up living in someone else’s shoes and seeing through their perspective no matter who they are. So, it does kind of change you in a way.
But coming to this film as a producer, as well, my husband produces all of our movies, and I’m constantly asking him, “Why do you need to do that again? Why do you need to go to the sound edit? Why do you need to go to the color grade?” And then suddenly, here I am doing what he does and understanding, like, “Oh my god, if I’m not there, that’s what the movie’s going to look like. If I’m not there, that’s what it’s going to sound like. If I don’t take it and just kind of hold it close and really work on it to the best of my ability…”
My god, this whole last summer, we were on vacation, and I tell you what, I know a lot of people say after vacation you need a vacation, but we had three kids on vacation, and we were waking up at 4:00 a.m. because our sound engineer and Don Cherel, who did the soundtrack with us… He’s a fabulous musician and was also a cameraman. He’s also a friend of Vern’s. Everybody did everything. It was amazing. But he’s on the East Coast, we were on the West Coast, so it’s three hours ahead for him, so we would be waking up at 4:00 in the morning just to sit down and go through the sounds of stupid, simple things, where you go, “What does this slide sound like? That slide just sounds so eh. You need like the slide to be like…” There are so many slides you can have, and you never realize how difficult that is until you actually experience it, and you realize how different a movie can be when you give it that love, and you give it that energy and that time. Especially not just with my scenes, but with the scenes in the police station, with the scenes with the other actors, the scenes that I wasn’t in, to really be able to keep the momentum going, to have the right music, to make sure that the way it was cut together to form the relationships that I knew were there, but just needed to be found.
As an actor, I think it gave me a really great upper hand because I was looking for performance, and a lot of times I would find moments that you wouldn’t even think. It was like a moment, even sometimes, where the actor didn’t even know they were being filmed. They were just reacting. I was like, “That’s real.” In the end, it doesn’t matter what you’re doing.
This is a great story my mom told me when she was in film school in the former Soviet Union. She was watching this senior actor on stage, and it was the last show. The graduates of that year would do their big performance, and he had this big speech, and at the end, he did this pause, and everybody was just watching him, like, “What is he thinking?” And then he finally said the line, and everybody was just overwhelmed. After the show, they came up to him, and they said, “What were you thinking when you took that pause?” And he goes, “You see those lights at the end of the theater? I was counting every single one.” [Laughs] I mean, the fact is, sometimes it’s as simple as just being real. It’s not about emoting or pretending or method acting. It’s just being real. Just doing something real.
Sometimes when I’m doing a scene, I’ll pinch myself, just something to get a reaction that I know is going to make my face do something. It might not be “respectable,” it’s not method, but it’s real. For an audience watching a movie, you need to make it real for them. In the end, we’re making movies. We’re not living real life, right? So we don’t need to really do drugs to play a drug addict, we just need you to believe that through our ability to trick you, right? It’s smoke and mirrors, and it’s the ability to have the education and the experience to make those smoke and mirrors work so well that people have that, “Wow!” They believe it, you know? In the end, that’s what performing has always been about, from the very beginning, from when people were on stage doing vaudeville. It was just that magic of bringing people into a story and then having them live with you through it and having you believe it — not because the special effects were the best, it was just because it was a great story. The actors, we’re giving you something real, and you went with it, and you bought it because you wanted to.
But this movie, it took a lot out of me. I mean, here I am still in the middle of it. It’s going to get released, finally. Finally, it’s going to be behind me. Not in a bad way, but just in a way of like, I can release it and move forward with my life because I’ve been obsessed with it for a year, and I need to take a step back and put Nikki to bed, finally.
‘Protector’ Shows a Whole New Side of Milla Jovovich
“It was a chance of a lifetime.”
For anyone out there who watches Collider Ladies Night, you know we always end those interviews with this particular question, and the way you’re describing how all-in you were with this production and how close to it you’ve been for so long is making me want to ask you this right now. Before I ask the question, I will just stress that when we were watching the credits, every single name you saw is of the utmost importance to making the movie. It’s a team effort, and every single one of those people is invaluable, but I find that in film and television, not enough of us stop to tell ourselves, “Good job,” nearly enough, so I want to know something that you accomplished making this movie that you know you’re always going to be able to look back on and say to yourself, “I’m so damn proud of what I did there.”
JOVOVICH: It’s such a funny question. It’s a great question because I think I am really hard on myself. I guess in the end, you do your best, and I know I did my best to make this movie the very, very best that it could be, and the story moved me. Everybody involved worked so hard, and I’m so grateful to the cast and to the crew for putting their all, for coming back to do some reshoots for free, literally in our home. People were there for real. Even when we were filming, a lot of times, they’ll say action, and some of the crew will check their phones and this and that, but people were watching. People were there with us.
But it’s the first movie I’ve ever taken from point A to point Z, and I am really proud of it. I am really proud of it, regardless. Some people are going to love it, some people are going to hate it. That’s the business I’m in, right? It is what it is. Some people are going to love it, some people are going to hate it. But it was a chance of a lifetime, and I never expected that I could do something like this. I never in my life expected that I could do something like this, so yeah, I am very proud of it.
As you should be! Let’s take a couple of audience questions now.
AUDIENCE: Did anybody ever figure out how many people you killed throughout the movie?
JOVOVICH: You know what? My dad is a great person who will be able to answer that because he keeps a really good body count. Because every time I call him, he’s like, “Kiddo, how many did you kill today?” [Laughs] So I know he’s going to be keeping score! I hope I don’t lose my crown as the reigning queen of kick-ass with this movie.
AUDIENCE: What made you decide to go from modeling to acting? What was the draw? What was the attraction?
JOVOVICH: Acting was something I was always going to do. My mother was an actress. We came to America with nothing, and she taught me what she knew because she realized that we needed some way to make our way in a new country. She didn’t speak the language. She was young, and she was gorgeous and so talented, but she wasn’t going to find work in a new country. So, she kind of put all of her energy into me. So I never really had a choice of what I was going to do, because I had a family to support. That was always very ingrained in me from a very early age, was that we all have to do our part to help our family make it to move forward in a new country.
AUDIENCE: It just seemed like you were so big as a model.
JOVOVICH: But, you know, at the same time, if you look at my early work, like Return to the Blue Lagoon, for instance, I was 14 years old when I did that press tour, just turned 15, and I got ripped to pieces. The kind of things that grown people said about a child, like how horrible I was, what a horrible actress I was. I’m in the middle of a press tour, and I’m having to read these reviews and then go on national television and try to hold my head up and be professional. It gave me a really big chip on my shoulder for a long time.
Thank god I had music. I love to sing, I love to write, and I had something else to do to kind of take my disappointment in myself, knowing that my mom was this amazing actress and I could never live up to her, and here was the proof. And at the time in a kid’s life that’s so pivotal when you’re a teenager, it was very hard. I think it definitely made me who I am. It’s still things that I’m dealing with today, of trying to love myself and accept myself, and go, “You’ve done a lot of good and inspired a lot of people with your career,” and to remind myself of that, because in the end, that girl who got those bad reviews is still there going, “Will I ever really be good?”
I do feel like this film was one of the first of my career where you kind of see, not the real me, but definitely a part of who I can be. Not the fun me, but the me that, in a disaster scenario… [Laughs] My family will laugh because there have been times when we went on vacation, there was a tsunami warning, and I started hiding food under the table. Then they were like, “It’s coming! It’s coming!” and I took my hand luggage, and I started walking like 50 feet up, and I was like, “Come on, family! We’re going 50 feet up,” as if that’s going to save us. But that part of me that’s like, “I’m going to take care of my family no matter what.” It’s just this calm.
That’s what I love about Nikki. I find in a lot of parents, and with myself, as well, in some of the most traumatic situations with your kid, when they get hurt or are in the hospital, you get this calm. You don’t panic because you have to take care of your child, so you can’t be like, “Ahh!” So, it’s almost like a shark, when their eyes glaze over, and you just have to do what you have to do. That is so what Nikki is all about, until that one moment where she almost dies, and she snaps. That was the one moment where I wanted to show her let go, and to show the human behind that machine of, “I’m gonna make this happen. I’m gonna make sure that my daughter gets found. I’m going to save her. I’m not going to panic. I’m never going to panic. I’m just going to go from one point to the next,” like a machine, almost. That was very real for me.
PERRI NEMIROFF: I’m so glad you brought that scene up. There are so many standout beats in this movie, but that particular one left me breathless.
JOVOVICH: That scene was written in the midst of everything. Again, this movie evolved, and that scene in particular really stood out for me because when it came to the day of shooting it, I talked to Isabel Myers, who played my daughter, and she’s such a wonderful actress and such a wonderful collaborator, and I said, “This has to be real.” We talked to the DP, and I said, “You can’t be like this angelic figure with this light around you. I want people, for a second, to go, ‘Wait a minute, is that her daughter sitting right next to her?’” Again, to just strip away all of the fluff and really just have that moment of, “Wow, this is what I’ve wanted to say to my kid all this time, and I never could because we didn’t leave it on a good note.” And I just want her to know that I’m going to do everything I can to get her back, to get her home. It was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done.
Protector is in theaters now.
Entertainment
Former Below Deck Star Sues NBCUniversal for $850 Million
Former Below Deck star Emile Kotze is suing NBCUniversal for $850 million after claiming the network perpetrated a “coordinated campaign of exploitation, harassment and deceit” during his time on the show.
Kotze, who appeared on season 3 of the Bravo series, was 23 years old when he worked as a deckhand on the reality show. Now 34, Kotze has been embroiled in a legal battle with Bravo’s parent network since June 2025, Us Weekly can confirm.
Kotze claimed in his initial lawsuit that he was “sexually harassed, manipulated and subjected to degrading treatment” during and after he filmed the show in 2015.
The yachty filed a first amended complaint on June 13, 2025, less than two weeks after he initiated the lawsuit in the Southern District of New York.
In October 2025, Kotze filed a second amended complaint, claiming that after he was cast on Below Deck, the showrunners decided they wanted him to be part of a “showmance” with female crew member Raquel “Rocky” Dakota.
One executive allegedly pointed to Kotze’s South African background and possible “traditional values” as something that would help with the story line.
“We can get some fish-out-of-water tension with him. Plus, he’s not union or anything, we can push him harder,” the executive allegedly said, according to the court filing.
Kotze further claimed that once filming began, production “piled” him with alcohol during his downtime and was “encouraging him to ‘make a move’” on Dakota, despite his alleged hesitation about pursuing a romantic relationship with her.
Kotze alleged that during cast nights out after charters, the producers would encourage them to take shots and do drinking games. He claimed that one such night led to Dakota “in a distraught emotional state” climbing the yacht’s mast and jumping overboard.
Kotze claimed in the docs that he was “traumatized witnessing this, as he feared for Rocky’s life.” He alleged that production “treated it as a dramatic plot twist – cameras kept rolling, and they later used the footage as entertainment.”

“After filming, Defendants defamed Plaintiff by deceptively editing footage to portray him in a false and damaging light, misappropriated his likeness for continued commercial gain without consent, and engaged in a cover-up and retaliation campaign to silence and discredit him when he sought redress,” the lawsuit read, claiming that Kotez’s alleged mistreatment continued once filming wrapped.
NBCUniversal had no comment.
Kotze is seeking between $633 million and $850 million in damages, claiming in his lawsuit that $123 million was lost in future earnings because his “once-promising yachting career was destroyed.”
He said he is seeking “no less than $10 million” in damages for emotional distress and proposed for punitive damages he be awarded $500 million.
Kotze also asked the court to demand that the network remove or delete any “intimate images or photos” of him from all platforms and stop future distribution or streaming of season 3 episodes “containing defamatory or unauthorized content.”
If the episodes remain up, Kotze wants the network to add a disclaimer to the show “clarifying that certain portrayals of the Plaintiff were manipulated.”
NBC, meanwhile, filed a motion to dismiss the first amended complaint in October 2025, but a judge denied the motion on January 3, People reported.
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Polly Pocket’s pop culture collectibles are compact tributes to “Friends”, “Stranger Things”, “Harry Potter,” and more
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They start at just $18
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“The Princess Bride” star Cary Elwes honors Rob Reiner on first birthday since murder: 'Missing you so much'
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“Still hard to believe you’re gone,” the actor wrote.
Entertainment
The Very Real Fistfight Star Trek Hid On Screen
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

For a franchise that’s all about peaceful exploration, Star Trek has always placed a special emphasis on fighting. From the infamous “Kirk-fu” of The Original Series to the Vulcan martial arts in Discovery, it never takes too long for an away team mission to lead to fisticuffs. Of course, we all know that the fisticuffs in question are just as fake as the special effects that bring these sci-fi series to life.
On one occasion, though, Star Trek ended up hiding a real fistfight in plain sight. In the Deep Space Nine episode “Invasive Procedures,” future Voyager star Tim Russ accidentally really punched Nana Visitor’s stunt double during a fight scene. While everyone else freaked out, she urged Russ to keep going because of how real the fight was going to look onscreen!
A Star Trek Icon Returns

“Invasive Procedures” is a Deep Space Nine episode in which the station has to be mostly evacuated thanks to a plasma storm. The command staff stays on as a skeleton crew, but it doesn’t take long before they are invaded and overpowered by a ragtag group of bad guys. One of the invaders is an unjoined Trill, and her goal is horrifyingly simple: she wants the symbiont inside Dax’s body, but without it, the perky science officer will soon die.
Among the bad guys is a Klingon mercenary played by Tim Russ, who would later famously play the Vulcan Tuvok on Star Trek: Voyager. This was actually his second appearance in the franchise, as he had previously appeared as a different kind of mercenary in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Starship Mine.” He would later make a memorable appearance in Star Trek: Generations before joining the lead cast of Voyager.
Deep Space Nine’s Strongest Fighter

Obviously, Russ made a major impact on the Star Trek producers early on, which is why they kept bringing him back for future appearances. In “Invasive Procedures,” however, he made an impact of an entirely different kind: with his fist. During the occupation of Deep Space Nine, Major Kira put up a fight, and she was scripted to scrap with the Klingon played by Russ.
According to Star Trek Monthly (issue 52), the fight went sideways when Tim Russ accidentally landed a punch. At the time, Patricia Tallman (who also played Lyta on Babylon 5) was Nana Visitor’s stunt double, so she was the one engaging in the onscreen fistfight. After Russ landed an actual punch, Tallman said that “everyone on the set freaked out, but I said, ‘No, don’t stop! That was really good – it looked very authentic!”
When Stunts Get Real

The stuntwoman had her way, and “we finished the fight there and then.” To her credit, it was a good call: while “Invasive Procedures” isn’t the best Star Trek episode, it does feature one of the most memorable fights in the entire franchise. That wouldn’t have happened if Patricia Tallman hadn’t been willing to take a punch and keep on filming.
While Tim Russ was horrified at accidentally punching a fellow actor, everything worked out. The onscreen fight looked excellent, and he went on to later have a thriving career as Star Trek’s second most-famous Vulcan. As for his Tuvok character, we can only assume he would declare that Tallman made the right call: after all, making their onscreen battle look as authentic as possible was only logical!

Entertainment
Netflix Has a 7-Part Horror Miniseries ‘From’ Fans Need To Watch Next
The third season of From might have wrapped on MGM+ in late 2024 with the series set to return for Season 4 in 2026, but it remains one of TV’s most chilling small-town horror stories. The people of the unnamed hamlet are just trying to survive each day while dealing with a mysterious group of evil night creatures. However, just five years ago, the guru of macabre, Mike Flanagan, created and directed a seven-episode miniseries for Netflix with many of the same plot devices and gruesome bloodletting. In Midnight Mass, available now on, it’s the residents of a sleepy, isolated island town that deal with the wrath of an evil presence exacerbated by a haunting sense of existential dread.
In what is his beefiest and best role to date, Hamish Linklater leads a strong ensemble cast that includes Zach Gilford, Kate Siegel, Henry Thomas, and Annabeth Gish. Suppose you’re digging the vibes of John Griffin‘s From, in that case, you should absolutely watch (or even rewatch) this terrifying creep show that ventures into religious epistemology and how extremely dark forces can be misinterpreted.
What Is ‘Midnight Mass’ About?
On the small island town of Crockett, the Monsignor of the local Catholic Church has mysteriously disappeared, leaving the God-fearing congregation needing help and new leadership. The people of Crockett are struggling as the fishing economy that drives the town is shrinking. The sleepy town is dying until a charismatic priest named Father Paul Hill (Linklater) arrives to ostensibly replace Monsignor John Pruitt. Along with his undeniable charm and knowledge of scripture, he brings a series of inexplicable miracles that revitalize the dreary island.
But, like in From, a malevolent being lurks, attempting to exploit the desperate populace. Flanagan does brilliant work interweaving the stories of an ensemble of players who are all engaging characters with unique storylines. When they start to realize that Father Paul is leading them down a dark path, it is too late, and dozens of the people in the community suffer the consequences of having blind faith in what turns out to be an irreparably flawed man who has no idea of the destruction he has brought to Crockett Island.
‘Midnight Mass’ Has the Same Dreadful Tone as ‘From’
There are obvious similarities between Midnight Mass and From, including a small and isolated group of people cut off from the larger society and subject to the whims of an influential entity like Father Paul. Even as Paul brings a sense of hope and executes miracles of healing power, there is a feeling that it is a precursor to something else—something dangerous. In that sense, the ambiance of the two shows is unyielding existential dread, as if the audience is waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Fortunately, while the slow-burning story of Paul’s secret forms throughout the series, Flanagan writes a collection of salt-of-the-earth people with interesting backstories. Riley Flynn (Gilford) is a recovering alcoholic who has returned to Crockett Island after having served time in jail for the vehicular manslaughter of a young woman. He fell asleep at the wheel because he was drunk. His love interest, Erin Greene (Siegel), tries to leave the small-town life behind her for greener pastures as a performer, but has also returned, getting pregnant and failing to achieve her dreams. The relationship between these two and their deep discussions about life and death is both profound and enlightening.
Father Paul’s Deadly Secret Devastates the Small Town in ‘Midnight Mass’
The unfortunate souls trapped in the Midwestern town deal with a deadly group of ghastly monsters every night in From. Midnight Mass is different because it continues collecting more gunpowder to deliver a massive haymaker of a shotgun blast in the final sequence. The series finale is intended to be Flanagan’s interpretation of the Bible’s Book of Revelations and the End of Days as it applies to the people of Crockett Island. He uses humanity’s shortcomings, lack of understanding, and misinterpretation of scripture to punctuate his story. Father Paul was wrong about everything regarding the bloodthirsty angel he brought back to the town.
He has brought the wrath of a cruel and winged vampire with designs to exsanguinate and own the souls of everyone on the island. He has brought a plague in the form of a ghoulish bloodsucker onto an island that has been completely cut off from the mainland and the rest of civilization. In the end, Flanagan intends to demonstrate how meek and clueless humanity is and that faith, while good for many people, can be twisted by a few in power. The result is a cataclysm that sees only two children survive as they row a small canoe away from an island engulfed in flames.
Midnight Mass is available to stream on Netflix in the U.S.
Entertainment
Caroline Wozniacki Flaunts Bikini Body After Baby No. 3
Tennis pro Caroline Wozniacki has a must-see bikini body.
Wozniacki, 35, showed off her figure in a sizzling hot swimsuit while enjoying a yacht outing with husband David Lee in St. Barths. In a carousel of photos, which she shared via Instagram on Thursday, March 5, Wozniacki was seen modeling a fiery set featuring a textured red triangle cup top finished with halter straps. She styled the itty-bitty piece with low-rise bottoms that hugged her hips.
The athlete made her look even more glamorous with a number of silver and gold bracelets stacked on one wrist. She further accessorized with a bronze scrunchie on her other arm and black shades.
Wozniacki went makeup-free while soaking up the sun and wore her blonde hair down and styled in a blowout.
When fans swiped through her carousel, they were met with even steamier snaps of Wozniacki taking an outdoor shower. She leaned her head back and rinsed her hair out in one pic before turning to the side and laughing in another.
She also posed with Lee, 42, who wore blue swim trunks. The couple, who share daughter Olivia, 4, and sons James, 2, and Max, 7 months, wrapped their arms around each other and gazed at the camera.

“Lady in red👙🌊☀️⛵️😍,” she captioned the post. Her celebrity friends and followers were quick to praise her in the comments section.
“OMG!!! Hot!!!😍🔥🔥,” one wrote, while golfer Michelle Wie West commented, “DAYUMMMMM.” Karlie Kloss also gushed, “🔥🔥🔥.” Olympian Donna Vekic playfully added, “Probably ate pasta and french fries before taking these pics 🥲.”
Wozniacki announced that she gave birth to Max in July 2025. At the time, she shared an adorable pic of Olivia and James cuddling with her newborn on a couch. “Max Wozniacki Lee, born July 26, 2025! Mom and baby are healthy and our family couldn’t be happier! ❤️✨,” she captioned the post.
Entertainment
Britney Spears Reportedly Feels ‘Regretful’ After DUI Arrest
Britney Spears is reportedly feeling “embarrassed” by her DUI arrest as she is worried about how it could affect her children.
A rep for the “Toxic” singer has since shared that she’s “going to take the steps” to get better and would have her sons by her side for emotional support.
Britney Spears’s past struggles with mental health issues are no news, but an insider recently shared that her ex-husband Kevin Federline‘s memoir sent her into a “downward” spiral.
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Britney Spears Is ‘Embarrassed’ By DUI Arrest

Britney Spears has reportedly been left embarrassed by her recent arrest for driving under the influence, as she worries over how it’ll affect her sons, Sean Preston and Jayden James.
A source close to the pop icon shared that she is feeling “very emotional and regretful” about the situation amid reports she’s on the path to turning a new leaf.
“She’s very emotional and regretful this morning. She’s also embarrassed because of how it could affect her sons,” the insider said, per People Magazine. “She loves them very much and never wants them to feel like she’s letting them down.”
Following her arrest, a rep shared that the boys will still be by her side as they hope to help her get through this difficult phase.
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“Her boys are going to be spending time with her. Her loved ones are going to come up with an overdue needed plan to set her up for success for well-being,” the rep said.
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Kevin Federline Made Disturbing Claims About The Singer’s Relationship With The Boys

Spears has not had the best of relationships with her sons, who have stayed with their dad all through their lives.
In his memoir, “You Thought You Knew,” released in October 2025, Federline claimed that she and her children were not on speaking terms.
He claimed that her visits with them became “less frequent, then stopped altogether” because the boys were “emotionally drained” by the dynamic. He also wrote about an incident where she wielded a weapon while watching them sleep.
“They would awaken sometimes at night to find her standing silently in the doorway, watching them sleep — ‘Oh, you’re awake?’ — with a knife in her hand,” he wrote.
According to NewsNation, a source also confirmed that they were not speaking at the time.
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“As of now, she’s not talking to anyone,” the insider said. “The boys are very worried about their mom, but there’s not much they can do.”
The source also claimed that Spears was in a “very dark” place at the time, and shared that “It’s gotten very bad again.”
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Britney Spears Says Her Relationship With Her Sons Is ‘Complex’

The “Gimme More” singer hit back at Federline’s claims in an X post, but said that her relationship with her sons was “complex.”
“I have always pleaded and screamed to have a life with my boys,” she wrote. “Relationships with teenage boys is complex. I have felt demoralized by this situation and have always asked and almost begged for them to be a part of my life.”
Spears continued, “Sadly, they have always witnessed the lack of respect shown by [their] own father for me. They need to take responsibility for themselves. With one son only seeing me for 45 min in the past 5 years, and the other with only 4 visits in the past 5 years. I have pride, too. From now on, I will let them know when I am available.”
The pop star added that she will “always love them” and has been trying to live a “sacred and private life” despite the media portrayal of her.
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Kevin Federline’s Book May Have Worsened The Singer’s Situation

Meanwhile, a source claimed Federline’s damaging allegations in his memoir took a negative toll on her and led to a “downward” spiral that eventually led to her DUI arrest.
“But the truth is, this has been going on for a while,” the source told Page Six. “Her behavior has become increasingly erratic in recent months. She goes from being fine to being not.”
The insider continued, “It was the Kevin book that really sent her over the edge, and it’s been downhill from there. It really impacted her emotionally.”
Britney Spears Felt Exploited By Her Ex-Husband

Speaking more on the singer’s recent spiral, the source told the news outlet that Spears felt her ex-husband, Federline, had “used” her after years of giving him all that he asked for while raising their sons.
The source said that Spears “feels like she gave Kevin everything that he wanted over the years” and “paid him so much money,” but he still “exploited her” with his memoir.
“He used her; he wanted to ruin her,” the insider added. “And that was a really hard pill to swallow; it absolutely killed her that someone would want to damage her so much.”
Entertainment
What Is a Trad Son? Breaking Down Trend of Stay-at-Home Kids
Move over “trad wives,” because you might have some competition from the “trad sons” for the latest viral craze.
The term “trad son” started making waves via TikTok in 2025, describing adult sons that live at home for an extended period long after graduating from high school or college.
“There’s a lot of unrest in men in their 20s and 30s, today. There’s a lot of insecurity and instability. Most young people haven’t truly found themselves yet,” family therapist Kathryn Smerling told The New York Post in October 2025. “For some, it’s comforting to be at home. They feel safe and secure with their parents in a very conflictual world.”
Soon enough, several of these so-called “trad sons” began popularizing the term in a flurry of social media posts. Keep scrolling to learn more:
What Is a ‘Trad Son’?
The term “trad son” describes a child who has continued to live with his parents into adulthood in exchange for helping with various household chores.
The movement got a boost when Brendan Liaw appeared on Jeopardy! in May 2025 when he was 28, where he was introduced as a “stay-at-home son.”
“It’s a pretty good gig, but I’m worried I’m going to be called a loiterer at some point,” Liaw told Vanity Fair in October 2025. “I really threw it out there as a little joke. I don’t want to be permanently associated with the face of unemployment forever.”
He added, “I think it’s fun that we get to talk about what it’s like to be a young man, navigating the labor market right now. I think it’s very different than it was for my parents or other people of other generations.”
Liaw eventually did move away from home later in 2025, relocating to Canada to attend law school at the University of British Columbia.
Why Are Men Interested in Becoming ‘Trad Sons’ Over Independent Living?
Several social media users have disclosed their reasoning for living at home, often citing the rising cost of living as a major factor.
“I just wanted to,” Luke Jonathan Parkhurst, for his part, told Vanity Fair in 2025. “I packed up and moved home and sold my house.”
Parkhurst, whose mother calls him a “hub-son,” begins his day by going to the gym while his mom walks the family dog. From there, Parkhurst picks up groceries from Costco before returning home to cook them both lunch. He handles other chores later in the day.
“Even at school, when they would ask what I wanted to be when I was older, I would always write, ‘stay-at-home son,’” he quipped to the outlet, revealing he identifies as a “truth seeker” but distances himself from traditional masculine values associated with new Republican figures. “When they talk about, ‘Hey, this is what a man’s supposed to do,’ I’m not saying they’re incorrect, but I have different perspectives on what I think a man should do as well.”
Are ‘Trad Sons’ Related to ‘Trad Wives’?
The “trad wives” movement, associated with women who follow stereotypical gender roles in their marriage, has gained traction through the likes of Hannah Neeleman and Nara Smith cooking their families home-cooked meals and raising a large brood of children. (Neeleman and Smith, however, both deny any connection to the label.)
Trad sons were given a similar name by virtue of living at home with goals of tackling housework.
Entertainment
Netflix’s 8-Part Harlan Coben Miniseries Is Still an Undisputed Classic
While Fool Me Once is certainly Harlan Coben‘s most-watched TV show, even grasping Netflix’s Top 10 most-watched TV shows of all-time list at one point, there are a few of his series that have remained under the radar. Among them is Stay Close, a 2021 eight-episode drama series on Netflix that’s full of twists and turns, and has scored an impressive 92% on Rotten Tomatoes.
The series, which has Coben’s signature style with mind-bending mystery, is the perfect weekend binge for anyone looking to be gripped from beginning to end. The story is all about how the past can come back to haunt you, even if you’re doing everything you can to move past it and reinvent yourself. But time has a way of playing tricks on you, as so does Coben.
What Is ‘Stay Close’ About?
Adapted by Danny Brocklehurst, Stay Close starts off with bride-to-be Megan Pierce (Cush Jumbo) as she enjoys her bachelorette party ahead of her seemingly picture-perfect wedding. But right when things are as happy as they can be, she gets a mysterious note on her doorstep that knocks her into place. The note is addressed to “Cassie,” her past self who she’s worked hard to keep buried. Right then, the suburban mother of three realizes she can’t escape her past, including her shady days as an exotic dancer at the strip club Vixens. As the series goes on, Megan tries to protect her family and confine her former life to the shadows, but new and old mysteries make it hard to keep everything under wraps.
Also essential to the series is Ray (Richard Armitage), a former documentary photographer who’s posing as a paparazzo, and Lorraine (Sarah Parish), an old acquaintance of Megan’s who comes back into her life unannounced. In Coben’s signature style, the series also follows an interconnected police investigation, this time led by the unrelenting DS Michael Broome (James Nesbitt), who becomes obsessed with solving a missing-person cold case. Their stories kick off when a man connected to their shared past disappears, 17 years to the night from another mystery, pulling them all into a web of lies, guilt, and unfinished business.
Harlan Coben Reveals Who You’re Most Likely To See in His Next Murder Mystery
The writer’s next project debuts on New Year’s Day.
‘Stay Close’ Is An Underseen Mystery Modern Classic
While Stay Close didn’t receive the same attention as Fool Me Once or the latest Run Away when it was released, it was nonetheless loved by critics. Among the highlights, in addition to Jumbo’s solid lead performance, is the powerful cast of actors, including Coben’s often used actors Nesbitt and Armitage. Together, they built the outer layers of the story, all while adding to Megan/Cassie’s central drama. Plus, like many of Coben’s shows, the mystery is carefully and deliberately constructed and revealed throughout the series, making each episode a puzzle piece of the story. One review called the series a “particularly bonkers, lightning-fast, highly binge-able thriller.
With that said, while Harlan Coben has been known as a master of mysteries on the page, his TV shows have continued to make for enthralling and gripping TV. 2021’s Stay Close does just that, delivering a forbidden romance, a string of unsolved murders, medical scares, and a delicious finale that will have viewers satisfied and even craving for more.
Daylight Saving Time — The Collider Movie Quiz!
Daylight Saving Time starts this weekend. Before we lose an hour of sleep, here’s a quiz about movie titles that contain Daylight, Saving, or Time.
- Release Date
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2021 – 2021-00-00
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James Nesbitt
DS Michael Broome
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Sarah Parish
Lorraine Griggs
Entertainment
Smokey Robinson Accusers Say He’s ‘Obstructing’ Case in Ongoing Legal Battle
Smokey Robinson
Accusers Hit Back in Legal Battle
Published
|
Updated
5:36 PM PT — Smokey’s lawyer Christopher Frost tells TMZ in response … “We are, unfortunately, not surprised that these plaintiffs and their lawyers are trying to get more media attention just after Mr. Robinson has announced new tour dates. We have explained in our lawsuit against them that their only real motivation is to recycle false allegations, vomit them all over the media at strategic times, and hope that they will affect Mr. Robinson’s livelihood and career enough to extort him into an undeserved settlement. That will not happen no matter how desperate Plaintiffs’ tactics become.”
Frost continues … “The plaintiffs’ recycled lamentations are clearly intended to mislead the public and hide their own misconduct. The truth is this: their discovery motions are a routine part of litigation and not newsworthy. What is newsworthy is the level of plaintiffs’ obfuscation and obstruction, for which we have repeatedly had to seek the court’s intervention.”
He adds … “It is the plaintiffs’ obfuscation and obstruction, for which we have repeatedly had to seek the court’s intervention, that is at issue here, on everything from completing depositions to imaging of cell phones to the numerous appeals we have had to make to the court to get deposition transcripts sent to the Los Angeles District Attorney. For them to somehow suggest the shoe is on the other foot could not be more absurd.”
Attorneys representing several of Smokey Robinson‘s accusers say they’ve asked a judge to step in … accusing the Motown legend of dragging his feet in the ongoing sexual-assault lawsuit.
John Harris — who represents Jane Does 1 through 4 — tells TMZ his team filed four motions to compel further discovery on Tuesday after what he describes as months of delays and incomplete responses from Smokey and his wife, Frances Robinson.
Harris claims the Robinsons’ discovery responses have been “evasive” and “designed to stall the progress of the case,” arguing the couple has repeatedly failed to comply with California’s discovery rules.
He also claims Smokey has been invoking the Fifth Amendment … even for routine questions, saying the constitutional protection shouldn’t be used as a blanket method to avoid answering questions or participating in the civil case.
According to Harris, the plaintiffs have done the opposite … fully cooperating with the legal process. He says all six accusers involved in the case — Jane Does 1 through 5 and John Doe 1 — have already sat for depositions — some as many as four times — despite what he calls intrusive questioning and retaliatory accusations.
Harris also points to Smokey’s $500 million countersuit against the accusers and their attorneys, describing it as an attempt to intimidate the plaintiffs.
The attorney says court intervention is now necessary to force transparency and move the case forward so the alleged victims can pursue justice.
As we previously reported … Robinson was first sued in May 2025 by four former housekeepers, who accused the singer of sexual battery and other misconduct while working in his home. Two additional accusers — including a male former employee — later sought to join the lawsuit, bringing the total number of plaintiffs to six.
Robinson has denied the allegations, and his attorney previously told TMZ the claims are part of an organized effort to extract money from the music icon.
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