Related: Grammy Awards 2026 Nominees and Winners: See the Complete List
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At the 2026 Grammy Awards, Album of the Year was undoubtedly the most coveted category of the night.
Bad Bunny got emotional while winning the accolade for Debí Tirar Más Fotos during the Sunday, February 1, ceremony at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. The singer gave most of his speech in Spanish, speaking directly to his home country, Puerto Rico.
“There is nothing that exists that we can’t accomplish,” he told the crowd, according to a translation. “Thank God, thank you to the Academy, and thank you to all the people who have believed in me throughout my career. To all the people who worked on this album. Thank you, Mami, for giving birth to me in Puerto Rico. I love you!”
The other nominees in the Album of the Year category were Justin Bieber’s Swag, Sabrina Carpenter’s Man’s Best Friend, Clipse’s Let God Sort Em Out, Lady Gaga’s Mayhem, Kendrick Lamar’s GNX, Leon Thomas’ Mutt and Tyler, The Creator’s Chromakopia.
“I want to dedicate this award to all the people who had to leave their homeland, their country, to follow their dreams,” Bad Bunny said in English, before continuing in Spanish.
“For all the people who have lost a loved one and,and even then have had to continue moving forward and continue with so much strength, this award is for you all. Thank you for so much love. I love you,” he concluded. “To all the Latinos in the entire world, and all the artists who came before and deserved to be on this stage picking up this award, thank you very much.”
Among the Album of the Year contenders, Lamar, 38, led the pack with nine overall nominations at the 2026 awards show. His nods included Record of the Year, Song of the Year and Best Melodic Rap Performance for “Luther” with SZA (which he won), Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for “30 for 30” with SZA, Best Rap Performance for “TV Off” with Lefty Gunplay and “Chains and Whips” with Clipse and Pharrell Williams (which he won), Best Rap Song for “TV Off” (which he won) and Best Rap Album for GNX (which he won).
Gaga, 39, followed close behind with seven nominations for Record of the Year, Song of the Year and Best Dance Pop Recording for “Abracadabra” (which she won), Best Pop Solo Performance for “Disease,” Best Pop Vocal Album for Mayhem (which she won) and Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for Harlequin.
Bad Bunny, 31, Carpenter, 26, Thomas, 32, and Tyler, The Creator, 34, each secured six total nods.
Bad Bunny earned his for Record of the Year and Song of the Year for “DtMF,” Best Música Urbana Album (which he won) and Best Album Cover for Debí Tirar Más Fotos and Best Global Music Performance for “EoO” (which he won), while Carpenter received hers for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, Best Pop Solo Performance and Best Music Video for “Manchild” and Best Pop Vocal Album for Man’s Best Friend.
Thomas landed his nominations for Best New Artist, Best R&B Performance for “Mutt — Live From NPR’s Tiny Desk,” Best Traditional R&B Performance for “Vibes Don’t Lie,” Best R&B Song (which he won) for “Yes It Is” and Best R&B Album for Mutt (which he won).
Tyler, The Creator, for his part, was up for Best Alternative Music Album for Don’t Tap the Glass, Best Rap Performance for “Darling, I” with Teezo Touchdown, Best Rap Song for “Sticky” with GloRilla, Sexyy Red and Lil Wayne and Best Rap Album and Best Album Cover for Chromakopia (which he won).
Meanwhile, Clipse — made up of Pusha T and Malice — earned five total nominations, including for Best Rap Performance for “Chains and Whips” with Lamar and Williams (which they won), Best Rap Song for “The Birds Don’t Sing” with John Legend and Voices of Fire, Best Rap Album for Let God Sort Em Out and Best Music Video for “So Be It.”
As for Bieber, 31, he secured four nominations overall for Best Pop Solo Performance for “Daisies,” Best Pop Vocal Album for Swag and Best R&B Performance for “Yukon.”
Prior to the 2026 ceremony, seven of the contenders in the Album of the Year category were already Grammy winners, with 22 previous accolades for Lamar, 14 for Gaga, three for Bad Bunny, two each for Bieber, Carpenter and Tyler, The Creator and one for Thomas.
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Caleb Ellsworth-Clark will portray Dewey for the revival.
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If you’re already planning your festival beauty looks, you know it’s all about bold color that actually lasts. Between long days in the sun, packed crowds and back-to-back sets, your makeup needs to hold up — not fade halfway through the first performance. That’s where this viral blush comes in — and part of a limited-time sale.
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Leslie Hines, an Army veteran and business owner, says she was wrongly followed and accused while running her Coolin’ Out Ice Cream truck business in a North Carolina neighborhood. The confrontation was reportedly captured on video. Additionally, Hines says that afterward, she struggled to feel comfortable with returning to the area.
What happened? And what are Leslie Hines’ rights?
The Shade Room’s Justin Carter is sharing the story and some answers on ‘TSR Investigates.’
According to Carter, in February, Leslie Hines encountered a man who allegedly followed her “on foot for three blocks.” And then continued to pursue her in his pickup truck. Per Hines, the man allegedly lied about her business, alleging that she sold him crack cocaine and methamphetamine. Then, as she made a stop to serve a family outside of their home, the man allegedly began yelling at another woman, who was present with her kids.
Per Carter, that woman called 911, and footage of the ordeal went viral. According to the woman, the next day, the man returned to her home with a vengeance.
Per Hines, the man’s behavior ultimately gave her anxiety about returning to the neighborhood to work.
“If he sees a Black woman riding through the neighborhood, that doesn’t give him justification or the right to be able to follow me… and slander me, and continually yell explicits at me. I was having anxiety attacks trying to return to the neighborhood… it was going to cost $600 for me to get GPD [coverage] — for me to get the police to come out there and protect me,” Hines explained
Scroll above to watch as Carter shares why Leslie Hines was unable to get a No Contact Order against the man. Additionally, Hines shares her experience of going back to the neighborhood — and how she received a blessing in disguise and can now use the traumatic event to pay it forward to others.
What Do You Think Roomies?
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The veteran journalist spent 30 years on the CBS news magazine, retiring in 2019.
“Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” star Taylor Frankie Paul has made a shocking admission about her relationship with Mormonism. After enduring a challenging 4 weeks amid the fallout from her ongoing domestic violence investigation and canceled season of “The Bachelorette,” Paul said she’s stepping away to explore a world beyond the church.
In her Instagram Stories, Paul shared a lengthy post admitting that she’s in an entirely new place with religion.
“Born and raised Mormon (LDS) and I’ll always have love and respect towards it,” the reality star wrote. “I’ll even continue to go with my family at times, with that being said, it’s time to detach myself from it.”
While Paul said she believes in Jesus Christ, God, and the Bible, she stated that she doesn’t need to be in a physical church building to be loved.
“I’ve also experienced grace and love from amazing people that aren’t sure what they believe — if at all,” she added.
“Point being, there is more out there to learn. And I’m writing this out as a release,” Paul finished.
In a separate post, Paul, 31, got candid about the disruption she’s experienced over the last month after some of her personal business was made public.
“The last 40 days felt like hell on earth. Through every panic attack I prayed for strength as I could feel my body breaking down and out from the distress of it all,” Paul said. “And HE sent just that in various ways along with so many undeniable signs saying ‘I am with you’ which I can’t wait to share that part.”
Paul went on to say that she’s been an avid believer in prayer since she was a young girl and “never stayed away” because of the power she believes it holds. “However, instead of just asking I switched over to thanking him at the end of each day no matter how low I felt,” she said.

According to a previous report from The Blast, Paul has been the center of negative attention over the last month following the release of a video showing a domestic dispute she had with her ex, Dakota Mortensen, in 2023.
In the shocking clip, Paul appears to punch and strike Mortensen before throwing metal chairs at him, which later hit her minor daughter.
“This is called physical abuse. This is all you do,” Mortensen cried out in the video. “It’s the only thing you know how to do is hurt me. You think this is OK? It’s not OK. Holy sh-t.”
The video came to light after a source revealed the cast of Hulu’s “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” refused to film after learning another alleged domestic dispute occurred between Mortensen and Paul in February 2026.
Amid all of this, ABC and Disney canceled what would’ve been the 22nd season of “The Bachelorette,” which was supposed to feature Paul as the lead.
“In light of the newly released video just surfaced today, we have made the decision to not move forward with the new season of The Bachelorette, [starring Paul], at this time, and our focus is on supporting the family,” the network said in a statement.

Paul has faced public backlash over her reported trials; however, one of her “SLOMW” co-stars rushed to her defense during a recent media appearance.
Jessi Draper showed her support for Paul on “Call Her Daddy,” according to The Blast, revealing Paul has made “a lot of changes” that the audience doesn’t know about.
“Seeing that video is so hard, because there’s so much pain underneath the surface for Taylor,” Draper shared. “It’s not who Taylor is. She got caught in a really bad cycle.”

The Blast reported that Mortensen has also been punished by ABC and Disney over his role in the alleged dispute between him and Paul in February of this year.
Mortensen, a member of DadTok, was scheduled to appear in season 3 of “Vanderpump Villa”; however, Hulu has decided to cut his scenes due to the ongoing ordeal.
In an earlier statement, Mortensen said his primary focus at this time was on his son, Ever, and offering him stability during this difficult time.
The Blue Bloods franchise has mourned the deaths of some cast members over the years.
The CBS show, which aired from 2010 to 2024, followed the lives of the Reagan family, many of whom work for the NYPD under the leadership of NYC police commissioner Frank Reagan (Tom Selleck). Frank’s father, Henry Reagan (Len Cariou), was also central to the show, alongside Frank’s children: daughter Erin Reagan (Bridget Moynahan) and sons Danny (Donnie Wahlberg) and Jamie Reagan (Will Estes).
After Blue Bloods came to an end, CBS announced spinoff Boston Blue, which follows Wahlberg’s character taking a position with the Boston P.D. He is then paired with detective Lena (Sonequa Martin-Green), the eldest daughter of a prominent law enforcement family.
Since Blue Bloods became a household name, the cast has mourned numerous costar deaths. The CBS show often featured tribute cards at the end of episodes with executive producer Leonard Goldberg and star Treat Williams receiving dedications.
In March 2026, news broke that Alex Duong died from a rare form of cancer after previously playing criminal and gang leader Sonny Le.
“We are overwhelmed with gratitude — because of you, we have already reached the original goal. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts,” a message read on a fundraiser page for Duong. “At the same time, with Alex passing, Christina’s situation has become more serious and the financial needs ahead are much greater than we could have anticipated. Alex’s memorial service, Everest ‘s education needs, ongoing care, daily support, and what lies ahead for his family mean we must continue raising funds beyond this initial goal.
The statement continued: “If you’ve already given, thank you — truly. If you’re able to share or contribute again, it would mean everything right now. Please keep Alex and his family in your prayers. Your support is carrying them through the hardest time of their lives. We will update you with respect to details of his ‘Celebration of Life.’”
Keep scrolling for the most heartbreaking Blue Bloods tragedies over the years:
The comedian Alex Duong died in March 2026 at age 42 after battling a rare form of cancer.
Ed Wheeler, who played Councilman Welsh, died in October 2024 from complications of pneumonia at age 88.

After playing Lenny Ross in season 7, Treat Williams died at the age of 71 in a motorcycle accident in June 2023.
Broadway star Nick Cordero died at age 41 in July 2020 after suffering from complications caused by COVID. He previously played Victor Lugo from 2017 to 2018.
The executive producer of the CBS series died at 85 in 2019 as a result of injuries sustained in a fall.
By TeeJay Small
| Published

If you were upright and outside back in 2014, you almost certainly heard buzz about a little critical darling called Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance). The film, which managed to sweep the Academy Awards with wins for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Cinematography, is perhaps best known today for its visual gimmick. The gimmick in question, is the elaborate stitching technique used to make Birdman appear as though it was captured in a single, continuous take.
In case you missed it, Birdman was written and directed by legendary Mexican filmmaker Alejandro G. Iñárritu. The film stars Michael Keaton in the lead role, as a washed-up actor best known for portraying a winged superhero decades earlier. This is obviously a thinly-veiled nod to Keaton’s history portraying Batman back in the 1980s, and a commentary on how the industry viewed superhero films before the Marvel Cinematic Universe made them the most mainstream thing on the planet.

In present day, Keaton’s Riggan Thomson is trying to restart his career, by directing and starring in a Broadway play. To get the show off the ground, he enlists the help of his girlfriend Laura, his daughter Sam, a recovering addict, and an insufferable method actor named Mike Shiner. Shiner is portrayed by Edward Norton in the film, in a role that some have theorized is based on his own behind-the-scenes behavior.
As the gang prepares for opening night, numerous issues arise, causing the show to go off the rails. At different moments, light fixtures fall from the ceiling, endangering the cast, Riggan clashes with his pompous co-stars, and at one point, he even finds himself locked out of the building in nothing but his tighty whities, forcing him to navigate through a crowd of gasping New Yorkers. All the while, the camera moves in extremely long shots, which make the film appear to play out in a single continuous take.

The camera work on Birdman is nothing short of spectacular. On an initial viewing, you might not be able to spot where the takes are stitched together at all. The presentation makes the whole film play out like a live stage show, effectively giving the viewer a window into what Riggan is trying to create with his Broadway play. Meanwhile, the frenetic drum-centric score cranks the chaotic energy to the max, forcing your heart to thump with excitement.
The score and visual presentation of Birdman became so popular after the film’s release that it was parodied by several well-known TV shows like BoJack Horseman, Sesame Street, and one especially memorable episode of It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia titled “Charlie Work.” They even opened the Razzie Awards with a parody skit of Birdman the year after the film premiered.


Though it’s best known for the visual gimmicks today, Birdman is well worth watching for its story alone. Iñárritu managed to weave the themes and concepts central to the film into a meta-narrative about the nature of performance itself, in a masterful display of writing and direction. There are a few mind-boggling visual effects present in the movie that will drive you crazy trying to figure out how they pulled it off, too.
Unfortunately, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) is not currently part of any major streaming library. It’s well worth the price to rent or buy through VOD services, but the film really should be placed on one of the major streamers, to ensure it gets the viewership it deserves.
As of this writing, Birdman can be viewed on-demand through YouTube, Apple TV+, Prime Video, and Fandango at Home.
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

One of the most unappreciated members of any given Star Trek show is the science consultant. This is the guy who is in charge of making all of the crazy sci-fi adventures of our favorite characters sound relatively realistic. At the end of the day, that’s what separates this franchise from Star Wars, which explains its wildest plot points by simply saying that the Force moved in mysterious ways.
On one occasion, a scientific consultant effectively saved the most important episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. After the rocky second season ended with a crappy clip show, Season 3 began with “Evolution,” a banger episode that proved that TNG was about to become must-see TV. The episode prominently featured nanites, futuristic machines straight out of our wildest sci-fi fantasies. But without consultant David Krieger, this episode wouldn’t have had nanites. Instead, it would have had dust mites flying tiny planes around the Enterprise!

For context, the plot of “Evolution” involved the Enterprise crew helping a cranky genius study a stellar explosion that happens every 196 years like clockwork. Meanwhile, teenage wunderkind Wesley Crusher was conducting experiments involving nanites, and he accidentally let a couple of the critters loose. Soon, they replicate and evolve, threatening the big experiment and everyone aboard the ship. The scientist clashes with the nanites, but Picard reaches a diplomatic solution by securing these new life forms their very own homeworld.
“Evolution” is an excellent episode, and it was written by Michael Piller, the man who ultimately became TNG’s showrunner and turned it into one of the best shows in television history. Plus, the nanites are one of the coolest creatures ever introduced into Star Trek. However, Star Trek science consultant David Krieger revealed on his personal website that this episode was nearly very different. According to him, the original pitch didn’t include nanites. Instead, it featured dust mites that gained intelligence and flew around the Enterprise in miniature aircraft.

Fortunately for all of us, Krieger found this idea deeply stupid. In fact, he claims that he laughed out loud when he read the original premise for the episode. Once he stopped chuckling, though, he spoke to the producers and firmly objected to the idea of dust mites turning into tiny flying gremlins. Instead, he proposed using nanites instead, which was a great call: not only are nanites based on actual scientific theories, but they looked far less goofy onscreen than flying dust mites ever would.
If David Krieger hadn’t stepped in and shut down the dust mite plot, “Evolution” would have joined the ranks of “Spock’s Brain” as one of the worst episodes in all of Star Trek history. Thanks to this science consultant’s intervention, though, this episode helped transform The Next Generation into what many fans consider the gold standard of the franchise. It also helped Michael Piller become showrunner, and he was so successful in the role that he would later help create both Deep Space Nine and Voyager. In that way, this humble consultant did more than save a single episode; he may have saved Star Trek as we know it!
By Brian Myers
| Published

Director and screenwriter Bob Clark did such a masterful job with the 1983 movie A Christmas Story that it’s hard to imagine the man creating anything that wasn’t wholesome. But two years before little Ralphie gets his Red Ryder gun, Clark wrote and directed a comedy so lewd and outrageous that modern audiences are still shocked by it. 1981’s Porky’s was one of the raunchiest comedy movies ever released by a major studio and served as an important milestone in shock comedy.
The story arc of Clark’s semi-autobiographical movie follows a group of high school basketball players who live in Angel Beach, FL in the 1950s. Their hormones raging, they conceive a plan to lose their virginities to an older sex worker, not realizing that they are being set up for a humiliating (and pretty darn funny) prank set up by one of their older brothers.

Determined to follow through with the plan of getting their first times out of the way, the boys believe that their dreams can be fulfilled at a strip club located deep in the Everglades. The seedy establishment is the film’s namesake, owned and operated by an older, hefty character named Porky Wallace. The team makes their way to the strip club, makes an arrangement with Porky for a handful of ladies, and are guided to a darkened room to await their fates.
Unfortunately, it’s a trap. A literal one. Porky pulls a lever from the outside the room the boys are waiting in, springing open a hatch in the floor. The boys plummet down and into the swamp water below.

Enraged, the team storms back in to get their money back and to take a crack at the source of their collective humiliation. Outnumbered and outwitted, they decide to leave while they are still in one piece. They make the long drive back to Angel Beach, still virgins.
The remainder of the film’s primary plotline involves subsequent attempts at revenge on Porky Wallace by one of the group, who only gets severely beaten. Finally, with the help of one of their older brothers (a local policeman), the boys hatch an elaborate vengeance plot that they hope will ruin Porky forever.

The film’s main story is compelling enough. The initial visit to the strip club is equal parts funny and cringy, and the final 20 minutes showcase one of the greatest revenge ideas ever. But it’s all of the side stories that spring up along the way that really make Porky’s a raunchy comedy well worth the time. One subplot involves the new gym coach wondering why one of the younger girls’ coaches (played by Kim Cattrall) has the nickname “Lassie.” No spoilers, but it has nothing to do with her love of collies.
Another sub-plot concerns several of the basketball players discovering that there are ways to view the girls while they shower after practice. Tommy Turner, Pee Wee Morris, and Billy McCarty try and fail several times, mistiming when the girls would be there. But one time, they get lucky and then get caught. No spoilers here, either, but an unnamed appendage of Tommy Turners accidentally winds up in the hands of a woman that the girls call “Kong,” the cranky old Coach Ballbricker.

Porky’s is a mashup of sophomoric pranks, full frontal nudity, hilarious sex scenes, and satisfying revenge. The Movie somehow manages to capture the nostalgic feeling of the 1950s, making the Angel Beach high school and its student body part of Rockwell illustration that is then caked in phallic jokes and bare-breasted women. If Happy Days and late 70s soft-core pornography gave birth to a film that was narrated by a group of 17-year-old boys, the finished product wouldn’t be that far from the film written and directed by Clark.
Porky’s went where no other major release had gone before. Multiple scenes of full-frontal nudity, lewd discussions about quests to lose virginities, and one character’s hilarious obsession with the size of his manhood (he measures it every morning and actually keeps a “growth chart” and pencil next to his bed) paved the way for even raunchier comedy movies throughout the remainder of the 80s and forward. Where Animal House didn’t dare to go, Porky’s said “hold my beer” and delivered shock, awe, and tear-jerking laughter. To be sure, without Porky’s, there would be no Revenge of the Nerds or American Pie.

Clark would go on to direct the first sequel, Porky’s II: The Next Day two years later, the same year that he directed the timeless Christmas movie that so many people watch each holiday season. This was certainly the filmmaker’s peak, as the entries later in his career included the bombs Loose Cannons, Turk 182, and Rhinestone.
In case you thought that Porky’s might be an aberration in Clark’s career as a family-friendly filmmaker, guess again. The New Orleans native began making exploitation movies in the late 1960s, beginning with the cult classic She-Man. The plot centers around a former GI that discovers that he enjoys wearing women’s clothing, giving audiences a look at the trans community.
Clark followed that work up with a documentary titled Queens at Heart in 1967. This piece centered around the lives of four transwomen, each of whom dresses to match their genders assigned at birth by day but live as women after work. Both of these early films by Clark are considered ground-breaking, given that they provide a candid and honest glimpse into the lives of a community that was scarcely represented during that era.

From there, Clark shifted his focus to horror. His first genre film was the gruesome zombie movie Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things (1972). Shot with a budget of $50,000, the cult classic was the result of Clark’s tireless diligence and the participation of a group of the director’s friends from college. It helped to cement his reputation as one of the best B-horror filmmakers of the decade and quickly became a late-night drive-in favorite.
In 1974, Clark directed two additional horror films. The first, Death Dream, was a reimagining of the W. W. Jacobs tale “The Monkey’s Paw.” Though a low-budget feature, it starred future multi-Emmy Award nominee Richard Backus (One Life to Live, Ryan’s Hope), as well as Academy Award nominee Lynn Carlin (Faces). Horror fans will recognize the special effects makeup work of master artist Tom Savini, who would soon go on to work with George Romero.
The second horror entry that year was, ironically enough, Clark’s first Christmas movie. Black Christmas is regarded by many as the first slasher film and has been remade twice (2006 and 2019). The original stars future Superman and Amityville Horror actress Margot Kidder, Olivia Hussey, and John Saxon.

Rounding out the decade for Clark was a leap to yet another genre of film. In 1976, he filmed Breaking Point, a low-budget crime drama starring Bo Svenson and Robert Culp. Three years later he brought to life Sherlock Holmes and Watson in the mystery thriller Murder by Decree. The plot follows the British duo as they track the Whitechapel killings committed by the notorious Jack the Ripper. It was his biggest budget film by far at that point, and boasted a cast consisting of James Mason (Salem’s Lot, Lolita), Christopher Plummer (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country), and Donald Sutherland (Invasion of the Body Snatchers).
So, the next time you and your family gather around the TV with the family and begin quoting along with Ralphie and the bunch, remember that the brain behind it was also the same fellow who orchestrated an on-screen tug-of-war between Coach Ballbricker and that rascal Tommy Turner, using the latter’s genitalia as sports equipment.

As of this writing, Porky’s is currently unavailable for Streaming.
From the heartbreaking modern classic Sound of Metal and the Jeffrey Wright-led American Fiction to the underrated One Night in Miami and Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista‘s The Wrecking Crew, Prime Video has quietly dropped some of the best streaming movies in recent memory. However, not all have been the enormous streaming successes of the likes of The Wrecking Crew, with some falling under the radar, as is the nature of streaming.
One of the more underrated entries from the Prime Video catalog is The Order, a based-on-a-true-story crime drama released less than two years ago. Directed by Justin Kurzel, 13 years after his debut, Snowtown, the film is set against the backdrop of a year of daring bank heists that have baffled law enforcement. As the violence escalates, FBI agent Terry Husk (Jude Law) becomes convinced that, instead of financially motivated attacks, the heists and robberies are instead the work of a domestic terrorist group.
Alongside Law, the film also featured the talents of Nicholas Hoult and Tye Sheridan, and was praised for its slick neo-noir execution and a Heat-esque tale that was triumphant in its ambition. Sadly, despite a positive response from critics and a near-perfect 93% score on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, The Order was limited to an uneventful theatrical run. In total, the film earned just $2.2 million from just 2.3 weeks on average in theaters. 16 months after its short theatrical run, The Order is proving a streaming success, officially placing inside the top ten most-watched movies on Prime Video in the world, at the time of writing.
Ross Bonaime reviewed The Order for Collider, agreeing with the near-perfect response from Rotten Tomatoes critics with an 8/10 score. “With The Order, Kurzel takes on a more straightforward approach than usual, giving us a Mann-esque thriller that keeps the audience on the edge of their seats,” Bonaime said. He continued, “Yet the director also manages to keep that disturbing energy that has made his work up to this point so effective and unnerving. The Order is a solid crime drama that sometimes hits too close to home, but that’s what makes it so terrifying.”
The Order is currently one of the ten most-watched movies on Prime Video in the world. Make sure to stay tuned to Collider for all the latest streaming stories.
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