Related: Jennifer Lopez‘s Summer Red Bag Style Is the Easiest Rich Mom Upgrade
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Jennifer Lawrence always looks effortless, but her latest sandal style takes it to a whole new level. She proved that comfy and chic can totally go together, and all it takes is this $25 look on Amazon.
Lawrence was spotted with her little one in the West Village, iced coffee in hand, wearing a soft T-shirt, slouchy lounge pants and easy cork sandals that channeled instant cool-mom vibes. These classic slip-ons are identical, giving you the same off-duty vibes, effortless polish and real arch support for two digits, not three. Thousands of five-star reviews don’t lie!
Get the Odoly Cork Slide Sandals for $25 (was $34) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
The Odoly Cork Slide Sandals mirror J.Law’s in every way: two clean straps across the top, a sleek cork footbed and adjustable buckles that let you customize the fit. They’re a summer staple that works with absolutely everything in your closet, from linen pants and trousers to denim skirts and sundresses. Rich mom style, zero effort.
What sets these timeless slides apart from average sandals is the arch support. The contoured insole cradles your foot the way orthotics do, except it’s sleek and doesn’t require a podiatrist’s referral. Cork magically molds to the shape of your foot over time, so the longer you wear them, the more comfortable they get.
Walkers are exceptionally enthusiastic. One happy reviewer wrote, “I ended up wearing them to Magic Kingdom later in my trip, too, because they were comfier than my regular Adidas sneakers.”
Another five-star fan shared, “I’m a travel agent and do several resort/site inspections . . . On an average day of visits, I can clock in about 14,000 steps . . . My last pair lasted me eight years, two passports and countless site inspections and even a trek up the pyramids in Egypt. So yeah, I love these for walking.”
Lawrence styled hers with relaxed loungewear, but these cork sandals earn their keep across an entire summer wardrobe. Throw them on with a midi skirt and a tank for brunch, then cropped trousers and a button-up for date night. They’ll carry you through farmers’ markets, travel days and school pickups alike.
At just $25, this celebrity-inspired look is already in our cart!
Get the Odoly Cork Slide Sandals for $25 (was $34) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
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Of all the many reboots currently in production or post-production, few are as exciting as John Wick director Chad Stahelski‘s Highlander reboot. Following in the footsteps of the 1986 film of the same name, starring Christopher Lambert and Sean Connery, Stahelski will be looking to pack action and tension into this beloved fantasy tale, and will do so with a star-studded cast, who have been seen in action in recent first-look photos from behind the scenes.
Henry Cavill will star as Connor MacLeod alongside Academy Award winner Russell Crowe as Ramirez, with the pair joined by the star-studded ensemble of Dave Bautista (The Wrecking Crew), Karen Gillan (Guardians of the Galaxy), Jeremy Irons (Batman v Superman), Djimon Hounsou (Blood Diamond), Marisa Abela (Industry), and more. Directed by Stahelski and written by Kerry Williamson and Mike Finch, the movie will be released by Amazon MGM Studios and is reported to have an eye-catching production budget of roughly $180 million.
The stage is set for yet another exciting action flick from Cavill, in the shadow of his stint as Superman and other big-budget projects. To get in the mood for the Highlander reboot, fans have been heading back to one of the actor’s lesser-spotted actioners, and one of his biggest flops ever. Released in 2019, the Canadian action thriller Night Hunter by writer/director David Raymond stars Cavill alongside the likes of Ben Kingsley, Alexandra Daddario, and Stanley Tucci. Sadly, despite boasting an undeniably talented cast, the movie flopped in spectacular fashion, scoring less than $1 million in a limited theatrical release and a dismal 14% score from critics on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.
Such poor reviews will usually harm the reputation of movies, but streaming often provides a place for solace. Eight years after its poor commercial and critical reception, Night Hunter is redeeming itself on global streaming. At the time of writing, the movie is one of the ten most-streamed titles on Paramount+ in the world, going toe-to-toe with some of the most exciting options on the streamer, including the zombie apocalypse flick World War Z, Glen Powell‘s 2025 remake of The Running Man, and even Ridley Scott‘s long-awaited legacy sequel Gladiator II.
You can stream Night Hunter on Paramount+ now. For all the latest streaming stories, make sure to stay tuned to Collider.
August 29, 2019
95 minutes
David Raymond
Kevin Scott Frakes, Nadine de Barros, Larry Harding, Nasrat Muzayyin, Zorin Finkelsen, Francesca Dutton, James Lancaster, Mitesh Parikh, Niraj Parikh, Gaurav Talwar, Pulak Parikh, Rob Wood, Mark Catton, Rick Dugdale, Sundip K. Bhundia, Steven Ashley, Peter Aitken, James Milligan, Chris Pettit, Alastair Burlingham, Buddy Patrick, Robert Ogden Barnum, Dave Hansen, Tony Parker
The 1990s brought forth a new wave of provocative, introspective, cutting-edge dystopian sci-fi features, and the sci-fi thriller Gattaca perfectly encapsulates the era. Written and directed by Andrew Niccol and boasting an all-star cast, Gattaca explores a society where humanity mastered genetic manipulation, dividing humans into two classes: the genetically engineered with what are viewed as the best genetic traits through natural selection (the “valids”), and the naturally born who are more susceptible to genetic defects, called the “in-valids.” Gattaca depicts a unique vision of the future by examining the potential dangers of genetic manipulation, along with the indomitable human spirit exceeding analytical potential.
Niccol’s script for Gattaca brilliantly explores the dangers of a society overly reliant on eugenics and genetic manipulation. Geneticists have mastered artificial birth, and children are genetically designed to be born with superior, preferable genetic traits. Unfortunately, the practice causes discrimination and a class divide, as the naturally born in-valids are depicted as a lower class and not afforded the same privileges and opportunities as the genetically superior valids. Gattaca intriguingly shines a light on scientific breakthroughs occurring throughout the era.
In the 1990s, the Human Genome Project launched to map, identify, and sequence all the genes of human DNA and decipher humanity’s genetic code. 1996 also saw the creation of Dolly the Sheep, the first mammal that was artificially cloned through an adult somatic cell. Gattaca presents a dystopian vision of the future with these ideas taken to an extreme conclusion. Humanity’s supposed mastery over eugenics favors those with the stronger genetic traits, and the in-valids are considered inferior and forced into menial labor. Meanwhile, the valids are treated among society’s elites and allowed to participate in space travel, which brings the plot to protagonist Vincent Freeman (Ethan Hawke), who dreams of traveling to space.
Gattaca features a stunning cast, showcasing the talents of many impressive Hollywood veterans. Ethan Hawke leads the visionary feature as Vincent Freeman, who was born through a natural birth. However, his projected lifespan is only about 30 years old. Unfortunately, Vincent’s status as an in-valid excludes him from achieving a higher status in society and fulfilling his dream of space travel. Vincent commits a type of fraud, posing as a valid, using the genetic material and identity provided by Jerome Eugene Morrow (Jude Law), a paraplegic valid who was paralyzed in a car accident. However, a murder committed at the Gattaca Aeronautical Corporation falsely implicates Vincent when his genetic material is found at the scene of the crime, and the walls begin to close in around him.
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Hawke and Law deliver incredible performances, infusing their roles with a melancholic energy. Hawke brilliantly showcases Vincent’s desperation and unbreakable spirit to fulfill his dream. Meanwhile, Law brings a tragic sadness to his character, especially when it’s revealed how he became paralyzed later in the movie. Vincent eventually meets and falls in love with his co-worker, Irene Cassini, portrayed by Uma Thurman. Thurman is terrific as a valid citizen with a high risk of a heart defect, which excludes her from being assigned to a space travel mission. Her chemistry with her future husband, Hawke, is electric.
The movie also features familiar faces up and down the cast, including Alan Arkin and Loren Dean as a detective duo investigating the murder at Vincent’s workplace. Ernest Borgnine, Tony Shalhoub, Xander Berkeley, Elias Koteas, Blair Underwood, and the award-winning author Gore Vidal also appear in the movie in notable supporting roles and enhance the world’s immersion.
Although Gattaca was not a huge success upon its release, it has aged remarkably in the nearly three decades since its original release. It’s a thinking person’s sci-fi movie, with a unique dystopian setting that looks real, grounded, and authentic. The world of Gattaca is very tactile and focused on DNA analysis, where surveillance comes through genetic material, like hair follicles, eyelashes, and fingerprints. Essentially, genetic material has become a type of currency and contraband in the world of Gattaca.
Niccol also demonstrates that, despite society’s ability to achieve control over eugenics and society being partial to artificial birth, it’s the valids who suffer the most from their predetermined genetic fatalism and are more subject to criminal outbursts. Meanwhile, it is Vincent who exceeds his genetic potential, despite his physical ailments and defects. Gattaca exceptionally depicts how, even with the advances in genetic sequencing and manipulation, science still cannot measure traits such as the capacity of free will and the triumph of the human spirit. Despite the plot’s melancholy style, Gattaca ultimately presents an uplifting underdog story arc for Vincent in an incredibly bleak, dystopic setting, elevating the movie into a must-watch sci-fi feature worth revisiting.
There’s a fine line that separates a truly bizarre fantasy movie from being labeled as bonkers in a good way or being discarded as trash. For instance, critics appear to have embraced the new Masters of the Universe movie, which currently holds a “Certified Fresh” 73% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes. This comes after weeks of marketing material that was dismissed or, worse, outright criticized. Masters of the Universe seems to have understood the assignment and embraced just the right amount of camp, and according to Collider’s Victoria Luxford, “this new version is determined to wink at the camera and appeal to your nostalgia.” However, not every movie that aims for this sort of lunacy is able to get the audience on its side. One of the most infamous examples of a movie that ended up being instantly discarded by critics and audiences has found its way onto a free streaming site this month.
The movie turns 10 this year, which makes this a momentous occasion. It was released in 2016 and headlined by Brenton Thwaites and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau. The supporting cast included Gerard Butler and Chadwick Boseman. However, since the movie was released a few weeks before Boseman’s debut as Black Panther in Captain America: Civil War, he wasn’t yet the draw he would later become. The fantasy film was the most expensive project of director Alex Proyas‘ career. The Australian filmmaker broke out with the sci-fi noir gem Dark City and the cult classic The Crow, and went on to direct the Will Smith-led tent pole I, Robot. However, he was coming off the Nicolas Cage-led sci-fi film Knowing, which many had criticized for taking itself too seriously. Similar criticism was made about Proyas’ 2016 fantasy movie, and he didn’t take it well.
We’re talking, of course, about Gods of Egypt. The film grossed just $150 million worldwide against a reported budget of $140 million, after receiving a 15% score on Rotten Tomatoes. Even the aggregator website couldn’t resist poking fun at the fiasco, writing in its consensus, “Look on Gods of Egypt, ye filmgoers, and despair! Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of this colossal wreck, boundless and bare. The lone and level sands stretch far away. (Apologies to Shelley.)” Proyas was mightily offended by the backlash. He took to Facebook and slammed critics as “deranged idiots” and “diseased vultures.” He hasn’t released a feature film since. You can watch Gods of Egypt for free on Tubi this month, and stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
February 25, 2016
127 minutes
Alex Proyas
Kit Harington admitted it was “gross” to film sex scenes with Sophie Turner for their horror movie The Dreadful given their past on Game of Thrones.
“It was weird,” Harington, 39, confessed in a recent interview with fellow Game of Thrones star Peter Dinklage for CNN’s Actors on Actors.
Harington and Turner, 30, essentially grew up together on the set of Game of Thrones, in which they played Jon Snow and Sansa Stark, respectively. For most of the show’s run, Jon and Sansa believed they were siblings before it came out that they were actually first cousins.
Still, the pair’s bond on and off the Game of Thrones set made it awkward when Turner asked Harington to play her lover in The Dreadful. (Turner produced and starred in the gothic horror film, in which Harington portrayed a sinister stranger who reemerged in the lives of Anne and her mother-in-law Morwen.)
“She sent me the script and I said, ‘Sophie, there’s a lot of us getting it on,’” Harington revealed. “She hadn’t seen that. She just said, ‘Yeah, Kit would be good for this part.”
Harington initially had doubts about accepting the role in The Dreadful because he’s “known [Turner] since she was a child” and considers her like “a younger sister.”
“We did it. It was gross but it was fine,” he insisted. “She’s an amazing actor. I know we all know that but she was a child when she [started on Game of Thrones]. She is phenomenal!”

Sophie Turner, Kit Harington in “The Dreadful.” Lionsgate /Courtesy Everett Collection
Turner revealed during an appearance on Late Night With Seth Meyers last year that she was equally horrified by the thought of shooting love scenes with Turner.
“I’d just got the script for this amazing gothic horror called The Dreadful, and I was reading through all the characters,” she explained to host Seth Meyers. “And I’m producing it, so the director was asking me, ‘Who do you think?’ And immediately, the first person I thought of was Kit.”
She went on, “So, I sent the script to Kit, and he kind of sent me a message back going like, ‘Yeah, I’d love to, but this is going to be really f***ing weird, Soph.’ And I was like, what is he talking about? Then I was reading it, and I’m like, ‘Kiss, kiss, sex, kiss, sex scene.’ And then I’m like, oh shoot, that’s my brother. But it’s such a good script that he’s like, ‘We kind of have to do it.’”
Turner joked that the great script for The Dreadful didn’t make filming the love scenes any less awkward.
“We put it out of our minds, and then we get on set, and it’s the first kissing scene,” she recalled. “And we are both retching, like really, it is vile. It was the worst, another really bad moment in my career.”
The Dreadful was released in February.
There couldn’t have been an actor more suited to the role of John Dutton on Yellowstone than Kevin Costner. And despite the ups and downs, the back and forth, the will-they-won’t-they between him and the show’s creator, Taylor Sheridan, Yellowstone turned out to be just the sort of hit that Costner needed at this stage of his career. The show’s success gave him the confidence to mount his own Western epic, Horizon: An American Saga, which remains stalled after the underperformance of the first installment. He spent a considerable amount of his Yellowstone earnings on self-financing the epic Western series, not to mention the fact that he effectively gave up the chance to return for more seasons of the show by focusing on his own project. But Costner and the Western genre go hand-in-hand; some of the best and most underrated movies of his career are Westerns.
One of those movies, which turns 23 years old this year, dealt with many of the same ideas and themes as Yellowstone. It revolved around a Montana ranch owner — yup — who gets into a turf war with an older herder who believes that his cattle can graze anywhere on God’s green earth. Costner played a Civil War veteran who fights on the side of the free-grazing herder. It’s interesting how the villain in the movie is like the sort of man Costner would go on to play, endearingly, in Yellowstone. A decade after the release of this movie, which Costner also directed, he starred in the limited series Hatfields & McCoys, which revisits a legendary Old West feud. You can tell that Costner loves a story about standing your ground, or, as Regina Hall would say, “sheltering in place.”
His underrated 2003 movie is now streaming for free in the United States, two decades after a theatrical run during which it grossed nearly $70 million against a reported $22 million budget. We’re talking, of course, about Open Range. The movie also features Robert Duvall, Annette Bening, and Michael Gambon. Open Range marked one of the earliest Hollywood roles for Diego Luna, who’d become a household name thanks to roles in Narcos and Andor. Open Range received positive reviews, and now holds a “Certified Fresh” 79% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes. The site’s consensus reads, “Greatly benefiting from the tremendous chemistry between Kevin Costner and Robert Duvall, Open Range is a sturdy modern Western with classic roots.” You can watch the movie for free on Tubi, and stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
August 15, 2003
139 Minutes
Christian Bale has long been a powerhouse in entertainment, from his unnerving role as Patrick Bateman in American Psycho to the Caped Crusader himself in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight trilogy. Batman hung up his cowl in 2012 after The Dark Knight Rises, but that wasn’t the end for Bale. Pretty soon after, the performer delivered a gripping performance in a forgotten thriller that deserves a second chance.
Out of the Furnace is a character-driven crime thriller with an all-star cast difficult to beat. Bale stars in the drama as Russell Baze, a steelworker in the rural part of Pennsylvania that may be familiar to Mare of Easttown fans. Russell is a working-class man who struggles to support his veteran brother, Rodney (Casey Affleck), after he becomes indebted to a local bookie. This starts a cataclysm of events that culminates in a violent revenge plot where there are no winners.
Out of the Furnace is a haunting story that, in the hands of the impressive ensemble cast, is truly great. Christian Bale carries the worries of his character Russell with grace, while Casey Affleck, as the troubled brother Rodney, is hard to look away from. The Baze brothers, however, are just a small part of the captivating characters. Woody Harrelson steals the show as Harlan DeGroat, the vicious antagonist of the story.
Desperate for money and unable to function at a 9-to-5 job, Rodney enters the world of underground fighting, further digging himself in deeper with a brutal drug dealer from New Jersey. Harrelson disappears completely into the role, becoming a terrifying villain who starts the story by abusing a woman and only gets worse from there. He is truly unredemptive, which is the linchpin of the rest of the narrative.
Russell dives headlong into vengeance after Harlan destroys his family, which may resonate with fans of Batman. Bale brings the same savage energy he had in his work in The Dark Knight trilogy in an even more realistic fashion. Russell’s desperation and grief are palpable, as are the stakes of the world. This small town is a place where not many people are allowed to get ahead. Rodney has to resort to back-alley fighting to make a living, while Russell’s own life falls apart because of a cruel twist of fate.
These characters have to subsist on nothing and still try to scrape by. Therefore, it should come as no surprise that the movie was originally a spec script by Brad Ingelsby, now known for his many vivid characters based in Delaware County. Ingelsby created Mare of Easttown and Task, both crime thrillers that deal with the specificities of what it is to live in that location. Out of the Furnace is equally specific, just on a shorter timeline.
The grim drama was a perfect first project after Bale’s tenure as Gotham’s protector. His range is evident in this story as Russell commits to some of the worst choices anyone could make. A tragic character portrait, it is a surprise that the star-studded film didn’t get more play the first time around. Now fans can see it to their heart’s content, streaming on Prime Video.
December 6, 2013
116minutes
Prime Video has had a big year in 2026 so far with new releases for some of its most popular shows, including both Invincible and The Boys. Prime Video subscribers are also on the lookout for the fourth season of Reacher, which is confirmed to premiere before the end of this year, but it’s still lacking an official premiere date. The show stars towering action icon Alan Ritchson, and Prime Video has so much faith in the series to perform that it’s already been picked up for Season 5. Reacher has become such a success that other platforms have attempted to recreate the show’s magic — Netflix has landed on The Night Agent as its closest replacement for the series. The hit conspiracy thriller stars Gabriel Basso, and while Netflix did renew it for another season, the streamer has confirmed that it will be the final season of the show.
Before Prime Video had Reacher, though, it had to draw fans in with another big-budget action thriller, Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan. The show was one of the first big breakout roles for John Krasinski following his performance as Jim Halpert in The Office, and he’s gone on to become a successful action star and director in the Hollywood hemisphere. Jack Ryan returned to the spotlight in the last few weeks thanks to the premiere of the story-capping sequel film, Jack Ryan: Ghost War, which is now streaming on Prime Video around the world. Ghost War is still the most-watched title in the world on Prime Video, but its success has also helped Jack Ryan in a similar respect. Jack Ryan has also jumped into the Prime Video top 10 in a handful of countries around the world.
Jack Ryan follows an up-and-coming analyst (played by John Krasinski) who is thrust into a series of dangerous assignments in the field. The show holds solid scores of 80% from critics and 74% from audiences on Rotten Tomatoes. The Prime Video original series is based on characters created by Tom Clancy, and it was written and created for TV by Graham Roland and Carlton Cuse. Roland is also known for his work writing and creating Dark Winds, the supernatural Western show produced by George R.R. Martin.
Check out all four seasons of Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan on Prime Video, and stay tuned to Collider for more updates and coverage of the show.
2018 – 2023-00-00
Prime Video
Carlton Cuse
Jann Turner, Andrew Bernstein, Dennie Gordon, Kevin Dowling, Lukas Ettlin, Patricia Riggen, David Petrarca, Phil Abraham, Carlton Cuse, Morten Tyldum
Amy Berg, Dario Scardapane, Nolan Dunbar, Vince Calandra, David Graziano, Steven Kane, Marc Halsey, Robert Port
Glen Powell‘s face will soon lead yet another sci-fi movie, as he joins forces with a veteran director in the genre for a hotly anticipated, big-budget theatrical spectacle. The film in question is The Great Beyond, directed by J.J. Abrams, which is set to star Wednesday favorite Jenna Ortega, Emma Mackey (Sex Education), and Samuel L. Jackson (Pulp Fiction) alongside Powell. “I wanted it to be big and something that generations of different people can all go to the theater to see,” Abrams promised in an interview at CinemaCon, with excitement for the November 2026 release continuing to build.
Before Powell’s latest sci-fi effort hits theaters — and prior to his work in Judd Apatow‘s next comedy, The Comeback King — his 2025 sci-fi adaptation of a Stephen King favorite continues to dominate streaming. Of course, we’re talking about The Running Man, featuring Powell alongside a star-studded cast including Josh Brolin, Colman Domingo, Lee Pace, and more. The second adaptation of King’s 1982 novel, following the 1987 effort directed by Paul Michael Glaser, 2025’s The Running Man sadly failed to capture the magic of the source material either critically or commercially.
Falling to mediocre reviews, despite the best efforts of talented director Edgar Wright, The Running Man was also a box office disaster, earning just $68.5 million worldwide against a bloated production budget of $110 million. Thankfully, the film has since redeemed itself on streaming, becoming a favorite on Paramount+, where it ranks as one of the top ten movies in the U.S., at the time of writing. The current chart-topper on the streaming site is Scream 7, the 2026 horror sequel that frightened its way to over $200 million at the box office.
The Running Man isn’t the only recent King adaptation proving popular on American streaming. Whilst Paramount+ subscribers indulge in that sci-fi adventure, Starz users are propelling the most-acclaimed King adaptation of 2025 into the streaming top ten. Hunger Games director Francis Lawrence‘s The Long Walk, based on King’s 1979 novel of the same name, stars Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson, and debuted in September last year. Earning widespread acclaim from both critics and audiences, the movie earned a respectable $63 million worldwide, against a reported production budget of $20 million.
The Running Man is currently available to stream on Paramount+. Stay tuned to Collider for the latest streaming stories.
November 11, 2025
133 minutes
Edgar Wright
Michael Bacall, Edgar Wright
Nira Park, Simon Kinberg, Edgar Wright
It’s been four years since the conspiracy thriller series The Capture was last on our screens, and since then, there have been rapid advancements in the technologies the show focuses on. When it was first released in 2019, AI deepfakes were still an emerging technology, so the way The Capture paired a crime thriller with the underbelly of the digital era felt novel. It took another three years for the second season to air, in which the political implications of deepfakes and surveillance were ramped up with the evolution of AI. Now, four years later, Season 3 is bound to grow bigger and hit harder, so there’s no better time to catch up with The Capture in preparation for June 18, when this alarmingly timely show returns on Peacock in the U.S.
The Capture‘s first season kicks off with a crime that may or may not have occurred, depending on how much you trust the live video footage. DI Rachel Carey (Holliday Grainger) investigates the assault and kidnapping of lawyer Hannah Roberts (Laura Haddock), and a CCTV camera that captured the entire scene points to Corporal Emery (Callum Turner) as the perpetrator. The thing is, not only is there plenty of evidence that Emery is innocent, but also that the video is a terrifyingly convincing deepfake, tossing the viewer into the uncertain waters of conspiracy and betrayal. This continues into Season 2, where the use of deepfakes expands from framing innocent people to manipulating the public.
The Capture‘s premise already feels very Black Mirror-esque, but the show is a uniquely invigorating entry in the thriller genre. With a plot that is meticulously mapped and swiftly paced, the series remains an engaging narrative on a personal level for its characters while still connecting to the larger implications of surveillance and AI. Ironically enough, this conspiracy thriller barely leaves the viewer time to form their own theories, as the plot sets up and lands twists and revelations with a startling precision. As such, the audience is simply tossed into the deep end and carried away by the current of mind-boggling deceptions and high-stakes political maneuvers, while still feeling the acute sense of danger that defines a thriller.
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The Capture‘s tech-horror can be deeply outrageous in its portrayal, almost dystopian in the sheer magnitude of how deepfakes and surveillance can be weaponized against the public, but it is this quality that also makes the series alarmingly relevant. There’s a chilling horror in watching footage being doctored in real-time, where the words on live footage are dissonant with the words actually coming out of someone’s mouth. This digital threat hangs heavy in the air, constantly evolving in ways neither the audience nor the characters can keep up with.
Alongside simply reflecting technology’s most dangerous aspects, The Capture raises ethical dilemmas about how law enforcement employs it in the name of justice and service. It questions the line between protection and invasion, as well as commitment to justice versus individual autonomy. Grainger’s Carey becomes the anchor that sifts through these questions, with her own grit, determination, and slight paranoia making her a lead we are happy to follow, yet she also has to confront and take accountability for her own role in this dynamic between the police and the public. On the other side in Season 1 is Turner’s Emery, a layered and flawed antagonist who complicates the line even further, while Season 2 gives us an idealistic politician (Paapa Essiedu) whose morals are tested in this AI-plagued society.
With The Capture‘s return just around the corner, now is the time to submerge yourself in a world that feels just as dystopian as it is hyperrealistic. While the show constructs its dramatic vision of the modern age, the humanly flawed characters and the rapidly-moving plot will sweep you away into larger conspiracies that are impossible to tear your eyes from. It makes for the perfect weekend binge, one that will make you second-guess every picture, video, or livestream you see on a screen from that moment on.
Some films are so fun and surprising that you’re almost certain they’re going to be a sensation with audiences as well as critics — especially if it’s connected to an already beloved IP that’s long been in need of a good adaptation. One key example of this had a great cast and a pair of directors who are sharp as a tack. What could go wrong? Sadly, everything.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is streaming for free on Pluto this month, giving viewers a chance to catch up with the 2023 movie, which will now only be successful on streaming. Based on the iconic tabletop role-playing game, the film follows charming thief Edgin Darvis (Chris Pine) and a ragtag crew who set out to retrieve a lost relic, only to get pulled into a much bigger magical mess.
The ensemble cast also includes Michelle Rodriguez (Fast & Furious) as Holga Kilgore, Regé-Jean Page (Bridgerton) as Xenk Yendar, Justice Smith (Pokémon Detective Pikachu) as Simon Aumar, Sophia Lillis (It) as Doric, Hugh Grant (Paddington 2) as Forge Fitzwilliam, Daisy Head (Shadow and Bone) as Sofina, and Chloe Coleman (My Spy) as Kira Darvis.
Tragically, this one was a total flop in terms of financial return, which was a terrible shame because of how charming and funny it is. It opened strongly with about $37–38.5 million domestically and topped the box office in its first weekend, beating John Wick: Chapter 4 in North America, but the big issue was the budget, because it reportedly cost around $150 million, and it only took in $208 million worldwide. Once marketing and distribution costs are factored in, that means disaster.
Critically, though, it did extremely well. Rotten Tomatoes’ consensus calls it an “infectiously good-spirited comedy with a solid emotional core,” and it sits in the low 90s with critics. Collider’s Carly Lane gave it a B+ in her highly positive review, praising directors Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley (Game Night), who also co-wrote the screenplay alongside Michael Gilio, for how they let their affection for the game shine through, as well as the performances of the stars, particularly Page.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is streaming for free on Pluto this month.
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