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The 1990s were a decade that produced many of the most iconic movies ever made — films that defined many of the genres that are still highly popular with audiences today. Action was certainly one of them. The action movies of the ’90s started as an extension of the ’80s’ one-man army formula, but as the decade progressed, so did its action filmmaking, embracing new technologies to create greater, more spectacular movies than ever before.
Now, to be fair, not all the action movies of the ’90s were that great, and many of them have aged quite poorly. But the true masterpieces of the decade are all still widely respected and have had a significant impact on modern cinema. So, without further ado, here’s a look at some of the ‘90s action movies that can be considered true masterpieces, including some of the most memorable blockbusters of all time.
A sequel to 1984’s The Terminator, directed by James Cameron, Terminator 2: Judgement Day continues the story of the war between the evil artificial intelligence Skynet and the human resistance, with Skynet sending a new and advanced killing machine to 1995 to kill a young John Connor. In response, a future John Connor reprograms the cyborg T-800 and sends it back to the same year to protect his younger self. Arnold Schwarzenegger returns as the titular machine, alongside Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor, with Robert Patrick, Edward Furlong, Earl Boen, and Joe Morton in supporting roles.
While The Terminator was a groundbreaking sci-fi action thriller, the sequel re-established both Cameron’s filmmaking genius and Schwarzenegger’s action hero image, turning the films into a worldwide action phenomenon that continues through the 21st century. Terminator 2 is memorable for its high-end action pieces designed with practical stunts and cutting-edge CGI, which make the second film an even better experience than the first. With bigger stakes, high-octane action, and explosive battle scenes, Terminator 2 is easily one of the best action sequels ever made.
Directed by Jan de Bont in his feature film debut and written by Graham Yost, Speed follows a city bus full of passengers rigged with a bomb, which is set to explode if the speed drops below 50 miles per hour or if the passengers are offloaded. Jack Traven, an LAPD officer, sets out to stop the impending disaster, while Annie, a passenger on the bus, rushes to help him. The film stars Keanu Reeves as Jack and Sandra Bullock as Annie, with Jeff Daniels, Dennis Hopper, Joe Morton, and Alan Ruck in supporting roles.
True to its title, Speed delivers a high-speed, high-tension virtual ride that is sure to keep the adrenaline rushing. The film’s core premise, action sequences, and elements like the runaway vehicle and bomb-on-board, are largely inspired by 1985’s Runaway Train and 1975’s The Bullet Train, swapping the train-based thrills with a bus on the streets of Los Angeles. Speed is not only a perfectly-made action film but also a quintessential ’90s blockbuster that has had a lasting impact on pop culture.
Written and directed by Michael Mann, Heat follows LAPD detective Vincent Hanna on a mission to catch career criminal Neil McCauley, who is planning one last big heist before he retires. As Hanna and McCauley go head-to-head in a battle of wits and tricks, it starts to take a toll on their professional lives and personal relationships. Al Pacino stars as Vincent and Robert De Niro as Neil, with Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Amy Brenneman, Ashley Judd, Mykelti Williamson, and Ted Levine in supporting roles.
Heat is a genre-defining ’90s classic boasting some of the best action scenes seen in 20th-century films, featuring thunderous shootouts and realistic fight sequences. The film is also noted for De Niro and Pacino’s first-ever on-screen appearance together, which resulted in some intense moments between the two stalwarts of Hollywood, making Heat a masterpiece in both action and character drama at the same time. The film has since become a major influence on crime action thrillers, setting new standards for tactical action and fight choreography.
Starring and produced by Tom Cruise, Mission: Impossible is an espionage thriller directed by Brian De Palma and based on the 1966 TV series that follows Ethan Hunt, an Impossible Missions Force (IMF) spy, who is framed for the murder of his team members. Ethan then embarks on a high-stakes solo mission to prove his innocence and bring the truth to light. Besides Cruise as Hunt, the film also stars Jon Voight, Henry Czerny, Emmanuelle Béart, Jean Reno, Ving Rhames, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Vanessa Redgrave.
Mission: Impossible launched the titular film series, which has since evolved into a three-decade-spanning multimedia action franchise that redefined Tom Cruise’s image as an action superstar. While the film received mixed reviews for its plot and narrative in its day, it was highly praised for the action choreography and stunts, many of which were performed by Cruise himself. The film’s high-tension action sequences, like the CIA vault heist and the spectacular train tunnel climax scenes, are considered iconic of the genre, and the movie has been an inspiration to many subsequent spy action thrillers.
A landmark sci-fi film directed and written by Roland Emmerich, Independence Day explores a worldwide attack by an alien race, destroying major civilizations with advanced weaponry and tactics. A disparate group of people, including the President of the United States, assemble in the Nevada desert in the aftermath to launch a counterattack on the titular day to save mankind. The film boasts an ensemble cast, featuring Bill Pullman, Will Smith, Vivica A. Fox, Mary McDonnell, Judd Hirsch, Margaret Colin, and Randy Quaid in lead roles.
Independence Day is a legendary disaster film that cemented Emmerich’s mastery of the genre, and it’s considered a major turning point in the history of action blockbusters. With its high-stakes action spectacles (especially the aerial dogfights), large-scale destruction, and maverick heroes, it led to a resurgence of sci-fi disaster thrillers in the mid to late ’90s. The award-winning special effects and action choreography of Independence Day were groundbreaking for its time, surpassing the popularity of other successful films like Twister and Mission: Impossible.
A ’90s cult classic action thriller directed by John Woo, Face/Off follows FBI agent Sean Archer as he obsessively hunts for a terrorist named Castor Troy after Troy inadvertently kills Archer’s son. When Troy is injured and goes into a coma, Archer undergoes an experimental surgery to look like Troy and takes his identity to infiltrate his life and criminal network. John Travolta stars as Archer and Nicolas Cage as Troy, with Gina Gershon, Alessandro Nivola, Colm Feore, Thomas Jane, and CCH Pounder in supporting roles.
Face/Off is an archetypal action blockbuster of the ’90s, defined by its gun-fu action and explosive fight sequences. The movie is stylish, campy, and high-octane all at once, remembered and lauded for Woo’s signature style of action choreography and stunts. Despite all its absurdity and impossibility of plot, concept, and narrative, Face/Off has aged surprisingly well as an action classic, and it’s often noted as one of John Travolta and Nicolas Cage’s best films of their respective careers.
A buddy cop action-comedy directed by Brett Ratner, Rush Hour follows Lee, an inspector of the Royal Hong Kong Police Force, who arrives in Los Angeles to rescue the kidnapped daughter of a Chinese diplomat and is forced to partner with fast-talking LAPD detective James Carter. The two cops navigate their cultural and personality differences in the most hilarious ways while trying to save the girl. Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker star as Lee and James, respectively, with Tzi Ma, Ken Keung, Tom Wilkinson, Chris Penn, and Elizabeth Peña in supporting roles.
A ’90s comedy classic, Rush Hour is an electrifying blend of high-stakes action set pieces and authentic buddy humor arising from Lee and James’ opposites-attract chemistry, which is also the biggest highlight of the film. The movie is also considered to be one of Jackie Chan’s best Hollywood projects, especially since he also did the action choreography and performed many of the dangerous stunts himself. While it’s not a rich cinematic or narrative work, Rush Hour remains an iconic action masterpiece that defined the late ’90s.
Written and directed by The Wachowskis, The Matrix is a cyberpunk action classic set in a dystopian future where most of humanity has been trapped inside the titular simulation. A computer hacker named Thomas Anderson, aka Neo, learns of this secret when he’s recruited by a group of rebels led by the mysterious Morpheus, joining their rebellion against the machines to free humanity from the Matrix. Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Hugo Weaving, and Joe Pantoliano star in the main roles.
The Matrix was a highly innovative film for its time, blending hard-core action, science fiction, philosophy, and mythology, and it cemented Keanu Reeves’ status as an action star. The film is a definitive example of cutting-edge visual effects and action choreography that remarkably blends Hong Kong cinema-style choreography, martial arts, and gun-fu. With inventive techniques like “bullet time” and groundbreaking practical and CGI effects in action sequences, The Matrix revolutionized the genre, becoming a benchmark for sci-fi action and cyberpunk films of the future.
March 31, 1999
136 minutes
Andrew Mason, Barrie M. Osborne, Bruce Berman, Erwin Stoff
Jason Statham fans have a lot to look forward to. Not only will he be returning to the role of Adam Clay in The Beekeeper 2, although this time under the directorial eye of Timo Tjahjanto instead of David Ayer, but Statham is also set to feature in a hugely enticing David Leitch film called Jason Statham Stole My Bike, which Leitch described to Collider as “a chance for Jason and I to do something we’ve been wanting to do for a long time.”
However, the most exciting upcoming Statham project sees him reunite with the man who gave him his big break in cinema, Guy Ritchie, almost 30 years since they first collaborated on Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Four more collaborations later, and the duo will be teaming up on their sixth project, Viva La Madness, a new action-thriller based on J.J. Connolly’s 2011 novel and the follow-up to Layer Cake. The only frustrating thing all these upcoming movies have in common is that we won’t be seeing them for some time yet, with The Beekeeper 2 scheduled for a January 2027 release date.
Thankfully, Statham fans are being kept well entertained on streaming, as many of his best and most underrated movies continue to circulate. At the time of writing, 2016’s Mechanic: Resurrection is one of the ten most-streamed movies on Netflix in the world. Directed by Dennis Gansel, the film marked the sequel to 2011’s The Mechanic, which itself was a remake of the 1972 film of the same name starring Charles Bronson. Mechanic: Resurrection stars Statham alongside an eye-catching cast including Jessica Alba, Tommy Lee Jones, Michelle Yeoh, Sam Hazeldine, Rhatha Phongam, and John Cenatiempo.
After the first installment scored a disappointing box office haul of just $76 million, Mechanic: Resurrection had some retribution to achieve. Thankfully, Statham is a master of revenge, with this sequel proving an undeniable hit during its 2016 theatrical run. Against a reported budget of $40 million, Mechanic: Resurrection earned a global haul of $125 million, split between just $21 million in domestic revenue and a further $104 million from overseas markets.
The Jason Statham-led sequel Mechanic: Resurrection is one of the ten most-streamed movies on Netflix in the world. Make sure to stay tuned to Collider for the latest streaming stories.
August 26, 2016
99 minutes
Dennis Gansel
Philip Shelby, Tony Mosher, Brian Pittman, Rachel Long, Lewis John Carlino
David Winkler, John Thompson, William Chartoff, Robert Earl
In the last six years, Apple TV has become the streaming industry’s premier destination for long-form sci-fi storytelling. Shows such as Severance have broken through and generated the sort of attention that is vital to a platform’s growth. More recently, the streamer hit another home run with Pluribus, Vince Gilligan‘s hugely anticipated follow-up to Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul. In the years between these two shows, Apple TV has delivered acclaimed titles such as Silo, which will return with a third season this year, and Foundation, the ambitious adaptation of Isaac Asimov‘s sprawling magnum opus. However, this golden age of sci-fi programming began in 2019 with a single title that continues to draw audiences even today.
The show in question will conclude after a sixth and final season scheduled for 2027, before which a spin-off will debut on the same platform in a few weeks. While airing its fifth season, the show hit a majestic milestone on the Apple TV streaming charts. According to FlixPatrol, it’s among the top 10 most-watched series on the streamer, and has now spent more than 500 days on its viewership chart. The series premiered in 2019 as a launch title for Apple TV, along with The Morning Show, Dickinson, and a handful of other titles. It remains the longest-running Apple TV series along with the espionage drama Slow Horses.
We’re talking, of course, about For All Mankind. The decades-spanning sci-fi drama unfolds in an alternate reality where the Space Race between the United States and Russia never ended. The first season took place in the 1970s, and the narrative has jumped forward by several years across the subsequent seasons. Co-created by Ronald D. Moore, the series has received positive reviews overall, and is currently sitting at a 91% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes. The second and fourth seasons hold perfect 100% scores, while the fifth season appears to have settled at a “Certified Fresh” 90% on Rotten Tomatoes. The aggregator website’s consensus reads,
“With smart storytelling, high ambition, and enough tension to keep viewers glued to their screen, For All Mankind remains one of television’s most compelling sci-fi sagas.” You can watch For All Mankind on Apple TV, where you can also tune into the upcoming spin-off, Star City, starting May 29. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
November 1, 1989
80 minutes
Al Reinert
Betsy Broyles Breier
Jim Lovell
Narrator – Apollo 8, Apollo 13 (voice)
Russell Schweickart
Narrator – Apollo 9 (voice)
Eugene Cernan
Narrator – Apollo 10, Apollo 17 (voice)
Michael Collins
Narrator – Apollo 11 (voice)
By the end of Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) has lost almost everything familiar to him. His aunt and uncle are dead, Obi-Wan Kenobi sacrificed himself aboard the Death Star, and for the young hero, the galaxy suddenly feels much larger and far more dangerous than it did back on Tatooine. Right before Luke steps fully into that uncertain future, Obi-Wan leaves him with one final reassurance:
“The Force will be with you. Always.”
More than three decades later, that line still feels like the emotional thesis for all of Star Wars. Not because it sounds cool, and not because fans have repeated it endlessly over the years, but because it perfectly captures what the franchise has always been trying to say underneath the space battles and mythology. Star Wars has never really been about winning wars: it’s about holding onto hope when everything around you tells you not to.
A lot of iconic movie quotes survive because they are attached to spectacle. They come from explosive reveals, or triumphant victories audiences never forget. Obi-Wan Kenobi’s line works for the exact opposite reason. The moment is quiet. Alec Guinness, despite his complicated relationship with the role, delivers “The Force will be with you. Always.” with the calm certainty that defines Obi-Wan throughout the original trilogy. He is not trying to hype Luke up before battle or deliver some grand speech about destiny. If anything, the line feels deeply personal. Obi-Wan understands Luke is terrified, overwhelmed, and stepping into a future he cannot possibly comprehend yet. Instead of filling the moment with exposition or philosophy, he gives Luke something simpler: reassurance.
That simplicity is exactly what gives the quote its staying power. The Force itself has become increasingly complicated over the decades as the franchise expanded through prequels, sequels, animation, books, games, and streaming series. This line cuts through all of that. It reduces the entire concept back down to its emotional purpose. The Force is not just power. It is guidance, faith, connection, and the belief that nobody is truly alone. The word “always” is what turns the quote from comfort into conviction. Obi-Wan is not promising Luke that things will become easy. He is telling him that even after loss, fear, and failure, the Force remains.
Part of what makes the line so powerful is how naturally it carries the full weight of Obi-Wan and Luke’s relationship. Luke barely has time to understand who Obi-Wan really is before he loses him, but this quote makes their connection feel permanent. It is the kind of reassurance that outlives the person who gives it. That matters because A New Hope is filled with characters trying to keep moving after unimaginable loss. Leia (Carrie Fisher) loses Alderaan and still leads. Luke loses his family and still chooses the Rebellion. Obi-Wan loses almost everything long before the film begins, yet he still believes enough to guide someone else forward. “The Force will be with you. Always,” captures that entire emotional pattern in one sentence.
It also reflects something unique about why Star Wars has endured for so long across generations. Science fiction franchises often become consumed by lore escalation. The stakes grow larger, the mythology becomes denser, and eventually the emotional center starts getting buried underneath continuity. Star Wars survives those shifts because moments like this keep anchoring the franchise in human emotion. No matter how massive the galaxy becomes, the series always circles back to connection, and people trying to believe that light can survive long enough to be passed on.
Over the years, Star Wars has produced bigger speeches, darker moments, and more technically impressive scenes than Obi-Wan’s farewell to Luke. Entire generations grew up with different versions of the franchise defining what Star Wars meant to them personally. Yet Obi-Wan’s line still feels untouchable because it captures the series at its emotional purest. At its best, Star Wars has always been about people choosing hope in situations that feel hopeless. The franchise works because it understands optimism is not naive, it is difficult. Sometimes survival itself becomes an act of faith. “The Force will be with you. Always,” distills all of that into six simple words.
Thirty-three years later, the line still lands because it feels bigger than nostalgia: it feels timeless. Even after countless sequels, spin-offs, animated series, and streaming expansions, that quote remains the clearest expression of what made Star Wars matter in the first place. Somehow, in a franchise filled with lightsabers, Death Stars, and one of the greatest villains in movie history, the line that still hits hardest is simply Obi-Wan promising Luke he will never truly be alone.
May 25, 1977
121 minutes
George Lucas
George Lucas
Gary Kurtz, Rick McCallum

There is something deeply refreshing about a movie that knows exactly how ridiculous it is and fully commits to the bit anyway. Modern studio blockbusters have developed a habit of sanding down their weirdest edges in favor of franchise setup, lore management, and self-serious spectacle, but Anaconda goes in the complete opposite direction. The 2025 reboot throws audiences directly into giant snake attacks, jungle chaos, and escalating panic almost immediately, then spends the next 99 minutes making sure things only get stranger from there. Somehow, that commitment to pure creature-feature energy has turned the Sony film into one of the biggest hits currently on Netflix.
While Peacock is largely known as the streaming home for NBCUniversal‘s shows and movies, the streamer does also make its own scripted content. It has occasionally landed hit shows like Bel-Air, Those About to Die, and The Day of the Jackal. However, there hasn’t been a true hit since the latter premiered in 2024. But as fans of The Day of the Jackal await Season 2, Peacock has released another crime series that has already taken over the platform.
Despite mixed reviews, the thriller is the top show on Peacock, dethroning the reality shows that largely dominate the streamer. With a 67% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the show has elicited mixed reactions from critics, with many noting that it works if viewers don’t question the story too much. However, many have praised its lead actor, Shannon Gisela, for her powerful performance even when the material drags her down. Collider’s Jessica Toomer was one of the critics who appreciated Gisela, calling her “the kind of discovery that makes the lulls bearable, and the highs feel earned.”
M.I.A, as the series is called, was created by Ozark‘s co-creator Bill Dubuque. As a result, it features some of those qualities that made Ozark a hit, but they don’t land as well in Florida. “M.I.A. is at its best when it stops trying to be Ozark and lets itself be Ozark‘s sweatier, more deranged cousin,” Toomer wrote. ScreenRant‘s Sean Morrison said in his review that it felt like the best parts of M.I.A are yet to be realized and may need more seasons to fully land. “For now, M.I.A. is still finding itself,” he wrote. Sherin Nicole of RogerEbert echoed these sentiments, noting that the show “makes you feel very little about these characters and their struggles.”
The series is a revenge thriller focusing on Gisela’s character, Etta Tiger Jonze. She comes from a drug-running family, but when the negative consequences of that line of work catch up with them, and her family is killed, Etta embarks on a revenge mission in Miami’s neon-lit crime underbelly. While critics were not impressed by the storyline’s development, they praised the show’s ability to capture the Miami vibe that made Miami Vice and Dexter feel authentic, with Dexter‘s writer, Karen Campbell, serving as executive producer and showrunner. Other cast members include Cary Elwes, Danay Garcia, Brittany Adebumola, Dylan Jackson, Alberto Guerra, Maurice Compte, Gerardo Celasco, and Marta Milans.
All episodes of M.I.A are available to stream on Peacock in the U.S. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
May 7, 2026
Peacock
Karen Campbell
Alethea Jones, Benjamin Semanoff, Gwyneth Horder-Payton, John Dahl, Mairzee Almas
Bill Dubuque, Karen Campbell
Shannon Gisela
Etta Tiger Jonze
Actress Daisy Ridley may best be known for her role as Rey in the “Star Wars” sequel trilogy, but she has appeared in countless movies spanning a wide range of genres. She appeared in the 2017 mystery film “Murder on the Orient Express” and played the titular Ophelia in the 2018 film of the same name. She had a lead role in the 2021 science fiction film “Chaos Walking” and played Gertrude Ederle in the 2024 biological drama “Young Woman and the Sea.” In January, she stepped into a zombie horror film when “We Bury The Dead” was released in theaters.
WARNING: Spoilers below.

The movie opens with text across the screen that reads, “Somehow, Palpatine returned…”
No, but could you imagine? One would have thought that Ridley would have had enough of zombies after she defeated a resurrected Palpatine in 2019’s “The Rise of Skywalker,” which was a movie so terrible that Disney pulled the plug on all future theatrical releases until “The Mandalorian & Grogu” – a spin-off of a three-season TV show on Disney+ – hits theaters later this month.
But “We Bury The Dead” isn’t so much a zombie movie as it is a commentary on grief and closure. The movie opens after the United States accidentally detonates an experimental weapon off the Eastern coast of Tasmania. Considering the current state of politics, this is a funny bit in a movie that provides very little comedy.
Speaking of funny, it was definitely an interesting choice to have Daisy Ridley’s character, Ava, play a “yank,” as she’s often referred to throughout the film, with a lackluster American accent that doesn’t go over as well as one might think. Whether American, British, or even Australian, where she’s from doesn’t have much bearing on the film.
Ava travels to the area as part of a body retrieval unit and is partnered with Clay, another volunteer who, we later find out, is volunteering to prove to his wife and daughter that he’s not as selfish as they think he is. But Ava has an ulterior motive for joining the program: her husband Mitch works in “renewable energy,” and a company retreat put him right in the detonation zone.
I don’t know what American renewable energy companies send their employees to Tasmania for a work retreat, but here we are.
Regardless, Ava is desperate to find him. He’s probably dead, but there are rumors that some of the dead are becoming undead, although they mostly just stare and grind their teeth in a way that would make a dentist cringe. The zombies only become speedy and violent when the plot needs them to, and let’s be honest, the plot doesn’t really need them to. Most of the time, they don’t end up doing anything besides staring and gnashing their teeth.
Clay and Ava get separated on her quest to get to her husband’s hotel when a soldier – Riley – shows up. Riley locks Ava in a room for hours while he “questions” Clay and then comes back to tell her that Clay ran away. Clay does seem like the kind of guy who would run away, but Riley also seems like the kind of guy who would take him out back and shoot him, so either way, Ava’s not in a great position.
And she gets in a worse position when Riley offers her a lift. With little other option, she gets in his jeep, only for him to drive her to his wife’s childhood home and cook her dinner. He then asks Ava to put on Katie’s clothes and perfume and dance with him before he will take her to her destination. For whatever reason, Ava agrees to this. Things get creepy, and then Riley gets expectedly violent when he realizes Ava didn’t take off her wedding ring, as requested.
She rushes upstairs only to find that his zombified wife is pregnant and chained to the bed. She escapes out the window only to find even more undead chained up together in his barn. He claims the dead who come back have “unfinished business” and that his wife came back because she still plans to give birth to their child.
Yup. Okay.

As expected, Ava kills him and escapes. Katie somehow also got unshackled from the bed and makes her way outside, somehow, but Ava just bolts out of there and continues her quest to find her husband. She eventually reaches the hotel where he’s staying and finds him in his room – I guess this is the only and only hotel in the world where rooms don’t have locked doors? – only to find evidence that her husband had been having an affair.
Flashbacks scattered throughout the movie hinted that they had been having marital problems, but it isn’t until Clay shows up – somehow – that Ava explains that she grew frustrated after being unable to conceive a child, and so she had an affair right before he left on this business trip. It’s not clear how long he’s been having an affair for, or if it was a one-night stand, but either way, Ava’s pretty upset that he won’t become undead and apparently doesn’t consider her “unfinished business.”
She and Clay get drunk and have a pool party – because why not? – which is interrupted when a zombie comes in. She smashes its head open with what looks to be a wine bottle, which is the bloodiest she gets throughout the entire film. She later wakes up in bed next to Clay and decides to give Mitch a ship burial after getting inspired by a painting of a Viking burial on the wall.
On their trip back north, they stop their car when they see Katie standing in the middle of the road. Ava sees her bloody clothes and rushes off to some stone ruins, where she hears the sounds of a baby crying. That’s right. Katie gave birth in the middle of a field, then stopped in the middle of the roadway, hoping someone would stop, get out of their car, and find her bundle of joy, who is somehow completely healthy.
Zombie Katie just walks off down the road, and Ava picks up the baby, seemingly delighted that she’s finally getting to be a mom, although it’s not really clear whether she wanted to be a mom or just to start a family with Mitch. The flashbacks only hint that the tensions in their marriage were due to her infertility, and it’s not clear how much Ava actually wanted to be a parent.
Maybe it’s supposed to end on a hopeful note, but it really just falls flat. After initially describing it to a friend as a “weird, weird, weird, movie,” I did what anyone would do and typed the name of the film into Google, where I came across a few Reddit boards asking, “WTH did I just watch?”
Honestly? Same. As a “Star Wars” fan, I was drawn in by Daisy Ridley. As a zombie movie fan, I was drawn in by the premise. It seemed very similar to Colson Whitehead’s 2011 novel “Zone One,” which follows a character named Mark Spitz clearing the last “straggler” zombies from NYC after a pandemic.
This was not that. “We Bury The Dead” seems more like a test of what people will go through in order to find closure, but it’s muddled by the ending and the reveal that Mitch is also having an affair. She cheated on him, he cheated on her, and then he died, and she risked her life trying to find a man who she knew was already dead.
The movie would have been better if it had featured Ava walking into the hotel room, finding Mitch’s body, and then slowly closing the door behind her before the screen faded to black. Does he reanimate? Does he stay dead? Does she get closure?
It would be incredibly ironic for a film about a character finding closure to then not give the audience the same. I’m a fan of ambiguous endings, but if 2025’s “A House of Dynamite” taught me anything, it is that most people are not.
The current ending doesn’t provide much closure, but at least Ava does find a baby. Does she head back to America with it? Does she stay with Clay? And how did he actually give Riley the slip and then somehow make it to the same hotel about ten minutes after Ava when they were separated for days?
“We Bury The Dead” doesn’t give you any answers. It just buries them.
Daisy Ridley, Brenton Thwaites, and Mark Coles Smith star in Zak Hilditch’s zombie horror “We Bury The Dead,” which is now streaming on Hulu.
After seemingly coming to an emotionally poignant close in 2023, with the titular soccer coach back in Kansas, Ted Lasso is ready to make a heartwarming comeback later this year, when the fourth season debuts on Apple TV on August 5. Jason Sudeikis‘ wise Ted is about to face his biggest challenge yet, as Season 4 sees him coaching a second division women’s football team, with the mens’ team left in the capable hands of Brett Goldstein‘s Roy Kent.
All your favorite faces will be back alongside Sudeikis and Goldstein for Ted Lasso Season 4, including Hannah Waddingham as Rebecca Welton, Juno Temple as Keeley Jones, Brendan Hunt as Coach Beard, and Jeremy Swift as Leslie Higgins, with new faces joining the cast including Tanya Reynolds of Sex Education fame, Jude Mack, Andor‘s Faye Marsay, Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey, Abbie Hern, and Grant Feely. The return of Ted and the gang can’t come soon enough, but thankfully, Netflix has your wholesome sports series requirements filled in the meantime.
At the time of writing, the second season of Netflix’s answer to Ted Lasso, Running Point, is one of the ten most-streamed shows on the platform worldwide. It was recently reported that the show had earned over 25 million hours viewed in its first week since returning, before showcasing its staying power with a jump to 32 million hours viewed in its second week, which roughly translates to 6.7 million total views. In the past week, Running Point has hit an inevitable decline as newer shows make their streaming splash, including the hit true-crime docuseries Should I Marry A Murderer? and the must-watch crime thriller Man on Fire starring Yahya Abdul-Mateen II.
Following her recent Academy Award nomination for Song Sung Blue, the brilliant Kate Hudson is back for Running Point Season 2 as Isla Gordon, the unlikely appointee as President of her family business, the LA Waves basketball team, following her brother’s entry into rehab. Hudson is joined by an eye-catching second-season cast, including Brenda Song, Chet Hanks, Fabrizio Guido, Scott MacArthur, and Justin Theroux, with guest stars including Max Greenfield, Ray Romano, Ken Marino, and Nicole Sullivan.
The perfect Ted Lasso replacement, Running Point, is a global streaming hit on Netflix. Make sure to stay tuned to Collider for all the latest streaming stories.
February 27, 2025
Netflix
Michael Weaver, James Ponsoldt, David Stassen, Thembi Banks
For eight years, The Handmaid’s Tale was one of the finest shows on Hulu. Tapping into some very real fears in our modern world, via Margaret Atwood‘s acclaimed novel, the show took viewers on a terrifying, deeply dramatic journey as June Osborne (Elisabeth Moss) quietly fought for justice against a totalitarian regime. After the end of the show’s hugely popular last season left a hole in viewing habits, Hulu capitalized, recently releasing the coming-of-age sequel series The Testaments, featuring the breakout star of One Battle After Another, Chase Infiniti.
Looking to bring their own slice of dystopian, gender oppression drama to the streaming catalog, Netflix jumped on this niche bandwagon with the recent release of Unchosen, the tale of a mother living in the shadow of a conservative Christian cult, who finds an unlikely path to freedom through an escaped convict. The series is stacked with talent, in an ensemble led by Molly Windsor. The Julie Greary-created series also stars the likes of Fra Fee, Asa Butterfield, Siobhan Finneran, Christopher Eccleston, Alexa Davies, Olivia Pickering, and Rory Wilmot.
Making its debut late last month on April 21, Unchosen has quietly proven a streaming favorite across the world, earning an impressive 10.4 million views in just six days. The series has topped the Netflix charts in over 69 nations worldwide, even hanging onto the top spot in 38 countries heading into its second week. At the time of writing, as the show’s third week continues, Unchosen is still one of the five most-streamed shows on Netflix in the world, with that list currently topped by the crime thriller Man on Fire.
Although there is no official word on a second season for this popular new series, there is hope that strong viewing figures will help make Netflix’s decision for them. In a previous conversation with Collider, star Fee expressed his hope that the show can continue, and even hinted that showrunner Greary has plans for the show’s future. “Like anything, if you know these shows, if it’s a big success, you know they’ll want to carry it on,” Fee said, adding, “and I think Julie probably has some ideas up her sleeve already.”
Stay tuned to find out if Unchosen is renewed on Netflix. Follow Collider for all the latest streaming stories.
The Real Housewives of New Jersey alum Jennifer Fessler has offered an unexpected apology over an Instagram post in which she denied hooking up with Summer House’s West Wilson.
“I’m sorry!!!!!! I admit it,” Jenn, 57, wrote via Instagram on Saturday, May 9, before clarifying, “I used the wrong font.”
Earlier in the day, Jenn released a strongly-worded denial over speculation about her relationship with West, 31, following his girlfriend Ciara Miller claiming that the two hooked up in the past.
“In all seriousness, and while I can’t help but be a little flattered, it is not nice nor is it OK to post something categorically untrue and defamatory on social media,” , wrote via her Instagram Stories on Saturday, May 9. “Regardless of whatever rumors or apparent ‘evidence’ led you to that conclusion, that is the definition of libel.”

The statement continued, “If it were true, I would have no recourse. Because it’s a lie, this can get more complicated. Having said that, I hope we can rectify this. It’s enough now.”
Aside from the content of the post, Bravo fans were annoyed about the cursive-style font that Jenn used for the message and apparently let her know about it.
The former Real Housewives of New Jersey star unexpectedly ended up in the middle of the drama over West’s newfound relationship with Summer House costar Amanda Batula earlier this week. On March 31, Amanda and West confirmed they were exploring their “connection” mere months after Amanda announced her separation from her estranged husband, Kyle Cooke.
Jenn stuck up for West during an interview on the red carpet of Vulture‘s The Masterminds of Reality TV event in New York City on Thursday, May 7.
“[West] is the cutest, sweetest golden retriever puppy dog. He does not mean any harm. He didn’t mean it,” Jenn said on the red carpet on Thursday, May 7. “He’s just trying to have a good time. He doesn’t wanna hurt anyone. Give him a break.”
Ciara, 30, responded to a clip of Jenn’s comments with a shocking allegation, writing, “Lol, because they slept together too.”
Jenn initially responded to Ciara’s accusation with a light-hearted statement to Page Six on Friday, May 8, saying, “It’s flattering that anyone would think someone who slept with Ciara Miller would be interested in sleeping with me.”

Jennifer Fessler in November 2025. Gabe Ginsberg/Bravo
West also tried to brush off the drama with an Instagram Story where he said the hookup rumors were “news to me.” A source close to West exclusively told Us Weekly that Ciara’s allegation was “absolutely not true,” dismissing it as “such a silly accusation.”
Ciara subsequently doubled down on her accusation by sharing a Summer House photo of Amanda via Threads, along with the cryptic caption, “If I send this to you I’m about to lie straight to your face.”
In the wake of Ciara’s accusation, Jenn’s recent Instagram post in honor of her 27th wedding anniversary has resurfaced and raised eyebrows. (Jenn has been married to her husband, Jeffrey Fessler, since 1999 and they share two children, son Zachary and daughter Rachel.)
“Happy 27,” Jenn wrote to Jeff via Instagram on April 10. “You could sleep with West or Amanda and I’d still stay!”
Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel are often considered to be among the top tier of film critics, particularly their TV series At The Movies (originally known as Siskel & Ebert & the Movies). The duo was known for their scathing sense of humor when it came to their reviews, along with their famous “Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down” system (long before Rotten Tomatoes was a thing). In all that time, Ebert and Siskel never reviewed a television series — except for one major occasion. That review was for the short-lived animated series The Critic, which was ironically about a movie critic’s life.
Created by Al Jean and Mike Reiss, The Critic follows New York movie critic Jay Sherman (Jon Lovitz). Much like Siskel and Ebert, Sherman hosted his own television series where he delivered takedowns of movies — most of them parodies of popular or classic films. He even had his own catchphrase: “It stinks!” But what did Siskel and Ebert think of the show? The answer’s a bit complicated.
Siskel and Ebert would review the first three episodes of The Critic, and their initial reactions were mixed. Siskel felt that The Critic had far fewer memorable characters than The Simpsons, which Jean and Reiss previously worked on. Ebert, on the other hand, felt that the show should focus on Jay’s job rather than his personal life. But the mix of Jay’s personal and professional life is what makes The Critic such a great watch. His interactions with his friends led Jean and Reiss to provide commentary on Hollywood, and he was a single father — a rarity in a sitcom, let alone an animated one.
Once Season 1 of The Critic found its groove, Ebert would eventually write a glowing review on his website. He thoroughly enjoyed it, saying that it was “impossible” not to like Jay, while praising executive producer James L. Brooks‘ work in balancing the show’s humor with character development. Ebert even delivered one of his signature witty observations regarding the pilot, which opens with a beautiful actress turning on Jay after he negatively reviews one of her movies: “In real life (in my experience of it, anyway), critics are never offered bribes for good reviews, and never wind up in bed with movie stars.”
It might have taken Siskel and Ebert a while to warm up to The Critic, but no one could have predicted that the duo would actually guest star on the series. In the Season 2 episode “Siskel & Ebert & Jay & Alice,” Jay gets invited to the Academy Awards alongside a select group of critics that includes Siskel and Ebert. But Siskel and Ebert get into a fight on the trip back, and eventually split up; Jay tries to partner with both of them before seeing how much they miss each other, and decides to repair their friendship.
Siskel and Ebert fully lean into the humor of The Critic, riffing on the fact that Jay ripped off the climax of Sleepless in Seattle to bring them together. It’s no wonder Jean and Reiss consider this to be one of their favorite episodes of The Critic.
The Critic weathered some rough storms during its brief run; it moved from ABC to Fox, and a crossover with The Simpsons led to series creator Matt Groening denouncing said episode. It was cancelled after two seasonsbut earned a reappraisal years later. Even the cast loved it! Maurice LaMarche, who provided a multitude of voices for The Critic, says that it and Pinky and the Brain were two of his favorite projects. Lovitz had a similar reaction when conducting an interview celebrating The Critic‘s 30th anniversary:
It’s very flattering, but at the same time, it’s frustrating, because I wish the show would have kept going. It was a hit show, and they just canceled it. So it’s one of those regrets, like: What would five years’ worth of shows that should have been, instead of just 23 [episodes], look like? I’ve been trying to do it again ever since, and they tell me it’s complicated.
The Critic, along with Siskel and Ebert’s work, helped shed light on how film criticism really worked. It’s rather fitting that it was the only TV show they ever reviewed and guest-starred in.
The Critic is available to stream on Tubi in the U.S.
1994 – 2001-00-00
Bret Haaland, Lauren MacMullan, Alan Smart, Rich Moore, Dan Jeup, Brian Sheesley, David Cutler, Steven Dean Moore, Susie Dietter, Chuck Sheetz
Jon Vitti, Steve Tompkins, Ken Keeler, Patric M. Verrone, Tom Brady, Jennifer Ventimilia, Joshua Sternin, Steven Levitan, Max Pross, Nell Scovell
Jon Lovitz
Jay Sherman (voice)
Christine Cavanaugh
Marty Sherman (voice)
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