Related: J. Smith-Cameron Wants to Do More ‘Hacks’ Episodes: ‘A Dream Come True’
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Here’s a look at what celebrities have been up to as of late!
Olivia Rodrigo poses in the ROOTS limited-edition Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary bomber jacket after hosting the show in New York City.
Alicia Keys appeared on American Idol wearing KSUBI’s Barrel Jacket in black.
Chase Infiniti attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City in the DELPHINE Florence Gown in Citron.
Jennifer Lawrence enjoyed a stroll in New York City while carrying CYKLAR’s Perfume Oil in Modern Patchouli.
Nikki Glaser attended Netflix Is A Joke Festival Presents: Night of Too Many Stars in Los Angeles, California, where she carried the Hazel Bow Bag from Charles & Keith.
Doja Cat, Tate McRae, Simone Ashley, Lisa, and Alexa Chung attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City wearing Stringys. The brand also launched their first-ever bra.
Kylie Jenner stepped out in Los Angeles, California wearing Helsa’s Beckette Knit Capris.
Nina Dobrev walked her dog in New York City while wearing the Seeley Double Breasted Longline Coat by ASTR The Label.
Becky G celebrated the release of her single “EPA” in West Hollywood, California while wearing Outcast’s Niko Shorts in Black Stripe.
Lily Collins filmed Emily in Paris in Mykonos, Greece while wearing high-waisted floral shorts from Maje.
Shay Mitchell posed on Instagram in a pair of Alana Stiletto Pumps from JUSTFAB.
Miranda Kerr, Karlie Kloss, Ciara, Lindsey Vonn, and more attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City after getting facials by celebrity aesthetician Mimi Luzon.
Doechii snapped a selfie for Instagram wearing the KSUBI Low Rider Exposed Swept Mini.
Bella Hadid vacationed in Saint-Tropez, France in OTRA’s Esme sunglasses in Olive to Gold / Olive.
Eva Longoria posed for a picture on Instagram in the Kinley Earrings in gold by Petal & Pup.
Lindsay Hubbard celebrated the premiere of In The City in New York City while wearing the Natalie Rolt Julietta Dress.
Selena Gomez attended the premiere of Marty, Life Is Short at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood in Los Angeles, California wearing feathered diamond earrings and a round, brilliant cut diamond ring from Stephen Silver Fine Jewelry. The singer also enjoyed a stroll in London, England while wearing the AGOLDE Dame Short in Convert.
Suki Waterhouse snapped a selfie for Instagram in the DUCIE Holly Long Hair Jacket.
Emily Ratajkowski shopped at the gimaguas pop-up in New York City.
Tina Fey attended a press day for The Four Seasons in Los Angeles, California wearing the INEZ Lola Heels and again to the premiere of the television show.
Emily Blunt, Sarah Pidgeon, Grace Gummer, Sarah Paulson, Luke Evans, and more attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City after getting their skin prepped by celeb facialist Lord Gavin McLeod-Valentine and Skin Lab lead facialist Desireé Delia using The Method by Augustinus Bader.
Katie Couric hosted a live conversation with Cameron Rogers at the Reinventing Relationships event at City Winery in New York City, where they discussed generational healing, family dynamics, and the importance of open conversations around mental health.
Heidi Montag appeared on the Coming in Hot podcast to discuss her comeback as a pop artist with her album, “Superficial”, her marriage to Spencer Pratt, and losing their Pacific Palisades, California home in the Palisades Fire.
Jamie Lynn Sigler shared her love for CYKLAR’s Vanilla Verve Body Oil with New York Magazine.
Terry and Heather Dubrow celebrated the college graduations of their twins, Max and Nick Dubrow, at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California.
Cameron Diaz and Katherine Power partnered with PAIGE to kick off Summer Fridays season by offering shoppers a complimentary Avaline Wine every Friday from May 22 through Sept. 2.
Hudson Williams starred in a BVLGARI jewelry campaign wearing the SIMKHAI Gibson Leather Shirt Jacket.
Gia Giudice hosted the social takeover of NBCUniversal’s 2026 Upfront presentation at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
Jesse Solomon appeared on the Summer House reunion wearing ALDO’s Axwell Loafers.
Amanda Frances announced the relaunch of the Vibe Membership with a lower price point and added value.
Holly Humberstone participated in Free People’s FP Sessions performance and interview series wearing the brand’s Clarise Mini Dress, Viola Over-the-Knee Socks, Aurora Flats, In This Groove Mini Slip, Frye for FP Campus Boots, Feeling Again Lariat Necklace, It’s Romantic Brami, In Full Swing Shorts, and Cecily Clogs.
Jimmy Butler attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City in a custom ALO outfit.
Lux Pascal attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City in a custom Cult Gaia look.
Maude Apatow attended the 2026 Met Gala celebrating Costume Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City in the Brilliant Earth Perfect 4-Prong Diamond Stud Earrings and Brilliant Earth Diamond Rings and HUE’s Opaque Sheer to Waist Tights.
Jennie stepped out in New York City in Black Suede Studio’s Easy 50 Mule and again in the Reformation Amelia Thong Wedge.
Deacon Phillippe strolled in New York City in ATM’s Slub Jersey Long Sleeve Destroyed Wash Tee.
Mika Abdalla posted on Instagram wearing the Skye Top in Espresso by Atelier Solana.
Sandra Vergara attended the Vulture Reality Masterminds Celebration at The Lawn Club in New York City wearing The Transformer in Crystal/Black by ROCKNOT.
Allie Eklund appeared as one of the newest cast members in the Season 3 trailer of McBee Dynasty at NBCUniversal’s Upfront presentation at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
Ella Bright appeared on Off Campus in Simone Pérèle’s Karma Sheer Demi in black and Intrigue Sheer Demi in black.
Melinda Melrose attended the Dolce&Gabbana beauty pop-up in New York City after being appointed as the brand’s Global Makeup Expert.
Kim Gravel appeared on the LegendsNLeaders podcast to discuss her live selling playbook.
Miranda McKeon hosted a Fill Your Tank community hike and farm-to-table lunch in New York.
Brittny and Jenson Button attended the Dior Cruise 2027 Show at Los Angeles County Museum of Art in Los Angeles, California.
Cassidy Montalvo attended the Academy of Country Music Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada with Amazon Prime Video.
Aimee Smale celebrated the release of her Pretty Busy podcast.
Kai Stone appeared on Getting Real with RED podcast.
Violet Witchel celebrated the launch of her Dense Bean Salad at BIGFACE Coffee in Miami, Florida.
Paige Lindgren promoted her debut cookbook, Sync & Savor, in New York City and Los Angeles, California.
Avantika Vandanapu attended the screening and conversation for Not Suitable For Work at 92NY in New York City.
Kacey Musgraves teamed up with Lee® to launch Kacey Lee, a 100-piece collaboration for Walmart with men’s and women’s denim bottoms and tops, sleepwear, swimwear, accessories, and pet items.
Shelton Wilder showcased listings in Brentwood, California, Malibu, California, and Beverly Hills, California.
Kat Velasco released her single “Shutting Down Midtown”.
Madison Woolley attended the Carla Zampatti show during Australian Fashion Week in Australia.
Jordan Chiles celebrated her birthday with a ’90s theme in Los Angeles, California.
Susan Holmes-McKagan celebrated the release of her paperback book, The Velvet Rose, at Sunset Marquis in West Hollywood, California.
GIRLSET attended 5th Annual Gold Gala at The Music Center in Los Angeles, California wearing the Manhattan Chain Link Statement Bracelet, Juliette Pave Bangle, Margaux Pave Ring, Plaza Ring, Nairobi Chain Bracelet, Camille Statement Drop Earrings, Knockout Collar, and Signature Midi Knockout Studs by Dean Davidson and the Golden Whirlwind Ring by Kaimanna by Samara.
Nick Arrojo hosted salon services including haircuts, color, and blowouts at the ARROJO pop-up in Los Angeles, California to celebrate three new additions to the ARROJO product collection.
Olivia Ponton attended the premiere of Amarga Navidad during the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France.
Michael Dupouy celebrated the release of his book, All Gone at the GUESS JEANS Melrose Flagship in West Hollywood, California, where guests enjoyed a book signing, custom denim experiences, and more.
Preslee Faith attended the Pink Palm Puff VIP pop-up event in Miami, Florida to celebrate the brand’s new store opening.
Katie Austin celebrated her sixth year as a SI Swimsuit model by appearing on Good Day New York, the Tamron Hall Show, and TODAY in New York City.
Shoshanna Raven celebrated her wedding to Christian Martin in Puerto Rico.
TJ Palma appeared on Harry Jowsey’s podcast, Boyfriend Material.
Glenn Adamson released ACHILLE, Assouline’s latest title, to celebrate the bespoke creations of the eponymous Italian architect, artist, and designer.
Lindye Galloway celebrated her 14-piece apparel capsule and 8-piece eyewear collaboration with Z SUPPLY at Common Thread in Costa Mesa, California.
RIXO co-founders Henrietta Rix and Orlagh McCloskey hosted a RIXO gifting suite at The Honeyman Agency in Beverly Hills, California. The brand also launched its May collection, Golden Haze, featuring new shapes, ’70s, vintage references, gemstone colorways, lightweight cottons, and fluid chiffons.
Lily Easton celebrated the opening of the With Jéan pop-up in West Hollywood, California.
Chase DeMoor is preparing for the Fame Fighting vs. Misfits boxing event in Leverkusen, Germany on June 6.
Jamie Milne welcomed her second baby with husband Brandon.
Sophie Saint teased new music, set to be released in June.
Levi’s® celebrated the debut of the Levi’s® Bungalow in Venice, California, where guests enjoyed music, food, and the spirit of summer.
Nick Fouquet and Jacques Marie Mage celebrated the launch of their eight-piece limited-edition collaboration featuring two JMM eyewear styles and one Nick Fouquet signature hat in two colorways with a private party at JMM Galleries in Venice, California.
Everist hosted a breakfast event at Ardor at The EDITION in West Hollywood, California to celebrate the launch of the brand’s EverBoost Multi-Peptide Scalp Serum.
Charles & Keith hosted a preview event in Los Angeles, California to present its summer collection alongside branded moments and more.
Hammitt hosted an intimate presentation for the Summer ’26 collection at Virginia Robinson Gardens in Beverly Hills, California, where guests enjoyed sips, light bites, music, fashion, and more.
Hourglass hosted an immersive event at The Grove in Los Angeles, California to celebrate the launch of the Phantom Blur Balm, where guests enjoyed personalized lip wardrobe consultations with Hourglass Lip Stylists, access to the Ambient Lighting Edit: Charms palettes, and more.
CHANEL hosted a private preview of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures’ landmark exhibition, Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon, in Los Angeles, California, to highlight the enduring connection between the actress and CHANEL No.5.
Quince hosted a preview for its furniture collection at Sunset Tower in Los Angeles, California, where guests shopped for home essentials including linen bedding, cashmere throws, and candles, as they enjoyed bites from Leora, Alfred Coffee, and Fleur et Sel.
G&B Digital Management and College of Influence selected five winners of their inaugural College Creator Micro-Grant ’26.
elysewalker Southampton announced that it will be a permanent store location open year-round in Southampton, New York.
BTS The City Arirang teamed up with Black Tap Craft Burgers & Beer at The Venetian Resort Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada to debut the “Our Love Song” combo, which includes the K-Town Chicken Sandwich and Strawberry Cheesecake Classic Shake, available through May 31.
SASHA THERESE launched a new limited-run collection filled with hardware-led sexy minimalism designs with built-in belt detailing, buckle accents, and draped accessories.
SEV Laser conducted a survey with Gen Z and Millennial women, where they found that 1 in 3 have cancelled summer plans because they didn’t feel beauty ready, with over 40% saying it happens more than once a month, highlighting what the brand is calling the Spontaneity Gap. To reduce time spent on routine grooming and upkeep, SEV Laser suggests aesthetic treatments like their laser hair removal, which saves 50 days of shaving and waxing over ten years.
Levain teamed up with Sweet Rose Creamery to bring back cookies à la mode, alongside new offerings like mini-ice cream sandwiches and affogatos.
NassifMD, founded by Paul Nassif, launched The Instant Peptide Lift Face Mask and The Instant Peptide Lift Undereye Patches.
OMI introduced two targeted additions to its Hair Growth Peptides™ collection, HARMONIZE and REVITALIZE, peptide-powered formulas designed to address specific causes of thinning and shedding.
Lee launched the Tee Shop, a curated selection of crew necks, logo styles, relaxed silhouettes, pocket tees, and statement graphics across men’s and women’s styles.
Melissa teamed up with GANNI to launch the Melissa/GANNI collaboration featuring the Thong Kitten Heel and Flip Flop Swim.
Prequel launched the Lip Visor SPF 30 in 4 new tinted shades, including Blush, Nude, Mahogany, and Berry.
Assouline launched Football: The Impossible Collection, Football Roots: The Spirit of the Game, and Basquiat: The World of Jean-Michel.
PatPat launched a new Star Wars-inspired collection to celebrate the theatrical release of The Mandalorian and Grogu.
Augustinus Bader launched The Overnight Restorative Cream with the brand’s Advanced TFC8® technology to work in sync with the skin’s circadian rhythm and peak regeneration hours for a complexion that appears firmer, smoother, and revitalized.
ONE/SIZE launched the Oil Sucker Liquid Blotting Paper Spray, which delivers the oil-absorbing power of a blotting paper without the pressing or patting.
Tower 28 launched the ShineOn Plumping Lip Jelly in five shades, powered by VibePlump™, Volulip™, tortula oil, arnica, and hyaluronic filling spheres for a fuller and smoother look without stinging or irritation.
Néccessaire launched The Hand Wash and The Hand Lotion Santal to combat dryness and stripping with niacinamide, vitamin B5, and essential minerals.
KSUBI launched its pre-fall ’26 collection, Higher Than Heaven.
Kosas launched the Impressionist Multistick in 7 nature-inspired shades to provide a flushed-from-within effect for blush and lip color.
Le Monde Gourmand launched the Tomate Bébé Eau de Parfum and Tomate Bébé Candle in collaboration with Jon & Vinny’s, featuring tomato leaf, garden basil, and green pepper with sparkling citrus and warm woods.
Thierry Lasry teamed up with Faena Hotels to launch a limited-edition sunglasses collection, which reinterprets two of Lasry’s signature styles, including CLANDESTY and SOCIETY.
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Ahh, who doesn’t love the summer? Summer vacation is when we all get to loosen up a little, schedules fall away, rules get bent — and a little bit broken — and no matter who you are, you’re supposed to be able to unwind a little bit. Of course, that’s easier said than done when your family vacation goes completely off the rails.
As part of Collider’s Exclusive Preview event for the summer’s hottest movies and TV shows, we’re debuting a new exclusive image from Summer’s Last Resort, a new comedy set to stream exclusively on Tubi later this year. The image gives fans a first look at Sophia Bush (One Tree Hill) and Jerry O’Connell (Star Trek: Lower Decks) arriving with full vacation energy. Though you wouldn’t know it from our exclusive image, this isn’t going to be the dream getaway they’ve been hoping for.
Summer’s Last Resort follows Summer (Violet McGraw), a high-strung teen whose vacation takes a very unfortunate turn when she gets trapped with her free-spirited mom’s try-hard boyfriend. Oh, hold on, it gets worse because he also happens to be her vice principal. Determined to end the relationship before things get any more embarrassing, Summer puts together a secret breakup plan, only for the whole thing to spiral into a week of utter chaos.
In addition to Bush as Milly, O’Connell as Glenn, and McGraw as Summer, Summer’s Last Resort also stars Tim Rozon (Schitt’s Creek) as Captain Otto. Glenn is Milly’s very well-meaning boyfriend, who is afflicted with that darned golden retriever energy and the dreaded cargo shorts-heavy style. Not the cargo shorts! Captain Otto, meanwhile, is a flip-flop-wearing wannabe pirate with movie-star swagger, but he has interests that are, in a manner of speaking, crime-adjacent. Probably not the most trustworthy guy in the world, but maybe a useful ally nonetheless. Behind the camera, Summer’s Last Resort also delivers a Wynonna Earp reunion with a script written by Emily Andras, directed by Melanie Scrofano (Heartland). The film is produced by Blue Ice Pictures, with Lance Samuels and Andras serving as executive producers.
“With Summer’s Last Resort, we’re further expanding our slate of young adult originals and bringing together an exceptional team of talent to deliver a character-driven comedy that speaks to Gen Z viewers and their families,” says Tubi chief content officer Adam Lewinson. “Sophia Bush, Jerry O’Connell, and Violet McGraw bring a perfect blend of humor and heart to this relatable comedy about growing up, letting go, and surviving the world’s most awkward family vacation.”
Summer’s Last Resort will premiere on Tubi this summer. Stay tuned for more at Collider as we close out our exclusive summer preview.
Hacks came to an end after five epic seasons — and the series finale was anything but predictable.
“I want to go out on top,” Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) told Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder) in the final episode, which premiered on Thursday, May 29.
The final episode allowed Hacks to end the same way it started — with just Deborah and Ava.
“I had a little bit of an idea of how it was going to end, but I just thought it ended absolutely perfectly,” Smart told Variety of the last episode. “I don’t think it hit me until I just watched that last scene. The relationship between the two of them was always at the heart of the show.”
She added, “I mean, the only thing that we missed at the end was that we weren’t with the whole cast and the whole crew.”
Keep scrolling for a full recap of the Hacks series finale:
No, but she is sick. The show’s penultimate episode had Deborah getting a cancerous mass removed. However, the finale revealed that the cancer had spread and the comedian would not be undergoing chemotherapy.
“The purpose of having her be sick was for the ultimate redemption, the idea of the comedy and writing together saving her life,” Hacks cocreator and executive producer Lucia Aniello told Variety following the finale. “We wouldn’t have had her die. There’s no reason for her to be sick, except to tell the story of how, in the end, she is saved by her want to continue to write.”
Deborah and Ava go to Paris, but mainly for Deborah to visit an assisted suicide facility. The duo do all the touristy things before Deborah realizes that her illness might just lead to a new comedy special.
Cocreator Jen Statsky told Variety that they wanted “a very hopeful ending for Deborah and Ava.” There was no other way to end the show.
Statsky explained, “The show ends with them together, because ultimately the show was always about them coming together and cracking each other open and making each other better.”

Einbinder told Variety that she thought the finale was “perfect as ever.”
“Every time we have a finale of any season, I feel like it leaves off in like such a beautiful place, and I think what we get to see in this finale is representative of the entire arc of the series,” she added. “It is representative of the depth of their love and the depth of their connection.”
Smart agreed.
“It was kind of magical being in Paris,” she said. “In a way I think that felt right, because they were out of their element, they weren’t at home, and they were just trying to figure out what was going on.”
Matthew Perry may be gone, but fans will soon have the chance to hold onto a meaningful piece of the actor who made millions laugh as Chandler Bing. From handwritten scripts and worn tennis rackets to “Friends” memorabilia and personal keepsakes, a collection of Perry’s belongings is heading to auction, all in support of a cause deeply tied to the late actor’s own journey. The emotional sale will benefit the Matthew Perry Foundation, which helps people battling addiction, a struggle Matthew Perry openly faced throughout much of his life.

On June 5, Heritage Auctions will offer fans the chance to purchase a range of Matthew Perry’s personal items at its Dallas, Texas headquarters. The collection features everything from scripts scribbled with notes to “Batman” memorabilia, pre-worn suits, tennis rackets, magazines from the height of “Friends” fame, and even a famed Banksy artwork.
According to Brian Chanes, Heritage Auctions’ Senior Director of Hollywood & Entertainment, the response surrounding Perry’s collection has been deeply emotional. “The outpour of enthusiasm and support and adoration for Matt has been amazing.,” Chanes told Daily Mail.
For many fans, the auction represents more than just memorabilia, but it offers a connection to an actor whose humor and honesty touched millions.

Among the standout items is a rare script outline from “Friends” before the iconic sitcom even had its famous name. Originally titled “Six of One,” the document gives fans an early glimpse into the beloved show that would eventually make Perry a household name.
“This was the name of ‘Friends,’ ‘Six of One,’ before it became ‘Friends,’ but this is a basically an outline, basically ‘From the creators of ‘Cheers’ and ‘Frasier’, you know, ‘Six of One,’” Chanes explained. “’Six single people living in New York is about friends and lovers, IKEA furniture, cappuccino, bad date, Spanish soap operas, and Mr. Potato Head,’ but anyway, it just gives the rundown of it, and then here is a pilot.”
Warner Bros. also donated an autographed “Friends” script that has already reportedly reached bids of $16,000.

Outside of Hollywood, Perry had another major passion: tennis. The actor played competitively growing up and was heavily inspired by tennis legend Jimmy Connors, even dreaming of a professional career before pivoting to acting.
Some of Perry’s well-worn rackets, complete with broken strings from years of use, are now among the items up for auction. “Obviously well-worn, you can see the gut strings are popped on a couple of them,” Chanes said. “He was heavily influenced by sports, especially tennis,” Chanes added. “He loved hockey too ’cause he was from Ottawa, but he felt particularly motivated by his idol Jimmy Connors.”
According to Chanes, Perry practiced relentlessly as a child. “He would play up to 10 hours a day when he was a kid,” he said, explaining Perry competed in tournaments in Canada before moving to Los Angeles.

While some of the higher-end pieces, including Banksy artwork, are expected to fetch six or even seven figures, auction organizers say there will also be affordable options for everyday fans. “One thing I want to make clear for people is that we have things for just a few $100 and we have things that are going to sell for maybe a million or more, that Banksy over there, the girl with the balloon,” Chanes explained.
Among the more accessible items are Perry’s personal VHS tapes from Warner Bros., which were reportedly sitting at around $330 in bidding. “We have his set of VHS tapes that were from Warner Brothers,” Chanes said. “It was like his master VHS of the final… It’s from his collection.”
“Right now, I think the bidding is at $330, and so you can have something of his that’s a good commemorative morsel, if you will,” Chanes continued. “And for [a] relatively small amount, and of course, knowing that the funds are going to his favorite cause is the real kicker.”

Perry famously battled addiction throughout much of his life, including during the height of Friends, when he starred alongside Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, and David Schwimmer. He later opened up about his struggles in his 2022 memoir, “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing,” offering a raw and honest look at the challenges he faced behind the scenes.
Perry died in October 2023 at age 54 after drowning in a jacuzzi at his Los Angeles home following a ketamine overdose. Now, even after his passing, the actor’s legacy continues through the Matthew Perry Foundation, with proceeds from the auction helping support those facing addiction, a cause that remained deeply personal to him.
By TeeJay Small
| Published

Action movie fans have been tuning in to see the Predator tear through television tough-guys like wet tissue paper since 1987. In that time, we’ve gotten nine films ranging from genre-defining classics to embarrassing missteps. Along the way, we’ve seen crossover specials, graphic novels, fan-films, and more, highlighting the unstoppable killing power of the Yautja hunters.
With so many films to choose from, it might be dizzying for new fans looking to find a point of entry. I’m here to solve that. These are the Predator films, ranked worst to best.

Shane Black’s The Predator offers a bold new take on the franchise. The film asks such questions as “what if the Predator were 11 feet tall and fully made of bad CGI,” and “wouldn’t it be hilarious if the Predator acted like Bugs Bunny?” The answer to that last question is… I guess? But only if you don’t mind watching Shane Black spit in the face of each previous Predator movie.
The Predator feels more like a Scary Movie version of the 1987 classic than an earnest attempt at a sci-fi slasher. It features bizarre gags such as a Yautja dog that owes its loyalty to anyone who shoots it in the head with a shotgun, a man blowing his own head off with a shoulder cannon because he glanced 90 degrees to the side, and an Iron Man suit that was meant to take this franchise into borderline anime territory, if further explored. At one point the Predator rips off a man’s arm, fashions the hand into a thumbs up, and angles it through an open window.
To give Black some credit, The Predator experienced massive studio interference, and suffered from numerous reshoots. If he had received full creative control, we probably wouldn’t have gotten such a tonal disaster. Still, as it currently stands, this is the most embarrassing film in the entire franchise.

Clocking in with a paltry 12 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes, we’ve got 2007’s Aliens Vs. Predator: Requiem. This is a sequel to the critically panned crossover event which brought the Yautja hunter face to face with alien Xenomorphs on the big screen for the very first time. It’s by far the darkest film in the series, as evidenced by scenes where the movie monsters tear through a maternity ward, killing a bunch of infants and pregnant women. It’s also the darkest movie in the franchise, literally, so you’ll have to crank the brightness settings on your TV to enjoy even a fraction of it.
The filmmaking duo behind this one had a background exclusively in VFX before helming the would-be blockbuster, so they didn’t handle things like scripting or budgeting with the grace they required. The result is a film that’s been artificially darkened and smothered with movie rain to hide imperfections in the Alien and Predator CGI. The humans are also Degrassi characters, for all intents and purposes, and completely insufferable to watch. I give this one style points for the Alien/Predator hybrid, but I really wouldn’t recommend watching it unless you’ve exhausted every other film on this list, and then some.

Now we’re getting into some controversial ranking. Some people swear by Prey, and cite it as the best that the franchise has to offer. While I obviously don’t share this opinion, I can certainly understand the appeal. This is the first film in the franchise directed by Dan Trachtenberg, and highlights a Native American woman attempting to prove herself to her patriarchal tribe by taking down a massive murderous space alien.
Trachtenberg did such an amazing job with this film that it was nominated for two Academy Awards, and he’s been effectively running the franchise ever since. The best sequence in the movie sees the Predator fighting a grizzly bear in one of the rawest and most intense fight scenes ever committed to film. The only reason this movie isn’t higher on my list is because there’s some seriously stiff competition elsewhere in the franchise. Plus, admittedly, a few of the following entries will be getting bonus points for nostalgia, and Prey didn’t come out until I was already 25 years old.

This is the point in the list where you tell me I’m an idiot with bad taste, and I tell you to shut up and give Alien Vs. Predator another chance. This film was panned by critics as a mindless action flick, and shunned for abandoning the horror roots of the original 1987 outing. While those critiques are accurate, they don’t detract from the fact that Alien Vs. Predator is about as badass as an action movie can be.
This one follows a group of archaeologists exploring an underground pyramid in Antarctica, where they accidentally awaken a Xenomorph queen. Doing so causes a Yautja ship to send down a trio of Predator hunters, who hack and slash their way through the dig site. Also, the pyramid walls shift to create new rooms and trap explorers every ten minutes. Paul W. S. Anderson might not be lauded by snooty critics for his silly action outings, but he was channeling something in Alien Vs. Predator that I want injected directly into my veins.

Predator: Badlands is the latest film in the franchise, and the third outing from Dan Trachtenberg. This one does the most to expand on the Predator lore, taking the action off-planet and onto a pair of distant alien locales, complete with sentient plant life and giant monsters. People had mixed reactions to the trailer, especially since this is the first Predator movie to center a Yautja hunter as the main protagonist. Luckily, once Badlands arrived in theaters, audiences quickly changed their tune.
Today, this film touts an impressive 86 percent critic score on Rotten Tomatoes, with a 95 percent audience score to match. It also features a crossover plot with the Alien franchise that blends much more cleanly than either of the AVP movies, so we might have a shot at rebooting that element of the franchise if Trachtenberg sets his mind to it. More importantly, Predator: Badlands features no human characters (save for a set of Weyland-Yutani droids), so there’s no need to suffer through any teen drama or rom-com elements. Just good old-fashioned science fiction, and a few Baby Yoda-inspired alien critters.

Critics hate Predator 2 because they are dumb and annoying. If you watch this film with a fresh set of eyes, you’ll see that it actually rules. It’s a big departure from the rumble in the jungle we experience in the first movie, but transporting the Predator to an urban environment and setting it loose in the midst of a gang war is absolutely brilliant. Danny Glover spends over an hour chasing, fighting, and sweating like a stuck pig as a lone Yautja parades through the streets, stringing up gangsters and terrifying old ladies.
This film is also the first to legitimize the concept of a crossover with the Alien franchise, since it features a giant Xenomorph skull in the background for a single scene. While 1987’s Predator can be credited with kickstarting this whole series, Predator 2 set the tone for everything that would come later by daring to reinvent its premise. In another timeline, we could be stuck with a Rambo-style rehash, where we get six Predator films that serve as needless retreads of the same played-out story. Maybe I’m letting a bit of nostalgia take the wheel, but I could never be convinced that Predator 2 isn’t at least a 4 out of 5 star movie.

When I first heard that Dan Trachtenberg was making an animated Predator film, I thought it was a bizarre choice. The entire franchise up to this point had been shot in live action, and the best entries have all relied heavily on practical effects. Taking things into animated territory seemed like an ill-advised venture that would only serve to separate the action from the realistic brutality we’d all like to see.
Then, when I fired up Hulu and watched Killer Of Killers, I quickly realized the true reason the film is animated: making this movie in live action would require a production budget of $500 billion. This movie seamlessly leaps from Viking times to feudal Japan to World War 2 to a futuristic Predator home planet without giving you whiplash, and it does so while being absolutely badass at every turn. The ending also ties the entire franchise together in an Avengers: Endgame style crossover, which made me nerd out for hours while breaking it down with my fellow Predator fanatics. There’s a real argument to be made that this is the best that the franchise has to offer, but I personally have the following films tied for my all-time favorite.

Long before Trachtenberg was taking the Predator franchise to bold new places, we had 2010’s Predators. This movie is still one of the most ambitious outings in the series, centering on a group of ultra-dangerous killers from across the globe who wake up disoriented in a Yautja game preserve somewhere among the stars. Everyone brings their A-game performance-wise; the environments feel uncannily real, and the ever-present threat of Yautja hunters is more terrifying than ever when the humans are away from their home turf.
If ever there were a Predator outing that demanded a follow-up, it’s this one. I’ve even written for this very site about the cliffhanger ending, and how fans deserve a proper resolution. Now that Trachtenberg is doing big things with the Predator lore, maybe we’ll finally get some closure in the coming years. For now, be sure to give Predators a spin, and enjoy some of the most innovative and interesting ideas in the entire franchise.

Finally, closing out our list, we’ve got the one, the only, the original 1987 Predator. It might be a little anticlimactic, but sometimes you just cannot beat a classic. This film has everything, from bodybuilder commandos with belt-fed Gatling guns to realistic jungle environments and practical effects to silly accents screaming “get to da choppah!” Arnold Schwarzenegger is the perfect cigar-chomping, war-paint-clad action hero to face off against the unseen alien hunter, and he puts on a career-best performance doing so.
Since 1987, Schwarzenegger has loomed over this franchise like a ghost. He has reprised his role in video games, and his character has returned in other mixed media, but we’ve never seen Dutch in any of the other eight films. That’s not for lack of trying, either. Schwarzenegger has been slated to appear in numerous Predator sequels, but each time it’s fallen through due to his other commitments, which included a stint as governor of California.

For my viewing pleasure, 1987’s Predator is a perfect movie. It blends action, science fiction, and horror into one harmonious masterpiece, accented by one of the most iconic movie soundtracks I’ve ever heard. I would watch this movie every day if I could. If you’re looking to get into this franchise for the first time, you can’t go wrong by diving in right at the very beginning.
Latto is opening up about the moment she found out she was pregnant, her viral retirement tweet, and more in her first interview since giving birth.
On Friday, May 29th, Latto released her fourth studio album, ‘Big Mama,’ alongside her first interview since giving birth. The rapper sat down with Nadeska Alexis for a 40-minute-long conversation released via Apple Music’s YouTube channel. Initially, their conversation centered on the experience of breastfeeding and dealing with the subtle effects of postpartum depression.
Around the six-minute mark, the conversation shifted to the moment the rapper found out she was pregnant.
“My baby was very much planned. I just don’t know if I was committed to the plan,” she humorously explained. “We looked down, and I was just like, ‘Oh!’ and there were tears, and anxiety was through the roof. But it’s what I wanted. But I was just like, ‘Wait, is this real life? Like, am I really ready?’”
Ultimately, Latto explained that her anxiety was over the lifestyle change and the impact on her career. However, she realized she needed to “do something for Alyssa.” Furthermore, she explained that it was the “biggest blessing in disguise” because she chose herself.
Around the 15-minute mark, the conversation then shifted to Latto previously announcing that ‘Big Mama’ would be her retirement album. As The Shade Room previously reported, Latto shared the mesage in early May.
While speaking with Nadeska, Latto shared that the tweet was sparked by somber postpartum feelings.
“I kind of underestimated it. So yeah, that was just one of those days where I was at home and overwhelmed with the album… I was overwhelmed. I was experiencing motherhood… I was dropping my last album that I owe the label. So I was going through it that day,” Latto explained.
Ultimately, Latto explained that she’s still “going through it” and is unsure of what her final decision is.
Around the twenty-two-minute mark, Latto was asked whether she would open up and share more of her personal life with the world. In turn, she explained that because she created something “so beautiful,” she would like to show it off. However, she thinks she will keep her “life” and her baby girl “private to a certain extent.”
Seemingly, as for her relationship, Latto stated:
“…With female rappers, it be: our personal life, who we f*****g, all this s**t — and I feel like, I’m too talented for that to be the forefront of my brand or my name, so I started falling back,” she stated.
Around the 33-minute mark, Latto shared that she “wanted a girl so bad” and waited until she gave birth to learn the gender of her baby. She seemingly revealed that she was aware of her pregnancy on her 27th birthday, which was December 22, 2025. However, on that day, she decided that since she wasn’t anxious to find out her baby’s gender prematurely, she would wait out her entire pregnancy.
Watch the full interview below.
What Do You Think Roomies?
This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available.
The next few years promise a lot of blockbuster releases for fantasy enjoyers of all kinds. For those looking for a mythical epic, Christopher Nolan‘s The Odyssey is the event of this summer to look forward to, bringing the director back to theaters to bring to life one of the most famous literary adventures from across history, with Matt Damon in the lead role. Laika is finally releasing their latest effort after over a decade of development, too, in the form of the gorgeous stop-motion film Wildwood in October. Next year, meanwhile, will see the return of two classic series with Greta Gerwig‘s much-anticipated Narnia: The Witch’s Nephew bowing in theaters in February and The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum arriving on December 17, 2027. For those looking to return to a certain long-dormant fantasy video game world this year, however, the wait just got a bit longer.
Fable, the much-anticipated reboot of the beloved Xbox fantasy action RPG series, has been delayed from its late 2026 release window. A social post from the official Xbox account confirmed on Friday that the date for the latest adventure to Albion has now been moved to February 2027, where it will have a bit of breathing room away from the company’s other big releases this year. The official statement indicated that the move was less about the state of the game itself and more about ensuring the long-awaited return of the series, 17 years after its last mainline entry, has “the dedicated moment it deserves.” Although it wasn’t explicitly said, the goal may be to specifically avoid Grand Theft Auto VI, which is sure to dominate the conversation when it launches on November 19.
The delay does mean that developers Playground Games will have a bit more time to polish up the reboot before its arrival, after just delivering the acclaimed Forza Horizon 6 this month. It’s not all grim news for those awaiting their next fantastical adventure, though. Xbox also confirmed that Fable will be featured heavily as part of the upcoming Xbox Games Showcase on June 7. Fans are expected to get their most extensive look yet at the game since it was confirmed at the 2020 showcase, though it will also be joined by other hotly anticipated titles like Halo: Campaign Evolved, Gears of War: E-Day, Call of Duty Modern Warfare 4, Control Resonant, and Star Wars: Galactic Racer.
This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available.
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“Amazing things are in store for this girl,” the singer said after Della Rose’s milestone moment.
By Joshua Tyler
| Published

The 1990s belonged to Steven Spielberg. Having established himself as the most bankable director in Hollywood with movies like Raiders of the Lost Ark and E.T. in the 1980s, the now-iconic filmmaker entered the decade with the cachet needed to do just about anything he wanted.
What he wanted more than anything else was a lavish production adapting Peter Pan, the most iconic children’s story ever written. So he went to work creating, building, and crafting. By 1991, his passion project was complete and set for release as the year’s biggest Christmas entry. Then it all went horribly wrong.
Spielberg, used to endless success, found himself targeted and mocked. As the sharks circled, his movie became an endless punching bag for people who thought he needed to be knocked down a peg. Worst of all, none of that negativity was deserved.
This is why Hook failed.

Steven Spielberg had been obsessed with Peter Pan since before he was the guy who made blockbusters. As a kid, he staged his own backyard version of the story. As an adult, he kept trying to turn that fascination into a movie, and kept failing to find the angle.
At first, that led him to Michael Jackson. Like Spielberg, Jackson was obsessed with Peter Pan. Michael saw himself as the boy who never grew up, and it’s why he named his sprawling compound Neverland Ranch. So, with Spielberg actively working on a way into the world of Peter Pan, Michael Jackson approached him with a pitch, and Steven Spielberg was into it.

The project reportedly moved far enough along that there were serious creative discussions about songs, tone, and scale. But it kept stalling for the same reason every other Peter Pan version stalled for him: it didn’t solve the biggest story problem inherent in any Peter Pan project. That story problem is this: Peter Pan never changes.
Main characters need an arc; they need to grow and develop as people. Yet, the entire point of Peter Pan is that he doesn’t grow; he doesn’t change. It’s why Wendy is the main character of J.M. Barrie’s book, and not Peter Pan.
But Spielberg wanted to make a movie about Peter Pan. To do that, he had to find a way to give Peter Pan room for growth. His solution was a script called Hook.
His Michael Jackson version was abandoned, with some of its best elements working their way into what Hook became. The bright theatrical sets, the heightened performances, even the occasional musical energy, they’re leftovers from that version of the movie that never got made. Instead of trying to preserve the Peter Pan myth as Jackson wanted, Steven Spielberg built a story about what happens when that myth breaks down.

Spielberg landed on Robin Williams as his Peter because he needed duality. Williams could play both the burned-out adult and the manic child underneath, all in one movie. The movie wouldn’t work without that, and there’s never been another actor who could pull that off the way Williams could.
Next, he brought on Dustin Hoffman as Captain Hook, disappearing so completely into the role that early crew members reportedly didn’t recognize him in costume.

To preserve the magic and wonder of the Peter Pan myth, everything about the movie was built the old-fashioned way: massive practical sets, constructed almost entirely on soundstages at Sony Pictures Studios. Neverland was built piece by piece, out of wood, paint, and sheer scale, with sprawling pirate ships and the Lost Boys’ hideout physically constructed.
The result is one of the most beautiful movies ever filmed, but it took forever and cost a fortune. The production became notoriously long and expensive, pushing past $70 million, a huge, huge number for the time.
Behind the scenes, it wasn’t exactly smooth sailing either. Julia Roberts, cast as Tinker Bell, earned tabloid attention for reported on-set tensions and was infamously labeled “Tinkerhell” in the press, while Spielberg himself later admitted he felt creatively adrift during filming, unsure if he was making a kids movie, a dark adult allegory, or something awkwardly in between.

Stress and tension, combined with something deeply personal and meticulously crafted, sometimes makes magic. That’s exactly what happened with Hook.
Peter Pan grew up. That’s the story. That’s Spielberg’s solution to his unsolvable problem.
The movie begins with the story of Peter Banning, a man who is everything Peter Pan was never supposed to become: a corporate lawyer, glued to his phone, too busy to notice his own kids slipping away. Then his kids actually do slip away, literally. They’re snatched out of their beds and dragged to Neverland by Captain Hook, who’s tired of waiting for his old enemy to grow up and finally does it for him.

Peter Banning follows, but the problem is he’s forgotten he was ever Peter Pan. He can’t fly, can’t fight, and barely remembers who he used to be, which makes him useless in a place built on belief.
The Lost Boys don’t buy him; their current leader, Rufio, flat-out rejects him, and Hook toys with him like a washed-up relic. What should have been a rescue mission turns into a midlife crisis with swords, as a man grapples with what really matters to him in the world.
To save his kids, Peter has to relearn imagination, rediscover joy, and essentially undo adulthood long enough to become the thing he abandoned. That’s exactly the kind of character development Spielberg spent decades looking for.
Renewed, revitalized, and with the welfare of his kids as his focus instead of empty corporate networking, the movie’s grand finale is Peter Pan versus Hook, round two, and this time it’s for everything. It’s a perfect story for every adult facing down the stress of middle age, while also a family story filled with all the magic and wonder kids need to fire up their own imaginations.

Though it’s now often regarded as a masterpiece and regularly defended as one of the 90s’ best fantasy movies, that’s not what happened to Hook when it was released. The budget, the production problems, it all loomed large over everything. Because of that, pundits treated it like a flop, a failure, when in reality it wasn’t at all.
Everyone expected a juggernaut. This was Steven Spielberg at the peak of his powers. The powers that be demanded another E.T. Instead, released in December 1991, Hook opened solidly but not spectacularly, pulling in about $13 million its first weekend.
It faced immediate competition from Beauty and the Beast, which was surging on word of mouth and becoming a cultural event, siphoning off the family audience Hook was counting on.
Smelling blood in the water, everyone pounced. Reviews at the time painted it as overstuffed, sluggish, and strangely joyless for a movie about rediscovering childhood. Many pointed out that Steven Spielberg, usually so precise, seemed lost in his own production, delivering something visually extravagant but emotionally unfocused.
Critics refused to accept Robin Williams as a serious actor, making cracks about Mork from Ork and dismissing him as not worthy of standing against Dustin Hoffman. All of it was ridiculous, especially given that Williams had already proven himself as an actor with Dead Poets Society.

Domestically, Hook went on to earn around $119 million, with a worldwide total landing in the $300 million range. On paper, that looks like a hit.
In reality, the film’s production budget, hovering around $70–80 million, huge for the time, combined with marketing costs meant the margin wasn’t nearly as impressive as the raw numbers suggest. This wasn’t E.T. money. It wasn’t even Indiana Jones money. It was a step down, and for Spielberg, that was framed as a miss.
Framing it that way was especially easy to do because of how Hook earned its money. It eventually turned a profit because the movie kept playing in theaters as word of mouth prompted more and more repeat viewing.
I was thirteen years old, and remember seeing it at least six times, going over and over again with the families of friends who’d heard it was good and decided they’d check it out. “I think we are going to go see Hook, I’ve heard it’s good,” someone would say. To which I’d respond, “I love Hook, count me in!”
Hook never had that BIG box office weekend that gets people talking. It just kept playing, kept being seen and enjoyed, as people showed up and watched.
That’s Hook in a nutshell. Lavish, beautiful, and deeply personal. The kind of movie you love, cherish, and keep to yourself until you’re ready to share it with someone you love.

Now most of the ludicrous condemnation of the movie has vanished. It’s a respected family classic, one people get excited about showing to their kids.
Hook is a high-water mark in 1990s family filmmaking excellence, the kind of lavish production that Hollywood is no longer capable of producing and wouldn’t want to try to make, even if it could.
Action thrillers live or die by momentum. The genre depends on tension, pacing, charisma, and escalation. The viewer has to feel that events are spiraling constantly forward. To achieve this, the best of these movies hit us with expertly choreographed action sequences as well as characters that we can genuinely invest in.
With that in mind, this list attempts to rank some of the most entertaining action thrillers in movie history. The titles below span a range of styles and tones, from gritty detective stories and practical stunt showcases to hyperkinetic martial arts spectacles and globe-trotting espionage epics, each exhilarating in its own way.
“Pulling a trigger is like ordering a takeout.” This banger boasts a simple but juicy setup: an elite Indonesian SWAT team enters a towering apartment complex controlled by a ruthless crime lord (Ray Sahetapy), only to become trapped inside after their cover is blown. From there, the movie transforms into one of the most relentless action experiences ever filmed. The protagonists must fight their way through every floor of the building like levels of a video game, each more intense than the last.
The combat choreography is off the charts here, and shot in a style that perfectly ups the impact. The fight scenes, heavily influenced by the Indonesian martial art pencak silat, are savage, fast, and painfully physical. Refreshingly, they never get repetitive. These sequences are chaotic and multidimensional, but director Gareth Evans makes sure they’re easy to follow.
“Pop quiz, hotshot.” Speed is the most breakneck action movie of the 1990s, hitting the ground running and never letting the tension ease for a second. After a terrorist plants a bomb on a Los Angeles bus, LAPD officer Jack Traven (Keanu Reeves) must keep the vehicle moving while trying to outsmart the bomber before dozens of civilians are killed. The bus will explode if its speed drops below 50 miles per hour. Opposite Traven is Annie Porter (Sandra Bullock), a passenger who unexpectedly finds herself behind the wheel.
The leads have a great dynamic, keeping their characters playful and human amid the escalating danger. Meanwhile, Dennis Hopper’s villain is just the right amount of theatrical. That said, it’s the practical stuntwork and ever-ratcheting suspense that ensures Speed’s place in action movie history. Every obstacle becomes a potential disaster, and catastrophe could strike at any moment.
“I didn’t kill my wife!” Harrison Ford leads this one as Dr. Richard Kimble, a man who is falsely convicted of murdering his wife (Sela Ward). While being transported to prison, Kimble escapes during a train crash and begins desperately trying to uncover the truth behind the murder while evading relentless U.S. Marshal Sam Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones). A lot of action flicks are one-note, but The Fugitive is well-rounded, hitting us with a perfect balance of suspense, action, and character development.
A big part of this is due to the everyman protagonist. Kimble is sympathetic because he behaves like an ordinary, intelligent guy forced into impossible circumstances. He isn’t a trained assassin or action hero. He survives through improvisation, desperation, and determination. That vulnerability makes every chase sequence feel genuinely tense, and his victories all the more satisfying.
“The bitch is dead.” After years of increasingly exaggerated gadget-driven spectacle, the James Bond franchise desperately needed reinvention. Casino Royale accomplished exactly that by stripping Bond back down to something rawer and more vulnerable. The story sees the newly promoted MI6 agent (Daniel Craig) attempting to bankrupt terrorist financier Le Chiffre (Mads Mikkelsen) during a high-stakes poker tournament in Montenegro. At the same time, Bond’s relationship with Vesper Lynd (Eva Green) provides some much-needed emotional weight.
The drama and action are more grounded and realistic this time around, anchored by a well-written script. Fight scenes are messy, exhausting, and painful rather than effortless displays of coolness. Bond sometimes gets his butt kicked, even gets taken prisoner and tortured. Our suave protagonist loses his aura of invincibility, which makes us a lot more invested in his journey.
“Get some rest, Pam. You look tired.” By the time the third instalment arrived, the Bourne franchise had already reshaped modern action cinema. Yet Ultimatum somehow escalated everything further, delivering one of the most tightly constructed and relentlessly paced thrillers ever made. In it, Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) closes in on the truth behind the CIA’s Treadstone and Blackbriar programs while being hunted across multiple countries by assassins and intelligence agencies.
There’s a lot of ground to cover, both narratively and literally (the plot takes us from London to Madrid to Tangier to New York), but the movie is incredibly economical, never wasting a scene. The editing, sound design, and handheld camerawork create an overwhelming sense of urgency without sacrificing coherence. Not to mention, the action sequences remain masterpieces of grounded tension, from the Waterloo Station pursuit to the white-knuckle Tangier rooftop chase.
“I won’t let you down.” The most ambitious of the Mission: Impossible movies, Fallout perfected the franchise’s recipe, delivering a near-perfect fusion of practical stunt work, espionage tension, and blockbuster spectacle. Tom Cruise is at his most charismatic here as Ethan Hunt, racing to recover stolen plutonium while preventing a catastrophic nuclear attack. Sure, the plot is pretty elemental, serving more as connective tissue for the big action sequences. But what action sequences they are!
Every major set piece feels constructed with obsessive precision. The HALO jump is unbearably tense, the Paris motorcycle chase transforms urban traffic into controlled chaos, and the helicopter finale becomes one of the most jaw-dropping practical stunt showcases ever filmed. Knowing that Cruise performed many of these stunts himself adds to the enjoyment. In an era dominated by CGI excess, Fallout feels physically real and genuinely dangerous.
“You’ve got to ask yourself one question: ‘Do I feel lucky?’ Well, do ya, punk?” Few action thrillers have left a cultural impact as massive as Dirty Harry. Clint Eastwood turns in a legendary performance here as San Francisco police inspector Harry Callahan, hunting a sadistic sniper (Andy Robinson) terrorizing the city. Loosely inspired by the Zodiac Killer, the movie combines procedural detective work with explosive bursts of violence. At the eye of the storm is Harry himself, one of cinema’s most iconic antiheroes.
Don Siegel was a master of tough, cynical cinema, and here he directs with lean efficiency, stripping scenes down to their essentials and allowing tension to build naturally. He also conjures up a world that was strikingly bleak and morally gray for a ’70s cop movie. In Dirty Harry, bureaucracy, legal loopholes, and institutional weakness constantly obstruct justice, forcing him to take matters into his own hands.
“Introduce a little anarchy.” The pinnacle of superhero cinema, and one of Christopher Nolan‘s most well-rounded movies. In The Dark Knight, Batman (Christian Bale) attempts to dismantle organized crime in Gotham while confronting the Joker (Heath Ledger), a terrorist anarchist determined to psychologically break both the protagonist and the city itself. From here, the film fires on all cylinders, reaching new heights of comic-book tension, intensity, and dramatic sophistication.
Obviously, the strongest element here is the towering performance from Ledger. He transforms nearly every conversation into psychological warfare, radiating an undercurrent of tension even during quieter scenes. The character is a force that cannot be reasoned with, yet no mere cartoon either. It’s unlikely that any superhero villain performance will ever surpass it. That said, the movie’s action is masterful, too, and the writing is intelligent, making this not just a banger superhero flick but one of the great modern crime thrillers.
“Give a guy a gun, he thinks he’s Superman.” The magnum opus of Hong Kong icon John Woo, Hard Boiled follows hard-nosed cop “Tequila” Yuen (Chow Yun-fat) as he wages war against violent gun smugglers while reluctantly partnering with an undercover cop (Tony Leung) embedded deep within the criminal organization. The plot itself is relatively straightforward, but the execution borders on mythic. Woo transforms gunfights into balletic spectacles filled with slow motion, long takes, dynamic camera moves, shattered glass, dual pistols, doves, and impossible levels of destruction.
The best example of this is the famous hospital shootout (still one of the greatest action sequences ever filmed), which escalates almost absurdly in scale and intensity while somehow maintaining perfect momentum. Nevertheless, there’s also real emotional heft behind the action, including Woo’s trademark fascination with loyalty, brotherhood, sacrifice, and honor.
“Yippee-ki-yay, motherf—–.” There is a reason so many action thrillers continue getting described as “Die Hard on a…” something. John McTiernan’s masterpiece effectively perfected the modern contained-location action formula, creating a blueprint that countless movies have borrowed from in the decades since. Bruce Willis is at the top of his game here as John McClane, an NYPD officer forced into a desperate one-man battle to rescue hostages being held by terrorists, including his estranged wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia).
A big part of the protagonist’s appeal is how he balances vulnerability and competence. McClane feels like an actual person trapped in extraordinary circumstances (though one with some awesome skills). He gets exhausted, terrified, injured, and frustrated. All of the performances are great, in fact, with Alan Rickman (in his film debut!) nailing his turn as the villain. Hans Gruber is intelligent, calm, witty, and ruthlessly pragmatic, providing the perfect counterbalance to McClane’s improvisational chaos.
July 15, 1988
132 minutes
Jeb Stuart, Steven E. de Souza, Roderick Thorp
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