Jason Statham in a black hoodie on the red carpetIan West/PA Images/INSTARimages
With his longtime creative collaborator, director Guy Ritchie, going through a difficult period at the box office, Jason Statham will need to rely on every last ounce of his star power for their next film together, Viva La Madness. Ritchie and Statham remain major draws on streaming, both together and individually. But the filmmaker hasn’t made a hit since Wrath of Man, which was released in 2021 and marked his long-awaited reunion with Statham. The two started out together in the late 1990s with the generation-defining gangster movie Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels. They worked together again on Snatch and Revolver, and charted independent paths in Hollywood over the next 15 years. After reuniting with Ritchie on Wrath of Man, Statham delivered two back-to-back hits directed by David Ayer.
Both those films and Wrath of Man have become fixtures on global streaming charts. One of them witnessed a viewership bump again recently, two years after its release. Statham’s first film with Ayer was the unexpected blockbuster The Beekeeper, which grossed more than $160 million worldwide in 2023. The action star is set to return early next year with The Beekeeper 2, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. The year 2027 will likely also see the release of Viva La Madness. It’s a high-stakes venture for both Statham and Ritchie, given the underwhelming commercial performances of their latest theatrical releases — Shelter and In the Grey.
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Collider Exclusive · Action Hero Quiz Which Action Hero Would Be Your Perfect Partner? Rambo · James Bond · Indiana Jones · John McClane · Ethan Hunt
Five legends. Five completely different ways of getting out alive — with style, with muscle, with charm, with luck, or with a plan so intricate it probably shouldn’t work. Ten questions will reveal which action hero was built to have your back.
🎖️Rambo
🍸James Bond
🏺Indiana Jones
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🔧John McClane
🎭Ethan Hunt
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01
You’re dropped into a dangerous situation with no warning. What do you need most from a partner? The first few seconds tell you everything about who belongs beside you.
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02
You have to get somewhere dangerous, fast. How do you travel? How you get there is half the mission.
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03
You’re pinned down and outnumbered. What does your ideal partner do? This is when you find out what someone is really made of.
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04
The mission is paused. You have one evening to decompress. What does your partner suggest? Who someone is when the pressure drops is who they actually are.
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05
How do you prefer your partner to communicate mid-mission? Good communication is the difference between partners and a liability.
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06
Your enemy is powerful, well-resourced, and has the upper hand. How should your partner approach them? The approach to the enemy defines the partnership.
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07
Things go badly wrong and you’re captured. What do you trust your partner to do? Who someone is when you need them most is the only thing that matters.
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08
What does your ideal partner bring to the table that you couldn’t replace? A great partner fills the gap you didn’t know you had.
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09
Every partnership has a cost. Which of these can you live with? No one comes without baggage. The question is whether you can carry it together.
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10
It’s the final moment. Everything is on the line. What do you need from your partner right now? The last question is the most honest one.
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Your Partner Has Been Assigned Your Perfect Partner Is…
Your answers have pointed to one action hero above all others. This is the person built to have your back — for better or considerably, spectacularly worse.
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Rambo
Your partner doesn’t talk much, doesn’t need to, and will have assessed every threat in your immediate environment before you’ve finished your first sentence. John Rambo is not a man of plans or politics — he is a force of nature shaped by survival, loyalty, and a capacity for endurance that goes beyond anything training can produce. He will not leave you behind. He has never left anyone behind who deserved to come home. What you get with Rambo is the most capable, most quietly ferocious partner imaginable — one who has been through things that would have broken anyone else, and who chose to keep going anyway. You’ll never need to ask if he has your back. You’ll just know.
James Bond
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Your partner will arrive perfectly dressed, perfectly briefed, and with a cover story so convincing it’ll take you a moment to remember what’s actually true. James Bond is the most professionally dangerous person in any room he enters — and the most disarmingly charming, which is the point. He operates in a world of layers, where nothing is what it appears and every advantage is used without apology. You’ll never be bored. You’ll occasionally be furious. But when it matters — when the mission is genuinely on the line and the margin for error has collapsed to nothing — Bond is exactly the partner you want. He has survived things that have no business being survivable. He does it with style. That is not nothing.
Indiana Jones
Your partner will know the history, the language, the cultural context, and exactly why the thing everyone else is ignoring is actually the most important thing in the room. Indiana Jones is brilliant, reckless, and occasionally impossible — but he is also one of the most resourceful, most genuinely knowledgeable partners you could find yourself beside. He approaches every situation with a scholar’s eye and a brawler’s instinct, which is an unusual combination and a remarkably effective one. He hates snakes and gets personally attached to objects of historical significance, both of which will slow you down at least once. It doesn’t matter. What Indy brings is irreplaceable — and the adventures you’ll have together will be the kind people write books about. Assuming you survive them.
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John McClane
Your partner was not supposed to be here. He does not have the right equipment, the right information, or anything approaching the right odds. He has a sarcastic remark and an absolute refusal to accept that the situation is as bad as it looks. John McClane is the greatest accidental hero in the history of action cinema — a man whose superpower is stubbornness, whose contingency plan is improvisation, and whose capacity to absorb punishment and keep moving would be alarming if it weren’t so useful. He will complain the entire time. He will make it significantly more chaotic than it needed to be. And he will absolutely, unconditionally, without question come through when it counts. Yippee-ki-yay.
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Ethan Hunt
Your partner has already run seventeen scenarios by the time you’ve finished reading the briefing, and the plan he’s settled on involves at least two things that should be physically impossible. Ethan Hunt operates at the absolute edge of human capability — technically, physically, and intellectually — and he brings the same relentless precision to protecting his partners that he brings to dismantling organisations that shouldn’t exist. He is not easy to know and he will never fully tell you everything. But he will carry the weight of the mission so completely, so absolutely, that your job is simply to trust him — and the remarkable thing is that trusting him always turns out to be the right call. The mission will be impossible. He will complete it anyway.
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Jason Statham and David Ayer Are Reuniting for a Third Time
Statham’s second successive action movie with Ayer was A Working Man. The movie grossed more than $98 million worldwide against a reported budget of $40 million. It received mixed reviews and is now sitting at a 47% critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes. However, it’s the film’s “Verified Hot” 87% audience score on the aggregator website that seems to be powering it to home-video success. According to FlixPatrol, A Working Man was among the most-watched movies globally on HBO Max this week. There has been no word yet on a possible sequel, but Statham and Ayer are set to work together for the third time on an action-thriller titled John Doe. Ayer is currently gearing up for the release of his big-ticket survival thriller Heart of the Beast, starring Brad Pitt.
Collider’s Steve Weintraub talks with Widow’s Bay star Matthew Rhys, creator Katie Dippold, and executive producer and director Hiro Murai.
In this interview, the trio takes us behind the scenes for series inspiration, from Sam Raimi to FX’s Atlanta, and how Rhys approached Mayor Tom Loftis.
They also discuss the potential for a Season 2 and what that will mean for the series.
We’re nearing the end of the first season of Apple TV’s near-perfect supernatural series, Widow’s Bay, and fans are eager for what’s coming next. Already, the show has garnered high praise from the masterful Guillermo del Toro and drawn comparisons to the king of horror himself, Stephen King. For a streamer that’s staked its claim as the leading sci-fi television, Katie Dippold’s horror comedy not only proves Apple TV’s dedication to stellar storytelling across the board but also to meticulous attention to high-quality in all departments.
Recently, Collider’s Steven Weintraub had the pleasure of moderating an exclusive panel with Dippold, executive producer and director Hiro Murai, and star Matthew Rhys after a special event screening of Episode 3, “The Inaugural Swim.” With the penultimate episode, “Emergency Shelter,” set to premiere this week, don’t miss the full conversation in the video above or in the transcript below for our behind-the-scenes discussion, where Dippold shares the initial inspiration for Widow’s Bay, Murai explains how his previous hit series, Atlanta, helped find the balance between these two genres, and Rhys shares his approach to Mayor Tom Loftis’s exasperation on the haunted New England island. The trio also look ahead to a potential Season 2, what lessons they’ll carry with them, and why Rhys can’t wait to continue the story.
Guillermo del Toro Is Raving About Apple TV’s ‘Widow’s Bay’
Creator Katie Dippold also explains why the show resonates so much with audiences.
Matthew Rhys gripping a bag and staring dully ahead in Widow’s BayImage via Apple TV
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COLLIDER: Widow’s Bay is exploding right now. What do you think it is about the series that’s resonating with so many people? What is it like when Guillermo del Toro starts raving about it on Twitter?
KATIE DIPPOLD: That was thrilling. I was out to dinner, and I walked out, and my phone had just blown up like there was some terrible accident or something, and then I saw it was about to tweet, and it lived up to the expectation. It was so exciting. He’s such a hero. He’s such an authentic… I think he’s just what’s good about show business and Hollywood. He’s just so creative, and just the way he lives, like the stories about how his house and his office set up is. I’m a big fan, big fan, so that was a real treat for us all.
What do you think it is about the show that’s resonating with so many people right now? I want to point out that it’s number one on Apple TV. There’s so much buzz on it. What do you think it is that’s connecting with people?
DIPPOLD: Matthew? [Laughs]
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MATTHEW RHYS: That’s not for me. That’s for the adults!
DIPPOLD: Honestly, I think one thing that was both exciting and terrifying to us is that we had no idea how it would land with people.
HIRO MURAI: That’s kind of a tough question to answer for us, but I think the thing we kept keying into is we know what it feels like for terrible things to keep happening over and over again, and then you kind of get to this, like, numbed-out state.
RHYS: It’s called Hollywood.
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MURAI: Yeah. [Laughs] And there’s something about that that felt baked into the show that was really real and resonant. But it’s not like you’re aiming for it to land a certain way. You’re just kind of trying to do the best version of the show you can.
DIPPOLD: I also feel like, I don’t know, it feels like life has felt like a bit of a nightmare for a while, and I think it’s watching this character go through a nightmarish experience. I don’t know if that’s what’s pulling people in. I’m not sure, honestly.
So someone online called Widow’s Bay the funniest supernatural horror Stephen King never wrote. I’m just curious what your reaction to that is.
DIPPOLD: Oh, that’s a dream description. Stephen King, I feel like he’s a main figure in all of our lives, just what he’s done and what he’s built. Being able to try to live in that world was really a goal, that atmosphere.
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How ‘Widow’s Bay’ Found Its Unique Horror-Comedy Tone
“To be honest, I actually don’t like most horror comedies…”
Image via Apple TV
When you’re building a town like Widow’s Bay, what comes first: the mythology, the characters, or the weird local rules?
DIPPOLD: The characters. In the writers’ room, we approached it from different angles, but it definitely started with character. Well, okay, that’s not true. Honestly, I wanted a haunted island to exist off the coast in New England. I really wished that there would be a world that I would take a ferry to and just this strange island, and feel like there are nooks and crannies to discover and little different terrifying stories and different places. That’s just something I wished to exist, but then you can’t do that unless you then focus on the characters living there. So, characters are most important, but a little haunted island is how it starts.
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One of the trickiest things to do in anything, especially in a show like this, is the tone and finding the right balance. Can you talk about getting the right tone and finding the tone in the editing room and when you were on set, and same with you when you’re doing the performance?
DIPPOLD: It was constant trial and error. I spent a long time figuring it out. To be honest, I actually don’t like most horror comedies. I have my favorites like American Werewolf in London, Cabin in the Woods, and Shaun of the Dead, and Sam Raimi movies, and those are all very different from each other. But other than those, for the most part, I feel like you’re neither laughing or scared, you know? So, it’s tricky.
So, I was trying to find a way to make sure the scary never feels silly, so it doesn’t feel like a spoof, and then also being brutal on the jokes. Like, there could be a joke that would make us laugh so hard in the writers’ room, but if it felt like it was going to take away from the story, we just have to cut it. So, it was a lot of being really strict on stuff like that. Then it was a lot of feeling it out on set, what felt right and what didn’t.
MURAI: The script was so funny, and it’s clearly also very scary, but when we started talking, I think the most important thing and it was very clear that we just needed to be real and grounded and character-first, so the horror and the comedy of it can just sit on this real kind of baked world.
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A lot of that, the execution of that, came from performance and casting. You watch this show now, and you kind of take for granted that Matthew is sort of inhabiting this world and telling you how to watch the show in a really naturalistic way, but if it were any other actor, it would tip your understanding of the show in a different way. So, it was an ongoing conversation, and as we got this group together, it became clearer and clearer what the tone of the show needed to be.
Image via Trent Barboza
RHYS: You kind of, from the get-go, said, “Look, we’re going to create a very real world with real people, real backstories, real situations. You play it for real, and that’s it.” It was kind of an emancipation of tone then because I was like, “Okay, you do tone with music and editing and cinematography, and we’ll just play it for real.” But it did. It was a great relief to hear you say that.
There is truly no one better than him. What you never did was refer to tone. You always advanced the next take by giving the most laser-specific notes or questions about where should the next part go. So, you’re constantly staying active about the scene, as opposed to being taken away by what tone was. And then he also said, “If you get the tone wrong, I’ll fucking kill you.”
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MURAI: I do remember saying that. Yeah, yeah.
DIPPOLD: Yeah, you would shout, “Funnier, please.” [Laughs] He did not do that, I swear.
Katie, your background is heavily rooted in iconic workplace comedy. You worked on Parks & Rec. So, if Mayor Tom Loftis had to deal with a sudden, aggressive town hall visit from Leslie Knope or Ron Swanson while a supernatural fog is rolling into Widow’s Bay, who cracks first?
DIPPOLD: Oh, God, that’s a great question. God, I don’t think any of them would give up, you know what I mean? In different ways. First of all, that scene would be very strange. I kind of think, for different reasons, none of them would give up.
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MURAI: I agree.
How ‘Atlanta’ Helped Shape the Horror-Comedy Style of Apple TV’s ‘Widow’s Bay’
“The cinema that they bring to this show is so crazy and beyond my wildest dreams.”
Donald Glover in AtlantaImage via FX
When you go in and pitch Apple on the show, and they’re getting ready to make it, how much do they want to know that you have, like, a three-season plan, or that you have an overarching storyline, and how much is it like, “Let’s just make one awesome season and see where it goes?”
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DIPPOLD: I talked them through the first season. We talked a lot about how it would feel. I told him where I saw this season going and how I saw it ending, and gave examples of things that would happen along the way. Then, we spoke about what the show in general meant to us and where we could see it ending, but that was about it. I mean, it sounds like a lot, but it was in a five-minute pitch, so it wasn’t too detailed.
Hiro, you directed the first three and the last two. In the first three, you’re obviously finding the visual aesthetic. The Director of Photography, Christian Sprenger, you’ve worked with many times. Can you talk about coming up with the visual aesthetic for the show and setting the tone and everything for everyone?
MURAI: I’ve worked with Christian for over a decade at this point. I always joke that I have more photos of Christian on my phone than of my wife, because we’ve been on set in so many different places. I think our approach for everything is kind of what we talked about with tone and performance, too. We just want to feel like we’re in a real place first and foremost, especially when the content can be kind of absurd or heightened, and then you just want to find a base level to walk in on.
He’s just so good at finding locations and lighting in a way that feels of the world. There’s nothing really artificial about the way he approaches it, but he also knows how to play up the emotions of the scene. So, he’ll kind of supplement a close-up with a little bit of ambient light just to punctuate a certain emotional beat, but he’s got a really light touch.
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Some of this stuff that we’re doing on this show, we kind of played around with on our show, Atlanta, where we played a little bit of comedy-horror, and we really enjoyed the process of playing with those two levers. Because I think they both play with tension building and puncturing, and so it becomes a game of, like, you stay on this set-up longer than you want to, so you as an audience are starting to feel a little weird about it, and then when you cut to the other side, it gives a release valve. So, these are things that we came in wanting to play with, and then we just kind of fleshed it out on the show.
DIPPOLD: Can I just say too, as a comedy writer, the cinema that they bring to this show is so crazy and beyond my wildest dreams for this show. It’s very fun to have a half-hour comedy show look the way they made it. It’s really crazy. So I’m very, very grateful for that.
I completely agree with what you said. This is one of those rare shows where everything works across the board.
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Matthew Rhys Tackles a Career First in ‘Widow’s Bay’
“I’ve never done anything like it.”
Image via Apple TV
Matthew, how much of Tom’s deadpan exasperation is meticulous acting and how much is it just your genuine reaction to reading the scripts?
RHYS: A little bit of both, and just exasperation with the people I had to act with, an awful troupe. No, especially in the town hall, there are so many comedy Olympiads in this that you really need to let those people do it. Tom is kind of alone in many ways, and so I wanted to make him feel as if he’s the only person going through these things. So, he’s exasperated not only, obviously, by the scripts, but I just wanted to, at times, isolate him in a way where he’s just like, “Jesus Christ, if only I had an ally on this mad island.” But also, it was just so much fun to do.
Your performance in this is just fantastic. You’ve done a lot of drama, but I’ve never seen you do physical comedy the way that you do in an upcoming episode. What is it like for you when you’re reading the script and you see what you’re about to go through?
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RHYS: I’ve never done anything like it. I’d never read anything like this before. We talked earlier about what it was, and why is it this now? I’d never read anything like this before, which is partly, I think, why it’s — it’s very unwell to say it’s doing so well, but it’s doing so well. I think it’s singularly unique.
To go back to physical comedy, I did grow up watching Harold Lloyd. I was obsessed with Harold Lloyd, and so, as much as it terrified me because it’s not something I’d done, I think when you read it, you go, oh my God, that’s going to take a certain degree of… I don’t want to use “slapstick” because it always has to remain somewhere very real. It’s frightening, and we would find it. We’d play around and experiment, and sometimes it was too broad, and sometimes the stunt coordinator would tell me off, and then we’d try and find somewhere in the middle that was real.
Image via Trent Barboza
DIPPOLD: Can I just say, I think he’s one of the greatest actors of all time. I really do. He really is. He’s going to hate this so much. He’s going to hate this, but he’s truly one of the greatest actors of all time. But also, he’s so funny, but he doesn’t ever try to be funny because he knows what funny is, and he has pitch-perfect comedic timing. So, he’s being very kind talking about the scripts, but I just can’t imagine the show working without him.
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I agree. I actually want to dig in a little bit more with your performance because I’ve always loved your work. When you have a big scene coming up on a Monday, something that might take a lot out of you, or physical comedy, whatever it is, what is it like in the days leading up to a day that you have circled on the calendar, knowing it’s going to be a really big day? Are you spending extra time reading lines or practicing?
RHYS: At home it’s like this, “I’ve got a big day on Monday! Shut up! No one understands! Christ!” That’s what the lead-up is. That’s where this physical comedy comes from.
Inside ‘Widow’s Bay’s Most Ambitious Episode Stunt Yet
Ex-SEALs, scuba teams, and sharks had Rhys wondering, “The fuck are we doing in the water?”
Image via Apple TV
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Katie, how did you decide what the show’s rules would be in terms of figuring out the line of “How weird can we get?”
DIPPOLD: In terms of the horror, it felt like the fog was a nice entry point because it fits the New England setting, and then it was just thinking of things that would scare us, but were fitting to the island. Like, I would believe that there is an inn that has centuries of terrible history there, like a hag makes sense. You know what I mean? I just feel like there will be some kind of hag on this island. Then it starts to branch out a bit and go in different places, but it felt like trying to slowly lure people in.
I mentioned it earlier, but the set design on this show is just incredible, like the hilarious newspapers and the historical society, the bizarre games in the hotel in Episode 2. Can you talk about working with the set designers and the production design teams in bringing all that to life? Because I really think some of that stuff just adds so much to the show and elevates everything.
DIPPOLD: I have to say, in the room, we’d pitch the comedy board games, and we’d have them all down, but then it goes to this other level. I don’t think the script mentioned anything about the little pieces with the newspaper and the bat. My favorite thing about the Daddy’s Home board game was that I always imagined just kind of an angry dad, but [Hiro] had pitched that more bewildered face, which I think is the funniest detail.
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MURAI: We had a lot of fun working on this because it’s so lovingly crafted in the script. The execution was even more fun because we had all these artists and artisans getting to enjoy it, too. We keep talking about it, this set is the most detailed set I’ve ever been on. Every single piece of board game toy, like you’ve spoken about it as an actor, you sometimes would open a drawer, and there would be nothing in there, but in this world, each drawer was custom-built for the character. So, there’s just a lot of love and care in the details.
DIPPOLD: We had a really great production design team who were just absolute maniacs in the best way and just put so much into it. There’s a lot of care, and it was a really great group.
I love learning about the behind-the-scenes of a show or a movie that you can’t read on Wikipedia or in the press notes. For each of you, what’s something you’d love to share or let everyone know about the making of the show? Any surprises? Any cool behind-the-scenes stories?
RHYS: We had to sign a lot of NDAs, so this is quite tough, especially about Jeff Hiller and Dale Dickey getting in a fist fight.
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DIPPOLD: [Laughs] This is a weird story, but you know what was a fun moment? I remember when Jeff got nominated for his Emmy in the middle of shooting the season. I was in my office, but I had a monitor on, and the monitor was on standby on Stephen [Root] and Kate [O’Flynn], and I could hear someone introduce, “Oh, Emmy-nominated Jeff Hiller,” and I could see Stephen and Kate so happy for him and cheering for him. This is a weird story, but I remember I was so moved by it. They just looked so happy for him. You know what I mean? It was so sweet. And I’m like, “Oh, these lovely actors that are supporting each other!” That’s a weird story to bring up, but it really stuck.
Image via Trent Barboza
RHYS: It was one of the happiest experiences I’ve ever had. Really, really deep, deep crying, laughing, directors going, “Please, can you focus?” We’re like, “Yes, yes, sorry!”
MURAI: I have one. When we first started doing the first block, how you would usually work with actors is you shoot the scene, and if you needed to shoot inserts, the actor doesn’t necessarily have to do the motion, like, if you’re getting a shot of someone writing or typing or something. But Matthew was really adamant that he does all of his own insert work because he wanted his physicality and hand in there, and I was just like, “What? Why are you so dedicated to the small things?” And he goes, “Well, there’s a show I did one time where I just kind of did the scene, and then they told me that they were going to get someone else to do the hands of typing on a computer, and so I left. Then later on, I saw the show, and they cut to me typing, and then they showed the hands, and he’s going like…” [flails hands].
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RHYS: I’ll tell you what the show was. It was the last, ever, Colombo. That’s not a lie. And I was robbed by the typing hands.
DIPPOLD: I really wanted to do a prank where we did a fake insert shot in one of the episodes to show to you, but we just didn’t have that kind of time.
RHYS: Good.
That’s called Season 2, I think.
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DIPPOLD: Also, one of my fondest memories was shooting “The Inaugural Swim” because the production was so crazy. It’s a very ambitious show, and watching Hiro in the wetsuit in the water with another camera in the water, and you have a scuba team for disaster, and you having to swim back and forth, and I’m standing perfectly fine in my normal clothes, I’m like, “Oh, this is a big ordeal. This is a real thing.” That was exciting.
RHYS: They’re all ex-SEALs, and so we’re all in the water, and I said, “So there are no sharks here?” And they went, “Oh yeah, there’s sharks.” I was like, “The fuck are we doing in the water?”
Matthew Rhys Says He Was Contending With “Improv Olympiads”
“I don’t stand a chance here. This isn’t fair.”
Matthew, what was the most fun part of playing someone who’s constantly trying to be rational in increasingly irrational situations?
RHYS: It’s the reactions of others. The fun part as a human being, not an actor in this project, was being so amped up, and then you’re looking at Dale Dickey looking at you, and she’s open-mouth coughing. That was the fun. It was the reactions of these people around me that just made it very hard to do. Then you had real improv Olympiads like Neil Casey, who were in a two-shot or a wide, and he’s off, and you’re like, “I don’t stand a chance here. This isn’t fair.” It’s like sprinting against Usain Bolt. It’s like, “I can’t do this.” That was the joy of it, watching those people fly.
DIPPOLD: I just remember Neil was trying to do something because when you shot Neil coming out of the room, there was some divide of time between that bit and the conversation downstairs before you go up. He was trying to either lose or gain weight between the two weeks so when he came out of the room, it looked like he had put on weight. [Laughs] He really was trying his best to do that.
MURAI: I did not know that. That’s really funny.
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Image via Apple TV
DIPPOLD: Another favorite Neil Casey thing is in Episode 4. This doesn’t spoil anything, but Neil Casey’s supposed to be eating these deviled eggs, and the director of [Episode] 4 had to have Neil keep eating. He must have eaten 14 deviled eggs.
RHYS: He’s like Cool Hand Luke.
DIPPOLD: And there is not one single shot of him eating a deviled egg in the episode. [Laughs]
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That actually leads me to a question that I’m curious about. Everything changes in the editing room. It’s the final rewrite. How did this show possibly change in the editing room in ways you guys didn’t expect?
DIPPOLD: God, there was always more to find. You know what I mean? We were always finding it, like there’s a rhythm. The process of finding the tone was from beginning to end, I would say.
MURAI: Yeah. It’s not a show where the structure of the story changed much in the edit. I think the scripts are always really tight, and there was a clear progression in the story. The things that changed were these microscopic rhythm and timing stuff that really affected the tone and flow of the scenes.
DIPPOLD: Sometimes there’d be big cuts. Sometimes I forget. Like [Episode] 4, for example, has a couple of nights before… You know what I mean?
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MURAI: That’s right. That’s right. People have kind of blacked it all out.
DIPPOLD: Yeah, yeah, yeah. The scripts are, say, 36 pages long, and Maria [Mantia], our first A.D., would be like, “These are not 36 pages long.” You know what I mean? It always took much longer, so that was a whole thing.
Matthew Rhys Teases Big Changes Ahead for Tom in ‘Widow’s Bay’ Season 2
“I have horns, I have a goatee, I’ve got hooves.”
Image via Apple TV
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Assuming you guys get to make a Season 2, which I’m confident you will have a Season 2, what were the big lessons for each of you that you learned making the first season? Because in the first season, you’re figuring out how to make the show. What were some of the big things you learned that you’ll take with you into a second season?
DIPPOLD: That’s a good question. I don’t know if I have specific examples, but it was a process of learning, because we would constantly on set look at each other and be like, “Does this feel right? Does this feel bad? Does this feel good?” And so I feel like by the end of it, you just sort of learned what works and what doesn’t. So, I’m hopeful, and I may be jinxing it, but I think there’d be a little less trial and error. But maybe that’s wrong. I don’t know if you felt like that.
MURAI: I think that’s right. Season 1 is impossible.
DIPPOLD: Yes.
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MURAI: You’re making the plane as you’re flying it. It’s crazy. It’s crazy. Also, the thing about TV shows is that you’re putting the people together, and you hope that it all takes on a life of its own. The actors start riffing off each other, you know your dynamic, and there’s a very organic sense of play there. So by the end of it, I feel like we had a really good grasp of what the show should be in a way that we didn’t when we started.
DIPPOLD: I totally agree.
RHYS: It’s not quite the question, but what I’m more excited about is where we leave off at the end of Season 1. The difference for Tom in Season 2 will be that much greater, and that’s what I’m excited about, is going, “Oh my God, where does he go from there?” Because he’s changed. I have horns, I have a goatee, I’ve got hooves. It’s brilliant. But no, that’s what I’m kind of more excited about, that you’ve laid the groundwork, you’ve done the foundation work, and now that’s all embedded in it, and now you can really hopefully take flight.
DIPPOLD: I mean, in some ways, Season 1 feels like a prequel to life on this island.
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RHYS: Right, because we’ve set up so much now that you’re ready to go.
Widow’s Bay releases new episodes exclusively on Apple TV every Wednesday.
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Release Date
April 28, 2026
Network
Apple TV
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Showrunner
Katie Dippold
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Directors
Sam Donovan, Andrew DeYoung, Hiro Murai, Ti West
Writers
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Alberto Roldán, Neil Casey, Kelly Galuska, Colton Dunn, Dave Harris, Katie Dippold, Mackenzie Dohr
It’s officially the off-season for Off Campus Season 1. Based on the bestselling books by Elle Kennedy, the series follows scholarship music student Hannah Wells (Ella Bright) and promising hockey star Garrett Graham (Belmont Cameli), who agree to a fake-dating arrangement. In return, Hannah gets help making her crush jealous, while Garrett hopes to ace his upcoming philosophy oral presentation. But the longer they play pretend, the more they realize just how compatible they are.
Season 1 may be over, but there’s no need to worry. With Season 2 of Off Campus officially in the works, another couple will be in the hot seat. But for fans who can’t get enough of Hannah and Garrett’s chemistry, there are plenty more books where that came from. From fake dating for a wedding to fake dating to pay the bills, here are the must-read books to enjoy while you wait for Off Campus Season 2.
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‘Heated Rivalry’ (2019)
Written by Rachel Reid
The cover for Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid over a blue backgroundImage via Carina Press
Now a television sensation,Heated Rivalry followsthe turbulent 10-year situationship between Canadian hockey player Shane Hollander and Russian star Ilya Rozanov. The two have their first awkward encounter at 17, and over the years — caught in the chaos of competition and rivalry — Shane and Ilya slowly develop sparks for each other, but never quite enough to turn it into a serious relationship.
Athletes famously don’t have the luxury of prioritizing their feelings, especially when they’re young prodigies like Shane and Ilya. But that pressure becomes even heavier in a sport known for its toxic hypermasculinity and unforgiving locker room culture. Over time, Shane and Ilya are forced to reckon with whether their hockey careers are worth sacrificing their happiness for.
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‘The Duke and I’ (2000)
Written by Julia Quinn
A portrait of Daphe Bridgerton and Simon Basset on the cover of ‘The Duke and I’Image via Avon Books
The hype for Bridgertonwouldn’t exist without its first novel, The Duke and I. True to the Netflix adaptation, the novel follows social debutante Daphne Bridgerton, who is under pressure during the matchmaking season. Unlike the television counterpart, the story shows Daphne entering her second season in the marriage mart, and it doesn’t help that most of the men around her only see her as just a friend.
Meanwhile, Simon Basset, the Duke of Hastings, returns to London. While mothers of the ton set their sights on him as the perfect match for their daughters, the Duke has no interest in marriage. When he learns of Daphne’s predicament, he suggests a fake courtship to solve both of their problems, which eventually grows into something real.
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‘To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before’ (2014)
Written by Jenny Han
A woman lying down on her bed in the cover of ‘To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before’Image via Simon & Schuster
Fake dating became the ultimate feel-good rom-com trope thanks to To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before. Hopeless romantic Lara Jean Covey has spent sixteen years of her life writing secret love letters to all her unrequited crushes. But things spiral out of control when those letters mysteriously go missing. Worse still, one of them is mailed to her older sister’s now ex-boyfriend, Josh.
Luckily, Lara might have a solution. Also on her “list” is Peter Kavinsky. Peter is everything Lara is not: outgoing, charismatic, and wildly popular — which makes him the perfect fake-dating candidate to cover up her awkward situation with Josh. Peter agrees to help, but it’s only a matter of time before they start catching feelings for each other.
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‘The Love Hypothesis’ (2021)
Written by Ali Hazelwood
A man and a woman wearing lab coats kiss on the lips on the cover of ‘The Love Hypothesis’Image via Berkley Books
Chemistry’s brewing in The Love Hypothesis, and it’s not happening in the lab. Slated for a film adaptation, the academic romance follows Olive Smith, a Stanford Ph.D. candidate who impulsively locks lips with a stranger to prove she’s over her ex. To her horror, the “stranger” she kisses is none other than Dr. Adam Carlsen.
The mere mention of Adam’s name is enough to send chills down anyone’s spine. With a notorious record of making dissertation students cry, Olive approaches him to see if he would like to enter into a fake-dating arrangement with her. Surprisingly, Adam agrees, as the university would see it as him settling down — convincing enough to help secure research funding. That wouldn’t be the only thing the two end up securing, though.
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Collider Exclusive · Star Wars Quiz Which Force User Are You? Light Side · Dark Side · Or Somewhere Between
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The Force is not a binary. It is a spectrum — from the serene halls of the Jedi Temple to the shadowed corridors of Sith space. Ten questions will reveal where you truly fall. The Force has always known. Now you will too.
🔵Jedi Master
🟡Padawan
🔴Sith Lord
⚫Inquisitor
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⚪Grey Jedi
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01
What is the Force to you? Your relationship with the Force defines everything else.
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02
When you feel strong emotions — anger, grief, love — what do you do? The Jedi suppress. The Sith feed. Others choose differently.
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03
The Jedi Council gives you an order you disagree with. You: How you handle authority reveals your alignment.
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04
You are offered forbidden knowledge that could give you enormous power. The cost is crossing a moral line. You: The dark side’s pull is never more than a choice away.
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05
Your approach to training and learning is: A student’s habits become a master’s character.
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06
In a duel, your lightsaber fighting style reflects: Combat is the purest expression of a Force user’s philosophy.
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07
A defeated enemy lies at your feet, powerless. You: Mercy — or its absence — is the truest test of alignment.
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08
The Jedi Code forbids attachment. Your honest view on love and bonds: The source of the greatest falls in the galaxy.
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09
Why do you use the Force at all? What’s the point? Purpose is the difference between a knight and a weapon.
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10
At the final moment — light side or dark side pulling at you — what wins? In the end, every Force user faces this moment. What does yours look like?
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Your Alignment Has Been Determined Your Place in the Force
The scores below reveal how the Force sees you. Your highest number is your true alignment. Read on to understand what that means — and what it will cost you.
🔵 Jedi Master
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🟡 Padawan
🔴 Sith Lord
⚫ Inquisitor
⚪ Grey Jedi
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Disciplined, compassionate, and deeply attuned to the living Force, you have walked the path long enough to understand its demands — and accept them. You lead not through authority alone, but through example. You have felt the pull of the dark side and chosen otherwise, every time. That is not certainty. That is courage.
You are earnest, powerful, and brimming with potential — and you know it, which is both your greatest asset and your most dangerous flaw. You act before you think, trust your gut over your training, and sometimes confuse impatience for bravery. The Masters see something in you, though. The question isn’t whether you have what it takes — it’s whether you’ll be patient enough to find out.
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You are not simply dangerous — you are certain, and that is worse. You have decided what the galaxy needs, and you have decided you are the one to deliver it. Your power is genuine and formidable, earned through sacrifice that would have broken lesser beings. But examine your victories carefully. Every Sith believed their cause was righteous. The dark side’s cruelest trick is that it agrees with you.
You were forged in fire and reshaped by those who found you at your lowest. You serve, because service gave you structure when you had none. Your allegiance is not to an ideology — it is to survival and to the master who gave you purpose. But there is something buried beneath the conditioning. The Jedi you hunt? You recognize them. Because you remember what it felt like before the choice was taken from you.
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You have looked at the Jedi Code and the Sith Code and found both of them incomplete. You walk the line not out of indecision but out of conviction — you genuinely believe both extremes miss something essential. The Jedi don’t fully trust you. The Sith think you’re wasting your potential. They’re both partially right. But so are you.
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‘The Spanish Love Deception’ (2021)
Written by Elena Armas
An illustration of a woman in summer clothes and a man in a tuxedo on the cover of ‘The Spanish Love DeceptionImage via Atria Books
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It’s an international match made in heaven — if only it weren’t fake.The Spanish Love Deceptionfollows Catalina Martin, a Spanish woman living in New York City and nursing a broken heart. Her family, constantly pushing her to move on, finally gets under her skin. With her sister’s wedding in Spain approaching, Catalina ends up accepting help from her arrogant coworker, Aaron Blackford.
Trouble begins as soon as they land in Spain. From sharing a hotel room and a single bed to facing Catalina’s larger-than-life extended family, things only get more complicated when she’s forced to deal with her ex-fiancé’s comments. Surprisingly, the usually cold Aaron is having none of it, and that’s when their workplace rivalry slowly starts to shift into something else.
‘A Not So Meet Cute’ (2021)
Written by Meghan Quinn
A man in a white shirt sitting on a sofa on the cover of ‘A Not So Meet Cute’Image via Hot-Lanta Publishing
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Things aren’t going well for Lottie Gardner in A Not So Meet Cute. Recently fired by her influencer best friend, drowning in debt, and living with her mother, she jokingly sets out to find a rich husband in Beverly Hills. Her wishful thinking comes true when she crosses paths with wealthy real estate developer Huxley Can.
Huxley’s in a sticky situation. He might have lied to an important client about being engaged to a pregnant fiancée. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Lottie plays the role of Huxley’s expectant fiancée, while he pays off her student loans and helps fund her future. From breast pump fittings to baby classes, they make a great fake husband-and-wife-to-be.
‘Funny Story’ (2024)
Written by Emily Henry
A man and a woman sit on a bar o nthe cover of ‘Funny Story’Image via Berkley Books
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Daphne Vincent thought she had her life planned out in Emily Henry‘s Funny Story— that is until her fiancé, Peter, leaves her just before their nuptials for his longtime friend, Petra. Stranded in Michigan, Daphne ends up living with Miles Nowak, Petra’s heartbroken ex-boyfriend. When Peter and Petra invite them to their wedding, Daphne impulsively claims that she and Miles are dating.
However, Daphne doesn’t plan on keeping up the charade for long, especially since she intends to move away from Michigan after her library’s all-night fundraiser. Before she leaves, though, she is determined to make the event a success. Knowing her time in Michigan may be coming to an end, Miles decides to spend as much time with her as possible.
‘The Love Match’ (2023)
Written by Priyanka Taslim
A woman in between a man playing the guitar and a man holding flowers on the cover of ‘The Love Match’Image via Salaam Reads
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It’s heart over mind in the Pride and Prejudice-inspired The Love Match. High school graduate Zahra Khan dreams of going to college, but those plans seem out of reach when her struggling family can’t afford her education. Worse still, Zahra’s mother has already arranged a marriage for her, believing it is the best way to secure her daughter’s future and protect her from poverty.
Zahra is matched with the wealthy Harun Emon, who, much like Zahra, has no interest in marrying young. The two agree to fake their courtship while quietly sabotaging the match. Meanwhile, Zahra begins developing feelings for Nayim Aktar, the new dishwasher at her tea shop. As she finds herself torn between duty and desire, Zahra learns that money doesn’t always guarantee happiness—sometimes, what matters most is the freedom to choose her own future.
‘The Cheat Sheet’ (2021)
Written by Sarah Adams
A woman and a men leaning on a football post on the cover of ‘The Cheat Sheet’Image via Dell
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Former ballerina Bree Camden is at her wits’ end in The Cheat Sheet. With rising rent looming, Bree struggles to keep her dance studio for low-income children afloat. Her lifelong best friend, NFL superstar Nathan Donelson, secretly purchases the building to help her, but the gesture only frustrates Bree.
After drowning her feelings in tequila, she accidentally confesses her long-hidden love for Nathan to a TMZ reporter, and the video quickly goes viral. Suddenly, the public is convinced they are the perfect couple. To capitalize on the attention and earn enough money to save the studio, Nathan and Bree agree to a three-week fake-dating arrangement.
‘Red, White & Royal Blue’ (2019)
Written by Casey McQuiston
The book cover for ‘Red, White & Royal Blue’Image via St. Martin’s Griffin
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There’s tension between the United States and the United Kingdom inRed, White & Royal Blue, centered on two young men: Alex Claremont-Diaz, the First Son of the United States, and Prince Henry of Britain. The two share a long, bitter history, which comes to a head when they accidentally ruin a cake at a royal wedding.
In an effort to keep up appearances, Alex and Henry are forced to stage a public truce. But when the cameras are off, their staged friendship blossoms into something more. Soon enough, the two quickly learn that there is a cost to sharing their newfound romance, especially when their lives revolve around politics and public opinion.
There’s no living director as controversial as Quentin Tarantino. The man makes undisputably great films: Pulp Fiction is the ultimate argument that style and substance can be one and the same. Kill Bill is the ultimate love letter to the boldest, bloodiest movies ever created. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, meanwhile, is a powerful deconstruction of the media machine that is so fundamental to our lives. What makes Tarantino so controversial, then? Sometimes, it’s the filthy content of his movies, with haters complaining about everything from the ultraviolence to the abundance of racially-charged language. More recently, though, Tarantino has gotten himself in trouble by dropping hot takes on various movies and actors.
For example, it wasn’t that long ago that Tarantino described beloved actor Paul Dano’s performance in There Will Be Blood as “weak sauce” and the actor as “the weakest f*cking actor in SAG.” After that, the entire internet wanted the director’s blood. However, with Toy Story 5 on its way, I thought it was time to revisit one of Tarantino’s less controversial takes: that Toy Story 3 was such a perfect ending to the franchise that it made no sense for Pixar to create any more of these movies.
Hollywood’s Filthiest Director Loves A Children’s Movie
In December 2025, Quentin Tarantino appeared on The Bret Easton Ellis Podcast to talk about a subject near and dear to his heart: his favorite movies of all time. He said a lot of crazy things during this appearance, including the extremely controversial comments about Paul Dano. But perhaps the most shocking thing Tarantino said in the interview was that Toy Story 3 was his second-favorite film of the century and “almost a perfect movie.” He went on to describe how “That last five minutes ripped my fuck*ing heart out” and how “if I try to even describe the end, I will start crying and get choked up. … I can’t even do it.”
It’s admittedly wild to imagine Tarantino tearing up over a Pixar movie about toys. But he’s serious, and in 2024, he told Bill Maher that Toy Story 3 was so good that it completely killed his interest in watching further films in the franchise. “You literally ended the story as perfectly as you could,” he said. “So no, I don’t care if it’s good. I’m done.” It’s a comment that raised many moviegoers’ eyebrows, especially in the wake of Toy Story 5’s success. Now that Toy Story 5 is about to come out, though, we need to admit that Tarantino was right and that Pixar should have ended things with the third movie.
The Toys Are Back In Town
Toy Story 3 basically wrapped the story up for Andy, the owner of all those fantastic toys like Woody and Buzz Lightyear. By the end, he is headed off to college and ends up donating all of his old toys to Bonnie, a young girl in the neighborhood. Woody says goodbye to his oldest friend, and he and the rest of the gang settle in for life with a brand new kid. Tarantino’s absolutely right about this ending, by the way: it’s guaranteed to make you cry, and it’s wonderfully meta to see Andy put away his beloved toys even as we, the audience, put away the franchise we’ve been enjoying for decades.
Perfect ending, right? Unfortunately, Disney likes money more than they like art, so we ended up getting Toy Story 4 and, now, Toy Story 5. Bonnie is now the central character, but she never becomes quite as compelling as Andy. Even if she was, though, Toy Story 4 felt like a creative rehash of things we had seen before. The idea of toys being secretly alive and going on crazy misadventures is a powerful one, but what’s the point in going back to the well for a fourth time if the movie feels derivative? Honestly, Disney should have gone all Spaceballs on us and called this sequel Toy Story 4: The Search For More Money.
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Toys Vs. Electronics
Now, Toy Story 5’s big gimmick is that Bonnie is a little older and wants to play with a tablet rather than her old toys. Like, seriously, who wants to watch that? Obviously, the rise of iPad kids has been a problem in the real world, but I doubt that parents want to see an onscreen recreation of the tablet arguments they are constantly having with their children every night. For that matter, I doubt that kids are in a serious rush to watch a movie that constantly reminds them they could be accessing the sum total of all entertainment and information instead of playing with a toy that has only a few points of articulation.
Obviously, not everybody shares Quentin Tarantino’s thoughts on this matter. Toy Story 4 was a critical and commercial smash hit, earning over a billion dollars at the box office. Movies making that kind of money are guaranteed to get a sequel. However, the very existence of sequels to Toy Story 3 underscores that everyone involved cares more about an easy payday than anything else. The third film was, as Tarantino said, “almost perfect,” effectively providing a perfect ending to the franchise and (in many ways) our collective childhood.
If nothing else, maybe Tarantino’s hatred of these sequels will spur him on to finally create his next film. With movies like Inglourious Basterds and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, the director has developed a penchant for rewriting history in ways that he finds more personally pleasing. Maybe, just maybe, we’ll get a Tarantino film where Pixar never made another Toy Story movie after the third one. That beats the alternative: a Toy Story reboot from Tarantino where a grown-up Bonnie’s feet somehow never leave the frame.
Sharon Osbourne has responded to critics who accused her of turning her late husband’s legacy into a commercial venture following the announcement of an upcoming AI avatar based on him.
Addressing the backlash, Sharon made it clear that financial gain was not her motivation, insisting she had no interest in critics’ money and adding that Ozzy Osbournewould have fully supported the project. Details of the initiative have been circulating for some time, alongside growing speculation that the late singer and his wife will also be the subject of an upcoming biopic.
ZUMAPRESS.com / MEGA
The Osbourne family has come under heavy criticism since announcing plans to create an AI avatar of the late Ozzy Osbourne.
Many critics have dismissed the project as a “cash grab,” prompting Sharon to speak out and defend the initiative against the growing backlash.
“The thing is, it’s like when there were propellers, and then there were jet planes. [People would question] ‘Why go on a jet when there’s a propeller? It’s a cash grab,” she said on “The Osbournes Podcast,” per NME.
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“Well, you know what, technology moves on,” she continued. “And I’m sorry for those people. I’m not asking you to come. I don’t want your f-cking money. I don’t need your f-cking money. I’m doing very well.”
Sharon Says Ozzy’s Legacy Drives The AI Project
Martin Harris/Capital Pictures / MEGA
Ozzy died last year at the age of 76 following a heart attack complicated by other health factors, meaning he is no longer able to weigh in on the plans himself.
However, Sharon believes the legendary Black Sabbath frontman would have fully supported having his legacy preserved in this way.
“For somebody to turn around to me and say I’m doing a cash grab? No, you don’t know my husband, OK? I know my husband,” the former “The Talk” host said.
She added, “My husband would say to me over and over, ‘After I go, how long do you think I’ll be remembered?’”
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Jack Osbourne Explains The Family’s Decision
Ozzy’s AI avatar will be created in collaboration with Hyperreal, a company known for producing ultra-realistic digital human performances.
While it remains unclear when the project will debut, Sharon hopes it will become something that can be passed down through the family and help future generations, including their grandchildren, keep the iconic singer’s memory alive.
Meanwhile, Sharon’s son, Jack Osbourne, has expressed a slightly different perspective. He believes the project needed to be undertaken by the family, arguing that if they did not move forward with the idea, someone outside the family likely would.
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“Either we do it, or someone else is gonna do it,” he said on the podcast. “And for me, it’s not about pretending he’s still alive. It’s making sure he’s never forgotten.”
Ozzy Osbourne Biopic Eyes 2028 Release
Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
A biopic centered on Ozzy is also in development, offering another way to preserve the rock icon’s legacy for future generations of fans.
While speculation about the project has circulated for years, Jack has generated fresh excitement in recent months by sharing new details about its progress.
According to Jack, a 2028 release is the tentative target, although that timeline could still change as much of the project remains in development. Earlier this year, he also hinted at the storyline, which will focus on a pivotal chapter of his father’s life and career.
“It would be kind of the tail end of Sabbath, him going solo. [Because] you gotta have the love story. And that’s kind of the main focus of the film, and all the craziness that happened in the early ’80s and Randy’s [Rhoads] tragic death. But, yeah, it’s an origin story,” he said.
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Jack Teases ‘Phenomenal’ Ozzy Osbourne Actor
ZUMAPRESS.com / MEGA
For now, the actor set to portray the heavy metal icon has not been publicly revealed. However, the role has already been cast, according to Jack, who suggested fans will be pleased with the choice.
“We have our decided pick, and I can’t say anything [yet], but it’s a phenomenal, phenomenal actor,” Jack revealed during a radio interview.
At the time, he also confirmed that the project already has a director attached, although he did not reveal the filmmaker’s identity.
The director is expected to have the full support of Sharon, who will serve as a producer alongside her children, Aimee and Jack.
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Khloé Kardashian has always been iconic, but it’s safe to say her outfits are eating as of late. Stepping out for the qualifying session at F1’s Monaco Grand Prix, the Khloud Foods founder was serving serious style inspiration in a tiny V-neck top, cool-girl capris and heeled flip-flops. However, it was her accessories that turned the look into a full fashion moment — specifically, her hoop earrings.
While some were waiting to spot the star’s sister, Kim Kardashian, with her new beau, Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton, we were waiting for Khloé to drop all those outfit deets. Sadly, the brand behind her gold statement hoops remains TBD, but found a similar pair on Amazon for just $12.
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Get the Exgox 5mm Wide Gold Hoop Earrings for $12 (was $14) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
The Exgox 5mm Wide Gold Hoop Earrings might not be the real deal, but the quality makes it hard to tell. Despite their large, 50mm size, these sterling silver babies are surprisingly lightweight, thanks to the thin, flat design. They’re also hypoallergenic and do not tarnish, meaning you can wear this pick on repeat without worry. That’s seriously good news, since they complement a variety of outfits.
These hoops are nearly identical to the bold option worn by Khloé, so you’ll have no problem styling them with an all-black ensemble, the same way the star did. The style adds a much-needed pop when paired with neutral basics or darker-colored pieces, but still complements bolder designs, like floral wedding guest dresses and sequin tops.
Amazon shoppers think the Exgox hoops are pretty spectacular, too, leaving tons of reviews hyping up the budget-friendly find.
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“These hoops have become my favorite ‘go to’ earrings of all time,” one person wrote. “I purchased these last year, wear them almost every day and they have not tarnished or faded. I haven’t had any problem with the closures either. The size is just perfect to make a statement, and they look like real gold! The quality of these earrings is simply superb.”
“Looks expensive . . . very light,” another shopper titled their review. “We ladies all have lost one loop of our favorite pair . . . expensive usually . . . so I decided to try these, and they look as good as my expensive one(s).”
Khloé proved that sometimes it’s the accessories that can turn a simple outfit combo into something special, and a pair of quality gold hoops is a quick way to zhuzh up your basics. Whether you’re looking to enhance an all-black summer fit, want to liven up your everyday jeans or need classic earrings you can wear for formal and casual occasions alike, these hoops are it. Don’t delay; grab the $12 pair ASAP!
Get the Exgox 5mm Wide Gold Hoop Earrings for $12 (was $14) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
Even Kate Middleton picks favorites. The Princess of Wales has a never-ending collection of diamonds and jewels, but she can’t stop wearing a classy triple-hoop earring style. Her exact pair costs thousands, but we found a similar gold version on sale for just $13 on Amazon. Classy and luxe, these earrings make any outfit look […]
Gwen Stacy has been one of the biggest missing pieces in Marvel Studios’ Spider-Man corner of the universe for years. That absence has only become more noticeable as the character has flourished across other Spider-Man media, from EmmaStone’s fan-favorite portrayal in The Amazing Spider-Man films to HaileeSteinfeld’s breakout performance as Spider-Gwen in Sony’s wildly successful Spider-Verse franchise. If you really want to be thorough, you can also count Bryce Dallas Howard’s brief appearance in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 3— though that version of Gwen rarely enters the conversation these days. Either way, Marvel is finally bringing Gwen Stacy into the mix in 2026.
The catch is that her debut won’t be happening alongside TomHolland‘s Peter Parker on the big screen. Instead, Gwen is set to make her first Marvel Studios appearance in Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Season 2, the animated Disney+ series returning in fall 2026. While the show is produced by Marvel Studios, it exists in its own alternate timeline rather than the MCU’s “Sacred Timeline,” meaning this won’t be the Gwen Stacy who eventually crosses paths with Holland’s Spider-Man in Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
Showrunner JeffTrammell has already confirmed Gwen’s arrival for Season 2, but recent social media teases have revealed even more. In a post shared to Instagram, Trammell showcased early character sketches of Gwen in both her everyday civilian look and her full Spider-Gwen costume, effectively confirming that this version of the character won’t simply be another student at Midtown High. While Marvel hasn’t revealed exactly how she acquires her powers, the artwork strongly suggests Gwen will play a significant role both in and out of costume when the series returns.
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Collider Exclusive · Marvel Personality Quiz Which MCU Hero Are You? Spider-Man · Daredevil · Iron Man · Punisher · Thor · Cap
Six heroes. One destiny. Answer 10 questions to discover which Marvel Cinematic Universe hero shares your personality, values, and fighting spirit. Will you swing, fly, or thunder your way to glory?
🕷️Spider-Man
😈Daredevil
🤖Iron Man
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💀Punisher
⚡Thor
🛡️Cap
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01
What drives you to do what’s right? Choose the answer that feels most like you.
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02
It’s 2 AM. Where are you? Your answer says more about you than you’d think.
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03
How do you handle a villain who keeps escaping justice? Every hero has a method. What’s yours?
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04
How do you feel about keeping a secret identity? The mask — or the lack of one — says everything.
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05
You’ve lost someone important because of your heroism. How do you carry that? Every hero pays a price. The question is how they pay it.
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06
What’s your role when working with a team? Who you are under pressure is who you actually are.
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07
Where do you draw the line between justice and revenge? The answer defines what kind of hero you really are.
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08
When you’re not saving the world, what does life look like? The person behind the mask is always the more interesting story.
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09
What keeps you up at night? Fear is useful data — if you’re honest about what you’re actually afraid of.
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10
The battle is lost. You’re outnumbered, outgunned, and exhausted. What do you do? This is your tiebreaker — choose carefully.
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Your Hero Has Been Identified Your MCU Hero Is…
Based on your answers, the Marvel hero who matches your spirit, values, and instincts has been revealed.
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Queens, New York
🕷️ Spider-Man
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You carry the weight of the world on shoulders that are younger than they should have to be — funny, loyal, and endlessly self-sacrificing.
You do the right thing not because it’s easy, but because no one else will.
You understand that responsibility isn’t a burden you choose — it’s one that finds you.
Whether it’s a neighbourhood mugging or a multiverse crisis, you show up.
Peter Parker’s lesson — that great power demands great responsibility — isn’t a slogan to you. It’s the code you live by, even when it costs you everything.
Hell’s Kitchen, New York
😈 Daredevil
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You fight in the shadows between law and chaos, guided by a fierce moral compass that refuses to let the guilty walk free.
You use every tool available — your mind, your body, your faith — to protect those the system overlooks.
You’ve looked into the darkness and chosen not to become it, though the line has never been easy.
Matt Murdock’s duality — champion in the courtroom, devil in the alley — mirrors your own.
Relentless, conflicted, and unwilling to stop. That is exactly you.
Stark Industries, Malibu
🤖 Iron Man
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Brilliant, driven, and occasionally insufferable — but always the person who solves the unsolvable problem.
You lead with your mind and back it up with resources, innovation, and a stubbornness that borders on heroic.
You started out looking out for yourself, but somewhere along the way the world became your responsibility.
Tony Stark’s arc — from ego to sacrifice — is your arc too.
You build, you plan, and when the moment comes, you’re willing to give everything. Because in the end, you’re Iron Man.
New York City
💀 The Punisher
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You’ve been through fire that would break most people — and it did change you, completely. What’s left is unyielding, relentless, and operating by a code forged in grief.
You don’t ask for forgiveness, and you don’t expect gratitude.
You see a corrupt, broken world and you’ve decided to do something about it, consequences be damned.
Frank Castle’s war is born from love twisted by loss — and so is yours.
Uncompromising and unflinching — the world may not agree with your methods, but your conviction is absolute.
Asgard · Protector of the Nine Realms
⚡ Thor
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Powerful, proud, and on a lifelong journey to become worthy of the legend you carry.
You lead with strength but have learned — sometimes painfully — that true greatness comes from humility and growth.
You’re larger than life, yet more vulnerable than you let on.
Thor’s story is one of transformation: from arrogant prince to worthy king, from isolated warrior to beloved protector.
You bring the storm when it’s needed — and the warmth when it matters just as much.
Brooklyn, New York · The Avengers
🛡️ Captain America
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You believe in something bigger than yourself — and you fight for it even when the world has moved on and nobody else will.
You don’t bully the small guy, and you never stop when it gets hard.
Steve Rogers didn’t become a hero when he got the serum — he was always one. So were you.
Your strength isn’t in your fists; it’s in your refusal to compromise what’s right, no matter the cost.
In a world full of people taking the easy road, you’re the one who picks up the shield and stands up — every single time.
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How Good Is ‘Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man’?
Season 1 may have already planted the seeds for her introduction. In the premiere, Peter Parker is bitten by a radioactive spider after it falls through a mysterious portal, leaving open the possibility that the same spider — or another altered spider — could continue its journey through Midtown. Season 2 was officially confirmed for fall 2026 during New York Comic Con, and Trammell’s earlier comments hinted that Gwen would be one of the major additions to the next chapter, alongside escalating symbiote storylines and the return of Charlie Cox‘s Daredevil. So while Marvel may not be introducing a live-action Gwen Stacy into Holland’s world just yet, it is finally bringing one of Spider-Man’s most iconic supporting characters into the Marvel Studios fold.
In his review for Collider, MikeThomas noted that while Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man may not rank alongside the very best Spider-Man animated series, it succeeds by embracing its own identity. Originally conceived as a much more direct MCU prequel, the project eventually evolved into a looser reimagining of Peter Parker’s early years. That creative shift allows the series to remix familiar Spider-Man mythology without being constrained by established continuity, giving classic characters and storylines room to feel fresh again.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Season 1 is streaming now on Disney+, and is due to return with Season 2 this fall.
The latest installment in the Scary Movie franchise might have taken last weekend’s box office top spot, but the parody of modern horror movies isn’t dominating general movie discourse. The viral masterpiece Obsession and A24’s Renate Reinsve and Chiwetel Ejiofor-led Backroomscontinue to be the talk of Tinseltown, although they’ll face some tricky new competition this weekend, with the arrival of Steven Spielberg‘s long-awaited Disclosure Day. From the allure of the big screen to the best of the small, there is also plenty worth watching on streaming. With that in mind, here’s a list of three movies you should stream this weekend on Netflix.
Disclaimer: These titles are available on US Netflix.
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1
‘Father of the Bride’ (1991)
Rotten Tomatoes: 71% | IMDb: 6.6/10
It’s officially wedding season, and this weekend might be the perfect time to get in the mood with an undeniable classic of the genre. If you’re a fan of Hulu’sOnly Murders in the Building, then 1991’s Father of the Bride is a must-watch, featuring the very best of Steve Martin and Martin Short‘s undeniable comedic chemistry.
The film stars the former as George Banks, a man whose life is turned upside down when his precious daughter returns from studying abroad engaged. With the wedding planning in full swing, George struggles to come to terms with his daughter’s marriage. A remake of the 1950 film of the same name starring Spencer Tracy, this hilarious, heartwarming ’90s comedy gained some particular emotional poignance last year, following the passing of the great Diane Keaton.
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Collider Exclusive · Oscar Best Picture Quiz Which Oscar Best Picture Is Your Perfect Movie? Parasite · Everything Everywhere · Oppenheimer · Birdman · No Country
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Five Oscar Best Picture winners. Five completely different visions of what cinema can be — and what it can do to you. One of them is the film that was made for the way your mind works. Ten questions will figure out which one.
🪜Parasite
🌀Everything Everywhere
☢️Oppenheimer
🐦Birdman
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🪙No Country for Old Men
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01
What kind of film experience do you actually want? The best movies don’t just entertain — they leave something behind.
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02
Which idea grabs you most in a film? Great films are driven by a central obsession. What’s yours?
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03
How do you like your story told? Form is content. The way a story is shaped changes what it means.
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04
What makes a truly great antagonist? The opposition defines the protagonist. What kind of opposition fascinates you?
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05
What do you want from a film’s ending? The final note is the one that lingers. What do you want it to sound like?
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06
Which setting pulls you in most? Where a film takes place shapes everything — mood, stakes, what’s even possible.
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07
What cinematic craft impresses you most? Every great film has a signature — a technical or artistic element that makes it unmistakable.
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08
What kind of main character do you root for? The protagonist is the lens. Who you choose to follow says something about you.
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09
How do you feel about a film that takes its time? Pace is a choice. Some films sprint; others let tension accumulate slowly, deliberately.
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10
What do you want to feel walking out of the cinema? The best films leave a mark. What kind of mark do you want?
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The Academy Has Decided Your Perfect Film Is…
Your answers have pointed to one Oscar Best Picture winner above all others. This is the film that was made for the way your mind works.
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Parasite
You are drawn to films that operate on multiple levels simultaneously — that begin in one genre and quietly, brilliantly migrate into another. Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite is a film about class, desire, and the architecture of inequality that manages to be darkly funny, deeply suspenseful, and genuinely shocking across a single extraordinary running time. Your instinct is for cinema that hides its true intentions until the moment it’s ready to reveal them. Parasite is exactly that — a film that rewards close attention and punishes assumptions, right up to its devastating final image.
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Everything Everywhere All at Once
You want it all — and this film gives you all of it. The Daniels’ Everything Everywhere All at Once is one of the most maximalist films ever made: action comedy, multiverse sci-fi, family drama, existential crisis, and a genuinely earned emotional core that sneaks up on you amid the chaos. You are someone who responds to ambition, who doesn’t want cinema to choose between being entertaining and being meaningful. This film refuses that choice entirely. It is overwhelming by design, and its overwhelming nature is precisely the point — because the feeling of being crushed by infinite possibility is exactly what it’s about.
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Oppenheimer
You are drawn to cinema on a grand scale — films that understand history not as a backdrop but as a force, and that place their characters inside that force and watch what happens. Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is a film about the terrifying gap between what we can do and what we should do, told with the full weight of one of the most consequential moments in human history behind it. You want your films to feel important without feeling self-important — to earn their ambition through sheer craft and the gravity of their subject. Oppenheimer does exactly that. It is enormous, complicated, and refuses easy comfort.
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Birdman
You are drawn to films that foreground their own construction — that make the how of the filmmaking part of the what it’s about. Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, shot to appear as a single continuous take, is cinema examining itself through the cracked mirror of a fading actor’s ego. You respond to formal daring, to the feeling that a film is doing something that probably shouldn’t be possible. Michael Keaton’s performance and Emmanuel Lubezki’s restless camera create something genuinely unlike anything else — a film that is simultaneously about creativity, relevance, self-destruction, and the impossibility of ever truly knowing if your work means anything at all.
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No Country for Old Men
You are drawn to cinema that trusts silence, that refuses to explain itself, and that treats dread as a form of meaning. The Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men is a film about the arrival of a new kind of evil — implacable, arbitrary, and utterly indifferent to the moral frameworks we use to make sense of the world. It is one of the most formally controlled films ever made, and its controlled restraint is what makes it so terrifying. You want your films to haunt you, not comfort you. You are not interested in resolution if resolution would be dishonest. No Country for Old Men is honest in a way that most cinema never dares to be.
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2
‘Hot Summer Nights’ (2017)
Rotten Tomatoes: 46% | IMDb: 6.4/10
Ahead of Dune: Part Three, the final installment in Denis Villeneuve‘s adaptation of Frank Herbert‘s novels, this December, why not check out one of star Timothée Chalamet‘s most underrated movies on Netflix? The neo-noir thriller Hot Summer Nights follows Chalamet’s sheltered teenager Daniel, who comes of age during one wild, romantic, and chaotic summer.
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Also starring Maika Monroe as the free-spirited McKayla, Hot Summer Nights features a Chalamet performance that, although it might not receive much recognition, is arguably one of his best. Its story might not be anything new, but it’s told with an eye for visual beauty, and makes for an indulgent coming-of-age tale that will keep you hooked this weekend.
3
‘The Big Lebowski’ (1998)
Rotten Tomatoes: 79% | IMDb: 8.1/10
One of the most famous cult classics of all time, the Coen brothers‘ The Big Lebowskiis now universally beloved for good reason, and remains a movie everyone should watch at least once. The movie stars Jeff Bridges as the iconic The Dude, a man who thrives on living life in the slow lane. However, after being mistaken for a millionaire of the same name, he becomes embroiled in an unlikely world of crime.
One of Bridges’ best performances that even spawned its own mock religion, The Big Lebowski is both laugh-out-loud funny and utterly enthralling. The Coens at their quirky, twisty best, the film is best known for featuring some of the finest ensemble characters in ’90s cinema, from John Goodman‘s Walter to Julianne Moore‘s Maude.
In the last 10 years, Miles Teller has quietly become one of the biggest stars in Hollywood, and it extends well beyond his blockbuster role in one of the highest-grossing movies of all time, Top Gun: Maverick. Teller can be seen starring in one of the biggest box office hits of 2026 with Michael, the new biopic that just arrived on digital after falling short of $1 billion globally. Teller took a three-year hiatus from acting between 2022 and 2025 before he returned to the screen for The Gorge, the Apple TV sci-fi thriller co-starring Anya Taylor-Joy. The film was denied a run in theaters, but it was met with widespread acclaim from critics and audiences, earning a Best TV Movie nod at the Emmys and shattering records to become one of Apple TV’s most-watched movies ever.
Like any star of his stature, though, Teller is always on the hunt for new projects. News broke yesterday afternoon that he’s been tapped to star in an epic new neo-Western crime thriller, Copperhead, which is expected to begin production later this summer in August. The film is being directed by John Swab, and it was written by Chad Feehan and J. Todd Scott — Feehan recently wrote the Taylor Sheridan-produced Yellowstone spin-off, Dutton Ranch, which is now streaming on Paramount Plus. Plot specifics about Copperhead are still being kept under wraps at this time, but the film is confirmed to follow a veteran detective who teams up with a young agent to unravel an internal conspiracy in West Texas. Copperhead is shaping up to be the perfect mash-up of Sicario and Training Day, and with Teller and Feehan involved, fans are surely in for a treat.
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Collider Exclusive · Taylor Sheridan Universe Quiz Which Taylor Sheridan Show Do You Belong In? Yellowstone · Landman · Tulsa King · Mayor of Kingstown
Four worlds. All of them brutal, complicated, and built on power, loyalty, and the price of survival. Taylor Sheridan doesn’t write heroes — he writes people who do what they have to do and live with the cost. Ten questions will reveal which one of his worlds you were made for.
🤠Yellowstone
🛢️Landman
👑Tulsa King
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⚖️Mayor of Kingstown
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01
Where does your power come from? In Sheridan’s world, everyone has leverage. The question is what kind.
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02
Who do you put first, no matter what? Loyalty in Sheridan’s universe is always absolute — and always costly.
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03
Someone crosses a line. How do you respond? Every Sheridan protagonist has a line. What matters is what happens after it’s crossed.
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04
Where do you feel most in your element? Sheridan’s worlds are as much about place as they are about people.
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05
How do you feel about operating in the grey? Nobody in a Sheridan show has clean hands. The question is how they carry the dirt.
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06
What are you actually fighting to hold onto? Every Sheridan character is fighting a war. The real question is what they’re defending.
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07
How do you lead? Authority in Sheridan’s world is never given — it’s established, maintained, and constantly tested.
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08
Someone new arrives and tries to change how things work. Your reaction? Every Sheridan show has an outsider disrupting an established order. Sometimes that outsider is you.
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09
What has your position cost you? Nobody gets to where these characters are without paying for it. The bill is always personal.
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10
When it’s over, what do you want people to say? Sheridan’s characters all know the ending is coming. The question is what they leave behind.
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Sheridan Has Spoken You Belong In…
The show that claimed the most of your answers is the world you were built for. If two tied, both are shown — you’re complicated enough to straddle two Sheridan universes.
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🤠 Yellowstone
🛢️ Landman
👑 Tulsa King
⚖️ Mayor of Kingstown
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You are a Dutton — or you might as well be. You understand that some things are worth protecting at any cost, and that the modern world’s indifference to history, to land, to legacy, is not something you’re willing to accept quietly. You lead from the front, you carry your family’s weight without complaint, and when someone threatens what’s yours, you don’t escalate — you finish it. You’re not cruel. But you are absolute. In Yellowstone’s world, that combination of ferocity and loyalty doesn’t make you a villain. It makes you the only thing standing between everything that matters and everyone who wants to take it.
You thrive in the chaos of high-stakes negotiation, where the money is enormous, the margins are thin, and the wrong word in the wrong room can cost everyone everything. You’re a fixer — the person called when a situation is already on fire and needs someone with the nerve to walk into it. West Texas oil country rewards exactly what you are: sharp, adaptable, unsentimental, and absolutely clear-eyed about what people want and what they’ll do to get it. You’re not naive enough to think this world is fair. You’re smart enough to be the one deciding who it’s fair to.
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You are a Dwight Manfredi — someone who has served their time, paid their dues, and arrived somewhere unexpected with nothing but their reputation and their wits. You adapt without losing yourself. You build loyalty through respect rather than fear, though you’re not above reminding people that the two aren’t mutually exclusive. Tulsa King is for people who are still standing when everyone assumed they’d be finished — who find, in an unfamiliar place, that they’re more capable than the world gave them credit for. You don’t need a throne. You build one, wherever you happen to land.
You carry the weight of a system that is broken by design, and you do it anyway — because someone has to, and because you’re the only one positioned to do it without the whole thing collapsing. Mike McLusky’s world is for people who are comfortable operating where there are no good options, only less catastrophic ones. You speak every language: law enforcement, criminal, political, human. That fluency makes you invaluable and it makes you a target. You’ve made your peace with both. Mayor of Kingstown belongs to people who understand that keeping the peace is not the same as being at peace — and who do the job regardless.
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Is Miles Teller Returning for ‘Top Gun 3’?
Miles Teller has confirmed that he will return and reprise his role as Rooster in Top Gun 3. However, at the time of writing in June 2026, it’s entirely unclear when the film will begin shooting, or much less when it will be released. Tom Cruise and other Top Gun stars like Glen Powell are booked and busy right now, which will certainly inhibit the ability to get everyone together for what will likely be a lengthy shoot. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer has also cast doubt that the film is anywhere near the start of production, meaning it could be 2030 or possibly beyond before it hits theaters.
Stay tuned to Collider for more updates on Copperhead and coverage of Teller’s future projects.
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Release Date
September 17, 2015
Runtime
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122 minutes
Director
Denis Villeneuve
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Producers
Basil Iwanyk, Edward McDonnell, Ellen H. Schwartz, Molly Smith, Thad Luckinbill, Stacy Perskie
Taylor Swift’s rumored wedding plans have become one of the most talked-about celebrity stories of the summer, but new reports suggest fans may not have the full picture.
Speculation recently exploded after claims surfaced that the pop superstar and former NFL champion Travis Kelce were preparing to host a massive wedding celebration at Madison Square Garden.
However, insiders now say the widely discussed venue could be serving an entirely different purpose as the couple reportedly works behind the scenes to keep their actual ceremony private.
Aaron Josefczyk Newscom/MEGA
Rumors surrounding Taylor Swift’s wedding gained traction after reports claimed she and Travis Kelce planned to marry at Madison Square Garden on July 3.
The reported celebration was said to involve more than 1,000 guests, including family members, celebrity friends, and high-profile figures from both the music and sports worlds.
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The idea immediately divided fans. Some questioned whether the singer who once wrote about longing for privacy would choose such a massive public venue for one of the most important moments of her life.
“This is beyond trashy,” one critic wrote online, adding, “It is genuinely the most attention-seeking, fanfare-heavy, tacky situation that I couldn’t even have concocted in my own head.”
Another commenter referenced Swift’s song “The Lucky One,” noting, “Yuck, in her song ‘the lucky one’ about not loving being famous […] that was in two thousand TWELVE when she was TWENTY TWO what happened to her intelligence and common sense in the years since. Cognitive decline.”
Swift’s Reported Ceremony May Be Far Smaller Than Expected
Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/MEGA
While rumors about a Madison Square Garden wedding spread online, sources told the Daily Mail that the reports may not reflect the couple’s actual wedding plans.
According to insiders, Taylor Swift’s official ceremony is expected to be significantly smaller. “Taylor’s official wedding will not have 1,000 guests,” one source said.
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The insider claimed a highly private and secured ceremony has already been planned for the couple’s closest loved ones.
The source also revealed that guests attending the larger celebrations have reportedly been encouraged to donate gifts to charity.
While details remain tightly guarded, the source hinted that Madison Square Garden still has some involvement. According to them, “There is something [else] associated with MSG.”
Taylor Swift’s Team May Be Using A Strategic Diversion
imageSPACE / MEGA
Another source suggested that the Madison Square Garden rumors may actually be serving a purpose. According to the insider, guests have reportedly been told only one thing so far.
“QR codes are going to be sent to guests. The only instructions they have are to arrive at MSG on July 3,” the source explained.
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Many attendees reportedly believe the arena could function as a staging point before guests are transported elsewhere.
As the insider put it, “A lot of guests think this may be a security screening to [then] go elsewhere because MSG is equipped for that with their facial recognition etc. But something involving the wedding is set there.”
The theory has led many fans to believe Swift may be orchestrating a carefully planned “bait and switch” to protect her privacy.
Swift’s Rhode Island Mansion Remains A Strong Possibility
MEGA
Although New York remains at the center of most speculation, another possible location continues to generate buzz.
Several insiders pointed to Taylor Swift’s Rhode Island mansion, known as High Watch, as a likely setting for an intimate ceremony. “The strong rumor is the location will be in New York,” one source explained.
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After considering various destinations, the couple reportedly prioritized security above all else. “Finally, they decided the only place that will guarantee them the most security is High Watch,” the source added.
The $17 million oceanfront estate has long been one of Swift’s most treasured properties and would offer the privacy many believe she desires.
The singer’s connection to New York remains undeniable, however. From purchasing multiple Tribeca properties to writing songs inspired by the city, it continues to play a significant role in her personal story.
Taylor Swift And Travis Kelce Are Reportedly Planning A Celebration Tour
RCF / MEGA
Even if the ceremony itself remains intimate, sources suggest the festivities could stretch far beyond a single day. One insider revealed that Rhode Island, New York, and Kansas City may all become part of an extended celebration.
“Before Travis has to return to his NFL commitments, they are also looking to treat the entire [July 4] weekend and the weeks before the end of July as a continuous celebration,” they noted.
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The source described the plans as “a little bit of a wedding tour.” According to another insider, the Grammy Award winner wants every detail to feel distinctive.
According to them, “She wants it to feel truly unique and unlike anything she’s done before – a one-of-a-kind event that reflects her style and vision in a way only Taylor can do it.”
One thing attendees seem to agree on is that the celebrations will not be quiet. “Travis and Taylor enjoy having cocktails and dancing and having a good time, so everyone’s expecting a late night party into the wee hours of the morning,” a source said.
Another insider added that while rumors continue to swirl about surprise performances, “nobody knows anything” because guests have signed NDAs and are keeping details under wraps.
Helen Mirren is throwing her support behind Tom Hardy after rumors swirled that he was fired from their show MobLand.
In an interview with Variety published on Thursday, June 11, Mirren, 80, was asked whether she would continue to work with Hardy, 48, following the drama.
“Absolutely. In a f***ing heartbeat,” the Oscar-winning actress responded.
Mirren continued to rave about the Inception star, praising his acting skills and claiming that she was fine with an actor going through their own methods to achieve great results on camera.
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“I love Tom, I think he’s the most amazing actor,” she told the outlet. “Different actors have different processes. I’ve learnt over the years that some people get to things faster. As long as what’s on the screen is fantastic, I’m totally chilled with however someone gets there. Tom is a very special person. I think he’s absolutely remarkable. My support of him is genuine and heartfelt.”
Last month, Hardy’s alleged behavior made headlines after multiple outlets reported the actor was fired from the Paramount+ show for its potential third season due his behavior. (MobLand season 3 has yet to be officially confirmed. Season 2 is expected to air later this year.)
Helen Mirren.(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
According to a Puck report in May, Hardy was allegedly fired from MobLand after filming wrapped on season 2. The outlet alleged that Hardy was late to set, asked to give notes on the script and attempted to change dialogue.
Variety, meanwhile, reported that Hardy “was not fired.” A source close to production told the publication that “the door is not closed for season 3 and things are being worked through creatively.”
Paramount+ has had a lot of success with shows about antiheroes on the wrong side of the law. That trend continues this month with the debut of MobLand, a new crime series starring Tom Hardy, Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren. Harry Da Souza (Hardy) is thrust into a mob war between two of London’s rival […]
Neither Hardy nor Paramount have addressed the allegations. Us previously reached out to representatives for Hardy, Paramount+ and MobLand producer 101 Studios for comment.
Following the reports, Mirren appeared to weigh in on the drama via an Instagram Story post shared on May 28. Alongside a photo of Hardy, she wrote, “Love you now and always, Helen.”
In MobLand, Hardy portrays Harry Da Souza, a fixer for the Harrigan crime family in London. Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Paddy Considine and Anson Boon also star as members of the Harrigan family. Filmmaker Guy Ritchie serves as the series’ executive producer and director. Hardy also serves as an executive producer.
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