Entertainment
These 6 Viggo Mortensen Movies Are His Only True Masterpieces
This list is not about Viggo Mortensen’s most famous roles alone, even though the top is dominated by the fantasy trilogy that turned him into a permanent part of modern movie history. It is about the films where Mortensen’s presence becomes inseparable from the movie’s full power.
Mortensen has never built his career around obvious movie-star vanity. His best performances feel lived-in before the story even starts. He carries history in posture, silence, appetite, exhaustion, violence, humor, and the way a character looks at another person before deciding what kind of truth to give them. All six movies on this list contain the kind of acting that stops feeling like performance and starts feeling like a person being tested in public.
‘The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring’ (2001)
Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) enters The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring like a man who has spent years avoiding the very story everyone else is walking into. He is dirty, watchful, guarded, and physically capable without seeming eager to prove it. That first impression matters enormously. The film already has hobbits, wizards, elves, ancient evil, mythic objects, and a world loaded with history. Aragorn gives that world a human kind of danger and an anchor. He looks like someone who knows exactly how badly courage can end.
Mortensen’s brilliance in the first film is restraint. He makes Aragorn’s nobility feel unwanted, almost burdensome. His protection of Frodo (Elijah Wood), his fear of Isildur’s (Harry Sinclair) weakness, his tenderness with Arwen (Liv Tyler), and his loyalty to Boromir (Sean Bean) all come from a man fighting against inheritance as much as Sauron. The death of Boromir works so strongly because Aragorn’s grief has no decoration. He gives Boromir comfort, accepts the broken sword of brotherhood between them, and then has to keep moving. That is the Aragorn foundation: reluctant king, exhausted soldier, decent man. Mortensen makes all three visible at once.
‘Eastern Promises’ (2007)
Nikolai Luzhin (Viggo Mortensen) is one of Mortensen’s most terrifying characters because he never begs the audience to admire his control. He simply has it. In Eastern Promises, Nikolai moves through London’s Russian criminal underworld as a driver, fixer, enforcer, and silent observer inside the orbit of Semyon (Armin Mueller-Stahl) and Kirill (Vincent Cassel). Every gesture feels measured. Every word feels rationed. Even his politeness has threat inside it.
The bathhouse fight is the scene everyone remembers, and rightly so, because Mortensen strips the character of clothing, weapons, and social disguise while somehow making him more frightening. Yet the performance is larger than that one brutal fight. Nikolai’s tattooed body tells a story he refuses to speak aloud. His relationship with Anna (Naomi Watts) introduces moral risk without turning him soft. His handling of Kirill mixes manipulation, contempt, and strange protection. Mortensen makes Nikolai unreadable in a way that feels earned, then lets small flashes of conscience cut through with devastating precision. It’s like David Cronenberg gives him a criminal world built on ritual and rot and Mortensen gives that world its most dangerous secret.
‘Captain Fantastic’ (2016)
A brilliant, stubborn father raising his children off the grid, training them in survival, literature, politics, music, combat, and radical self-sufficiency is a role that could easily tip into fantasy-parent worship or smug anti-society sermonizing. Mortensen saves Captain Fantastic from that trap by playing Ben as deeply loving and deeply wrong in ways he cannot fully see. Ben Cash (Viggo Mortensen) could have been unbearable in the wrong hands. That’s not the case here.
The movie hurts because Ben’s devotion is real. He does not neglect his children through laziness. He has built an entire life around preparing them to think, question, endure, and resist. Mortensen makes that devotion magnetic, then slowly lets the damage show. The children are extraordinary, but they are also isolated. They can quote philosophy and hunt for food, yet some of them barely understand ordinary social life. The funeral fight over their mother Leslie exposes the limits of Ben’s certainty. He wants to honor her wishes, protect her memory, and defend his family’s way of life, but love has started turning into control. The masterpiece is in watching a father discover that being right is not the same as being good enough.
‘A History of Violence’ (2005)
Tom Stall (Viggo Mortensen) is terrifying in A History of Violence. You can realise this before even understanding why. At first, he appears to be a gentle small-town husband and diner owner, a man with a quiet marriage to Edie (Maria Bello), two children, and a life built around ordinary decency. Then violence enters the diner, and Tom kills with a speed and precision that instantly changes the entire movie. The shock is not only that he can do it. The shock is how naturally his body remembers.
Mortensen’s performance is a masterclass in divided identity without theatrical tricks. Tom begins to lose control over the person he has been pretending to be, or maybe the person he has worked brutally hard to become. When Carl Fogarty () starts calling him Joey, the film turns every denial into a test. Mortensen makes Tom’s fear, anger, shame, and buried reflexes fight inside the same stare. The staircase sex with Edie, the confrontation with Richie (William Hurt), and the silent family dinner near the end all expose different wounds.
‘The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers’ (2002)
Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) in The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers is where he stops feeling like a man hiding from a crown and starts becoming someone others can survive around. Mortensen’s work here is less romantic than in The Fellowship of the Ring and less triumphant than in The Return of the King. That middle position gives the performance its force. He is exhausted, muddy, bruised, and constantly making decisions with incomplete information. He has no throne, no army of his own, and no certainty that the world will last long enough for destiny to matter.
His scenes in Rohan are crucial because Aragorn has to become useful before he becomes kingly. He listens to Théoden (Bernard Hill), challenges him without humiliating him, respects Éowyn (Miranda Otto) without exploiting her feelings, and steadies Legolas (Orlando Bloom) and Gimli (John Rhys-Davies) when fear begins to spread. At Helm’s Deep, Mortensen gives Aragorn command without turning him into a speech machine. He is in the mud with everyone else, shouting orders, pulling bodies, looking at children sent to fight, and understanding exactly how desperate the defense is. The greatness of this film is not just spectacle. It is the sight of a future king earning trust before anyone has the luxury of believing in crowns.
‘The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King’ (2003)
Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King is the masterpiece that completes him without making him less human. The Return of the King could have turned him into pure myth — heir revealed, sword reforged, army summoned, crown claimed. Mortensen keeps pushing against that simplicity. Even when Aragorn finally accepts who he is, he does not become grand in a hollow way. He becomes clearer. The doubt is still there, but it no longer rules him.
His best moments are not only the obvious heroic ones. The look he gives the dying Théoden (Hill) carries respect and sorrow. His decision to march on the Black Gate is not confidence; it is sacrifice turned into strategy. His speech before the final battle has force because Mortensen plays it as a man asking terrified soldiers to spend their lives buying Frodo a chance they cannot even see. Then comes the coronation, where the entire trilogy’s emotional debt gathers in one simple gesture: Aragorn bowing to the hobbits. Mortensen understands that the king’s highest act is gratitude. That is why this performance remains untouchable. He gives the trilogy its warrior, its doubt, its mercy, and finally its grace.
Entertainment
Netflix’s Cancelled-Too-Soon Sci-Fi Spectacle Passes 3.4 Billion Minutes Watched
Netflix’s abrupt cancellation of the high-profile sci-fi series The Boroughs sent shockwaves through the industry, not only because the cancellation seemed premature, but also because the show hailed from the Duffer Brothers. The brothers are best known for having created one of Netflix’s platform-defining hits, Stranger Things. They served as executive producers on The Boroughs, which was marketed as their big return to sci-fi. The show premiered to excellent reviews on May 21, and around a month later, Netflix announced that it wouldn’t be producing any more episodes. Coincidentally, the Nielsen ratings for the show’s debut week were revealed the following day, and as it turned out, The Boroughs hadn’t done as poorly as expected at all.
In fact, the show accumulated 1.2 billion minutes watched for the week, finishing second on the Nielsen charts behind fellow Netflix hit Nemesis. In its second week, the series drew another 1.6 billion minutes watched, taking the top spot on the rankings. This was hugely unexpected, because the cancellation had made it seem like the show was in free fall. In fact, it showed a major increase in viewership in its second frame, perhaps thanks to positive word of mouth and encouraging reviews. The Boroughs now holds a “Certified Fresh” 96% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “The Boroughs exudes excellence through its wonderfully plotted sci-fi trappings, star-studded cast, heartfelt narrative, and genuine ingenuity; a new classic through-and-through.”
‘The Boroughs’ Has the Makings of a Future Cult Classic
The latest Nielsen report, which tracks streaming data in the week of June 1 to June 7, revealed that The Boroughs accumulated another 661 million minutes watched. The show has generated 3.4 billion minutes watched in three weeks, finding spots on the Nielsen charts on all three occasions. Starring Alfred Molina, Alfre Woodard, Geena Davis, Clarke Peters, and others, the series follows a group of retirees who are confronted by a mysterious presence at their retirement facility. The show’s cancelation led to speculation that the Duffers’ departure from Netflix — they recently signed a deal with Paramount — might have something to do with it. The brothers are working on a mysterious event movie slated for a 2028 release. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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2026 – 2026-00-00
- Network
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Netflix
- Showrunner
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Jeffrey Addiss, Will Matthews
- Directors
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Augustine Frizzell, Kyle Patrick Alvarez
- Writers
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James Schamus, Jose Molina, Julie Siege, Tom Hanada
Entertainment
‘The Odyssey’ First Reactions Say Christopher Nolan’s Biggest Gamble Paid Off
Christoper Nolan‘s The Odyssey has been the talk of online. Whether you’re a Nolan fan or someone mad about “historical” realism in a movie based on the fictional poem by Homer, who may or may not exist, people are talking. Fresh off his Oscar winning film Oppenheimer, Nolan tackled the epic poem (often taught in schools in tandem with Homer’s The Iliad). And the first social reactions for the film praise Nolan’s retelling, calling it his “most impressive.”
The Odyssey stars Matt Damon as Odysseus, the king of Ithaca, who embarks on a 20 year journey back home after fighting in the Battle of Troy. His son, Telemachus (Tom Holland) is not yet old enough to rule and the people of Ithaca don’t know if Odysseus is alive or dead. His wife, Penelope (Anne Hathaway) is the defacto queen still but she has no real power, leaning to suitors (Robert Pattinson and Corey Hawkins) knocking at her doorstep. The film also stars Lupita Nyong’o, Jon Berthanl, Zendaya, Charlize Theron, and more.
First reactions to the film include Jake Kleinman of Polygon calling it Nolan’s most “straight-forward” film while also potentially his most “impressive.” While some praised Nolan’s latest, others called it “Dense but accessible” and said that it is “built to last.” The Mary Sue’s Rachel Leishman said Nolan’s take is “as epic as the source material.” IndieWire’s David Ehrlich called it an “S-tier” Nolan film but said that “the last act rewards the journey.” Colldier’s own Perri Nemiroff said that The Odyssey “is a filmmaking feast. A grand and gripping rendition of Homer’s epic, and one that feels uniquely Christopher Nolan. It’s sincerely hard to imagine any other filmmaker on the planet being able to bring that source material to screen with this much scale, scope and heart.” Collider’s Steve Weintraub called it “incredible” after seeing the film twice, writing “I’m really blown away by this film.”
A Rare But Fascinating Adaptation for Christopher Nolan
For most of Nolan’s career, he focused his work on original films. Starting with Following back in 1998 through movies like Memento, Inception, Interstellar, Tenent, and more, if he’s not making his own original genre bending work, he’s tackling things like a lesser known battle of World War II with Dunkirk or Oppenheimer. Outside of his Batman movies, Nolan’s relationship with adaptation is very limited. And he has in the past, on Stephen Colbert‘s show, said that he views the epics as the original superhero stories. So it isn’t surprising that he would go to something like The Odyssey in a post-Dark Knight trilogy world.
And if the reactions are anything to go by, it was clearly the right move. You can see Nolan’s The Odyssey in theaters on July 17.
- Release Date
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July 17, 2026
- Runtime
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172 Minutes
Entertainment
Raunchy, R-Rated Comedy Special Ruins Your Childhood In The Funniest Way
By Chris Snellgrove
| Updated

There’s one decade that movies and TV shows never get sick of: the ‘80s. The wildly popular show Stranger Things kept the Reagan era in pop culture for nearly a decade. And long before Eleven first showed her chopped haircut, Hollywood began bringing ‘80s franchises like Ghostbusters, Transformers, and G.I. Joe to the big screen. While this was certainly an iconic time period, it was enough to make this ‘80s kid (class of 2000, baby!) wonder when a much better decade will finally get its due.
If we can’t celebrate the ‘90s, though, we can do the next best thing: laugh at the ‘90s. Recently, standup comedian Rob Anderson released a special, Are You Afraid of the ‘90s, and it basically gives the Bo Burnham treatment to our favorite overlooked decade. With killer punchlines, catchy songs, and perfectly timed video clips (not to mention several healthy heapings of raunchy humor), this is one special that’s guaranteed to leave millennials howling.
The Decade That Time Forgot

The formula for Are You Afraid of the ‘90s is simple but entertaining. Host Rob Anderson (who channels the self-deprecating, self-aware humor of Taylor Tomlinson and the manic, animated delivery of Gianmarco Soresi) brings up various arcane knowledge of the ‘90s and riffs on how weird these moments were. The result is a surprisingly fun performance that feels like the lovechild of Joe Bob Briggs’ How the Rednecks Saved Hollywood and the dankest memes in your favorite group chat.
Part of what makes Anderson’s humor so effective is how hilariously specific he gets. This isn’t just him saying “wow, that was crazy” and then moving on. Instead, he’ll pull up niche video clips of some of our favorite ‘90s protagonists and riff on how weird these moments are. For instance, in commenting on an awful anti-drug special, he points out the absurdity of just how quickly Simon from Alvin and the Chipmunks recognizes marijuana. In one of my favorite bits, he also talks about the weird visual similarities between the Burger King Kids, Captain Planet’s Planeteers, and Mrs. Frizzle’s kids. Like, it really was just genuinely bizarre!
From Stand-Up To Singing

Speaking of Mrs. Frizzle, Rob Anderson has an extended bit about Magic School Bus guaranteed to make you chuckle. This includes highlighting an episode where she forces the titular school bus into a kid’s body, leading to horrifying moments like them staring at this boy’s butthole from the inside. Strangely enough, the horrors of this pale in comparison to another episode where the children huddle in protective pods while a fish fertilizes them. Yes, it’s exactly what you think it is, and it looks just as insane as you imagine. Anderson really goes for it with the raunchy jokes, ensuring that you’ll never look at this beloved children’s cartoon the same way again.
I don’t want to say too much more about the jokes in Are You Afraid of the ‘90s? (seriously, go watch it, the link is at the bottom!) because it’s worth experiencing all of this delightful weirdness with an open mind. However, I do want to comment a bit on Rob Anderson’s comedic style. Basically, he pairs hyper-specific pop culture references with an energetic, almost manic delivery, and the result is downright infectious. While his subject matter can get a bit naughty, he never punches down, and the audience is always in on the joke. Plus, he’s a genuinely gifted singer, and the demented musical sections are far catchier than they have any right to be.

As luck would have it, this New York Times best-selling comedian has made his entire comedy special available for free on YouTube. That means Are You Afraid of the ‘90s is just a click away, and it won’t cost you a thing to enjoy this relentless riffing on the decade that time forgot. That leaves you with more spare cash to go mindlessly spend on your favorite collectibles from that era. If you snag some Burger King Kids toys and some Captain Planet toys, be sure to have them fight in a big, Avengers-style crossover. Trust me: it’s what Rob Anderson would want!

ARE YOU AFRAID OF THE ’90S SCORE
Entertainment
8 Great Thriller Books Not Written by Stephen King
Stephen King has been writing horror books for well over half a century at this point, since the likes of Carrie and ‘Salem’s Lot were originally published more than 50 years ago, and The Shining is coming up on its 50th anniversary, too. Owing to those first three books, and then a bunch more that came after, King’s been linked to the horror genre more than any other, but he’s also made his mark on some other genres, writing fantasy, sci-fi, and some thriller books, too.
The thriller genre often gets tied to the horror one, for obvious reasons, and so King’s arguably written almost as many iconic thrillers as he has scary books. Misery rides the line well, and then something like 11/22/63 is more of a sci-fi/thriller novel than it is a work of horror. But if you’ve made your way through all his thrillers, or if you like thrillers but don’t really love Stephen King, then maybe the following books are worth tackling. These aren’t necessarily the best non-King thrillers, but they are all well-regarded thriller books not written by Stephen King (with some deservedly being considered classics, too).
8
‘Watchers’ (1987)
This one’s here mostly because Dean Koontz’s work often gets compared to Stephen King’s. The two are almost the same age, they’re both very prolific, and they tend to write horror/thriller books, albeit neither does so exclusively. Koontz isn’t quite as well-known as King, with part of that being the fact that his work hasn’t been adapted nearly as often as King’s, but he certainly has a sizable fanbase regardless.
And with a big fanbase, it’s ultimately going to be hard to single out one Dean Koontz book as his “best” or “most important,” but Watchers is probably up there, for what it’s worth. It is the Koontziest of the Dean Koontz books, with a sentimental streak throughout that’s almost a bit much, though it does contrast with the more suspenseful and frightening moments in a sometimes interesting way. And it’s also about a (very unusual) dog, and Koontz loves his dogs, so yay. There’s that. Woof.
7
‘The Trial’ (1925)
It’s a bit hard to categorize The Trial into a single genre, but singling it out as something of a psychological drama/thriller book feels perhaps most appropriate. The Trial is kind of in a genre of its own, and that’s not said pretentiously, but more because Franz Kafka told a certain kind of story in a certain way, and Kafkaesque became an adjective used to describe such a story, so The Trial is indeed Kafkaesque.
That is to say, it feels a bit like a waking nightmare for its protagonist, with some absurdity that’s played more for unease and horror than it is for laughs. A man is put on trial, but doesn’t know what he’s been accused of, and the whole process just gets more confusing and surreal the longer it goes on. So, The Trial is not really a fun read, and it’s got very little to offer by way of answers, yet it is compelling, rewarding, and undeniably influential, so it earns its classic status, in any event.
6
‘The Wolf’s Hour’ (1989)
The Wolf’s Hour is really cool, and also really silly, but in a way that works. It’s a pulpy novel about a spy during World War II, working for the Allies, and he also happens to be a werewolf. So, he does spy and werewolf stuff behind enemy lines, taking on – and taking down – various high-ranking members of the German army, while some chapters also deal with his life some years in the past, back when he was first given (or cursed with) werewolf abilities.
The commitment to the bit is quite stunning, and The Wolf’s Hour really does remain entertaining throughout.
Maybe someone once thought, “What if I made a werewolf/spy/World War II story?” before, but if they did bring about that vision, then they didn’t do so as well as Robert R. McCammon. The commitment to the bit is quite stunning, and The Wolf’s Hour really does remain entertaining throughout. If you’re more into old horror movies than books, then comparing this to one of the movies in The Invisible Man series, called Invisible Agent, might be useful. That one’s got the grandson of the original Invisible Man using invisibility to be an Allied spy during World War II. Swap out an invisible guy with a werewolf, and make everything a good deal racier and more violent, and then you’ve pretty much got The Wolf’s Hour.
5
‘No Country for Old Men’ (2005)
Cormac McCarthy is one of those rare writers who’s written something that some people have suggested might be the fabled “Great American Novel.” That book is Blood Meridian, which is a Western and sort of a horror book at the same time, but not really a thriller. He’s also done a post-apocalyptic book, The Road, but you can’t really call that a thriller, either, even if it does inspire dread and a persistent sense of unease, and they’re things you get from thrillers, obviously.
So, here’s No Country for Old Men instead, which is maybe his third-most iconic book, after those other two. This one is more within the bounds of thriller territory, though it does take place in a similar area to Blood Meridian, albeit it’s a neo-Western this time, thanks to the early 1980s setting. It involves a large amount of cash being found at the site of a drug deal gone wrong, which a man takes, and then he becomes the target of a ruthless hitman who’s trying to get that money back. And that hitman, Anton Chigurh, is similarly terrifying and unstoppable as Judge Holden in Blood Meridian. Chigurh is a big reason why No Country for Old Men is as unsettling and intense as it is, though McCarthy’s willingness to have shocking things happen almost out of nowhere helps in that regard, too.
4
‘The Black Dahlia’ (1987)
Compared to some of James Ellroy’s later books, The Black Dahlia is a rather straightforward affair. It’s the first book in the L.A. Quartet series, and stands out among them for just having the one protagonist, and also for being written in the first-person. This is stylistically different from his Underworld U.S.A. trilogy, too, which feels in line with the other L.A. Quartet books, albeit taking place from the late 1950s to the early 1970s, while the L.A. Quartet series spans from the late 1940s until the late 1950s.
So, if you want extra ambition and more complexity, you can find that to a greater extent in other Ellroy novels, but The Black Dahlia is compelling and direct, making it an ideal “first” James Ellroy novel to read. It’s about the titular case, which involved the infamously grisly murder of Elizabeth Short, and how it affects a pair of detectives (though mostly the one narrator) who get involved in the whole confounding investigation. It works as a psychological drama/thriller book as much as it works as a crime/mystery thing, and is also easy to recommend if you found the 2007 film Zodiac compelling. Similar things – like uncertainty, anxiety, and obsession –are unpacked extensively in both.
3
‘The Talented Mr. Ripley’ (1955)
The Talented Mr. Ripley holds up well, even compared to other legendary books that were published in the 1950s. It’s about a young man named Tom Ripley who becomes obsessed with another young man named Dickie Greenleaf, and begins to involve himself in Dickie’s life more and more. Once Tom starts to realize just being acquaintances or friends probably isn’t enough, then things get complicated and a good deal messier.
If you’ve seen the movie adaptation of the same name, or Purple Noon, or the more recent series just called Ripley, you’ll know where things are going. Still, the first time you experience this story, regardless of whether you tackle the source material or one of those adaptations, The Talented Mr. Ripley proves undoubtedly surprising and nerve-wracking. It’s a story told in an incredibly clever and rather effortless way, and then it’s got even more to offer beyond its story (as a character study for the titular character, it’s also remarkable).
2
‘Libra’ (1988)
Best known for his postmodernist novels, Don DeLillo strayed a little out of that kind of zone when he wrote Libra, which isn’t as postmodern as something like Underworld (1997). Libra is kind of a thriller, or at least more thrilling than most of DeLillo’s other works, as it’s a piece of historical fiction that paints a portrait of the assassination of John F. Kennedy in a way that intentionally diverges from what the official story is.
Importantly, it doesn’t say that this is definitely what happened. Liberties are taken, and Libra is most concerned with unpacking the state of mind of various characters, including some based on real-life people (Lee Harvey Oswald is probably the closest thing to a central character here). It uses a real historical event to unpack troubling and unsettling ideas about history and how fragile everyone’s grasp on reality, and everyone’s understanding of the “real world” and its history, really are.
1
‘And Then There Were None’ (1939)
While there are a few Agatha Christie books that could be considered all-timers, And Then There Were None is the one that stands the best chance at being considered, well, her best. Especially if you’re looking at her standalone novels, since the likes of Murder on the Orient Express and Death on the Nile (both part of the Hercule Poirot series) are strong contenders. Still, And Then There Were None is something kind of special.
Maybe not having Poirot or Miss Marple at the center of it all makes things feel more suspenseful and dangerous. 10 people show up on an island, and they keep dying one by one, with the lack of a clear central character – and the title suggesting there could well eventually be none – making anything possible. It’s a murder mystery where there isn’t one wholly heroic detective character who you can (almost certainly) trust is not involved. It’s perfectly suspenseful, undoubtedly intense, and, in the end, one of the absolute greatest thrillers ever written.
Entertainment
Tom Sandoval’s EX, Victoria, Alleges Abuse
Former “Vanderpump Rules” star Tom Sandoval filed for a restraining order in June 2026, claiming his now-ex, Victoria Lee Robinson, and her father had been abusive toward him. Since then, more has transpired, including, most recently, she’s made similar accusations against the Bravo alum and also requested a restraining order.
This comes after Sandoval was seen with the police as she moved her items out of their rental home, where her father had also been staying leading up to the split.

According to TMZ, Robinson filed for a restraining order against Sandoval on July 3. In the filing, she stated that the “Vanderpump Rules” alum had exhibited forms of abuse against her on multiple occasions in the past. This includes their previously reported altercation at their rental home on June 3.
Before the June 2026 fight, the 34-year-old model claims Sandoval shoved her to the ground, elbowed her in the chest, locked her out of their hotel room, and rummaged through her personal items in May 2026.
Robinson also says he pushed her down the stairs on August 30, 2025. She stated in the filing that the attack left her with “visible injuries” on her knees.
Regarding the May 2026 attack, Robinson stated Sandoval screamed at her, gaslit, and manipulated her while she was in Nashville visiting her grandfather, who is terminally ill.
Victoria Lee Robinson Says She Endured Verbal Abuse

Elsewhere in the legal filing, Robinson claimed that she has faced verbal abuse from Sandoval throughout their relationship, which began in early 2024. The model recalled in the filing that she had been referred to as “stupid,” “dumb,” and “a coward.”
Regarding the restraining order, Robinson is hopeful that the judge will also add protection for her father, despite him having already filed for one on his own. She wants the extra measure out of fear that the “Vanderpump Rules” alum may seek out her father with the desire to harm him.
Victoria Wants Tom Out Of The Home

Per TMZ, Robinson has also requested that Sandoval move out of the home they had been sharing. She claimed in the legal filing that she had a right to the home as she had been paying rent. It’s unclear whether she meant the total amount of the rent or if she and Sandoval had been splitting it.
Robinson also stated in the legal filing that her name is present on the lease for the home. The model is even willing to forgo the Mercedes they leased together if it means she can retain the house. Robinson is also requesting a no-contact order from the court, which would render Sandoval unable to contact her or her father, with the required distance being 100 yards.
Tom Sandoval’s Restraining Order Was Approved

Sandoval requested and had his restraining order against Robinson and her dad approved on June 25. However, according to PEOPLE, she returned to retrieve some of her items from the home the following day. Sandoval then called the police to ensure that she and her father left the property.
This comes after the reality star accused Robinson of being abusive toward him, including by punching him in the face on June 3.
He also claimed that Robinson’s father “lunged.” According to the filing, “[Victoria] and her father continue to reside in our rental home, which I am presently paying for. Meanwhile, I have been completely displaced from my home. I am bringing this request because I cannot tolerate [Victoria’s] abuse any longer.”
However, it’s also important to note that footage released from the fight shows him screaming into her face about recording him and then pushing her father into a lit fire pit.
Victoria’s Dad Also Provided His Account Of The June Fight

Per PEOPLE, Robinson’s father filed a civil harassment restraining order against Sandoval on June 26. In discussing the June 3 altercation, he claimed Sandoval “overpowered’ Robinson and also recalls being pushed into the fire pit. He also stated that the “VPR” alum “began talking about himself having a gun.”
The man also said that Sandoval’s attack “seriously injured” him, causing a ruptured disk, a broken thumb and elbow, and a laceration on his right heel. Robinson’s father also accused Sandoval of returning to the home and “starting trouble,” resulting in the police being called.
Entertainment
Rob Reiner's son Jake shares behind-the-scenes photo of one of his dad's final roles
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The late actor-director, who died in December, appeared as George Washington in a skit on “Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness.”
Entertainment
Nolan Xavier Wells’ Body Found On Horn Island Amid Search
The United Cajun Navy has reportedly called off its search for Nolan Xavier Wells. At first, it was unclear whether this meant the other Mississippi agencies involved in searching for the missing 18-year-old had also ceased their search. The update came after reports of a body being found on Horn Island, where Nolan was last seen on July 4. Hours after that update, Wells’ family identified the body as his and confirmed his death.
RELATED: Mississippi Authorities Search For Nolan Xavier Wells After He Goes Missing During A Boat Trip To Horn Island
Body Reportedly Found On Horn Island Belongs To Nolan Xavier Wells (UPDATE)
According to WLOX, a park ranger discovered the body at around 8:45 a.m. on Monday (July 6), two days after Nolan Xavier Wells first went missing. The body was not immediately identified, but it was found on the northwest end of Horn Island. Additionally, Sheriff John Ledbetter reportedly confirmed it matched the description of the missing 18-year-old. The condition of the body found and whether the death was foul play is unclear. At this time, the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department, which oversaw the multi-agency search, has not provided any other details.
As mentioned, the United Cajun Navy announced on Facebook that the search for Nolan Xavier Wells “has been called off.” The agency offered thoughts and prayers for the teen’s family while sharing a link to WLOX’s body discovery update.
“At this time, officials have not confirmed the identity of the individual found. We will continue to provide updates as officials release a statement. Our hearts are with Nolan’s family, friends, the first responders, and everyone impacted as they await official confirmation. Out of respect for the family and the ongoing investigation, we will continue to defer to law enforcement for any additional updates. Please keep everyone affected in your thoughts and prayers,” the United Cajun Navy wrote.
Nolan’s Parents & Coroner Speak Out
Nolan was first reported missing on the night of July 4 by his mother, Christine Wonsley. By that point, the last time he has reportedly been seen was 3 p.m. that day on Horn Island. Local police described him as standing 6 feet tall and weighing 180 pounds. He was last shirtless, wearing blue swim trunks and sunglasses. He was a student at Southwest Mississippi Community College and played the position of wide receiver on their football team.
In an social media emotional post on Monday, Nolan’s mother described him as a “special soul.” She also thanked all the agencies and volunteers who aided in the search of her son.
“His father, our family, friends and I are absolutely devastated. My heartbroken for my sweet son who was always willing to cheer and uplift others,” Christine Wonsley wrote, per the New York Post. “Nolan was a special soul, God took his time creating our son. I ask that you please give me and my family time to grieve.”
Early Monday afternoon (Eastern Time), Jackson County Coroner Bruce Lynd told WLOX that DNA testing will confirm the body discovered is Wells’. However, Lynd added: “There is no reason to believe it is not him.”
What About The People Last Seen With Nolan?
Photos shared hundreds of times on social media appear to show that Wells might’ve been the only Black person enjoying the holiday among a group of white males. The internet has speculated that he was part of their friend group. However, at this time, the police have not shared details about Nolan’s relationship to the people he traveled to Horn Island with. Additionally, there hasn’t been online or media commentary from the men in the viral photos alongside Nolan. It’s unclear whether local police have questioned anyone in the group Wells traveled with. While the case is an active investigation, it also appears no arrests have been made.
RELATED: Prayers Up! Lil Jon Breaks Silence After Son Nathan Smith’s Body Found In Pond Following Missing Person’s Report
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Yung Miami Thanks Monica For Supporting ‘Spend Dat’
Yung Miami has shared a message amid the chatter over her song ‘Spend Dat,’ and she is thanking Monica for her support. ‘The Boy Is Mine’ singer performed at the Essence Festival of Culture in New Orleans on Saturday, July 4, and she incorporated the controversial hit into the show.
RELATED: India Arie Doubles Down On Her Comments About Yung Miami’s ‘Spend Dat’ & The TL Is Divided (PHOTOS)
Yung Miami Thanks Monica For Dancing To ‘Spend Dat’ During ESSENCE Fest
Monica delighted the crowd at the ESSENCE Fest when she incorporated ‘Spend Dat’ into her performance on Saturday night.
The move comes amid the controversy surrounding Yung Miami’s latest single, ‘Spend Dat,’ which features about spending money and scamming. As previously reported, one critic called out the song for being “degrading to our culture.” And India Arie’s weigh-in response prompted an online debate.
Several backup dancers joined Monica on stage as she danced to ‘Spend Dat,’ and Yung Miami was thankful for her support amid the drama.
The 32-year-old artist, whose real name is Caresha Romeka Brownlee, shared a video of the performance on Instagram. Caresha also thanked Monica in the caption.
“Ahhhh…. This is what an OG look like!!! Thank you @monicadenise for hitting that sh*t one time and showing ya girl some LOVE. We can celebrate each other’s wins and just have a good time! This is sisterhood this is black excellence!! 🤍🤍🕺🏽🕺🏽Thank you Monica you’ve truly always been a REAL ONE & stay embracing and pouring into the girls! A ICON, A LEGEND 🙏🏾🤍”
Monica Replied With More Support As Roomies Weighed In
Roommates also reacted after the video was shared on The Shade Room‘s Instagram page.
User @tsx2__ replied, “Yeah cause I don’t understand all the hate. The songs back in the day were way worse.”
@dana__denise joked, “boycott isn’t going so good huh?”
@_klassycapricorn agreed. “Real is so rare these days! Monica always been a REAL one.”
@d3miyo noted that Yung Miami finally spoke out about the drama. “One thing about Miami she know how to step on a toe or two in silence 🤣.”
Monica also replied to Yung Miami’s message on Instagram. “I Love You @yungmiami305 Support & Sisterhood is my stance always AA So much love for you and your family!”
However, not everyone supported the video.
@trapsoulmood replied, “Just cause she’s a celebrity don’t mean she right 😂😂😂😂.”
User @itslegendaryshay replied, “Why are yall still dragging this ? It’s giving she knows India is right. India never mentioned her name, and yall keep trolling over a general comment she made about ALL this watered down music. Mannnn gone!”
India Arie’s Comments About ‘Spend Dat’ Went Viral
After a fan called for a boycott of ‘Spend Dat,’ Arie’s response went viral.
“I spent my entire adult life, caring way too much,” wrote Arie in part. “Because I finally learned that not everybody Cares ( with a capital C) And explaining it to them is not gonna make them care. Everything you listen to see or eat is going to influence you. So make wise choices y’all. The mass acceptance of this song itself is a CRYSTAL CLEAR sign of the bigger problem.”
After folks began saying Arie supported a boycott, she clarified her comments.
“FOR CLARITY!! I did not say that I think anyone needs to boycott this song,” she wrote. “I said it is a sign of where we are as a culture that this song has been accepted so widely. And… THATS FACTS.”
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
The Hottest Blockbuster Of The ‘90s Should Have Been A Masterpiece
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

You ever think about Will Smith’s greatest mistake? I’m not talking about his marriage, though I’ll probably go to my grave still trying to figure out how that sh*tshow actually works. No, I’m talking about Wild Wild West, the 1999 blockbuster which became a critical and commercial flop. On paper, this movie had everything going for it. The film had a huge budget, ambitious special effects, and was directed by Barry Sonnenfeld, the man who brought us ‘90s bangers like The Addams Family and Men in Black. Speaking of which, Wild Wild West starred Will Smith, whom Men in Black had cemented as a bankable action star.
However, this film was absolutely dead on arrival. Over on Rotten Tomatoes, it has an abysmal 16 percent critical score, which is low enough to make recent flops like Supergirl look downright good. So, what the heck happened here? How did a summer blockbuster from the hottest director and actor of the ‘90s become the cringiest punchline in all of Hollywood? It all began with a script in which four (!!!) screenwriters couldn’t figure out what kind of movie they wanted to make. And it ended with a fight against a giant mechanical spider that a producer spent years trying to inexplicably turn into the greatest Big Bad of the ‘90s.
Have Gun, Will Babble

Wild Wild West is a loose adaptation of the ‘60s show The Wild Wild West. The plot involves an Army captain (played by Will Smith) and a US Marshal (played by Kevin Kline) hunting down the ex-Confederate general who killed the captain’s parents (played by Ted Levine). Along the way, they find a bigger foe: a former Confederate science genius (played by Kenneth Branagh) turned technological terrorist. Our two heroes are ultimately the only ones who can stop this mad scientist’s plan to divide America, effectively finishing the Confederate Army’s goal of destroying the United States as we know it.
Based on the cast, Wild Wild West seemed like it would be a winner. Its primary star was Will Smith, the beloved Fresh Prince of Bel-Air alumnus who had become a breakout movie star thanks to the success of films like Men in Black and Independence Day. His costar was Kevin Kline, a veteran performer and Oscar winner. Their Big Bad was played by Kenneth Branagh, a man who has dedicated his life to bringing Shakespeare’s most complex dramas to life. Heck, it even starred Salma Hayek, the talented hottie that nobody could take their eyes off in From Dusk Till Dawn.
How The West Was (Not) Fun

Throw in the fact that this was a high-budget ($170 million) Western in a decade where cowboy movies (like Unforgiven, Tombstone, and The Quick and the Dead) made a huge comeback, and it seemed like Wild Wild West was destined for greatness. But the movie lost money and was absolutely bodied by the critics. Where did everything go wrong? As usual, it started with the writing. This blockbuster inexplicably had four different screenwriters, and it often seemed like they were all tugging the film in different directions. This was most apparent with the humor in Wild Wild West, which oscillated from completely tone deaf to completely cringe.
The biggest change from the original TV show was making Captain Jim West a Black man. That was downright progressive for the ‘90s, but the writers then proceeded to add the worst racial humor to the film. For example, Will Smith’s character escapes a lynch mob by doing a bizarre smooth-talking bit involving complimenting his attacker’s Klan-style hoods. Oh, and when one of them says they want to teach his character a lesson, Smith sarcastically replies, “Don’t grab a white lady’s boobies at the big redneck dance?” There’s nothing inherently wrong with racial humor, but Wild Wild West makes the cardinal mistake of being just painfully unfunny with it.
The South Will Raze Again

Another bizarre element is how hard this movie tried to bite the style of James Bond, a character who had his own ‘90s revival with GoldenEye. Unfortunately, it sucks at that, too. The spy banter is unworthy of even the worst 007 film. Furthermore, the gadgets (and my God, does this movie have a lot of gadgets) are goofy instead of cool. Plus, if you were in any danger of thinking this was a cool spy movie, Smith ruins it with one of his signature moves: an end credits rap song that retells the entire film in an even more forgettable way.
Wild Wild West failed to be a Blazing Saddles-style racial comedy, and it failed even harder at being a 007-esque spy thriller. Sadly, it failed at its last endeavor, too: being a steampunk-powered sci-fi Western. This genre crossover is mostly exemplified by a climactic fight against a giant mechanical spider, which feels as over-the-top as it is unnecessary. The original TV show had nothing like this, and “robot spider” isn’t exactly a cowboy’s natural enemy. How the heck did this end up in here? Simple: producer Jon Peters had spent most of the late ‘90s trying to put a giant spider in a movie, and he was done waiting.
Does Whatever A Spider Can

Back in the late ‘90s, Warner Bros. was in serious talks with Neil Gaiman about adapting The Sandman into a feature film. According to the author, Jon Peters wanted to include a giant mechanical spider in the film. In 2002, Clerks director Kevin Smith revealed that when he was writing Superman Lives, Peters requested the Man of Steel fight a giant spider. That Superman film was officially scrapped in 1998, and Wild Wild West came out one year later. Considering that Peters produced this failed blockbuster, it seems reasonable to assume he’s the reason it ends with a notoriously stupid fight against a giant robot arachnid.
This is sad because, in other creators’ hands, Wild Wild West should have been a masterpiece. It was an update of a classic TV show with a hit director and a cast of insanely talented performers. Unfortunately, the writers couldn’t decide if they were making an edgy comedy, a spy thriller, or a sci-fi adventure. The result was a movie with an identity crisis so massive that it destroyed the entire franchise. But are you morbidly interested in watching the trainwreck unfold, or maybe you just want to return to the glory days of Will Smith’s career? Maybe, like Smith, you need something to watch while your wife is with her boyfriend? Good news, then: Wild Wild West is currently streaming for free on Tubi.

Entertainment
Frodo’s Next Lord of the Rings Return Just Got More Complicated
One of the most surprising announcements of the last 12 months was the confirmation that a new Lord of the Rings film was in the works, but this time, from the pen of one of television’s most famous late-night hosts. No, David Letterman isn’t writing a Tom Bombadil movie, but Stephen Colbert is taking one of the forgotten early chapters from The Fellowship of the Ring, and going back a quarter of a century to re-tell an important part of the story featuring Frodo Baggins, Samwise Gamgee, Meriadoc Brandybuck, and Peregrin Took.
That setup has naturally led to speculation about whether the original Hobbits could return, especially after Elijah Wood, Sean Astin, Dominic Monaghan, and Billy Boyd appeared on IMDb listings tied to the project. But Wood has now made it clear that any return as Frodo Baggins remains very far from official. Speaking to The Direct while promoting Among Us, Wood said the project has not reached the stage where casting is locked in, or even where he has a script to consider.
“Okay. Well, it hasn’t… We’re not there yet… But listen, I think the implication is that the stories that Stephen [Colbert] wants to tell, which are the six chapters that were not committed to film in Fellowship of the Ring, largely because they would have slowed the process of the journey down, because when he leaves Bag End and the Shire, and he has to get to Bree, if it had gone the meandering way that it does in the books, it just would have taken a long time to get to Bree, and… it would have killed momentum.”
Is Elijah Wood Returning for ‘Lord of the Rings’?
Wood did not rule out returning, though. In fact, he sounds genuinely excited by the prospect of Colbert tackling some of Tolkien’s more wandering, strange, and fan-beloved material. “But I think the idea of telling the story of what happens in those six chapters is really exciting, and I think really exciting for fans, and I think what Stephen and his son have crafted and what they’re working through is really rich and interesting, and it certainly includes all those characters,” he added. “So, a script has to be written, we have to go through a process and read it, and it has to get a green light and all those things, but certainly in theory, yeah. And I’m beyond thrilled that it’s Stephen and his son doing it. It’s in the best Tolkien scholarly hands.”
The big catch is right there: Shadows of the Past is not yet greenlit, meaning there is no confirmed cast, production timeline, or release date. Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh are reportedly attached as producers, but the project still has several major hurdles to clear before fans can start imagining Frodo heading back through the Barrow-downs. Wood is, however, set to return for The Hunt for Gollum, the Andy Serkis-helmed movie in which he will also star, with Jamie Dornan and Anya Taylor-Joy among the new names joining Middle-earth.
Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
-
December 19, 2001
- Runtime
-
178 Minutes
- Writers
-
Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Peter Jackson, J.R.R. Tolkien
- Producers
-
Barrie M. Osborne, Bob Weinstein, Harvey Weinstein, Mark Ordesky, Robert Shaye, Tim Sanders
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