Let the MCU snap count for Iron Man and others!
A fun aspect of The Boys Season 2 is perhaps an unintended consequence of its release schedule: the eight-episode season will premiere with three new episodes on Sept. 4, followed by a new episode every Friday until the season finale on Oct. 9. Because of this, each of the episodes coming out starting with Episode 4 features an endangered species in the world of streaming television: a "Previously on..." recap to remind viewers of past key moments. Each of these "Previously on"s... begins with a literal bang, spotlighting a past moment of grotesque, hilarious horror to prepare us …
Bravo's Real Housewives franchise is a pop-culture monolith, but it could gain some new energy by casting some of these talented women.
Rumors are abound regarding a surprise 2019 Christmas episode of Doctor Who. This would be a perfect answer to season 11's divisive response.
The war between DC's Swamp Thing and Marvel's Man-Thing has raged for years, but a new Weapon Plus blows both away. Meet... Man-Slaughter!
The horror movie genre as we know it started with monster movies and creature features. We think these monsters need a comeback and soon.
The studio has a few other fascinating villains they should consider for standalone stories.
Marvel and ABC's Agents of SHIELD will end after season 7. Here are the biggest characters that need to return in the final season.
The worldwide moviegoing audience has proven that not only can women carry an entire superhero film by themselves, we WANT to see them do it.
Last year, the Freddie Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody blew the doors off of movie theaters everywhere, delivering a pulse-pounding, fist-pumping ode to one of the greatest rock bands of all time and its frontman. After winning a slew of awards, including a few Oscars, it’s natural for many fans to ask whether or not their favorite bands and singers deserve such an honor.
Few series end the lives of major characters with quite as much abandon as George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. Fans of the novels know that no one is safe, no matter how beloved they may be and when the books were adapted for HBO, the writers knew that they needed that sense of precariousness to translate to the small screen as well.