Andy Muschietti’s The Flash is a movie with real heart — but every time the conversation comes up, he can’t stop defending the one part everyone knows failed: the visuals. No one doubts his passion or the performances that carried the film, but the CGI was a mess then, and it’s even harder to ignore now. Pride’s one thing. Denial’s another.
Sora 2 and the End of Copyright Control
OpenAI’s Sora 2 isn’t a creative breakthrough—it’s a calculated flood. By releasing an endless stream of copyright-blurring AI videos, the company isn’t challenging Hollywood’s rules so much as burying them. The strategy is simple: overwhelm the system, exhaust enforcement, and redefine ownership by default.
How Hideo Kojima Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Algorithm
Hideo Kojima, the man who once warned us about the dangers of algorithmic control, now calls artificial intelligence a “friend.” It’s not a sellout—it’s evolution. In a year when Hollywood’s fear of AI is finally cooling, Kojima’s new stance signals that the conversation has moved beyond panic. He’s not rejecting the future; he’s learning how to shape it.
Jim Carrey’s Jetsons Reboot Sounds Like a Future Nobody Asked For
Jim Carrey, The Jetsons, Colin Trevorrow, Warner Bros, Warner Bros Pictures, Hanna-Barbera, Hollywood Reboots, Nostalgia, Retro Futurism, Meet the Robinsons, AI in Film, Jurassic World, Movie Industry, Sci-Fi Comedy, Pop Culture, Film Commentary, Hollywood After Dark,
The Last Great Movie Poster Artist Has Left Us
Drew Struzan wasn’t just a movie poster artist — he was the brush behind our imagination. From Star Wars to Indiana Jones, Back to the Future, and The Thing, his work captured the heart of adventure and defined what movie magic looked like for generations. His passing marks the end of an era when posters were more than promotion — they were portals to our dreams.
The Biggest Threat to the DCU Right Now Is James Gunn’s Mouth
James Gunn has built his brand on being the straight-talking, fan-friendly filmmaker who tells it like it is. But after the Peacemaker finale and his constant attempts to control the DCU narrative, that honesty is starting to look more like ego. He’s overhyping, underdelivering, and arguing with fans when he should be letting the work speak for itself. The best thing James Gunn could do right now? Stop talking.
Tilly Norwood: Star of Tomorrow or Just a Pitch Deck in Drag?
Hollywood’s latest experiment is an AI “actress” named Tilly Norwood — hyped as the first digital starlet who could rival human talent. But beyond the headlines, her résumé is a two-minute sketch with six words of dialogue. AI has a future in film, especially in VFX, but right now Tilly looks less like a breakthrough and more like a pitch designed to impress investors.
ABC Pulled Kimmel to Protect Nexstar’s Merger, Not Audiences
ABC’s decision to pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! indefinitely isn’t about “standards” or “sensitivity.” It’s about power. It’s about Donald Trump’s fragile ego, corporate greed, and a media empire that would rather protect mergers than defend free speech. Jimmy Kimmel didn’t celebrate Charlie Kirk’s death—he did what he’s been doing since 2015: calling out MAGA hypocrisy. For that, he’s been gagged. And ABC, Disney, Nexstar, and Sinclair all rolled over without a fight.
The Future of Cinema Belongs to Horror and Anime
Hollywood keeps trying to manufacture “event” blockbusters out of every superhero and legacy sequel, and audiences have stopped buying it. Meanwhile, horror and anime—once treated as niche curiosities—are packing theaters with genuine urgency. The Conjuring: Last Rites and Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle prove it: smaller budgets, passionate fans, and cultural moments that feel worth showing up for. Horror has the staying power, anime has the spectacle, and together they might just be the real lifeline for theaters.
The Joke Charlie Kirk Could Take, Comedy Central Couldn’t
Comedy Central pulled South Park’s “Got a Nut” after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, but the move wasn’t about respect. Kirk laughed at the parody. He embraced it. The network killed it anyway—out of fear of Trump, fear of backlash, and fear of jeopardizing a merger. In the end, Kirk could take the joke. Comedy Central couldn’t.
