Undertone, one of the most anticipated horror films of 2026, made its U.S. premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in The post Undertone Is One of the Most Disquieting Horror Movies We’ve Ever Seen. It ...
The new "SpongeBob Movie" arrives in theaters Friday, Dec. 19. There's a fair amount of bathroom humor and some scary images of a zombie sailing crew and Underworld monsters. Parents will appreciate ...
Hot on Instagram this AM: Warner Bros and Legendary’s new Tom Cruise movie directed by 4x Oscar winner Alejandro González Iñárritu has been titled Digger and will hit theaters on Oct. 2, 2026 — that’s ...
Check out the Launch Trailer for Sleep Awake, a first-person dystopian horror game developed by Eyes Out. Massive data breach sees millions of credit card details leaked Trump files $10 billion ...
From Netflix to Prime Video, and Shudder to the Criterion Channel, here are the best movies coming to each streaming platform this month. Netflix may get most of the attention, but it’s hardly a ...
Movies are the great escape. “Optimistic endings, passionate romances,” sings the incarcerated dreamer of “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” who looks to old Hollywood movies as an oasis of beauty and faith.
From Timothée Chalamet's latest high-wire act to Amy Madigan's indelible horror villain to dynamic duos and standouts from around the globe, these were THR critics' favorite big-screen turns of the ...
Whether it’s a movie or a game, a good horror experience is almost entirely driven by sound. Audiences react to jump scares, body horror, and skin-crawling nightmarish imagery, but all work in tandem ...
Check out the Launch Trailer for Sleep Awake, a first-person dystopian horror game developed by Eyes Out. Players will get to the bottom of a mysterious phenomenon that sees people disappearing in ...
Ethan Krieger (He/Him) is an editor at DualShockers that got started in the writing industry by covering professional basketball for a sports network. Despite being a diehard sports fan (mainly ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?