The Palisades Fire alone has burned through over 17,000 acres of land in two days.
For context, the entire island of Manhattan is 14,600 acres.
A series of wildfires have battered Los Angeles and other surrounding areas of Southern California since Tuesday, killing at least five people, burning through tends of thousands of acres of land, and destroying at least 1,000 structures.
The damage so far is estimated to be in the tens of billions of dollars.
When natural disasters strike, numbers like these β that reach the thousands, millions, and even billions β can become difficult to comprehend.
To put the wildfire destruction in California into perspective, here are seven statistics to help understand the damage they have inflicted.
The Palisades Fire alone has burned through 17,000 acres. That's larger than the entire island of Manhattan.
That makes the fire, which started on Tuesday morning, the most destructive fire in Los Angeles' history, according to multiple reports.
The island of Manhattan in New York is roughly 15,000 acres.
In total, more than 26,978 acres had been burned as of 1:45 a.m. Thursday, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection reported.
Officials ordered 130,000 to evacuate, a number that's greater than the population of Kansas' capital city.
That number is more than the population of Topeka, the capital of Kansas, which has a population of 125,457, according to 2023 population estimates by the US Census.
Los Angeles' total population is just under 4 million people. That means around 3% of the city's population has been displaced.
More than 420,000 people are estimated to be without power. That's roughly the population of Minneapolis, the largest city in Minnesota.
The number comes from PowerOutage.us, which has been tracking power outages across California.
One estimate puts damage and economic losses at $52 to $57 billion, making it one of the costliest natural disasters in US history.
That preliminary estimate, from forecasting service Accuweather, could increase if the fires spread to further areas.
For comparison, the total GDP of the country of Libya is $48 billion, according to the IMF.
If this was a hurricane, that'd make it the 10th-costliest storm in history, right below 2012's Hurricane Sandy.
More than 7,500 LA firefighters have been deployed, but that's still not enough.
Governor Gavin Newsom is sending in the state's National Guard, and more firefighters are coming from Nothern California. The Los Angeles Times reported Los Angeles County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone requested aid from fire departments in Oregon, New Mexico, Washington, and Utah.
Wind gusts have reached 90 mph. That's equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane.
For comparison, Category 1 hurricanes have wind speeds of between 74 and 95 mph, and they can do a lot of damage. Hurricane Florence was a Category 1 storm when it made landfall in North Carolina in September 2018, and was one of the costliest hurricanes in history.
Universal Studios was forced to close for the first time since COVID-19 in 2020.
Universal Studios said in a statement it closed its gates on Wednesday "out of an abundance of caution" due to the high winds and fires, closing for the first time since the park shut down in March 2020, per People. It remained closed on Thursday.
Disneyland, located in Anaheim, has been able to remain open.
Celebrities have been known to splurge on expensive engagement rings.
In 2016, billionaire James Packer reportedly spent $10 million on a ring for Mariah Carey.
Kris Humphries auctioned off the engagement ring he gave Kim Kardashian for $749,000.
On Sunday, stars gathered at the Golden Globes to kick off the 2025 awards season, yet all anyone could talk about was the apparent engagement ring Zendaya debuted on the red carpet.
The "Euphoria" star has been in a confirmed relationship with fellow actor and "Spider-Man" costar Tom Holland since September 2021, and though the pair has yet to confirm if they're actually engaged, experts have already estimated the ring may be worth upward of $300,000.
If the speculation is true, Zendaya's cushion-cut diamond would rank as one of the most expensive celebrity engagement rings of all time.
So, while the internet anxiously awaits an official announcement, here's a look back at 40 other memorably expensive celebrity engagement rings, from Prince William and Kate Middleton's $500,000 diamond-and-sapphire bauble to James Packer and Mariah Carey's $10 million emerald-cut stone.
Prices are based on available estimates, reports, and auction prices.
Amy Daire and Brenna Opelka contributed to an earlier version of this article.
Colin Jost and Scarlett Johansson
Jost and Johansson were first spotted together in May 2017, and have had a low-key relationship ever since, minus the occasional "SNL" joke and red-carpet appearance.
They got engaged in May 2019, but the ring wasn't revealed until two months later.
Representatives for Rare Carat, a diamond search engine, told Business Insider in July 2019 that Johansson's diamond is an old cut that has great clarity, especially for a light-brown diamond, and estimated the ring would cost $450,000.
Jost and Johansson tied the knot in October 2020, and they welcomed their son in August 2021.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced their engagement to the world on November 27, 2017, with Markle debuting a three-stone diamond ring designed by Prince Harry and jeweler Cleave & Company.
People magazine reported that the ring features a 3-carat, cushion-cut center stone sourced from Botswana β a location of special significance to the couple β while the side stones are two round diamonds from Princess Diana's jewelry collection. Experts estimated it cost $350,000.
The couple married the following May and now reside in California with their two children.
Prince William and Kate Middleton
Kate Middleton's unique 12-carat sapphire β surrounded by diamonds, no less β popped perfectly with her navy dress when the royal couple announced their engagement in 2010.
The $500,000 heirloom might not be the most expensive ring on the list, but its sentimental value is worth much more. Princess Diana famously wore this ring while she was engaged to Prince Charles.
The pair wed in April 2011 and have since welcomed three children.
But the "Hollaback Girl" singer didn't give fans a closer look at her ring until a few weeks later on her Instagram story.
"We're looking at a gorgeous 8-carat, radiant-shape diamond with trapezoid sides β an Art Deco look," Rare Carat founder and CEO Ajay Anand told BI in November 2020. "We're talking $500,000 in all, as the center stone is an icy white D-to-F color diamond."
Lady Gaga and Taylor Kinney
Lady Gaga never ended up saying "I do" to "Chicago Fire" star Taylor Kinney, who proposed in 2015 on Valentine's Day with a 6-carat, heart-shaped diamond ring by Lorraine Schwartz.
The couple split in summer 2016, but seemingly remained friendly, with Kinney telling Entertainment Tonight in 2019 that "the sky is the limit" for Gaga after her success with "A Star Is Born."
Christian McCaffrey and Olivia Culpo
The San Francisco 49ers running back proposed to the model and former Miss Universe winner in April 2023 after almost four years of dating with a three-stone ring designed by Ring Concierge.
Nicole Wegman, Ring Concierge's founder and CEO, told People, "We worked with Christian to thoughtfully design a ring that encompassed Olivia's trendsetting style while still remaining timeless β a beautifully cut Oval flanked with Epaulette side stones in a handcrafted gold and platinum setting." It's estimated that the ring is worth $600,000.
Actor George Clooney proposed to British international human rights lawyer Amal Alamuddin (now Clooney) with a 7-carat, emerald-cut diamond.
The solitaire ring, which features side baguettes set in platinum, is worth an estimated $750,000.
The couple publicly revealed their engagement in April 2014, and by September of that year, they had tied the knot. They later welcomed twins in 2017.
Hilary Duff and Mike Comrie
In February 2010, professional hockey player Mike Comrie proposed to Hilary Duff while the pair were on vacation in Maui.
E! News reported, per Forbes, at the time that Duff's 14-carat, princess-cut ring cost $1 million.
The couple kept their engagement short, marrying in August of that year. They later welcomed their son in 2012 before announcing their separation in 2014. The couple's divorce was finalized in February 2016.
In 2016, Gucci Mane proposed to entrepreneur Keyshia Ka'oir during an Atlanta Hawks game with a 25-carat, cushion-cut diamond ring.
And three years later, the rapper decided to up the ante with a whopping $1 million, 60-carat round-cut diamond creation by Pristine Jewelers Ben Shimon and Avi Davidov, BET reported.
The outlet added that it took the jewelers 45 days to complete the ring.
Michael Douglas did pretty well choosing a $1 million antique Fred Leighton 10-carat engagement ring for Catherine Zeta-Jones, and their relationship isn't so bad either β the actors have been together for more than 20 years and have two children.
Kourtney Kardashian Barker and Travis Barker
Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker proposed to Poosh founder Kourtney Kardashian in October 2021 with an engagement ring designed by Lorraine Schwartz.
"It's a flawless, beautifully cut diamond stone," Schwartz told People.
Kathryn Money, SVP of Merchandising and Retail at Brilliant Earth, told Brides that the center stone β an elongated oval solitaire diamond β is likely 10 to 12 carats with an estimated cost between $500,000 and $1 million.
The pair went on to host three weddings β in Las Vegas, Santa Barbara, and Portofino, Italy β throughout 2022. They welcomed their son in November 2023.
Justin Theroux and Jennifer Aniston
In August 2012, Justin Theroux asked for Jennifer Aniston's hand with a $1 million 10-carat diamond ring designed by her friend Jennifer Meyer, E! Online reported.
The couple announced their divorce in February 2018, but remain close friends.
Rare Carat CEO Ajay Anand told BI that the ring appeared "to feature a 10-carat, emerald-cut stone" and estimated that it "would sell for no less than $1 million."
But Lovato and Ehrich's engagement was short lived β they split just two months later in September 2020.
"I think I rushed into something that I thought I was supposed to do," Lovato said in her 2021 documentary "Dancing with the Devil," adding, "I realized as time went on that I didn't actually know the person I was engaged to."
Lovato is now engaged to musician Jordan 'Jutes' Lutes.
Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union
Gabrielle Union said yes to former NBA star Dwyane Wade and the $1 million 8.5-carat, cushion-cut diamond he chose for her.
The couple married in 2014 and welcomed a daughter via surrogate in 2018. Union is also stepmother to Wade's three children.
Gaga told Vogue in September 2024, "My mom met him and she said to me, 'I think I just met your husband,' and I said, 'I'm not ready to meet my husband!'"
Zack Stone, CEO of UK-based jewelry retailer Steven Stone, told InStyle in December 2024 that the ring appears to be 15 carats and estimated that it was worth around $1.25 million.
Justin and Hailey Bieber
Justin originally proposed to Hailey in July 2018 with an 18-carat Solow & Co engagement ring, Vogue reported.
However, six years later, the "Peaches" singer decided to upgrade the Rhode founder's ring, this time selecting a piece by Lorraine Schwartz that she debuted on her Instagram in May 2024.
After tabloid speculation about the new ring's size, Hailey Bieber told W Magazine in July 2024 that her new bauble "is only one carat bigger" than her original ring. "It's just elongated," she said. It's estimated that the upgraded ring cost $1.5 million.
The couple have been married since September 2018 and welcomed their first child in August 2024.
Justin Verlander and Kate Upton
In 2016, model Kate Upton said yes to MLB pitcher Justin Verlander and a one-of-a-kind ring by Anita Ko, featuring an 8-carat, round-cut diamond in a unique six-prong setting that was estimated to cost $1.5 million.
The couple have been married since 2017 and they share one daughter.
Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise
Tom Cruise proposed to Katie Holmes with a 5-carat rock in 2005.
The center oval-cut diamond was surrounded by another 6 carats of diamonds and has been estimated to cost as much as $1.5 million, per Who What Wear.
They welcomed their daughter in 2006 before splitting in 2012.
Kris Humphries and Kim Kardashian
Kim Kardashian's marriage to Kris Humphries only lasted 72 days, and the best thing to come out of it was the 16-carat center diamond designed by Lorraine Schwartz.
While the ring was initially reported to be worth nearly $2 million, in 2013, when Humphries auctioned it off at a charity event, it went for $749,000.
Paris Hilton and Carter Reum
Paris Hilton and M13 Ventures founder Carter Reum got engaged in February 2021.
The following month, Hilton shared on "On Air with Ryan Seacrest" that Reum designed the ring with Jean Dousset, the great-great-grandson of Louis Cartier.
"It is a three-stone ring design with an emerald-cut center stone, featuring baguette-cut and trapezoid accent diamonds," Dousset said in a 2021 interview with The Knot.
He added, "The design of the ring derives from a combination of classical and Art Nouveau era influences. The geometric shapes of this ring are befitting to resemble the structure of the Grand Palais in Paris." It's estimated that the ring cost $2 million.
The pair wed in November 2021 and share two children.
Paris Hilton and Chris Zylka
Before Reum, Hilton was engaged to actor Chris Zylka from January to November 2018.
Hilton kept the $2 million 20-carat pear-shaped diamond after their split, telling "The Jenny McCarthy Show" in December 2018, "The person who we got it from got millions and millions of dollars of free publicity, so I love how social media has basically become a new form of money. It's pretty sick."
"Diamonds are a girl's best friend," she added.
Ciara and Russell Wilson
When NFL quarterback Russell Wilson put a ring on it, he made sure no one could miss the news by gifting Ciara a 16-carat round, brilliant-cut center diamond.
And that's not all β the center stone is flanked by a trapezoid-shaped and pear-shaped diamond on each side, bringing the ring's total estimated value to about $2 million, per The Knot.
They married in July 2016. They have three children together and also parent Ciara's son whom she had in her previous relationship.
Nick Cannon and Mariah Carey
Mariah Carey got engaged to Nick Cannon in 2008, who proposed with a 17-carat, emerald-cut pink diamond by Jacob & Co.
"I wanted to do something extremely special, something that Mariah would really appreciate," Cannon told People magazine at the time, adding, "We got the pinkest stone we could find, surrounded by other diamonds."
People reported that the center diamond was surrounded by 58 smaller pink diamonds and two half-moon diamonds, leading it to cost an estimated $2.5 million.
Blake Lively's trendy 12-carat, oval-cut diamond set in 18-carat rose gold was made by celebrity favorite Lorraine Schwartz and reportedly cost her husband, Ryan Reynolds, $2.5 million.
The two wed in 2012 and have four children.
Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Aristotle Onassis
The former first lady wed Aristotle Onassis, a Greek shipping magnate, in 1968.
He proposed with the Lesotho III diamond, a 40.42-carat, marquise-cut diamond.
The ring sold for $2.6 million at auction in 1996.
The pair wed the following November in New Orleans and now share two daughters.
Donald and Melania Trump
Current President-elect Donald Trump proposed to wife Melania in 2005 with an emerald-cut diamond from Graff Diamonds that weighed more than 10 carats.
At the time of their engagement, he told The New York Times he got a $1 million discount on the ring β however, according to Forbes' reporting in 2018, Trump paid the full price of $1.5 million.
Regardless, he upgraded Melania's ring in 2015 for their 10th wedding anniversary, selecting another Graff Diamonds piece that weighed 25 carats and cost $3 million.
Alexa Dell and Harrison Refoua
In December 2017, tech heiress Alexa Dell got engaged to real-estate investor Harrison Refoua at the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai.
The Daily Mail estimated that the 12-carat diamond ring is valued between $2 million and $3 million.
Kobe and Vanessa Bryant
Kobe Bryant upgraded his wife Vanessa Bryant's ring in 2003 to "an eight-carat, emerald-cut purple diamond worth $4 million," Brides reported.
In October 2013, Kanye West (who now goes by Ye) proposed to Kim Kardashian with a 15-carat, cushion-cut diamond ring designed by Lorraine Schwartz that was estimated to cost upward of $3 million, per E! News.
And almost three years later, West surprised his wife with another Lorraine Schwartz ring, this time weighing 20 carats.
However, Kardashian was robbed of the ring just weeks later while on a trip to Paris in October 2016; lawyers and police officials estimated that it was worth about $4.5 million.
The couple finalized their divorce in 2022 after six years of marriage. They have four children.
Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez
Jennifer Lopez said "I do" to Marc Anthony in 2004 after he proposed with an 8.5-carat blue diamond ring by Harry Winston worth an estimated $4 million, according to E! News.
The pair welcomed twins in 2008 and were married for 10 years before divorcing.
Prince Rainier III of Monaco and Grace Kelly
When Prince Rainier III of Monaco proposed to Grace Kelly in 1955, he pulled out a 10.47-carat, emerald-cut diamond ring by Cartier then worth about $4 million.
The couple married the following year, and remained so until Kelly's death in 1982. They had three children.
At the time of their engagement, experts from James Allen estimated to BI that the emerald-cut diamond ring was 15 carats and worth at least $1 million, while gemologists at Rare Carat estimated the ring was 20 carats and worth around $4.5 million.
Paris Kassidokostas-Latsis and Paris Hilton
Paris Kassidokostas-Latsis proposed to Hilton in 2005 with a 24-carat canary diamond.
She stopped wearing the reported $4.7 million ring just four months after they initially announced their engagement.
It was widely reported that the center stone is either a ruby or a pink diamond, while eight white diamonds flank it to resemble petals. Since the center stone composition has never been confirmed, experts' reported price estimates have ranged from $25,000 all the way to $5 million, The Knot reported.
The couple welcomed their daughter in August 2020, and despite their engagement happening nearly six years ago, they've never announced if they're officially married.
However, they've continued to support each other publicly at events, with Bloom presenting Perry with the MTV VMA Video Vanguard Award in September 2024.
Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez
Bennifer rekindled their romance in 2021 and got engaged in April 2022 with a three-stone ring featuring a rare light-green radiant-cut diamond as the center stone.
Lopez told Apple Music in 2023 that Affleck also had the words "not going anywhere" engraved on the band as a reference to his email signatures when they reconnected.
Unfortunately, the couple's second chance was too good to be true; Lopez filed for divorce in August 2024 after just two years of marriage, though she will keep the $5.6 million ring, People reported, citing their divorce settlement.
One of the world's most iconic musical duos said "I do" in 2008 at a secret wedding. Her engagement ring has an overwhelming 24-carat, emerald-cut flawless center diamond.
Anna Kournikova and Enrique Iglesias were lowkey about their relationship until she went public with a large radiant-cut canary diamond.
The unique, yellow diamond is set in platinum and has two other diamonds on either side βΒ but this may be her second engagement ring. The tennis pro was spotted with a huge 11-carat, pear-shaped pink diamond back in 2004 which was reportedly worth as much as $2.5 million dollars.
These days she has mostly been spotted with the yellow one, paired with an equally impressive wedding band, though the two have long maintained that they're not interested in getting married. They have three children.
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton
When Elizabeth Taylor wed Richard Burton for the first time in 1964, she had said yes to an emerald Bulgari brooch, not a traditional engagement ring, Vogue reported.
However, four years into their marriage, Burton purchased the 33-carat Asscher-cut Krupp diamond for $305,000 β it sold for $8.8 million at a Christie's auction in 2011.
Mariah Carey and James Packer
Mariah Carey and billionaire James Packer broke the record for most expensive celebrity engagement ring in 2016 with a whopping 35-carat, emerald-cut diamond.
The wedding was called off just months later, but luckily for the "Always Be My Baby" singer, she got to keep the $10 million ring since Packer was the one who broke it off, Us Weekly reported. She sold it in 2018 for just over $2 million, Page Six reported.
While some states' coldest temperatures were recorded recently, others were documented decades ago.
Hawaii remains the only state in the US yet to report a temperature below zero degrees Fahrenheit.
The coldest temperature ever recorded in the US was -80 degrees in AlaskaΒ in 1971.
Despite record-breaking temperature drops across the US over the last century, the world continues to get hotter. In fact,Β only three states have recorded their lowest-ever temperatures in the 21st century.
In Alaska, the coldest temperature ever recorded was -80 degrees Fahrenheit in Prospect Creek Camp in 1971 β and all but one of the 50 states has reported a temperature below zero. What's the holdout? Hawaii, which recorded its lowest temperature of 12 degrees Fahrenheit at the Mauna Kea Observatory on May 17, 1979.
Melissa Wells contributed to a prior version of this story.
Alabama's lowest recorded temperature was -27 degrees Fahrenheit at New Market on January 30, 1966.
On this snowy January day, it was Lucille Hereford, the postmaster and town volunteer weather observer, who recorded the -27-degree temperature, calling it a "terribly cold" morning in a 1988 interview with an Alabama State climatologist.
Per a 2021 news report by WHNT, a local news outlet, the official story comes with a caveat: The temperature was initially erroneously recorded as warmer than the -24 degrees Fahrenheit reported at Russellville the same day. It wasn't until years later that a Birmingham reporter uncovered the truth, and the National Climatic Data Center finally issued a correction in its records.
Alaska's lowest recorded temperature was -80 degrees Fahrenheit at Prospect Creek Camp on January 23, 1971.
The Anchorage Daily News reported in 2013 that there have been unofficial measurements of even lower temperatures. On the National Weather Service Alaska website, Phil Schaefer said it hit -84 degrees Fahrenheit in Coldfoot in 1989, and Joe Cochran said the temperature in Hughes dropped to -85 degrees Fahrenheit in the '90s, The Daily News reported.
However, the Prospect Creek Camp temperature is the only one that's been verified.
This is the lowest temperature ever recorded in the US.
Arizona's lowest recorded temperature was -40 degrees Fahrenheit at Hawley Lake on January 7, 1971.
Hawley Lake isn't a town so much as a remote weather station, but it's important in Arizona's meteorological history. In addition to setting a state record for 91 inches of snow in 1968, the overseer of Hawley Lake, Stan Bryte, recorded the state's lowest temperature of -40 degrees Fahrenheit in 1971, per AZCentral.
In fact, on the morning of January 7, 1971, Bryte's chief meteorologist told him, "You need to get up to Hawley Lake. I have a suspicion this is going to be a real record."
Arkansas' lowest recorded temperature was -29 degrees Fahrenheit in Brook Farm Pond near Gravette on February 13, 1905.
Brook Farm Pond is near the town of Gravette, which has just over 3,500 residents, according to census data.
It is located in Benton County, which has the motto "The Heart of Hometown America." At one time, it also bore the name of "Gate Community" for serving as a gateway to northwest Arkansas from Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.Β
California's lowest recorded temperature was -45 degrees Fahrenheit in Boca on January 20, 1937.
The Los Angeles Times reported in 1937 that the low temperatures had brought "influenza, frozen toes, broken water pipes and automobile radiators, icy streets and traffic disruption."
Colorado's lowest recorded temperature was -61 degrees Fahrenheit in Maybell on February 1, 1985.
CBS News reported in January 2023 that Maybell, located 25 miles west of Craig, is home to just 76 people.
Β Maybell resident of 56 years Georgia McIntyre told 9News in 2015, "You don't think about how cold it is. You just put all the clothes you've got on, and we even put newspapers in our shoes because we didn't have all these fancy things you have now."
Connecticut has recorded temperatures of -32 degrees Fahrenheit twice: First in Falls Village on February 16, 1943, and then again in Coventry on January 22, 1961.
In 1943, a National Weather Service observer noted February was a "relatively mild month" in Connecticut, only for the state to record its coldest temperature in the state's history 16 days into the month, per a 2023 CT Insider article.
A freezing day in January just 18 years later would hit that same low temperature.
Delaware's lowest recorded temperature was -17 degrees Fahrenheit in Millsboro on January 17, 1893.
Thirty-seven years later, a Millsboro weather station recorded a temperature of 110 degrees Fahrenheit on a scorching July day, according to the National Weather Service.
Florida's lowest recorded temperature was -2 degrees Fahrenheit in Tallahassee on February 13, 1899.
WTXL Tallahassee reported in 2020 that in Tallahassee 124 years ago, an inch of snow coated the city (its third biggest snowfall ever), and a record low of -2 degrees Fahrenheit was recorded.
Headlines at the time read "All Previous Records Broken," and editors were calling the storm, "The Snow King," "The Ice King," and "the Great Blizzard of 1899," Tallahassee Democrat reported in 2018.
Georgia's lowest recorded temperature was -17 degrees Fahrenheit in CCC Fire Camp F-16 near Beatum on January 27, 1940.
Not even 12 years later, on July 24, 1952, Georgia recorded its highest temperature at 112 degrees Fahrenheit in Louisville and again on August 20, 1983, in Greenville, according to NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee.
Hawaii's lowest recorded temperature was 12 degrees Fahrenheit at the Mauna Kea Observatory on May 17, 1979.
Forecasters think this record may have changed because, on February 11, 2019, several sensors at the Mauna Kea Observatory reported temperatures between 8 and 11 degrees Fahrenheit, Khon2 reported in 2022, but it has yet to be confirmed.
Idaho's lowest recorded temperature was -60 degrees Fahrenheit in Island Park Dam on January 18, 1943.
Island Park Dam is located in the Targhee National Forest in the northeast corner of the state. It's tied for the eighth coldest temperature ever recorded in the US.
Illinois' lowest recorded temperature was -38 degrees Fahrenheit in Mount Carroll on January 31, 2019.
Frigid temperatures across Illinois in late January 2019 led to a startling discovery: On the morning of January 31, the weather observer at Mount Carroll in Carroll County recorded a temperature drop to -38 degrees Fahrenheit.
Only after an extensive review did the State Climate Extremes Committee collectively validate the reading as the new state record low temperature, The State Journal-Register reported in 2019.
Indiana's lowest recorded temperature was -36 degrees Fahrenheit in New Whiteland on January 19, 1994.
ABC57 reported in 2020 that all temperatures across Indiana dropped below zero on the morning of January 19, 1994.
In a newscast from 1994 for WRTV Indianapolis, a mail carrier told former Channel 6 meteorologist David James, "Well, I'll tell you, it's better today than it was yesterday, 'cuz there's not that wind. So, I don't mind this at all."
Iowa's lowest recorded temperature was -47 degrees Fahrenheit in Elkader on February 3, 1996. Previously, it was in Washta on January 12, 1912.
Iowa was one of many states in the Midwest that experienced the "1996 Cold Wave," as KCRG-TV9 described it in 2016.
Kansas' lowest recorded temperature was -40 degrees Fahrenheit in Lebanon on February 13, 1905.
The winter of 1905 was reportedly so bitterly cold that "it was impossible for one to face the storm," according to "Reno County Kansas, Its People, Industries, and Institutions," by B.F. Bowen & Co. Inc. of Indianapolis, published in 1917 and reported in 2014 by The Kansas City Star.
Kentucky's lowest recorded temperature was -37 degrees Fahrenheit in Shelbyville on January 19, 1994.
According to meteorologist John Belski, January 19, 1994, "was certainly a day for the history books."Β
"Those who were not around in 1994, it was the only time I can remember when grocery stores in parts of Louisville ran out of food and gas stations ran out of gas that week since no deliveries were able to be made for several days. It was so strange to see people walking in the middle of Bardstown Road and also Broadway," he recalled for WLKY News in 2020.
Louisiana's lowest recorded temperature was -16 degrees Fahrenheit in Minden on February 13, 1899.
Over two weeks in February 1899, freezing weather swept over the US, with record-low minimum temperatures recorded in 12 states. According to weather historian David Ludlum in "The Great Arctic Outbreak and East Coast Blizzard of February 1899," this was "the greatest arctic outbreak in history" at the time.
Maine's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in Big Black River on January 16, 2009.
After a month of scrutinizing weather data, scientists said in February 2009 that Maine had reached a record low: 50 below freezing.
After much evaluation by the State Climate Extreme Committee, "It turned out [the -50 reading] was spot on," Bob Lent, Maine director of the US Geological Survey, said, as reported by NBC News in 2009.
Maryland's lowest recorded temperature was -40 degrees Fahrenheit in Oakland on January 13, 1912.
Oakland, Maryland, is home to 1,851 people, according to census data. It was established in 1849 and became a well-known tourist spot when the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad built a rail line that traveled through the town, according to Britannica.
Massachusetts's lowest recorded temperature was -35 degrees Fahrenheit in Chester on January 12, 1981; in Coldbrook on February 15, 1943; and in Taunton on January 5, 1904.
The same temperature was previously recorded in Coldbrook on February 15, 1943, and in Taunton on January 5, 1904.
Michigan's lowest recorded temperature was -51 degrees Fahrenheit in Vanderbilt on February 9, 1934.
Only 11 states have recorded colder temperatures than Michigan: Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Minnesota's lowest recorded temperature was -60 degrees Fahrenheit in Tower on February 2, 1996.
The average low in this sparsely populated former mining town is usually around 4 degrees Fahrenheit in February, according to WorldClimate.com.
Mississippi's lowest recorded temperature was -19 degrees Fahrenheit in Corinth on January 30, 1966.
By contrast, Mississippi's highest recorded temperature was recorded 36 years prior on July 29, 1930, when the mercury in Holly Springs hit 115 degrees Fahrenheit.
Missouri's lowest recorded temperature was -40 degrees Fahrenheit in Warsaw on February 13, 1905.
Interestingly enough, the coldest and hottest temperatures recorded in Missouri have both been in Warsaw, according to the University of Missouri Climate Center. The hottest temperature was a whopping 118 degrees Fahrenheit on July 14, 1954.
Montana's lowest recorded temperature was -70 degrees Fahrenheit in Rogers Pass on January 20, 1954.
"It's a day that will probably live in American history forever," Corby Dickerson, a National Weather Service meteorologist, said of the record, NBC Montana reported in February 2023. "It was the coldest day ever observed in the lower 48 states."
Nebraska's lowest recorded temperature was -47 degrees Fahrenheit in Oshkosh on December 22, 1989. Previously, it was in Bridgeport on February 12, 1899.
The biggest snowstorm on the southeast US coast was known as the "Christmas Snowstorm of 1989," according to The National Weather Service, and it was felt all the way to Nebraska. It broke snowfall records in several states, and unheard-of temperatures followed.
Nevada's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in San Jacinto on January 8, 1937.
Fifty-seven years after the state's cold temperature, a weather station in Laughlin recorded a temperature of 125 degrees Fahrenheit in June, per data from NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee.
New Hampshire's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in Mount Washington on January 22, 1885.
More recently, sensors on Mount Washington logged the US' coldest windchill on record: -108. The Weather Service office serving Mount Washington posted in February 2023 that its recording software refused to log the reported low number.
New Jersey's lowest recorded temperature was -34 degrees Fahrenheit in River Vale on January 5, 1904.
"That was a very cold morning in northeastern New Jersey," David Robinson, a New Jersey State Climatologist, told NJ.com in 2019.
"A deep fresh snow cover, the valley location, adjacent to a pond that was used to make ice, and a generally treeless landscape near the station all helped contribute to the excessive cold."
New Mexico's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in Gavilan on February 1, 1951.
Conversely, the hottest temperature in New Mexico was recorded on June 27, 1994, at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Loving, where it reached a blazing 122 degrees Fahrenheit.
New York's lowest recorded temperature was -52 degrees Fahrenheit in Old Forge on February 18, 1979.
Jane Tormey, the official weather watcher for Old Forge for CNY Central, recalled in 2013, "People were saying their milk froze on the way home from the store to home. A lot of cars obviously couldn't get started. My car window driver's side was shattered."
North Carolina's lowest recorded temperature was -34 degrees Fahrenheit in Mount Mitchell on January 21, 1985.
One of the past century's most extreme arctic outbreaks occurred between January 18Β and January 22, 1985. According toΒ the National Weather Service, newspapers at the time reported at least 165 deaths related toΒ the weather.
North Dakota's lowest recorded temperature was -60 degrees Fahrenheit in Parshall on February 15, 1936.
Coincidentally, both the hottest and coldest temperatures recorded in North Dakota's history happened in the same year, with Steele hitting 121 degrees Fahrenheit on July 6, 1936, KYFR-TV reported in 2023.
Ohio's lowest recorded temperature was -39 degrees Fahrenheit in Milligan on February 10, 1899.
Ohio was another state affected by the unprecedented cold of February 1899. The US Weather Bureau reported 105 fatalities between January 29 and February 13 from the arctic temperatures and avalanches brought on by "the Great Arctic Outbreak."
Oklahoma's lowest recorded temperature was -31 degrees Fahrenheit in Nowata on February 10, 2011.
2011 was reportedly Oklahoma's third snowiest year, and the state's record for most snowfall in 24 hours was reached in Spavinaw, with 27 inches, FOX23 News reported in 2020.
Oregon's lowest recorded temperature was -54 degrees Fahrenheit in Ukiah on February 9, 1933, and in Seneca on February 10, 1933.
Ukiah and Seneca are occasionally known as "Oregon's Icebox" due to their icy winter conditions. That said, Meacham residents have said the temperature once plummeted to -62 degrees Fahrenheit, but it has never been proven officially, The Oregonian wrote in 2010.
Pennsylvania's lowest recorded temperature was -42 degrees Fahrenheit in Smethport on January 5, 1904.
By contrast, in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, two consecutive days of 111 degrees Fahrenheit were recorded on July 9, 1936 and July 10, 1936, in the hottest temperature ever recorded in the state.
Phoenixville is five hours from Smethport, where the coldest temperature was recorded 32 years prior.
Rhode Island's lowest recorded temperature was -28 degrees Fahrenheit in Wood River Junction on January 11, 1942.
According to NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee, -25 degrees Fahrenheit was previously reported at Greene, Rhode Island, on February 5, 1996, but it could not be verified.
South Carolina's lowest recorded temperature was -19 degrees Fahrenheit in Caesar's Head on January 21, 1985.
In 1985, in the Carolinas, the coldest temperatures ever recorded were dubbed "The Coldest Day," WMBF News reported in 2020.
South Dakota's lowest recorded temperature was -58 degrees Fahrenheit in McIntosh on February 17, 1936.
McIntosh was home to just 111 people in 2020. It is the county seat of Corson County.
Tennessee's lowest recorded temperature was -32 degrees Fahrenheit in Mountain City on December 30, 1917.
The two days of 113 degrees Fahrenheit were recorded in Perryville on July 29, 1930, and August 9, 1930, making them the hottest temperatures ever recorded in Tennessee.
Texas' lowest recorded temperature was -23 degrees Fahrenheit in Seminole on February 8, 1933. The same temperature was also recorded in Tulia 6NE on February 12, 1899.
Texas is known for its heat, but even this state has seen severe drops in temperatures β the best known was during the Great Blizzard of 1899.
Some unofficial reports even claim temperatures reached -30 degrees Fahrenheit in February 1899 at Wolf Creek, Texas. Either way, the Concho Valley Homepage reported in 2022 that newspapers in 1899 described the temperatures as "the worst freeze ever known in the state."
Utah's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in Strawberry Tunnel (East) on January 5, 1913.
By contrast, the city of St. George has been home to the state's record for hottest temperature β twice. A temperature of 117 degrees Fahrenheit was recorded in July 1985 and again in July 2021.
Vermont's lowest recorded temperature was -50 degrees Fahrenheit in Bloomfield on December 30, 1933.
Bloomfield, a town in Essex County, had a population of 217 in the 2020 US census. The weather station existed from 1906 to 1968, according to Century 21 Farm & Forest.
Virginia's lowest recorded temperature was -30 degrees Fahrenheit in Mountain Lake Biological Station on January 21, 1985.
Centered in the Allegheny Mountains is Mountain Lake, one of only two freshwater lakes in Virginia, according to the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources.
Just a year after this temperature was recorded in 1985, Mountain Lake was made famous again for "Dirty Dancing," which is where the movie was filmed.
Washington's lowest recorded temperature was -48 degrees Fahrenheit on December 30, 1968, in two different towns: Mazama and Winthrop.
On June 29, 2021, Hanford, Washington, reached 120 degrees Fahrenheit, the hottest recorded temperature in that state.Β
West Virginia's lowest recorded temperature was -37 degrees Fahrenheit in Lewisburg on December 30, 1917.
Just 13 years later, the highest temperature recorded was 112 degrees Fahrenheit in Moorefield, West Virginia, on August 4, 1930.
Wisconsin recorded the lowest temperature in the state's history on February 2, 1996, in Couderay. Two days later, it broke its own record at -55 degrees.
The coldest temperature recorded in Wisconsin ranks ninth in the nation.
Wyoming's lowest recorded temperature was -66 degrees Fahrenheit in Riverside Ranger Station in Yellowstone National Park on February 9, 1933.
Although Yellowstone's temperatures in Wyoming haven't plummeted to the levels they once did in 1933, "since most of the park lies at an elevation of 6,000 feet above sea level or higher, unpredictability characterizes Yellowstone's weather," the National Park Service has said.
Correction: January 9, 2024 β An earlier version of this story included an image that was mislabeled as Minden, Louisiana. The photoΒ has been replaced with one of Minden.
Over the last four decades, Nicole Kidman has provided us with dozens of iconic looks.
Kidman has never been afraid to take a risk, as evidenced by these 45 style moments.
From backless gowns to giant parrots, here are some of her most daring outfits.
Nicole Kidman has been one of the most successful actors of the last 40 years, with five Oscar nominations (and one win), six BAFTA nominations (another win), 18 Critics' Choice nominations (three wins), three Emmy nominations (two wins), and 20 Golden Globe nominations (six wins).
She also hasn't shied away from box-office fodder, like the "Aquaman" films β which have made more than $1 billion at the box office β "Paddington," "Happy Feet," and "Batman Forever."
Kidman is also known for her iconic red-carpet style. We've picked 45 of the most daring looks from her decadeslong career, from the '90s to now.
Kidman channeled a flamenco dancer with this ruffled hot pink dress at a May 1995 screening of "To Die For."
Kidman won a Golden Globe for her performance.
One month later, in June 1995, Kidman shined bright like a disco ball at the "Batman Forever" premiere.
She looks the part of the next big movie star.
Her 1997 Oscars dress proved she was willing to take risks β not many can pull off a silk dress this color.
Technically, this John Galliano-designed Dior dress is considered chartreuse, and it was considered the "first true couture dress on the red carpet," according to Smithsonian Magazine.
Kidman paired a black see-through top with this patterned fringed skirt for the premiere of "The Peacemaker" in September 1997.
She added a large jeweled choker over the collar of her shirt.
Kidman was the picture of '90s glam with this almost entirely backless, oxblood set at the premiere of "Eyes Wide Shut" in July 1999.
InStyle rightfully calls this look "perfect" to this day β though it's a wonder Kidman didn't experience any type of wardrobe malfunction.
Kidman rocked a similarly backless top at the premiere of "Mission: Impossible 2" in May 2000.
This kerchief-esque style of top is trendy once again in 2025, like the rest of '90s and early 2000s style.
For the Australian premiere of the film that same month, she wore a floor-length leather dress.
We have to wonder why she's yet to play a super spy after seeing her in this outfit.
She wore this almost entirely sheer black dress at the premiere of "The Others" in August 2001.
Kidman was nominated for another Golden Globe for her performance in the film.
At the 2001 Hollywood Film Festival Gala Awards later that month, Kidman wore an ornate gold belt on her stomach.
She paired it with a black crop top and blazer, and a golden snake choker.
Kidman vamped it up in this black velvet off-the-shoulder gown with a plunging neckline in February 2002.
The Yves Saint Laurent dress has a simple silver vine detail on the front.
Kidman's dress at the 2002 SAG Awards in March resembled a tuxedo vest, without the accompanying shirt or jacket.
It was designed by Jean Paul Gaultier as part of his Haute Couture line.
Kidman wore a lingerie-inspired slip dress to the 2003 Critics' Choice Awards in January of that year.
She carried a blush silk jacket with her.
For the 2003 Met Gala in April, she wore this semi-sheer, sparkly, one-shoulder gown and giant diamond earrings.
The Gucci by Tom Ford dress fit in well with the theme of "Goddess: The Classical Mode."
The "Cold Mountain" star once again opted for an entirely backless dress, this time a black one, for a November 2003 event.
She added a giant red flower in her hair.
She wore a white-and-gold one with an exaggerated collar and belt for a "Cold Mountain" premiere in December 2003.
Note the matching over-the-top cuffs, too.
Kidman paired sequins and mesh paneling at the 2004 Golden Globes.
This Dior dress wouldn't be out of place at a 1920s-themed party.
The following month at the Academy Awards, she wore an icy blue strapless dress with a feathered hem.
The satin Chanel gown had matching feathers at the neckline, too.
In January 2005, Kidman wore a peacock-inspired dress to the Golden Globes.
The dress is the classic peacock blue-green and is accented with peacock feathers on the shoulder. It was designed by Gucci.
Kidman's 2007 Academy Awards dress with the giant bow at the neckline remains one of her most iconic looks.
"That one was controversial," Kidman said of the Balenciaga dress in 2016. "Some press people didn't like it. But that kind of talk doesn't bother me. I still liked it, especially the structure," she told InStyle.
She returned to the metallics in December 2007 with this shiny silver suit.
Kidman looked ready for battle in a suit of armor for the "Golden Compass" premiere.
At a February 2008 press conference, Kidman managed to combine lace, mesh, and feathers in a single dress.
Kidman, who was five months pregnant at the time, wore Prada for the event.
Once again, Kidman proved she loves a backless dress at the Academy of Country Music Awards in April 2009.
The high-neck, backless look is one she returns to time and time again. This particular gown was designed by L'Wren Scott.
Kidman wore a mauve dress with a matching capelet at a screening of "Nine" in December 2009.
The dress was also designed by L'Wren Scott.
Kidman channeled a circus ringmaster at the 2010 Academy of Country Music Awards.
Once again, she chose a L'Wren Scott look.
In June 2011, she mixed a green velvet/brown sheer dress with periwinkle heels at the CMT Music Awards.
This interesting look was designed by Proenza Schouler.
Kidman pulled out all the stops for Derby Day at Flemington Racecourse in November 2012.
Kidman deserves to attend a royal wedding if her hat game is this strong.
Kidman walked the Golden Globes red carpet with her husband, Keith Urban, in this black dress with a sheer corset bodice and bronze bees in January 2013.
That year she was up for two awards: best supporting actress for "The Paperboy" and best actress in a miniseries or motion picture β television for "Hemingway & Gellhorn."
Kidman's 2013 Oscars dress shimmered and shined down the red carpet that February.
The L'Wren Scott dress had golden swirls along the bottom.
One doesn't know what to look at Kidman's sequined and lace blue gown at Cannes in May 2014.
This dress was designed by Armani and it was fit for a princess, which was appropriate, as she was there for the premiere of her film "Grace of Monaco."
She wore a white gown that featured a large black bird for an awards ceremony in November 2015.
Kidman chose an Alexander McQueen gown for the 2015 Evening Standard Awards in London.
At the 2016 Academy of Country Music Awards in April, Kidman wore this busy dress with sheer sleeves and butterflies.
Once again, this dress is Alexander McQueen.
Kidman looked like a celestial goddess at the 2016 Met Gala in this dress adorned with the moon and stars.
That year's theme was "Manus x Machina: Fashion In An Age Of Technology," and she wore this Alexander McQueen dress, complete with a cape.
Kidman's black dress at the 2016 Critics' Choice Awards had both a large cutout and a dramatic slit.
She opted for a simple black Brandon Maxwell dress for the December 2016 ceremony.
Kidman's dress at the 2017 SAG Awards in January featured a plunging neckline and a parrot on each shoulder.
The flamboyant, green sequined gown was designed by Gucci.
The star returned to dramatic bows for the 2018 Academy Awards.
Kidman's entrance at the 2023 Met Gala was nothing short of jaw-dropping.
This is the same Chanel gown that Kidman wore in her iconic commercial for Chanel No. 5 in 2004, directed by Baz Luhrmann. According to Vogue, the blush gown is made of silk tulle and is covered with "250 pink ostrich feathers, and over 3,000 silver crystals and sequins."
To attend a gala in September 2023, Kidman wore a baby-blue feathery gown with black opera gloves.
The dress was accentuated by a satin bow around her waist.
Kidman went for vintage glam at the 2024 Met Gala in May.
The theme of the 2024 Met Gala was "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion," which meant bringing back vintage looks from their "sleep."
Kidman's look was a recreation of a 1950s gown designed by Cristobal Balenciaga. Per Vogue, it took 800 hours to attach 3,000 black feathers to the silk bodice.
Kidman wore a sparkling low-cut black gown to the premiere of "The Perfect Couple" in September 2024.
Kidman wore a Ferragamo dress to the premiere of her latest Netflix show, "The Perfect Couple," based on the Elin Hilderbrand novel of the same name.
Kidman went back to one of her favorite silhouettes β backless and one-shouldered β at the 2025 Golden Globes.
The Balenciaga dress was perfectly complemented by a voluminous high ponytail.
For most actors, winning a Golden Globe can be a career high. But everyone knows that where there are highs, there are also lows.
These are the films that critics have deemed the worst in 36 Golden Globes winners' careers, including this year's winners such as Kieran Culkin, Sebastian Stan, Demi Moore, and Zoe SaldaΓ±a.
Moore won her first Golden Globe in January 2025, her first major acting award since making her film debut 44 years ago. Her win came for her role in "The Substance," a black comedy/body horror satire about what it means to be aging in Hollywood.Β
She has been nominated three times before: in 1991 for "Ghost" and twice in 1997 for acting inΒ and producing the TV movie "If These Walls Could Talk."
Her worst-rated movie by critics, "Blame It on Rio," is a somewhat bizarre rom-com in which Matthew (Michael Caine) and Victor (Joseph Bologna) are two best friends who bring their teenage daughters on a trip to Rio β but Matthew begins having an affair with Victor's daughter. Moore plays Matthew's daughter, Nikki.
Brody won his first Golden Globe in 2025 for starring in "The Brualist." He had previously been nominated in 2003 for "The Piano," but lost β both are critical hits.
Conversely, "Air Strike" has the rare 0% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The film is about the Japanese bombings of Chongqing during World War II. Brody is credited as a special appearance.
Stan was nominated for two Golden Globes this year, for lead actor in both a drama and a musical/comedy. While he lost the drama award, he won for his performance in the black comedy "A Different Man."
Thirteen years ago, he appeared in the horror film "The Apparition." In it, a group of college students (including Stan's character Ben) attempt to recreate the "Charles Experiment," which sees them stare at a drawing of a dead man named Charles to summon his spirit.
Farrell has been nominated for four Golden Globes, winning his first in 2009 for "In Bruges," his second in 2023 for "The Banshees of Inisherin," and his third in 2025 for "The Penguin."
One of his more recent films, "Artemis Fowl," has also proven to be his worst, according to critics. In it, he plays Artemis Fowl Sr., the missing father of the titular character.
Culkin has been nominated for six Golden Globes in his career, winning two back-to-back in 2024 and 2025 for "Succession" and "A Real Pain," respectively.
However, just a decade or so ago, he appeared in the lowest-rated film of his career: "Movie 43," a comedy anthology film. Culkin's segment is about a grocery store clerk, Neil, whose ex-girlfriend shows up and the two quickly begin having an explicit conversation β unbeknownst to them, though, Neil's mic is hooked up to the store's intercom. Neil's ex Veronica is played by Culkin's real-life ex Emma Stone. And speaking of Stone ...
Stone has been nominated for eight Golden Globes, winning two. Her first came in 2017 for "La La Land" in 2017, and her second came seven years later in 2024 for "Poor Things." Stone appeared at the Golden Globes in 2025 because she produced one of this year's nominees for best comedy, "A Real Pain."
And just like Culkin, the worst film of her career (according to critics) is "Movie 43."
Washington is one of the most decorated actors of all time, especially when it comes to the Globes. He's been nominated 11 times β most recently for "Gladiator II" β winning for "Glory" and "The Hurricane." Washington also received the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2016.
But critics say his worst film of all time is the 1990 buddy comedy "Heart Condition," in which he co-stars with Bob Hoskins. Washington plays a lawyer, Napoleon, while Hoskins plays a racist police sergeant named Jake. The two team up to solve a crime.
Bassett had only been nominated for one Golden Globe, which she took home for the 1994 Tina Turner biopic "What's Love Got to Do with It," until 2022, when she scored her second win for playing Queen Ramonda in "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever."
In 2015, Bassett starred in the worst-reviewed film in her career to date, "Survivor," a spy thriller in which she played the US ambassador to the United Kingdom, Maureen Crane.
Garfield won his first (and only, to date) Golden Globe in 2022 for his performance in "Tick, Tick...Boom!."
His other nominations came from "The Social Network," "Hacksaw Ridge," and "Under the Banner of Heaven."
Garfield's worst movie, according to critics, was only his second on-screen appearance, and he appeared alongside titans like Meryl Streep, Robert Redford, and Tom Cruise. In the film, he plays an apathetic college student who is channeled by a professor, played by Redford.
Hugh Grant β "Did You Hear About the Morgans?" (2009)
Grant has one win from seven nominations, for his performance in "Four Weddings and a Funeral." He was nominated in 2025 for his performance in "Heretic," but lost to Sebastian Stan.
In 2009, Grant co-starred with Sarah Jessica Parker in "Did You Hear About the Morgans?" as an estranged NYC couple who are forced to enter the witness protection program and move to Wyoming after witnessing a murder.
Chastain has eight Golden Globe nominations to her name β including one in 2023 for "George & Tammy" β but only one win: "Zero Dark Thirty" in 2013.
Only four years prior, though, Chastain appeared in a career low, the 2009 film "Stolen" alongside Jon Hamm and Josh Lucas. The film tells the story of two fathers connected by the kidnappings of their sons 50 years apart.
Cruise has three wins from seven Golden Globe nominations: He's won for "Born on the Fourth of July," "Jerry Maguire," and "Magnolia." In 2021, amid controversies with the Golden Globes and the Hollywood Foreign Press, Cruise returned all three awards.
Just two years before he'd win his first Globe, though, he appeared in the critically panned β but box-office smash β "Cocktail" as Brian Flanagan, an Army vet who turns to bartending to make ends meet.
Smart won her first Golden Globe in 2022 for her performance as legendary stand-up comedian Deborah Vance in "Hacks." Three years later, in 2025, she won again for "Hacks." She was also nominated in 2023 but lost.
She's had a decadeslong career in show business, including the 2018 flop "Life Itself," which had an ensemble cast of Smart, Mandy Patinkin, Oscar Isaac, Olivia Wilde, Antonio Banderas, Olivia Cooke, and Annette Bening. The film spans multiple generations, families, and confusing plotlines.
That same year, he appeared in "Movie 43," a film comprised of multiple short segments. In his, he plays a character who goes on a date with Kate Winslet's character, and he has a rather unfortunate appendage growing from his chin.
Blanchett has won four times: for "Elizabeth," "I'm Not There," "Blue Jasmine," and most recently, for "TΓ‘r." She's been nominated an additional nine times, most recently for "Disclaimer."
However,Β critics say her worst film was 2024's "Borderlands," an absolutely cursed video-game adaptation that also fell totally flat with fans and at the box office. Blanchett led the film as Lilith, a bounty hunter.
Egerton's first win was alsoΒ his first nomination β he won for his performance as Elton John in 2019's "Rocketman." He was nominated again in 2022 for his work on the Apple TV+ series "Black Bird."Β
These both were a rebound from a career low. He'd appeared as the antagonistic tennis pro Dean in "Billionaire Boys Club" in 2018.
In 2022, Williams secured her seventh nomination for her performance in Steven Spielberg's semi-autobiographical film "The Fabelmans." From those seven, she has two wins, for "My Week with Marilyn" and "Fosse/Verdon."
Just three years after her first nomination for 2005's "Brokeback Mountain," she starred in her worst-review film, "Deception," a thriller co-starring Hugh Jackman and Ewan McGregor. The film is basically a B-list "Eyes Wide Shut," in which McGregor's character gets involved in a mysterious underground sex club that Williams is a part of.
Pitt was nominated for his eighth Golden Globe in 2022 for "Babylon," 28 years after his first nomination for "Legends of the Fall." He secured his first win the next year for "12 Monkeys." It took him another 23 years to win again, this time for "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood," in 2019.
While 2019 was a peak, the nadir of his career has to be his appearance in "Cool World" as Frank, a detective transported into a comic book world.
Hudson also won a Globe on her first try in 2006 for her role as Effie White in "Dreamgirls," which was also her acting debut; an auspicious start.
Her worst film, though, came just last year β the sci-fi thriller "Breathe" which takes place on an Earth where the atmosphere has become unbreathable. Hudson plays Maya, the film's protagonist, who is constantly on the hunt for an oxygen machine and will stop at nothing to get it.
Bardem has been nominated for six Golden Globes overall, winning one for "No Country for Old Men." Most recently, he was nominated for "Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story."
In 2016, Bardem co-starred with Charlize Theron in "The Last Face," directed by her boyfriend at the time, Sean Penn. Theron and Bardem played doctors in Liberia who fall in love while dealing with their dangerous circumstances. However, critics didn't think much of it, as shown by its low score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Pike proved that the third time's the charm in 2021, winning her first Golden Globe on her third nomination. After receiving nods for "Gone Girl" and "A Private War," she won for her performance in "I Care a Lot." She was nominated again for her performance in "Saltburn" in 2024, but didn't win.
On the flip side, the worst film in her career according to critics is 2015's "Return to Sender," a psychological thriller about a surgical nurse, Miranda (Pike), striking up a friendship with her rapist while he's in jail.
Kaluuya scored his first Golden Globe win in 2021 for his performance as Fred Hampton in "Judas and the Black Messiah." He was also nominated for "Get Out."
But back in 2010, fresh off his run on "Skins," Kaluuya appeared in the internet thriller "Chatroom," which followed a group of teens who meet online and encourage each other's bad behavior.
Hudson was nominated for her second Golden Globe in 2021 for the controversial film "Music," but lost to Rosamund Pike. She won her first in 2001 for her role as Penny Lane in "Almost Famous."
She also starred in the 2011 film "A Little Bit of Heaven" as Marley, a woman who learns she has terminal cancer and struggles to come to terms with it, while also being granted three wishes.
Close has been nominated for 16 Golden Globes, winning three for her performances in "The Lion in Winter," "Damages," and "The Wife." She was most recently nominated for "Hillbilly Elegy," but she lost to Jodie Foster.
However, her worst film, according to critics, was 1985's "Maxie," in which she plays the titular character, the spirit of a would-be '20s film star who possesses a normal woman, Jan, so she can fulfill her destiny as a film star.
Ronan won her first and only Golden Globe (thus far) in 2018 for "Lady Bird," though she has three other nods to her name.
In 2013, she appeared in the film adaptation of "Twilight" author Stephenie Meyer's otherΒ series, "The Host," as the main character Melanie, who gets taken over by a parasite named Wanderer.
Michael Douglas β "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt" (2009)
Douglas has been nominated for 14 Golden Globes, and has won five β he won for producing "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," one for producing "Romancing the Stone," and others for his performances in "Wall Street," "Behind the Candelabra," and "The Kominsky Method." He also received the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2004.
But critics say his worst film is the 2009 crime thriller "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt," in which he plays a sketchy (but successful) lawyer who is embroiled in a scandal when a journalist tries to set him up.
Octavia Spencer β "The Divergent Series: Allegiant" (2016)
Spencer has been nominated for three Golden Globes, winning one in 2012 for her breakthrough performance in "The Help."
After that, she was cast in the "Divergent" series, one of the many dystopian film series that was touted as the next "Hunger Games," as Johanna, a member of the "Amity" faction. She appeared in both "Insurgent" and "Allegiant," which has a critics score of just 11%.
Downey has received five Golden Globes noms in his career and has won three awards: one for his performance on the TV series "Ally McBeal" in 2001, a second for his performance as the iconic detective in "Sherlock Holmes" in 2010, and a third in 2024 for playing Lewis Strauss in "Oppenheimer." He also won a special award as part of the ensemble cast of "Short Cuts."
One of the worst movies of his career, though, is "Johnny Be Good" in which he appeared as Leo, the best friend of the main character Johnny Walker, who is trying to decide where to play college football.
Ryder has won one Golden Globe from three nominations, for her performance in "The Age of Innocence."
Seven years later, Ryder starred in the horror film "Lost Souls" as Maya, a member of a group of people who believe that Satan intends to inhabit a human being.
It took Gosling five tries to finally take home a Golden Globe, which he did for 2017's "La La Land." He received another nomination in 2023 for "Barbie."
Three years before he'd earn his first Golden Globe nomination for "Lars and the Real Girl" in 2008, he starred in 2005's "Stay" as Henry Letham, a car crash survivor who is slowly losing his grip on reality.
Awkwafina β "Breaking News in Yuba County" (2021)
Awkwafina won her first Golden Globe for her breakthrough performance in "The Farewell" in 2020. It was also her first nomination.
Just a year later, she'd already gotten her worst film out of the way: 2021's "Breaking News in Yuba County," in which she played Mina, an enforcer for money launderers.
Sigourney Weaver β "The Cold Light of Day" (2012)
Weaver has two Golden Globe wins under her belt from seven nominations. She won for her portrayal of Dian Fossey in "Gorillas in the Mist" and for playing the villainous boss Katharine in "Working Girl."
A career low for Weaver is 2012's action thriller "The Cold Light of Day," in which she plays the duplicitous CIA handler of Henry Cavill's character Will.
Sam Rockwell β "Gentlemen Broncos" (2009) and "Mute" (2018) (tie)
Rockwell's been nominated for three Golden Globes, winning one for his performance in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri."
Almost a decade prior, he appeared in "Gentlemen Broncos," a film about a would-be author named Benjamin Purvis, who is trying to write a book called "Yeast Lords." Rockwell plays the main character of the book, Bronco (later Brutus).
The same year he won for "Billboards" in 2018, he also appeared in the tech-noir film "Mute," in which he has an uncredited cameo as Sam Bell, his character from "Mute's" predecessor, "Moon."
Carrey has been nominated for eight Golden Globes, winning twice in back-to-back years β in 1999 for "The Truman Show" and 2000 for "Man on the Moon."
Three years before he'd receive his seventh acting nom for "Kidding," Carrey appeared in "Dark Crimes" (also known as "True Crimes"), a film based on the real story of Polish convicted murderer Krystian Bala, per The New Yorker.Β Carrey plays Tadek, a detective investigating a murder.
Felicity Huffman β "Christmas with the Kranks" (2004)
Huffman has been nominated for seven Golden Globes, mainly for her television work, but her only win to date is for her performance in the film "Transamerica" in 2005.
The year prior, she had a small role in "Christmas with the Kranks" as one of the main character's friends, Mary.
We ranked his films based on Rotten Tomatoes scores, including "Licorice Pizza" and "The Hangover."
The highest-rated film Cooper has ever starred in is "Avengers: Endgame."
Cooper is one of the most highly decorated actors of his generation, with 12 Academy Award nominations β though no wins β and billions of dollars at the box office under his belt.
However, not all of his films have been highly regarded by critics. For every classic like "American Hustle" or "Guardians of the Galaxy," there are less-regarded films like "Case 39" and "All About Steve."
These are the best and worst films Cooper has starred in, according to Rotten Tomatoes.
These are the worst films of Cooper's career, according to critics.
After Adam, a chef played by Cooper, flames out at his high-end Parisian restaurant due to drug use and erratic behavior, he moves to New Orleans to get sober, and then to London to try to rebuild his career.
"Barreling his way through scene after scene of sweary, shouty kitchen violence, the three-time Oscar nominee excels where the screenplay, script (and everything else) doesn't," wrote One Room with a View's Alex Flood.
The film's main story is actually a reading of a novel written by Clayton Hammond (Dennis Quaid). Hammond's protagonist is Rory (Cooper), a struggling author who secretly passes off a manuscript he found as his own.
According to Chicago Reader's Drew Hunt, "The premise is ambitious β if not a little hokey β but the meager themes of ephemeral authorship and constructed realities aren't exactly revelatory."
When 35-year-old Tripp (Matthew McConaughey) won't move out of his parents' home, they devise a plan to hire Paula (Sarah Jessica Parker), who specializes in getting immature men to get their own places. Predictably, they fall in love. Cooper plays one of Tripp's friends, who has a similarly arrested development.
"A strange idea for a romantic comedy results in quite a strange film. Not much to like about the main plot, but some fun to be had on the fringes," writes the Herald Sun's Leigh Paatsch.
According to the Austin Chronicle's Marc Savlov, the film is "neither so awful as to be enjoyable nor eerily artful enough to be anything other than a snoozy also-ran."
Four years after the events of the first "Hangover" film, the crew heads back to Las Vegas after their friend Doug (Justin Bartha) is kidnapped, due to their recklessness in the first film and their relationship with Chow, a criminal played by Ken Jeong. The trio of Alan (Zach Galifianakis), Stu (Ed Helms), and Phil (Cooper) must once again team up to solve the mystery.
"If you loved 'The Hangover' but loathed its nastier, cruder, non-hilarious sequel β apart from that quite amusing monkey β you'd be right to approach this threequel with caution," wrote Metro's Larushka Ivan-Zadeh.
Cooper plays Brian, a military contractor, who returns to Hawaii on behalf of a billionaire trying to turn local land into a space center. He also reunites with his ex-girlfriend and her new husband and meets a new woman, Allison (Emma Stone), who is in the Air Force.
"Half the time while watching 'Aloha,' I had no clue what was going on. Not so much the plot β although I was admittedly a bit muddled on that, too β but why anyone acted the way they did," wrote Max Weiss of Baltimore Magazine.
The Garry Marshall film follows multiple intersecting plots across Valentine's Day, including Holden (Cooper) and Katherine (Julia Roberts), two strangers who bond while sitting next to each other on a plane. Holden is traveling to visit his boyfriend, and Katherine is briefly returning home to visit her son, as she is in the military and rarely gets to come home.
"A brutal St Valentine's Day massacre of comedy, of love, of believable human emotion," wrote The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw.
Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence costar as George and Serena, a married couple living in Depression-era North Carolina, whose schemes, jealousy, and resentment catch up to them in a tragic fashion. The film is based on the 2008 novel of the same name and is the lowest-rated film costarring Cooper and Lawrence.
According to Buzzfeed's Alison Willmore, the film is "an odd misfire from two actors at the peak of their game, but a misfire nonetheless."
Mary, a quirky yet lonely crossword puzzle writer played by Sandra Bullock, stalks Steve (Cooper), a cameraman for a local news station, around the country after going on a date that she perceived as perfect β but for him, not so much. Along the way, Mary makes friends and becomes more confident in herself.
"On paper, a crazy romcom starring Sandra Bullock and Bradley Cooper could only be a good thing. Wrong," wrote Simon Braund for Empire Magazine.
This mockumentary follows Dax Shepard as he tries to pivot from comedy to action star by making a martial arts film called "Brother's Justice." He (unsuccessfully) attempts to get Cooper to costar in the film with him.
"Reeks of a throwaway joke that should have been left to die; even at a mere 80 minutes, this halfhearted Tinseltown satire still feels padded," wrote Time Out's Eric Hynes.
And now for the best films of Cooper's career.
Between his Marvel career, "A Star Is Born," and his collaborations with directors David O. Russell and Paul Thomas Anderson, Cooper has been in his fair share of new classics.
Here's what the high points of his career are, according to critics.
Cooper returned to voice Rocket, a raccoon, for what may be the final time in "Vol. 3," which lets viewers learn about Rocket's tragic past, how he was created by a mad scientist playing god named the High Evolutionary (Chukwudi Iwuji), and how he has truly found a new family.
ScreenCrush's Matt Singer wrote that the film "completes Rocket's transformation from a footnote to one of Marvel's greatest characters."
A few months after the events of the first "Guardians" film, this installment sees the crew travel across the universe to meet Peter Quill's (Chris Pratt) father and, once again, save the galaxy.
According to David Sims of The Atlantic, "In Marvel lingo, 'Guardians 2' feels like a great six-issue arc, the kind of storytelling that used to be the backbone of superhero comics."
The Guardians of the Galaxy meet the Avengers in 2018's "Avengers: Infinity War," in which Rocket teams up with Thor (Chris Hemsworth) on his quest to construct a weapon that can kill Thanos.
Simran Hans of The Observer wrote, "This chaotic but surprisingly nimble installment, directed by Anthony and Joe Russo, brings together an eye-popping ensemble cast of A-listers (imagine the table read!) and pushes them into playful new configurations."
Paul Thomas Anderson's "Licorice Pizza" follows 15-year-old Gary (Cooper Hoffman) and the object of his affection, 25-year-old Alana (Alana Haim), as they meander their way through '70s San Fernando Valley. Cooper pops in for a couple of scenes towards the end in a truly electrifying performance as the real-life movie producer and ex-boyfriend of Barbra Streisand, Jon Peters.
"The things in 'Licorice Pizza' that are so good, like the performances from Haim and Hoffman and Cooper and the period fidelity, make you wish that the entire movie was just as good," wrote Mark Feeney of The Boston Globe.
Like the three "Star Is Born" films that preceded it, the story follows a young up-and-coming singer/actress, played by Lady Gaga, and her relationship with an aging star, played by Cooper, dealing with the pressures of fame and addiction, and what it means to be truly authentic.
This was also Cooper's directorial debut.
"At its huge, pulsating heart this is a story about lovers desperately trying to save one another β from the loss of integrity in an industry that disdains it and from self-destructive impulses with roots too old and deep to be touched," wrote Matthew Norman of The London Evening Standard.
Cooper plays Pat, a man with bipolar disorder who leaves a mental health facility after an eight-month stay, while Lawrence plays Tiffany, a young widow with an unspecified mood disorder. The two connect after they meet at a dinner at Tiffany's sister's house, and the film follows their relationship as it grows throughout a football season.
"It's a rom-com that succeeds in revitalizing that discredited genre where so many others have failed, injecting it with the grit and emotion of realist drama rather than with amped-up whimsy or social satire or montages of people walking on the beach," wrote Andrew O'Hehir of Salon.
Five criminals β Gamora, Peter Quill, Drax, Groot, and Rocket played by Zoe SaldaΓ±a, Chris Pratt, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, and Cooper β come together to keep a destructive stone out of the wrong hands and become a family along the way.
According to Richard Lawson of Vanity Fair, "'Guardians' bounces with the energy of pure invention."
Irving and Evelyn (Christian Bale and Amy Adams) are con artists who devise a scheme with Richie (Cooper), an FBI agent, to help keep themselves out of prison and implicate the mayor of Camden, Carmine Polito (Jeremy Renner), in illegal activities. The film is based on the actual 1970s FBI Abscam sting operation.
"It's a sly film that slips through your fingers, leaving the glitter of great performances, but one you'll be hustling to watch again," wrote Metro's Larushka Ivan-Zadeh.
After the tragic events of "Infinity War," the Avengers work together to bring back everyone they've lost in the best-reviewed movie of Cooper's career.
"The only complaint about 'Avengers: Endgame' is that it raises the bar so high that there may well never be a superhero movie to match it," wrote The London Evening Standard's Matthew Norman.
Netflix released dozens of original movies last year, both good and bad.
While some Netflix originals may be getting Oscar buzz, not all of them can be great.
"Mother of the Bride," "Rebel Moon," and "Uglies" are some of the streamer's worst 2024 releases.
Since Netflix released its first original film 10 years ago, it's become a giant studio, releasing hundreds of films that have been shown in millions of homes worldwide and generating billions of dollars in revenue.
But even though the streaming service is, by all accounts, a success, that doesn't mean it only releases films that are loved by critics. In fact, these movies were almost universally panned by critics when they were released in 2024.
We used Rotten Tomatoes to determine the worst original movies released by Netflix last year. Here were the 15 lowest-ranked films.
"The Union," released in August, stars Mark Wahlberg as Mike McKenna, a regular guy working in construction who is recruited into a secret organization known as The Union by his ex-high school sweetheart Roxanne, played by Halle Berry.
"'The Union' defies logic to such an extent that no amount of suspension of disbelief could ever justify it," wrote Newsday's Robert Levin.
In June, Nicole Kidman began her summer of Netflix domination with "A Family Affair," in which she stars as a widowed mother who begins a secret relationship with mega-movie star Chris Cole, played by Zac Efron. The only catch? Her daughter Zara (Joey King) is Chris' assistant whom he constantly takes advantage of.
"This fantasy where everyone gets what they want is made awkward and uncomfortable by the lack of chemistry between its stars," wrote Emily Zemler for the Observer.
"Our Little Secret" is one of this year's holiday offerings released by Netflix. In this one, Lindsay Lohan plays Avery, and Ian Harding plays Logan, two exes who are thrown back together after 10 years when they realize their respective significant others are siblings. When Avery convinces Logan to pretend they've never met, things get messy.
"A typically formulaic seasonal sugar rush that's only blandly mediocre, rather than so-bad-it's-good. But Lindsay Lohan's romcom-dominance cannot be denied," wrote Empire's John Nugent.
You might remember "The Deliverance," which was released in August, when a few clips of Glenn Close's performance went viral online.
"The Deliverance," directed by Lee Daniels, stars Andra Day as Ebony, a woman struggling to balance taking care of her sick mother, Alberta (Close), and keeping her drinking in check to keep custody of her three kids. Add in some demonic possession, and you've got a movie that critics didn't love.
"With every over-the-top line of dialogue and tone-deaf gamble, 'The Deliverance' inches closer to becoming a parody of itself," wrote Jacob Oller for the AV Club.
"Mary" is a biblical epic that tells the story of Mary (Jesus' mother) from the time of her own miraculous birth all the way through the presentation of Jesus at the temple in Jerusalem. It was released in December and stars Noa Cohen as Mary, Ido Tako as Joseph, and none other than Anthony Hopkins as King Herod.
"What we get here is no more real than a Hallmark card, except that it's a different kind of Hallmark card, one in which Mary has to jump off a roof to escape a burning building and Joseph gets into sword fights," wrote The San Francisco Chronicle's Mick LaSalle.
"Lift," released in January, stars Kevin Hart as Cyrus, a mastermind thief who is forced to team up with his ex Abby (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), an Interpol agent, to plan a giant heist on a plane while it's in the air to clear his name.
"The one saving grace of the many shenanigans in 'Lift' is that everything is so confusing that we don't get the chance to realize how punishingly implausible it all is," wrote Bilge Ebiri for Vulture.
The August release "Incoming" is a simple story of a group of friends who are beginning their freshman year of high school, and attend their very first high school party β¦ and a lot goes down, both good and bad.
"Some of the things people do in the cheerfully gross movie range from morally questionable to flat-out criminal," wrote Richard Roeper for the Chicago Sun-Times.
In October's "Time Cut," "Outer Banks" star Madison Bailey plays Lucy, a teenager whose older sister Summer (Antonia Gentry) was brutally murdered by a serial killer known as the Sweetly Slasher 21 years prior, in 2003.
Lucy accidentally discovers a time machine that sends her back to 2003, just two days before Summer β whom she never met β is murdered. Lucy decides to try to change her fate by identifying the Slasher and stopping him before it's too late.
"The time travel stuff is mined for funny jokes for a few minutes and then the film shows zero interest in all the worms it's uncanned. It's a whole lot of 'what ifs' and not a lot of 'then whats,'" wrote The Wrap's William Bibbiani.
"Trigger Warning" was star Jessica Alba's first film in five years β unfortunately, the movie, released in June, did not live up to the hype. In it, she plays a Special Forces agent who is forced to return home when her father dies under mysterious circumstances. When she discovers how organized crime has taken over her town, she decides to intervene.
"At some point along the way, the powers that be appear to have decided that 'Trigger Warning' didn't have to be good, it just had to be something that people might succumb to on a Friday night when they don't have the energy to seek out something better," wrote David Ehrlich for IndieWire.
In April, the sequel to 2017's "Woody Woodpecker" dropped on Netflix. This time, Woody (an animated woodpecker voiced by Eric Bauza) goes to Camp Woo Hoo and meets new friends (all humans), but predictably causes a little trip too.
Charles Solomon of NPR called the film "excruciating."
"Atlas," which was released in May, has an all-star cast of Jennifer Lopez, Sterling K. Brown, and Simu Liu, but that didn't stop critics from tearing it apart.
"Atlas" takes place in a dystopian future where humans and AI have been fighting for years. Lopez plays Atlas, our hero who is dedicated to stopping the AI terrorist Harland (Liu), with whom she has a personal relationship.
"J. Lo may be fighting for the very existence of the human race, but there's nothing at stake between you and the screen," wrote Slate's Sam Adams.
"Mea Culpa," released in February, was directed by Tyler Perry and stars Kelly Rowland as Mea Harper, a defense attorney who takes on the defense of Zyair Mallory (Trevante Rhodes), who was charged with murdering his girlfriend. Making things more complicated? Mea's brother-in-law Ray (Nick Sagar) is prosecuting the case.
"While it might start out as an erotic thriller, it slows down to a damp relationship drama before meandering its way to a climax hinged on head-scratching twists that make little to zero sense," wrote Benjamin Lee for The Guardian.
Based on the beloved YA series of the same name, "Uglies" stars Joey King as Tally, a 15-year-old girl living in a society in which everyone, on their 16th birthdays, undergoes surgery to make them "pretty." But while everyone seems more than happy to let things continue as they are, Tally discovers that there are dark secrets about her life, her family, and her friends. It was released in September.
"Despite a committed young cast, director McG's unexciting franchise-starter doesn't say anything all that meaningful about inner beauty and warped beauty standards," wrote Variety's Tomris Laffly.
"Scargiver," released in April, picks up where the first installment leaves off, with Kora (Sofia Boutella), rallying rebels from across the universe to go up against the tyrannical Imperium.
"Turn away from your screens. Go for a walk. Start your own wheat-threshing collective. Anything but suffer through this," wrote David Fear for Rolling Stone.
Netflix's worst movie of 2024, according to critics, was released in May and stars Brooke Shields, Miranda Cosgrove, Benjamin Bratt, Sean Teale, and Chad Michael Murray.
In the film, social-media influencer Emma (Cosgrove) shocks her mother, Lana (Shields), by announcing she's getting married in Thailand to RJ (Teale), a man Lana has never even heard of, let alone met. When Lana makes her way to the nuptials, she discovers that RJ's father is Will (Bratt), a man who shattered her heart in college and hasn't seen since.
"I won't go so far as to say that 'Mother of the Bride' feels like an AI creation but it does feel at least a little stitched together from pieces of other romantic comedies of varying quality," wrote Lindsey Behr for the Associated Press.
There have been 85 theatrically released movies based on a Marvel comic property to date.
From "Howard the Duck" to "Kraven the Hunter," the quality has ebbed and flowed.
Here's how all the Marvel movies β so far β compare.
It's been 38 years since audiences saw their very first theatrical movie based on a Marvel comic β would you believe that 1986's "Howard the Duck" was the first major motion picture based on a character from Marvel?
Since that inauspicious start, Marvel has become one of the most recognizable and successful brands in the movie business. The Marvel Cinematic Universe alone has grossed over $30 billion worldwide, and that's not including mega-hits like "X-Men," "Men in Black," or the "Spider-Verse" films.
While most of these movies made significant chunks of change at the box office, not all were beloved by critics. Here's how each film was received by critics, from worst to best, according to Rotten Tomatoes.
"Fantastic Four" is the second on-screen iteration of the famed Marvel family consisting of Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic (Miles Teller), his love interest Sue Storm/Invisible Woman (Kate Mara), her brother Johnny Storm/Human Torch (Michael B. Jordan), and their friend Ben Grimm/The Thing (Jamie Bell).
After they travel to a different dimension and acquire fantastic, if gruesome, powers, they face off against Doctor Doom, played by Toby Kebbell, a former friend turned homicidal maniac.
"A poorly constructed, ineptly executed, flatfooted piece of Branded Product that plays as though it were written by a piece of software fed every superhero movie script to date and instructed to synthesize them," wrote Flavorwire's Jason Bailey.
After dying at the end of "Daredevil," Elektra, played by Jennifer Garner, is revived by her mentor, Stick, to become a force for good. Eventually, she abandons this lifestyle and becomes a contract killer until an evil organization known as The Hand attempts to kill her.
Tim Robey of The Telegraph called the film "Studio dross of the lowest grade."
The first Marvel film of 2024 (though not part of the MCU) was "Madame Web," which stars Dakota Johnson as Cassandra Webb, a paramedic living in New York City who somehow gains clairvoyance. She teams up with three young women β Julia (Sydney Sweeney), Anya (Isabela Merced), and Mattie (Celeste O'Connor) β who each have spider-powers in their future to take down a mysterious foe, Ezekiel Sims (Tahar Rahim).
"Even Johnson has her limits, and 'Madame Web' blows so far past them that you can practically guess which scenes were shot last based on the degree to which its star has given up," wrote Allison Wilmore for Vulture.
As you might've guessed from the title, Howard is a duck. Specifically, a resident of the planet Duckworld, which is like Earth, but inhabited by ducks. When Howard finds himself on Earth in the state of Ohio, he must team up with a woman, Beverly Switzler (Lea Thompson) to try and get home.
"Sound the horns, light the speakers, and cue the marching band, because 'Howard the Duck' is here ... and bad movie historians could not ask for a more mallard-droit venture than this," wrote Michael Burkett of the Orange County Register.
In "Morbius," Jared Leto stars as Dr. Michael Morbius, a highly intelligent doctor dying from a rare blood disease. In his quest to find a cure, he accidentally turns himself into a "living vampire," a being with enhanced strength, sonar capabilities, a psychic connection with bats ... and the unending desire to drink blood.
"'Morbius,' at best, will be remembered as the latest effort on Sony's part to make its nascent Sinister Six franchise happen. And, like 'fetch,' it's hard to see that happening," wrote Liz Shannon Miller of Consequence.
What seems to be the final film in Sony's ill-advised SSU (Sony's Spider-Man Universe) is "Kraven the Hunter," which stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the titular Kraven. In the film, Kraven works to free his brother Dmitri (Fred Hechinger) from the villainous Rhino (Alessandro Nivola).
"'Kraven the Hunter' is a terrible movie, but you almost feel sorry for it," wrote Peter Howell of The Toronto Star.
Nicolas Cage returns as stuntman-turned-flaming-skeleton Johnny Blaze, who has been in hiding since the events of the first film. When he finds out that the devil himself has fathered a child and is planning to raise him, he rides again as the demonic Ghost Rider in exchange for getting his soul back.
"Cage appears to find his role as this second-tier Marvel Comics antihero alternately silly, tremendously fun, and the means to a decent paycheck for not all that much work," wrote the Austin Chronicle's Marc Savlov.
Sophie Turner plays Jean Grey, who begins to lose control of her psychic abilities, unleashing what's called the "Phoenix Force." The rest of her mutant teammates and some enemies assemble to try to help Jean control her powers, leading to tragedy.
"Outgunned on the action front by box-office rivals and too nervous to tell a more intimate story, 'Dark Phoenix' leaves the franchise running on empty," wrote Michael Hale of Sight & Sound.
Yes, the "Men in Black" franchise is based on the Malibu Comics run of the same name. Malibu was then acquired by Marvel in 1994.
The 2019 stand-alone sequel sees Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson take over for Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, playing two new agents, Agent H and Agent M, who are paired up in London to uncover a mole within the agency.
"For all its oddball aliens and fantastical technology, the most unbelievable thing about 'Men in Black: International' is just how thoroughly it wastes Tessa Thompson and Chris Hemsworth," wrote Mashable's Angie Han.
Until Mahershala Ali's "Blade" film is released, Wesley Snipes will be the only big-screen version of Blade, a human-vampire hybrid who has dedicated himself to hunting vampires. In the last film of the trilogy, Blade, played by Wesley Snipes, teams up with two new vampire hunters (Ryan Reynolds' Hannibal King and Jessica Biel's Abigail Whistler) to defeat Dracula.
"This has all the appeal of reheated, congealed blood," wrote Time Out's Nigel Floyd.
Not long after "Howard the Duck," the next Marvel movie was released: "The Punisher." In it, Lundgren plays Frank Castle, a presumed-dead former detective whose family was blown up by a car bomb placed by the Mafia. However, Castle survived the bombing and has now dedicated his life to getting revenge on everyone involved.
This film never got a theatrical release in the US, but it was released internationally, thus qualifying it for this list.
Time Out's Suzi Feay called the film "destructive, reprehensible, and marvelous fun."
Years before he became Captain America, Chris Evans took on the role of Johnny Storm, better known as the Human Torch, in "Fantastic Four." He was joined by Jessica Alba as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Ioan Gruffudd as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic, and Michael Chiklis as Ben Grimm/The Thing.
Instead of traveling to a parallel dimension, this version of the Fantastic Four's origin story sees them interact with a cosmic cloud in space, giving them their powers. But, like in the reboot, their primary nemesis is Doctor Doom, this time a former classmate of Reed and Sue's, played by Julian McMahon.
On the AV Club, Keith Phipps simply called the movie "A garish mediocrity."
In "Ghost Rider," viewers watch as Cage's Johnny Blaze descends into hell as the literal devil's bounty hunter, a power he received after trading his soul to spare his father's life. Now, when he's around an evil spirit, he becomes the Ghost Rider, a flaming skull demon who rides a motorcycle. He gets into a race against the son of a demon to prevent him from unleashing hell on Earth.
"Nic Cage seems comfortable in the role of the flaming-skulled biker, but the plot holes are too deep even for his Herbie-like arachnid motorcycle to negotiate," wrote David Jenkins for Time Out.
"The Punisher" stars Thomas Jane as Frank Castle, a former FBI agent whose entire family is murdered after his cover is blown by the vengeful Saint crime family, the head of which is played by John Travolta. Frank then dedicates his entire existence to getting revenge on those who were involved in the death of his wife and children.
"A comic-book action movie with an unpleasant edge," wrote Nev Pierce for the BBC.
"War Zone" saw its titular role re-cast with Ray Stevenson, whose version of Frank is now five years into his career as the vigilante the Punisher. This time, Frank goes up against one of his most famous adversaries in the comics, Jigsaw (played by Dominic West), while evading the police, who have created a "Punisher Task Force" dedicated to bringing him in.
"You couldn't call it shoddy, exactly, and the actors take it painfully seriously; it's just dispiriting to see all this endeavor in the service of something so humorless and disgusting," wrote Andrew Pulver of The Guardian.
"Not since 'Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance' has a Marvel Comics adaptation centered on such a splendidly weird lead performance," wrote the Chicago Reader's Ben Sachs.
"Kick-Ass" and its sequel are based on the series of the same name, which was initially published by the Marvel imprint Icon Comics. It has since moved to Image Comics, the third-largest comics brand behind Marvel and DC.
Specifically, "Kick-Ass 2" reunites viewers with the vigilante duo of Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Dave Lizewski/Kick-Ass and ChloΓ« Grace Moretz as Mindy Macready/Hit-Girl as they once again face off against Christopher Mintz-Plasse's Chris D'Amico, who has an NSFW alter ego.
"Although the film has the cheap veneer of female empowerment that comes from having a girl assassin, it is rotten with misogyny," Jenny McCartney for The Telegraph.
Now that Disney officially owns Fox, the next X-Men movie we get will likely be an entirely different continuity. For a franchise with high highs and low lows, it's just unfortunate that thisΒ was the last hurrah.
"New Mutants" stars Maisie Williams, Anya Taylor-Joy, Charlie Heaton, Blu Hunt, Henry Zaga, and Adam Beach as a group of teenage mutants living in a hospital. They were all sent there after causing horrible accidents (or even deaths) with their powers, only to discover that things at the hospital are not what they seem.
"The concept behind 'The New Mutants' is a solid, intriguing one that could've reinvigorated the familiar origin superhero story. Instead, Boone opts for genericism, ending the 'X-Men' franchise with an angsty-teen whimper," wrote Meagan Navarro for Bloody Disgusting.
66 (tie). "Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer" (2007)
The cast from the first film all returns, joined by Doug Jones and Laurence Fishburne, who provide the physical form and voice, respectively, of the Silver Surfer, a herald from outer space who serves to warn a planet of its incoming destruction at the hands of the planet-killing Galactus.
"An off-brand superhero movie, the cinematic equivalent of one of those generic breakfast cereals with a badly drawn squirrel for a mascot," wrote Slate's Dana Stevens.
The 2009 film focuses on Logan, or Wolverine, as played by Hugh Jackman, and what his life was like before he became the X-Man that we knew and loved in the three previous movies. It follows him from the Civil War to the 1970s.
"'Wolverine' starts with a roar before sliding into a chaotic, preachy mess," wrote The Irish Times' Donald Clarke.
After the events of the first film, Agent K (Tommy Lee Jones) has retired and subsequently had his memory wiped of all things alien, but Agent J (Will Smith) drags him back into duty to confront their biggest threat yet.
"This is effective button-pushing sci-fi entertainment, but you won't need to be neuralized to forget it," wrote Andy Jacobs for the BBC.
"Venom: The Last Dance" is exactly what it sounds like: a trilogy-capping film. It stars Tom Hardy as both the human reporter Eddie Brock and his alien symbiote best frenemy, Venom. In "Last Dance," Eddie and Venom must make difficult decisions regarding their relationship and the safety of the planet.
"At least the film ends with a fittingly poignant/ridiculous tribute to the greatest love story ever told about a man and his symbiotic alien goo," wrote Indiewire's David Ehrlich.
"The King's Man" is based on the Icon Comics series "Kingsman" (originally titled "The Secret Service"), telling the story of the very first members of the Kingsman, including Ralph Fiennes' Orlando Oxford, his son Conrad (played by Harris Dickinson), a maid/spy Polly (played by Gemma Arterton), a butler/spy Shola (played by Djimon Honsou), and more as they go up against Russian sorcerer Rasputin, as played by Rhys Ifans.
"It is downright diabolical for Vaughn to make audiences even imagine a sequel to this unnecessary prequel simply to see if can be as outlandish as promised," wrote the Los Angeles Times' Mark Olsen.
Affleck plays Matt Murdock, a blind lawyer with preternaturally sensitive senses and a healthy helping of Catholic guilt who decides to save Hell's Kitchen by becoming Daredevil, the Man Without Fear.
He's joined by Jennifer Garner as Elektra, an assassin with a heart, and Jon Favreau as Foggy Nelson, his best friend and fellow lawyer. They go up against the crime boss Wilson Fisk, aka Kingpin, played by Michael Clarke Duncan, and the unstable assassin Bullseye, played by Colin Farrell.
Joe Morganstern of The Wall Street Journal wrote, "It isn't a great film, or even a greatly original one. Still, it has many grace notes, and interesting oddities."
It's been a tough time for the MCU over the last couple of years, and "Quantumania" seems to be a nadir for the long-running franchise.
In this film, Ant-Man (or Scott Lang), played by Paul Rudd, travels to the microscopic Quantum Realm to save his daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton), who was sucked in there by a mysterious device. Along for the ride are his girlfriend Hope/The Wasp (Evangeline Lilly), her mom Janet (Michelle Pfeiffer), her dad Hank (Michael Douglas), and various other citizens of this new plane of existence.
"Apocalypse" is the ninth "X-Men" film overall, and the third installment in the prequel trilogy that stars James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, and Nicholas Hoult as younger versions of mutants from the original three films.
In "Apocalypse," the team must unite to defeat the world's first mutant, En Sabah Nur, or Apocalypse, as he tries to remake the world when he is awoken after thousands of years.
"This is one of the big dangers for the extended franchise model of filmmaking, that characters and series will be kept alive not because there's a story to tell, but because the franchise must be kept alive," wrote Peter Suderman for Vox.
"Zhao ultimately robs the artist's comic of its sweep by constantly turning a space opera into a repetitive character drama," wrote Ed Gonzalez for Slant Magazine.
Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone reunite as Peter Parker, aka Spider-Man, and his doomed girlfriend Gwen Stacy, in this over-stuffed sequel that sees Peter going up against Jamie Foxx's Electro, Dane DeHaan's Green Goblin, and Paul Giamatti's Rhino.
"Over-stuffed with plot and consequently struggles to invest the audience in any of it, since there's so much to get through and so many future films and spin-offs to set up," wrote The Atlantic's David Sims.
"The Golden Circle" stars Taron Egerton once again as Eggsy, a newly minted member of the secret spy organization the Kingsman. After many of its members are wiped out, Eggsy and his colleague Merlin (Mark Strong), travel to the US and meet their American equivalents, the Statesman.
David Edelstein simply wrote, "What a mess it is" in his review for Vulture.
"The Last Stand" is another interpretation of the "Dark Phoenix Saga," this time focusing on Famke Janssen's version of Jean Grey after she's resurrected following her death in "X2." Like the 2019 version of the story, Jean is unable to control her powers and kills people that she cares about until she is ultimately taken out by Logan.
"'The Last Stand' pretty much looks and plays like the first films, though perhaps with more noise and babe action and a little less glum," wrote Manohla Dargis for The New York Times.
"Blade II" might be a little tough to watch in the year 2024, as its plot focuses on a pandemic that turns vampires into Reapers, aka rabid vampires, but the additions of Ron Perlman and a young Norman Reedus are worth the watch.Β Plus, it was directed by horror visionary Guillermo del Toro, which means, at theΒ veryΒ least, that it's never boring.
As the AV Club'sΒ Nathan Rabin wrote, "The world can always use another entertainingly trashy B-movie, and 'Blade II' fits the bill."
"Venom: Let There Be Carnage" is a lean, mean, killing machine. Ostensibly, the movie is about Venom and Eddie working together to defeat the serial killer Cletus Kasady, played by a dialed-in Woody Harrelson ... but, in actuality, it's a romantic comedy between Venom and Eddie trying to figure out how to live together in one body.
"A love story written in blood, sweat, and the slime of half-eaten brains," wrote The Independent's Clarisse Loughrey.
Wesley Snipes makes his debut as Blade, a vampire-human hybrid who has dedicated his life to hunting down vampires in the seedy underworld of his home city, using his unique advantages, like the ability to walk in the daylight.
"'Blade's' stomach-turning special effects, bone-crunching martial arts and cynical humor will more than satisfy any action-film addict's need for a fix of eye-popping escapist adrenaline," wrote the Washington Post's Michael O'Sullivan.
After saving the universe, Carol Danvers (Brie Larson) has once again left Earth to continue saving the rest of the galaxy β but when her powers get entangled with her best friend's daughter, Monica (Teyonah Parris), and a Captain Marvel superfan who has nicknamed herself Ms. Marvel (Iman Vellani), she must return to her home planet to see what exactly is going on, and confront the mistakes of her past.
"It's silly and makes little sense, but it's such a fun time at the movies. And isn't that why we go to see movies in the first place?" wrote Kristen Lopez for The Wrap.
Eric Bana took on the role of Marvel's not-so-jolly green giant in Ang Lee's version of "Hulk" in one of the most faithful comic-book movies, at least aesthetically speaking, even if the character's origin wasn't exactlyΒ the same as on the page. A supporting cast of Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott, and Nick Nolte also elevates this movie.
"Where so many comic-book movies feel as disposable as Kleenex, the passionate, un-cynical 'Hulk' stamps itself into your memory. Lee's movies are built to last," wrote Newsweek's David Ansen.
"Spider-Man 3" made the mistake of trying to cram too many villains into one film, a mistake that "The Amazing Spider-Man 2" replicated a few years later. In the film, Peter, as played by Tobey Maguire, faces off against his best friend Harry Osborn (James Franco) as the new Green Goblin, Flint Marko/Sandman (Thomas Haden Church), and Eddie Brock (this time played by Topher Grace), aka Venom.
"Too many villains, too many pale plot strands, too many romantic misunderstandings, too many conversations, too many street crowds looking high into the air and shouting 'oooh!' this way, then swiveling and shouting aaah!' that way," wrote Roger Ebert.
The follow-up to smash hit "Thor: Ragnarok" and the first-ever fourth solo film for an MCU hero didn't live up to expectations, at least according to critics. But we did get to see Natalie Portman return to the MCU as her version of the Mighty Thor, a couple of screaming goats, andΒ a jaw-dropping post-credits cameo.
"Though Chris Hemsworth, as usual, has a lot of fun in the title role, the film around him too often strains to provide excitement and laughs,"Β wrote Wall Street Journal's Kyle Smith.
A decade after we last saw Agents J and K, viewers were once again treated to the comedic duo of Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, but with a twist.
The film focuses on an alien who travels back in time to kill a young Agent K (Jones) in the 1960s, leading Agent J (Smith) to alsoΒ travel back and team up with the young Agent K, played by Josh Brolin, to fix the future.
"The movie represents at least a partial return to form, not as inventive as the first, but surely better than the recycled materials that made up the second," wrote The Atlantic's Christopher Orr.
"Thor: The Dark World," the 2013 sequel to the 2011 film, stars Chris Hemsworth as the titular Norse god, Tom Hiddleston as his mischievous brother Loki, and Natalie Portman as Thor's Earth-bound love interest Jane Foster. It wasn't as well-received as its predecessor, but it has its defenders.
"This feels like a really, really, expensive episode of 'Doctor Who.' In a good way," wrote Larushka Ivan-Zadeh for Metro.
Edward Norton took over for Eric Bana in "The Incredible Hulk," which was plagued with rumors of behind-the-scenes drama, including that Norton rewrote much of the movie while it was shooting, and that there were many clashes between Norton, director Louis Leterrier, and Marvel Studios.
Those dueling visions led to a moderately received comic-book film.
"The climax is a bit of a yawn, but most of what precedes it is vigorous and sharp," wrote Tom Charity of CNN.
"The Wolverine" separates Hugh Jackman's Wolverine from the rest of the X-Men for his own little side quest in Japan. In it, he wrestles with the consequences of his actions (aka killing Jean Grey in "X-Men: The Last Stand") and with his "curse" of immortality.
"Director James Mangold's film features some breathtakingly suspenseful action sequences, exquisite production and costume design and colorful characters, some of whom register more powerfully than others," wrote Christy Lemire for RogerEbert.com.
Released just five years after Tobey Maguire hung up his spider-suit in 2007, "The Amazing Spider-Man" had its work cut out for it. And, largely, the movie succeeds at introducing a new take on our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man and his second-most iconic love interest Gwen Stacy (played by a luminous Emma Stone), while attempting to introduce new lore regarding Peter's parents' disappearance.
"The casting is just right. As if moving back in time, Andrew Garfield is the Spidey Sean Connery, as opposed to Tobey Maguire's Roger Moore," wrote The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw.
In retrospect, "Iron Man 2" had an impossible job: to build upon what is still regarded as one of the finest superhero films of all time.
Perhaps that's why critics weren't too kind to "Iron Man 2," which focused on Tony Stark, aka Iron Man, being rude to everyone around him while covering up his impending death. Oh, and Mickey Rourke is there playing Whiplash, a Russian villain who loves his bird.
"Casting the likes of Downey and Rourke and then imprisoning them in jointed refrigerators is resource-squandering of the highest order," wrote Dana Stevens for Slate.
42. "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness" (2022)
After the events of the Disney+ miniseries "WandaVision," Elizabeth Olsen's Wanda Maximoff has been taken over by the dark forces of the Scarlet Witch, putting her on a collision course with Benedict Cumberbatch's Doctor Stephen Strange as he works to protect a new teenage friend, America Chavez (played by Xochitl Gomez), from Wanda's plans.
"It might be Marvel's multiverse, but 'Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness' is [director Sam] Raimi's plaything. And we wouldn't want it any other way," wrote Kristy Puchko for Mashable.
"Kingsman," based on the Icon Comics run of the same name, is a far bloodier and funnier movie than anything viewers have seen from a comic book movie in some time. Taron Egerton stars as Eggsy, a petty criminal and Royal Marines dropout who is turned into a super-spy with the help of his mentor, Harry, played by Colin Firth.
"On Day One of filming, they must have thrown away the moral compass and taken a group vow to splatter our sensibilities with stylish, gratuitous violence and one 'Wait, what?!' moment after another," wrote Richard Roeper for the Chicago Sun-Times.
The Avengers team up once again in "Age of Ultron" to take down the nihilistic AI known as Ultron, designed as a "suit of armor around the world" by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner, aka Iron Man and the Hulk, who is hell-bent on destroying the planet at all costs.
"The sharp, interpersonal dramedy that made the first movie such a delight is again present in flashes, but not infrequently it is drowned out by the noisy, inevitable need to Save the World," wrote Christopher Orr for The Atlantic.
Chris Hemsworth and Tom Hiddleston were both essentially unknowns when they were cast as Norse gods Thor and Loki (as evidenced by their casting announcement in Deadline), and this movie catapulted them both to the A-list almost immediately.
Both Hemsworth and Hiddleston still have a future with the MCU in 2024 β Hemsworth's Thor got a fourth solo film (a first for the MCU) that had an open-ended conclusion and Hiddleston's Loki got a second season of his Disney+ series (also a first for the MCU), which also left the door wide open for more Loki in the future. Seeing their chemistry as brothers in this first film explains why.
"The new Marvel Comics movie 'Thor,' directed by Kenneth Branagh, is equal parts trippy, tacky, and monumental, the blend surprisingly agreeable, a happy change from all those aggressively down-to-earth superhero flicks like 'Iron Man,'" wrote David Edelstein for Vulture.
Of course, some of those characters predate the Icon Comics character, but without the on-screen success of "Kick-Ass," it's hard to tell when those adaptations would've come to pass.
"Kick-Ass" stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson β who is currently suiting up for his thirdΒ comic-book movie as Kraven the Hunter βΒ as Dave Lizewski, a normal teenager and comics super-fan who decides to become a vigilante called Kick-Ass. He inspires a movement, and teams up with other vigilantes like Hit-Girl (ChloΓ« Grace Moretz) and Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage) to take down organized crime.
"Everything you've likely heard about 'Kick-Ass' is true, providing you've heard it's profane, outlandish, ultra-violent, shocking, funny and wildly entertaining," wrote Tom Long of The Detroit News.
"Deadpool & Wolverine" was released on July 26. Eleven days later, it had made $852 million worldwide, out-grossing the $782 million of the first film and the $785 million of the second film, according to Box Office Mojo.
Besides being a team-up between Deadpool, the Merc with a Mouth, and Wolverine, the best-known X-Man by a mile, "Deadpool & Wolverine" is a love letter to the 20th Century Fox era of superhero films, with cameos from Jennifer Garner, Wesley Snipes, Chris Evans (as Johnny Storm!), Dafne Keen, and more.
"Dotted in among the quips and Easter eggs is the superhero equivalent of 'Toy Story 2,' a mournful goodbye to the things we once held dear, even if some of those things weren't that great to begin with," wrote Slate's Sam Adams.
"Iron Man 3" focuses on Tony Stark dealing with his PTSD after the events of "Avengers," like his near-death experience flying a nuclear bomb through a wormhole in space. But the big twist of this movie, the bait-and-switch identity of the Mandarin, played by Ben Kingsley, remains this movie's biggest legacy.
"A thrilling film and a somewhat satisfying conclusion to the 'Iron Man' trilogy," wrote NicolΓ‘s Delgadillo for Discussing Film.
Brie Larson stars as Carol Danvers, a former US Air Force pilot who is exposed to a blast of cosmic energy in the '90s, experiences memory loss, and is taken in by an alien race called the Kree. As Carol tries to remember her past, she's introduced to a young(er) SHIELD agent, a digitally de-aged Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury.
"The main strength is a core of female friendship: Carol Danvers is the only Marvel hero you could imagine getting hammered and belting out songs by No Doubt," wrote The Observer's Wendy Ide.
Set between the events of "Captain America: Civil War" and "Avengers: Infinity War," and exactly a decade after her introduction as Natasha Romanoff in "Iron Man 2," Scarlett Johansson finally stars in her own solo film with "Black Widow." The film also introduced actors Florence Pugh, David Harbour, and Rachel Weisz to the MCU, all three of whom we'd love to see again in the future.
"In all the ways that matter to an MCU fan, 'Black Widow' the film meets or exceeds all expectations. It is a killer action flick, and a unique viewing experience... in that I loved it, and the fact that I loved it also makes me livid," wrote Salon's Melanie McFarland.
Simply put, Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, is the role that Chris Evans was born to play. Audiences see Evans first as a digitally altered scrawny kid from Brooklyn who, against all odds, is chosen to receive a "super soldier serum" and become Captain America due to his pure heart. With anyone else, it'd be unbearably cheesy, but Evans sells it.
"No clever messages here, just bang-on romance and action, with another fresh twist on 20th-century history woven in for the kids to dive into after the credits have rolled," wrote Ed Gibbs for The Sydney Morning Herald.
"X-Men" gave us Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, Patrick Stewart as Professor X, Ian McKellen as Magneto, Halle Berry as Storm, Famke Janssen as Jean Grey, James Marsden as Cyclops, Anna Paquin as Rogue, Rebecca Romijn as Mystique ... the list goes on.
While the film is a pretty straightforward origin story/team-up film, the action set the template for what the next 20-plus years of movies would look like.
"The 'X-Men' comic books have spawned a cottage industry of mutant characters, and the movie helps make sense of these legions while offering the established fan base something new to cheer," wrote Jami Bernard for the New York Daily News.
After the galaxy-saving stakes of the first two "Guardians" films, it was refreshing to watch our favorite rag-tag group of heroes come together to just save one of their friends, Rocket (Bradley Cooper), after he was gravely injured by a new threat, Adam Warlock (Will Poulter).
Of course, the film also deals with Peter/Star-Lord's (Chris Pratt) trauma of having to see a new version of his dead ex-girlfriend Gamora (Zoe SaldaΓ±a) β a sentence that only makes sense if you've seen "Infinity War" and "Endgame" β but if this is the last we see of our nice space friends, it was a great run.
"Now that nearly every other cinematic release reads like a holding pattern until they finally get around to mutants, 'Guardians Vol. 3' is the first sign in a while that Marvel might actually have some genuine enjoyment left in the tank," wrote Jackson Weaver for CBC News.
Rudd plays Scott Lang, a white-collar criminal who is enlisted to take on the mantle of Ant-Man, a shrinking superhero who used to be Michael Douglas' Hank Pym.
But, as Pym is too old to suit up, he and his daughter Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) teach Lang how to control ants, shrink and grow at will, and later break into Pym's lab to take down Darren Cross (Corey Stoll).
"Paul Rudd stars in a formulaic but consistently entertaining and likable Marvel summer blockbuster," wrote NME's Nick Levine.
"Deadpool 2" expanded the universe of Wade Wilson, aka Deadpool, a mutant mercenary who has a tendency to break the fourth wall. In addition to bringing back Teenage Negasonic Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand), Colossus (Stefan KapiΔiΔ), and Vanessa (Morena Baccarin), "Deadpool 2" adds Josh Brolin as Cable and Zazie Beetz as Domino, two welcome additions.
In "Deadpool 2," Deadpool teams up with an X-Force (of sorts) to find young Russell Collins, a mutant with fire capabilities, who is the target of the time-traveling assassin Cable, who wants to kill Russell as a teen before he becomes a serial killer in the future.
"'Deadpool 2' goes bigger than the first, but the shockingly touching family theme pulls all of the new characters and big set pieces together well. Another wild, hilarious ride for the character with just enough honesty and heart," said Perri Nemiroff in a Collider video review.
After the tragic (and unexpected) death of Chadwick Boseman in 2020, the highly anticipated "Black Panther" sequel was rewritten to be a story of grief and mourning, while also setting up the future of Wakanda in the MCU for years to come.
Angela Bassett, Lupita Nyong'o, Letitia Wright, and Winston Duke all put in stellar performances, while Tenoch Huerta introduced viewers to the underwater king Namor with a bang.
"A thoughtful and mature exploration of communal grief in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever' is a fitting tribute to the legacy of Chadwick Boseman,"Β wrote Chicago Reader's Sheri Flanders.
The whole gang reunited in 2003 for "X2," which sees the X-Men go up against Brian Cox's William Stryker, an anti-mutant military scientist who is planning to commit genocide against all mutants.
"'X2' is pretty much all that you'd ever want out of a comic book movie. It's smart, it's breathlessly paced, the characters have at least 2 1/2 dimensions, and the action sequences are jaw-droppers, even on the small screen," wrote The Advocate's Alonso Duralde.
After playing Deadpool in the 2009 "X-Men" spin-off "X-Men Origins: Wolverine," Reynolds was determined to do the character justice in his own film with a completely redesigned version of him.
Seven years later, Reynolds starred in "Deadpool," which tells the story of mercenary Wade Wilson who embarks on a journey to cure himself of terminal cancer with some unintended consequences, like when he becomes immortal and scarred across his entire body.
"'Deadpool' is obnoxious and puerile and infantile and has an irritating meta tone so snide that it's constantly in danger of nullifying the entire movie, and I still got a pretty big kick out of it," wrote Will Leitch in The New Republic.
"GOTG Vol. 2" delves into the true parentage of Peter Quill, aka Star-Lord, as played by Chris Pratt. In addition to the rest of the stellar returning cast, Kurt Russell was added to play Peter's biological father, Ego the Living Planet, and Pom Klementieff joined the team as the empathic alien, Mantis.
"In Marvel lingo, 'Guardians 2' feels like a great six-issue arc, the kind of storytelling that used to be the backbone of superhero comics," wrote The Atlantic's David Sims.
"Avengers: Infinity War" is the first part of the culmination of the first 10 years of the MCU, which concluded one year later in "Avengers: Endgame."
"Infinity War" follows Thanos, an alien who is dedicated to erasing half of the universe's population, as he scours space for the six Infinity Stones. Meanwhile, the Avengers stop at nothing to prevent him from getting all six with disastrous consequences.
"The conclusion of 'Infinity War' is so shocking because it doesn't feel like a cliffhanger, more like a drastic wiping clean of the slate before the whole cycle starts again, with whatever reversal of fortune or comprehensive reboot it may be," wrote Film Comment Magazine's Jonathan Romney.
"First Class" will go down in history as the film that introduced audiences to young Professor X and Magneto, played by James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender, respectively.
The film takes place in the '60s, as a young Magneto tracks down the Nazi scientist who killed his mother, and a young Professor X has yet to be confined to his wheelchair.
"For reasons arising from the way the 'X-Men' film franchise has developed, this is the first Marvel movie set in the period when the characters were created, and thus able to embrace the Rat Pack cool that was part of their original charm," wrote Kim Newman of Sight & Sound.
By adding the Wasp to the title of the film, Evangeline Lilly is theΒ trueΒ first woman to play a titular superhero in the MCU, though she still shares top-billing with Paul Rudd as Ant-Man.
In "Ant-Man and the Wasp," the two insect-themed heroes reunite to rescue Hope's mom, played by the radiant Michelle Pfeiffer, from the mysterious quantum realm after an accident decades prior.
"Its intent is limited to amusing and diverting for a couple of hours of high-summer fun. That it does," wrote Matthew Norman of the London Evening Standard.
Cumberbatch joined the MCU to play Dr. Stephen Strange, a hot-shot surgeon who loses the use of his hands after a brutal car crash and seeks out sorcerers who can help him regain his strength.
As Richard Bailey wrote in The New Yorker, the film "lives up to its title, in mostly good ways."
For a generation of movie fans, Tobey Maguire will forever beΒ theirΒ Spider-Man, and director Sam Raimi's trilogy, beginning with 2002's "Spider-Man," will always be the best on-screen representation of the most famous wall-crawler in movie history.
"Spider-Man" stars, as previously stated, Maguire as Peter Parker, and he's supported by an all-star cast of Kirsten Dunst, Willem Dafoe, Cliff Robertson, Rosemary Harris, and more. The story watches Peter go from a gawky teenager to the super-powered, spandex-clad Spider-Man as he faces off against the Green Goblin (Dafoe), who is determined to take away everything that matters to Peter.
"At its best, 'Spider-Man' takes the adolescent yearning at the heart of most superhero sagas and gives it a lovely swing. The script, by David Koepp, isn't inspired, but it keeps the emotional beats clean, and director Sam Raimi treats his hero tenderly: He gives him space to watch and think as well as act," wrote Slate's David Edelstein.
16 (tie). "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" (2014)
If "Captain America: The First Avenger" was Marvel's take on a WWII drama, "Winter Soldier" is the MCU's version of a tense, political thriller as Cap uncovers multiple layers of conspiracy within the US government, and must go on the run from his presumed-dead best friend Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), now brain-washed into the murderous assassin the Winter Soldier.
"'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' delivers the superhero movie goods, but it does so with a grin and a wink, and that seems more and more like the right way to approach these things," wrote Jason Bailey for Flavorwire.
"Days of Future Past" reunites the original "X-Men" cast from the first three movies with the younger versions of themselves introduced in "First Class" by taking Hugh Jackman's Wolverine and sending him back in time to prevent a great tragedy in the present day.
"A pleasingly coherent, plot-driven action movie, positively streamlined by the standards of today's superhero blockbusters," wrote The Independent's Laurence Phelan.
Yes, "Big Hero 6" is based on the Marvel team of the same name, which began in the late '90s. When Disney purchased Marvel in 2009, it was only a matter of time before the House of Mouse merged their two powerhouses, animation and Marvel.
And, with the success of "Big Hero 6," there's a strong argument for more Disney Animation comic-book movies. This one focuses on Hiro Hamada, a teenage robotics prodigy living in San Fransokyo.
After the death of his older brother Tadashi, Hiro connects with Tadashi's invention, a healthcare robot named Baymax, to save the city, along with Tadashi's friends Fred, Go Go, Wasabi, and Honey Lemon.
"An origins story ripe with innocence and loss, this anime-inflected treat harks back to Disney's big-hearted heritage even as it looks forward towards new worlds of innovation," wrote The Observer's Mark Kermode.
Essentially an "Avengers" movie, "Captain America: Civil War" sees Captain America team up with his friends Falcon (Anthony Mackie), Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), and Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) to save his friend Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) from getting wrongfully convicted for a bombing at the United Nations.
Cap goes up against Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Vision (Paul Bettany), and War Machine (Don Cheadle) to save his friend.
Of course, this movie is also famous for introducing Chadwick Boseman as T'Challa, aka Black Panther, and Tom Holland as the MCU's version of Peter Parker, aka Spider-Man.
"It is one of the best movies to ever come out of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, balancing engaging action set pieces and witty dialogue with intelligent character studies and ethical debates," wrote Salon's Matthew Rozsa.
"Men in Black" follows Will Smith as James Edwards, an NYPD officer who becomes convinced that aliens are real, leading him to join the Men in Black, a secret government organization dedicated to monitoring and protecting alien refugees that live on Earth. He's partnered with Agent K, played by Tommy Lee Jones.
It's a loose adaptation of the Malibu comic series of the same name.
"'Men in Black' is the wryest, sharpest, most entertaining special effects film in recent memory, a simultaneous participant and mocking parody of the more-bang-for-your-buck behemoth genre," wrote CNN's Paul Tatara.
After four years of teasing out the six main Avengers (Iron Man, Captain America, Black Widow, Thor, Hawkeye, and Hulk), they all met up on the big screen for the first time in "The Avengers."
Under the watchful eye of Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury, viewers saw Earth's mightiest heroes team up for the first time to take out Thor's brother Loki as he attempted to conquer the world on behalf of a mysterious purple alien.
"A mega-budget action extravaganza that succeeds on just about every level, and it's one you should certainly go and see as soon as possible," wrote Luke Holland for NME.
Picking up a few months after the events of "Avengers: Endgame," Peter Parker/Spider-Man must figure out how to balance his life as a web-slinging superhero and a simple teenager with a crush on his friend MJ, played by a delightful Zendaya.
Add in a truly unhinged Jake Gyllenhaal performance as Quentin Beck/Mysterio, and you have the makings of a solid Spidey film.
"The stakes this time turn out to be considerably lower, and your friendly neighborhood Spider-Teen is arguably just the guy to bring things down to Earth and reestablish a human scale," said NPR's Bob Mondello.
10 (tie). "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" (2021)
Simu Liu tweeted Marvel back in 2018 asking if they were "gonna talk or what #ShangChi." Three years later, Liu debuted as Shang-Chi in "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings."
In it, Shang-Chi comes to accept his past as a member of his father's (played by the always wonderful Tony Leung) criminal organization, the Ten Rings, while protecting his mother's village from the attacks of a demon known as the Dweller-in-Darkness.
"It's a good movie. It's got a plausibly fearsome villain by way of Leung, a nice ensemble of heroic personalities, and a dose of actually-poignant family drama undergirding all the rest," wrote K. Austin Collins for Rolling Stone.
At the time, it was aΒ hugeΒ swing for Marvel to entrust writer/director James Gunn with bringing one of the lesser-known superhero teams into the MCU. But, as we know, it was one of the smartest gambles Marvel ever made.
"Guardians," led by the ever-charming Chris Pratt as Peter Quill, combines hilarious jokes with a genuinely sweet story about found family: In this case, Peter finds Gamora (Zoe SaldaΓ±a), Drax (Dave Bautista), Groot (Vin Diesel), and Rocket the Raccoon (Bradley Cooper).
"Blessed with a loose, anarchic B-picture soul that encourages you to enjoy yourself even when you're not quite sure what's going on, the scruffy 'Guardians' is irreverent in a way that can bring the first 'Star Wars' to mind," wrote Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times.
"Spider-Man: Homecoming" was the third reboot of Spider-Man in 15 years, but somehow, once again, the powers that be managed to find a third actor who was just as qualified as his predecessors Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield to bring Spidey to life.
After his introduction in "Civil War," "Homecoming" focuses on Peter Parker's sweet bond with Tony Stark/Iron Man, and his realization that being a hero is about more than a cool suit.
"The youthful vibe of this character reset, with its sense of humor and its light touch, makes 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' one of the most enjoyable Marvel movies in years," wrote Chesapeake Family Magazine's Roxana Hadadi.
For many years, "Spider-Man 2" was considered, at least by critics, to be the best Spider-Man movie. From the iconic subway fight against Alfred Molina's Doc Ock to the tear-jerking hero speech by Aunt May to an almost exact replication of one of Spider-Man's most iconic comic panels, "Spider-Man 2" remains genuinely enjoyable, even 20 years later.
"It's unusual and gratifying to find a multimillion-dollar movie that's been put together with some thoughtfulness, that doesn't neglect subtlety in between delivering the smash-bang-wallop," wrote Anthony Quinn of The Independent.
"Ragnarok" was one of the most impressive feats in MCU history. After all, two "Thor" movies are among some of the lowest-rated MCU movies, while "Ragnarok" is in the top 10 of all Marvel movies, period.
This comes down to director Taika Waititi, who was able to infuse his signature style and tone into the MCU in this cosmic adventure that's also a straight-up comedy, following Thor on his journey to prevent the destruction of his home world, Asgard.
"Beautifully filmed with serious kinetic energy by director Taika Waititi, with a crackling script, 'Thor: Ragnarok' is a heap of fun. Cue 'Immigrant Song,'" wrote Kristen Lopez for Culturess.
At this point, you've probably heard that "Logan" is more of a Western than a traditional superhero movie, which is correct.
"Logan" follows a beaten-down Logan whose powers are leaving him, all his friends are dead or dying, and he's living in secret as a limo driver. But when a mysterious young mutant with powers like his shows up, he musters his strength one last time to help her escape.
This was supposed to be Hugh Jackman's last hurrah as Wolverine, but you might have heard of a little movie called "Deadpool & Wolverine" which made Jackman change his tune.
"Make no mistake, 'Logan' earns its tears. If Jackman and Stewart are serious about this being their mutual 'X-Men' swan song, they could not have crafted a more heartfelt valedictory," wrote Rolling Stone's Peter Travers.
"Spider-Man: No Way Home" now has the distinction of sharing the third-best Spider-Man movie crown with "Spider-Man 2" (more on the top Spidey films later). But "No Way Home's" charms are impossible to deny, even if the plot has more holes than Swiss cheese.
For Marvel movie fans, it's hard to imagine something more satisfying than seeing Tom Holland, Andrew Garfield, and Tobey Maguire together on screen, discussing their rogues' galleries, Tobey's weird web situation, or how with great power comes great responsibility.
"Throughout all of it, the weird and complex history of Spider-Man as a cinematic icon isn't a hindrance to the story; instead, it's an enhancement, using the quirks of the character's legacy as a source of illumination into why he has endured so long," wrote Liz Shannon Miller of Consequence.
The reason that pop culture is what it is today can be boiled down to the mega-success of this movie, which set up an entire cinematic universe, revived Robert Downey Jr.'s career and boosted director Jon Favreau's status so high that he's now basically one of the auteurs of the entire "Star Wars" universe.
But this film is simple: Billionaire weapons manufacturer Tony Stark (Downey) is kidnapped by a group of terrorists, which leads him to discover his weapons are landing in the wrong hands. So, he builds a suit of armor and becomes a superhero.
"Led by Downey's career-resurrecting performance as billionaire weapons peddler Tony Stark, it proves just as indispensable to the movie's giddy escapist appeal as the seamless CGI effects and eye-popping pyrotechnics," wrote Craig Outhier of the Orange County Register.
"Endgame," as a movie, is a magic trick. Somehow, this movie crams in 11 years of MCU storytelling and every major character from all of the films, and travels back in time to essentially walk through the universe's greatest hits, has real stakes, and makes a three-hour movie fly by.
When the Avengers decide to try to undo Thanos' universe-shattering snap, the original crew from the 2012 movie (with a few notable additions like Karen Gillan's Nebula, Paul Rudd's Ant-Man, and Don Cheadle's War Machine), travel through Marvel history to find the Infinity Stones.
"Eleven years of Universe building, and this is the crescendo. It really pays off, I've never seen anything quite like it," said James Luxford on the BBC.
"Across the Spider-Verse," the sequel to "Into the Spider-Verse," takes the story of Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) and levels it up in every way.
Now, Miles is up against not just an extra-dimensional villain known as the Spot (voiced hilariously by Jason Schwartzman), but also an entire society of spider-people, including his old friends Peter B. Parker (Jake Johnson) and Spider-Gwen (Hailee Steinfeld), as they are told by Spider-Man 2099 (Oscar Isaac) that Miles isn't even meant to exist.
"'Across The Spider-Verse' truly explodes the idea of what a comic book movie can be. This is thanks to the boundlessly exuberant and adventurous way it both constructs and captures its world(s) during this jaunt through the multiverse," wrote Uproxx's Jason Tabrys.
After Chadwick Boseman, who died in 2020, was introduced in "Captain America: Civil War" as Black Panther, fans were waiting with bated breath for his solo film, and they weren't disappointed.
"Black Panther" is a riveting story in which the "villain" (a supremely cast Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger) has aΒ compelling point and even gets the hero, T'Challa, to change his mind.
Supported by all-stars like Angela Bassett, Forest Whitaker, Daniel Kaluuya, Lupita Nyong'o, Danai Gurira, and Sterling K. Brown, along with newer finds like Letitia Wright and Winston Duke, "Black Panther" is special.
To date, it's the only Marvel movie to be nominated for best picture at the Academy Awards.
"'Black Panther' is a revelation, the first film from the Marvel Cinematic Universe that truly feels like an of-the-moment masterwork that also happens to be a comic-book movie," wrote Roxana Hadadi of Chesapeake Family Magazine.
"Into the Spider-Verse," which took home best animated feature at the 2019 Oscars, is a movie that has to be seen to be believed. Spider-Men (and -Women!) travel from all over the multiverse to help teenager Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) grow into his own as his universe's new Spider-Man.
It proves you don't have to be Peter Parker to be Spider-Man, anyone can wear the mask, as Miles says. The upcoming two-part sequel has a lot of hype to live up to, but we'll always have the greatness of "Into the Spider-Verse" to fall back on.
"Maintaining a breathless pace, the filmmakers pile up sci-fi conceits, one-liners, and a melange of animation styles; as opposed to lots of other comic book adaptations, this actually captures the sensation of getting absorbed in a comic book," wrote the Chicago Reader's Ben Sachs.
Junebug recently announced the winners of its 2024 Best of the Best Wedding Photography Contest.
The 50 winning photos were taken around the world, from Alaska to Bali.
The images capture stunning scenery, joy, and a protective cat.
The average American couple spends just under $30,000 on a wedding, and for many, the photographer is a big chunk of that budget.
To mark the start of their happily ever afters, most couples take photos β some even traveling to an epic location or a particularly meaningful spot β to get the perfect image.
Junebug Weddings has an annual photo contest to choose the best wedding photos worldwide.
Here are its winners from 2024.
The champagne tower at this wedding in Monterrey, Mexico, came crashing down β but in a picturesque way.
The bride and groom were ready to ride off into the sunset at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah.
A quick game of catch at a Tucson, Arizona In-N-Out made for a great photo.
This photo taken of two brides in Moab, Utah, is stunning.
Anyone who wants a witchy wedding should go for the vibes seen at this Leavenworth, Washington, wedding.
It's impossible not to smile at this photo taken on British Columbia's Granville Island.
The view of the sky in Kanab, Utah, is unreal.
Playing peek-a-boo gave a glimpse of the bride's wedding henna in Antigua, Guatemala.
Couples who shred together, stay together, as evidenced by this couple in Wanaka, New Zealand.
These newlyweds are perfectly framed by their car window in Donegal, Ireland.
The wedding party is fully in shadow at this wedding in Vancouver.
The bride at this Ascoli Piceno, Italy wedding looks straight out of a painting.
This breathtaking photo was taken at Artist Point in Washington.
This sweet moment was captured in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The happy couple was bathed in neon and bright colors at their wedding in Adelaide, Australia.
This bride and groom were channeling Jack and Rose at their Greenland wedding.
This wedding in Guayaquil, Ecuador was certainly a party.
So was this one in Naples, Italy.
This intimate snapshot of wedded bliss was taken in Washington's Olympic National Park.
This otherworldly photo was taken in Alaska.
The colors at this Sydney wedding were unbelievable.
The ruins of a Scottish castle provided a beautiful backdrop.
It takes a village to help a bride get ready, as seen at this Vancouver wedding.
This monochromatic wedding shot was also captured in Vancouver.
This new husband and wife were in the spotlight at their wedding in Sintra, Portugal.
The beach in Big Sur, California provided a stunning backdrop.
If you need to show someone what it's like to get married in Las Vegas, this photo is all you need.
The bride got hugs from her parents at her wedding in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
This wedding is giving '70s glam.
It's not easy to hike in California's Yosemite National Park in wedding dresses, but it made for a beautiful photo.
Pouring water on the bride is a Hindu tradition, as seen at this Hyderabad, India wedding.
A shooting star made this photo in Estes Park, Colorado even more arresting.
This photo taken in Covington, Kentucky is pure joy.
This photographer combined art, light, and a wedding ring to create magic.
The photo of this bride in Singapore is timeless.
The single tear rolling down the bride's face really makes this photo taken in New Braunfels, Texas.
This photo was taken in Tofino, a small town on Vancouver Island, Canada.
The bright flowers and streamers gave this Seattle wedding a lot of color.
Getting married is two people deciding to walk down a long road together, like these newlyweds in Glencoe, Scotland.
This atmospheric photo was also taken in Scotland, in Glen Etive.
This husband and wife look like they're on Cloud Nine, literally β but it's actually Tahiti.
The hazy crescent moon gives this photo taken in Bend, Oregon an ethereal vibe.
This ring has its own personal feline guard in Bucharest, Romania.
This couple in Bali, Indonesia is very well-accessorized.
This photo looks like it came from the set of a Wes Anderson film β but it's a real cabin in Verbier, Switzerland.
This photo looks like it's from the woods in "Twilight." It's in Northern Greece.
A crescent moon was used as a focal point in Moab, Utah.
This couple in Madrid is the definition of cool.
These newlyweds in Yosemite National Park look like they traveled back in time.
The bride and groom are ready to run away together at the Waterton Lakes National Park in Canada.
It's also a great place to do some last-minute holiday shopping.
I went on December 23 and was surprised to see how much inventory was left.
In addition to being a fan of HomeGoods, I'm also a bit of a procrastinator.
With traffic at my local mall reaching Black Friday levels this week, I decided to skip that chaos. Instead, I stopped by HomeGoods, the successful home decor chain with over 900 locations across the US, to see what it was like two days before Christmas.
Yes, it was crowded, but it wasn't stifling. And there were no empty, picked-over shelves. I was pleasantly surprised by how much inventory and last-minute gift options the store hadβΒ if not a bit overwhelmed.
Here's what it was like to get some last-minute gifts at HomeGoods.
I went to a HomeGoods in my hometown on Long Island.
The store advertised same-day delivery and a special holiday return policy when you walked in.
The first display was a table filled with reindeer, snowmen, penguins, and wrapping paper.
If you want to shop at HomeGoods, you have to be OK with digging through tables of seemingly random items.
Sometimes, displays are organized. For example, this table was labeled "For the chef."
It had items like this basil-dip tasting set for $19.99.
This Modelo goodie-filled tub, which cost $59.99, included glasses, coasters, a bottle opener, pretzels, and chips.
This table was piled high with "baking essentials."
No one would be mad to open chocolates on Christmas morning.
I was particularly drawn to this "wine" bottle filled with truffles.
There was an entire aisle dedicated to peppermint snacks.
There were multiple shelves filled with just hot chocolate β gourmet hot chocolate is a great grab-bag gift.
I bought these chocolate-covered spoons for $7.99. They turn any cup of milk into hot chocolate, and they'll be a hit in my home on Christmas morning.
Even when you go into the store, past the gift displays, some items would make good presents.
Of course, HomeGoods is known for decor. Many teenage girls would be excited to get one of these disco-ball gifts.
Or for the coquette-obsessed, any of these Hello Kitty gifts would do.
These Hollywood feuds offer a glimpse into the sometimes-fraught world of entertainment.
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni's reported feud has already solidified its place in pop-culture history.
Though some make up after spats, other celebs never quite get over their friction.
"It Ends With Us," the long-awaited film adaptation of the Colleen Hoover novel of the same name, had no shortage of controversies, starting with its subject matter β some critics said the story "romanticizes" domestic abuse.
Still, that's not the only reason you might have seen this movie in the headlines. Internet detectives became convinced there was drama between Justin Baldoni, the director (who also starred in the film), and Blake Lively, who played protagonist Lily Bloom earlier this year.
Those theories were proven right when Lively sued Baldoni for sexual harassment in December, confirming that the two did not get along during filming.
However, Baldoni and Lively aren't the only director-actor pairing to have reportedly dealt with on-set friction. This feud is frequent in Hollywood history, going back to the 1960s at least.
Here are some of movie history's most infamous feuds between actors and directors.
Melina Glusac contributed to an earlier version of this story.
Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively
Whispers of a feud started on social media after it became clear that Baldoni, who both directed and starred in "It Ends With Us," wasn't doing press with the rest of the cast. Then, internet sleuths discovered that while Baldoni follows the entire cast on Instagram, none follow him back.
Over the summer, reports emerged that there were two cuts of the movie: one approved by Baldoni and another done by editor Shane Reid, who has worked with Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, which Lively commissioned, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
Rumbles of a feud continued as Lively began getting called out for how she promoted the movie.Β Baldoni hiredΒ Melissa Nathan, a seasoned crisis PR manager, as this happened. Nathan is known for working with Johnny Depp during the Amber Heard trial.
After a quiet few months, their rift returned to the headlines when Lively sued Baldoni for sexual harassment in December 2024 and said that he worked with Nathan and his publicist, Jennifer Abel, to start a smear campaign against her.
Baldoni's lawyer, Bryan Freedman, said in a statement, "It is shameful that Ms. Lively and her representatives would make such serious and categorically false accusations against Mr. Baldoni, Wayfarer Studios and its representatives, as yet another desperate attempt to 'fix' her negative reputation."
Lively's representative directed Business Insider to a statement she shared with The New York Times: "I hope that my legal action helps pull back the curtain on these sinister retaliatory tactics to harm people who speak up about misconduct and helps protect others who may be targeted."
Celebrities have begun to support Lively publicly, including her "Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" costars and "It Ends With Us" author Colleen Hoover. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Baldoni has been dropped by his agency, WME.
Olivia Wilde and Florence Pugh
Rumors about Wilde and Pugh not getting along began in July 2022,Β whenΒ Page Six reported that Pugh was "displeased" about Wilde's relationship with "Don't Worry Darling's" other costar (and pop music sensation) Harry Styles. Wilde and Styles have since broken up.
Eagle-eyed fans noticed that Pugh did little to no promotion of "Don't Worry Darling" on social media. Pugh also was not involved in any of the film's events besides its premiere at the Venice Film Festival (notably missing the much-memed press conference) and declined to comment about Wilde in a profile on the director in Variety.
At the premiere itself, fans seemed convinced that Pugh refused to make eye contact with Wilde, didn't stand next to her in any photos, and generally seemed unbothered.
"As for all the endless tabloid gossip and all the noise out there, the internet feeds itself. I don't feel the need to contribute; I think it's sufficiently well-nourished," said Wilde during the Venice press conference.
David O. Russell and George Clooney
Mounting tensions on the set of 1999's "Three Kings" reportedly led to a physical fight between the film's star, Clooney, and its director, Russell.
According to one of the film's producers, Charles Roven, Clooney was tired from working on both "ER" and "Three Kings" simultaneously, and Russell was experiencing budget pressure from the studio. Reportedly, when Clooney saw Russell yelling at a crew member, it was the final straw. The two engaged in a "tussle," per The Hollywood Reporter.
In a 2000 interview with Playboy, Clooney said Russell's aggression was a widespread problem on set, and that the director also made the script supervisor cry, physically pushed an extra, and embarrassed a camera-car driver.Β
After the reports about Harvey Weinstein came out in 2017, stories surfaced about Russell, with former co-workers accusing him of on-set abuse, as reported by Vulture.
It's been 25 years since "Three Kings," but the bad feelings have not disappeared. In an August 2024 GQ profile, Clooney said it was "not worth it" to work with a "miserable" person like Russell, who made every person on set's life difficult.
David O. Russell and Lily Tomlin
A video leaked a few years ago shows Russell screaming at Tomlin while filming 2004's "I Heart Huckabees."Β
The video is profanity-laden: After Tomlin complains to Russell about his constant re-writing of lines and scenes, he has a complete meltdown. Russell shoves and knocks items over on the set as crew members flee.Β
But the episode did not harm Russell and Tomlin's relationship for more than a few hours. She told The Hollywood Reporter in 2015, "We've overcome it. It dissipates and it's gone." The two have said they would gladly work together again.
Joel Schumacher and Val Kilmer
Schumacher told Entertainment Weekly in 1996 that the two even "had a physical pushing match" on set.
"He was badly behaved, he was rude and inappropriate. I was forced to tell him that this would not be tolerated for one more second. Then we had two weeks where he did not speak to me, but it was bliss," he continued.
Kilmer was eventually replaced in the sequel by George Clooney.
Time did not heal this wound, though β in 2019, 24 years after the film, Schumacher doubled down on their beef. In an interview with Vulture, he called Kilmer "psychotic," though he did admit that he was a "fabulous Batman."
It's unknown if the two reconciled before Schumacher's death in June 2020.
Danny Boyle and Ewan McGregor
McGregor and Boyle were close friends due to Boyle casting McGregor in his directorial debut "Shallow Grave" and his follow-up, the critically acclaimed "Trainspotting" in 1996.
However, when it came time for Boyle to direct "The Beach" in 2000, he chose Leonardo DiCaprio to be his leading man, instead of McGregor. According to a 2021 interview between McGregor and The Hollywood Reporter, this fractured their relationship for years.
McGregor said the two did not speak for "a long time" and even sat together in a first-class cabin on a transatlantic flight "without exchanging a single word."
"It wasn't handled very well. There was probably both sides to it," McGregor said. "I was upset. But at the same time, it's part of life, it's just part of growing up."
Boyle has said he felt "great shame" about what happened, even admitting that he had given McGregor the impression that the role in "The Beach" would be his.
"I handled it very, very badly, and I've apologized to you," Boyle told McGregor on "The Graham Norton Show" in 2017. "I felt a great shame about it. I was not proud of the way I handled it," Boyle added.
Eventually, the two reconciled and worked together again on the 2017 sequel "T2 Trainspotting."
Roman Polanski and Faye Dunaway
Dunaway and controversial director Polanski apparently clashed on the set of 1975's "Chinatown."
At one point during filming, Polanski was upset by a stray piece of Dunaway's hair that was ruining his shot, so he walked up to Dunaway and yanked it out of her head. One urban legend even said that Polanski's refusal to allow Dunaway bathroom breaks led to her throwing a cup of her own urine at the director.
Dunaway vehemently denied the urine incident toΒ The Guardian but did tell the Sabotage Times that "the friction between Roman and me began from the start" of filming.
So he apparently gave Bardot sleeping pills, claiming that they were painkillers, The Guardian reported. Bardot took too many and ended up having to get her stomach pumped as a result.
After the fact, Bardot called Clouzot "a negative being, forever at odds with himself and the world around him," according to the outlet.
This was just one of many incidents for Clouzot, however, as he reportedly slapped Suzy Delair while filming "Quai des Orfèvres" in 1947.
Stanley Kubrick and Shelley Duvall
"The Shining" is one of the most iconic films in American history β and the reported feud betweenΒ Duvall and Kubrick is just as infamous.
Kubrick's masterpiece took 13 months to shoot, and every bit of it seems to have been torture for lead actor Shelley Duvall. A perfectionist, Kubrick apparently nitpicked her performance, re-shooting scenes and lines and reaming her in front of the crew for missing cues, reported Rolling Stone. To get real desperation out of Duvall, he apparently filmed one emotionally taxing scene 127 times.
After "The Shining" was released in 1980, Duvall said to critic Roger Ebert, "Going through day after day of excruciating work. Almost unbearable ...Β in my character I had to cry 12 hours a day, all day long, the last nine months straight, five or six days a week."
Later in her career, though, Duvall celebrated the director. In a video posted to X by the Shelley Duvall Archive, Duvall (who died in July 2024) said she "wouldn't trade the experience" of shooting the film "for anything" because of Kubrick. "It was a fascinating learning experience," she said.
Tony Kaye and Edward Norton
"American History X" got off to a rough start: Controversial British director Kaye didn't even want to hire Norton to play the lead, but he told The Guardian in 2002 that he "couldn't find anyone better."
Norton and Kaye reportedly began to clash when the film was being edited. Kaye's 95-minute cut was not favorably received by New Line Cinema and Norton, who both began to offer Kaye some notes β and he did not take the suggestions well, reported Den of Geek.
Entertainment Weekly reported in 1998 that Kaye was so furious with Norton that he punched a wall and broke his hand. Kaye also threatened to replace his director's credit with the name Humpty Dumpty. Kaye even called Norton "a narcissistic dilettante" to the outlet.
Norton has never spoken publicly about Kaye.
Michael Bay and Megan Fox
Bay and Fox openly slammed each other in the press, and the animosity seems to have started on the set of "Transformers" in 2007.
In a 2009 interview with Wonderland magazine, Fox said of her director, "[Bay] wants to create this insane, infamous mad-man reputation. He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is ... He has no social skills at all. It's endearing to watch him. He's so vulnerable and fragile in real life and then on set, he's a tyrant."
Members of Bay's "Transformers" crew retaliated by writingΒ an open letter that year that called Fox "the queen of talking trailer trash and posing like a porn star," reported Deadline.
Fox was then fired from the "Transformers" franchise in 2011 and replaced with Rosie Huntington-Whiteley.
"I've always loved Michael," Fox told Entertainment Weekly that year. "We've had our battles in the past but even when I've been really outspoken about difficulties we've had, I've always followed up by saying that I have a particular affinity to him."
Alfred Hitchcock and Tippi Hedren
Hedren ascended to stardom after scoring lead roles in Hitchcock's "The Birds" and "Marnie." But Hedren later told Variety that the director made unwanted sexual advances on her throughout the filming of "The Birds" in 1963 β and threatened her career if she didn't comply.Β
Hedren repeatedly rebuffed his advances. She said, "When he told me that he would ruin me, I just told him to do what he had to do. I went out of the door and slammed it so hard that I looked back to see if it was still on its hinges."
According to Hedren, the inappropriate behavior continued on the set of "Marnie." At one point, Hitchcock and Hedren were in the back of a limousine, and she said he lunged at her, begging her to kiss him.
"It was absolutely awful, and as soon as the movie 'Marnie' was over, I was out of there," Hedren said. "That was the end of the Hitchcock relationship."
Judd Apatow and Katherine Heigl
In a now-infamousΒ Vanity Fair interview from 2008, Heigl insulted her "Knocked Up" director, Apatow, by calling the movie "a little sexist."Β
Heigl went on to express discontent with her character's personality in the film: "It paints the women as shrews, as humorless and uptight," she told the magazine. "It paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys."
Both Apatow and Heigl's costar, Seth Rogen, did not take this critique well. Apatow commented on Heigl's lack of an apology on "The Howard Stern Show" in 2009, saying, "[You'd think] at some point I'll get a call saying, 'Sorry, I was tired ...' and then the call never comes."Β
The incident dampened Heigl's career, leading her to apologize (via the press) in 2016. In 2017, Apatow told Vulture he still hasn't spoken to Heigl since the Vanity Fair interview came out a decade ago.
In 2021, Heigl spoke to The Washington Post about being branded as "difficult" in Hollywood after her "Knocked Up" comments.
"I may have said a couple of things you didn't like, but then that escalated to 'she's ungrateful,' then that escalated to 'she's difficult,' and that escalated to 'she's unprofessional,'" she said. "What is your definition of difficult? Somebody with an opinion that you don't like?"
Kevin Smith and Bruce Willis
Smith discussed the making of the 2010 film "Cop Out" on an episode of "WTF with Marc Maron" in 2011, almost a year after its release. He told the comedian that one of the stars of the film wouldn't sit for a poster photo shoot β and once Maron pressed the director for a name, he let loose.
The "Mallrats" director confirmed that it definitely wasn't Tracy Morgan," who he called "a dream" and said he would "lay down in traffic for."
"Were it not for Tracy, I might've killed myself or someone else in the making of that movie," Smith said. "It was difficult. I've never been involved in a situation like that where one component is not in the box at all." He added it was "soul-crushing."
Wills, for his part, kept it simple in his response. "Poor Kevin. He's just a whiner," he told Time Out in 2013.
However, the two seem to have squashed their beef. Almost a decade later, in 2019, Smith told a story on his podcast, "Fatman Beyond," about the action star texting him to ask for his address, as Willis had some pictures he wanted to send Smith.
"Reach out to an old friend or to someone you never thought would be a friend again. You never know what bridges you can mend," said Smith.
In 2022, Willis' family announced the actor was stepping back from acting after he was diagnosed with aphasia, and the director had some kind words to say on X. "Long before any of the Cop Out stuff, I was a big Bruce Willis fan - so this is really heartbreaking to read," he wrote. He also expressed regret for his previous comments.
Harold Ramis and Bill Murray
Murray and Ramis were longtime friends and "Ghostbusters" costars, but they had a bitter falling out on the set of Ramis' 1993 film "Groundhog Day."
Murray was the star of the film, and, according to Ramis' daughter Violet's book "Ghostbuster's Daughter: Life With My Dad, Harold Ramis," his behavior became increasingly erratic while shooting βΒ he was repeatedly late to set and threw many a tantrum. The issue came to a head when Ramis, at one point, is said to have grabbed Murray by the collar and shoved him against a wall.
Ramis' daughter also wrote that "Bill was going through a difficult time in his personal life, and he and my dad were not seeing eye to eye on the tone of the film."
She added, "Eventually, Bill just completely shut my dad out ... for the next 20-plus years."
Ramis became terminally ill in 2010, and it was then that Murray extended an olive branch, arriving at Ramis' house with a police escort and a dozen doughnuts. The two were friends until Ramis' death in 2014.
Werner Herzog and Klaus Kinski
Kinski was known for being a difficult actor to work with, and this seemed to prove true for director Herzog on the set of "Aguirre: The Wrath of God" in 1972.Β
Kinski and Herzog began to disagree about how Kinski should play his character, and Kinski became defiant. He reportedly threw wild tantrums on set and constantly threatened to quit the production. In one of the latter instances, Herzog is said to have held Kinski at gunpoint in order to make him stay, reportedΒ Indiewire.
The two went on to work together four more times, and Herzog made a documentary about their mercurial, decadeslong friendship called "My Best Fiend" in 1999.
Lars von Trier and BjΓΆrk
Both BjΓΆrk and von Trier won many awards and accolades for their 2000 indie film "Dancer in the Dark." But in light of the #MeToo movement, BjΓΆrk claimed in 2017 that von Trier made unwanted sexual advances at her during filming.Β
In a series of Facebook posts, BjΓΆrk alleged that von Trier made "unwanted whispered sexual offers from him with graphic descriptions," and he threatened to "climb from his room's balcony in the middle of the night with a clear sexual intention."Β
Von Trier denied the claims, saying that sexual harassment was "not the case. But that we were definitely not friends, that's a fact," reported The Guardian.
John Carney and Keira Knightley
Carney blasted Knightley in a 2016 interview with The Independent after their film "Begin Again" was released, calling her a "supermodel" who was unable to capture the essence of her musician character.
Carney said, "Keira's thing is to hide who you are and I don't think you can be an actor and do that ... being a film actor requires a certain level of honesty and self-analysis that I don't think she's ready for yet, and I certainly don't think she was ready for on that film."Β
Directors rallied to defend the Oscar-nominated actor on Twitter (now X), calling her "utterly spectacular" and "a joy" to work with. Carney then issued an apology on X in 2016, saying, "Keira was nothing but professional and dedicated during that film and she contributed hugely to its success."Β
In 2019, Knightley revealed in an interview with the Irish Times that Carney had privately apologized to her, and she had accepted it.
"It was a very difficult shoot. We didn't get on. It's just a thing that happens sometimes and I say that with no blame. It takes two to tango," she said. "I think we can both be very proud of ourselves for the film that we made because it's difficult when a lead actor and director don't get on. And I don't think you could tell that from watching the film."
Paul Thomas Anderson and Burt Reynolds
Anderson hit it big with his critically adored second film, "Boogie Nights," in 1997. But Reynolds, who won a Golden Globe for his performance, never saw the film.
Reynolds told GQ in 2015 that he and Anderson clashed on set, personality-wise. He found Anderson to be too pleased with his own ability, saying they butted heads "mostly because he was young and full of himself. Every shot we did, it was like the first time [that shot had ever been done]."Β
Anderson extended an olive branch by offering Reynolds a part in his next film, "Magnolia," but Reynolds told The Guardian he declined the offer, saying, "I'd done my picture with Paul Thomas Anderson;Β that was enough for me."
Adrian Lyne and Kim Basinger
Basinger spoke to The New York Times in 1986 about the grueling experience of shooting the erotic drama "9 1/2 Weeks."
Basinger was reportedly bullied by director Lyne, who also convinced costar Mickey Rourke to completely ignore Basinger off-camera in order to add to the duo's intensity on-screen. Lyne said to the Times, "In order for her to be angry I would rage at her and she would rage back at me."
It wasn't until after "9 1/2 Weeks" was released that Basinger realized the level of manipulation that was happening on set. She reflected, "Mickey was egging me on β I hated him sometimes. I got confused. I didn't know who I was after a while. My husband [Ron Snyder] and I had a bad time during this movie."
Even though Basinger said there were times she was ready to quit the movie, she holds firm that the experience β and the final product β were worthwhile.
Bernardo Bertolucci and Maria Schneider
Though the scene depicting the rape of Schneider's character was in the script for "Last Tango in Paris," director Bertolucci created a disturbing last-minute addendum.
Bertolucci and actor Marlon Brando had the idea of using a stick of butter as a lubricant for the scene, but they apparently didn't warn Schneider beforehand because Bertolucci wanted "her reaction as a girl, not as an actress," he said in 2013.
In 2007, a few years before her death in 2011, Schneider told The Daily Mail that the scene felt real to her. "Marlon said to me: 'Maria, don't worry, it's just a movie,' but during the scene, even though what Marlon was doing wasn't real, I was crying real tears," she said.
Bertolucci said Schneider hated him for years after the film, and "Last Tango In Paris" received renewed media attention in 2016 before the #MeToo movement, as celebrities β both actors and actresses β rallied to defend Schneider on X.
As any December 24 or December 25 baby knows, it's hard to have a birthday around the holidays.
But they aren't alone β these celebrities were born on Christmas Eve or Christmas.
Justin Trudeau and Sissy Spacek will celebrate their birthdays on December 25.
Sometimes, sharing your birthday with a holiday can be fun β think: Halloween, St. Patrick's Day, or July 4. But trying to celebrate your day of birth while many others are celebrating Christmas can be tricky.
Christmas babies: We see you, and now you have 14 more celebrity friends to commiserate with. These 14 celebrities, from Stephenie Meyer to Ricky Martin, were born on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day.
Keep scrolling to see who's sharing their birthday with the reason for the season.
Ryan Seacrest
On December 24, Ryan Seacrest will turn 50.
Two years ago, Seacrest celebrated his birthday with a family gathering and playing games with balloon animals, according to Instagram.
Ricky Martin
Ricky Martin's 53rd birthday is on December 24, 2024.
To get into the Christmas spirit, Martin voiced a character in the Netflix holiday film "Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey."
Dr. Anthony Fauci
The most famous expert on infectious diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, will turn 84 on Christmas Eve.
Fauci was born on December 24, 1940 β and while he might not have been a huge celebrity for the first seven decades of his life, Decade No. 8 is shaping up to be his busiest ever.
Louis Tomlinson
Louis Tomlinson's 33rd birthday is on Christmas Eve.
Tomlinson is the oldest member of One Direction, and the oldest of seven siblings.
Jimmy Buffett
Jimmy Buffett would have celebrated his 78th birthday on December 25, 2024.
Of the many,Β many,Β albums Buffett released over his decadeslong career, he put out two Christmas albums: 1996's "Christmas Island" and 2016's "'Tis the SeaSon."
Stephenie Meyer
"Twilight" author Stephenie Meyer will celebrate her 51st birthday on Christmas Eve.
In 2020, Meyer released the eighth installment in the "Twilight" saga, "Midnight Sun," a re-telling of the first "Twilight" book from Edward's perspective.
Lee Daniels
Lee Daniels turns the big 6-5 on December 24 this year.
The Oscar-nominated director is celebrating his 65th birthday this year, 19 years after his directorial debut, "Shadowboxer."
Barbara Mandrell
Barbara Mandrell's 76th birthday is this Christmas Day.
The iconic country singer released a Christmas album in 1984, "Christmas at Our House."
Jeremy Strong
Jeremy Strong was born 46 years ago on Christmas Day, 1978.
The "Succession" star has a few things to celebrate this year. He's been receiving awards buzz for his performance as Roy Cohn in "The Apprentice" and won a Tony for his role in "An Enemy of the People."
Sissy Spacek
Sissy Spacek's 75th birthday is on Christmas Day.
The Oscar winner starred in the 2008 Christmas rom-com "Four Christmases."
Justin Trudeau
On December 25, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau turns 53.
At 43 years old, Trudeau was the second-youngest prime minister in Canadian history when he was elected in November 2015.
Dido
Dido will also turn 53 on Christmas Day this year.
The British singer takes a page out of Paddington Bear's book to celebrate her birthday β since Christmas is already a holiday, she celebrates her birthday on June 25, according to The Guardian.
Annie Lennox
Annie Lennox's 70th birthday is on Christmas Day.
The "Walking on Broken Glass" singer released her first and only Christmas album, "A Christmas Cornucopia," in 2010.
Helena Christensen
Danish supermodel Helena Christensen will turn 56 on December 25, 2024.
Christensen first gained mainstream recognition 35 years ago when she starred in the music video for Chris Isaak's "Wicked Game."
With a prequel, Hollywood can get as much out of intellectual property as possible.
Prequels can also be a good way to illuminate something new about a story or character.
Here are some of the best, worst, and plain unnecessary sequels in movie history.
When the news dropped back in 2020 that Disney was producing a prequel to "The Lion King" about the adventures of young Mufasa and Scar, people were skeptical.
Of course, this movie might have something to do with the fact that the live-action remake of "The Lion King" earned $1.6 billion at the box office and the original 1994 film made $978 million.
This isn't the first time Hollywood has released a prequel that may or may not be totally necessary. We've compiled a list of the 22 best, worst, or confusing prequels of all time β keep reading to see which films made the cut.
In contrast to "The Hunt for Gollum," we were excited about "Furiosa," the prequel to "Mad Max: Fury Road."
There have been four movies set in the world of "Mad Max," a postapocalyptic future where the entire planet looks like a desert and society has almost completely broken down β and we can't get enough.
The 2015 installment, "Mad Max: Fury Road," introduced audiences to Imperator Furiosa (played by Charlize Theron), a general who fights against the tyrannical Immortan Joe (played by Hugh Keays-Byrne) to free his enslaved wives.
As "Fury Road" is technically a "Mad Max" movie, we spend more time with Max (played by Tom Hardy in "Fury Road" and originally played by Mel Gibson in the first three), but everyone left the theater wanting more Furiosa.
While "Furiosa" may not have been a hit at the box office, it was still so great to be back in the world created by director George Miller. Anya Taylor-Joy did a solid job as Furiosa, but it was Chris Hemsworth's performance as Dementus that we couldn't stop thinking about.
Another amazing prequel? "The Godfather Part II."
"The Godfather Part II," released in 1974, is both a sequel and a prequel to 1972's "The Godfather." The film simultaneously follows Al Pacino's Michael Corleone as he assumes the role of don in the Corleone crime family after the death of his father Vito, and tells viewers the origin story of a young Vito (played by Robert De Niro) as he immigrates to New York City from Italy.
Comparing and contrasting Vito and Michael at similar ages is a fascinating look into each of their personalities, and the film keeps viewers equally invested in both as they rise to power.
The less we say about "The Godfather Part III," the better.
"Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again" follows a similar format, and it's also a total banger.
In our opinion, "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again," released in 2018, is far superior to the 2008 original film. Why? Because it somehow follows "The Godfather Part II's" playbook and is both a sequel and a prequel.
While we watch a grown-up Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) struggle to finally open her mother Donna's hotel in the present, weΒ alsoΒ get to look back at how a young Donna (played by the effervescent Lily James) met the threeΒ veryΒ handsome men, any one of whom could be Sophie's father.
It shouldn't work, but it does. All we know is that β even if it doesn't make sense β we need both James and Meryl Streep back for the rumored third film.
"The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" is a perfectly entertaining film, whether you've seen the other two films in the trilogy or not.
"The Good, the Bad and the Ugly," released in 1966, was the third and final film of director Sergio Leone's "Dollars Trilogy," which began with 1964's "A Fistful of Dollars."
But "The Good..." is actually a prequel, as it depicts Clint Eastwood's character (known simply as The Man with No Name) gaining the iconic items of clothing he wears in the other two films, and it explicitly takes place during the Civil War, while the others seem a bit more modern.
However, you don't need to see "Fistful" or its 1965 sequel to understand why "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" rules. It's a staple of the spaghetti Western genre, Eastwood is as good as he's ever been, and the film's theme is still iconic almost 60 years later.
"Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" is a controversial film, but there are still things to enjoy about it.
Yes, "Temple of Doom," released in 1984, takes place before 1981's "Raiders of the Lost Ark," even though characters from "Temple of Doom" (e.g. Ke Huy Quan's Short Round or Kate Capshaw's Willie Scott) are not mentioned in "Raiders" or "Last Crusade."
Instead, "Temple of Doom" is a rip-roaring adventure following archaeologist/treasure hunter Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) as he goes up against a religious sect that uses enslaved children and rips out human hearts while trying to save a rural village that's been cursed.
"Temple of Doom" hasΒ notΒ aged well in all aspects (its depiction of Indian food and culture is abysmal), and it doesn't really provide any context about Indy's early life β you'd have to watch the prologue of "Last Crusade" to see River Phoenix playing a younger version of the character β it's still worth the watch for the mine car chase, Ford's delivery of "We are going to die," and the ludicrous plane-crash scene.Β
"Rogue One" is the best "Star Wars" prequel β bar none.
"Rogue One" is a prequel that explains exactlyΒ oneΒ plot point from the first "Star Wars" movie, originally released in 1977. Almost 40 years later, in 2016, fans finally got the answer to this question: How did the Rebels get access to the schematics of the Death Star?
Now we know: The daughter of an Empire engineer, Jyn Erso (Felicity Jones), teamed up with a ragtag crew comprised of a spy named Cassian Andor (Diego Luna), a reprogrammed Imperial droid named K-2SO (Alan Tudyk), a blind believer in the Force and his best friend (Donnie Yen and Jiang Wen), and a former Imperial pilot who turned good (Riz Ahmed), to steal the plans from an Imperial base on a suicide mission.
"Rogue One" is such an effective prequel because it almost immediately gets you invested in these characters, and you already know the stakes because of the original trilogy β the fate of the galaxy is at stake.
If that wasn't enough prequel action for you, don't fret. The Disney+ series "Andor" is itself a prequel to "Rogue One."
"Star Wars: Episode III β Revenge of the Sith" is also a solid prequel.
It all led to this: "Revenge of the Sith," released in 2005, finally showed "Star Wars" fans how exactly Jedi prodigy Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) turned into one of the most terrifying villains of all time, Darth Vader.
The final confrontation between Anakin and his erstwhile mentor, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), has basically become a meme at this point, but when you rewatch the movie, it still hits. These two actors are both operating at the top of their game, and you really feel the heartbreak coming from both of them.
This film almost makes the mediocre first two films in the prequel trilogy (more on them later) worth it.
"Bumblebee" gave audiences the chance to learn more about everyone's favorite yellow Transformer.
After the truly mind-boggling events of 2017's "Transformers: The Last Knight," which introduced the Knights of the Round Table and Merlin to the mythology, it was time to take the franchise back to basics.
And one year later, they did by releasing "Bumblebee," which takes the story back to 1987 and focuses on 18-year-old Charlie (Hailee Steinfeld). Charlie, who has just lost her father, finds Bumblebee in a scrapyard and begins to bond with him.
The stakes are a little lower, the lore is aΒ lotΒ more digestible, and Steinfeld is easily the best protagonist the franchise has ever seen.
"Transformers: Rise of the Beasts" is pretty good too β "Transformers" might be the only franchise that's truly benefited from prequels.
In 2023, "Rise of the Beasts" was released. It's a bigger story than "Bumblebee" but not as incoherent as "Last Knight" or "Dark Side of the Moon." It also has a way more compelling cast of characters, led by Anthony Ramos as Noah Diaz, Dominique Fishback as Elena Wallace, and Pete Davidson as Mirage.
Again, this movie is a prequel to the original films, taking place mainly in 1994 and largely ignoring the events of both "Bumblebee" and the later films.
It's a fun time at the movies for anyone who simply likes to turn off their brain and watch giant robots beat each other up.
Because, against all odds, "Transformers One" makes this list too.
In 2024, audiences were treated to yet another movie focusing on the Transformers; this time it was an animated prequel about the origins of Optimus Prime, voiced by Chris Hemsworth, his best-friend-turned-archnemesis Megatron, voiced by Brian Tyree Henry, and Bumblebee, voiced by Keegan-Michael Key.
To put it plainly: This movie rocks. The voice casting is impeccable, the animation is beautiful, and the story is genuinely compelling.
"X-Men: Days of Future Past" was a fun way to see younger versions of our favorite characters while keeping around some of the original X-Men.
The "X-Men" franchise has one of the most complicated chronologies in movie history β and much of that is made even more confusing with the events of 2014's "Days of Future Past," which sees characters from the original "X-Men" film go back in time to link up with the characters introduced in 2011's "X-Men: First Class" to change the future and hopefully save all of mutant-kind.
Seeing Hugh Jackman's Wolverine interact with the younger version of his mentor Professor X (played by James McAvoy) and his arch-enemy Magneto (Michael Fassbender) is entertaining, and the happy ending they manage to pull off for almost everyone feels earned.
The only prequel Pixar has ever produced is "Monsters University," which doesn't match the highs of "Monsters, Inc.," but is still a prequel worth watching.
"Monsters University" was released in 2013, 12 years after we last saw Sulley and Mike, our resident scarers (and later comedians).
The ending of "Monsters, Inc." should never be touched β it's perfect β so when it was announced that another film in this universe was coming, fans were a bit nervous. But the filmmakers managed to avoid ruining the end of "Monsters, Inc." by instead showing us how best friends Mike (Billy Crystal) and Sulley (John Goodman) met while they were attending Monsters University.
Fans get some genuine insight into how this world works, how Mike and Sulley were able to bond even though they're total opposites, and even how their beef with Randall (Steve Buscemi) started.
And before you ask: No, "Lightyear" isn't a prequel.
"Alien: Covenant" is more connected to the original "Alien" films than its predecessor, "Prometheus."
The world of "Alien" is a big one β that's why there have been seven movies, with a TV show on the way next year.
While 2012's "Prometheus" takes place in the same universe as "Alien," its 2017 sequel "Alien: Covenant" directly ties into the events of the earlier films by essentially retelling the events of 1979's "Alien." But this time, it explains how the horrifying xenomorphs were actually created by the evil Weyland-Yutani Corporation and how learning to control these creatures has always been their plan.
Also, we have to shout out Michael Fassbender, whose dual performance as Walter and David is the highlight of this movie. Creepy androids are an important part of the "Alien" franchise, and he knocked it out of the park.
But not all prequels are great β some are completely unnecessary, like "Oz the Great and Powerful," an origin story for the Wizard from "The Wizard of Oz."
"The Wizard of Oz" remains one of the greatest films of all time, even though it was released 85 years ago. That's probably enough of a reason to leave this story alone, but instead, there have been many attempts to create a worthy sequel of the film β none of them have lived up to the original.
Sadly, neither does 2013's prequel "Oz the Great and Powerful," starring James Franco as the titular Oz. Part of the fun of "The Wizard of Oz" is that you don'tΒ reallyΒ know how the Wizard got to Oz, and that mystery adds to the fantastical vibes of the land of Oz.
But if you watch "Oz," you'll learn all about Oscar's career as a scam artist, how he manipulated everyone around him, and how he inadvertently created the Wicked Witch of the East.
It's not a horrible movie, but it kind of diminishes the magic of the original film, and for that, it's unnecessary.
We can't knock Emma Stone's performance in "Cruella," but did we really need an origin story for the Dalmatian-hating Cruella de Vil?
We know that anti-heroes are all the rage, but did Disney really expect us to start siding with a woman who wanted to skin 101 Dalmatian puppies for a coat? This 2021 film gives Cruella de Vil, the villain of the 1961 animated film, a convoluted back story in which she clashes with a legendary fashion designer known only as the Baroness (Emma Thompson).
It is fun to watch Stone and Thompson face off, the fashion is to die for, and it's overall a solid movie ... but there's no reason for it to exist. We didn't need to know any more about Cruella β and we definitely don't need a sequel.
Many people loathe the "Hobbit" trilogy β "Lord of the Rings" fans were content with the original three films.
Simply put: "The Hobbit" films (2012's "An Unexpected Journey," 2013's "The Desolation of Smaug," and 2014's "The Battle of the Five Armies") are slow. While the first three "Lord of the Rings" movies are based on a 1,200-page tome, "The Hobbit" films are based on a 300-page novel (that's downright cute in comparison).
Maybe "The Hobbit," which starred Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins, would've worked as a single film, but there was no reason for the story to be stretched out across three films β especially when we know exactly how it ends thanks to Bilbo's appearances in "Fellowship of the Ring" and "The Return of the King," as played by Ian Holm.
We'll see if "The Hunt for Gollum" is a more worthy prequel β the jury's still out on "The War of the Rohirrim."
"300: Rise of an Empire" took everything that was not great about "300" and doubled down.
"300," the 2006 historical epic, isn't exactly a work of cinematic art, but it is entertaining, and spawned many a meme and much interest in ancient Sparta.
However, "Rise of an Empire," released in 2014, is both a prequel and a sequel and also takes place during the events of "300." You could argue it bites off more than it can chew. Plus, in our opinion, Sullivan Stapleton does not hold the screen the same way Gerard Butler does.
As The New York Times' Nicolas Rapold put it, "Rise of an Empire" "[lacks] the momentum and bombastic je ne sais quoi of '300.'"
"The Thing" didn't live up to the '80s original.
The 1982 John Carpenter classic "The Thing" was negatively reviewed upon its release, but it has since been reappraised as one of the best sci-fi/horror films of all time. The special effects alone remain horrifying 42 years later.
The 2011 prequel, also called "The Thing," leads viewers right up to the first moments of the 1982 film, which completely removes the stakes β you know that everyone in the film is toast.
As many critics noted, the 2011 version also didn't really deviate from the source material. NME's Owen Nicholls wrote, "The real mess lies in the fact that from Plot Point One until Act III we're treading over all-too-familiar snow prints."
Just watch the original.
"Star Wars: Episode I β The Phantom Menace" and "Star Wars: Episode II β Attack of the Clones" are just boring.
Think back to 1999 β the first "Star Wars" movie in 16 years is about to be released. You can't wait to see how director George Lucas is going to show fans how the Jedi chosen one, Anakin Skywalker, became the space fascist known as Darth Vader.
You sit down with popcorn to view "The Phantom Menace" ... and you watch a movie that's about track blockades, contains a scientific explanation for the Force, and portrays the future Darth Vader as a whiny kid.
Three years later, in 2002, you sit down once again to see "Attack of the Clones." Maybe they've course-corrected β but no. Now you have a whiny teenage Anakin Skywalker, the Jedi acting even more incompetently than they did in "Phantom Menace," and a movie that's just as boring. There's not a Han Solo-level character to be found.
Skipping to "Revenge of the Sith" is the best way to view "Star Wars," trust us.
"The Scorpion King's" only redeeming quality is that it started Dwayne Johnson on his path to movie stardom.
"The Scorpion King" is just a bad movie. The CGI is bad, the Rock hasn't mastered his on-screen persona yet (read: he does not have a personality in this movie), and there's really no reason we needed to see the Scorpion King's origin story: There's a scene dedicated to his origin story in "The Mummy Returns," and that tells us everything we need to know.
"Mufasa: The Lion King" does not justify its existence.
Prequels like this are tricky to pull off β weΒ knowΒ that Taka will turn into the villainous Scar, who will one day push his brother off a cliff to his death, an act that traumatized so many '90s and 2000s kids. So, it's hard to get invested in him as a cute cub when we know what his future holds.
Similarly, it's hard to get invested in the action when we know that basically every character on screen will be fine. There are so many scenes where Mufasa almost falls off a cliff, which is supposed to be foreshadowing but also has no dramatic tension since we know he will be OK (for now).
The animation is better than in 2019's "Lion King" remake. However, it's still somewhat in the uncanny valley zone, and it's always going to be easier animating a cartoon lion to have expressions than a photorealistic one. If you're really in need of a "Lion King" sequel, check out "The Lion King II: Simba's Pride."
Since its 1983 release, "A Christmas Story" has become a beloved holiday classic.
But you might not have known that the film inspired the sitcom "The Wonder Years."
The film almost starred Jack Nicholson as Ralphie's dad, aka the Old Man.
"A Christmas Story" is one of the most beloved holiday films of all time, but it wasn't immediately a huge phenomenon on its release in November 1983.
It made a modest $19 million at the box office, according to Box Office Mojo, and was out of theaters before December 25.
But after years of repeat showings on cable β including, famously, 24 hours of "A Christmas Story" on TNT and TBS on Christmas Day β it's become a true holiday staple.
Here are some things you might not know about this film, including who almost made the cast and some blink-and-you-miss-it cameos.
"A Christmas Story" is based on two books written by Jean Shepherd.
Shepherd was a well-known radio personality, comedian, writer, and storyteller by the time "A Christmas Story" was released. The film is based on a set of short stories that were first published in Playboy before he compiled them into the collection "In God We Trust: All Others Pay Cash" in 1966, per CBS.
Other elements of the film were taken from his 1971 collection "Wanda Hickey's Night of Golden Memories and Other Disasters."
Shepherd and his wife, Leigh Brown, who also cowrote the film, have cameos in the movie.
Besides narrating the film, Shepherd also cowrote "A Christmas Story" with his wife, Leigh Brown, and the film's director, Bob Clark.
Shepherd and Brown appear in the scene where Ralphie and his brother Randy meet Santa at the department store Higbee's.
Director Bob Clark also has a cameo.
Clark plays one of Ralphie's neighbors who questions the Old Man about the famous Leg Lamp.
This wasn't the first holiday film Clark worked on β he directed the Christmas-themed slasher "Black Christmas" in 1974.
Clark got Shepherd barred from the set after he made too many suggestions to the actors.
Vanity Fair reported there was friction between Clark and Shepherd. Shepherd, for his part, was protective of his characters, while Clark was concerned with finishing the project on time and under budget β so he barred Shepherd from the set.
"Shepherd was a perfectionist with his own material, but Bob Clark had a budget and a schedule that he had to meet, and he already figured out how this all should be done, and he couldn't have Shepherd constantly interrupting," Shepherd's biographer Eugene Bergman told the publication.
There have been three sequels across 28 years.
The first theatrical sequel, "My Summer Story," was released in 1994, and was once again directed by Bob Clark. However, almost no one from the original cast reprised their roles.
Ralphie β originally portrayed by Peter Billingsley β was played by none other than Kieran Culkin, while his parents were played by Charles Grodin and Mary Steenburgen in roles that were originated by Darren McGavin and Melinda Dillon.
The only returning actor was Tedde Moore as Ralphie's teacher.
In 2012, "A Christmas Story 2" was released. It ignored the events of "My Summer Story" and once again starred an entirely new cast.
Ten years later, most of the surviving cast reunited for "A Christmas Story Christmas," which is a direct sequel to the original, and follows 42-year-old Ralphie as he comes home for Christmas after the death of his father.
"A Christmas Story" inspired the creation of the '80s classic sitcom "The Wonder Years."
It's easy to see the connections β "A Christmas Story" is told mainly from the point of view of 9-year-old Ralphie, who deals with an annoying brother, a somewhat strict mother, and a distant but loving father. It's also narrated by an older version of Ralphie.
That's basically the setup of "The Wonder Years," down to the older version of the main character narrating. It premiered in 1988, five years after "A Christmas Story" was released.
The connection was so strong that Billingsley himself had a cameo in the final two episodes of the show as a friend of main character Kevin (Fred Savage).
Sean Astin and Wil Wheaton were considered for the role of Ralphie.
Astin and Wheaton were two of the biggest child stars of the '80s.
But in 1983, neither was that well-known. Wheaton's big break came in 1986's "Stand By Me" before he was cast in "Star Trek: The Next Generation" in 1987.
For his part, Astin starred in the 1985 adventure classic "The Goonies" before appearing in films such as "Toy Soldiers" (also starring Wheaton!) and, most famously, "The Lord of the Rings."
Wheaton wrote about his experience seeing Astin and Billingsley at auditions on his blog in 2001.
"I sort of knew Peter [Billingsley] because we'd been on so many auditions together, but I was always a little star-struck when I saw him," he wrote.
The specific BB gun Ralphie so desperately wants never existed in real life.
Throughout the film, all Ralphie wants for Christmas is a Red Ryder Carbine Action 200-shot Range Model air rifle.
But this gun never actually existed. The Red Ryder model didn't have the sundial (the "thing that tells time") or a compass that Ralphie's ideal gun had, but a different model manufactured by Daisy Outdoor Products did. So, the gun had to be constructed specifically for the film.
In 2020, Daisy finally released an official replica of the "Christmas Story" rifle, aptly titled the Christmas Dream.
Jack Nicholson was considered for the role of the Old Man, aka Ralphie's dad.
Clark said he "loved" Nicholson, but was glad he didn't get the part "because Darren [McGavin] is the Old Man," according to Vanity Fair.
For context, this movie came out the same year as "Terms of Endearment," and just three years after "The Shining" β it might have been difficult to see Nicholson as a wholesome father figure.
In Ralphie's dream sequence, Billingsley is chewing real tobacco.
In the beginning of the film, Ralphie has a dream sequence where he saves his family from a gang of outlaws, and you can clearly see he's got a hunk of what's supposed to be chewing tobacco in his bottom lip.
You might think that a kid wouldn't be given real dip, but you'd be wrong. Billingsley told Vanity Fair that a propman on the set gave him some chewing tobacco, and within a few minutes he was profusely sweating and the entire set had to be shut down.
"We shut down for an hour or so, when I just had to lie down on the couch. This was long before they knew what to do with kid actors," he said.
For the rest of the shoot, the kids were given ground-up raisins.
Ralphie's hometown Hohman, Indiana, is based on the real Indiana city of Hammond, but the film was mainly shot in Cleveland.
Shepherd's hometown was Hammond, the only city in Indiana to border Chicago. The film uses a real street in Hammond, Hohman Avenue, as the inspiration for its name.
It was not seen as a classic upon its release.
"A Christmas Story" was originally released on November 18, 1983, a full month before Christmas. It never topped the box office and was out of theaters by the middle of December, which meant people couldn't even see the movie during the peak of the holiday season.
But the legacy of "A Christmas Story" was just getting started. It became a true cable classic β so much so that TNT and TBS each play the film for 24 hours straight on Christmas Day, and at various other times during December, meaning that millions more people have seen it on TV than ever did at the cinema.
The film was turned into a musical in 2012.
"A Christmas Story: The Musical" had two limited runs on Broadway for the 2012 and 2013 holiday seasons.
Funnily enough, strengthening the connection between "A Christmas Story" and "The Wonder Years," Dan Lauria β best known as Kevin's father on "The Wonder Years" β originated the role of Jean Shepherd on Broadway.
You can stay in the Parkers' home for real.
The house, which is located in Cleveland, has been turned into a museum. It's been restored to look exactly like it did during the production of the movie and houses authentic props and costumes from the movie.
Super-fans are also able to spend a night in the Parkers' home.
Of course, there's also an online gift shop if you want to purchase your own leg lamp.
Jon Favreau cited "A Christmas Story" as an inspiration for "Elf" β Billingsley even has a cameo in it.
Favreau and Billingsley are frequent collaborators. Billingsley has been credited as a producer or executive producer on six movies that Favreau has directed or starred in: "Made," "Elf," "Zathura," "The Break-Up," "Iron Man," and "Four Christmases."
Billingsley's 2009 directorial debut, "Couples Retreat," was cowritten by Favreau, who also stars in the film.
If you're sick and tired of "Love Actually" and "It's a Wonderful Life," you're not alone.
There are plenty of holiday movies that are full of blood, guts, laughs, and more.
Here are 18 of the best anti-Christmas Christmas movies.
Christmas movies are a huge industry and some, like "The Holiday," "Elf," or "Home Alone" are both wholesome and were huge box-office smashes. Others made less impact at the box office β see "A Christmas Story" and "It's A Wonderful Life" β but still became beloved classics.
But for every movie that makes you feel warm and fuzzy inside, there are horror, action, or black comedy films set around the holidays that might make you feel a bit differently about the holiday season.
Here are some of the best anti-Christmas Christmas films to watch when you've heard enough angelic carols and drank enough eggnog for lifetime.
"Carry-On"
"Carry-On" is essentially "Die Hard" in an airport β don't worry, "Die Hard" also appears on this list. It stars Taron Egerton as a lone TSA worker who is blackmailed into helping a terrorist known only as The Traveler (Jason Bateman) smuggle nerve gas onto a plane, all while his wife, Nora (Sofia Carson), is being held hostage.
What else could you ask for? We ranked this as our favorite of Netflix's six new holiday films this year. It should not be missed.
"Carry-On" is streaming on Netflix.
"Dear Santa"
When Liam, a sixth-grader who has dyslexia, accidentally addresses his letter to "Satan" instead of "Santa," hijinks ensue. Instead of St. Nick, Satan, a low-level demon played by Jack Black, shows up to help Liam gain back some confidence ... for the low price of his soul, of course.
Anyone who loves to see Black going wild should fire this movie up. It will not disappoint.
"Dear Santa" is streaming on Paramount+.
"Red One"
In the world of "Red One," Santa Claus (JK Simmons) is totally ripped and loves to lift weights. He's also protected by a Secret Service-esque agency that knows him by the codename Red One. When Santa is kidnapped, his best agent, Callum Drift (Dwayne Johnson), teams up with a talented hacker and bounty hunter, Jack O'Malley (Chris Evans), to get him back.
"Red One" is streaming on Prime Video.
"Violent Night"
"Violent Night" stars David Harbour as Santa Claus, but not like any Santa you've seen before. When a rich family is targeted by a band of mercenaries at their mansion on Christmas Eve, Santa decides to stick around and take them down.
The mercenaries all have Christmas-themed code names, including their leader Scrooge, played by the always-great John Leguizamo.
If you're looking for some very visceral action and a Santa who used to be a bloodthirsty Viking, turn on your TV now.
"Violent Night" is streaming on Starz.
"Die Hard"
"Die Hard," released in 1988, stars Bruce Willis as John McClane, an NYPD detective traveling to Los Angeles to attend his estranged wife's holiday party at her building, Nakatomi Plaza. That same night, radical German terrorist Hans Gruber, played by Alan Rickman, decides to execute his plan to take the entire building hostage to steal hundreds of millions of dollars.
There's been much debate over the years whether "Die Hard" is a real Christmas movie, or a movie that just happens to take place on Christmas Eve.
Whichever side you fall on, it works as a thrilling action movie.
"Die Hard" is steaming on Disney+, Hulu, and Tubi.
"Batman Returns"
The sequel to 1989's "Batman," 1992's "Batman Returns" stars Michael Keaton once again as Bruce Wayne, aka Batman. This time, he's joined by Michelle Pfeiffer as Selina Kyle, aka Catwoman, Danny DeVito as the Penguin, and Christopher Walken as sleazy businessman Max Shreck.
Director Tim Burton's gothic version of Gotham City is all decked out for the holidays in "Batman Returns," covered in snow, Christmas lights, and a huge tree.
Plus, one of the most famous lines from the movie involves the potentially lethal nature of mistletoe.
This sequel isn't for the faint of heart, with the Penguin's overall disgusting vibe, the multiple attempted murders of Catwoman, and the overall dour vibes of Gotham City.
In the 2003 black comedy "Bad Santa," Billy Bob Thornton plays Willie, a small-time crook who secures a gig as a mall Santa every year β and this year, it works out in his favor as he meets Sue (played by Lauren Graham), a woman with a full-blown Santa fetish.
Along the way, Willie meets a young boy, Thurman, who he takes under his wing, gets blackmailed by a mall security guard (played by Bernie Mac), and learns a bitΒ about the meaning of Christmas.
The less we say about 2016's "Bad Santa 2," the better.
"Bad Santa" is streaming on Paramount+ and Pluto TV.
"Gremlins"
A true '80s classic, "Gremlins" is the tale of Billy Peltzer, played by Zach Galligan, who receives a mogwai for Christmas from his dad, accompanied by three simple rules: Don't expose the mogwai to sunlight; don't let it touch water; and don't let it eat after midnight.
Of course, everything goes wrong, the entire town is invaded by gremlins on Christmas Eve, and more than one person dies at the hands of Stripe, Gizmo, and the rest of them.
"Gremlins" and its sequel "Gremlins 2: The New Batch" are both quintessential anti-Christmas Christmas movies.
"Gremlins"Β and "Gremlins 2" are streaming on Max.
"Krampus"
Starring Adam Scott and Toni Collette, 2015's "Krampus" follows the Engel family, who are more than a little dysfunctional. When Max, the youngest son and the only true believer in Santa, curses his family and loses his Christmas spirit, he inadvertently summons Krampus, a horned demon that punishes any family that doesn't respect the holidays.
Come for the surprisingly solid cast, stay for the festively gruesome kills and German folklore.
"Black Christmas," released in 1974, is a true '70s slasher. It follows three sorority sisters who are targeted by a mysterious caller only known as "The Moaner," who terrorizes them just before they're set to go home for Christmas break.
There won't be anything bloodier and less jolly on this list than "Black Christmas," but it has staying power β the film was remade in 2006 and 2019, though neither is as good as the original.
A California Christmas is already an odd combination, as many associate the holidays with cold temperatures, snow, and general coziness, not 85-degree weather, shorts, and sunshine.
Add in a dark criminal conspiracy, a thief played by Robert Downey Jr., a gay detective played by Val Kilmer, and a childhood crush played by Michelle Monaghan, and you have a solid neo-noir on your hands β and yes, it takes place at Christmas.
"Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" is available to rent online.
"Anna and the Apocalypse"
Starring Ella Hunt as Anna, a student who is planning to take a gap year before university, "Anna and the Apocalypse," released in 2017, is like "High School Musical" meets "Shaun of the Dead" meets Christmas.
Anna and her friends, on the night of their school's Christmas show, discover that their town (and later country) has been infected by a zombie virus ... all while singing about their feelings.
A particularly memorable set piece takes place at a Christmas tree warehouse.
"Anna and the Apocalypse" is streaming on Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel.
"Reindeer Games."
With a cast of A-listers like Ben Affleck, Charlize Theron, and Gary Sinise, 2000's "Reindeer Games" is filled with action, multiple plot twists, stolen identities, and Affleck dressed up as Santa attempting to rob a casino.
"Ocean's 11" this is not, but "Reindeer Games" provides the laughs and only a little bit of Christmas cheesiness at the end.
"Reindeer Games" is streaming on Paramount+.
"The Long Kiss Goodnight"
Geena Davis plays Samantha Caine, a schoolteacher with amnesia who discovers she has the skills of an expert assassin. To figure out who she really is, she hires a private investigator named Mitch Henessey (Samuel L. Jackson).Β
"The Long Kiss Goodnight," released in 1996, also has an iconic action set piece at a Christmas parade where Davis dresses up as Mrs. Claus, if you needed any more convincing to turn this on.
"The Long Kiss Goodnight" is streaming on Pluto TV.
"Tangerine"
Sin-Dee Rella, played by Kitana Kiki Rodriguez, meets up with her friend Alexandra, played by Mya Taylor, on Christmas Eve, soon after she was released from prison. This 2015 film follows the two friends on their Hollywood escapades over the next few days as they catch up, look for clients, support each other's work, and more.
"Tangerine" is streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.
"The Ice Harvest"
"The Ice Harvest," released in 2005, stars John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton as unlikely allies who team up to steal from their mobster boss, played by Randy Quaid. When the two are stuck in town due to icy roads, they're left to their own devices to entertain themselves in Wichita, Kansas, during the holiday season.
Rounding out the cast is Connie Nielsen as a woman who runs a strip club in town (and is the object of Cusack's affection), Oliver Platt as one of Cusack's friends, and Mike Starr as a mob enforcer.
"The Ice Harvest" is available to rent online.
"Lethal Weapon"
The 1987 film "Lethal Weapon" is the story of LAPD narcotics sergeant Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson) and homicide sergeant Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover) teaming up to take down a criminal conspiracy. It's also another California Christmas film.
Throughout the film, there are many reminders of the holiday season, including lights, Christmas trees β and frequent shootings, murders, and more. But it can still be considered a holiday classic!
"Lethal Weapon" is streaming on Hulu.
"In Bruges"
The Belgian city of Bruges has never looked better than in this 2008 film, as it's decorated for the holidays β too bad its charms are wasted on Ray (Farrell), who compares being in Bruges to being in hell.
This is a story of redemption and friendship, as Gleeson's character Ken sticks by his friend, even after Ray accidentally kills a kid.
If you enjoyed "The Banshees of Inisherin," which recently starred Farrell and Gleeson, try watching their first collaboration.
"The Brutalist," starring Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, and Guy Pearce, is 3 hours and 35 minutes.
Over the last few years, blockbusters have become longer and longer.
Three-hour movies are becoming more common, like "Killers of the Flower Moon" and "Oppenheimer."
Multiple movies in recent years have clocked in at three hours long, from "Killers of the Flower Moon" and "Oppenheimer" to this year's architectural epic, "The Brutalist."
The reaction to these lengthy running times ranges from joy to begging for an intermission, and in the case of "The Brutalist," those prayers were answered: The film has a 15-minute intermission built into its runtime.
A long runtime isn't an unprecedented move. There have been many movies throughout cinematic history that have clocked in at three hours or more, including some of the highest-grossing movies of all time, like "Avengers: Endgame" and "Avatar: The Way of Water."
If you ever have a spare afternoon, here are 23 three-hour-long movies that will eat up a significant chunk of your day.
'The Wolf of Wall Street': 3 hours
"The Wolf of Wall Street," directed by Martin Scorsese, is based on the true story of Jordan Belfort and his escapades as the leader of a stock brokerage firm that ended up breaking federal laws. The movie was well-received by both critics and audiences, according to Rotten Tomatoes.
"'The Wolf of Wall Street' is a magnificent black comedy: fast, funny, and remarkably filthy," wrote The Atlantic.
'Oppenheimer': 3 hours
"Oppenheimer," one-half of the biggest movie phenomenon of last year ("Barbenheiemer"), stars Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb.
The film follows Oppenheimer from his time as a university student in the United Kingdom through World War II and the atomic bomb detonations, the security clearance hearing that ended his career in politics, to the end of his life.
The Ringer wrote that the "level of shock and awe" exhibited in "Oppenheimer" is "breathtaking," yet sometimes also "taxing."
'Dances with Wolves': 3 hours, 1 minute
Kevin Costner both starred in and directed the 1990 film "Dances with Wolves," which follows a Civil War-era lieutenant in the US Army who is positioned in a remote outpost on the western frontier. He eventually becomes part of a Native American tribe.
His directorial debut was applauded and even earned Costner the best director Academy Award. It also won best picture. Newsweek wrote, "Costner directs with the confidence of a Hollywood veteran well aware that entertainment comes before earnestness."
'Avengers: Endgame': 3 hours, 2 minutes
"Avengers: Endgame" didn't have an easy job to do β tie up a full decade of Marvel movies while simultaneously setting the stage for Phase 4. But somehow, it worked. It also managed to rake in nearly $2.8 billion at the box office.
As Business Insider's Kirsten Acuna wrote, "'Endgame' is an emotional punch straight to the gut," and "a very satisfying conclusion to this adventure that started back in 2008 with Tony Stark."
'The Deer Hunter': 3 hours, 3 minutes
"The Deer Hunter" combined the star power of Robert De Niro, Meryl Streep, and Christopher Walken in a movie about the effects that the Vietnam War had on residents of their small Pennsylvania town.
"Babylon" is an epic story of Old Hollywood, following three characters, played by Margot Robbie, Diego Calva, and Brad Pitt, as they make their way in 1920s Los Angeles.
The film was divisive. The London Evening Standard called it a "disaster of biblical proportions," while the Wall Street Journal said it was one of the "richest and most ambitious films" of the year.
Rotten Tomatoes said it best: "This colossal and opulent $60 million spectacular was epic in every sense of the word β an epic investment, an epic in the annals of Hollywood gossip, and, ultimately, an epic flop."
'Avatar: The Way of the Water': 3 hours, 12 minutes
Director James Cameron's long-awaited follow-up to 2009's "Avatar" (which itself is 2 hours and 42 minutes long) came 13 years later and is even more of a spectacle than its predecessor.
"The Way of Water" continues the story of Jake Sully and his love, Neytiri, along with their blended family of biological and adopted children, as they once again face the greed of the human race trying to exploit Pandora's natural resources.
Business Insider's Jason Guerrasio called the film an "astounding epic."
'The Right Stuff': 3 hours, 13 minutes
"The Right Stuff" is based on the true story of Chuck Yeager and his fellow test pilots who were chosen for Project Mercury, the first crewed spaceflight.
"Rarely has a film made a historic accomplishment seem so vivid and personal," wrote The Hollywood Reporter. "It makes you wonder, quite suddenly, why there aren't more movies like this."
'Titanic': 3 hours, 14 minutes
The tragic love story of Jack and Kate, two passengers on the doomed RMS Titanic, was forever immortalized in this tearjerker.
Vox reviewer Alyssa Wilkinson watched the film for the first time in 2017 and found it to be still effective.
She wrote that it "swept me off my feet almost from the get-go, a grand epic romance-disaster that reminded me, in the middle of my overstuffed-with-movies life, of what we mean when we talk about the power of cinema."
'Schindler's List': 3 hours, 15 minutes
Steven Spielberg's Oscar-winning drama is about the true story of Oskar Schindler, a German man who defied the Nazis and saved more than 1,000 Jews by employing them at his factory.
"With seemingly effortless grace and skill, 'Schindler's List' balances fear and exaltation, humor and horror, love and death," wrote The Chicago Tribune.
'The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King': 3 hours, 21 minutes
The final movie of "The Lord of the Rings" saga concluded with the entire Fellowship of the Ring working together to save Middle Earth from the evil all-seeing eye of Sauron.
Though its running time tired some people out β "Yes, the running time is long, and yes, those many endings in a slow, dreamy coda left me feeling spent β better spent than I can ever remember," wrote The Wall Street Journal β it became the first and only "Lord of the Rings" movie to win the Academy Award for best picture.
'The Godfather Part II': 3 hours, 22 minutes
This follow-up to "The Godfather" combined the origin story of mob boss Don Vito Corleone with the rise of his son, Michael, in the rare sequel that's just as good as, if not better than, the original.
"One of the most ambitious and brilliantly executed American films, a landmark work from one of Hollywood's top cinema eras," wrote The Chicago Tribune.
'Malcolm X': 3 hours, 22 minutes
Denzel Washington starred as the titular Malcolm X, one of the most famous and divisive leaders in Black history.
Newsweek wrote, "[Director Spike] Lee and company have performed a powerful service: they have brought Malcolm X very much to life again, both as man and myth."
'Barry Lyndon': 3 hours, 23 minutes
"Barry Lyndon," directed by Stanley Kubrick, follows the titular character, played by Ryan O'Neal, for around 40 years of his life, as he rises from a lower-class gambler to the husband of a lady β and then sinks back to being a gambler.
As Rotten Tomatoes wrote, the film is "cynical, ironic, and suffused with seductive natural lighting."
'Killers of the Flower Moon': 3 hours, 26 minutes
One of the best movies of last year was "Killers of the Flower Moon," starring frequent Scorsese collaborators like Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, along with new additions like Lily Gladstone and Jesse Plemons.
The film is based on the real murders of members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma, also known as the Reign of Terror, in the 1920s.
"Killers" was called "grand, classic film-making" and "an American tragedy of the highest order" by The New Statesman.
'The Irishman': 3 hours, 29 minutes
"The Irishman" reunited De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, and more of some of the most iconic actors of the last 50 years to tell the decadeslong story of Union leader Jimmy Hoffa (Pacino), mob enforcer Frank Sheeran (De Niro), and mob leader Russell Bufalino (Pesci).
Even though it's a hefty 3 1/2 hours, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, "there are 209 minutes in 'The Irishman' and not one of them is wasted."
'Ben-Hur': 3 hours, 32 minutes
Charlton Heston, one of the most legendary actors in history, starred as the titular Ben-Hur, a Jewish prince who is sold into slavery and must journey back home to Jerusalem, all the while meeting historical figures like Pontius Pilate and Jesus Christ himself.
The Telegraph wrote that "the story of how a man takes on the tyranny of the Romans, with all sorts of horrible consequences to himself and his family, is powerful and gripping."
'The Brutalist': 3 hours, 35 minutes
"The Brutalist," which is directed by Brady Corbet and hits theaters on December 20, is the story of Hungarian architect LΓ‘szlΓ³ TΓ³th (Adrien Brody) as he moves to the United States in the aftermath of the Holocaust. When he is hired by an enigmatic client (Guy Pearce), his life begins to unravel.
"Similar in tone to such Paul Thomas Anderson films as 'There Will Be Blood' and 'The Master,' Mr. Corbet's often-staggering movie casts an unsentimental look at the price of greatness," wrote The Wall Street Journal.
'Lawrence of Arabia': 3 hours, 36 minutes
"Lawrence of Arabia," based on the life of British soldier T.E. Lawrence in WWI-era Middle East, is separated into two parts and even has an intermission.
"'Epic' is an over-used word in cinema, but David Lean's 1962, near-four-hour journey with T.E. Lawrence (Peter O'Toole) into the Arabian desert is surely the gold standard for films grand in scale, design and delivery," wrote Time Out on the film's 50th anniversary.
'Gone with the Wind': 3 hours, 58 minutes
This nearly four-hour sprawling story is about Scarlett O'Hara, a Civil War-era woman who lives on a Georgia plantation and deals with love, loss, and eventually is determined to start her life anew.
While the film has been criticized for its dubious portrayal of the Civil War and slavery, Time Out wrote, "No one watches 'Gone with the Wind' for historical accuracy. What keeps us coming back is four-hours of epic romance in gorgeous Technicolor."
Walt Disney Studios has come a long way since its inception in the 1920s, when two brothers, Walt and Roy Disney, began animating an impish mouse named Mickey.
Now, Disney is one of the largest movie studios on the planet and controls properties such as "Star Wars," Marvel, Pixar, "Planet of the Apes," and more.
But first and foremost will always be Disney Animation. Since its first feature-length animated movie was theatrically released in 1937, Disney has been the gold standard for animated films.
Business Insider used Rotten Tomatoes' critics scores to rank every one of the studio's fully animated films β that means no "Fantasia," "Mary Poppins," or "Songs of the South," which have live-action components. This list also does not include movies like "A Goofy Movie" and "Return to Never Land," which were produced by a division of the company, Disney MovieToons.
The scores were accurate as of December 2024.
Here's how the animated Disney films stack up against each other from worst to best.
After the success of the studio's 1999 movie "Tarzan" and its soundtrack, which featured Phil Collins, Disney attempted to recapture that magic with "Brother Bear," a story of brotherly love that also included Collins' music.
However, Nell Minow of Common Sense Media called this film a "lackluster story only for kindergarteners."
Based on the folk tale of the same name, "Chicken Little" is about a fearful little chicken who becomes convinced the sky is falling. While the adults in his life dismiss him, it becomes clear that something is certainly afoot in his small town.
"When Disney can't hit a tried-and-true fairy-tale adaptation out of the park, maybe it's time to give up the ghost and get Pixar back on the phone," wrote the Orlando Sentinel's Roger Moore.
"Wish" is filled to the brim with Easter eggs referring to Disney's 100 years of magic, but the studio seems to have forgotten to add a compelling story, lovable characters, or well-written songs.
Asha had the potential to be an all-time Disney princess, but the rules of this universe are confusing, and Magnifico's heel turn seemingly comes out of nowhere.
"This fairy tale feels more like a corporate product than a magical event; it's a limp dissertation on Disney's motto that, 'When you wish upon a star, your dreams come true,'" wrote The Boston Globe's Odie Henderson.
There's not a cute animal sidekick or a show tune to be found in "Atlantis." Instead, Milo, a passionate archaeologist, unwittingly exposes the people of Atlantis to the corporate greed of the surface world in this slightly depressing story.
"It's so oppressively tedious at times that you almost wish the cast would break into a chorus of 'Under the Sea,'" wrote Lou Lumenick for The New York Post.
"Home on the Range" is a simple story of three cows who decide to take matters into their own hands (hooves?) to save their farm by collecting a bounty put on the head of Alameda Slim, a cattle rustler and thief.
Richard Roeper called it "a serviceable time-killer" on "At the Movies."
This cartoon is a loose adaptation of the Charles Dickens story "Oliver Twist," but instead of a down-on-his-luck orphan, Oliver is an adorable stray kitten.
For most people, this is remembered as the Disney movie with songs by Billy Joel.
"With its captivating characters, sprightly songs and zap-happy animation, 'Oliver & Company' adds up to a tip-top frolic," wrote Peter Travers for People.
Pocahontas was a real Native American woman. but her life did not follow the fairy tale story put forth by Disney. No matter how good "Colors of the Wind" is, this film is flawed and best left in the past.
"All Disney has really done in its disappointing 33rd animated feature is revive the stereotype of the Noble Savage," wrote Rita Kempley for The Washington Post.
"The Black Cauldron" is based on Welsh mythology β hence why characters have names like Princess Eilonwy and Fflewddur Fflam. It tells the story of a teenager named Taran who longs to become a hero. He gets his chance when he sets out to prevent the Horned King from using the Black Cauldron to raise an evil army.
"This is the 25th full-length animated feature from Walt Disney studios, and professionally put together as it is, many of the ingredients may seem programmed to those who have seen some of the others," wrote Walter Goodman of The New York Times.
In this version of the classic tale, Robin Hood and Maid Marian are foxes, his best friend Little John is a bear β who looks suspiciously like Baloo from "The Jungle Book" β and the dastardly Sheriff of Nottingham is a wolf.
"The washed-out, muted colors are a mistake, and if Robin Hood is sometimes hilarious, it has little memorable magic," wrote Alan R. Howard of The Hollywood Reporter.
You'll find "Moana 2's" predecessor much higher on this list.
"Moana 2" sees the return of Moana, a newly minted wayfinder, as she tries to reconnect the people of her island, Motunui, with their ancestors from other islands. To do this, she reunites with demigod Maui on a new adventure across the sea.
"Much like the hermit crab who kicks things off by attempting to trade in his new shell for an ill-fitting larger one, there's simply not enough to fill out 'Moana 2,'" wrote Andrea Thompson for Chicago Reader.
"The Aristocats" is essentially the tale of "Lady and the Tramp," but this time with cats. Duchess, a pristine cat and mom of three precocious kittens, meets the alley cat Thomas O'Malley and falls in love.
"Before the disastrous aughts, was there a worse decade for Disney animated features than the 1970s?" asked Matt Brunson of View From the Couch.
"Dinosaur" is the story of Aladar, a dinosaur who was orphaned and then raised by lemurs. Aladar and his adopted family join up with other dinosaurs to find a safe place after a natural disaster devastates their home.
If this sounds just like the other animated dinosaur film, "The Land Before Time," to you, you're not alone.
Michael Sragow of Salon wrote, "Well, Bambi meets Godzilla again in the new computer-cartoon epic 'Dinosaur,' but the results aren't so witty."
Notably, this was the last Disney film to be released before Walt Disney's death in 1966.
"The Sword in the Stone" is King Arthur's origin story β he meets legendary sorcerer Merlin and pulls out Excalibur, the sword lodged inside the stone.
'There is still some life in the characterizations, though the animation is turning stiff and flat," wrote Chicago Reader's Dave Kehr.
In "Meet the Robinsons," Lewis is desperate to find his birth mother, who gave him up for adoption. Instead, he's brought to the future by the mysterious Wilbur, who claims he's a time cop.
"Charming as all these surface layers are β and even in 2D, it's more than passable family fare β 'Meet The Robinsons' really flowers with the extra dimension, which makes an already neato cinematic universe feel palpably inhabitable," wrote Scott Tobias for the AV Club.
"Treasure Planet" updates the setting of the famed pirate story "Treasure Island" to the future. Instead of hitching a ride on a pirate ship, Jim Hawkins hops on a spaceship β and instead of looking for buried treasure, Jim and his friends are searching for a missing planet made entirely of treasure.
"Akin to an extremely well-made Saturday morning cartoon β great for hyperactive four-year-olds or hungover students, not worth a trip to the pictures," wrote Nev Pierce for the BBC.
At the time, "The Rescuers" was one of Disney's most popular films (even if its reputation has been somewhat diminished since its release in 1977), which is why our two favorite mice, Bernard and Bianca, returned for this film β the first sequel ever theatrically released by Disney.
This time, Bernard and Bianca are sent to Australia by the Rescue Aid Society to help a young boy who's been kidnapped.
"A gorgeously drawn myth made for plucky children and very brave mice," wrote The Washington Post's Rita Kempley.
Based on the 1831 Victor Hugo novel of the same name, "Hunchback" centers on sweet Quasimodo, a physically deformed man who is orphaned after the villainous Judge Frollo murders his mother.
To atone for his sins, Frollo adopts Quasimodo but keeps him hidden atop Notre Dame's bell tower. But when Quasimodo catches sight of Esmerelda, he vows to enter the world below.
"You're quickly won over by the movie's subversive wit, swept along by its narrative bravado and its enormous visual energy. This new 'Hunchback' is a triumph on its own terms, and on any other terms that might come to mind." wrote Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal.
Not even the A-list voice talent of Jake Gyllenhaal, Dennis Quaid, Jaboukie Young-White, Gabrielle Union, and Lucy Liu could save this movie β which isn't bad! β from flopping.
"Strange Worlds" is about the Clades, a family of legendary explorers who must venture into space to see if they can save their planet.
"So much of 'Strange World's' audaciousness is front-loaded into its concept, and so little of it comes through in the execution," wrote Alison Willmore for Vulture.
"The Fox and the Hound" is one of the rare Disney movies that doesn't have a totally happy ending. Tod, a fox, and Copper, a bloodhound, meet when they're young and become best friends. But when they grow up, they learn they're natural enemies.
It ends on a bittersweet note, as the two friends acknowledge that they probably won't see each other again, but are at peace in the forest.
"All charmingness aside, this cute but rather thinly plotted yarn exposes the cracks that were present in the pre-renaissance Disney empire," wrote William Thomas of Empire.
"Frozen II" picks up soon after where "Frozen" left off β Elsa is now queen and in control of her ice powers, Anna and Kristoff are in love, and Olaf is just happy he's not melting.
But when Elsa begins to hear a mysterious voice calling out to her, our characters leave Arendelle behind to discover the source of Elsa's power.
"The songs, perhaps not as compelling as in the original, still make the heart beat faster now and then," wrote Stephen Romei for The Australian.
"Peter Pan" is based on the 1904 play of the same name by JM Barrie.
In it, the Darling children are whisked away to Neverland, a magical world where children never grow up, fairy dust lets you fly, and an evil captain with a hook for a hand terrorizes the seas.
But Neverland is also home to Tiger Lily and her tribe, who are drawn in the most stereotypical way possible β so much so that Disney has added an apology before the film plays on Disney+.
"It is still a lush, bright feature that happily clicks along with rollicking songs by Sammy Cahn, Sammy Fain, and others," wrote Dolores Barclay for the Associated Press.
In this story, Basil and Dawson are the mice stand-ins for Sherlock and Watson, while Professor Ratigan (a rat) is based on Sherlock's arch-nemesis Professor Moriarty.
"'The Great Mouse Detective' reflects the energy and enthusiasm of a talented group of young artists stretching their wings for the first time," wrote Charles Solomon for the Los Angeles Times.
"The Rescuers" focuses on Bernard and Bianca, two mice who are sent to help Penny, a young orphan who has been kidnapped by the evil Madame Medusa, who plans to use her to steal a precious jewel.
"Although not one of the studio's classics, it has warmth, humor and delightful characterization," wrote Victoria Mather for The Daily Telegraph.
"Hercules" is a loose re-telling of the Greek myth of the hero Heracles. After getting kidnapped and turned (almost) mortal by Hades' henchmen, Hercules goes on a quest to prove to his father, Zeus, and the rest of the gods that he's worthy of immortality and godhood.
"Jumps into the ancient legends feet-first, cheerfully tossing out what won't fit and combining what's left into a new look and a lighthearted style," wrote Roger Ebert.
Based on Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," this adaptation follows Alice as she falls down the rabbit hole and meets unforgettable characters like the Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, and the Queen of Hearts.
"If you are not too particular about the images of Carroll and [illustrator John] Tenniel, if you are high on Disney whimsy, and if you'll take a somewhat slow, uneven pace, you should find this picture entertaining," wrote Bosley Crowther for The New York Times.
"The Princess and the Frog" updates the setting of the Brothers Grimm fairytale "The Frog Prince" to 1920s New Orleans. Tiana is a determined young woman who wants more than anything to open her own restaurant.
When she kisses prince-turned-frog Naveen to revert him back to humanity, the opposite happens: Tiana turns into a frog, too.
"This has a lot to commend it, and it isn't just nostalgia for the Disney past. It's a visual treat," wrote The London Evening Standard's Derek Malcolm.
After years of criticism regarding its Disney princesses and their lack of agency, audiences were given Mulan, a young woman who secretly takes her father's place in the Chinese Imperial Army by disguising herself as a boy.
Mulan is a warrior through and through. No one could ever call her a typical damsel in distress.
"Overall, this is a lovely film, ranking with the best of Disney's animated features while taking on rather serious issues of war, honor, gender roles and family pride," wrote Moira MacDonald for The Seattle Times.
In "The Emperor's New Groove," David Spade stars as Kuzco, the self-absorbed, clueless Incan emperor, who is turned into a llama by his evil advisor Yzma, who wants to steal the throne for herself. To get his throne back, Kuzco must team up with the kindly peasant Pacha, whose house he has marked for destruction.
CNN's Paul Tatara called Kuzco's tale "a silly little movie that's smarter than most of the self-important features that came out this year."
Newly orphaned sisters Lilo and Nani are struggling to adjust to their new normal when Lilo adopts Stitch, a rambunctious alien who she thinks is just a weird dog. When two agents of the Galactic Federation come looking for Stitch, chaos erupts on Kauai.
"It's one of the most charming feature-length cartoons of recent years β funny, sassy, startling, original, and with six songs by Elvis," wrote Roger Ebert.
"Wreck-It Ralph" is the story of Wreck-It Ralph, the villain in the classic arcade game "Fix-It Felix Jr." But when Ralph is sick of being the bad guy in everyone's story, he goes on an epic journey visiting other video games to become a hero.
"'Wreck-It Ralph' is a must-see for anyone who grew up playing 1980s arcade games β and their kids will love it too," wrote Larushka Ivan-Zadeh for Metro UK.
23 (tie). "The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad" (1949)
Running at just 68 minutes long, this is an anthology film. First up is "The Wind in the Willows," which is the story of J. Thaddeus Toad, who is trying to save his home from bankruptcy.
The second story is "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," in which Ichabod Crane arrives in Sleepy Hollow and is stalked by the terrifying Headless Horseman.
Chicago Reader's Jonathan Rosenbaum called this film "engaging and lively."
This film is based on the Rudyard Kipling book of the same name, published in 1894 β and was the last film Walt Disney himself worked on. He died during its production.
It's the simple story of Mowgli, an orphaned human raised by wolves. But when it becomes clear that the evil tiger Shere Khan will stop at nothing to kill Mowgli, a panther named Bagheera and a bear Baloo agree to take Mowgli back to the human village he came from.
"It's a slight tale, of course, and incredibly short, but the characters and songs are pretty much perfect viewing time and again," wrote Empire's Ian Nathan.
Six years after "Wreck-It Ralph," in which Ralph discovers that even though he's a villain in his game, he doesn't have to be a bad guy; he's on another adventure with his friend Vanellope. This time, our duo heads to the internet to find a part that's needed to fix Vanellope's game, "Sugar Rush."
"'Ralph Breaks the Internet' works because it doesn't pander, and it doesn't simplify," wrote Brian Tallerico for RogerEbert.com.
Based on the 1912 novel "Tarzan of the Apes" by Edgar Rice Burroughs, "Tarzan" tells the story of the titular character being raised by apes after his parents are killed. Although he feels out of place, he doesn't know any different until Jane and her crew of explorers arrive at Tarzan's jungle and begin to show him a different way.
"Tarzan" is a fun time at the movies, but its lasting legacy is the multiple songs on the soundtrack written and performed by Phil Collins.
In June 1999, Peter Stack of The San Francisco Chronicle called it "so far, the most entertaining film of the year."
"Tangled" is a classic Disney princess film, but made with modern 3D animation, a first for the studio. It tells the tale of Rapunzel, a teenager with magical hair who longs to see the world outside her tower β and when the charming thief Flynn Rider happens upon her home, she seizes the chance to break free.
"If this is what old-fashioned means, then bring it on," wrote Derek Malcolm of The London Evening Standard.
While it doesn't seem like it now, a Disney princess story where the true love story is between two sisters was groundbreaking. Add in some of the catchiest songs ever written by the House of Mouse and a lovable (if somewhat grating) snowman, and you have one of the studio's biggest and most beloved films, raking in more than $1.3 billion at the worldwide box office.
For all the talk about how poorly this relationship has aged β sure, it's true love's kiss, but can someone under a sleeping curse really consent? β this movie is a wonder to look at. Maleficent, the evil witch, remains a high point of Disney's character designs.
"'Sleeping Beauty' is a masterpiece. In my opinion, it's not just the best animated film to ever come out of Walt Disney Studios, but it is also the finest animated motion picture I've ever seen, period," wrote Sara Michelle Fetters for MovieFreak.
In the 16 years since its release, it seems like "Bolt" has been somewhat forgotten. But it's fun! It stars John Travolta as the voice of Bolt, the star of a hit TV series who doesn't realize his superpowers on the show aren't real. When he believes his owner is kidnapped β but really, it's just a cliffhanger in the show β he embarks on a cross-country journey to rescue her.
"While it may lack a certain amount of bite, there's plenty of bark to recommend this winning animated adventure," wrote The Sydney Morning Herald's Eddie Cockrell.
Everyone's favorite honey-loving bear, who starred in 1977's "The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh," returned to the big screen in "Winnie the Pooh."
This time, Pooh and the rest of the Hundred Acre Wood crew team up to save Christopher Robin from a monster they're calling the Backson β in reality, Christopher Robin is just at school and will be "back soon."
"It's a pleasure to sink into an animated family movie from Disney that radiates charm with a gentleness that seems damn near revolutionary," wrote Peter Travers for Rolling Stone.
"Bambi" is a straightforward story about a young deer growing up in the forest and learning how to protect the forest creatures from hunters known only as Man.
The New York Times' Theodore Strauss wrote, "In colors that would surprise even the spectrum itself, Disney's cartoon craftsmen have re-created a woodland that shimmers and glows and darkens altogether magically."
Disney went through a rough period in the '70 and '80s β when "The Little Mermaid" was released in 1989, it was a return to form for the studio. It's a classic love story with beloved songs like "Part of Your World," "Under the Sea," and "Kiss the Girl."
"'The Little Mermaid' β impudent, grandiose, a multilevel crowd-pleaser β almost returns the Disney animated features to their glory traditions of the '30s and '40s," wrote the Los Angeles Times' Michael Wilmington.
"Encanto" is about the Madrigal family, who each receives a magical power when they turn 5 β all except Mirabel, who was mysteriously skipped over. When the magic in their home starts failing, Mirabel makes it her mission to save her family, powers or not.
"You will be humming 'Welcome to the Family Madrigal' β expositional but infectious β all the way home. The characters are infectious, too, and well-drawn, enriching 'Encanto's' world with gifts that extend far beyond their bestowed powers," wrote Time Out's Whelan Barzey.
"The Lion King" combined breathtaking visuals, amazing songs composed by Elton John, Tim Rice, and Hans Zimmer, and an epic coming-of-age story to cruise to $978 million at the box office.
Jay Carr wrote in The Boston Globe, "Make no mistake, the magnitude of the achievement here far outweighs any shortcomings. 'The Lion King' is both populist blockbuster and royal treat."
"Lady and the Tramp" is another Disney film that now comes with a disclaimer due to the problematic nature of its two Siamese cats, Si and Am.
If you're able to move past that, though, "Lady and the Tramp" is simple and sweet. Lady is a dog who's barely left her house, but due to a misunderstanding, she ends up on the street and meets the stray Tramp.
Their spaghetti kiss is still being referenced to this day.
"The quintessential American love story β the one between the spoiled heiress and the spontaneous, fun-loving guy from the wrong side of the tracks β has seldom been more elegantly and entertainingly told," wrote The Chicago Tribune's Dave Kehr.
Kelly Marie Tran stars as Raya, a young woman who goes on a quest to find the last dragon to reunite her fractured country, Kumandra.
"As an overall throwback, and as a return to the streamlined storytelling upon which Disney built its supremacy, 'Raya and the Last Dragon' is a welcome expansion of the Disney universe," wrote Pajiba's Roxana Hadadi.
"Beauty and the Beast" is based on, well, a tale as old as time: a French fairy tale from the 1700s. In it, Belle is taken hostage by a prince-turned-beast who lives in a castle filled with talking furniture.
When you take it out of context, as with many animated films, it's β¦ weird. But songs like "Be Our Guest," "Beauty and the Beast," "Gaston," and "Belle" are all-time favorites. And the Academy agreed β it was the first animated movie to ever be nominated for best picture.
"The set pieces are narcotically pleasing, especially the Busby Berkeley-style dancing-kitchenware spectacular, 'Be Our Guest,' and the romantic ballroom centerpiece that brings Beauty and her Beast together," wrote Lisa Schwarzbaum for Entertainment Weekly.
"Dumbo" has some problematic elements, including a flock of stereotypical crows β one of whom was originally named Jim Crow β a drunk baby elephant, and "Song of the Roustabouts."
But Dumbo's design makes him one of the cutest characters in the Disney canon, and "Baby Mine" is a tearjerker.
"Perfection, thy name is Dumbo," wrote Slant Magazine's Rob Humanick.
"Aladdin" is anchored by the iconic voiceover performance by Robin Williams as the Genie. But there's lots of other stuff to love, like Princess Jasmine and her pet tiger Rajah, the bumbling Sultan, and the sweet "street rat" Aladdin.
While its depiction of the Middle East has been criticized, as theΒ BBC noted, "Aladdin" remains one of the most loved Disney films of the last 40 years.
"The magical, the mystical, the mysterious β all those powers that lurk within movies but are rarely tapped are unleashed in Disney's latest magnificent animation, 'Aladdin,'" wrote Duane Byrge for The Hollywood Reporter.
"Moana" is another modern Disney princess film that eschews a love story for a story of personal growth. Moana ventures out to the sea to save her island and, along the way, learns that she's capable of leading her people and exploring the open ocean.
Victoria Luxford called "Moana" "great fun" and "a traditional Disney Princess film but with a little more depth to it, being about personal discovery and bravery" for BBC CWR.
Almost 90 years later, the tale of Snow White, her seven dwarf friends, the Evil Queen, the Huntsman, and her handsome (unnamed) prince, remains the blueprint β it was the first Disney movie, after all.
"It was the dearest picture I have ever seen. The characters were so sweet that I just wanted to hug them," wrote the Miami Herald's Elizabeth Hemphill.
"Cinderella" is one of the most frequently adapted fairy tales of all time, but Disney's animated version of the rags-to-riches story is the most beloved. And it's been said that Cinderella's transformation was one of Walt Disney's favorite pieces of animation.
"The musical numbers woven into the fantasy are generally solid, with at least two or three likely hit tunes standing out in the half-dozen songs," Variety wrote in 1949.
This movie did more for Dalmatians than any best-in-show title could β and its villain, the puppy-napping, fur-obsessed Cruella de Vil, is still one of Disney's best-known villains.
"Among the many contributions of Disney and his team to the cinema, this is perhaps the strangest: they have made us watch with heart in mouth the adventures of beings who exist only as the projection of photographs and colored drawings," wrote Dilys Powell for the Sunday Times.
"Zootopia" takes place in a world without humans, where anthropomorphic mammals have built their own society, complete with laws, organized crime, and tax evaders like Nick Wilde (a fox voiced by Jason Bateman).
"The fictional universe it presents β a human-free world where mammals have evolved into a bustling, civilized society β is vividly realized, richly detailed, and very funny," wrote John Nugent for Empire.
1 (tie). "The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh" (1977)
"The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh" is three shorts starring Pooh as he combats a blustery day, bees, Heffalumps, and Tigger's inability to stop bouncing.
"You'll enjoy reuniting with childhood friends, and for the next-generation fans of The Book of Pooh, this batch of honey couldn't be sweeter," wrote Entertainment Weekly's Dalton Ross.
"Pinocchio" is based on an Italian children's story from 1883. It's a heartwarming (if a bit creepy) story of a wooden puppet who comes to life after its creator, Gepetto, wishes upon a star.
Why has "Pinocchio" remained at the top of the pack? Well, "When You Wish Upon a Star" is Disney's official theme, distilling everything we love about Disney movies into a 3-minute and 15-second song.
Otis Ferguson wrote in The New Republic that "Pinocchio" is "a delight and at times will take your breath away, for the limits of the animated cartoon have been blown so wide open that some of the original wonder of pictures β wonder and terror too, as when that train roared up into the camera β is restored."
When this day rolls around, people buy and travel less. In fact, the global economy is estimated to lose as much as $900 million every time a Friday lands on the 13th.
However, the Dutch Center for Insurance Statistics reported in 2008 that Friday the 13th is actually statistically safer than other Fridays β there are fewer accidents and reports of fire and theft on these days.
If that doesn't convince you, keep scrolling to learn about some positive events that took place on a Friday the 13th.
President Lyndon B. Johnson signed an executive order preventing gender discrimination in the government.
While Title VII officially prevented discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, and sex for private employers, it wasn't until Executive Order 11375 that discrimination based on gender was illegal for the federal government and federal contractors.
President Johnson signed the order, which was officially titled Amending Executive Order No. 11246, Relating to Equal Employment Opportunity, on October 13, 1967.
Malta became a republic.
The tiny Mediterranean country of Malta first became independent of the British in 1964, but officially became a republic on December 13, 1974.
Evelyn "Pinky" Kilgare-Brier became the first certified female pilot instructor.
According to the National Museum of the US Air Force, Kilgare-Brier became the first woman to receive an airplane instructor's license on October 13, 1939.
She was an important figure for women in aviation. She also flew non-combat missions during World War II, and after the war she owned and operated her own private airport, according to her obituary in the Los Angeles Times.
The Olympics officially returned to their home country.
The 2004 Summer Olympics were held in Athens, Greece, the country where they started, both in ancient and modern times. The opening ceremony took place on August 13.
It was the largest Olympic Games at the time, with 201 countries participating. Michael Phelps also won his first Olympic medal and broke his first record in Athens.
The queens of the '90s, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, were born.
They famously got their start on "Full House" and went on to create an empire: books, videos, perfume, clothing lines, and much more.
"Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour" premiered on Friday, October 13, 2023.
Taylor Swift was born on December 13, 1989 β her birthday lands on Friday the 13th this year β and she has repeatedly said that 13 is her favorite number. She even used to perform with "13" drawn on her hand.
As part of her 13 agenda, her blockbuster concert film "Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour" premiered in theaters on Friday, October 13, 2023. It went on to become the highest-grossing concert film of all time after grossing $261 million worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo.
The first scientifically recognized dinosaur eggs were discovered.
Roy Chapman Andrews discovered the first dinosaur eggs at a dig in Mongolia on July 13, 1923, according to the American Museum of Natural History.
Scientifically, this was huge for the field of paleontology, confirming that dinosaurs laid eggs. The museum was so impressed that Andrews went on to become its director from 1935 to 1942.
The famous Hollywood sign was dedicated.
The Hollywood sign is an iconic piece of California culture. But when it was officially dedicated on July 13, 1923, it wasn't even supposed to last for more than two years.
Originally, the sign was installed to promote a new subdivision in the Hollywood Hills.
"Super Mario Bros." was released.
"Super Mario Bros.," one of the most iconic video games in history, was released on September 13, 1985, exclusively in Japan, per The Verge.
Since then, Mario has been in approximately 170 games, including wildly successful spin-offs like "Mario Kart," "Mario Party," and "Paper Mario."
A "significant amount" of water was found on the Moon.
A lunar space station has long been the subject of science fiction novels, but on November 13, 2009, that dream took one step closer to reality when NASA announced they found water on the Moon.
How much is a "significant amount"? According to NASA's Anthony Colaprete, around a dozen 2-gallon bucketfuls.
Black Sabbath released their debut album and invented heavy metal.
The 69th best debut album of all time, at least according to Rolling Stone, Black Sabbath's self-titled album was released on February 13, 1970.
The album is widely regarded as having created the genre of heavy metal, with instant classics like "NIB." and "The Wizard."
Actor Steve Buscemi was born.
Steve Buscemi was born on December 13, 1957 β yes, he shares a birthday with Taylor Swift. Buscemi might be famous as an actor, but he also has a lesser-known second career: a New York City firefighter.
Buscemi became an NYC firefighter at age 18. He eventually left the service to pursue acting, but in the aftermath of 9/11, Buscemi helped with rescue efforts and worked 12-hour shifts sifting through the rubble.
"Friday the 13th Part III" was released.
Of the iconic "Friday the 13th" movie saga, "Part III" was the first to actually open on Friday the 13th (August 13, 1982), the first to experiment with 3D, and the first appearance of Jason's mask.
Even though the movie was critically panned, the movie made over $36 million against a $2.3 million budget, according to Box Office Mojo.
Friday the 13th is always the last day before the weekend.
If all else fails to convince you that Friday the 13th isn't a cursed date, just remember this: It's the last day of the work week. Fridays are the best!
Friday the 13th has been a superstitious date for a very long time, but no one knows exactly why.
There are multiple examples of terrible or tragic events happening on these Fridays in history.
Friday the 13th is so famously unlucky that there's even a phobia dedicated to it: friggatriskaidekaphobia.
Even if you personally don't put stock in this fear, there are a lot of people who do. The Stress Management Center and Phobia Institute even estimated in 2013 that between $800 and $900 million are lost in business every Friday the 13th because people are afraid to shop, travel, and conduct business.
Still think it's just a superstition? These events might be enough to convince even the most determined non-believer.
Buckingham Palace was bombed during WWII.
German forces during WWII bombed Buckingham Palace on September 13, 1940. The bombs hit both the palace and its chapel.
Even scarier, the king and queen were at the residence at the time of the attack. Even though the event was traumatic, Queen Elizabeth II β then a princess β merely stated she was "glad we have been bombed. Now I can look the East End in the face," the BBC reported.
March 13, 2020, could be considered the first official day of the pandemic in the US.
Shakur was shot four times on September 7, 1996, in Las Vegas. He succumbed to his injuries six days later on Friday, September 13.
In September 2023, police arrested one of the last surviving witnesses to his killing for the murder. Duane "Keffe D" Davis was indicted by a jury in Clark County, Nevada, on one count of murder with the use of a deadly weapon, plus a gang enhancement.
The arrest came after Davis spoke multiple times publicly β including in a memoir β about his involvement in the case. Davis, who remains in custody, pleaded not guilty in November 2023.
A British 13-year-old boy was struck by lightning on a Friday the 13th, at 13:13.
The Daily Mail reported that the unnamed teenager was struck by lightning while at an air show in England in 2010 and, incredibly, only sustained burns on his shoulder. The hospital stated he was expected to make a full recovery.
Kitty Genovese, a Queens resident, was brutally attacked and murdered.
The murder of Kitty Genovese took place on March 13, 1964. The New York Times reported Genovese was assaulted and killed by Winston Moseley inside her apartment building. The crime is famous because, reportedly, 38 people heard the attack, and none of them called the police β making the "bystander effect" a household term.
The Costa Concordia cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Italy.
The Costa Concordia sank into the ocean on January 13, 2012. It became the largest passenger ship ever wrecked, with almost double the number of people on board than on the Titanic.
Thirty-two people died, and the captain was convicted of manslaughter in 2015.
Kansas experienced record-breaking amounts of rain and flooding.
On July 13, 1951, the state of Kansas was hit with over 25 inches of rain. The cities of Manhattan, Lawrence, and Topeka were most affected, and over 2 million acres of land were damaged by the flood.
The storm also affected oil tanks, some of which caught on fire and exploded. There were passengers stuck on trains for four days. And, at its highest, the flooding exceeded previous records by 4 to 9 feet.
The people of Kansas were not wrong to call this day "Black Friday."
The stock market experienced a "mini-crash" in 1989.
After the buyout of United Airlines fell through on October 13, 1989, the ripples were felt throughout the stock market, specifically the junk bond market.
CNBC reported this resulted in a 7% sell-off in the Dow, and the S&P 500 lost 6%. Essentially, a lot of people lost a lot of money.
A flight through the Andes ended in disaster and death.
Uruguayan Flight 571 was headed toward Chile when it crash-landed in the Andes on October 13, 1972. In the following days, the survivors were reduced to hiding in the fuselage of the plane and eating deceased passengers.
The rescue efforts were called off only 10 days after the crash, so it was shocking when two men appeared 72 days later and alerted the authorities that there were 16 other survivors trapped in the mountains.
On that same day, another flight crashed in Russia.
At the time, the tragedy of Aeroflot 217 was the worst plane crash in Russian history. All 174 people on board the flight (including the 10 crew members) died when the plane crashed while trying to land due to bad weather.
It's never been confirmed what the cause of the crash was β some speculate it was a lightning strike. The plane ended up just 3 miles away from the runway.
The Ku Klux Klan's first Grand Wizard was born.
Nathan Bedford Forrest was born on July 13, 1821. Forrest first rose to fame as a Confederate general and was in charge of the infamous Fort Pillow Massacre, where he and his men reportedly killed over 200 unarmed Union soldiers who had surrendered (many of whom were Black).
Forrest is widely believed to have served as the KKK's first Grand Wizard, though he would later decree that the organization should be demolished, PBS reported.
Computers fell victim to the "Friday the 13th Virus."
On January 13, 1989, a computer virus swept through the UK. The Los Angeles Times reported hundreds of computers were affected by the virus, which deleted personal files specifically on the unlucky date.
The virus also slowed computers down, but fortunately didn't cross the Atlantic Ocean.
The Bhola cyclone hit Bangladesh.
The storm officially ended on November 13, 1970, but its effects are still being felt today.
The Bhola cyclone is still the deadliest storm in the Bay of Bengal β the death toll is estimated to be from 150,000 to 550,000, according to NBC News. One district in Bangladesh lost over 45% of its population.
In addition to being deadly and extremely costly, the cyclone is credited with jump-starting a civil war. At the time of the storm, the area was called East Pakistan. The Pakistani mismanagement of the relief efforts was considered to be a huge event in the fight for Bangladeshi independence.
Swedish flight DC-3 vanished and was never heard from again.
A Swedish flight disappeared while flying over the Baltic Sea on June 13, 1952. And for 40 years, the Swedish government stuck by the story that the plane was merely performing training exercises.
However, National Geographic wrote that in the '90s, it was leaked that the crewmembers were actually spying on the Soviet Union for NATO, even though Sweden was officially neutral during the Cold War. And Russia responded with its own confession: A Russian pilot told a Swedish diplomat that he had shot the plane down.
The city of Buffalo, New York, was hit with a freak blizzard.
It's been called the "October Surprise." From October 12 to October 13, 2006, western New York was hit with two feet of snow. Over 300,000 people were left without power, thousands of trees were damaged, and the governor of New York declared a state of emergency for the Buffalo region.
The Black Friday bushfires consumed Victoria, Australia.
The fires in Victoria from 1939 to 1940 were the culmination of a long, dry summer. But on January 13, 1939, the Black Friday bushfires consumed the area: 71 people died directly from the fire, another 438 from the resulting heatwave, and 575,000 hectares of land were burned to a crisp.
The ash that resulted from the two days of flames was intense. There were reports of it reaching as far as New Zealand.
Daredevil Sam Patch plunged to his death in the Genesee River in 1829.
Sam Patch was America's first professional daredevil, according to Atlas Obscura. Throughout his life, he jumped from many great heights, including Niagara Falls twice.
So, when he decided to jump from the High Falls into the Genesee River, no one thought to be concerned, but it quickly became apparent that something was wrong.
While some speculated that he was drunk, it's never been known for sure what exactly happened to Patch when he jumped into the river. But on November 13, Patch jumped, and his body was found four months later.
In 2029, an asteroid will come extremely close to Earth.
According to NASA, an asteroid, 99942 Apophis., will come within 20,000 miles of the Earth on April 13, 2029. This might not seem like a big deal, but it's actually extremely close in relation to space.
Although it's not expected to actually hit our planet, the closeness of the asteroid could cause damage on its surface β the gravity of Earth might cause avalanches on Apophis.
Lifetime released "Christmas in the Spotlight" this year.
It's about the world's biggest pop star falling in love with a football player. Sound familiar?
The movie is filled with Easter eggs and references to both Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce.
Many have said that the relationship between Taylor Swift, one of the most β if not the most β popular musicians in the world right now, and Travis Kelce, a hugely successful NFL player, feels straight out of a romantic comedy.
The holiday movie geniuses over at Lifetime certainly did β and that's why "Christmas in the Spotlight," a Lifetime Christmas movie about a pop star and a football player falling in love, has been brought into the world.
Screenwriter Eirene Tran Donohue told USA Today that Christmas and Taylor Swift are the "two great loves of my life."
"I think this movie does stand if you've never even heard of Taylor Swift or Travis Kelce," she said. "I think that Swifties will enjoy it and understand that it was made with love and that it is not an attack on her and it's not trying to be exploitative," she continued.
Although there are some key differences between our main characters, Bowyn and Drew, and Swift and Kelce, the references to their real lives abound.
Here are all the Easter eggs we found in "Christmas in the Spotlight."
This movie starts out strong, showing Bowyn directing her own music video, just like Swift.
Swift has directed the videos for "I'm Only Me When I'm With You," "The Best Day," "Mine," the vertical version of "Delicate," Me!," "You Need to Calm Down," "Lover," "Christmas Tree Farm," "The Man," "Cardigan," "Willow," "Anti-Hero," "Bejeweled," "Lavender Haze," "Karma," "I Can See You," "Fortnight," and "I Can Do It with a Broken Heart."
Bowyn also flexes her bicep, which Swift did when she performed "The Man" on tour.
Bowyn's manager, Mira Vu, has had her bomber jacket since she was 15, an important number for Swifties.
Of course, "Fifteen" is a song from Swift's album "Fearless." Mira fittingly calls her jacket "a classic."
Bowyn also later notes she became famous when she was 15.
Next, we meet Drew "Gonzo" Gonville. His jersey number is 13.
The number 13 is basically holy in the Swift fandom.
Swift was born on December 13, and has since made it a huge part of her relationship with fans. For years, she even drew a 13 on her hand for every concert, which meant that fans still did it at the Eras Tour, years after she stopped.
Even Drew's name could be a reference β Swift sings about a Drew in "Teardrops on My Guitar."
The very first lyrics of "Teardrops on My Guitar" are "Drew looks at me/I fake a smile so he won't see."
It's a reference to Swift's real-life classmate, Drew Hardwick, whom she had a crush on.
Of course, Drew has a brother, Rob, who also plays football.
Unlike Jason and Travis Kelce, who never played on the same NFL team, Rob and Drew play for the same "NFO" team: the Bombers.
Rob has a nickname too: "Golden."
Is that a reference to the beloved Swift song "Daylight," which states that she "once believed love would be burning red" β or "black and white" β "but it's golden"? Perhaps.
Like Jason Kelce, Drew's older brother Rob is married with at least one daughter.
In real life, Jason Kelce has three daughters, with one more on the way.
Bowyn's fans call themselves "Arrowheads," which is the name of the Kansas City Chiefs' stadium.
In-universe, they're called Arrowheads because of Bowyn's name containing the word "bow," as in bow and arrow.
Drew notes that there are college courses taught about Bowyn's career.
There are plenty of colleges, including Harvard University and New York University, where you can take a class about the career and music of Taylor Alison Swift.
Drew also calls Bowyn a "feminist icon" and a "queer ally," which Swift has also been called in the past.
The stadium where the Bombers play is called National Corners.
One of Swift's most important collaborators of the last four years has been Aaron Dessner, a member of the band the National.
The National has also appeared on Swift's "Coney Island." Conversely, Swift was featured on the National song "The Alcott."
She also appeared on two songs by Dessner's other musical project, Big Red Machine: "Birch" and "The Renegade."
Bowyn tunes into an Instagram live, and the usernames and comments are filled with references.
The username "starryeyes23" could refer to a line from "Delicate": "Starry eyes sparking up my darkest night."
In fact, "starry eyes" have been mentioned a few times through Swift's discography. She says she thought she was "better safe than starry-eyed" on "loml," and that someone was "gazing at me starry-eyed" on "The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived."
Another commenter, "joynoise89," references the year Swift was born, 1989, which is also the name of her fifth album.
A third commenter, "skyesnation43," might be a reference to Taylor Nation, an official account run by her marketing team.
Mira tells Bowyn that the "sky's not big enough" for her.
The stage at Bowyn's tour looks similar to Swift's stage at the Eras Tour.
Of course, Bowyn's is a bit more low-budget.
The beginning of Bowyn and Drew's relationship mirrors the beginning of Swift and Kelce's.
Much like Kelce, Drew attends one of Bowyn's shows and decides to broadcast his crush on her on the internet. However, unlike Kelce, who did this on his podcast "New Heights," Drew posted on Instagram.
Here's what Drew wrote: "Thank you, Bowyn for an amazing show and making my niece's dream come true. Swing by Bay Springs someday to watch the Bombers rock the stadium. The beer is on me!"
And here's what Kelce said on "New Heights": "I've seen you rock the stage at Arrowhead. You might have to come see me rock the stage at Arrowhead and see which one's a little more lit."
However, unlike Kelce, Drew actually got to meet Bowyn backstage and took a picture with her, but not before asking if it was OK to touch her.
Bowyn appreciates Drew asking before touching her first. You might remember that a radio DJ sued Swift in 2015 for defamation after she claimed he had inappropriately touched her at a meet-and-greet in 2013. She counter-sued for battery and sexual assault, eventually winning a symbolic $1.
In real life, Kelce never got to meet Swift at her Kansas City concert. He said on "New Heights" it was because Swift didn't meet anyone at her concerts because she had to save her voice.
Mira notes that Bowyn's type is "pretentious actors and indie rockers who have been breaking her heart for 15 years."
Mira notes that Bowyn has never headlined the Super Bowl Halftime Show.
Although Swift has a relationship with football, even debuting the second single from "Reputation," "β¦Ready for It?," on ESPN during a college football match, she has never performed at the Super Bowl.
Mira and Bowyn note that Rob has been in many commercials.
Both Travis and Jason Kelce have appeared in their fair share of ads, especially the former. iSpot.tv pointed out he's appeared in 130 ads β more than anyone else in the NFL.
Bowyn says "Let the games begin."
"Baby, let the games begin," is a lyric from "β¦Ready for It?" and were the first words heard during the "Reputation" tour in 2018. During the "Reputation" segment of the Eras Tour, "β¦Ready for It?" was the first song.
Drew's niece answers the phone in a familiar way to any Swiftie.
When Bowyn finally calls Drew, his niece picks up and says, "Uncle Gonzo can't come to the phone right now. He's dead!"
In Swift's song "Look What You Made Do," she sings a similar phrase: "I'm sorry, the old Taylor can't come to the phone right now. Why? Oh, 'cause she's dead."
Bowyn calls Drew a "wild boy."
In "But Daddy I Love Him" from "The Tortured Poets Department," there's the lyric, "Me and my wild boy/And all of this wild joy."
During the Eras Tour, she mashed this song up with "So High School," which is thought to be about Kelce.
Bowyn says she was never a "cheerleader type," and was "more of a bleacher girl."
In Swift's inescapable hit "You Belong With Me" from "Fearless," she sings, "She's cheer captain and I'm on the bleachers."
Also, not for nothing, one of Swift's closest friends and collaborators, Jack Antonoff, releases music under the name Bleachers.
Bowyn and Drew's first date takes place in an airplane hangar.
One of the most memorable parts of the music video for "Look What You Made Me Do" takes place in an airplane hangar. There, the different versions of Swift argue.
Swift has also been in the headlines in the past over the use of her private plane, which was also seen in the Netflix documentary "Miss Americana."
Bowyn and Drew reference "I Can Do It With a Broken Heart" in their conversation.
Bowyn calls herself a "tough kid," as in, "I'm a real tough kid/I can handle it." Drew notes that she looks like she's having the time of her life, as in "I can read your mind/She's having the time of her life."
Bowyn also references "But Daddy I Love Him" again.
She tells Drew she can't remember if singing was ever fun. Swift sings a similar musing in the "TTPD" song: "I forget how the West was won/I forget if this was ever fun."
She also says she started performing at 13.
A running theme of the movie is Bowyn's love for puzzles.
No one loves to leave secret messages, puzzles, Easter eggs, and anagrams more than Taylor Swift, who has self-identified as a "mastermind."
Mira says that after her date with Drew, Bowyn's color is back.
As Swift sings in the song "So Long London," "And I'm just getting color back into my face/I'm just mad as hell 'cause I loved this place."
Mira also says Bowyn would rather be trapped in a pit of snakes than attend her ex-boyfriend's premiere.
Snakes were a huge part of the "Reputation" era, as Swift was called a snake by Kim Kardashian and then reclaimed the reptile for the album.
Mira also says Bowyn's ex-boyfriend Hudson would never walk the red carpet with her.
Before Kelce (and Matty Healy), Swift was in a six-year relationship with actor Joe Alwyn. They were intensely private and rarely photographed together. The two never walked a red carpet together, though they did sit together at the 2020 Golden Globes.
At one point, Bowyn wears a cardigan.
Sure, cardigans are popular, but no one has been more associated with the cardigan in recent years than Taylor Swift.
The lead single from her 2020 album "Folklore" was "Cardigan," which peaked at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and was nominated for both song of the year and best pop solo performance at the Grammys.
Since then, Swift has released various era-specific versions of the cardigan she wore in the music video for Swifties to purchase.
Drew's best friend, George, is dating a woman named Cassandra.
On "The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology," there's a song called "Cassandra."
The film features news coverage of their relationship. The newscasters are Aimee Hannah and Chad Marcus.
Aimee is a reference to the song "Thank You Aimee," while the name Hannah is mentioned in "But Daddy I Love Him," in which Swift sings, "Sarahs and Hannahs in their Sunday best/Clutching their pearls crying 'What a mess.'"
Chad is a nod to something Swift said about people who were mad the NFL was showing her too much during football games β she called them "dads, Brads, and Chads" in an interview with Time.
And Marcus is a nod to another "Anthology" song, "Chloe or Sam or Sophia or Marcus."
Bowyn shows up at a Bombers game, which excites Drew.
There's a popular video of what seems to be Kelce spotting Swift at a Chiefs game and lighting up.
Drew's mom notes he has a "bit of a reputation."
Of course, this is a nod to "Reputation."
Drew hits the same archer pose that Kelce does when he scores a touchdown.
This also connects to Swift β she has a song from "Lover" called "The Archer." During performances, she also does the same archer pose.
Bowyn says she wants someone to "like me for me."
Swift sings about a similar desire in "Delicate" from "Reputation": "This ain't for the best/My reputation's never been worse, so/You must like me for me."
Bowyn and Drew both love to say "Let's freaking go."
This movie aired on Lifetime, so no profanity allowed, but there is a video of Swift attending a Chiefs game where she screams a more R-rated version of this phrase after Kelce scores a touchdown.
The newscasters note that the "alchemy" between Drew and Bowyn is off the charts.
On "TTPD," there's a song called "The Alchemy" that's widely believed to be about Kelce. The newscasters also reference a winning streak, which could be referencing a lyric from the song: "These blokes warm the benches/We've been on a winning streak."
George tells Drew that Bombers fans are explaining football to Bowyn's fans, which Drew loves.
The Kelce brothers have been vocal about how much they love that Swifties have been getting into football due to their relationship, and they even dedicate a segment on their podcast, "No Dumb Questions," to explaining rules to them.
People online claim their relationship is a PR stunt, but Drew shuts it down.
According to this movie, Bowyn is a billionaire and doesn't need the PR, just like Swift.
Drew tells Bowyn, "You're the best thing at this party."
"Frontlines, don't you ignore me/I'm the best thing at this party," Swift sings on the song "You're Losing Me."
When Bowyn runs into her ex Hudson, he calls her the Alice to his Mad Hatter.
"Alice in Wonderland" is an important text to Swift. She has a song called "Wonderland" on "1989."
She also references "Alice" in the "Evermore" song "Long Story Short." "And I fell from the pedestal/Right down the rabbit hole," she sings.
Bowyn calls Drew a "better man" than Hudson.
Swift originally wrote the song "Better Man" in 2016, but decided to give it to the country band Little Big Town, who went on to win a Grammy for it.
When Swift began re-releasing her albums, she included "Better Man" as a bonus track on "Red (Taylor's Version)" in 2021.
Mira references "You Need to Calm Down" and "All Too Well."
After Bowyn has a minor freakout about her relationship with Drew, Mira says, "You gotta calm down," a sly reference to this "Lover" track.
She also tells Bowyn "you know all too well" about bad relationships, β Swift's most beloved song by fans is probably the "Red" song "All Too Well."
Drew, on the other hand, references "Never Grow Up" and "Fearless."
On his side of the freakout, Drew tells his family, "I am calling my own shots." Swift sings "And you can't wait to move out someday and call your own shots" on the "Speak Now" song "Never Grow Up."
He also says Bowyn "gets rid of my doubts and fears."
In the album booklet for "Fearless," Swift wrote about what being fearless actually meant to her.
"To me, 'fearless' is not the absence of fear. It's not being completely unafraid. To me, 'fearless' is having fears. 'Fearless' is having doubts," she wrote.
Drew and Bowyn break up over an edited conversation, a sensitive subject for any Swift fan.
Bowyn's ex-boyfriend Hudson leaks a taped conversation the two had, which he heavily edited to make it seem like Bowyn insulted Drew.
An edited recording of a conversation between Swift and Kanye West regarding his song "Famous" re-started their feud in 2016 (which began at the VMAs in 2009) and led to the public turning on Swift and declaring that she was "over."
In both cases, the unedited versions of the conversation eventually were released, vindicating Bowyn and Swift, as Variety reported.
Drew's niece gives him a friendship bracelet with Bowyn's lyrics.
The bridge of the "Midnights" song "You're on Your Own Kid," goes like this: "'Cause there were pages turned with the bridges burned/Everything you lose is a step you take/So make the friendship bracelets, take the moment and taste it/You've got no reason to be afraid."
Fans seized onto the "friendship bracelet" line and began trading bracelets at the Eras Tour, usually with references to lyrics or inside jokes in the Swift fandom. These bracelets became so associated with Swift that a giant bracelet began moving from stadium to stadium during the tour.
Drew and Bowyn attend a fundraiser together.
Swift and Kelce also attended a fundraiser together in April, and footage of them went viral. It's also when Kelce called her "my significant other" for the first time.
Bowyn says that as long as she's holding on to Drew, she won't "fumble again."
Obvious football reference aside, "Hold on to the memories/They will hold on to you" is a fan-favorite lyric from "New Year's Day" off "Reputation."
She also sings "Say you'll never let 'em tear us apart/And I'll hold onto you while we run" on the "Red" song "Run."
After newscasters begin insulting her, she jokingly asks her team, "Why they gotta be so mean?"
That's a direct reference to a lyric from the "Speak Now" song "Mean," which asks why a music critic who wrote negatively about Swift's performance at the 2010 Grammys "gotta be so mean."
Two years later, she performed "Mean" at the Grammys, and it won best country solo performance and best country song.