New Photo - Vampire Diaries writers and Candice King discuss the 'most bananas' season 7 twist

Vampire Diaries writers and Candice King discuss the 'most bananas' season 7 twist

Vampire Diaries writers and Candice King discuss the 'most bananas' season 7 twist

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 25, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

Over the course of its eight seasons, *The Vampire Diaries*' mythology changed every now and then to fit a certain story. But in its seventh season, the show delivered its biggest change from its established mythology when, suddenly, Caroline (Candice King) became pregnant via a magical transfer. Even though she was a vampire, she was somehow carrying Alaric (Matthew Davis) and Jo's (Jodi Lyn O'Keefe) twins.

The twist was something the writers thought up as a way to soften the tragedy at the end of season 6 when Kai (Chris Wood) killed Jo and her unborn children—on her wedding day, no less. "We had always left that [story thread] hanging on instinct," writer Neil Reynolds says during episode 7 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*.

Executive producer Julie Plec adds, "Because of the tragedy of the twins and Jo dying and looking for story for Alaric for the season, we had separately come up with the story of the woman who knocks on his door and is like, 'I think I'm pregnant with your babies.'" But the writers weren't sure if that twist was *too* crazy, so they didn't originally plan to go there. Until star Candice King called to let them know she was pregnant. "I was very nervous to make that call," King says on the podcast.

The Vampire Diaries

Candice King on 'The Vampire Diaries'. Bob Mahoney/The CW

Ultimately, the writers decided to work in King's pregnancy and use the aforementioned story, only instead of a random woman showing up pregnant, Caroline would carry Ric's kids. Plec remembers warning CW president Mark Pedowitz about "the most bananas thing" she was ever going to pitch him at the time, but surprisingly, he wasn't fazed. And thus Caroline's pregnancy became part of the series and will always go down as one of the show's most unexpected turns.

For more about season 7, listen to the full episode of the podcast below:

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

**Related content:**

- *Vampire Diaries* star Ian Somerhalder reveals why he was jealous of Chris Wood's Kai

- *Vampire Diaries* boss reveals the real reason they killed Katherine in season 5

- *Vampire Diaries* bosses on the 'controversial' sire bond and the role Pedro Pascal auditioned for

- *Vampire Diaries* boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL EW"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Vampire Diaries writers and Candice King discuss the 'most bananas' season 7 twist

Vampire Diaries writers and Candice King discuss the 'most bananas' season 7 twist Vampire Diari...
New Photo - Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast. Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast.

Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast.

By Samantha Highfill

Sam Highfill author photo

Samantha Highfill

Samantha Highfill is an executive editor at **, where she's worked for more than 12 years covering television.

EW's editorial guidelines

August 27, 2021 9:00 a.m. ET

For *The Vampire Diaries* creatives, casting Enzo was a particularly difficult task. Because originally, the role was going to be very different.

"You were supposed to be the third Salvatore brother," executive producer Julie Plec tells star Michael Malarkey in episode 8 of *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries*. Writer Brett Matthews adds, "That was always the plan, and then it went a different direction, but that's why it was so hard to find the person. We thought it was going to be a Salvatore brother, so we cast a very wide net [and] looked very hard." Ultimately, they scrapped that plan and made it so Enzo didn't share Salvatore blood, but he was a brother figure for Damon (Ian Somerhalder) for many years (and he was sired by Lily Salvatore).

But that wasn't the only plan that changed in the writers' room over the years. In discussing the *Vampire Diaries*' final season, Plec and Matthews recall the final major debate: Which Salvatore were they going to kill in the series finale? "We went back and forth in the writers' room all season long," Plec says. "We finally landed on: We're killing Damon. That's the right thing to do. He is the one with the consequence to pay. Stefan was morally a bit stronger of a character."

The Vampire Diaries

Michael Malarkey as Enzo and Ian Somerhalder as Damon on 'The Vampire Diaries'. Annette Brown/The CW; Bob Mahoney/The CW

Matthews adds, "Damon's a fairly obvious choice," noting that the writers really fell in love with the idea of Damon compelling Stefan (Paul Wesley) to let him die. But when executive producer Kevin Williamson proposed that it should be Stefan that dies, they started to rethink their plan. "It felt like dying for Stefan freed him from a lot of weight, whereas it felt like living for Damon freed him to go and be the man that he was always supposed to be," Plec says.

Of course, both Salvatores were meant to die in the original ending Plec and Williamson came up with during the show's second season. In that ending, "The boys would sacrifice themselves to save Elena so that Elena could go and have a life and be human and live," Plec recalls during the podcast. "To save her, they would die together, and that was always the pitch. And then when Nina [Dobrev] left, it felt like the show can't be as much about protecting Elena's happiness, although that's important to us, but we want to protect the bothers' happiness, we want them to get something out of this. Then it shifted to: We can't kill both of them for her because that feels somehow like nobody got what they wanted. Let's find a different way to give one of these brothers the happiness that they need and the other brother the closure that they need."

(One other way Dobrev leaving changed the plan? Plec says, "I thought that by the time we came back to the end of the series, whenever it was, that Elena would've found her way back to Stefan and Damon would've found a different path.")

For more about the final season, listen to the full podcast episode below:

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's Binge: The Vampire Diaries* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com.**

**Related content:**

- *Vampire Diaries* star Ian Somerhaldher reveals why he was jealous of Chris Wood's Kai

- *Vampire Diaries* boss reveals the real reason they killed Katherine in season 5

- *Vampire Diaries* bosses on the 'controversial' sire bond and the role Pedro Pascal auditioned for

- *Vampire Diaries* boss Julie Plec explains why Klaroline could never happen today

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL EW"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a Salvatore brother and Damon's fate in the finale

Listen to the final episode of EW's Binge: Vampire Diaries podcast. Vampire Diaries bosses on casting Enzo as a ...
New Photo - Eureka reveals Drag Race star Chad Michaels' cut scene on American Horror Story

&34;She was really supportive,&34; Eureka tells EW of the RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 1 winner on the AHS set, where the AS6 queen adopted Evan Peters as their

"She was really supportive," Eureka tells EW of the RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 1 winner on the AHS set, where the AS6 queen adopted Evan Peters as their drag daughter: "That's my baby!"

Eureka reveals Drag Race star Chad Michaels' cut scene on American Horror Story

"She was really supportive," Eureka tells EW of the RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 1 winner on the AHS set, where the AS6 queen adopted Evan Peters as their drag daughter: "That's my baby!"

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

October 1, 2021 12:19 p.m. ET

*RuPaul's Drag Race* star Eureka was absolutely *living* for Chad Michaels and Evan Peters on *American Horror Story*... well, before their character died, that is.

During a recent interview for EW's BINGE podcast, the *All Stars 6 *queen reveals that their fellow *Drag Race* icon—who appeared on season 4 of the show before winning *All Stars 1*—filmed scenes with them for *American Horror Story: Double Feature*'s Sept. 8 episode "Blood Buffet," which were ultimately cut from the broadcast.

"Chad Michaels was there, she introduced Evan Peters' character, Patty O'Furniture, on stage. She was actually the host of the show! I was shocked they cut her right out!" Eureka recalls of filming an episode that follows Peters as a struggling performer who's turned into a blood-sucker at the hands of romance novelist Belle Noir, played by Frances Conroy. (FX did not respond to EW's request for confirmation on scenes that were cut from the installment, but Chad also posted about being on the show on Instagram.)

Eureka appears as Crystal DeCanter, a local matriarchal queen whose commitment to excellence puts their Provincetown peers to shame. And they remember Chad as being "really supportive" on set throughout production. "She was like, 'Girl, you're doing it, I'm so proud of you.' She's like the original mama, honey, to all the girls.... she takes care of all the girls, she's watching out."

The* We're Here *star says that, while they didn't put Peters in full drag for their scenes together, they did "give him some advice" on the art form.

"[It was] more like loving advice, because you know that's my baby!" Eureka says. "I call her my drag daughter now! We had a good time." The queen adds they also got to run lines with Conroy before filming, saying, "It was magic just getting to be in the same room."

The moment particularly resonated with Eureka after they landed in the middle of the pack during *AS6*'s *RuMerican Horror Story* satirical acting challenge earlier this year.

Evan Peters; Eureka

Evan Peters and Eureka in drag on 'American Horror Story.'. FX on Hulu (2)

"I felt like I got to redeem myself because I love to act, I want people to take me as an actor and take it as seriously as I do. It's one of my favorite things to do in the world," Eureka says, finishing with optimism for the future: "I died in the *RuMerican Horror Story*, I died in *American Horror Story*, I hope I stay alive though, honey!"

*American Horror Story* airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. on FX. Watch a clip from the* EW's BINGE* podcast video on *RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 6* at the top of this article, and listen to the full audio version in the embed above.

EW's Binge RuPaul's Drag Race

'RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 6' reunion with Kylie Sonique Love, Eureka, Ra'Jah O'Hara, and Ginger Minj on EW's BINGE podcast.

***Subscribe to* ****EW's BINGE* podcast****** for full recaps of *RuPaul's Drag Race*, including our new season diving into all five *All Stars *seasons, featuring exclusive interviews with Jujubee, Alexis Mateo, Shea Couleé, Alaska, Detox, BenDeLaCreme, Kennedy Davenport, and more*. *And be sure to catch up on our *BINGE* recaps of *RuPaul's Drag Race* seasons 1-13 with Symone, Jaida Essence Hall, Trixie Mattel, Katya, Peppermint, Bianca Del Rio, Bob the Drag Queen, Sasha Velour, and more!***

**Related content:**

- *RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 6* top 4 reunion reveals which epic moment 'was not a joke'

- *RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 5* queens spill untold tea on that 'campaign' against Shea

- Naomi Smalls and Monique Heart dish on THAT shocking *RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 4* thrilla for Manila

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL TV"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Eureka reveals Drag Race star Chad Michaels' cut scene on American Horror Story

&34;She was really supportive,&34; Eureka tells EW of the RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 1 winner on the A...
New Photo - How to watch the Scary Movie franchise in order (and where to stream each entry)

With a sixth movie on the way, now's the time to revisit the franchise's five existing films. How to watch the Scary Movie franchise in order (and where to stre

With a sixth movie on the way, now's the time to revisit the franchise's five existing films.

How to watch the *Scary Movie *franchise in order (and where to stream each entry)

With a sixth movie on the way, now's the time to revisit the franchise's five existing films.

By Declan Gallagher

October 31, 2025 10:00 a.m. ET

Leave a Comment

SCARY MOVIE 3 Anna Faris Scary Movie 4 (2006) Regina Hall Scary Movie (2000) Shawn Wayans and Marlon Wayans

Anna Faris, Regina Hall, and the Wayans brothers headline the 'Scary Movie' franchise. Credit:

Marni Grossman (2); Andrew MacPherson

If you're in the mood for horror but don't want all the psychological baggage, the *Scary Movie* franchise is for you. The original film hit theaters in the summer of 2000, offering take-no-prisoners parodies of the era's popular horror movies — namely *Scream *(1996) and *I Know What You Did Last Summer* (1997).

The series evolved to follow the genre's trends, as future installments took aim at the likes of J-horror remakes, the torture porn era, and found footage.

One of the most lucrative comedy franchises of all time, the *Scary Movie* series has grossed over $830 million globally. It began as the brainchild of the Wayans brothers — writer-stars Marlon and Shawn, and director Keenen Ivory. After the first two films, the series switched hands to seasoned parody veterans David Zucker and Pat Proft before flaming out with the fifth entry in 2013.

Last year, the Wayans brothers announced they were relaunching the franchise. *Scary Movie 6, *which will see the return of original stars Anna Faris, Regina Hall, and Marlon Wayans, is scheduled for release in 2026.

Whether you're a longtime fan revisiting the franchise or a curious newcomer looking to the (surprisingly complicated) series lore, you've come to the right place. Read on for **'s guide to watching the *Scary Movie* franchise in order.

Scary Movie (2000)

Jon Abrahams, Shawn Wayans and Marlon Wayans in Scary Movie (2000)

Jon Abrahams, Shawn Wayans, and Marlon Wayans take on 'Scream' (and more) in 'Scary Movie'.

Andrew MacPherson

The film that reignited the parody genre after a stagnant decade-plus, *Scary Movie* grossed $278 million worldwide and launched a new era of gross-chasing for Dimension Films.

The plot is basically *Scream *— a killer in a Ghostface mask picking off teenagers one by one — combined with the backstory of *I Know What You Did Last Summer*. One year ago, Cindy Campbell (Faris) and her friends accidentally killed a dude and got away with it. Until now, that is. The gang starts getting creepy, threatening notes right as Ghostface shows up and starts mowing local teens down.

Brenda (Hall), her brother Shorty (Marlon Wayans), and her closeted boyfriend Ray (Shawn Wayans) join Cindy as they try to survive amid a wave of possible suspects, including reporter Gail Hailstorm (Cheri Oteri), as the body count rises.

Amid copious references to *Scream*, as well as some set pieces recycled wholesale, *Scary Movie* parodies teen slashers both past (the O.G. *Halloween*) and present (*Urban Legend*).

Where to watch* Scary Movie*: MGM+

Scary Movie 2 (2001)

Scary Movie 2 (2001) James Woods

Father James Woods does an exorcism in 'Scary Movie 2'.

The whole gang returns for this sequel, which takes the form of an elaborate haunted house tale, namely the many iterations of Shirley Jackson's* The Haunting of Hill House *and similar stories. As such, *Scary Movie 2*'s primary aim is supernatural horror — most directly the 1999 Jackson adaptation, *The Haunting*, and the similarly themed *House on Haunted Hill *(1999).

One year after the events of the original, our returning quartet is recruited by the saucy, sinister Professor Oldman (Tim Curry) to spend a night at a haunted mansion, subtly dubbed Hell House, for a psychological, paranormal experiment. Various new characters join in on the fun, including Chris Elliott's Riff Raff-style butler and Tori Spelling's obnoxious try-hard friend, Alex.

The film gets spoof material from supernatural classics — *The Exorcist *(1973), *The Amityville Horror *(1979) — and contemporary hits like *The Sixth Sense *(1999) and *What Lies Beneath *(2000). Even more preoccupied with toilet humor than its predecessor, *Scary Movie 2* hauled in substantially less at the box office.

Where to watch *Scary Movie 2*: Amazon Prime Video (to rent)

Scary Movie 3 (2003)

SCARY MOVIE 3 Regina Hall and Anna Faris

The longtime franchise stars, Regina Hall and Anna Faris, in 'Scary Movie 3'.

As the Wayans family departed the franchise, the studio brought on another group of established spoof veterans. Between them, David Zucker and Pat Proft had *Airplane!*, *Top Secret!*, and the *Naked Gun* and *Hot Shots! *series under their belts.

In addition to the new creative voices (including future *Chernobyl *and *The Last of Us* writer Craig Mazin), *Scary Movie 3* has plenty of new references to work with, thanks in part to the rise of American J-horror remakes. Indeed, *The Ring *(2002) is the film's jumping-off point, with a plot revolving around a cursed videotape that kills all who watch it.

Cindy, now a local TV reporter covering a crop circle mystery — yes, this was made in the wake of M. Night Shyamalan's *Signs *(2002) — comes into possession of the tape after Brenda falls victim to it. Cindy subsequently joins forces with a farmer, Tom (Charlie Sheen), and his battle-rapping brother, George (Simon Rex), to get to the bottom of it.

With this third entry, the franchise moved from R-rated vulgarity into more tame PG-13 territory. Zucker, Proft, and star Leslie Nielsen (playing an inept U.S. president) deliver a wackier, more old-school spoof. It paid off at the box office: *Scary Movie 3* is the second highest-grossing installment, accruing more than $220 million worldwide.

Where to watch *Scary Movie 3*: Amazon Prime Video (to rent)

Scary Movie 4 (2006)

Scary Movie 4 (2006) Regina Hall

Would you like to play a game, Regina Hall? 'Scary Movie 4' takes on the torture porn era.

Boy, how horror appetites change in just three years. *Scary Movie 4 *arrived in an era when *Saw *(2004) had pushed onscreen violence to extremes, at least by American multiplex standards. This fourth installment finds plenty to mine from Jigsaw and his diabolical traps — and yes, that silly tricycle-riding clown gets some screen time.

The film combines *The Grudge *(2004) and *War of the Worlds *(2005) while also parodying broader pop culture figures and viral moments, like Tom Cruise jumping on Oprah's couch.

Cindy, having married George and weathered his untimely death, takes a caretaking job at the home of Mrs. Norris (Cloris Leachman) and winds up falling for her next-door neighbor, Tom (Craig Bierko). Oh, did we mention that Mrs. Norris lives in a house currently haunted by a ghost child? Meanwhile, Earth itself is suddenly besieged by an alien invasion.

Where to watch *Scary Movie 4*: Paramount+

Scary Movie 5 (2013)

SCARY MOVIE 5 (2013) SARAH HYLAND

Sarah Hyland in 'Scary Movie 5,' the last installment until the franchise's 2026 revival.

Malcolm D. Lee (*The Best Man, Undercover Brother*) took directorial reins for this terminally confused fifth installment, which parodies *Paranormal Activity* (2007), *Black Swan* (2010), and *Mama* (2013), among others.

This was the first entry that didn't feature franchise mainstays Faris and Hall. Rex and Sheen, however, are back, albeit as different characters. In the opening scene, Sheen plays himself (alongside Lindsay Lohan) so that he can crack uncomfortable wink-wink references to his then-recent "Winning!" meltdown. Rex fares slightly better as Dan Sanders, the brother of the (now-deceased) actor Charlie Sheen. (Are you following all this?)

Dan and his wife, Jody (Ashley Tisdale), eventually become surrogate parents to Charlie's three children, who went missing before being discovered in an abandoned cabin, completely feral. But the would-be happy new family has an unwelcome paranormal visitor lurking about…

*Scary Movie 5* took in a franchise-low $32 million domestically ($78 million worldwide). That put the nail in the coffin, albeit temporarily.

Where to watch *Scary Movie 5*: Paramount+

How to watch the *Scary Movie *franchise in order:

- *Scary Movie *(2000)

- *Scary Movie 2 *(2001)

- *Scary Movie 3 *(2003)

- *Scary Movie 4 *(2006)

- *Scary Movie 5 *(2013)

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Movies"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

How to watch the Scary Movie franchise in order (and where to stream each entry)

With a sixth movie on the way, now's the time to revisit the franchise's five existing films. How to watch t...
New Photo - How to watch the Terrifier movies in order (including the lesser-known anthology)

It's time to acquaint yourself with Art the Clown. How to watch the Terrifier movies in order (including the lesserknown anthology)

It's time to acquaint yourself with Art the Clown.

How to watch the Terrifier movies in order (including the lesser-known anthology)

It's time to acquaint yourself with Art the Clown.

By Declan Gallagher

October 31, 2025 8:00 a.m. ET

Leave a Comment

Terrifier, Terrifier 2, and Terrifier 3

What's black and white and red all over? Why, Art the Clown after a normal day at the office, of course. Credit:

Dread Central; Courtesy of CINEDIGM; Cineverse

By now, every horror fan knows Art the Clown.

With the facial articulation of a silent film star crossed with the savagery of a post-*Saw* killer, Art went from underground curiosity to horror icon within a decade. It started with his debut in the 2008 short *The 9th Circle*, which eventually became part of director Damien Leone's anthology film, *All Hallows' Eve*.

From there, he took center stage in a feature franchise, beginning with *Terrifier*, advancing with *Terrifier 2*, and concluding (for now…) with last year's Christmas-set *Terrifier 3*. Leone's creation has gained a substantial cult following thanks to its throwback grindhouse aesthetics, nauseating practical effects, and unapologetic brutality.

Whether you're a fan looking to rewatch the franchise or just arriving at Art's door for the first time, here's how to watch the *Terrifier *movies in order. Get your ponchos ready, because anywhere Art goes, a shower of gore and viscera is sure to follow.

All Hallows' Eve (2013)

All Hallows' Eve

Art makes his first feature-length appearance in the anthology, 'All Hallows' Eve'.

Leone's horror anthology features a wraparound story about a babysitter, Sarah (Katie Maguire), and her two adolescent charges, Timmy and Tia, who find an unmarked VHS in their trick-or-treat bag. Despite her better judgment, Sarah pops the tape into the VCR, and we're introduced to a triptych of stories featuring Art the Clown.

Art (Mike Giannelli) becomes the centerpiece in the third story, "Terrifier." A young woman (Marie Maser) stops for gas late at night, only to witness Art cheerfully sawing body parts off the gas station attendant. She frantically drives away but can't escape the bloodthirsty clown, who inexplicably pops up along her route. He takes her to his underground lair and basically repeats his gas-station antics… only this time, while keeping his victim alive.

But Leone's *real* trick comes after that segment concludes...

Where to watch *All Hallows' Eve*: AMC+

Terrifier (2016)

Catherine Corcoran in TERRIFIER

Catherine Corcoran tries to put a smile on Art's face in 'Terrifier'.

Art (now played by David Howard Thornton) made his feature-length debut in this expansion of Leone's earlier shorts. After a marathon night of Halloween parties, Tara (Jenna Kanell) and Dawn (Catherine Corcoran) stop for a slice of pizza. Art, meanwhile, occupies a lonely table in the pizzeria and tries to put on his best clowning act for the two women.

Art being Art, it's not long before he's abducted Dawn and Tara and starts getting to work. His workspace is an abandoned apartment building, and it's not long before we get a sense of what he has in mind for these two. Luckily — okay fine, *unluckily *— Tara's sister, Vicky (Samantha Scaffidi) is on her way to… well, "help" would be the wrong verb, though not for lack of effort.

Where to watch *Terrifier*: Peacock

Terrifier 2 (2022)

TERRIFIER 2

David Howard Thornton in 'Terrifier 2'. Courtesy of CINEDIGM

With *Terrifier 2*, the series moved from small-scale slasher to epic-sized (138 minutes!) fantasy-inflected supernatural saga.

Sienna Shaw (Lauren LaVera) is preparing for her first Halloween since her father's death. Her younger brother, Jonathan (Elliot Fullam), is obsessed with Art the Clown after discovering a drawing of the slasher in their dad's notebook. Art, naturally, is still alive (he's immortal, you see), confirmation of which comes in an elaborately drawn-out opening in which our silent antihero bludgeons his way out of the morgue.

There's some Art-specific "lore" regarding Sienna and Jonathan's father, which involves a magic sword and a sometimes-spectral, sometimes-corporeal corpse of a 10-year-old girl. But *Terrifier 2 *mostly uses those details as pillars to prop up one surreal, splattery set piece after another.

Where to watch *Terrifier 2*: Peacock

Terrifier 3 (2024)

Terrifier 3

He knows if you've been bad or good, so be good for goodness' sake: Art gets into the holiday spirit in 'Terrifier 3'.

The Christmas-set *Terrifier 3*, the highest-grossing unrated film ever released, features as much brutality and dark wit as we've come to expect from Art the Clown. Hands-down one of the most disgusting movies ever made (a compliment), the film finds the indefatigable slasher, who was decapitated at the end of *Terrifier 2*, reattaching his head and commencing his ritual slaughters.

By his side is the original film's sole survivor, Vicky. She's now possessed by the aforementioned "Little Pale Girl," who has far greater relevance than initial appearances would suggest.

This time around, Art gets into the holiday spirit by dressing up as Santa. In between detonating bombs hidden in Christmas presents and disfiguring the entire police force, Art sets his sights on the Shaw family. He makes his way to Jonathan's college campus — casually dispatching a couple of the poor guy's friends — and then turns his attention to Sienna. Would you believe a literal portal to Hell is eventually involved? Just go with it.

Where to watch *Terrifier 3*: Peacock

How to watch the Terrifier franchise in order:**

- *All Hallows' Eve *(2013)

- *Terrifier *(2016)

- *Terrifier 2 *(2022)

- *Terrifier 3 *(2024)

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Movies"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

How to watch the Terrifier movies in order (including the lesser-known anthology)

It's time to acquaint yourself with Art the Clown. How to watch the Terrifier movies in order (including the les...
New Photo - The 20 best A24 horror movies ranked, from Talk to Me to Midsommar

Some of the film studio's titles are more &34;elevated&34; than others. The 20 best A24 horror movies ranked, from Talk to Me to Midsommar

Some of the film studio's titles are more "elevated" than others.

The 20 best A24 horror movies ranked, from Talk to Me to Midsommar

Some of the film studio's titles are more "elevated" than others.

By Dennis Perkins, Chris Bellamy, and Kevin Jacobsen

October 31, 2025 9:00 a.m. ET

Leave a Comment

Talk to Me, The Lighthouse, Midsomar

The best A24 horror movies ranked. Credit:

Matthew Thorne; A24 Pictures; Gabor Kotschy, Courtesy of A24

Since its founding in 2013, A24 has gradually built up a reputation for highly inventive genre films, particularly those of the horror variety. It all started with 2013's *Under the Skin*, Jonathan Glazer's haunting sci-fi spooker in which Scarlett Johansson plays an alien luring men into her secret abyss. Audiences have come to understand what they're in for with an A24 horror movie: original ideas presented through an off-kilter lens; thoughtful explorations of grief and trauma; and, more often than not, a wildly chaotic ending.

A24 horror's branding might be easy to characterize, with some feeling its "elevated horror" trademarks are no longer innovative. Yet, many of their horror titles have been hailed as some of the best films of their respective years, from 2018's *Hereditary* to 2019's *The Lighthouse*. Ahead, read **'s ranking of the 20 best A24 horror movies, and explore why they stand out in today's cinematic landscape.

20. The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015)

Kiernan Shipka as Katherine in 'The Blackcoat's Daughter'

Kiernan Shipka as Katherine in 'The Blackcoat's Daughter'.

Moody and intricate (sometimes maddeningly so), this debut from Oz Perkins (son of *Psycho* star Anthony) inflicts supernatural horror and grief upon the students of a Catholic boarding school. Kiernan Shipka, Lucy Boynton, and Emma Roberts are the focus of three separate but interwoven stories, with Perkins expertly keeping us off balance while still playing fair with the plot's time-hopping structure.

Left behind at their foreboding campus over winter break, Boynton and Shipka's characters are at the mercy of the school's imperious nuns and old secrets. Split into three slices (whose interconnectedness is revealed with patient, ruthless logic), *The Blackcoat's Daughter* is all slow-burns and suggestion — until it's not. Perkins relies more on atmosphere than jump scares, but when the payoffs come, the pent-up anxiety he's cultivated erupts into thudding dread. —*Dennis Perkins*

Where to watch *The Blackcoat's Daughter*: Tubi**

19. It Comes at Night (2017)

Riley Keough as Kim and Christopher Abbott as Will in 'It Comes at Night'

Riley Keough as Kim and Christopher Abbott as Will in 'It Comes at Night'.

This tale of a plausible viral apocalypse makes the case that true horrors can lurk just outside our view — and possibly within us all. A pandemic has sent a family fleeing to isolation in the woods, where they watchfully guard themselves against infection (and other survivors). But soon, an intruder introduces both suspicion and hope for connection, as loneliness battles with the fear that something considerably larger than a virus is hiding in the dark.

The best post-apocalyptic horror movies posit that *we* are the true danger to our continued survival as a species. With a stellar cast (Joel Edgerton and Carmen Ejogo lead one family, while Christopher Abbott and Riley Keough form the other), director Trey Edward Shults allows the tension to build until it all explodes in a climax as devastating as it is dispiritingly, horribly human. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *It Comes at Night*: HBO Max**

18. Saint Maud (2020)

Morfydd Clark as Katie/Maud in 'Saint Maud'

Morfydd Clark as Katie/Maud in 'Saint Maud'.

Rose Glass' debut feature* *is 84 minutes of concentrated, escalating dread and yawning horror. The story of a young hospice nurse who calls herself Maud (Morfydd Clark), sent to care for a wealthy former dancer dying of lymphoma (Jennifer Ehle), is a character study of madness and repression as the pious aide sets out to "save" her latest charge, according to her own deeply unsettling beliefs.

Maud appears easy to figure out at first. Her seemingly naive caregiver prays for guidance in her duties, with Clark evoking Sissy Spacek's Carrie White in her apparent unworldliness. But as Maud's God begins to talk back, and her desperate pleas for divine intervention send her into fits of orgasmic fervor and desperate carnality, Glass hints at the depths of mania powering the nurse's dedication. As with many of A24's horror movies, we're left to ponder whether anything supernatural happens as Maud's quest reaches its apotheosis, proving that fanatical belief is enough to inspire great terrors. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *Saint Maud*: Amazon Prime Video**

17. In Fabric (2019)

Fatma Mohamed as Miss Luckmoore and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Sheila Woolchapel in 'In Fabric'

Fatma Mohamed as Miss Luckmoore and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Sheila Woolchapel in 'In Fabric'. A24

Few major film studios would be interested in distributing a movie about cursed clothing. But A24 saw writer-director Peter Strickland's kooky vision of a haunted red wrap dress that ruins the lives of its wearers and gave it a proper home with the others on this list.

Marianne Jean-Baptiste stars as an unappreciated bank teller who buys the flowing red frock at a department store, only to have her life go from bad to worse. Strickland is fully aware of the silliness of his premise, leading with dry, dark humor as he shows how consumerism can control you if you're not careful. —*Kevin Jacobsen*

Where to watch *In Fabric*: Paramount+

16. Heretic (2024)

Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, Sophie Thatcher as Sister Barnes, and Chloe East as Sister Paxton in 'Heretic'

Hugh Grant as Mr. Reed, Sophie Thatcher as Sister Barnes, and Chloe East as Sister Paxton in 'Heretic'.

One of the most horrifying things imaginable is being stuck with a know-it-all who's eager to debate. Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East) are young Mormon missionaries who learn this the hard way when they knock on the door of the enigmatic Mr. Reed (Hugh Grant). After inviting them in, he mocks their faith and lectures them before torturing them with sinister plans.

Grant is wickedly delightful, rightfully becoming one of the rare actors in a horror movie to gain awards traction, receiving nominations at the Golden Globes, Critics Choice Awards, and BAFTAs. His portrayal of a pompous, yapping intellectual who's rotten to the core rings uncomfortably true, as do the performances of Thatcher and East as their characters nonverbally communicate their discomfort to each other. —*K.J.*

Where to watch *Heretic*: HBO Max**

15. I Saw the TV Glow (2024)

Justice Smith as Owen and Jack Haven as Maddy Wilson in 'I Saw the TV Glow'

Justice Smith as Owen and Jack Haven as Maddy Wilson in 'I Saw the TV Glow'.

Courtesy of A24

That the fictional show within *I Saw the TV Glow* revolves around a psychic connection is no coincidence. Teenagers Maddy and Owen are hypnotically drawn to *The Pink Opaque* and its psychically entwined heroines. Maddy soon vanishes, then reappears a decade later, insisting the show's world is, in fact, reality. Now, she wants to rescue Owen and take him back to where they both belong.

The film has a way of connecting discordant wavelengths — past and future, memory and experience, reality and fiction — that's as existentially haunting as anything in recent genre history.** In their sophomore feature, burgeoning auteur Jane Schoenbrun channels everything from Méliès to Lynch, from *Buffy* to *Donnie Darko*, to set a mood that's both nostalgic and menacing. —*Chris Bellamy*

Where to watch *I Saw the TV Glow*: HBO Max

14. Lamb (2021)

Noomi Rapace as María in 'Lamb'

Noomi Rapace as María in 'Lamb'.

It's not quite the *Eraserhead* baby, nor the *It's Alive* baby, nor even the *Trainspotting* baby. Rather, the *Lamb* baby is literally the face of a lamb and the body of a human child, which is unsettling in a wholly novel way. That grieving parents María (Noomi Rapace) and Ingvar (Hilmir Snær Guðnason) name the mutt after their own dead daughter, Ada, pushes the film into the realm of a psychological fever dream, albeit one that operates on a dry, profoundly deadpan register.

Meanwhile, the ewe who gave birth to her won't go away or stop pestering these human usurpers. We realize...wait, is this an abduction movie? And are we rooting for the wrong side? —*C.B.*

Where to watch *Lamb*: Tubi**

13. Pearl (2022)

Mia Goth as Pearl in 'Pearl'

Mia Goth as Pearl in 'Pearl'.

Christopher Moss/A24

First teased in 2022's *X*, the homicidal elderly villain Pearl (Mia Goth) got her own origin story with this inspired homage to classic Hollywood. Set in 1918, the film follows Pearl as a young woman desperate to escape her dull existence on the farm. She sets her sights on becoming a movie star, but her disturbed mind and violent temper prevent her from achieving her dreams.

Taking inspiration from *The Wizard of Oz* (1939) and Douglas Sirk melodramas of the '50s, director Ti West delights in playing with contrasts in *Pearl*, adorning grisly murders and a terrifying lead performance with a sumptuous score and rich, saturated colors. This may also be what makes Goth's performance so frightening: Pearl's outward girlish innocence masks a deep well of rage that the actress taps into with chilling ferocity. The final close-up is reason enough for the film's placement on this list. —*K.J.*

Where to watch *Pearl*: HBO Max**

12. The Killing of a Sacred Deer (2017)

Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell as Anna and Steven Murphy in 'The Killing of a Sacred Deer'

Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell as Anna and Steven Murphy in 'The Killing of a Sacred Deer'.

Fans of Yorgos Lanthimos' work (*Poor Things*,* Dogtooth*) admire his signature icy, deadpan style. But this chilling family horror is the director at his most deliberate and ruthless as he unfurls a tale of absurdist vengeance. Doctors Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman are placidly married with two perfect children, their daily interactions nearly a parody of Kubrick-style stilted and inconsequential dialogue. It's only when a mysterious young man (Barry Keoghan) inserts himself into their lives that some energy seeps into their routines (gnawing terror will do that).

With a title and premise inspired by the myth of Iphigenia, Greek scholars might imagine they have a head start on puzzling out the strange things that happen as Keoghan's blankly polite teenager begins to affect the family in inexplicably creepy ways. Farrell and Kidman are outstanding, even as Lanthimos' ritualistic plotting and direction keep them hemmed into their characters' rigid conceptions. *The Killing of a Sacred Deer* is an ingenious and idiosyncratic trap, with an ending as inevitable as it is horrific. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *The Killing of a Sacred Deer*: HBO Max**

11. Climax (2018)

Romain Guillermic as David and Sofia Boutella as Selva in 'Climax'

Romain Guillermic as David and Sofia Boutella as Selva in 'Climax'. A24

Drug-using expert Hunter S. Thompson once evoked Colonel Kurtz's immortal "the horror, the horror" to describe a bad trip in his novel *Hell's Angels*. With that in mind, Gaspar Noé's *Climax* might as well have been called *Hell's Dancers*. A French dance troupe stages a party, and somebody spikes the punch with psychedelics. You might guess what kind of chaos breaks loose, but the realities of this extreme horror film are much bleaker than whatever you're imagining.

As the party collapses into collective, mob-like madness, despair is unleashed along with paranoia, depravity, violence, and carnage. The horror comes from the violation* *of a group meant to exist in harmony — featuring a cast of real dancers as the luridly fluid characters — being thrown violently out of sync, like a body spasming. Meanwhile, Noé's anxious camera emphasizes their increasing disorientation and anguished confusion. When the party's over, only destruction is in its place. —*C.B.*

Where to watch *Climax*: Tubi**

The 30 best Halloween movies to stream this spooky season

'Frankenweenie'; 'The Craft'; 'Evil Dead 2'

Every A24 movie on Netflix, ranked

Greta Lee as Nora Moon in 'Past Lives'; Adam Driver as Prof. Jack Gladney in 'White Noise'; Alessia Zecchini in 'The Deepest Breath'

10. Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022)

Amandla Stenberg as Sophie, Maria Bakalova as Bee, Pete Davidson as David, and Rachel Sennott as Alice in 'Bodies Bodies Bodies'

Amandla Stenberg as Sophie, Maria Bakalova as Bee, Pete Davidson as David, and Rachel Sennott as Alice in 'Bodies Bodies Bodies'.

There are slasher movies, and then there's whatever *Bodies Bodies Bodies* is (this is a compliment). Genre trappings abound in horror, but Halina Reijn's film gives the murder mystery template a gleefully modern spin. Here, it's the machinery for a send-up of Gen Z psychology. Sophie (Amandla Stenberg) brings her new girlfriend (Maria Bakalova) to meet her old friends for a house party during a raging hurricane, which brings out the more frenetic sides of the cabin fever cohorts. The titular parlor game ensues… until one character winds up really, truly dead. And then another. And then another.

It would be cruel to spoil one of the decade's great climactic punchlines; suffice it to say the movie cleverly leverages the rules of the slasher format to turn the tables on its house full of would-be victims. —*C.B.*

Where to watch *Bodies Bodies Bodies*: Amazon Prime Video**

9. X (2022)

Mia Goth as Maxine Minx in 'X'

Mia Goth as Maxine Minx in 'X'.

While it may be best appreciated in concert with its prequel, *Pearl* (2022) — Ti West's *X* stands on its own as one of the gnarliest slashers in recent memory. The setting is familiar enough: rural Texas farmland, a creepy old couple, charming dirtbags secretly shooting a dirty movie. *X* pushes those set pieces towards their weirdest, grossest possibilities, fashioning a mournful plunge into the horror of aging and the pain of realizing your body can't do what it used to. Regret and envy, the film posits, can easily inspire vengeance, and these creative kills are proof.

If nothing else, *X* made everyone take notice of Mia Goth as a generational horror talent (apparently, not enough people saw 2016's *A Cure for Wellness*). *X* revolves around her character's obsession with star power, while Goth's dual-role performance leaves no doubt of her own prowess onscreen, single-handedly justifying the conceit of the whole trilogy. —*C.B.*

Where to watch *X*: HBO Max**

8. Bring Her Back (2025)

Jonah Wren Phillips as Oliver and Sally Hawkins as Laura in 'Bring Her Back'

Jonah Wren Phillips as Oliver and Sally Hawkins as Laura in 'Bring Her Back'.

Grief can make people do the unthinkable, as explored in this viscerally upsetting horror drama from *Talk to Me* directors Danny and Michael Philippou. After the death of their father, stepsiblings Andy (Billy Barratt) and Piper (Sora Wong) are orphaned and taken in by Laura (Sally Hawkins), a grieving mother who lost her only biological child. Andy is disturbed by Laura and the menacing mute boy she's also fostering, and soon realizes his new guardian's disturbing plans for Piper.

What makes *Bring Her Back* such a striking film among the many other horror movies tackling grief and trauma is the Philippou brothers' willingness to really *go there*. Laura's inner turmoil is manifested through a series of shocking body horror sequences that are best left unspoiled, with Hawkins delivering a fearless performance as a mother so desperate to bring her daughter back, she'll do just about anything. —*K.J.*

Where to watch *Bring Her Back*: HBO Max

7. Green Room (2015)

Anton Yelchin as Pat (front) in 'Green Room'

Anton Yelchin as Pat (front) in 'Green Room'.

Jeremy Saulnier's taut, gory thriller might not delve into otherworldly terrors, but it doesn't have to. Following a struggling but committed punk band (led by the late Anton Yelchin) to a gig in the Oregon backwoods that goes bloodily awry, *Green Room* shows that there are ruthless human monsters among us as the group performs at a (surprise!) neo-Nazi roadhouse. (Though to their detriment, they open their raucous set with a deliciously inflammatory Dead Kennedys cover.)

Stumbling across the sort of nefarious crime you get whenever Nazis are involved, the band barricades themselves in the club's grimy green room and tries to figure out a way to escape with their lives. Patrick Stewart, of all people, is an all-time villain as the skinheads' calculating leader, issuing merciless orders in the same reasonable cadence we've been conditioned to trust implicitly. The violence, when it comes, is brutal and realistic. All the while, Yelchin, Stewart, Alia Shawkat, and Imogen Poots imbue their disparate characters with inner lives that make each successive shock that much more nerve-fraying. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *Green Room*: Paramount+**

6. Midsommar (2019)

Florence Pugh as Dani in 'Midsommar'

Florence Pugh as Dani in 'Midsommar'.

Horror thrives in the darkness, which makes the mounting terrors of Ari Aster's immersive nightmare especially impressive. The incessantly bright and colorful palette of the film's Swedish summer locale leaves the characters — and viewers — nowhere to hide. Tagging along with her lunkish boyfriend and his grad school friends for a trip to study a rare rural folk festival, the grieving Dani (Florence Pugh) finds herself drawn further and further into the commune's rituals.

Aster weaves an inescapable nightmare out of sunshine, blindingly white fabrics, and garlands of flowers. In the isolated Swedish countryside of the never-setting sun, *Midsommar* hints at deeper, darker forces beneath the commune's folksy, welcoming exterior. It all leads to a climax where the full weight of tradition and belief roars with terrifying finality. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *Midsommar*: HBO Max**

5. Under the Skin (2013)

Scarlett Johansson as the Female in 'Under the Skin'

Scarlett Johansson as the Female in 'Under the Skin'.

Jonathan Glazer's unclassifiable sort-of horror film quickly weeded out those not willing to follow its uniquely trying and abstract path. In *Under the Skin*, Scarlett Johansson plays a blank, accommodating woman whose nightly ventures into Glasgow see her pick up men and bring them back to — well, that would be saying too much.

Here, high-concept plot elements that might otherwise be lurid emerge as part of the film's own, singular vision. What happens to those men in Johansson's care is the stuff of pulp and exploitation, while Glazer's exquisite visuals and measured, inscrutable plan transform genre convention into thoughtful (if mesmerizingly horrific) meditation. Like Johansson's character, *Under the Skin* comes at its subjects through an unnervingly alien lens. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *Under the Skin*: Tubi**

4. The Lighthouse (2019)

Willem Dafoe as Thomas Wake and Robert Pattinson as Ephraim Winslow in 'The Lighthouse'

Willem Dafoe as Thomas Wake and Robert Pattinson as Ephraim Winslow in 'The Lighthouse'.

Robert Eggers' second feature is a hallucinatory, maddeningly claustrophobic blend of folk horror and darkly funny character work from Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe. A24's commitment to auteurism is evident in the black-and-white cinematography, the solitary 19th-century New England setting, and a nearly square aspect ratio. As the two keepers' accelerating madness batters their already uneasy relationship, the film becomes a phantasmagorical endurance test, with the two antagonistic leads hurling themselves against their tight confinement.

Dafoe, as Thomas Wake — the crustiest "wickie" on the brutal coast — roars and bellows with wild-eyed Shakespearean menace, while Pattinson's newbie Ephraim Winslow catches glimpses of his partner's strange midnight rituals and finds inexplicable things washed up on the rocky shore. Everything is soaked in stashes of harsh liquor and inadequately buried tensions, leading to an utterly go-for-broke, ambiguous denouement. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *The Lighthouse*: HBO Max**

3. Talk to Me (2023)

Sophie Wilde as Mia in 'Talk to Me'

Sophie Wilde as Mia in 'Talk to Me'.

Young people doing imprudent things at parties is a time-honored tenet of life and horror movies. Drinking too much, making a fool of yourself, casually puncturing the delicate veil between the living and the dead — you know, the usual. But there's a strange intimacy to *Talk to Me*'s premise, in which teens act tough by holding a mummified hand, declaring the titular phrase, and inviting one lucky spirit from the other side to inhabit their body. In another context, it would be romantic. Call it "90 Seconds in Heaven," since after a minute and a half, as the urban legend goes, the possession gets harder to shake (and might even become permanent).

That metaphysical connection soon snowballs into a mounting existential threat when Mia (Sophie Wilde) allows her best friend's eager little brother to have one round with the hand, after which his body is never the same. Here, spiritual infractions are met with savage physical punishment and some of the more grotesque images in recent horror memory (which, as the genre has become ever more popular and emboldened, is seriously saying something). —*C.B.*

Where to watch *Talk to Me*: HBO Max**

2. Hereditary (2018)

Gabriel Byrne as Steve Graham, Toni Collette as Annie Graham, and Alex Wolff as Peter Graham in 'Hereditary'

Gabriel Byrne as Steve Graham, Toni Collette as Annie Graham, and Alex Wolff as Peter Graham in 'Hereditary'.

Ari Aster's directorial debut cemented him as a defining voice of modern arthouse horror. A searing tale of grief and buried family secrets, the film is a showcase for the great Toni Collette, whose matriarch must cope with an unthinkable tragedy while something even more sinister lurks in her past. As a woman whose dawning realization infests and wrenches apart her family, Collette turns in one of the most towering horror performances in memory.

Aster's craftsmanship matches his lead's, with *Hereditary* being as controlled and meticulous as the miniature tableaux Collette's character creates. As is often the case in so-called elevated horror, we're primed to accept the film's mounting evils as either psychological or supernatural, never quite certain of which side the ax will fall. Even if *Hereditary* eventually provides clear answers, the implications linger with the force of undisputed classics like *The Exorcist* or *Rosemary's Baby*. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *Hereditary*: HBO Max**

1. The Witch (2015)

Anya Taylor-Joy as Thomasin and Harvey Scrimshaw as Caleb in 'The Witch'

Anya Taylor-Joy as Thomasin and Harvey Scrimshaw as Caleb in 'The Witch'.

Robert Eggers has become synonymous with A24's particular horror brand, and while *The Witch* and *The Lighthouse* are wildly different films, each encapsulates the studio's aura in its own way. New England circa the 17th century is the setting for this enigmatic tale of an outcast Puritan family haunted by superstition, paranoia, disappearances, and the growing fear that something in the deep, dark woods surrounding their homestead is attacking their rigid faith.

Anya Taylor-Joy, in her film debut as the family's teenage daughter, appears to be the center of the escalating occurrences, as the clan begins to splinter. Eggers' stunning visuals and meticulous pace draw viewers into their increasingly desperate mania, gradually wedging open the door between rational interpretation and supernatural inescapability. Ultimately less ambiguous than it seems, *The Witch* etches its story in sudden, shocking strokes. *—D.P.*

Where to watch *The Witch*: HBO Max**

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Movies"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

The 20 best A24 horror movies ranked, from Talk to Me to Midsommar

Some of the film studio's titles are more &34;elevated&34; than others. The 20 best A24 horror movies ra...
New Photo - What to Watch this week: Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi star in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein

Plus, Sydney Sweeney stars in the harrowing boxing biopic &34;Christy,&34; and Kim Kardashian, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close, and more star in &34;All's Fair.&34;

Plus, Sydney Sweeney stars in the harrowing boxing biopic "Christy," and Kim Kardashian, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close, and more star in "All's Fair."

What to Watch this week: Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi star in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein

Plus, Sydney Sweeney stars in the harrowing boxing biopic "Christy," and Kim Kardashian, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close, and more star in "All's Fair."

By Gerrad Hall

Gerrad

Gerrad Hall is an editorial director at **, overseeing movie, awards, and music coverage. He is also host of *The Awardist* podcast, and has cohosted EW's live Oscars, Emmys, SAG, and Grammys red carpet shows. He has appeared on *Good Morning America*, *The Talk*, *Access Hollywood*, *Extra!*, and other talk shows, delivering the latest news on pop culture and entertainment.

EW's editorial guidelines

on November 3, 2025 3:00 a.m. ET

Leave a Comment

What To Watch with Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi for Frankenstein; Sydney Sweeney for Christy; Kim Kardashian and Sarah Paulson for All's Fair

'All's Fair'; 'Christy'; 'Frankenstein'. Credit:

Netflix; Black Beer; Disney

He's alive! Guillermo del Toro's *Frankenstein* — starring Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein and Jacob Elordi as his Creature — has been electrifying theatrical audiences in its limited run, and now it will be available to stream.

In theaters, Sydney Sweeney gets in the ring for *Christy*, the true story of Christy Martin, who put women's boxing on the map — but fought a much bigger battle at home. Plus, Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson lead the adaptation of *Die My Love*, and in *Predator: Badlands*, a runt Predator outcast (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi) teams up with a synth (Elle Fanning) to battle for survival and to prove its worth.

On TV, Kim Kardashian, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close, Niecy Nash-Betts, Naomi Watts, and Tayana Taylor star on the legal drama *All's Fair*; and *Breaking Bad* and *Better Call Saul* creator Vince Gilligan is back with the sci-fi series *Pluribus*, starring *Saul*'s Rhea Seehorn as a woman who seems to be the only person immune to a virus that turns everyone else into happy, optimistic people.**

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.*****

Monday, Nov. 3

st denis medical wendi mclendon covey

Wendi McLendon-Covey on 'St. Denis Medical'.

Justin Lubin/NBC

**Movies*****Parrot Kindergarten* (doc) - In select theaters

**Streaming*****Black Snow* (season premiere) - Acorn TV*******Crutch* (series debut) - Paramount+*******The Gone* (season premiere) - Acorn TV*******I Am Curious Johnny* (doc) - HBO Max*******In Waves and War *(doc) - Netflix*******Murder Before Evensong* (season finale) - Acorn TV

**8 p.m.*********90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way* - TLC*******Below Deck Mediterranean *- Bravo*******Finding Mr. Christmas* - Hallmark*******Holiday Baking Championship* (season premiere) - Food Network (next day on HBO Max and Discovery+*******Monday Night Football* (Arizona Cardinals at Dallas Cowboys) - ABC / ESPN*******Name That Tune* - Fox*******The Neighborhood* - CBS*******Nick Cannon Presents: Wild 'N Out* - VH1*******St. Denis Medical* (season premiere) - NBC*******WWE Monday Night RAW* - Netflix (5 p.m. PT)******

**8:30 p.m.*****DMV* - CBS*******Nick Cannon Presents: Wild 'N Out* (season finale) - VH1*******St. Denis Medical* - NBC******

**9 p.m.*********Celebrity Weakest Link *- Fox*******FBI* - CBS*******Seeking Sister Wife* - TLC*******The Voice* - NBC (next day on Peacock)*******Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen* - Bravo******

**10 p.m.*****Brilliant Minds *- NBC (next day on Peacock)*******Watson *- CBS

**11 p.m.*****The Daily Show* - Comedy Central**

Tuesday, Nov. 4

ALL'S FAIR - KIM KARDASHIAN, NAOMI WATTS

Kim Kardashian and Naomi Watts on 'All's Fair'.

Disney/Ser Baffo

**Movies*****I Really Love My Husband* - Digital*******Ice Fall* - Digital, VOD*******Out of My Comfort Zone* - Digital*******Peas and Carrots* - Digital*******Satisfied* (doc) - VOD*******The Smashing Machine* - Digital******

**Streaming*********All's Fair* (series debut) - Hulu*******The Boulet Brothers' Dragula* - Shudder*******Forest of the Missing* (series debut) - MHz Choice*******Guts & Glory* (season finale) - Shudder*******Leanne Morgan: Unspeakable Things* (comedy special) - Netflix*******Squid Game: The Challenge* (season premiere) - Netflix******

**8 p.m.*********100 Day Dream Home *- HGTV*******Bobby's Triple Threat* (season finale) - Food Network (next day on HBO Max)*******Dancing With the Stars* - ABC / Disney+*******Homestead Rescue* - Discovery*******Love & Hip Hop Miami* (season premiere) - BET*******NCIS* - CBS*******The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City* - Bravo******

**9 p.m.*****Alex vs America* - Food Network*******Baylen Out Loud* - TLC*******The Lowdown* (season finale) - FX (next day on Hulu)*******NCIS: Origins* - CBS*******Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition* - Bravo******

**10 p.m.*********7 Little Johnstons* - TLC*******Alex vs America* - Food Network*******Hustlers, Gamblers, Crooks* - Discovery*******NCIS: Sydney* - CBS*******Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen* - Bravo*******Who Hired the Hit Man?* (series debut) - ID (next day on HBO Max)******

**11 p.m.*****The Daily Show* - Comedy Central**

Your guide to 2025 TV premiere dates

collage of Gaten Matarazzo, Angela Bassett, Jaz Sinclair, and Cote de Pablo

Your guide to 2025 movie release dates

collage of Anthony Mackie in Captain America: Brave New World; Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan for Freakier Friday; Cynthia Erivo in Wicked: For Good; M3GAN

Wednesday, Nov. 5

Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm/The Thing, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic and Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm/Human Torch in The Fantastic Four: First Steps

'The Fantastic Four: First Steps'.

Courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios

**Movies*********The Fantastic Four: First Steps* (streaming debut) - Disney+*******Finding Joy* - Prime Video******

**Streaming*****Down Cemetery Road* - Apple TV*******Hazbin Hotel* - Prime Video*******Ink Master* - Paramount+*******Loot* - Apple TV*******The Morning Show* - Apple TV*******Murdaugh: Death in the Family* - Hulu*******Selling Sunset* (reunion special) - Netflix******

**8 p.m.*********The Challenge: Vets and New Threats* - MTV*******Chicago Med* - NBC*******The Floor* - Fox*******Help! I Wrecked My House* - HGTV*******Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent* - The CW*******Nature: The Pigeon Hustle* (doc) - PBS*******Shifting Gears* - ABC*******Survivor* - CBS*******Tournament of Champions: All-Star Christmas* (season premiere) - Food Network (next day on HBO Max and Discovery+)******

**8:30 p.m.*****Abbott Elementary* - ABC******

**9 p.m.*********99 to Beat* - Fox*******Chicago Fire *- NBC*******Dangerously Obese* - TLC*******Expedition Unknown* (season premiere) - Discovery*******The Golden Bachelor *- ABC*******Operation Space Station* (two-part special debut) - PBS*******The Real Murders on Elm Street* (season finale) - ID*******Sin City Rehab* - HGTV*******Sistas* - BET******

**9:30 p.m.*****The Amazing Race* - CBS******

**10 p.m.*********About Face* - TLC*******Chicago PD* - NBC*******Expedition Files* (season premiere) - Discovery*******The Friday the 13th Murders* (season finale) - ID*******Shark Tank* - ABC*******Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen* - Bravo******

**10:30 p.m.*********Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head* - Comedy Central

**11 p.m.*****The Daily Show* - Comedy Central

Thursday, Nov. 6

Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande in Wicked: One Wonderful Night

Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Granda on 'Wicked: One Wonderful Night' NBC special.

Griffin Nagel/NBC

**Streaming*********Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake* - HBO Max*******All Her Fault* (series debut) - Peacock*******Death by Lightning* (series debut) - Netflix*******The Kardashians* - Hulu*******A Life's Worth* - Viaplay*******The Light in the Hall* - Acorn TV / AMC+*******Married at First Sight* - Peacock*******Reasonable Doubt* - Hulu*******The Vince Staples Show* (season premiere) - Netflix******

**8 p.m.*********9-1-1* - ABC*******Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage* - CBS*******Hell's Kitchen* - Fox*******Police 24/7 *- The CW*******The Real Housewives of Orange County* (reunion, part 1) - Bravo*******Wicked: One Wonderful Night* (special) - NBC (streaming the next day on Peacock)******

**8:15 p.m.*****Thursday Night Football* (Las Vegas Raiders at Denver Broncos) - Prime Video

**8:30 p.m.*****Ghosts* - CBS******

**9 p.m.*****9-1-1: Nashville* - ABC*******Alex vs ARod* (docuseries debut) - HBO / HBO Max*******Love + War *(doc) - Nat Geo (next day on Disney+, Hulu)*******Matlock* - CBS*******Special Forces: World's Toughest Test* - Fox*******Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen* - Bravo******

**10 p.m.*********Elsbeth* - CBS*******Grey's Anatomy *- ABC

**11 p.m.*****The Daily Show* - Comedy Central**

Friday, Nov. 7

Frankenstein. Jacob Elordi as The Creature in Frankenstein.

Jacob Elordi as the Creature in 'Frankenstein'.

Ken Woroner/Netflix

**Movies*********31 Candles* - In theaters*******All That We Love* - In theaters*******The Beldham* - In theaters*******Belén* - In select theaters*******Brothers on Three* (doc) - In select theaters (Regal Cinemas exclusive)*******Christy* - In theaters*******Die My Love* - In theaters*******Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale* (streaming debut) - Peacock*******Exit Protocol* - In select theaters, Digital, VOD*******Frankenstein* - Netflix*******I Wish You All the Best* - In theaters*******Long Shadows* - In theaters (limited release)*******Lost & Found in Cleveland* - In theaters*******Materialists* (streaming debut) - HBO Max*******Modi* - In theaters*******Nuremberg* - In theaters*******Peter Hujar's Day* - In theaters*******Pistachio Wars* (doc) - In select theaters (one-night-only), Digital, VOD*******Predator: Badlands* - In theaters*******Stone Cold Fox* - In theaters*******Train Dreams* - In select theaters*******We Forgot to Break Up* - In theaters******

**Streaming*********Cat's Eye* - Hulu*******Fire and Water: Making the Avatar Films* (two-part doc) - Disney+*******The Great British Baking Show* (season finale) - Netflix*******Knife Edge: Chasing Michelin Stars* - Apple TV*******The Last Frontier* - Apple TV*******Maxton Hall — The World Between Us* (season premiere) - Prime Video*******Pluribus* (series debut) - Apple TV******

**8 p.m.*********Belle Collective* - OWN*******The Braxtons* - We TV*******Celebrity Wheel of Fortune* - ABC*******Friday Night Vibes* (*Remember the Titans* and *Drumline*) - TBS*******Gold Rush* (season premiere) - Discovery *******Happy's Place* (season premiere) - NBC*******Have We Met This Christmas?* (movie) - GAF*******The Mistletoe Murders* (season premiere) - Hallmark*******Power Book IV: Force* (season premiere) - Starz*******Sheriff Country* - CBS******

**8:30 p.m.*****Stumble* (series debut) - NBC******

**9 p.m.*****20/20* - ABC*******Dateline *- NBC*******Fire Country* - CBS*******The Mistletoe Murders* - Hallmark*******Ready to Love* (season premiere) - OWN*******The Unbelievable With Dan Aykroyd* (season premiere) - History******

**10 p.m.*********Boston Blue* - CBS*******Everything on the Menu With Braun Strowman* - USA**

Saturday, Nov. 8

**8 p.m.*********Christmas Above the Clouds* (movie) - Hallmark*******Cold Justice* - Oxygen*******Dinner and a Movie* (*The Replacements*) - TBS*******Preach, Pray, Love* (movie) - Lifetime*******Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony 2025* - Disney+*******A Very Curious Christmas* (movie) - GAF******

**9 p.m.*****The Death Investigator With Barbara Butcher* - Oxygen******

**10 p.m.*****48 Hours* - CBS

**11:30 p.m.*****Saturday Night Live* (host Nikki Glaser; musical guest Sombr) - NBC******

Sunday, Nov. 9

IT: Welcome to Derry

Taylour Paige on 'It: Welcome to Derry'.

Brooke Palmer/HBO

**Streaming*********House of David* - Prime Video*******Mayor of Kingstown* - Paramount+*******Tulsa King* - Paramount+******

**6 p.m.*****Snapped: Behind Bars* (season premiere) - Oxygen******

**7 p.m.*********60 Minutes* - CBS*******America's Funniest Home Videos* - ABC*******Killer Relationship With Faith Jenkins* (season premiere) - Oxygen******

**8 p.m.*********90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?* - TLC*******Christmas of Giving* (movie) - GAF*******Harry Potter: Wizards of Baking* - Food Network (next day on HBO Max and Discovery+)*******A Keller Christmas Vacation* (movie) - Hallmark*******Killer Grannies* (series debut) - Oxygen*******My Husband's Other Wife* (movie) - Lifetime*******The Real Housewives of Potomac* - Bravo*******Universal Basic Guys* - Fox

**8:15 p.m.*****Sunday Night Football* (Pittsburgh Steelers as Los Angeles Chargers) - NBC

**8:30 p.m.*********The Simpsons* - Fox

**9 p.m.*****Anne Rice's Talamasca: The Secret Order* - AMC / AMC+*******The Guest* (season finale) - Showtime / Paramount+*******It: Welcome to Derry* - HBO / HBO Max*******Krapopolis* - Fox*******Masterpiece: Maigret* (season finale) - PBS*******The Road* - CBS*******Robin Hood* - MGM+*******Sweet Empire: Winter Wars* (series debut) - Food Network (next day on HBO Max and Discovery+)*******Tony Shalhoub Breaking Bread* - CNN*******Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition* (season finale) - Brav0******

**9:30 p.m.*****Bob's Burgers* - Fox******

**10 p.m.*****Billy the Kid* - MGM+*******The Chair Company *- HBO / HBO Max*******In the Eye of the Storm* - Discovery*******Sister Wives* - TLC*******Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen* - Bravo******

**10:30 p.m.*****I Love LA* - HBO / HBO Max******

**11 p.m.*****Last Week Tonight With John Oliver* - HBO / HBO Max**

*times are ET and subject to change

- What to Watch

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL What"

Read More


Source: CUSTOS NEWS

Full Article on Source: CUSTOS NEWS

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

What to Watch this week: Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi star in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein

Plus, Sydney Sweeney stars in the harrowing boxing biopic &34;Christy,&34; and Kim Kardashian, Sarah Paulson...

 

TREND MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com