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Extremely R-Rated Thriller Is The Ultimate Body Transformation

By Robert Scucci
| Published

Midway through my viewing of 2012’s American Mary, I hit pause and preemptively jotted down a note saying, “There’s not a single moment in this movie in which I enjoyed myself or felt good about watching it.” If I’m being truthful, this one was hard to get through because as much as I love gore, I much prefer the kind that’s so over the top it stops feeling real. You don’t get any of that with American Mary, a film that introduces itself to your eyeballs through closeups of a raw turkey being dissected and sutured by an aspiring medical student.

Right off the rip, American Mary makes you uncomfortable through its visuals before zooming out and making you feel dumb for being so grossed out so soon. If you’ve ever watched an episode of Grey’s Anatomy, you know full well that playing Operation with a piece of poultry is actually an effective way for surgical residents to fine-tune their skillset at home in a way that’s affordable and makes post-practice dinner options a no-brainer.

American Mary 2012

That’s all well and good, but as soon as American Mary gives you a brief moment of comfort, it escalates into the type of body horror bloodbath that will have you rattling off a litany of questions to any medical professional before going under the knife for even the most routine of surgeries.

From Medical Student To Bloody Mary

American Mary starts out as your typical underdog story, introducing Mary Mason (Katherine Isabelle) as a struggling medical student trying to get through school without any outside financial help. She’s clearly talented and takes her work seriously, but is constantly humbled and belittled by Dr. Alan Grant (David Lovgren), a professor who recognizes her potential while simultaneously pushing her to a breaking point.

Tight on cash, Mary seeks out her strip club owning friend Billy (Antonio Cupo), hoping to land a job to keep herself afloat. It’s at this strip club where Mary is made an offer she can’t refuse. There’s a man bleeding out in the basement who needs immediate medical intervention, and Billy offers her $5,000 to stitch him up and keep her mouth shut.

The surgery is a success, which leads to a stripper named Beatress (Tristan Risk) tracking Mary down with another offer. Beatress is a soft-spoken woman who’s undergone extensive plastic surgery to resemble Betty Boop, has seemingly infinite financial resources at her disposal, and wants a consultation for an extensive procedure involving her acquaintance Ruby Realgirl (Paula Lindberg). Ruby’s request is simple. She wants every part of her body that can be gawked at sexually to be removed, effectively turning herself into a living Barbie doll.

Hard up for cash and on the verge of dropping out of medical school, Mary takes the job and decides to open up a body modification shop for clients looking to undergo similar or even more extreme surgeries under the radar. As Mary gains clout in the underground body modification circuit, she also gets revenge on Dr. Alan Grant, who assaulted her while she was still his student before her residency, by using his now mangled body as a means to practice surgeries the same way she once practiced on raw turkey earlier in the film.

The Most Profound Transformation Of All

Disgusting body modification surgeries aside, the real transformation that threw me for a loop in American Mary was Mary herself. While I was initially disturbed by the film’s gore, I eventually learned to accept it because that’s clearly the vibe the writer and directors, Jen and Sylvia Soska, were going for. One thing I’m far less forgiving about is how quickly Mary’s personality changes.

American Mary 2012

Since I’ve never been assaulted by a teacher while simultaneously considering dropping out of med school to join the black market surgery circuit, I can’t objectively say that her character evolution is outright wrong, but it certainly feels rushed. Mary starts out timid and reserved, and by the second act she’s an overconfident monster willing to put the knife to anyone with the wallet to pay for their questionable procedures. That includes amputations, mutilation, and in one instance, sewing two twins together.

The gore is fine. The character evolution is fine in theory too. But in my mind, it all happens so quickly that we never really get to sit with the interim phases Mary may have gone through to reach this point of no return. That missing connective tissue made it harder for me to fully buy into her transformation, even as the film doubled down on its increasingly extreme imagery.

American Mary 2012

All in all, American Mary is a solid body horror film, but one that ultimately fails to stick the landing due to these tonal inconsistencies. I can’t say I’ll ever watch it again, but fans of David and Brandon Cronenberg will likely get exactly what they’re looking for if top-notch gore and practical effects are their primary draw.

As of this writing, American Mary is streaming for free on Tubi.


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Moon phase today: What the Moon will look like on April 23

We’re almost at the First Quarter which means the Moon is almost half illuminated. Each night it gets a little brighter, and this will keep happening until the Full Moon when the reverse will then occur and each night it will appear less.

What is today’s Moon phase?

As of Thursday, April 23, the Moon phase is Waxing Crescent. Tonight, 41% of the moon will be lit up, according to NASA’s Daily Moon Guide.

If you’re looking at the Moon with just your naked eye, you should be able to catch a glimpse of the Mares Serenitatis, Tranquillitatis, and Fecunditatis. If you have binoculars, the Mare Nectaris and Endymion and Posidonius Craters should also come into view, appearing from halfway up the Moon to near the top. And, finally, with a telescope you’ll see all this plus the Apollo 11 and 17 landing spots, and the Rupes Altai.

When is the next Full Moon?

The next Full Moon is predicted to take place on May 1, the first of two in May.

What are Moon phases?

NASA says that the Moon completes a full orbit around Earth in about 29.5 days, during which it passes through eight stages. Although the same face of the Moon is always turned toward us, the portion illuminated by the Sun shifts as it travels along its path, producing the familiar cycle of full, half, and crescent shapes. These variations are referred to as lunar phases, and there are eight altogether:

New Moon – The Moon is between Earth and the sun, so the side we see is dark (in other words, it’s invisible to the eye).

Waxing Crescent – A small sliver of light appears on the right side (Northern Hemisphere).

First Quarter – Half of the Moon is lit on the right side. It looks like a half-Moon.

Waxing Gibbous – More than half is lit up, but it’s not quite full yet.

Full Moon – The whole face of the Moon is illuminated and fully visible.

Waning Gibbous – The Moon starts losing light on the right side. (Northern Hemisphere)

Third Quarter (or Last Quarter) – Another half-Moon, but now the left side is lit.

Waning Crescent – A thin sliver of light remains on the left side before going dark again.

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Tinder responds to viral video about tricking facial scan

Earlier this month, journalist Christophe Haubursin published a YouTube video called “Something very weird is happening on Tinder.” In the video, which has over 1.5 million views as of this publication, Haubursin described a way to workaround to Tinder’s Face Check feature — the facial recognition that is now required for all U.S. users as of Oct. 2025.

What Haubursin and his interviewees discovered is a bunch of profiles that appeared normal, but the last photo on each profile was…off. It was usually a digitally-altered image of a different person in a weird scenario, like on a billboard or in a Victorian painting. And if someone matched with this person and asked about the image, they dodged the question. Instead, they asked to move the conversation to WhatsApp, where it became clear they were romance scammers.

But how did they evade Face Check? Haubursin found that Tinder and Hinge, both owned by Match Group, only need one photo for the facial recognition software. So these people may be the actual person in that odd image, and able to pass the face scan. Then, they could grift images of other people from the internet to use for the bulk of their profile.

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Tinder didn’t respond to Haubursin’s request for comment, but it did respond to Mashable’s. 

“We’re aware of the concerns raised about our Photo Verification and Face Check features. In recent weeks, we’ve taken action to strengthen our Photo Verification badging logic, including requiring greater consistency across profile photos and additional reviews to achieve higher confidence in cases that warrant extra scrutiny,” a Tinder spokesperson told Mashable. “Face Check, our more recently launched verification system, builds on Photo Verification to help confirm accounts belong to real users. We are committed to continuously improving and investing in our systems to keep Tinder safe and authentic for our users.”

Mashable also recently spoke with Hinge’s Chief Product and Technology Officer, Ben Celebicic, about this, as Haubursin also replicated this on Hinge (which began implementing Face Check after Tinder). Celebicic hasn’t seen Haubursin’s video, but he did say that there’s a constant battle between trust and safety teams and policy-violating actors. 

“They’ll find new ways,” he said. “We’ll find ways to prevent them from accessing the platform.”

There’s not going to be a single product the team builds that will fully prevent people from bypassing our solution, Celebicic continued. He said they have a big team working on these issues, and they’re in tune with new ways bad actors try to penetrate the platform and work to fix them.

Around one-third of Hinge’s workforce is dedicated to trust and safety, the app told Mashable, and Match Group invests $125 million annually in this area.

Trust and safety is a major concern for dating apps. In Sept. 2025, two senators sent a letter to Match Group CEO Spencer Rascoff, urging him to do something about romance scammers on the platforms. In Dec., a class-action lawsuit against Match Group claimed that a serial rapist was allowed on Tinder and Hinge after several women reported him. 

Facial recognition scans have boomed recently thanks to the influx of age-verification laws, which require a robust method of proving someone’s age in order to access certain content, usually explicit content. These methods include uploading a government ID to a platform, using a credit card, or in other cases, scanning your face. But, like with Face Check, people have found workarounds to evade the scan and see the content they want to see.

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The Unhinged, Raunchy 80s Robot Sci-Fi Almost No One Saw

By Robert Scucci
| Updated

When I fired up 1987’s Robot Holocaust on Tubi, I was expecting a Mad Max-style scenario with a bunch of clankers running amok and wiping out humanity. Instead, I got a weird, loincloth-laden odyssey where the most expensive special effects are red lights, and the villain is basically a giant, walking, talking Dr. Zoidberg from Futurama. I know I’m being anachronistic by comparing a 1987 film to a character that didn’t exist until 1999, but that’s the comparison I’m making, and I’m sticking with it.

Let me have this, because the other reality I have to live with is that this movie is pretty rough. There are barely any robots, and what transpires hardly qualifies as a holocaust. The male-to-female buttcheek ratio sits at a clean 50:50, and the nudity isn’t even the good kind. Everybody’s wandering around in punishing heat all day, so you just know the smell is so bad you can almost taste it.

It’s Listed As A Sci-Fi But It’s More Of A Fantasy Quest

Robot Holocaust 1987

The best way to describe Robot Holocaust is an ill-fated cross between Mad Max and the original Star Wars trilogy. You’ve got a ragtag group of city-dwelling slaves living under the thumb of the Dark One, with his laws enforced by Torque (Rick Gianasi), the robot who looks like Zoidberg.

These wasteland slaves are trying to overthrow the Dark One, and their plan mostly involves a lot of unsexy walking as they run into enemies, obstacles, and, occasionally, robots.

That’s so Zoidberg

Leading the charge is Neo (Norris Culf), a New Terra drifter accompanied by his C-3PO-esque companion, Klyton (Joel Van Ornsteiner). Along the way, he links up with Deeja (Nadine Hart), Nyla (Jennnifer Delora), Bray (George Gray), and Kai (Andrew Horwath), all of whom are fed up with the Dark One’s evil machinations and willing to trudge half-naked through asphalt and overgrown wasteland to do something about it.

Alliances and wills are tested, but the goal stays the same. Our heroes, and there are too many of them to really invest in, especially given their almost aggressive lack of charisma, need to find the Power Station where the Dark One resides and wipe out him and his goons once and for all.

Amateur Hour, But Not Without Its Charm

Robot Holocaust 1987

While Robot Holocaust mostly plays like a college film project with no budget, I can appreciate what writer-director Tim Kincaid was going for with limited resources. Most of the exterior shots look like people wandering around the outskirts of NYC, and most of the interior scenes feel like they were filmed inside a Spirit Halloween. A lot of my enjoyment came from the production notes I made up in my head, like, “Places, everybody! This fog and these fake spiderwebs set us back $25, making it the most expensive scene we’re shooting!”

That said, I’ve got to give the cast credit for committing to the vision, even if they’re reaching pretty far to get there. The robot costumes actually look decent from a distance, but the illusion falls apart in the close-ups, which we get way too often.

Robot Holocaust 1987

At the end of the day, Robot Holocaust is perfect home-viewing material. It’s only 79 minutes long and packed with a healthy dose of camp. It doesn’t make much sense, and when the primary antagonist is finally revealed, it’s basically just a guy dressed like an egg. For that reason alone, it’s worth a watch because it’s just so random.

As of this writing, you can stream Robot Holocaust for free on Tubi.


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