Connect with us

Entertainment

Tom Hiddleston's Vampire Movie With Tom Holland Is Guaranteed To Break Your Heart

By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

Even if you love vampire movies like a good little child of the night, it can be difficult to find a modern film featuring these monsters that doesn’t, well, suck. A few years ago, though, we got a heartbreaking vampire drama from an iconic indie director, one that started two Marvel icons. The movie in question is Only Lovers Left Alive (2013), and you can now stream this underappreciated Tom Hiddleston/Tilda Swinton classic for free on Tubi. 

The premise of Only Lovers Left Alive is that two vampires who have been married for centuries now live two very different lives on opposite sides of the world. However, dark, destructive ennui has begun to take hold in Tom Hiddleston’s character, and he’s pondering shuffling off the mortal coil of a world he has grown increasingly tired of. Tilda Swinton’s character comes to help him find the joy diminished by years of empty existence, but whether she succeeds will come down to how much they can rekindle the passion that originally brought them together.

A Cast Of Undead Excellence

The cast of Only Lovers Left Alive includes some major genre names, including Tom Holland (best known for playing Spider-Man in the Marvel Cinematic Universe). It also includes Jeffrey Wright (best known for The Batman) and the late, great Anton Yelchin (best known for the Star Trek reboot). It even includes the legendary John Hurt (best known for Alien) who, in an inspired bit of casting, plays William Shakespeare’s contemporary Christopher Marlowe.

Mostly, though, Only Lovers Left Alive revolves around Tom Hiddleston (best known for The Avengers) and Tilda Swinton (best known for We Need To Talk About Kevin). Each of them individually does an excellent job of portraying a supernatural creature who is at once both more and less than human, and their natural chemistry helps lend this movie its passion and its pathos. Trust me: if you’re only used to these actors in Marvel movies, seeing them in a heartbreaking indie where they get to chew scenery as they see fit is quite the revelation.

Dead And Not Loving It

When Only Lovers Left Alive premiered, it didn’t make the box office feel all that likely. Against a budget of $7 million, the film only earned $7.9 million; however, it received a surprising amount of acclaim despite lackluster earnings: for example, it was nominated for the Palm d’Or at the Cannes Festival, and it rightfully took home that prestigious film festival’s award for Best Soundtrack. Seriously, this combination of the director’s favorite songs and his own band’s score helps give this quirky classic a surprisingly authentic and almost shockingly autobiographical vibe. 

Despite (or perhaps because of) the fact that it was completely different from other vampire media, Only Lovers Left Alive cast quite a hypnotic spell on everyone who saw it. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an 86 percent, with critics praising director Jim Jarmusch for pumping some new blood into a genre that felt drained long ago. They also singled out Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton for giving performances that effortlessly pivot from heartbreaking pathos to gallows humor and back again, fully selling us on the unexpected treaties and quiet triumphs that come from a love that can literally never end.

Who Wants To Live Forever?

Now, here’s the rare admission from a critic: I had to watch Only Lovers Left Alive twice before I really understood and appreciated it. The first time, the movie felt a little too slow for me, and it clashed with my expectations of a genre tale full of blood and betrayal. On the second watch, though, I realized that the movie was all about answering the question first put forth by Queen all those decades ago: “who wants to live forever?”

While it makes for a tear-jerking watch at times (it’s not a question of if you’ll cry but when), Only Lovers Left Alive very provocatively asks what eternal love looks like for a man and a wife who can never die. How does that transform the traditional wedding promise of “till death do us part,” and how do you keep a spark alive when the weight of untold eons weighs on your chest like the rock of ages? For anyone who has ever loved someone with their whole heart, Only Lovers Left Alive forces you to consider how you might sustain that passion over the centuries and what its sudden absence could mean for both you and your relationship.

A Monstrous Mirror

In this way, Jim Jarmusch created a vampire movie that isn’t really a vampire movie; rather, its supernatural protagonists are metaphors for the monstrous urges and creeping loneliness that threaten to tear even the strongest unions apart. It’s not exactly a scary movie, especially for those hoping to see plenty of blood, gore, and other staples of monster movie mayhem. But in holding up an unflinching reflection to both the impermanence of passion and the undying fire of true love, this may be the scariest vampire movie of them all.

Will you agree that Only Lovers Left Alive is slow-burn genre perfection, or is this one vampy movie you’d rather drive a stake into? The only way to find out is to stream it for free on Tubi today. Come for the Marvel stars and stay for the eye-opening meditations on life, love, and the forbidden attraction of death!

ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE REVIEW SCORE


source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Entertainment

HBO's Harry Potter Series Will Definitely Fail For One Big Reason, And It's Not J.K. Rowling Or Snape

By Jonathan Klotz
| Updated

Harry Potter is coming back. If it were in POG form, everyone might be more excited. Warner Bros. dropped the first trailer for the upcoming HBO Max series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, which has touched off a fresh round of debates over whether or not the series should be boycotted due to J.K. Rowling’s beliefs and who even wanted this series in the first place.

Here’s the trailer…

No matter how you feel about the Boy Who Lived or the rich and famous author who created the most poorly designed sport in literature, it might be some solace to know Warner Bros. is going to fail spectacularly, and it has nothing to do with anyone’s opinions. It’s about money. A lot of money. So much in fact, that it’s impossible enough people will watch the new streaming series to break even, and don’t even think of turning a profit. 

The Most Expensive Entertainment Project In History

The 2001 adaptation of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone made a billion dollars on a budget of $125 million. By way of comparison, the HBO Max series has an estimated budget of $100 million. Per episode.

That’s before the marketing blitz that you won’t be able to get away from, even if you close your eyes while sitting in your tiny room underneath the stairwell. To put this in perspective, Warner Bros. is spending more money on the upcoming streaming series than any studio has ever spent on a single piece of entertainment. Series, movie, The Eras Tour, Dinotopia, doesn’t matter, nothing will come close to the sheer amount of money Warner Bros is setting on fire.  

If you watch the initial trailer, it feels like a version of the movie fell out of an alternate universe. Everything looks similar to the original film, but it’s slightly off.

The cast looks like their movie counterparts. The one very notable exception is Snape, who’s also the single worst character in the series to race swap if you worry about things such as why everyone’s suspicious of him for no real reason, or why James Potter bullies him. It’s a baffling choice in a trailer full of baffling choices. 

Yer A Remake Harry!

To its credit, the trailer does attempt to answer the question as to why the series is being made. With a single season covering each of the books, finally, the little details that Potterheads have obsessed over for generations will get to leave the page. From the large changes, Headless Nick’s birthday party, to the smaller, calm changes of the later novels, a book-accurate adaptation could only be done as a series. 

Though Warner Bros is making it the largest entertainment project since the Romans erected the Colosseum, the first trailer can’t quite shake the nagging feeling that it’s destined to fail. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone is going to be seen by millions and millions of people around the world, but at a total price tag approaching $4 billion, it seems impossible for it to become a financial success, which, as we all know, is sadly the only type of success that matters to studios. 

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone is coming to HBO Max around Christmas 2026. 


source

Continue Reading

Entertainment

The Last NCIS Has One Fatal Flaw

By Robert Scucci
| Published

NCIS is one of those ride-or-die franchises you’ll have a shaky relationship with for the rest of your life if you started watching at a certain age. I remember sitting with my parents watching the flagship series when it first came out, and over the years I’ve kept tabs on its many spinoffs. Now that NCIS: Los Angeles, New Orleans, and Hawai’i have run their course, and the one-off Tony & Ziva miniseries totally screwed the pooch, we’re back to just the flagship series and its prequel, NCIS: Origins.

Honestly, I’m okay with this. The original series still has its charm despite its many personnel changes, and NCIS: Origins allows for some great retconning and callbacks that are obvious enough for diehard fans, but not so granular that newcomers can’t jump in without doing homework. It’s a perfect show if you’re a fan of the franchise, and the best thing that’s been put out in years.

NCIS: Origins S02E11

However, there’s one big problem that NCIS: Origins runs into, and it’s something unavoidable: there’s no suspense. Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of thrills in the heat of the moment when the drama gets dialed up. There are also surprisingly strong action sequences for a series that belongs to a franchise that’s basically a procedural soap opera for boomers who just want to tune into their stories week after week.

One Specific Kind Of Suspense Is Missing

On an episode-to-episode basis, there are plenty of reasons to keep tuning into NCIS: Origins. We get to learn about the early days of Special Agent in Charge Leroy Jethro Gibbs, and how he cut his teeth working for NIS before it became the agency and franchise we all know and love. We see how his 91 rules came to be. We get more backstory on Special Agent Mike Franks, the best character in the series (and it’s not even close), and Kyle Schmid is a dead ringer for the older, somehow more cynical Franks from the original series (Muse Watson).

NCIS: Origins S02E11

Even better, comic relief comes in the form of Randy Randolf (Caleb Foote), who, if it weren’t for Franks, would be the standout character. We also get the best kind of wise-cracking forensic nerd banter from Woody (Bobby Moynihan) and Philip (Ely Henry). I could go on, but the point is, NCIS: Origins is a beyond solid series, sans one thing.

There’s no real suspense.

Yes, people get hurt, and dangerous leads get chased, but that’s not the kind of suspense I’m talking about.

The kind of suspense the show is missing, which is par for the course when it comes to prequels, is the kind it could never have in the first place. The show stars Austin Stowell as a young and hungry Gibbs, but it’s still narrated by Mark Harmon. More importantly, we know Gibbs rises through the ranks and then has a 20-year tenure on NCIS. In other words, any time Gibbs finds himself in danger in NCIS: Origins, we know without a sliver of doubt that he’s going to be just fine.

NCIS: Origins S02E11

The same can be said for Franks, and the rest of the gang to a certain degree. While I’m speculating here, I think we can guess Lala’s (Mariel Molino) fate as well. She’s never mentioned in the flagship series, yet she’s a constant presence in NCIS: Origins, the series that tells Gibbs’ entire backstory leading up to NCIS. I could be grasping at straws, but I have reason to believe something terrible happens to her that’s too painful to bring up later. The series has done an excellent job retconning the original series, so it’s surprising that they’d come up with a character who could have easily been one of the dozens of agents mentioned in the main series but never actually seen on screen or seen in passing. 

In other words, as much as I like her character, I’m not going to get too attached because she’ll probably meet a tragic end at some point.

Fortunately, We Don’t Need This Kind Of Suspense

NCIS: Origins S02E11

Thankfully, NCIS: Origins is worth tuning into week after week, not for the suspense, which we’ve established doesn’t exist here for obvious reasons, but because it’s an excellent character study of one of cable’s most iconic, coffee-chugging curmudgeons. We’re currently watching Gibbs’ second marriage, which has yet to fall apart, and I can’t wait to see how that whole thing dissolves, along with his (checks notes) third and fourth marriages.

Lack of pure, adrenaline-pumping thrills aside, showrunners Gina Lucita Monreal and David J. North know what they’re doing with the lore. NCIS: Origins remains a great watch for old-timers and newcomers alike. But if you’re like me and find yourself asking your wife, “Do you think he’s going to make it?” for the thousandth time in an attempt to be funny (she doesn’t find it funny), you’ll be pleased to know that Gibbs does, in fact, make it out alive, and then goes on to star in another 435 episodes.

NCIS: Origins is streaming on Paramount+


source

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Lord Of The Rings Is Now In The Hands Of One Of America's Most Hated Celebrities

By Jennifer Asencio
| Updated

Stephen Colbert

Just when we thought the cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert meant the end of seeing the comedian’s rhetoric, he’s rising again like Sauron trying to collect the One Ring. But this time, the target of his didactic punditry is nerddom: Colbert is penning a “sequel” to The Lord of the Rings.

One Sequel To Rule Them All

The movie’s working title is The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past and is going into production after the newest entry, The Hunt for Gollum.

Colbert believes he can add to JRR Tolkien’s work with a story that begins 14 years after Frodo leaves for the Grey Wastes. Sam’s daughter goes girl-boss and makes a discovery that leads her “to uncover why the War of the Ring was nearly lost before it began.” That leads to a flashback in which the movie will cover chapters 3-8 of The Fellowship of the Ring, a story that includes exciting prospects like The Barrow Downs.

As if The Hobbit and Rings of Power weren’t damaging enough to Tolkien’s legacy, now we’re getting another shameless cash grab at the expense of the author’s work. Only this time, one of the most divisive and extremely political personalities in Hollywood is writing the script.

Colbert is co-writing the film with his son, Peter McGee, and “franchise veteran” Philippa Boyens. Boyens has long been a part of the Peter Jackson productions; she co-wrote The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, and Jackson’s King Kong.

Colbert Really Is A Certified Tolkien Obsessive

stephen colbert @midnight

Colbert has been held out as a Tolkien expert since the announcement on March 24, 2026, and that is actually fair, no matter what one thinks of his extreme political views. He has studied the author’s work extensively, to the point where he can speak both Elvish languages, Quenya and Sindarin.

The biggest question on the minds of fans is whether Colbert will be tempted to infuse the story with his personal politics, or if the writing team will try to add extra material that isn’t needed by Tolkien’s story. The Hobbit didn’t work because it added embellishments, such as the romance between Tauriel and Kili. Rings of Power doesn’t work because, on top of adding modern identity politics to the series, it also doesn’t follow the source material, earning the derision of many Tolkien fans.

Boyens has shown that when she sticks to Middle Earth and not regular Earth, she can deliver on Tolkien’s mastery. However, the inclusion of Colbert raises concerns that this movie will stray beyond Tolkien’s boundaries.

In his other job as a talk show host, Colbert has made it a mission to inject his divisive personal politics into his work. That tendency towards personalizing what he does could either strongly enhance a new Lord of the Rings project or turn it into a stain on Tolkien’s legacy by applying themes to the world of the One Ring that Tolkien never intended. Which Colbert will ultimately write the script: the political loudmouth or the Tolkien scholar?


source

Continue Reading