A Kansas City native, Justin has written for numerous sites including IGN, io9, Polygon, and SyFy Wire. Don't ask him about how much gum he's had, because the answer will be much more than he's willing to admit.
Sounds like it's a whole miracle that Patel got to even make this thing at all.
Another universe is probably watching Miles Morales' third movie right now and being wowed by it. Sadly, that ain't happening in ours.
The new sci-fi flick from It Follows' David Robert Mitchell finally ges a title as shooting is underway.
Way, co-writer Shaun Simon, and artist Chris Weston are making a "psychedelic" horror comic with shades of The Prisoner.
Let us know if Frozen Empire made you glad to be a Ghostbusters fan, or if it was just a bust.
If you missed two of the year's earlier horror flicks, they're making their way to Peacock over the next few weeks.
Been hankering to watch Totoro or Kiki's on the big screen again? Studio Ghibli Fest has got you covered, as always.
No, Marvel's not saying "Pride is for the straights," but bad phrasing has tainted the publisher's June rollout.
The new Captain America just wants Sam to have more adventures with Bucky and Zemo after Falcon & Winter Soldier made it look so fun.
Like TV and movie actors last year, SAG-AFTRA's TV animation members have gained increased wages and securities against artificial intelligence.
All you have to do is watch nine movies of fluctuating quality in a theaters for nearly a whole day. That's totally doable...right?
Nearly a month later, the world continues to be Dune- pilled as Part Two is inching closer to $500 million worldwide.
The Titans are more than just the five from the 2003 cartoon, and we want to know what your imaginary roster for this (probably) real film would be.
The studio behind the popular 1940s shorts is trying its hand at restoring (and preserving) these important pieces of superhero media.
The horror movie studio is bringing its 2010s classics like The Purge and Insidious back to theaters for a five-day event.
Nolan's no stranger to adaptations, and he's more than fine if diehard Fallout fans don't fully see the show's vision.
Joe Dante and Roger Corman are reviving the horror-comedy classic for the spooky season and a new generation.
Comedy and genre alums like Randall Park and Ashley Johnson are lending their voices to the TV show based on the hit multiplayer game.
Marvel's taking the mutants out of Krakoa and back into the regular world so they can do what they do best.
Spidey's always been a team player, but nobody would've won if he'd headlined a live-service game.