Of all the various non-Spider-Man movies Sony's trying for, this one ended up not going far.
Abigail continues the studio's decision to give filmmakers carte blanche to do whatever they want with their classic monsters.
Are Din and Grogu ready to leave TV behind and blast off full-time into the movie zone?
WB takes the reign from Netflix's dropped horror movie, which has a hell of an actor lineup behind its love story.
Plus: The best and weirdest gadgets from CES 2024.
Catch up on the biggest stories in genre entertainment from this week.
Plus: NASA shows off its X-59 quiet supersonic plane and paleontologists find the oldest fossilized skin.
Netflix hid their latest trailer inside a big, chrome edifice, while other companies tried to recreate Candy Land with a kiddie coaster and fake flying carpet.
Lidar scans revealed thousands of human-made structures beneath the forest canopy.
This week, Congress finally started paying attention to the threat AI poses to an already struggling journalism industry.
The Killers of the Flower Moon Oscar contender grew up wanting to be one of Star Wars' fluffy warriors.
Here are this year's Disney Parks collectible prints by Wonderground artists for the 2024 festival.
NASA and Lockheed Martin showed off the X-59 supersonic plane in Palmdale, California, on Friday.
The Gravity-1 rocket successfully launched on Thursday, carrying three payloads into orbit and establishing new benchmarks along the way.
The Mandalorian (and now The Mandalorian & Grogu ). Ahsoka . Solo . Obi-Wan Kenobi . Andor . The Acolyte and Skeleton Crew just about slide. What happened to fun?
Why yes, we do live in a world where Mad Max: Fury Road 's Charlize Theron and Moon 's Sam Rockwell were overlooked by the Academy.
The FDA said it has "not found evidence that use of these medicines causes suicidal thoughts or actions" though it's still investigating the matter.
Janine Melnitz makes a brown jumpsuit look damn good in the latest glimpse of the Ghostbusters: Afterlife sequel, arriving March 22.
The SpaceX CEO has been accused of alarming levels of illegal drug use that could jeopardize his contracts with government agencies.
Producer Ronald D. Moore reveals which three Trek shows exist in his alternate sci-fi Apple TV+ show.