In related news

  • X-Men ’97 ripped the metal out of Wolverine’s body because of a joke

    Carrying on the legacy of its predecessor, X-Men ’97 leaves no stone unturned when it comes to adapting and remixing the great X-Men comics of the 1980s and ’90s. And the final moments of this week’s episode, “Tolerance is Extinction - Part 2,” are no exception. If you’ve seen it, you know, and if you haven’t you should go watch it, because what comes next is one of the strangest swerves Marvel Comics ever tried to take with Wolverine. [Ed. note: This piece contains spoilers for “Tolerance is...
  • ‘It’s great!’ Rafe Spall on having a baby with his co-star in Trying, the infertility sitcom

    In the hit TV series, Spall and Esther Smith play a couple who have endured the pain of infertility. And now it turns out they’re having a real-life baby together. The proud dad-to-be reveals allAs the fourth season of Trying lands, things have moved on a lot for the sparky everycouple, played by Rafe Spall and Esther Smith. Their painful journey through infertility, from season one, is long behind them. The two kids they adopted tortuously through seasons two and three, Princess and Tyler, are...
  • Revisiting Brief Interviews With Hideous Men, director John Krasinski’s first pancake of a film

    It’s a common misconception that A Quiet Place was John Krasinski’s directorial debut. The critically acclaimed post-apocalyptic thriller was actually his third film as a director (besides a handful of episodes of The Office), following two previous two outings in the indie world—the ensemble family drama The Hollars, and his actual debut, an adaptation of David Foster Wallace’s short story collection Brief Interviews With Hideous Men. If you’ve never seen it, or even heard of it, that’s no...