The American National Tragedy That Gave A Nightmare On Elm Street Its Name
A Nightmare on Elm Street's title references one of the most infamous American national tragedies of the 20th century.
Read MoreA Nightmare on Elm Street's title references one of the most infamous American national tragedies of the 20th century.
Read MoreOnly one Sean Connery movie has a perfect score on Rotten Tomatoes. Here it is.
Read MoreThe original opening scenes for Denis Villeneuve's first Dune movie would have shown the creation of Arrakis, inspired by the Book of Genesis.
Read MoreTHX 1138 was Star Wars director George Lucas' first feature film, but only two major actors from the cast are still alive today.
Read MoreBefore Amy Allen was Aayla Secura in Star Wars, she was working at Industrial Light & Magic.
Read MoreP.J. Soles was injured during the firehose scene from the climactic scene of the Stephen King movie Carrie
Read More'The Devil's Chord' is Doctor Who's first proper musical episode, but it lacks the character-driven crooning that made Buffy's 'Once More With Feeling' great.
Read MoreSteven Spielberg was more worried about a good detective story than he was sci-fi when it came to the Minority Report script.
Read MoreWith Monica Rambeau still figuring out how she fits into the Marvel Cinematic Universe after The Marvels, let's look back at her history in the comics.
Read MoreWilliam Shatner had a grand ol' time behind the scenes on the otherwise serious Star Trek: The Original Series episode 'The Deadly Years.'
Read MoreRobert Downey Jr. isn't just waving his hands and arms randomly when he summons his Iron Man suit in the MCU.
Read MoreThe sci-fi series Farscape set out to be the anti-Star Trek, and it succeeded.
Read MoreRoger Corman, one of the most influential directors and producers of B-movies in Hollywood history, has died at the age of 98.
Read MoreFor an inherently episodic shows like Bones, serialized serial killer storylines could be a real challenge to pull off.
Read MoreWe went ahead and ranked some of the best (worst?) Star Wars villains, right here!
Read MoreGeorge Takei always wanted Star Trek to feature Sulu's family, but it wasn't until he stopped playing the character that it did.
Read MoreDenis Villeneuve and his crew struggled to keep footprints out of the sand while filming Dune and Dune: Part Two.
Read MoreThe original Thor movie was, in many ways, a risk, which made casting the titular superhero extra challenging for Marvel.
Read MoreMr. Burns' unnamed Blue-Haired Lawyer from The Simpsons is based on someone who once represented Donald Trump.
Read MoreThe bug wrangler on Frank Marshall's horror comedy Arachnophobia had to figure out how to control all of those spiders. The solution he cooked up was 'genius.'
Read MoreWhen Cartoon Network cancelled Speedy Gonzales back in 1999, passionate fans did not take the cancellation lying down.
Read MoreRod Serling is best known for creating and hosting The Twilight Zone, but he turned one of his 'what if?' tales into a feature film script.
Read MoreSurprisingly, the only Daniel Day-Lewis film to achieve a perfect score on Rotten Tomatoes is a 1985 romantic period piece co-starring Helena Bonham Carter.
Read MoreRemember when Stewie met Booth? It really happened back when Bones crossed over with Family Guy in season 4's 'The Critic in the Cabernet.'
Read MoreDoctor Who is playing with Disney's house money now, but when the Beatles episode came along, the show still didn't have the budget to clear the band's songs.
Read MoreStar Wars: The Clone Wars couldn't resist paying homage to the best-looking Marvel villain.
Read MoreHeat, Dog Day Afternoon, Scent of a Woman, and more! Here are Al Pacino's best screaming scenes, ranked.
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