New Photo - Whoopi Goldberg collapses on The View table in our honor: 'This is for Entertainment Weekly'

Goldberg dedicated the latest in her long line of collapses to EW. Whoopi Goldberg collapses on The View table in our honor: 'This is for ' Goldberg dedicated the latest in her long line of collapses to EW. :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/JoeyNolfiauthorphotoba4923fec03a4027868306485696ef41.jpg) Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at . Since 2016, his work at EW includes RuPaul's Drag Race video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more. EW's editorial guidelines December 3, 2025 12:09 p.m. ET Whoopi Goldberg has once again collapsed on The View. The EGOTwinning actress dedicated her latest crash to .

Goldberg dedicated the latest in her long line of collapses to EW.

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on The View table in our honor: 'This is for **'

Goldberg dedicated the latest in her long line of collapses to EW.

Joey Nolfi, senior writer at

Joey Nolfi is a senior writer at *. *Since 2016, his work at EW includes *RuPaul's Drag Race* video interviews, Oscars predictions, and more.

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December 3, 2025 12:09 p.m. ET

- Whoopi Goldberg has once again collapsed on *The View*.

- The EGOT-winning actress dedicated her latest crash to **.

- "This is for **," the 70-year-old said in our honor.

Celebrity pass-out artist Whoopi Goldberg has once again collapsed at *The View* table — and even dedicated her latest crash toward the Hot Topics surface to **.

During an apparently agonizing cohost discussion about a couple who allegedly got into an argument over jabs about each other's bodies in bed, the 70-year-old made it clear that she'd had enough after her colleagues began using the word "shtooping" and "a jiggle" to describe, uh, playtime in the sack.

Before her big moment, Goldberg readied the audience at the start of the conversation, warning them that she might not make it through the segment.**

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on 'The View' in tribute to ''

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on 'The View' in tribute to ''.

"Stay with this," she said. "Stay with this, and keep me awake."

As the conversation trudged on, Goldberg remained mostly silent, until things went one step too far, leading her to invoke EW's spirit as she performed one of her famous collapses.

"This is for **," Goldberg said, as she lowered her head to the table to take a brief nap.

Wednesday's collapse is, by far, not the first time Goldberg has feigned passing out in dire capacity while seated at the Hot Topics table.

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on 'The View' table during live cohost discussion

Whoopi Goldberg, Sara Haines, and Joy Behar on 'The View'

Whoopi Goldberg falls back into chair on 'The View' after collapsing over agonizing topic

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on 'The View'

Various discussions have contributed to Goldberg zapping herself out of reality in the workplace, including Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, observations about Donald Trump, and coverage of the *Real Housewives* franchise, among numerous other hellish occasions.

In a stunning display of her EGOT-winning skills, Goldberg even once stood up from — and *then* collapsed — to the table during a June 2025 discussion about Sean Combs.

In other Goldberg-related mobility developments, the star once got up from the table to point out that a dead alien was, in fact, dead.

Whoopi Goldberg on an airplane

Whoopi Goldberg on an airplane.

Whoopi Goldberg/Instagram

"It's definitely dead," she said, standing up to point toward the alleged alien body displayed on a medical table in a photo behind the cohosts.

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter*.**

Additionally, in March 2024, Goldberg sprung up from her seat to scold a disruptive audience member who was recording the telecast with his phone.

Watch Goldberg collapse in honor of EW in the video at the top of this post.

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Source: "EW Talk"

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#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Whoopi Goldberg collapses on The View table in our honor: 'This is for Entertainment Weekly'

Goldberg dedicated the latest in her long line of collapses to EW. Whoopi Goldberg collapses on The View table in our h...
New Photo - The Challenge season 41 winners reveal how they went from last place to first, production 'fluke,...

&34;I think production took an extra rope on accident,&34; [SPOILER] says of the missing prop that forced a team to endure a 5minute penalty. The Challenge season 41 winners reveal how they went from last place to first, production 'fluke,' and more &34;I think production took an extra rope on accident,&34; [SPOILER] says of the missing prop that forced a team to endure a 5minute penalty. By Sydney Bucksbaum :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/headshotb5dc24df8d5d43d1a16c9ce0e0383119.jpg) Sydney Bucksbaum Sydney Bucksbaum is a staff writer at .

"I think production took an extra rope on accident," [SPOILER] says of the missing prop that forced a team to endure a 5-minute penalty.

The Challenge season 41 winners reveal how they went from last place to first, production 'fluke,' and more

"I think production took an extra rope on accident," [SPOILER] says of the missing prop that forced a team to endure a 5-minute penalty.

By Sydney Bucksbaum

Sydney Bucksbaum author photo

Sydney Bucksbaum

Sydney Bucksbaum is a staff writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2019 and is a published author. Her work has previously appeared in *TV Guide Magazine*, E! News/E! Online, *The Hollywood Reporter*, Mashable, Bustle, IGN, DCComics.com, Inverse, *The Daily Northwestern*, and more.

EW's editorial guidelines

December 3, 2025 9:30 p.m. ET

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The Challenge season 41 finale

'The Challenge' season 41 finalists. Credit:

**This article contains spoilers for *The Challenge: Vets and New Threats* finale. **

*The Challenge: Vets and New Threats* has officially crowned two new champions: Olivia Kaiser and rookie Yeremi Hykel.

It's a result that not even the new champs themselves thought was possible after they ended the first day of the grueling season 41 final in third place, and then got bumped down to last place after a disastrous Connect Four checkpoint. But thanks to Yeremi's ultra-marathon skills and Olivia's powerful endurance as she kept his pace, the two ultimately overtook every other team to cross the finish line in first place at the top of the Andes Mountains.

"My story is just a wild ride — I came in as a rookie, I was fearless, and then I got injured, kind of became fearful because of an injury like that, and then became a villain, fell in love, and then won, and now I'm a mom," Olivia tells *.* "I mean, it's been busy over here... For the split second that I had the energy, I was happy and proud that I could show that I am a gamer as well, not just a *Love Island*er that went in there to mess around."

Below, Olivia and Yeremi break down their shocking win, the production "fluke" that cost another team a major time penalty, and more.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Yeremi Hykel and Olivia Kaiser on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**: Yeremi, you're now in the very exclusive club of rookies who won in their first season. Your former partner Aviv is also in that small group. Have you two spoken about that since your win?**

**YEREMI HYKEL: **Yeah, we definitely have. She's so happy for me, but there's always this unspoken thing where we're just both like, "I wish we were doing this together." That was the plan the whole time, and we were just backed into a corner where the only move that we could do was separate. But she's so proud of me, and she's like, "I already did this, so if I can do anything that I can to give you the best chance," she was going to do it.

**If you hadn't staked a claim on Olivia, and you stayed with Aviv and competed in that puzzle elimination against Michaela and Cedric, how do you think that would have went?**

**HYKEL: **I don't know. I think it would've went better than it did, because Aviv and Will hadn't worked together in a really long time, and their communication didn't look like it was as on point as I think me and Aviv's would have been in there. It was a double puzzle elimination. I'd like to think that me and Aviv would've done well, but Cedric and Michaela are both super, super smart and they're really good at puzzles.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Olivia Kaiser on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**Turbo said that he believes you would have lost that elimination and not even made it to the final. What did you think of that?**

**HYKEL: **Turbo's just trying to talk s---, man. He says a lot of things, and one could arguably say that Turbo wouldn't even be in that final without Sydney. It's crazy because he's talking all this mess at the very end when we were supposed to be working together this entire time. It's kind of surprising to hear some of the comments that Turbo has.

**What did you think of how Turbo had to be airlifted off the mountain after crossing the finish line?**

**HYKEL:** I thought that was really funny. When you get to the top of that mountain, there's not a shiny helicopter there to take you down. They're literally like, "Now walk down the same way you came up," and you're like, "What the hell, are you serious?" For this entire character that Turbo puts on as being like an "alpha," it makes him feel like he's just the pinnacle of man, right? He wears blood for makeup. But he was the only one of this entire final to get dragged down by other people. When we did the swimming checkpoint, he was like, "Yeremi's cardio is so bad," but you are literally the only person that had to get other people to carry you off this mountain. Wow, dude. You are so far from what you think you are and you don't even know it. You'll look stupid and that sucks for you... I didn't talk to him at all until I saw him again at the reunion.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Yeremi Hykel and Olivia Kaiser on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**At what point during the final did you realize you won? Was it when you passed Turbo and Sydney on that last part of the hike?**

**HYKEL: **It had to be when I saw the chest. We had this whole battle climbing next to Turbo and Sydney for what felt like 30 minutes, moving the pace of a snail on that mountain. Because we decided to make a move that was essentially taking on more physical strain by climbing a section of that trail versus taking the path, which Sydney and Turbo decided to take, that was ultimately the reason that we were able to overtake them in the end. It was shocking. I was just in complete disbelief that when we got there, we put our keys in, we opened it, it was a feeling that I've never felt before. It was beautiful.

**OLIVIA KAISER: **The final on TV looks hard, but it was the hardest thing I've ever done, and I hike all the time. When we were at Connect Four and we went from second place to fourth, we looked at each other and he's like, "We have to give it everything that we got." And I said, "I have been. I don't know if I have any more in me." But then Yeremi was like, "Liv, come on. Let's just place so I can get a little money. I'm broke." He doesn't even put pressure on me to win, he just wants us to do well. And something in my brain clicked where I was like, "Wow, I have a bigger purpose to fight for." Sometimes [just fighting for] myself isn't enough because I'm content with [what I have]. After that, I gave it everything I had, and I for some reason knew at Connect Four, if we just kept pushing the gas, we could win. At the end of the day, heart trumps everything else.

**HYKEL: **Connect Four, I can't even say it was a loss, it was just an ass-whooping. I just got battered down with that Connect Four. Turbo and Sydney got so far ahead, but you can see all of them scattered, separated on the path, on the incline. It's a daunting sight. So let's just push it and let's just get third. I think that really helped us not become defeated by the really daunting task that it was to think about even potentially getting back to second or even first.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Yeremi Hykel on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**How much time separated you from Turbo and Sydney in second place?**

**HYKEL: **I would say probably five to 10 minutes, because we had gotten to the chest, opened it, we were [filming] our reactions, and we fell to the floor at one point just to try to get some rest. That was the first time we actually got to rest that entire day. And then we ended up seeing Sydney and Turbo getting up there a little bit later.

**Olivia, if you had found out that you were pregnant during the season, would you have left the show or would you have stayed?**

**KAISER: **Yeah, if I found out I was pregnant, I would definitely go home. I would have to go home — you can't compete pregnant, but also I would be like, "I need to go sort my real life out." My head would've gone totally out of the game, and also I would want my baby to be healthy and safe. I'm lucky enough where he's perfect. People are like, "Did you know? You shouldn't have run the final pregnant, you shouldn't have done this." I didn't know! I had no symptoms, I had no morning sickness. I was so thin at the time, and I just didn't know what to look for. I'd never been pregnant before. I think any woman that finds out they're pregnant on *The Challenge* leaves usually because of morning sickness. I was lucky enough where I was [already] in my sober era, so I think I had maybe three cocktails the entire season, if that. Thank God it worked out for me, but any person that finds out they're pregnant is going to leave the show.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Olivia Kaiser on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**Yeremi, when did you find out that Olivia competed in the final with you while she was pregnant?**

**HYKEL: **There was some speculation inside [the house] that she might have been pregnant, but you don't take anything seriously, really. But it was probably a month after that, she ended up DMing me on Instagram and she sent me the ultrasound and broke the news, so that was so crazy. And I love that for her because she gets a lot of hate for her past performances, but this is just a testament to what she can do and what she can handle. And let me tell you, as somebody who is certified in doing hard s--- for a living, that final was difficult, so the fact that she was able to push through it and come out on top in that situation is extremely commendable.

**Yeremi, why didn't you stake a claim on Sydney for the second day of the final?**

**HYKEL: **Quite simply because I had just did that and I knew what that entailed. Running up that mountain was not fun. It was exceptionally challenging, and I had just gassed out my meter doing that StairMaster twice, and then doing that swim. When [TJ] said that, I was like, "Not me, big dog." And I just didn't feel any need to. I was confident in myself, I was confident in my abilities, and I was also confident in Olivia's resilience. If I'm with her and I keep her, I know that we're able to give this a good run.

**KAISER: **Sydney is obviously a G, and I think she would've won the entire thing, so it's nice that we had partners. Turbo held her back, who would've thought? We were so tired that even if Yeremi and Sydney wanted to be partners, I don't even think that they wouldn't have done it, because we knew that that was going to result in some kind of mountain climb. No one had the energy. At that point people were like, "Let's just get through the next day." I wasn't going to stick a claim. I think that Yeremi also saw me push myself, and knew that with me as a partner, he still would do well. He wouldn't have staked if I was horrible as a partner that needed to be carried.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Olivia Kaiser and Yeremi Hykel on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**What was your reaction when Michaela and Cedric lost their rope? Did you know that Theo thinks he took theirs?**

**HYKEL: **I had draped my rope over my tent, and Cedric ran straight up to my tent trying to take my rope. And I was like, "Nope, that's not your rope, dog, that's mine," and he was like, "Oh my bad." That was crazy. Why would you think you misplaced your rope on my tent? We tore apart that camp looking for it and it was nowhere.

**KAISER: **I think it was a little bit of a fluke on production. The ropes shouldn't have been taken. None of them should have been misplaced. We didn't leave that campsite, so I think production took an extra rope on accident, just cleaning up some miscellaneous stuff. But there's no footage of it, so who knows? We'll never know. And honestly, if it was anyone else but Michaela and Cedric, maybe I would've been like, "Who did take your guys' rope?" But karma is literally a bitch. I was bullied all season by that girl, so it's catching up with you now.

'The Challenge' season 41 finale footage leaks early online and spoils ending for fans

Michaela, Turbo, and Olivia on The Challenge: Vets and New Threats, season 41 finale

'The Challenge' stars welcome first baby while competing against each other in finale

The Challenge Season 41 - Olivia and Theo

**What's your relationship with Michaela like now?**

**KAISER: **Oh, girl, there's zero relationship, and I love it that way. I like to surround myself with positive people that are fun. Me and Johnny do not get along in the game, clearly, but outside the game, it's never that serious. And with her, apparently it is. I don't like her, but I also don't not like her enough to try to crucify her name everywhere. I never did anything to her. If she wants to waste her energy on me, okay... The only reason I'm offended a little bit by Michaela is because she's bringing it into other things in my life where I'm like, "Dude, I don't understand the smoke." Even the other girls, like Aviv, Nany, Ashley, we didn't work together all season, but [we're good]. It's never that deep until it is, I guess.

**Yeremi, what do you think about Michaela and Cedric's recent podcast appearances where they haven't taken accountability for targeting you and Aviv despite being in an alliance with you?**

**HYKEL: **It was not only painful, but it was very surprising to hear that it was Michaela who asked for me to go in there and for me to think that Cedric's over here saying that he didn't know about it, but he 100 percent knew about it. I can't believe that I'm just getting played, straight up. It's a jarring feeling and it feels crazy. I'm not surprised to be honest with you, and I think what they did is completely fine — I'm not surprised that somebody in this game didn't want to run a final with an ultra-marathon runner. The only thing that I have an issue with is they try to portray this image that they're essentially taking flack that they don't deserve. And that right there is in itself a lack of accountability, because what they did was be untruthful and gaslighting. That, plain and simply put, is a shady game, but they don't want anybody to criticize them for playing a shady game. I just wish they would take some accountability for that.

The Challenge season 41 finale

Yeremi Hykel and Olivia Kaiser on 'The Challenge' season 41.

**Were there any checkpoints or legs of the final that weren't shown?**

**KAISER: **No. This final was definitely a foot race. The checkpoints were all fairly easy. It was more just who can hike the fastest or the most consistently.

**Did you have any injuries that weren't shown?**

**KAISER: **Oh my gosh, yes. Everyone was injured, everyone was down bad. The first day I was hiking that loop, I overextended my hip and it was hurting the rest of the entire final. We were getting hypothermia and altitude sickness. I think it was probably maybe some kind of morning sickness starting to set in and not eating, since we only had a banana and a little pack of nuts. And afterwards, my knees, just like the impact on them, I was injured for a month or two. Theo ran the *War of the Worlds* final, and he said this was almost harder. But Yeremi gave me exactly what I needed, healthy communication as a team, and it worked, and I gave him what he needed, someone that wasn't going to stop or quit.

*This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.*

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

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Source: Reality

Published: December 04, 2025 at 10:57AM on Source: RED MAG

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The Challenge season 41 winners reveal how they went from last place to first, production 'fluke,...

&34;I think production took an extra rope on accident,&34; [SPOILER] says of the missing prop that forced a team to e...
New Photo - The best 2025 movie scenes we can't stop thinking about, ranked

From musical timewarps to apocalyptic finales, these 10 movie moments took our breath away this year. The best 2025 movie scenes we can't stop thinking about, ranked From musical timewarps to apocalyptic finales, these 10 movie moments took our breath away this year. By Wesley Stenzel :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/WesleyStenzelauthorphoto32b61793a2784639af623f2ae091477e.jpg) Wesley Stenzel is a news writer at . He began writing for EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines December 2, 2025 3:00 p.m. ET :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/BW2025BestScenes08ef3f5391484d9885231b1e68f7d78c.

From musical time-warps to apocalyptic finales, these 10 movie moments took our breath away this year.

The best 2025 movie scenes we can't stop thinking about, ranked

From musical time-warps to apocalyptic finales, these 10 movie moments took our breath away this year.

By Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel is a news writer at **. He began writing for EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

December 2, 2025 3:00 p.m. ET

collage of Best scenes of 2025 with Tom Cruise in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning; Rachel Brosnahan in as Lois Lane in Superman; Miles Caton in Sinners

Best scenes of 2025 with Tom Cruise, Rachel Brosnahan, and Miles Caton. Credit:

Paramount Pictures; Warner Bros - Design: Alex Sandoval

As the world outside the cinema grows ever crazier, many of our foremost filmmakers are putting forth some of their strongest work to date, crafting films that capture, respond to, or offer welcome respite from the chaos of 2025.

Among tales of vampires, aliens, and superheroes, we saw standout moments that offered apocalyptic visions, death-defying stunts, and triumphant celebrations of culture and creativity.

Without further ado, here are EW's top 10 movie scenes of 2025, ranked.

10. The assassination in Eddington

Pedro Pascal in 'Eddington'

Pedro Pascal in 'Eddington'.

Ari Aster's eerie, provocative fourth feature pits prickly Sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) against affable Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) in an absurd small-town mayoral race at the height of the pandemic. At first characterized by verbal attacks and vindictive posturing, the duo's catty, low-stakes political battle should feel familiar to anyone who's endured our last few American election cycles. That is, until the film's most surprising sequence: an unassuming domestic spat between Ted and his teen son that abruptly ends with both Garcias bleeding out in their family room thanks to a couple of sniper rifle rounds from Joe. It's a bold narrative pivot that unceremoniously takes the movie's biggest star off the table with an hour of runtime left, pointedly unleashing Aster's directorial superpower — staging viscerally graphic deaths for maximal shock value — to illustrate the violent amorality at the heart of many American power fantasies.

9. Lois and Clark's interview in Superman

Rachel Brosnahan and David Corenswet in 'Superman'

Rachel Brosnahan and David Corenswet in 'Superman'.

DC Studios/ Warner Bros.

The most riveting scene in any 2025 superhero movie isn't an action-packed fight sequence or a VFX showcase: it's a 10-minute conversation. In one of *Superman*'s earliest scenes, Daily Planet reporter Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) grills her boyfriend, Clark Kent (David Corenswet), over the Man of Steel's unsanctioned intervention in an international conflict between Boravia and Jarhanpur. The scene marks a new milestone in the two journalists' relationship, as it's the first time Superman allows anyone to interview him (besides himself), but it quickly escalates into a tense exploration of superheroic responsibilities and journalistic ethics. Corenswet's impassioned performance highlights the manifold identities that make Superman such a rich, complex character: he's simultaneously an alien outsider, a mild-mannered reporter, a doting boyfriend, and an idealistic savior. And Brosnahan's rapid-fire delivery of James Gunn's snappy dialogue clarifies that Lois is even more thoughtful and fearless than the Big Blue Boy Scout himself.

8. The sandwich heart-to-heart in Sorry, Baby

Eva Victor and John Carroll Lynch in 'Sorry, Baby'

Eva Victor and John Carroll Lynch in 'Sorry, Baby'.

Philip Keith/A24

Eva Victor's directorial debut chronicles a young academic's bumpy road to recovery after surviving a harrowing sexual assault by a former mentor. In perhaps the most tender scene in any 2025 movie, our protagonist Agnes (Victor) breaks down in a panic attack on the side of the road after learning a distressing revelation about her assailant, and shares an unexpectedly impactful moment with Pete, the owner of a nearby sandwich shop. The restaurateur is played by veteran character actor John Carroll Lynch, whose prior portrayals of terrifying creeps and lovable confidants make his character's intentions difficult to evaluate at first. But once Pete's initial hostility softens into kindhearted support, Agnes (and the audience) can breathe a long-overdue sigh of relief as Lynch's character offers sage advice and a life-changing sandwich, suggesting a brighter, more hopeful world may be on the horizon.

7. The hamster escape in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You

Hamster in 'If I Had Legs I'd Kick You'

The hamster in 'If I Had Legs I'd Kick You'.

Is motherhood a fate worse than death? Is Rose Byrne the greatest actress of her generation? Mary Bronstein's anxiety-inducing sophomore feature suggests the answer to both questions might be "yes." Byrne plays Linda, an exhausted therapist in the midst of a Sisyphean quest to help her young daughter grapple with an eating disorder. Midway through the movie, as tensions at home and work have continually mounted beyond the point of any immediate solution, Linda fulfills her reluctant promise to buy her daughter a pet hamster. The rodent — surreally rendered as a twitchy puppet — quickly reveals itself as something of an inexplicable demonic force, and its unceasing shrieking and gnawing prompts immediate buyers' remorse in both mother and daughter. Then, in a shocking moment of pitch-black comedy, the hamster suddenly…stops being a problem. It feels like a moment of divine intervention and is the closest the movie comes to handing Linda a win.

6. Sensei's house in One Battle After Another

Leonardo DiCaprio in 'One Battle After Another'

Leonardo DiCaprio in 'One Battle After Another'.

Practically any scene from Paul Thomas Anderson's latest masterpiece could earn a spot on this list. But for my money, *One Battle After Another* peaks at its midpoint, when community leader Sensei Sergio (Benicio del Toro) invites Bob (Leonardo DiCaprio) to reconvene at his house as Lockjaw (Sean Penn) descends on their hometown. Although it's a fairly unflashy scene in which the unlikely duo sorts out various logistics — securing a gun, charging a phone, grabbing some cash — it clarifies the fascinating dichotomy between the two men's approaches to resistance. Bob is a paranoid, self-interested ex-revolutionary stoner past the end of his rope who's only trying to save one person, while Sensei Sergio remains cool, calm, and collected as he quietly protects dozens in a "Latino Harriet Tubman situation" that could easily sustain its own movie. And Bob's combative phone call with a persnickety resistance operator marks a comedic career highlight for both DiCaprio and Anderson.

5. The Yankees-salsa chase in Highest 2 Lowest

Denzel Washington in 'Highest 2 Lowest'

Denzel Washington in 'Highest 2 Lowest'.

The first hour of Spike Lee's reimagining of *High and Low* patiently sets its pieces in place: record executive David King (Denzel Washington) ponders whether he should pay millions in ransom after Kyle (Elijah Wright), the son of his driver Paul (Jeffrey Wright), is mistakenly kidnapped in a botched attempt to nab the protagonist's son Trey (Aubrey Joseph). The film kicks into a significantly higher gear at the exact moment that David decides to drop off the dough. In the film's most exhilarating sequence, David and his police escorts fall into the kidnappers' elaborate trap that exploits the celebratory chaos of a Yankees-Red Sox showdown and the National Puerto Rican Day Parade. Any other director would see the sequence as an opportunity to show off their action-filmmaking chops, but only Lee would think to deliver a thrilling chase *and* a lovely tribute to the baseball fans and Afro-Latin communities of the Bronx.

4. The biplane sequence in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning

Tom Cruise in 'Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning'

Tom Cruise in 'Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning'.

Paramount Pictures and Skydance

Though the eighth *Mission: Impossible* film was more noticeably uneven than other recent entries, it still ought to hold a permanent spot in the Action Movie Hall of Fame thanks to its absurdly ambitious airborne finale. The daredevil sequence sees Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) hijack a biplane to chase down the villainous Gabriel (Esai Morales), who's in a biplane of his own. Ethan then decides to leap from one biplane to the other in order to grab the MacGuffin around Gabriel's neck, and, eventually, he succeeds — but not before the antagonist throws him for a loop or two while our hero is clinging to the wing. Cruise, of course, performed the stunt practically and says he nearly broke his back while slamming into the plane. Imagining a more impressive stunt sequence is, frankly, well, impossible.

The best movies of 2025 so far

Collage of Michael B. Jordan in Sinners; Florence Pugh in Thunderbolts; Sophie Thatcher in Companion; Ralph Fiennes in 28 Years Later; Cate Blanchett in Black Bag

The best albums of 2025 so far

Collage of Lady Gaga, Bad Bunny, HAIM, Perfume Genius and FKA Twigs performing on a colored bars background

3. The 'Boots' montage in 28 Years Later

Aaron Taylor-Johnson in '28 Years Later'

Aaron Taylor Johnson in '28 Years Later'.

The most breathtakingly edited sequence of the year comes early in Danny Boyle's post-apocalyptic fable *28 Years Later*. As Spike (Alfie Wililams) begins his journey to mainland Britain on a rite-of-passage hunting trip with his father Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), editor Jon Harris intercuts DP Anthony Dod Mantle's iPhone cinematography with black-and-white archival footage of young Britons gearing up for war in the early 20th century, snippets from battle sequences in Laurence Olivier's 1944 film adaptation of *Henry V*, and shots in red-night vision capturing the infected alongside the Isles' wildlife. And, in a move echoing the film's brilliant trailer, the sequence is soundtracked by a hair-raising 1915 recording of Rudyard Kipling's battle-weary poem "Boots," resulting in an electrifying montage that weaves together a century of British wartime accounts, both real and imagined, to contextualize the characters' imminent combat within a long lineage of bloodshed.

2. The finale of Bugonia

Emma Stone in 'Bugonia'

Emma Stone in 'Bugonia'.

Yorgos Lanthimos' remake of Jang Joon-hwan's *Save the Green Planet* pits Teddy (Jesse Plemons), a working-class conspiracy theorist, against Michelle (Emma Stone), a CEO he kidnaps in the belief that she's a powerful alien in disguise. Stone's character eventually reveals that she is, indeed, the empress of an alien race that created humanity…and after spending a few days with Teddy, she ultimately decides that mankind is beyond redemption, prompting her to pop a bubble aboard her mothership that instantly wipes out all human life. The film's closing minutes are devoted exclusively to a montage of lifeless bodies around the world. The sequence offers a distressing yet strangely cathartic vision of our total demise, where the world seems more peaceful without any human endeavors mucking it up. And the birds and the bees persist on a post-human Earth: we didn't make it, but life goes on.

1. The juke joint time warp in Sinners

Miles Caton in 'Sinners'

Miles Caton in 'Sinners'.

Warner Bros. Pictures

"There are legends of people... born with the gift of making music so true, it can pierce the veil between life and death." Ryan Coogler begins his dazzling, genre-fluid hit *Sinners* with these words from Annie (Wunmi Mosaku), and re-deploys them as aspiring blues singer Sammie Moore (Miles Caton) finally graces his cousins' Mississippi juke joint with his song "I Lied to You." Sammie's tune is so powerful that he summons centuries of other performers across time and space for a spiritual musical summit that burns the house down. Coogler and cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw present the time-bending sequence in one long take (which was actually a series of several long takes due to IMAX camera limitations) that unites blues, rock, hip-hop, ballet, tribal dance, and more in a transcendently powerful celebration of the lineage of Black art.

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The best 2025 movie scenes we can’t stop thinking about, ranked

From musical timewarps to apocalyptic finales, these 10 movie moments took our breath away this year. The best   2025 movie ...
New Photo - Why Home Alone star Daniel Stern won't be celebrating the movie's 35th anniversary in person

Stern, 68, says that the love for the holiday favorite is &34;overwhelming sometimes.&34; Why Home Alone star Daniel Stern won't be celebrating the movie's 35th anniversary in person Stern, 68, says that the love for the holiday favorite is &34;overwhelming sometimes.&34; By Raechal Shewfelt :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/RaechalShewfeltauthorphotoc49d3a3b6aa442f588f2bbc0de804e09.jpg) Raechal Shewfelt Raechal Shewfelt is a writer at . She has been working at EW since 2024. Her work has previously appeared on Yahoo and in American Journalism Review and The Shreveport Times.

Stern, 68, says that the love for the holiday favorite is "overwhelming sometimes."

Why Home Alone star Daniel Stern won't be celebrating the movie's 35th anniversary in person

Stern, 68, says that the love for the holiday favorite is "overwhelming sometimes."

By Raechal Shewfelt

Raechal Shewfelt is a news writer at

Raechal Shewfelt

Raechal Shewfelt is a writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2024. Her work has previously appeared on Yahoo and in American *Journalism Review* and *The Shreveport Times*.

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December 2, 2025 8:34 p.m. ET

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Daniel Stern plays Marv in 'Home Alone' in 1990

Daniel Stern as Marv in 1990's 'Home Alone'. Credit:

20th Century Studios

Daniel Stern is a major part of the classic holiday movie *Home Alone*, but don't look for him to toast it anytime soon — at least not in person*.*

Stern knows how much people like what's become a Christmas classic, but it's not enough to get him out to any events celebrating it, even in this, its 35th year.

"I don't leave my farm," Stern, 68, told PEOPLE of his Ventura County, Calif., property in an interview published Tuesday. "It's no offense to the movie. I'm just ... a phone call, Zoom call, I'm in. But... I'm a bit of a homebody."

Stern, of course, plays Marv, one of the two burglars — the other is Joe Pesci's Harry — who break into the home of Macaulay Culkin's character, 8-year-old Kevin, while the rest of his family is away. The most hilarious part of the generational favorite is when the burglars go through the precocious kid's "fun house," as Harry calls it, which he's orchestrated to have doorknobs hot enough to burn hands, a falling iron, and swinging paint cans.**

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Also known for his roles in '90s projects like *City Slickers* and its sequel, *City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly's Gold*, and for narrating TV's original* The Wonder Years*, Stern was candid about what it was like being part of such an iconic movie.

"I love knowing that everybody loves it," Stern said, "but, like, actual people come at me and say, 'We love it.' It's a little overwhelming sometimes."

Macaulay Culkin's kids still have 'no idea' he's Kevin in 'Home Alone'

HOME ALONE, Macaulay Culkin, 1990.

Brenda Song recalls fiancé Macaulay Culkin 'ruining' 'Home Alone' for her when they watched it together

Macaulay Culkin and Brenda Song at the Variety and Chanel Female Filmmakers Dinner during the Toronto International Film Festival 2024 on September 7, 2024 in Toronto, Canada

The movie continues to be enjoyed by fans of all ages, via not only streaming but repeated screenings on cable and in movie theaters this time of year.

Stern had an idea that it would catch on, but not like it did; that was too big to conceive of.

"I did know that it was a gem of a movie," the actor told the outlet. "John Hughes wrote the funniest script I've ever read. I mean, I was rolling on the floor, laughing reading it. It was so funny, but it was also full of heart and you know — the kid and the neighbor saves him and he and the mother reunite ... I mean it was so emotional."

Daniel Stern attends a 2020 event

Daniel Stern attends a 2020 event.

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty

The emotion comes in when Kevin's family, who've left him at home accidentally, attempt to get back to him before Christmas.

The original *Home Alone* had one sequel with the same cast — *Home Alone 2: Lost in New York *also* *notably costarred the fabulous Tim Curry — then several others with new actors. But Culkin explained in November that he has an idea for a new installment.

His character would be "either a widower or a divorcee" who's raising a kid, Culkin said at an anniversary event in Long Beach, Calif., per PEOPLE. "I'm working really hard and I'm not really paying enough attention and the kid is kind of getting miffed at me and then I get locked out."

He added that the son is "the one setting traps for me," and "the house is some sort of metaphor for our relationship."

*Home Alone *is streaming on Hulu and Disney+.**

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Why Home Alone star Daniel Stern won't be celebrating the movie's 35th anniversary in person

Stern , 68, says that the love for the holiday favorite is &34;overwhelming sometimes.&34; Why Home Alone star Dani...
New Photo - The Mighty Nein reveals Caleb's tragic backstory: How star Liam O'Brien made his own Hamlet (excl...

&34;I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career,&34; the voice actor says. The Mighty Nein reveals Caleb's tragic backstory: How star Liam O'Brien made his own Hamlet (exclusive) &34;I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career,&34; the voice actor says. By Nick Romano :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/NicholasRomanoauthorphotoadc9b60763e34711935cbf7b3d768d24.jpg) Nick Romano is a senior editor at with 15 years of journalism experience covering entertainment. His work previously appeared in Vanity Fair, Vulture, IGN, and more.

"I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career," the voice actor says.

The Mighty Nein reveals Caleb's tragic backstory: How star Liam O'Brien made his own Hamlet (exclusive)

"I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career," the voice actor says.

By Nick Romano

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December 3, 2025 12:00 p.m. ET

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Episode 5 of The Mighty Nein

Liam O'Brien voices Caleb on 'The Mighty Nein'. Credit:

Courtesy of Prime Video

- Liam O'Brien breaks down Caleb's haunting origin episode on *The Mighty Nein*.

- "I kind of made my own *Hamlet* to explore," the voice actor and executive producer says.

- The actor also digs into the intense, tragic burning sequence of the episode, calling it "a big hefty load of catharsis."

**Warning: This article contains spoilers from *The Mighty Nein* episode 5, "Little Spark."**

Travis Willingham of *The Mighty Nein* said it best: "There's not an award given for the most traumatic backstory, but if there was, Caleb is certainly a very strong contender."

That backstory plays out on the adult animated show's fifth episode, titled "Little Spark," marking another reshaping of Critical Role's original live-streamed tabletop campaign with the TV adaptation.

Voice actor and executive producer Liam O'Brien gives *The Mighty Nein* its meatiest hour yet through a series of flashbacks that explore Caleb's humble beginnings as Bren, a young man from a poor family in the Dwendalian Empire's Zemni Fields. Interspersed throughout the main storyline, sequences depict how Trent Ikithon (Mark Strong) recruited the promising fire mage to join his magic academy, submit to painful experimentations to enhance his power, and eventually groomed him to become a Volstrucker assassin to hunt down dissidents.

Two such dissidents he's tasked with executing are his own parents, who burn alive, trapped within Caleb's childhood home in a blaze of his own making.

"I wanted something that I could really sink my teeth into, the kind of role that I had chased and didn't really feel like I'd gotten enough of in my life," O'Brien tells ** of formulating this backstory for the original campaign. "So I kind of made my own *Hamlet* to explore. All the curves and angles of existence and what matters to us in life, redemption...It could have been spun into a complete revenge story, but at the table, the loose picture was to make my own character be the villain in his story that he had to grapple with."

Episode 5 of The Mighty Nein

Teenage Caleb (Liam O'Brien) on 'The Mighty Nein'.

Courtesy of Prime Video

In essence, "I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career," he says.

Back in the days of the writers' room, O'Brien was admittedly precious about how the story was handled, but ultimately felt secure in the hands of his two Critical Role colleagues, Willingham and Sam Riegel, who serve as chief EPs, as well as showrunner Tasha Huo.

In preparation for the recording sessions, he pored over the material, specifically Caleb's German dialogue. "There was a lot of German spoken in that episode," he says, "and while I love the German language and do a pretty good German accent, I'm not fluent in any way, shape, or form."

'The Mighty Nein' exclusive premiere breakdown: Campaign changes, Yasha's intro, and more

The Mighty Nein

Auli'i Cravalho on Toya's 'The Mighty Nein' twist: 'It changes the game' (exclusive)

Mighty Nein - Auliʻi Cravalho as Toya

One of O'Brien's final scenes in the episode is also his most haunting. Caleb isolates the Volstrucker assassin that's been stalking them after a botched interrogation. The two have a strained history under Ikithon's torturous tutelage, and he finally gives in to the guilt and rage that's eating him alive. O'Brien lets out scream after scream as the mage burns the assassin alive.

The scene was "a big hefty load of catharsis," O'Brien describes. "He's been bottling up since he was a teenager. We all have smaller versions of these feelings in our lives, feeling like we've been cast aside or we're less than or we've done wrong — and guilt. We all feel guilt for different things we've done. Knowing that he had a dam that just built and built and built with pressure behind it and letting that moment be a complete break of the dam, I just tried to give myself over to it."

Episode 5 of The Mighty Nein

Trent Ikithon (Mark Strong) addresses his pupils on 'The Mighty Nein'.

Courtesy of Prime Video

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The actor gives props to the animators at Titmouse for bringing this scene, and the episode at large, to life. He points out the visual continuity of Caleb's spell-casting motions as a troubled teenager and as a tormented adult.

"I look back at it all and I still go, 'God damn! Why'd I do this?' Because it is such a dark-toned story, at least at the onset," O'Brien says. "If we're blessed with being able to tell this story to the very, very end, you watch someone climb from the lowest place they could possibly be to equilibrium again."

O'Brien ultimately believes the TV audience, much like the one that watched Critical Role's campaign, will empathize with Caleb's story. However, while he may understand the character's plight as someone groomed and programmed by an adult he trusted, O'Brien says it doesn't absolve Caleb of his choices, which speaks to the complexity of this story.

"I would say that episode 5 shows you one of the Mighty Nein at their most broken, bottom-of-the-rung moment," he continues. "He's had a lifetime to choke on guilt and regret, and it is only through the friendship and the bonds that they forge over time that allow him to offer himself any ounce of kindness. So enjoy seeing him at the bottom and root for him as he climbs up to the top."

New episodes of *The Mighty Nein* drop weekly on Amazon's Prime Video on Wednesdays.

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Published: December 04, 2025 at 09:38AM on Source: RED MAG

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The Mighty Nein reveals Caleb's tragic backstory: How star Liam O'Brien made his own Hamlet (excl...

&34;I wanted to give myself the largest challenge of my career,&34; the voice actor says. The Mighty Nein reveals C...
New Photo - What's Love Got to Do With It star recalls Laurence Fishburne stunt gone wrong: 'He slapped the l...

&34;One side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good.'&34; What's Love Got to Do With It star recalls Laurence Fishburne stunt gone wrong: 'He slapped the living s out of me' &34;One side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good.'&34; By Ryan Coleman :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/RyanColemanauthorphoto0081ce8f0254478080f35972c433877b.jpg) Ryan Coleman Ryan Coleman is a news writer for with previous work in MUBI Notebook, Slant, and the LA Review of Books.

"One side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good.'"

What's Love Got to Do With It star recalls Laurence Fishburne stunt gone wrong: 'He slapped the living s--- out of me'

"One side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good.'"

By Ryan Coleman

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Vanessa Bell Calloway in What's Love Got to Do with It

Vanessa Bell Calloway in 'What's Love Got to Do With It'. Credit:

Buena Vista Pictures

- Vanessa Bell Calloway says that one infamous *What's Love Got to Do With It *accidentally went too far.

- Laurence Fishburne, who played the abusive Ike Turner in the 1993 Tina Turner biopic, mistakenly slapped Calloway for real when he was meant to only mimic the motion.

- "My face was pounding. I mean, it was like, thump! The one side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good,'" Calloway recalled.**

*What's Love Got to Do With It *star Vanessa Bell Calloway is revealing the secret to her stunning performance in one of the film's most violent scenes — it was all real.

The infamous "cake scene" dramatizes an account from *I, Tina Turner*, the 1986 memoir by the Queen of Rock and Roll herself, and the primary source material for *What's Love Got to Do With It*. Turner wrote that her abusive husband and creative partner, Ike Turner, humiliated Tina by forcing her to eat an entire cake in public. In the film, however, Ike (Laurence Fishburne) actually shoves cake in Tina's (Angela Bassett) face when she refuses to eat it, and slaps her friend Jackie (Calloway) to the ground when she attempts to intervene.

"They wanted to put the double in for the slap, and then I'd pop up. So I told the director, I told Brian Gibson, 'You know what? This is not going to be right because I need to be in the moment, and when I get up, then I could tell him off, and I need to have that energy, that adrenaline,'" Calloway recalled in a recent interview with Cocoa Butter reflecting on her most memorable roles. "So [he] said, 'Okay, the choreographer of the stunt, he'll show you, he teaches you when this hand goes this way, you turn your head really aggressively, it looks like a slap, and they put the sound in later.'"

That isn't, unfortunately, how the screen played out when Gibson called "Action!"

"On one take, we missed. We didn't have the eye connection and he slapped the living s--- out of me," Calloway recalled. "My face was pounding. I mean, it was like, thump! The one side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh, keep going, Vanessa. This going to be good. This going to be good.'"

"I sound sick," the *Coming to America *star laughed.

Laurence Fishburne in What's Love Got to Do with It

Laurence Fishburne in 'What's Love Got to Do with It'.

Courtesy Everett Collection

Calloway explained that everyone on set could instantly tell that the slap had accidentally connected, but she kept the scene going. "I slap, and I roll, and I get up, and baby, I let him have it. And that's the take they used. I don't blame [Gibson], because if I was a director or producer, that's the one I would have used, because I didn't stop. Of course, when they cut, everybody ran to me with ice packs and everything to make sure I was okay. But I mean he slapped the poop out of me."

Angela Bassett pays tribute to Tina Turner: 'I am humbled'

WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT, from left: Tina Turner, Angela Bassett on the recording studio set, rehearse a song performance, 1993. ph: D Stevens / © Buena Vista Pictures / courtesy Everett Collection

Laurence Fishburne wants to play Charles Xavier in MCU's version of X-Men

Laurence Fishburne attends the World Premiere of The Amateur at Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 02, 2025 in New York City, Professor Xavier from X-Men comic

* *has reached out to a representative for Fishburne for comment.

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Bassett was praised upon the movie's release for her depiction of a woman enduring abuse at the hands of her husband, whom the public thought was her most ardent supporter. In 2021, two years before her death, Turner finally opened up about those dark and stormy years with Ike in the HBO documentary *Tina*, noting, "I had an abusive life. There's no other way to tell the story."****

Vanessa Bell Calloway, Laurence Fishburne, and Angela Bassett in What's Love Got to Do with It

Vanessa Bell Calloway, Laurence Fishburne, and Angela Bassett in 'What's Love Got to Do With It'.

Buena Vista Pictures

Following Turner's 2023 death after a long illness at 83 years old, Bassett, who was nominated for Best Actress at the 1994 Academy Awards, memorialized the trailblazer she grew close to during production.

"How do we say farewell to a woman who owned her pain and trauma and used it as a means to help change the world?" she shared in a statement at the time. "Through her courage in telling her story, her commitment to stay the course in her life, no matter the sacrifice, and her determination to carve out a space in rock & roll for herself and for others who look like her, Tina Turner showed others who lived in fear what a beautiful future filled with love, compassion, and freedom should look like."

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What's Love Got to Do With It star recalls Laurence Fishburne stunt gone wrong: 'He slapped the l...

&34;One side of my brain was like, 'Ow,' and the other side was, 'Oh keep going, Vanessa. This going to be goo...

 

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