New Photo - 'Bold and the Beautiful' Star Insists He and Brother Aren't 'Special' Despite Family Fame

'Bold and the Beautiful' Star Insists He and Brother Aren't 'Special' Despite Family Fame Katherine SchaffstallNovember 3, 2025 at 4:09 AM 0 Jesse Grant/Variety via Getty Images The Bold and the Beautiful star Clint Howard insisted that he and his famous brother, Ron Howard, are just normal people despite being wellknow actors. While Clint, 66, acknowledged that both he and Ron, 71, have been able to find success as actors, the soap opera star got real about how he actually views their family's success.

- - 'Bold and the Beautiful' Star Insists He and Brother Aren't 'Special' Despite Family Fame

Katherine SchaffstallNovember 3, 2025 at 4:09 AM

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Jesse Grant/Variety via Getty Images

The Bold and the Beautiful star Clint Howard insisted that he and his famous brother, Ron Howard, are just normal people despite being well-know actors.

While Clint, 66, acknowledged that both he and Ron, 71, have been able to find success as actors, the soap opera star got real about how he actually views their family's success. "I understand that, yeah, what Ron and I have done is very unique," he previously told Fox News Digital. "We're just people that make a living. We're just people that have jobs and, you know, yeah, our jobs are creative, our jobs are creative. That doesn't mean we're anything special."

In light of Clint and Ron's success, the Happy Days alum's daughter Bryce Dallas Howard has also been able to make a name for herself as an actor. However, Clint insisted that Bryce, 44, is just as great of a person as she is an actor and director.

"Bryce is a wonderful, wonderful person; great, great mother; great leader amongst her friends," Clint said of his niece. "She's directing now, and she likes to act, and she's really humble about it all."

Both Clint and Ron began their careers as child stars. While Ron was first introduced to audiences playing Opie Taylor on The Andy Griffith Show in 1960, Clint's first major role was in 1967's Gentle Ben.

In more recent years, Clint appeared in the movies The Old Way and Terrifier 3. Additionally, he guest starred as Tom Starr in 13 episodes of The Bold and the Beautiful, which earned him a nomination at the 2025 Daytime Emmy Awards in the outstanding guest performance in a daytime drama series category.

Following Clint's nomination, Ron spoke to People in September about the major accomplishment. "I know he did a good job because people come up and talk to me about his performance on that," he said of his younger brother.

"And so I saw one episode, I thought he was great," Ron continued. "And it was one of those things where they brought him in for one episode and he wound up doing 10 or 12 of them."

Ron, who has pivoted from an acting career to a directing career, was also asked if he ever gives Clint acting advice, though he said he doesn't often need it after he books a job. "Oh, no, no. He's just fun," Ron said. "When I'm casting, I'm sure he gets notes, but when I'm watching him, I'm just enjoying my brother. He's a very individual talent. Has his own cadence and vibe."

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Not only did Clint earn an Emmys nomination in 2025, but so did Ron. The eldest Howard brother earned the nod for his guest starring role as a satirically temperamental version himself on The Studio. However, neither Clint nor Ron won their categories during this year's awards show.

While reflecting on his own nomination, Ron told People that it was a "fun surprise" to be included in the category.

"It never even crossed my mind because it was so beyond the realm of feasibility," he said about the nomination at the time. "So this whole thing is an absolute gift — from out of nowhere. It's really gratifying, really fun."

This story was originally reported by Parade on Nov 3, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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New Photo - Supreme Court won't stop Trump's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say

Supreme Court won't stop Trump's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say By David LawderNovember 3, 2025 at 12:05 AM 0 FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump signs an executive order on tariffs, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo By David Lawder WASHINGTON, November 3 (Reuters) U.S.

- - Supreme Court won't stop Trump's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say

By David LawderNovember 3, 2025 at 12:05 AM

0

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump signs an executive order on tariffs, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON, November 3 (Reuters) -U.S. factory equipment maker OTC Industrial Technologies has long used low-cost countries to supply components - first China and later India - but President Donald Trump's blitz of tariffs on numerous trade partners has upended the supply chain math for CEO Bill Canady.

"We moved things out of China and went to some of those other countries, and now the tariffs on those are as bad or worse," Canady told Reuters. "We just have to hang on and navigate our way through this so we don't all go broke in the short run."

It is a dilemma that is sinking in with companies, foreign trade ministries, trade lawyers and economists as the U.S. Supreme Court considers the legality of Trump's global tariffs, with arguments set for Wednesday. Under one legal authority or another, Trump's tariffs are expected to stay in place long term.

The court, whose 6-3 conservative majority has backed Trump in a series of major decisions this year, is hearing his administration's appeal after lower courts ruled that the Republican president overstepped his authority in imposing sweeping tariffs under a federal law meant for emergencies.

A ruling striking down Trump's use of the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, to quickly impose broad global tariffs also would eliminate a favorite cudgel to punish countries that draw his ire on non-trade political matters. These have ranged from Brazil's prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro to India's purchases of Russian oil that help fund Russia's war in Ukraine.

"For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far, both friend and foe alike," Trump said in announcing sweeping reciprocal tariffs in April under this law.

"Reciprocal - that means they do to us and we do it to them," Trump added.

Trump is the first president to invoke this statute - which often has been used to apply punitive economic sanctions to adversaries - to impose tariffs. The law provides a president broad authority to regulate a variety of economic transactions when a national emergency is declared. In this case, Trump deemed a $1.2 trillion U.S. goods trade deficit in 2024 a national emergency - even though the United States has run trade deficits every year since 1975 - and also cited overdoses of the often-abused painkiller fentanyl.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he expects the Supreme Court to uphold the IEEPA-based tariffs. But if it strikes down the tariffs, Bessent said in an interview, the administration will simply switch to other tariff authorities, including Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which allows broad 15% tariffs for 150 days to calm trade imbalances.

Bessent said Trump also can invoke Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930, a statute that allows tariffs up to 50% on countries that discriminate against U.S. commerce.

"You should assume that they're here to stay," Bessent said of Trump's tariffs.

For countries that have negotiated tariff-lowering trade deals with Trump, "you should honor your agreement," Bessent added. "Those of you who got a good deal should stick with it."

Trump already is using other authorities for certain tariffs. He is busy piling up tariffs under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 involving national security concerns to protect strategic sectors including autos, copper, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, robotics and aircraft, as well as tariffs under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 involving unfair trade practices investigations.

"This administration is committed to tariffs as a cornerstone of economic policy, and companies and industries should plan accordingly," said Tim Brightbill, co-chair of law firm Wiley Rein's trade law practice in Washington.

Trump administration officials have touted his tariffs as pushing major trading partners such as Japan and the European Union to negotiate major concessions that will help to reduce the U.S. trade deficit, arguing those concessions will survive any Supreme Court ruling.

U.S. trade partners are not waiting for a Supreme Court ruling in deciding how to proceed. The U.S. Trade Representative's office has announced finalized framework trade deals with Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand and Cambodia, locking in tariff rates of 19% to 20%. South Korea agreed to terms on a $350 billion investment plan, unlocking a 15% tariff for its cars and other goods.

Negotiations with China have proven more difficult due to its willingness to retaliate against the United States and cut off its supplies of rare earth minerals and magnets essential for U.S. high-tech manufacturing from autos to semiconductors.

Instead of major concessions, Trump's administration has had to settle for extensions of a delicate truce under which American and Chinese tariffs were reduced to keep the rare earths flowing.

In South Korea last Thursday, Trump agreed in talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping to halve the U.S. tariff rate on Chinese goods related to fentanyl to 10% and to delay tighter technology export controls for a year in exchange for China's year-long pause on its tough licensing requirements for global rare-earth exports.

Xi agreed to resume purchases of American soybeans that China had halted for months, while Trump paused new U.S. port fees for China-linked ships for a year.

REVENUE, INVESTMENT CONCERNS

Some investors have said financial markets, which have grown accustomed to the Trump tariff status quo, could be thrown into turmoil if the Supreme Court strikes down the IEEPA tariffs.

A major reason for concern, particularly in the Treasury debt market, is the risk of having to refund more than $100 billion in IEEPA tariff collections and forgoing hundreds of billions of dollars of revenue annually.

The IEEPA tariffs collected so far this year make up the biggest portion of a $118 billion increase in net customs receipts in the 2025 fiscal year that ended on September 30. That helped offset rising healthcare, Social Security, interest and military outlays, helping shrink the U.S. deficit slightly to $1.715 trillion.

"It's a significant political economy risk that we get addicted to tariff revenue," said Ernie Tedeschi, a senior fellow at the Yale University Budget Lab, adding that makes it harder for any future presidential administration to lower the duties.

Getting the money back also would be difficult, as a tariff reversal "is unprecedented at this scale" for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said Angela Lewis, global head of customs at freight forwarder and customs broker Flexport.

The onus could be on individual importers to apply for "post-summary corrections" with the agency, a messy process that could take years and not be worthwhile for some smaller firms, Lewis said. For those getting refunds, U.S. taxpayers also would be on the hook for 6% annual interest costs compounded daily.

The biggest dilemma is managing costs. Importers for the most part have eaten the tariffs, according to academic studies and comments from executives, reducing profit margins but limiting higher consumer prices and protecting market share.

While this has dampened the inflationary impact so far, cost pass-throughs are broadening through clothing and other goods prices, according to Oxford Economics, which estimated that tariffs added 0.4 percentage point to September's Consumer Price Index annual rate of 3.0%, keeping inflation well above the Federal Reserve target.

Corporate earnings have taken the biggest hit, with global companies flagging more than $35 billion in tariff-related costs so far heading into third-quarter earnings season.

Ohio-based OTC designs and builds factory production lines and automation systems. Soon, CEO Canady said, companies like his will have to "place their bets" on where to shift production for a more sustainable cost base. That may mean back to U.S. shores for high-end products, and to Mexico for lower-value parts.

"I think the new normal is going to be 15%," Canady said of Trump's tariffs, regardless of the legal authority he invokes. "They're going call it whatever they need to call it so that it is not challengeable."

(Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by David Gaffen and Joseph Ax; Editing by Dan Burns and Will Dunham)

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Supreme Court won't stop Trump's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say

Supreme Court won't stop Trump 's tariffs. Deal with it, officials say By David LawderNovember 3, 2025 at 12:0...
New Photo - FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious concerns'

FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious concerns' MATTHEW PERRONE November 2, 2025 at 11:50 PM 0 FILE The Food and Drug Administration seal is seen at the Hubert Humphrey Building Auditorium in Washington, April 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File) () WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Food and Drug Administration's drug center abruptly resigned Sunday after federal officials began reviewing "serious concerns about his personal conduct," according to a government spokesperson. Dr.

- - FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious concerns'

MATTHEW PERRONE November 2, 2025 at 11:50 PM

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FILE - The Food and Drug Administration seal is seen at the Hubert Humphrey Building Auditorium in Washington, April 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File) ()

WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Food and Drug Administration's drug center abruptly resigned Sunday after federal officials began reviewing "serious concerns about his personal conduct," according to a government spokesperson.

Dr. George Tidmarsh, who was named to the FDA post in July, was placed on leave Friday after officials in the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of General Counsel were notified of the issues, HHS press secretary Emily Hilliard said in an email. Tidmarsh then resigned Sunday morning.

"Secretary Kennedy expects the highest ethical standards from all individuals serving under his leadership and remains committed to full transparency," Hilliard said.

The departure came the same day that a drugmaker connected to one of Tidmarsh's former business associates filed a lawsuit alleging that he made "false and defamatory statements," during his time at the FDA.

The lawsuit, brought by Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, alleges that Tidmarsh used his FDA position to pursue a "longstanding personal vendetta" against the chair of the company's board of directors, Kevin Tang.

Tang previously served as a board member of several drugmakers where Tidmarsh was an executive, including La Jolla Pharmaceutical, and was involved in his ouster from those leadership positions, according to the lawsuit.

Messages placed to Tidmarsh and his lawyer were not immediately returned late Sunday.

Tidmarsh founded and led a series of pharmaceutical companies over several decades working in California's pharmaceutical and biotech industries. Before joining the FDA, he also served as an adjunct professor at Stanford University. He was recruited to join the agency over the summer after meeting with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary.

Tidmarsh's ouster is the latest in a string of haphazard leadership changes at the agency, which has been rocked for months by firings, departures and controversial decisions on vaccines, fluoride and other products.

Dr. Vinay Prasad, who oversees FDA's vaccine and biologics center, resigned in July after coming under fire from conservative activists close to President Donald Trump, only to rejoin the agency two weeks later at the behest of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

The FDA's drug center, which Tidmarsh oversaw, has lost more than 1,000 staffers over the past year to layoffs or resignations, according to agency figures. The center is the largest division of the FDA and is responsible for the review, safety and quality control of prescription and over-the-counter medicines.

In September, Tidmarsh drew public attention for a highly unusual post on LinkedIn stating that one of Aurinia Pharmaceutical's products, a kidney drug, had "not been shown to provide a direct clinical benefit for patients." It's very unusual for an FDA regulator to single out individual companies and products in public comments online.

According to the company's lawsuit, Aurinia's stock dropped 20% shortly after the post, wiping out more than $350 million in shareholder value.

Tidmarsh later deleted the LinkedIn post and said he had posted it in his personal capacity, not as an FDA official.

Aurinia's lawsuit also alleges, among other things, that Tidmarsh used his post at FDA to target a type of thyroid drug made by another company, American Laboratories, where Tang also serves as board chair.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court of Maryland, seeks compensatory and punitive damages and "to set the record straight," according to the company.

___

The Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious concerns'

FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious concerns' MATTHEW PERRONE November...
New Photo - Week 9 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Jayden Daniels suffers injury, Bears rookies shine, Panthers stun Packers

Week 9 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Jayden Daniels suffers injury, Bears rookies shine, Panthers stun Packers Matt Harmon and Chris AllenNovember 3, 2025 at 6:26 AM 0 Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy ForecastApple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube Matt Harmon and Chris Allen recap a wild Week 9 in the NFL by providing their biggest instant fantasy takeaways from all the action on the Sunday slate. The two place games in three fantasy buckets: Games we care about the most, games we sort of care about and games that could have been an email.

- - Week 9 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Jayden Daniels suffers injury, Bears rookies shine, Panthers stun Packers

Matt Harmon and Chris AllenNovember 3, 2025 at 6:26 AM

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Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy ForecastApple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube

Matt Harmon and Chris Allen recap a wild Week 9 in the NFL by providing their biggest instant fantasy takeaways from all the action on the Sunday slate. The two place games in three fantasy buckets: Games we care about the most, games we sort of care about and games that could have been an email.

(1:05) - Matt's solo SNF recap: Seahawks 38, Commanders 14

(19:00) - Boom and Bust players of Week 9: Drake London and Jahmyr Gibbs

(22:00) - Games we care about most: KC@BUF, CHI@CIN, MIN@DET, ATL@NE

(56:00) - Games we sort of care about: CAR@GB, DEN@HOU, IND@PIT, JAX@LV

(1:21:00) - Games that could have been an email

Matt Harmon and Chris Allen recap a wild Week 9 in the NFL by providing their biggest instant fantasy takeaways from all the action on the Sunday slate. The two place games in three fantasy buckets: Games we care about the most, games we sort of care about and games that could have been an email. (Jason Jung)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

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Week 9 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Jayden Daniels suffers injury, Bears rookies shine, Panthers stun Packers

Week 9 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Jayden Daniels suffers injury, Bears rookies shine, Panthers stun Packers Matt Ha...
New Photo - Deadly quake rocks Afghanistan leaving iconic Blue Mosque surrounded by rubble

Deadly quake rocks Afghanistan leaving iconic Blue Mosque surrounded by rubble Masoud Popalzai, Catherine Nicholls and Laura Sharman, CNNNovember 2, 2025 at 11:23 PM 0 A powerful earthquake has rattled northern Afghanistan, killing at least 12 people and damaging one the country's most beautiful mosques, local authorities said. Families were jolted awake in the early hours of Monday when the 6.3 magnitude quake struck near MazariSharif, one of the most populated cities in the north of the country, at a shallow depth of 28 kilometers (17.4 miles), the United States Geological Survey said.

- - Deadly quake rocks Afghanistan leaving iconic Blue Mosque surrounded by rubble

Masoud Popalzai, Catherine Nicholls and Laura Sharman, CNNNovember 2, 2025 at 11:23 PM

0

A powerful earthquake has rattled northern Afghanistan, killing at least 12 people and damaging one the country's most beautiful mosques, local authorities said.

Families were jolted awake in the early hours of Monday when the 6.3 magnitude quake struck near Mazar-i-Sharif, one of the most populated cities in the north of the country, at a shallow depth of 28 kilometers (17.4 miles), the United States Geological Survey said.

A massive search and rescue operation is underway, with a child seen pulled from the rubble in the north of the country in video released by the Ministry of Defense on Monday morning. It was not immediately clear if the child had survived.

Mazar-i-Sharif's iconic Blue Mosque was damaged in the quake, footage on social media geolocated by CNN revealed, with its base littered with rubble - early evidence of the destruction captured in the shadows before dawn.

The site is one of Afghanistan's architectural treasures and a major point of pilgrimage, believed by some to be the resting place of Hazrat Ali, the fourth Caliph of Islam and the son-in-law of Prophet Mohammad.

An injured woman receives treatment at a hospital in the aftermath of an earthquake, that struck overnight in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan, on November 3, 2025. - Atif Aryan/AFP/Getty Images

Health officials put the early death toll at 12, with more than 250 people injured, in Samangan province, near the epicenter. The National Authority for Disaster Preparedness said the quake struck at around 1 a.m. local time, impacting parts of the north, east and west.

The United Nations confirmed it has teams on the ground "to assess needs and deliver urgent aid."

Afghanistan has endured a series of earthquake in recent years that have caused thousands of deaths and the USGS models estimate the shaking from this quake could result in hundreds of fatalities.

The defense ministry said Monday the exact number of casualties was not yet know.

The impoverished country's ability to respond to natural disasters has been further impeded by a shortage in international aid following the Taliban's successful takeover in the wake of the chaotic withdrawal of US-led forces in 2021.

Damage to properties was also reported in the affected areas, the Afghanistan National Disaster Management Authority said, with accounts of broken windows and structural damage to homes.

One resident of Mazar-i-Sharif told CNN that her family "woke up terrified" after the quake struck, saying that her children ran "down the stairs screaming" when it occurred.

"I had never experienced such a strong earthquake in my life," Rahima, a former school teacher, 50, said, adding that it broke some of her windows and damaged the plaster on some of her walls.

"I am happy that my house is made of concrete in the city," she told CNN. "I don't know if houses made of mud have survived this earthquake in the outskirts of the city."

The earthquake was also felt in regions of Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, three countries that border northern Afghanistan, USGS reported.

Social media footage geolocated by CNN shows debris scattered on the ground outside the Blue Mosque in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan following the earthquake on November 3, 2025. - Social Media

Back in August, at least 2,200 people were killed and thousands more were injured after a 6.0-magnitude quake caused widespread damage along a mountainous stretch of provinces in eastern Afghanistan.

The region was hit by at least five aftershocks, the strongest measuring 5.2 magnitude in the hours after the initial quake, according to USGS.

In October 2023, another 6.3-magnitude earthquake took place in western Afghanistan, killing more than 2,000.

This is a developing story and will be .

CNN's Mariya Knight and Billy Stockwell contributed to this report.

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Deadly quake rocks Afghanistan leaving iconic Blue Mosque surrounded by rubble

Deadly quake rocks Afghanistan leaving iconic Blue Mosque surrounded by rubble Masoud Popalzai, Catherine Nicholls a...
New Photo - Every Stephen King Easter egg you may have missed in IT: Welcome to Derry

The HBO Max series is brimming with references to King's vast literary universe. Every Stephen King Easter egg you may have missed in IT: Welcome to Derry The HBO Max series is brimming with references to King's vast literary universe. By Randall Colburn :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/RandallColburnauthorphotoe7e8b48d9f8645588439077e721a5f48.jpg) Randall Colburn Randall Colburn is a writer and editor at . His work has previously appeared on The A.V. Club, The Guardian, The Ringer, and many other publications. EW's editorial guidelines October 31, 2025 5:14 p.m.

The HBO Max series is brimming with references to King's vast literary universe.

Every Stephen King Easter egg you may have missed in IT: Welcome to Derry

The HBO Max series is brimming with references to King's vast literary universe.

By Randall Colburn

Randall Colburn author photo

Randall Colburn

Randall Colburn is a writer and editor at **. His work has previously appeared on *The A.V. Club, The Guardian, The Ringer*, and many other publications.

EW's editorial guidelines

October 31, 2025 5:14 p.m. ET

Chris Chalk as Dick Hallorann on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'

Chris Chalk as Dick Hallorann on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'. Credit:

Brooke Palmer/HBO

Like the malevolent clown dancing in its dark heart, *IT: Welcome to Derry* is a strange creature.

The series is technically a prequel to 2017's *IT* and 2019's *IT Chapter Two, *which were adapted from Stephen King's 1986 epic novel about Derry, Maine, a small town being terrorized by an ancient, child-devouring evil that surfaces every 27 years. According to co-creator Andy Muschietti, who also directed the films, *Welcome to Derry* will adapt the book's various interludes, which dig deep into Derry's violent history and how its namesake creature factors into it.

And while that's true, the show is also its own beast, deviating greatly from King's story by weaving in military intrigue, spycraft, and Native American mythology. That gives the creative team ample freedom to flesh out their vision of Derry, all while paying tribute to the breadth of King's vast oeuvre, which, by virtue of the author's penchant for cross-pollination, lends itself to Easter eggs.

What an Easter egg *is*, exactly, is up for interpretation. But for the purposes of this piece, we're focusing on direct and oblique references to the book *IT* and King's work in general. Also, for the sake of clarity, we'll be calling the story's nameless shapeshifter Pennywise, the leering clown that often serves as its painted face.

Below are all of the Stephen King Easter eggs in *Welcome to Derry. *Be sure to bookmark this piece, as we'll be updating it after each new episode.

Episode 1: 'The Pilot'

Bert the Turtle in 'IT: Welcome to Derry' episode 1

Bert the Turtle in 'IT: Welcome to Derry' episode 1.

- The surname of Leroy Hanlon (Jovan Adepo) will be familiar to fans of both the novel and its adaptations, as it's shared by Mike, a key member of the Losers' Club who goes on to become the town's librarian (and the researcher of the interludes on which *Welcome to Derry* is based). An older version of Leroy (played by Steven Williams) is seen in Muschietti's *IT* films showing Mike (Chosen Jacobs) the ropes at his abattoir.****

- Fans may also recognize the surname of Teddy Uris (Mikkal Karim-Fidler), the broccoli-haired pre-teen who features heavily in episode 1. Stan Uris (played by Wyatt Oleff and Andy Bean in the films) is among the most ill-fated members of the Losers' Club. Considering what happens to Teddy at the end of episode 1, it's likely his brother, not him, who is Stan's father.

'It: Welcome to Derry' star Chris Chalk explains Dick Hallorann's unexpected role

'It: Welcome to Derry' star Chris Chalk explains Dick Hallorann's unexpected role

'It: Welcome to Derry' star Stephen Rider initially lost out on Mike Hanlon movie role

Stephen Rider attends the premiere of HBO Original Series

- We don't spend much time with him in episode 1, but the Black soldier seen with Leroy at the Derry military base is Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk). Hallorann is best known from *The Shining*, in which he teaches a young Danny Torrance to use his psychic gift. The character also appears briefly in *IT*'s first interlude, though it's clear his role will be expanded on in this series.****

- One of the more curious elements of *IT* is Maturin the turtle, a cosmic being that essentially serves as a benevolent counterpart to the evil in Derry. Maturin hasn't been portrayed in any adaptations yet — it would be very difficult to pull off — but is often referenced. *Welcome to Derry* is no exception, with the school's mascot being Bert the Turtle. We also see Matty (Miles Ekhardt) give Lilly (Clara Stack) a toy turtle, and she responds by saying, "Turtles are lucky."

A bloody finger rising from the drain on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'

A bloody finger rising from the drain on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'.

- After Lilly hears the voice of missing Matty coming up through her bathtub drain, she shrieks when one of his bloody fingers reaches up through it. This may or may not be a reference to "The Moving Finger," a short story collected in King's 1993 book *Nightmares & Dreamscapes*. In that story, a man is haunted by a long, multi-jointed finger rising from his bathroom sink.****

- Eagle-eyed viewers will see a *Creature From the Black Lagoon* poster in Phil's (Jack Molloy Legault) room. In the book, the scaly Creature is among the many forms Pennywise takes when terrorizing its victims.

"Alvin Marsh," reads bathroom graffiti in 'IT: Welcome to Derry'

"Alvin Marsh," reads bathroom graffiti in 'IT: Welcome to Derry'.

- During a scene between Lilly and Marge (Matilda Lawler) in the school bathroom, the name "Alvin Marsh" is seen written inside a heart on the wall. Alvin Marsh is the name of the abusive father of the Losers' Club's Beverly Marsh (played by Sophia Lillis and Jessica Chastain in the films).****

- This one might be pushing it, but Teddy is notably seen reading a Clayface comic book. For one, Clayface is, like Pennywise, a shapeshifter. Secondly, DC Studios' upcoming Clayface film was written by Mike Flanagan, who has directed multiple Stephen King adaptations, including *Gerald's Game*, *Doctor Sleep*, and the upcoming *Carrie* series for Amazon.**

Episode 2: 'The Thing in the Dark'

Peter Outerbridge as Clint Bowers in 'IT: Welcome to Derry' episode 2

Peter Outerbridge as Clint Bowers in 'IT: Welcome to Derry' episode 2.

- This episode offers a look at how the U.S. military is attempting to leverage Hallorann's "gifts," a.k.a. the shining, to help track down Pennywise's lair.****

- Juniper Hill, the mental hospital where Lilly is taken at episode's end, appears in numerous King books, including *IT*. (In the book, one of the guards is named John Koontz, a supposed dig at author Dean Koontz, one of King's contemporaries.)****

- Derry's police chief is named Clint Bowers (Peter Outerbridge), another name that should ring a bell with Constant Readers. Henry Bowers is the local punk who relentlessly bullies the Losers' Club and later falls under the spell of Pennywise. Henry's dad, Butch, was portrayed as a cop in Muschietti's films, and we're guessing Clint is his father.

A sign announcing the building of a Paul Bunyan statue on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'

A sign announcing the building of a Paul Bunyan statue on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'.

- A great deal of hubbub is being made over the installation of a Paul Bunyan statue in Derry. That statue, as fans of both the book and *IT Chapter Two* know, will be used to terrifying effect by Pennywise.****

- Lilly is seen drinking a Fizz-A-La soda. A fictional soda brand in King's work is Nozz-A-La.****

- This episode marks the first appearance of Secondhand Rose, Secondhand Clothes, a thrift store featured in several King stories. In *IT Chapter Two*, King himself played the store's proprietor.****

- Is this an Easter egg? Maybe? Well, the man Charlotte (Taylour Paige) sees outside the drugstore in downtown Derry looks very much like a younger Norbert Keene, the creepy pharmacist the Losers encounter in the films.

Larry Day as Stan Kersh on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'

Larry Day as Stan Kersh on 'IT: Welcome to Derry'.

- The butcher Charlotte meets is named Stan Kersh (Larry Day). Kersh is also the name of the elderly woman (?) Beverly finds living in her old home when she returns to Derry as an adult.****

- In detention, "Mike loves Christine" is written on the chalkboard. How can we not think of the 1958 Plymouth Fury at the center of King's 1983 novel *Christine*?**

Where can I watch IT: Welcome to Derry?

*IT: Welcome to Derry *streams on Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO Max.

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

Original Article on Source

Source: "EW TV"

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Source: TV

Published: November 03, 2025 at 08:38AM on Source: VOXI MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Every Stephen King Easter egg you may have missed in IT: Welcome to Derry

The HBO Max series is brimming with references to King 's vast literary universe. Every Stephen King Easter egg you ma...
New Photo - The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix

The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix From natural disasters to manmade horrors, the streaming giant has fanfavorites like &34;Bird Box,&34; &34;Don't Look Up,&34; and more. By Ilana Gordon :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/ILANAGORDONHEADSHOT80577598f8ed442cacff5de184ceb9f5.jpg) Ilana Gordon is an entertainment, culture, and comedy writer originally from Connecticut. She currently lives in Los Angeles. EW's editorial guidelines and Sara Netzley :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/SaraNetzleyauthorphoto8fc0c3ccde6b4fa9b37f123769b4e0af.

The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix

From natural disasters to man-made horrors, the streaming giant has fan-favorites like "Bird Box," "Don't Look Up," and more.

By Ilana Gordon

Ilana Gordon

Ilana Gordon is an entertainment, culture, and comedy writer originally from Connecticut. She currently lives in Los Angeles.

EW's editorial guidelines

and Sara Netzley

Sara Netzley author photo

Sara Netzley has over 25 years of experience covering media, pop culture, and breaking news. She has been writing for * *since 2014.

EW's editorial guidelines

on November 1, 2025 7:38 a.m. ET

Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson in '28 Years Later'; Matt Damon as Mark Watney in 'The Martian'; Seth Rogen as himself in 'This Is the End'

Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson in '28 Years Later'; Matt Damon as Mark Watney in 'The Martian'; Seth Rogen as himself in 'This Is the End'. Credit:

Sony Pictures Entertainment; Twentieth Century Studios; Columbia Pictures

Feeling less "Netflix and chill" and more "Netflix and chill your blood imagining all the ways the world could end" these days? Looking to disassociate yourself into a universe filled with murderous creatures, anarchic nomads, and other assorted existential threats? If so, the streaming giant's got you covered.

Whether you prefer it when humanity ends with an outbreak (*28 Years Later*) or with a whimper (*Don't Look Up*), read on for **'s list of the 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix right now.

28 Years Later (2025)

Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson in '28 Years Later'

Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson in '28 Years Later'.

Miya Mizuno/Columbia

Danny Boyle's *28 Years Later *proves the franchise still has a lot to say. Released 18 years after *28 Weeks Later* (2007), the third installment in the postapocalyptic horror series is set on one of the British Isles, where a community has flourished, isolated from the more evolved versions of the infected that still terrorize the region. The film follows 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), who must contend with his mother's growing illness and his father's inability to help her.

Writer Alex Garland and director Danny Boyle reunite for the first time since *28 Days Later *(2002), and their collaboration meditates on British culture and isolationism in a post-Brexit, COVID-impacted world. EW's writer calls the film "strange, unpredictable, gloriously revolting, darkly funny, and, when you least expect it, rather touching. It's a full package, and one of the richest horror movies in a very long time." Its own sequel, *28 Years Later: The Bone Temple*, will premiere in January 2026. *—Ilana Gordon*

Where to watch *28 Years Later*: Netflix

**EW grade: **A–

**Director: **Danny Boyle

**Cast: **Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jack O'Connell, Alfie Williams, Ralph Fiennes

Battleship (2012)

Taylor Kitsch as Lt. Alex Hopper in 'Battleship'

Taylor Kitsch as Lt. Alex Hopper in 'Battleship'. Frank Masi

*Battleship* proves board games aren't just for basements. With an eclectic cast that includes both Liam Neeson and Rihanna, *Battleship* is a military science fiction action film that combines a love story, aliens, and good old-fashioned naval warfare — and somehow manages to pull it all off.

Propelled by the best special effects available at the time, while still nodding to the game's original low-tech roots, *Battleship* also manages to reunite *Friday Night Lights* director Peter Berg with *FNL* star Taylor Kitsch to great effect. If you're looking for an action film that won't sink under the weight of your expectations, *Battleship*, EW's critic writes, is the "rousing, engaging, and emotionally complex action war picture the silly 2001 action war picture *Pearl Harbor* only wished it could be." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Battleship*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B+

**Director: **Peter Berg

**Cast: **Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgård, Rihanna, Brooklyn Decker, Tadanobu Asano, Liam Neeson

Bird Box (2018)

Sandra Bullock as Malorie Hayes in 'Bird Box'

Sandra Bullock as Malorie Hayes in 'Bird Box'. Merrick Morton/Netflix

This deeply unsettling Sandra Bullock film finds humanity blindly stumbling to survive after an unseen force drives the bulk of the population to suicide. "It's a thriller about motherhood," director Susanne Bier tells EW. "[Bullock's character is] very forceful, very uncompromising. She's a very contemporary female hero."

EW's critic calls *Bird Box* "taut and defiantly in the moment." Watch it, and you'll never take the luxury of driving without a blindfold for granted again. *—Sara Netzley*

Where to watch *Bird Box*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B

**Director: **Susanne Bier

**Cast: **Sandra Bullock, Trevante Rhodes, Danielle Macdonald, Rosa Salazar, Sarah Paulson

Don't Look Up (2021)

Jonah Hill as Jason Orlean, Leonardo DiCaprio as Dr. Randall Mindy, Meryl Streep as President Orlean, and Jennifer Lawrence as Kate Dibiasky in 'Don't Look Up'

Jonah Hill as Jason Orlean, Leonardo DiCaprio as Dr. Randall Mindy, Meryl Streep as President Orlean, and Jennifer Lawrence as Kate Dibiasky in 'Don't Look Up'.

The mega-comet is real, but it's a fame and fake news apocalypse that ultimately dooms the Earth in *Don't Look Up*. EW's critic calls the Adam McKay film a "winking indictment of climate-change deniers and alternative-fact peddlers" who are happy to ignore global existential threats as they chase a little more clout. As McKay tells EW, "This movie came from my terror about the climate crisis and the fact that we live in a society that tends to place it as the fourth or fifth news story, or even deny that it's happening, and how horrifying that is, but at the same time [how] preposterously funny."

*Don't Look Up* stars Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, and, conservatively, a billion other famous faces. (As tempting a target as Earth is for killer comets, McKay's gravitational pull on actors is even stronger.) *—S.N.*

Where to watch *Don't Look Up*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B

**Director: **Adam McKay

**Cast: **Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, Meryl Streep, Jonah Hill

Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage in 'Edge of Tomorrow'

Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage in 'Edge of Tomorrow'. David James

The characters in *Groundhog Day* and *Palm Springs* might have thought they were stuck in the worst time loops possible, but they were never forced to die in the same battle over and over again. In *Edge of Tomorrow*, Tom Cruise stars as Major Cage, a public affairs officer who is more accustomed to running his mouth than discharging his weapons.

After Cage is dispatched to the front lines against aliens known as Mimics who have overtaken Earth, he finds himself repeatedly dying in the same fight — and the only person who believes him is war hero Sgt. Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), who once experienced something similar. Doubted by the Army, including General Brigham (Brendan Gleeson), it's up to Vrataski and Cage to devise a plan to use Cage's looping abilities to destroy the Mimics and save humanity. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Edge of Tomorrow*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B+

**Director:** Doug Liman

**Cast: **Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Paxton

Elysium (2013)

Matt Damon as Max and Wagner Moura as Spider in 'Elysium'

Matt Damon as Max and Wagner Moura as Spider in 'Elysium'.

Kimberley French/Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

Matt Damon is a man on a mission to save himself in the 2013 sci-fi thriller *Elysium*. Damon plays Max, a former car thief living in the dystopic remains of Los Angeles in the year 2154. After Max is accidentally exposed to radiation at work, he learns he has five days left to live. His only chance for survival is to leave Earth and head to Elysium — the artificial world where the wealthy reside — which houses technology capable of curing any ailment. But when Max hijacks information belonging to Elysium's defense secretary (Jodie Foster), it seems unlikely he will ever reach his intended destination alive.

Directed by Neill Blomkamp, EW's critic writes, "*Elysium* confirms the talent — for razory mayhem and shocking satire, for the crazed spectacle of future decay — that Blomkamp showcased in his amazing first feature, *District 9* (2009)." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Elysium*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B+

**Director: **Neill Blomkamp

**Cast: **Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley, Alice Braga, Diego Luna, Wagner Moura, William Fichtner

Godzilla Minus One (2023)

Kuranosuke Susaki as Seiji Akitsu and Godzilla in 'Godzilla Minus One'

Kuranosuke Susaki as Seiji Akitsu and Godzilla in 'Godzilla Minus One'.

Toho International/Courtesy Everett Collection

*Godzilla Minus One* won the 2024 Oscar for Best Visual Effects, but the film is so much more than a monster movie with incredible CGI. Set in Japan, a country ravaged by the after-effects of World War II, the film follows a failed kamikaze pilot as he is haunted both by his performance during the war and a gargantuan monster with a heat ray capable of razing Tokyo.

A love story disguised as a horror movie, *Godzilla Minus One* offers stunning performances, a fascinating historical perspective, and — of course — the kind of city-trampling mayhem one would expect when selecting a *Godzilla *movie. You know they did a good job when the filmmaker has you sympathizing with both the monster and the citizens rallying to defeat it. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Godzilla Minus One*: Netflix

**Director: **Takashi Yamazaki

**Cast: **Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada, Munetaka Aoki, Hidetaka Yoshioka, Sakura Ando, Kuranosuke Sasaki

Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters (2017)

Godzilla in 'Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters'

Godzilla in 'Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters'.

It's a Gojira-pocalpyse in *Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters*, the first in Polygon Pictures' anime trilogy that follows a group of refugees returning to a ravaged Earth 20,000 years after the cranky lizard drove out all the humans.

Directors Hiroyuki Seshita and Kôbun Shizuno created a visual feast in this fresh, sci-fi-infused take on the monster mythos, continuing in *Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle *and* Godzilla: The Planet Eater*, which are also available on Netflix. *—S.N.*

Where to watch *Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters*: Netflix

**Directors: **Kōbun Shizuno, Hiroyuki Seshita

**Cast: **Mamoru Miyano, Takahiro Sakurai, Kana Hanazawa, Yūki Kaji

The 27 best drama movies on Netflix

Florence Pugh as Elizabeth 'Lib' Wright in 'The Wonder'; Robert De Niro as Frank Sheeran in 'The Irishman'; Benedict Cumberbatch as Phil Burbank in 'The Power of the Dog'

The 31 best Netflix original movies

Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in 'Maestro'; Matías Recalt as Roberto Canessa and Augustín Pardella as Fernando 'Nando' Parrado in 'Society of the Snow'; John Boyega as Fontaine, Teyonah Parris as Yo-Yo, and Jamie Foxx as Slick Charles in 'They Cloned Tyrone'

I Am Mother (2019)

Clara Rugaard as Daughter in 'I Am Mother'

Clara Rugaard as Daughter in 'I Am Mother'. Ian Routledge/Sundance Institute

If you like a little sci-fi with your apocalypse, you should meet this *Mother*. After humanity's extinction, a strange woman (Hilary Swank) upends the life of a teenager raised in an austere postapocalyptic bunker under the care of a maternal robot voiced by Rose Byrne.

Australian filmmaker Grant Sputore's debut outing offers a heady mix of rich characters, shifting loyalties, and thought-provoking ideas, along with a fierce performance from Danish actress Clara Rugaard as a young woman grappling with the threat to the only life she's ever known. *—S.N.*

Where to watch *I Am Mother*: Netflix

**Director: **Grant Sputore

**Cast:** Clara Rugaard, Rose Byrne, Hilary Swank

Leave the World Behind (2023)

Mahershala Ali as G.H. Scott, Myha'la as Ruth Scott, Julia Roberts as Amanda Sandford, and Ethan Hawke as Clay Sandford in 'Leave the World Behind'

Mahershala Ali as G.H. Scott, Myha'la as Ruth Scott, Julia Roberts as Amanda Sandford, and Ethan Hawke as Clay Sandford in 'Leave the World Behind'.

JoJo Whilden/Netflix

Based on a book by Rumaan Alam, this star-studded film follows two families who are thrown together when a cyberterror attack knocks society offline. Director Sam Esmail tells EW he wanted to "get inside your mind and unlock the fears that you might really have about our world" in *Leave the World Behind, *which was produced by Barack and Michelle Obama's production company. You can't argue about the film's pedigree — or the terror of a world without technology. *—S.N.*

Where to watch *Leave the World Behind*: Netflix

**Director: **Sam Esmail

**Cast: **Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Kevin Bacon

The Martian (2015)

Matt Damon as Mark Watney in 'The Martian'

Matt Damon as Mark Watney in 'The Martian'.

20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett Collection

Based on author Andy Weir's best-selling novel and fronted by a tour de force performance from Matt Damon, Ridley Scott's *The Martian* was nominated for Oscars in multiple categories — including Best Picture — but the real winner here is science. Scott and his team worked closely with NASA experts to nail the specifics, and the movie both educates and entertains.

*The Martian* begins on Mars in the year 2035, when astronaut Mark Watney (Damon) and his fellow NASA crew members — led by Cmdr. Melissa Lewis (Jessica Chastain) — find their mission interrupted by severe weather. After Watney is knocked out by the storm and presumed dead, the crew departs without him, leaving the astronaut stranded on the Red Planet. Unwilling to give up, Watney, whose area of expertise is botany, must figure out how to connect with comms and survive on Mars. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *The Martian:* Netflix**

**EW grade:** A–

**Director: **Ridley Scott

**Cast: **Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig, Jeff Daniels, Michael Peña, Sean Bean, Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie, Mackenzie Davis, Benedict Wong, Donald Glover, Chen Shu, Eddy Ko, Chiwetel Ejiofor

The Midnight Sky (2020)

Felicity Jones as Sully in 'The Midnight Sky'

Felicity Jones as Sully in 'The Midnight Sky'. Netflix

George Clooney directed, co-produced, and starred in *The Midnight Sky*, which finds his lushly bearded Arctic scientist attempting to prevent a crew of astronauts, including Felicity Jones and David Oyelowo, from returning to Earth where a global catastrophe awaits them.

Filming took place in Iceland, and the weather proved to be its own mini-catastrophe for Clooney. "It was like 40 below, 60-70-mile-an-hour winds, and it's tricky because you could get lost 15 feet away from the camera," he told EW. "I lost like 25 pounds [for the part], so I was pretty weak in general and I'm also directing a big film and you need energy. I was pretty beat up." *—S.N.*

Where to watch *The Midnight Sky*: Netflix

**EW grade:** B

**Director: **George Clooney

**Cast: **George Clooney, Felicity Jones, David Oyelowo, Tiffany Boone, Demián Bichir

Oxygen (2021)

Mélanie Laurent as Elizabeth 'Liz' Hansen in 'Oxygen'

Mélanie Laurent as Elizabeth 'Liz' Hansen in 'Oxygen'.

A nightmare comes to life for claustrophobics everywhere, *Oxygen *is a French-language sci-fi film that thinks outside the box in terms of action. At the genesis, an unidentified woman (Mélanie Laurent) awakens in an airtight medical unit, unsure of who or where she is. Interactions with the system's AI — dubbed M.I.L.O. (Medical Interface Liaison Officer) — provide some clarity as to her identity, but no matter what she tries, she cannot escape her prison.

As she seeks to understand who placed her in the box and why, truths about her personal life and the current state of the world come into focus — but her search for context is actually a race to outwit the slowly depleting oxygen levels. Laurent is excellent, and despite being forced to perform on her back, she manages to imbue the film with a strong sense of determination and humanity. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Oxygen*: Netflix

**EW grade: **B

**Director:** Alexandre Aja

**Cast: **Mélanie Laurent, Mathieu Amalric, Malik Zidi

This Is the End (2013)

Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco, and Craig Robinson as themselves in 'This Is the End'

Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco, and Craig Robinson as themselves in 'This Is the End'. Suzanne Hanover/Sony Pictures/Everett

World destruction has never been funnier than in *This Is the End*, a meta-comedy about Hollywood, the Rapture, and who deserves to survive. What starts out as a party at James Franco's house — featuring a who's who of early 2010s comedy talent — quickly devolves into a dystopian hellscape, played with the utmost gravitas by the stars who manage to survive the fiery chaos.

Directors Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg flawlessly satirize the actors' public personas to deliver a movie that they claim is 85 percent improvised. The jokes might be off-the-cuff, but the premise is rock solid and pristinely executed. As EW's critic notes, "It's the wildest screen comedy in a long time, and also the smartest, the most fearlessly inspired, and the snort-out-loud funniest." *—I.G.*

Where to watch *This Is the End*: Netflix

**EW grade:** A

**Directors: **Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg

**Cast:** James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, Michael Cera, Emma Watson

Train to Busan (2016)

Gong Yoo as Seok-woo in 'Train to Busan'

Gong Yoo as Seok-woo in 'Train to Busan'. Everett Collection

The only thing faster than a bullet train is the zombie infection overtaking its passengers. In the South Korean action horror film *Train to Busan*, Seok-woo (Gong Yoo) is a work-obsessed hedge fund manager and absentee father who agrees to accompany his young daughter Soo-an (Kim Su-an) on a trip from Seoul to Busan so she can spend her birthday with her mother. As the train departs, a sick woman begins transitioning into a zombie — and infecting everyone around her.

Now barreling full-speed across the country, Seok-woo, Soo-an, and the other passengers must find a way to survive the apocalyptic journey in order to find refuge in Busan. These zombies seem to have studied at the *World War Z* School of Swarming; they move at the same frenetic speed, aiming to infect everyone in their path. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *Train to Busan*: Netflix

**Director: **Yeon Sang-ho

**Cast: **Gong Yoo, Jung Yu-mi, Ma Dong-seok, Kim Su-an, Choi Woo-shik, Ahn So-hee, Kim Eui-sung

What Happened to Monday (2017)

Noomi Rapace as one of the Settman siblings in 'What Happened to Monday'

Noomi Rapace as one of the Settman siblings in 'What Happened to Monday'. Jonas Stolpe/Netflix

*Orphan Black *lovers will want to check out *What Happened to Monday*, a 2017 sci-fi action thriller directed by Tommy Wirkola. The film stars Noomi Rapace, giving seven unique performances as septuplet sisters, each named after a different day of the week. The siblings live in a fascist America where overpopulation has necessitated the creation of a Child Allocation Bureau (run by Glenn Close), which imposes a single-child policy on all families.

The septuplets live secretly with their grandfather (Willem Dafoe), share the name Karen Settman (a relic from their dead mother), and are only allowed to leave the house on the day of the week that corresponds with their name. But after Monday goes out and never comes home, it's up to her sisters to save her — at the risk of exposing themselves. *—I.G.*

Where to watch *What Happened to Monday*: Netflix

**Director: **Tommy Wirkola

**Cast: **Noomi Rapace, Glenn Close, Willem Dafoe

Original Article on Source

Source: "EW Movies"

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Source: Movies

Published: November 03, 2025 at 08:38AM on Source: VOXI MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix

The 16 best apocalypse movies streaming on Netflix From natural disasters to manmade horrors, the streaming giant has fa...

 

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