People are still not interested in reading the COVID-19 pandemic article enough to bring it back here. The recently deceased - including the actor who again tops the list - plus politics and whatever is on streaming, television and now reopening movie theaters seem much more appealing than the disease that can't leave soon enough!
Christopher Nolan's long-awaited drama got postponed due to the pandemic that has slipped off the list again, but was released in movie theaters last week. Tenet had good reviews, even if with criticism for a confusing plot that was not helped by drowning dialogue under noise, and opened to a somewhat respectable $20 million given most theaters are still closed and many people are still afraid of going out during a pandemic.
His father was a Senator, his uncle was President... and in spite of all this great legacy before him, RFK Jr. is on the news for making the world worse, being anti-vaccination and pro-COVID-19 idiocy, down to speaking in a partially violent demonstration in Berlin calling for an end to anti-Corona restrictions. (Strangely, the redirects to his article got more hits than the actual title.)
The film starred #1 as the first lead role for a black superhero in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and made over $1 billion. This week it was given special screenings on TV in the U.S., as well as re-released in some movie theaters, in tribute to the film's deceased star.
The pandemic screwed over the release of Disney's latest live-action remake, originally scheduled for March and postponed to the point the company decided to put it on Disney+ under the hefty tag of $30. And so, at least in the United States, the streaming service received Yifei Liu (pictured) playing the Chinese girl who decided to fight a war in her father's place (who wasn't royalty or married into it, but still counted as a Disney Princess), only now without the Eddie Murphy dragon or that awesome montage song.
Still on streaming: after The Umbrella Academy on Netflix, another subversive superhero show returned, namely the Prime Video comic book adaptation where "supes" are corporate puppets and overall jerks - and now we can't even say the exception are the women, as Season 2 made the jaded veteran and the still idealistic newcomer be joined by a racist sociopath named after a neo-Nazi website.
The two stars of #3 (seen with Martin Kove in the picture to the left), one whose career barely registered afterwards - at most he produced an Academy Award-nominated short - and another who has been working steadily and even had a guitar duel againstSteve Vai!
One of the Miracle Mets who won the World Series in 1969, Seaver died at the age of 75 as a result of complications of Lewy body dementia and COVID-19.
Long time no see, Reddit. A r/TIL thread recalled the story of a famous National Geographic cover, whose "model" was found 17 years later through iris recognition.
For some less controversial news on Musk for a change, he's now the fifth richest man in the world and announced progress of the research at Neuralink.
Given the contract for what could be an X-Men spinoff series obligated a theatrical release, the superhero horror starring among others Anya Taylor-Joy (pictured) as Magik opened atop the box office... when theaters are barely open. Reviewers also noted that the movie clearly could have been better if corporate moves hadn't tied the hands of the filmmakers regarding reshoots and such.
Netflix and India, a winning combo to get an entry here. This fashion designer stars alongside her equally famous mother, actress Nina Gupta, in the streaming service's show Masaba Masaba.
The only main character of The Karate Kid - aside from the love interest, given every movie has a new one! - that didn't return in #3 was trickster mentor, Mr. Miyagi, stated to have died because his portrayer (who coincidentally was also in the cartoon remade as #8) also left this mortal coil in 2005.
Finishing off with another nostalgia-fueled entry: while Keanu Reeves' fears that his tombstone would simply read "He was Ted" are no longer true, he still returned to his star-making role in Bill & Ted Face the Music.
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