Sunday, November 2, 2025

 
Home Blog Page 73

OpenAI’s company knowledge wants access to all of your internal data – Computerworld

0



Jeff Pollard, VP/principal analyst for Forrester, said trust, or the lack of trust, is the most critical background factor in this announcement.

“Whether it’s Microsoft Copilot M365, Gemini Enterprise, Anthropic Claude Enterprise Access, and now OpenAI company knowledge, the choice is really between the devil you know — the vendor you already work with — and who do you trust?” Pollard said. “The capabilities across all these solutions are similar, and benefits exist: Context and intelligence when using AI, more efficiency for employees, and better knowledge management.”

But Pollard said the risks of such an offering are equally important. “Data privacy, security, regulatory, compliance, vendor lock-in, and, of course, AI accuracy and trust issues. But for many organizations, the benefits of maximizing the value of AI outweigh the risks.”



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

P.I. for Hire arrives in March 2026

0


We finally have a release date for Mouse: P.I. for Hire. The delightfully animated game, which marks Troy Baker’s first time playing a rodent private eye, is slated for March 19, 2026.

Based on its trailers, you’d be forgiven for viewing Mouse: P.I. for Hire as Cuphead meets Doom. Although it does include FPS action, Engadget’s Jessica Conditt discovered surprising depth behind its whimsical brutality. The game “has more to offer than shock-value cartoon violence,” she wrote. “This is a clue-gathering, photo-snapping, girlfriend-avenging, noir detective simulator that happens to star a bunch of slick-talking mice and rats, and I’m fully into it.”

Baker plays Private Investigator Jack Pepper, the game’s protagonist. When he isn’t hunting clues or sneaking around during the game’s quieter moments, he’ll have a delightful arsenal on hand. This includes wacky ones like a turpentine gun that melts the inked “skin” of your foes. Fun stuff.

Like Cuphead, Mouse‘s most obvious point of comparison, it uses hand-drawn frames to recreate that old-school style. It also deploys an original jazz soundtrack recorded by an orchestral ensemble. It’s all presented in a gritty, film noir aesthetic.

You can check out the release date trailer below. Mouse: P.I. for Hire will launch next March on PC, Switch 2, Switch, PS5/4, Xbox Series X/S and Xbox One.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Release Date, Cast & How to Watch – Hollywood Life

0


Image Credit: Paramount+

The gritty world of Mayor of Kingstown is returning—starring Jeremy Renner, the Taylor Sheridan–created drama continues its exploration of power, corruption, and survival in a town built around the prison system. With new conflicts on the horizon and familiar faces returning, Season 4 is set to deepen the tension and drama that have defined the series.

Jeremy Renner, who returns after his near-fatal snowplow accident in 2023, recently told the New York Post, “Season 3 was the one where I was pretty affected… This season, I’m much stronger, much clearer, happier, more awake and attentive.”

Here’s everything you need to know—from premiere schedule to cast changes to where to watch.

What Is Mayor of Kingstown About?

Created by Sheridan and Dillon, Mayor of Kingstown follows the McLusky family — power brokers in the fictional town of Kingstown, Michigan, where incarceration is the main industry. Renner stars as Mike McLusky, a man who navigates tense alliances between law enforcement, criminals, and local politicians in a system built on corruption and compromise.

The show explores themes of power, justice, and morality within America’s prison complex. As co-creator Dillon told PEOPLE, “It’s a detonation, not an escalation — the blade’s sharper, the cuts go deeper.”

Mayor of Kingstown Cast

Here are some of the cast members for Mayor of Kingstown Season 4:

  • Jeremy Renner as Mike McLusky

  • Hugh Dillon as Ian Ferguson

  • Taylor Handley as Kyle McLusky

  • Edie Falco as Nina Hobbs

  • Lennie James as Frank Moses

  • Laura Benanti as Cindy Stephens

How to Watch Mayor of Kingstown

All episodes of Mayor of Kingstown are available to stream exclusively on Paramount+. Seasons 1 through 3 are currently on the platform, making it easy for fans to catch up before the new season begins.

Paramount+
Paramount+

Mayor of Kingstown Season 4 Release Date

Season 4 of Mayor of Kingstown premieres Sunday, October 26, 2025, exclusively on Paramount+, with a total of 10 episodes premiering on Sundays. Here’s the full release schedule:

  • October 26, 2025: Episode 1

  • November 2, 2025: Episode 2

  • November 9, 2025: Episode 3

  • November 16, 2025: Episode 4

  • November 23, 2025: Episode 5

  • November 30, 2025: Episode 6

  • December 7, 2025: Episode 7

  • December 14, 2025: Episode 8

  • December 21, 2025: Episode 9

  • December 28, 2025: Episode 10



This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

Hidden UK waterfall the backdrop to Christopher Nolan blockbuster | UK | Travel

0


When you think of the Christoper Nolan films, you may think of filming locations like the Parisian boulevards from Inception, the skyscrapers of New York used to mimic Gotham in Batman, or even the vast New Mexico desert used in Oppenheimer.

But for fans of the history-making British director, one iconic location lies much closer to home and itt is guaranteed to take your breath away.

Tucked away deep in a wooded gorge, on the edge of the Brecon Beacons, lies a waterfall astonishing enough to have starred in a major Hollywood feature.

However, many in Wales may never have even heard of it.

Henrhyd Falls is South Wales’s tallest waterfall and is the very spot chosen by Christopher Nolan for the entrance to the Batcave in all of his The Dark Knight trilogy, with scenes of the Black Tumbler – the huge tank-looking Batmobile – flying through the Welsh waters into the hero’s secret lair.

But for anyone who isn’t the Caped Crusader, you can still easily make a trip to the waterfall without the need for any of Bruce Wayne’s gadgets, maybe just a solid pair of boots.

You begin the walk on a path through lush woodland near the village of Coelbren, where you can already begin to hear the rushing water in the distance. Then a steep but well maintained footpath will lead you down into the gorge weaving down and towards the waters.

Then, turning a corner after around 20 minutes on your feet, you’re faced with the stunning 27-metre drop of water flowing down into the green moss-lined gorge.

And that’s when the memories from the big screen may come rushing back as the doorway to Batman’s lair. In The Dark Knight Rises, the waterfall gets a particularly long shot when John Blake, aka Robin, discovers the hidden entrance to the Batcave after wandering behind this exact sheet of water.

What elevates Henrhyd from simply a pretty scene to a location with blockbuster status is its natural drama. The waterfall plunges over a hard sandstone ledge known locally as the “Farewell Rock”, into a narrow gorge surrounded by thick forest. It’s tucked away, a little off the beaten track, giving it that “hidden lair” feel.

One recent visitor was blown away by the experience, later leaving a positive review which said: “Henrhyd Falls is absolutely stunning – a hidden gem surrounded by beautiful nature.

The walk down to the waterfall is scenic and peaceful, and standing behind the falls is an unforgettable experience. The sound of the rushing water and the lush greenery make it feel magical.”

The best time to visit is after some light rainfall, when the waterfall is at its most dramatic, though the paths can be slippery, especially if you venture behind the curtain of water.

Early mornings tend to be quieter, and sturdy footwear is a must — plus a waterproof if you plan to stand close enough to feel the spray.

For fans of natural beauty and for devotees of the Caped Crusader alike, Henrhyd Falls offers both. And even if you don’t spot the Batmobile lurking in the shadows, you’ll certainly leave feeling you’ve discovered one of Wales’s most enchanting hidden treasures.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

10 Harsh Realities of Rewatching ‘Hocus Pocus’ Over 30 Years Later

0


Released in 1993, it’s been over 30 years since Hocus Pocus first flew into theaters and flopped at the box office. Despite its poor opening, the movie managed to become one of the most beloved Halloween cult classics of all time, for kids and adults alike. What once was an underperforming Disney oddity has grown into a full-blown seasonal obsession. For many millennials growing up, the movie was as much a part of Halloween as costumes, trick-or-treating, and bright orange pumpkins. In fact, it has also grown popular among Gen Z and younger generations, with Freeform and Disney Channel each year during October.

Watching it back through the lens of adulthood, however, the film is darker, weirder, and not as good as one might remember. There are many things that flew over our heads as kids, from overtly creepy jokes to strangely bleak aspects. Production was also sloppy, with many continuity errors and goofs present throughout the movie. While the nostalgia is strong, so is the cringe.

Here are 10 harsh realities of rewatching Hocus Pocus over 30 years after it came out.

There Are a Lot of Historical Inaccuracies

Everyone knows Hocus Pocus wasn’t aiming for factual accuracy or a history lesson, but its many historical inaccuracies are difficult to ignore as a grown-up. Firstly, the Sanderson sisters were hanged for witchcraft on October 31, 1693, but the Salem Witch Trials were abolished in May 1692 by Governor William Phips, after his own wife was accused of being a witch. Another flaw is the mention of margarine by the Sandersons, a product that wasn’t invented until the 1800s.

Perhaps the hardest to ignore inaccuracy is that most of the movie takes place on a school day on Halloween in 1993, but that year, the holiday fell on a Sunday. In the movie, it’s also the night of a full moon, but in real life, there was no full moon that evening. The last Halloween full moon took place in 1974, and there wouldn’t be another full moon on October 31 again until 2020. The film is Halloween fodder, sure, but it’s hard not to notice these errors years later.

The Obsession With Virginity Is Weird

The return of the Sanderson sisters is built around a virgin lighting the Black Flame Candle. This is the movie’s most crucial plot point — that only a virgin could light it and bring the witch trio back to life. That emphasis on virginity feels uncomfortably weird rewatching as an adult. It might have slid as just fantasy lore, but the movie continually brings up the fact that Max (Omri Katz) is a virgin.

His virginity is continually scrutinized and used as a punchline, turning a minor’s lack of sexual experience into an oddly recurring joke. Even his little sister, a 9-year-old, discusses sex and pokes fun at him about it. What exactly does so much focus on virginity bring to a children’s movie? The hyperfocus on a teenager’s sex life in a Halloween movie made for kids is highly uncomfortable. The running gag has aged very, very poorly.

The Movie Has Many Goofs and Mistakes

The whoopsie moments in the movie don’t end with historical inaccuracies. Throughout Hocus Pocus, there are more production errors than there are candies in a kid’s trick-or-treat bag. Back when you were playing this movie on VHS or watching it on the Disney Channel, you might have been too bewitched to notice, but they’re impossible to ignore as an adult. To name a few: Emily moves quite a lot in the chair after she’s killed, Sarah’s hair alternates between curly and straight, Mrs. Dennison’s (Stephanie Faracy) wedding ring disappears and reappears during the party scene, and Winifred (Bette Midler) quotes Max’s “It’s just a bunch of Hocus Pocus,” despite being dead when he said it.

If you look closely in the Dennison family kitchen, you can spot the camera crew’s reflection. When keeping an eye out during scenes where the Sanderson sisters are flying, you can see the cables holding the actors up. Max gets soaked in the museum with the sprinklers, but is completely dry only minutes later when he, Dani (Thora Birch), and Allison (Vinessa Shaw) reach the cemetery. The note he gives Allison at the beginning of the film changes when she hands it back to him. When the witch trio arrives at the school, the clock reads 3:00 a.m., then switches to midnight and back. There are probably a lot of other goofs and mistakes that have gone unnoticed.

The Bus Driver Is a Predator

It’s actually quite insane that what once played as cheeky humor is just gross and undeniably sleazy. As the Sanderson witches stalk the streets of Salem looking for their beloved spellbook, they stumble upon a bus, whose driver greets them. The lecherous man immediately starts flirting with them when he opens the door. After Winifred asks what the “contraption is for,” he replies, “to convey gorgeous creatures such as yourself to your most forbidden desires.” When she tells him that desire would be children, he misunderstands and his response is: “Hey, that may take me a couple of times, but I don’t think there’ll be a problem.”

Yeah, jokes about children in that context are not funny, and not cool. The man just screams predator. The whole exchange has aged poorly, giving off the energy of a creepy uncle doing and saying things he shouldn’t at a family reunion — no, actually something worse. It’s unbelievable that this ever made it past Disney’s censors. Even if this was intended to skip over kids’ heads and amuse adults, there’s nothing humorous about it. It’s sick.

Max Is a Jerk

If you were growing up with Hocus Pocus in your Halloween movie rotation, chances are that you probably thought Max was a dreamboat. On the surface, he’s supposed to be like every ’90s teenage boy. He was portrayed as a cool outsider forced to adjust to a new town. In reality, Max is a real big jerk. He sulks about moving, mocks Salem’s Halloween traditions, and is unkind to his little sister. After being callous to her when his parents make him take her trick-or-treating, he uses her to score points with a girl.

Max also comes off as cocky and arrogant, as seen in the scene where he casually hands Allison his phone number after she totally annihilates his comments in class. Trying to impress Allison with bravado is precisely what brought the child-killing witches back from the dead. Something that’s also really irking when rewatching the movie as an adult is how he left two teens to possibly die at the Sanderson house. Sure, they were bullies, but not even they deserved that.

Sarah Sanderson Is a Creepy Character

Sarah (Sarah Jessica Parker) is widely remembered as the hot, ditzy Sanderson sister, but if you look beyond her good looks and playful exterior, you’ll realize she’s actually one of the creepiest characters in the film. After she and her sisters suck the life out of Emily and become younger in appearance, she exclaims, “I am beautiful! Boys will love me!” In the same cottage scene, she shamelessly thirsts after Thackery, a teenage boy, going as far as caressing his face. There’s something uncomfortably inappropriate about the way she soon tells Winifred, “Hang him on a hook and let me play with him.”

At one point, she’s even seen kissing a teen. Additionally, the way she enchants children with a haunting lullaby to lead them to their deaths is utterly horrifying. Sure, her character is meant to be comedic, but when you combine her child-snatching with overtly sexual antics, it paints a much darker picture than the movie seems to realize. Rewatching the movie decades later, and she’s less of a “fun witch” and more of a problematic predator.

The Female Characters Are Mostly One-Dimensional

One of the harshest realizations when rewatching Hocus Pocus 30 years later is how one-dimensional the female characters are. There’s no denying that the Sanderson witches are iconic, but despite their magical camp, their characters can feel oversimplistic. Winifred is painted as the typical power-hungry, cruel, and angry witch. The middle sister, Mary, is the bumbling sidekick. SJP’s Sarah is the flirty, sexy airhead — a character who’s underused and defined mostly by her beauty and sexuality.

It’s not just the witches, either. Allison, the most grounded character in the movie, gets very little to do besides be the love interest to an overrated male protagonist and serve as a walking resource for all things Salem. Dani is a kid with spunk to spare, but she exists mostly to annoy her brother and be put in peril so that he can be the hero. In a film packed with magic and big personalities, the women and girls don’t get much agency beyond their surface traits. The film could have done a better job at developing its female leads with more complexity and growth.

It’s Surprisingly Dark for a Kid’s Movie

Hocus Pocus opens up terrifyingly for kids, kicking off with the death of a child and capital punishment. Little Emily Binx’s (Amanda Shepherd) death as the three witches drain the life force out of her is a bleak scene — not exactly the spooky fun you remember from childhood. The moment doesn’t get much emotional weight either, quickly followed by jokes. Soon after, the Sanderson sisters are hanged for their crime in a public execution. The nooses around their necks and their dangling feet are extremely disturbing.

It doesn’t stop there. The curse cast on Emily’s brother, Thackery (Sean Murray), is pretty grim. It’s a cruel fate to be cursed to live as a cat forever, watching the ones you love live their lives without knowing you’re there, and then watching them die and being left alone for the rest of your days. There’s also the daring, bold talk of worshiping Satan. It’s easy to forget how dark these aspects are when they’re wrapped in campy humor, but the implications hit harder when you’re older.

Winifred’s Abuse Towards Her Sisters Isn’t So Funny Now

As previously mentioned, Winifred’s whole shtick is being mean and bossy. As kids, everyone laughed at how she constantly called her younger sisters things like “idiots” and smacked them around. While watching the movie decades later, the reality hits that Winifred is actually an emotional tyrant. What once seemed cartoonish, over-the-top, and theatrical is hard not to wince at in some instances as an adult. Mary and Sarah are clearly terrified of disappointing her, constantly seeking her approval while being belittled and pushed around.

Winifred’s constant insults, put-downs, physical aggression, and yelling look like verbal and emotional abuse through the adult eyes. What felt like slapstick comedy and a funny sibling dynamic as a kid just doesn’t hit the same at a time when there’s more awareness of what controlling behavior looks like. Sure, it’s meant to be camp, but it’s easy to spot the toxicity in it today.

Nostalgia Does a Lot of the Heavy Lifting

Hocus Pocus is undeniably an icon in cinema. The movie is a beloved classic, but let’s face it, the Halloween staple isn’t a masterpiece. In fact, one might argue that it’s a sloppy film. Stripping away the rose-colored glasses, what’s left is a clunky picture. From all the aforementioned goofs to the thin characterization to the huge plot holes, it just isn’t a great movie. The story drags in spots, the humor doesn’t land like it used to, and it’s filled with awful ’90s tropes.

A lot of what viewers love about movies is remembering how they made them feel, and that is exactly where the magic of Hocus Pocus lies. It’s a nostalgic comfort movie that one returns to each October searching for a long-lost feeling, yearning to travel back to a past where everything felt easier and more filled with possibilities. It’s precisely this nostalgia that makes it so easy to overlook the plethora of things that are wrong with the film. It wraps even the messiest, darkest, and most questionable moments in a warm jack-o-lantern glow. It’s why audiences will keep coming back to it each fall, even if they cringe through half of it.



Release Date

July 16, 1993

Runtime

96 minutes

Writers

Neil Cuthbert, David Kirschner, Mick Garris

Producers

David Kirschner, Mick Garris, Ralph Winter, Bonnie Bruckheimer, Steven Haft





This story originally appeared on Movieweb

10 Most Disturbing Movies Like The Hand That Rocks The Cradle

0


Movies like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle include stories about people who infiltrate a family’s life and disrupt everything. The original film was a 1992 release by director Curtis Hanson (L.A. Confidential), the story of a nanny (Rebecca De Mornay) working to tear a family apart and replace the mother she works for.

In 2025, The Hand that Rocks the Cradle was remade, with Mary Elizabeth Winstead as the mother, and minor changes were made to help the new Hulu release dominate its opening week. For fans of stories where someone tries to ruin a person’s life, here are other movies like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle.

The Visit (2015)

The Visit Tyler inside the room and the grandparents outside

Released in 2015, M. Night Shyamalan began his comeback with the found-footage horror film The Visit. The story follows teenage siblings who are sent to spend five days with their maternal grandparents, whom they have never met. However, the longer they are there, the more they realize something is wrong.

Like most of his movies, this includes a Shyamalan twist, and it works perfectly here. It turns out that the grandparents are not the real grandparents, but are instead escaped psychiatric patients who killed the kids’ grandparents and took their place in the home.

Much like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, this is a movie about someone who wants to step in and replace another person, taking over their life. In this case, they succeeded and would likely have maintained the charade if not for the two teens who came to stay for the week and discovered the ruse.

One difference is that the killers in this movie are not really interested in being grandparents to the teens, but are only playing along to keep their dark secrets. That makes it an even more terrifying version of the trope.

Poison Ivy (1992)

Drew Barrymore and Sara Gilbert in Poison Ivy
Drew Barrymore and Sara Gilbert in Poison Ivy

Poison Ivy is a movie very similar to The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, but it comes at the story from a different angle. Instead of a nanny who wants to push out the mother and replace her in the family unit, this sees a teenager who wants to replace her friend in the family, with devastating effects.

Drew Barrymore stars as Ivy, the teen who decides she wants to move in and then starts to try to seduce her friend’s dad. However, in this case, only the daughter, Sylvie (Sara Gilbert), realizes what is going on and tries to get Ivy out of her life before she destroys her family.

With the main villain being a teenager seducing the father and actually killing the mother, this was an even more disturbing telling of the story. This movie had a similar ending to The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, as it took the death of the antagonist to end their reign of terror.

Bad Influence (1990)

James Spader holds a knife to Rob Lowe's throat in Bad Influence
James Spader holds a knife to Rob Lowe’s throat in Bad Influence

Not only did Curtis Hanson direct The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, but he also directed a similar story with a different slant two years earlier in Bad Influence. Instead of an outsider coming in to destroy a family by trying to force her way in, this had an outsider ruining a man’s life by luring him into temptation.

Rob Lowe was the charming outsider, Alex, who meets James Spader’s Michael, a socially awkward man who allows people to push him around. Alex then convinces Michael to cut loose and do things that keep him from getting stepped on all the time. What results is a cat-and-mouse game between the two that ends in tragedy.

As mentioned, there is no family destruction here, but it is similar to The Hand that Rocks the Cradle in that a person comes in and tries to mold a person’s life into what they want it to be. The acting was great, and this was a look at the story from a male perspective by the same director.

Single White Female (1992)

Hedy standing behind Allie looking in a mirror in Single White Female

The same year as The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, a very similar movie was also released in theaters. That movie was Single White Female, which stars Jennifer Jason Leigh as Hedy, a woman who answers an ad and becomes the roommate of Allie (Bridget Fonda), a successful software designer.

Just as in The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, Single White Female depicts an outsider who sees a successful woman and wants her life for herself. Both films see the outsider begin to dig in more and more, setting things up to force their way in and replace their roommate.

This movie is much more tragic than The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, and it plays more like a dark thriller than that film. This is a movie about one obsessed person destroying another’s life completely, and leaving them empty and alone at the end. There was also a lesser sequel 13 years later.

Orphan (2009)

Orphan's titular orphan standing outside and looking to the side
Orphan’s titular orphan standing outside and looking to the side

Orphan takes the theme from The Hand that Rocks the Cradle and turns the outside invader into a “child.” In this movie, a couple has struggled to have a child and decides to adopt a nine-year-old Russian girl named Esther. However, they don’t realize until it’s too late that Esther is not a child at all.

Throughout the movie, Esther depicts puzzling mannerisms that lead Kate, the mother, to realize something is wrong, and when she finally learns the truth, there is a battle to the death. This is a little more similar to The Visit, where Esther is in self-preservation mode and will do anything to keep her secret, including murder.

What is most shocking is that Orphan is based on a true story, and there was even a similar case after the fact, where the adoptive parents used the movie as an excuse for why they felt their daughter was not really a child. It is a disturbing tale, and it even received a prequel in 2022.

Fatal Attraction (1987)

Glenn Close as Alex and Michael Douglas as Dan about to kiss in Fatal Attraction

Fatal Attraction is a thriller about a man who has an affair with a woman, only to find that she won’t let it go when he tries to end it. Michael Douglas is Dan, and Glenn Close is Alex, the woman he has an affair with. When he tries to break things off, she contemplates suicide and then begins to torment Dan and his family.

Unlike The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, Alex doesn’t want to take Dan’s wife, Beth’s, place in the family. She wants to just take Dan for herself and does some terrible things to his wife and daughter to try to drive them away. By the end, she has come completely unhinged and launches an all-out attack on the family.

The Fatal Attraction ending is a little troublesome today, with Dan’s wife coming to his rescue and almost instantly forgiving him for his blame. It is also ironic that the ending was supposed to be more tragic, with Alex dying by suicide, making it look like Dan killed her to ruin his life. This tragedy could have changed everything about the film.

Stoker (2013)

Matthew Goode as Charlie Stoker sitting with Nicole Kidman as Evelyn Stoker in Stoker.
Matthew Goode as Charlie Stoker sitting with Nicole Kidman as Evelyn Stoker in Stoker.

Stoker is a complicated movie about a family whose patriarch dies, and his brother moves in and slowly takes his place in the family unit. Directed by Japanese visionary Park Chan-wook (Oldboy), Matthew Goode is Charlie Stoker, the brother who moves in with Nicole Kidman’s Evelyn and her daughter India (Mia Wasikowska).

The film becomes very creepy when he takes more notice of India while continuing to woo Evelyn. This causes India to start to develop more antagonistic traits, which Charlie almost encourages, and he slowly begins to demolish this small, broken family with just his presence.

Unlike The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, Charlie succeeds in destroying this family. However, this takes the entire idea one step further. Charlie does not emerge victorious but instead corrupts another family member into committing atrocious acts, delivering a shocking, dark ending to the story.

Fear (1996)

David McCall (Mark Wahlberg) smirks in Fear (1996).
David McCall (Mark Wahlberg) smirks in Fear (1996).

Fear is a movie about a handsome, charming young man who begins dating a young woman and slowly destroys her family’s life. Released in 1996, this was an early Mark Wahlberg performance where he plays David, a young man who begins dating teenage Nicole (Reese Witherspoon).

While Nicole’s (William Petersen) dad doesn’t like David, his concerns are for good reason when David shows violent tendencies, and Nicole can’t seem to let him go. This, like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, is a movie about a person becoming obsessed with someone and refusing to let go, as he destroys their life.

David is even more dangerous and evil than Mrs. Mott in The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, as he is a violent man who will hurt anyone who angers him and doesn’t really care about love or acceptance. He only wants destruction.

The Good Son (1993)

Elijah Wood and Macaulay Culkin smoking in The Good Son
Elijah Wood and Macaulay Culkin smoking in The Good Son

The Good Son is similar to Orphan and Poison Ivy, but it is much more disturbing because of the characters’ ages. Fresh off his breakout role in Home Alone, Macaulay Culkin took on a very different role as a young sociopath who sets out to destroy the lives of another young man and his family.

Elijah Wood plays Mark, a young man whose mother died, so his dad sends him to live with his aunt and uncle, and their kids, Connie (Quinn Culkin) and Henry (Culkin). Of the two, Henry turns out to be the bad seed, and his own parents can’t seem to see that he’s developing violent tendencies.

Unlike The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, The Good Son presents the person actively trying to destroy the family as part of the family, and the young man he seeks to blame is the innocent outsider. Despite that difference, the two movies are very similar in structure, and each ends with a gut punch.

Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

Mia Farrow as Rosemary looking horrified at the end of Rosemary's Baby
Mia Farrow as Rosemary looking horrified at the end of Rosemary’s Baby

Rosemary’s Baby is a lot like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, but on a much grander scale. Instead of one person coming into a family’s life and trying to manipulate them into what they want the family to look like, this sees an entire cult pulling the strings to get the family where they want them to be.

Of course, Rosemary’s Baby isn’t about someone who wants to replace a family member, but instead about the cult trying to ensure that Rosemary becomes pregnant with the Antichrist. Shockingly, Rosemary’s husband is even part of the scheme, making this even more difficult to accept.

This might be the top critically acclaimed movie like The Hand that Rocks the Cradle, as it earned two Oscar nominations, winning Best Supporting Actress for Ruth Gordon. It was also added to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2014.



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

With a 15.1% discount and 8.7% yield, is this penny stock worth considering for growth and passive income?

0


Image source: Getty Images

For those of us looking to earn extra passive income, I reckon a stock yielding 8.7% probably warrants further investigation. And if there was one that also had a market cap less than the value of its assets, I’d definitely want to find our more.

Alternative Income REIT (LSE:AIRE) is one such stock. It invests in UK properties in alternative and specialist sectors – including hotels, health clubs, hotels, and car showrooms – with a view to providing “secure and predictable income returns”.

As a real estate investment trust (REIT), it’s required to return at least 90% of its property rental profit to shareholders by way of dividends each year. Generally speaking, this makes REITs good for income. However, 90% of nothing isn’t worth anything so there are no guarantees that high yields can be maintained.

Please note that tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in future. The content in this article is provided for information purposes only. It is not intended to be, neither does it constitute, any form of tax advice.

For the year ended 30 June 2025 (FY25), the trust paid dividends of 6.2p. In cash terms, this is a 20.6% improvement on FY21. A near-9% yield puts the stock comfortably in the top 10% of UK-listed companies.

And to help provide some assurance that its future income stream is going to be reliable, it has a weighted average unexpired lease term of 15.6 years. In addition, 95.8% of its contracts contain provisions for inflation-linked upwards-only rent reviews.

That’s not all

But there’s more. At 30 June, its net assets per share was 83.6p. This represents a 15.1% discount to its current (24 October) share price of 71p.

However, although this suggests the stock’s undervalued, I wouldn’t pay too much attention to this. Most REITs that I’ve come across are in a similar position. To expand, their business models usually involve borrowing to buy more properties. This makes them less attractive during periods of high interest rates. But this is a sector-wide problem rather than anything specific to Alternative Income REIT.  

The rules of the trust specify that it can only borrow up to a maximum of 40% of the gross asset value (GAV) of its portfolio. At 30 June, its loan to GAV was 36.9%.

However, as positive as its yield and valuation might be, there are risks.

The UK commercial property market can be volatile. A downturn in the domestic economy could result in tenants experiencing financial difficulties. If a company goes bust, the length of its lease and whether it provides for inflationary rent increases is inconsequential. And as a penny stock – its current share price is less than £1 and its market cap is below £100m – it doesn’t have the financial firepower to withstand a sustained slump. Also, it only owns 20 assets, so one failure could have a significant impact.

In common with other REITs, the business model of Alternative Income means it’s unlikely to experience rapid share price growth. Although it’s increased 33% since October 2020, the baseline for comparison was when the pandemic was still a thing. Of more relevance, the stock’s currently trading 16% lower than it was in September 2022.

But the whole point of a REIT is that it should be good for dividends. In my opinion, capital growth should be viewed as the icing on the cake. And with a yield of 8.7%, Alternative Income has lots going for it. That’s why I think it’s a stock for passive income investors to consider.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

A Loud Signal Was Just Sent That Voters Are Ready To Virtually End Trump’s Presidency

0


There has been a disconnect between the Trump administration and the voters since shortly after the 2024 election, when Donald Trump declared that he would not be doing anything to reduce prices and inflation, because those issues were too hard.

Many swing voters who cast their ballots for Trump did so because they believed him when he said that he would bring prices and inflation down right away if he was sent back to the White House.

PoliticusUSA is not beholden to any political party or special interest. We are 100% independent. Support us by becoming a subscriber.

This turned out to be another of Trump’s promises that was a total lie.

During the campaign, Trump would on occasion let his true plan slip during rallies. Trump made numerous statements to his support to the effect that he thought the really important issues in the country were not inflation and rising costs, but immigration and crime.

Trump always intended to use the White House to serve his own interests, not those of the American people.

The president’s refusal to listen to the people has sparked the largest protests against any US president in history.

The more Trump ignores them, the louder and larger the protests become. There are now signs that the energy behind the protests is transferring to the ballot box.

Story continues below.



This story originally appeared on Politicususa

Revealed: The plan for a ‘New Gaza’ – and the four militias Israel is backing to defeat Hamas | World News

0


Israel may have agreed to stop fighting in Gaza, but it is backing armed groups that plan to fight Hamas to the bitter end.

Sky News has confirmed for the first time that four anti-Hamas militias are all backed by Israel, and consider themselves part of a joint project to remove Hamas from power.

The groups are all operating from areas still under Israeli control, behind what’s been called the “yellow line” – the boundary for Israel Defence Forces (IDF) troop deployments established by the ceasefire agreement.

“We have an official project – me, [Yasser] Abu Shabab, [Rami] Halas, and [Ashraf] al Mansi,” says militia leader Hossam al Astal, speaking to Sky News from his base in southern Gaza.

Image:
Hossam al Astal spoke to Sky News from his base near Khan Younis

“We are all for ‘The New Gaza’. Soon we will achieve full control of the Gaza Strip and will gather under one umbrella.”

The footage below, shared with Sky News, shows troops from Hossam al Astal’s militia parading near its base.

visualization

We used the video to identify the location of the militia’s headquarters for the first time.

It is situated on a military road that runs along the yellow line, less than 700 metres from the nearest IDF outpost.

“I’m hearing the sound of tanks now while I’m speaking, perhaps they’re out on patrol or something, but I’m not worried,” says al Astal.

“They don’t engage us, and we don’t engage them […] We’ve agreed, through the coordinator, that this is a green zone, not to be targeted by shelling or gunfire.”

The New Gaza

This area, now a patchwork of rubble and military berms, was once a leafy suburb of Gaza’s second city, Khan Younis.

photo-slider visualization

Al Astal says he grew up here, but was forced to flee in 2010 after being pursued by Hamas over his involvement in militant groups aligned with their rival, the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority (PA).

He spent the next 11 years abroad, working for the PA’s security services in Egypt and Malaysia.

Two months after he returned to Gaza, he was accused of involvement in the 2018 assassination of a Hamas member in Malaysia and sentenced to death.

“When the war started, they left us locked up, hoping the Israelis would bomb the prison and rid them of us,” he says. “Two months later, we broke down the doors and escaped.”

Hossam al Astal poses with armed men from his militia in Khan Younis. Pic: Hossam Al Astal
Image:
Hossam al Astal poses with armed men from his militia in Khan Younis. Pic: Hossam Al Astal

He says that his weapons, mainly Kalashnikov rifles, are purchased from former Hamas fighters on the black market.

Ammunition and vehicles, on the other hand, are delivered through the Kerem Shalom border crossing after coordination with the Israeli military.

This is the same border crossing used by another militia leader, Yasser Abu Shabab.

Yasser Abu Shabab (right), in a photo uploaded to his social media account. Pic: TikTok
Image:
Yasser Abu Shabab (right), in a photo uploaded to his social media account. Pic: TikTok

Sky News previously revealed that Abu Shabab’s militia was smuggling vehicles into Gaza with the help of the Israeli military and an Arab-Israeli car dealer.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Meet the militia group opposing Hamas

Al Astal says he uses the same car dealer. One of his vehicles appears to have Hebrew writing on the side, which has been partially scratched out.

visualization

He says his militia also receives weekly deliveries of everyday items needed to support the civilians living at the camp.

visualization

“We currently provide basic medical and education support to roughly 30 families,” he says.

“Children can get apples and bananas, food and drink, chips and so on. By contrast, in the other area, in the tents, you find five-, 10- or even 15-year-olds surviving on little more than lentils and pasta.”

He says these supplies come in via weekly deliveries. In the video below, a cargo truck can be seen at the militia’s base.

visualization

A similar cargo truck can be seen in satellite imagery of the camp, taken on 14 October.

Sky News has also confirmed that the other two militias, which are operating in the north of Gaza, are receiving supplies from Israel.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

New videos suggest Israeli support for Gaza militia

The video below, filmed by a member of Ashraf al Mansi’s militia, shows a car loaded with supplies driving towards their base.

visualization

Sky News previously confirmed that this road leads either from an IDF outpost or from the Erez border crossing with Israel.

A member of the other militia operating in northern Gaza, which is led by Rami Halas, told Sky News that coordination with the IDF is done indirectly through the District Coordination Office.

It’s part of the Israeli defence ministry, but also includes officials from the PA – Palestine’s internationally recognised government, based in the West Bank.

This fits with what we were told by al Astal, by an Israeli soldier stationed at Kerem Shalom, and by a senior commander in Abu Shabab’s militia – that coordination with the military is managed indirectly, and that the PA plays a key role.

“I have people within my group who are still, to this day, employees of the Palestinian Authority,” says al Astal.

The PA did not respond to Sky’s questions, but has previously denied having any relationship to these militias.

“The Palestinian Authority can’t admit to having a direct relationship with us,” the militia leader says.

“It already has enough issues and doesn’t want to add to that burden. You know, if word got out that they had ties with militias or with the occupation forces, you can imagine how that would look.”

From top left clockwise: Yasser Abu Shabab, Ashraf al Mansi, Hossam al Astal and Rami Halas
Image:
From top left clockwise: Yasser Abu Shabab, Ashraf al Mansi, Hossam al Astal and Rami Halas

Military coordination

Although he acknowledges working with Israel to secure supplies, al Astal denies he has ever coordinated military operations with the IDF.

Sky News previously reported that Israeli aircraft had intervened in two battles fought by Abu Shabab’s militia.

We asked Abu Shabab whether these were due to coordination, but did not receive a response.

Hamas accused al Astal’s militia group of direct military coordination after several of its fighters were killed when Israel intervened during a battle between the two groups on 3 October.

The footage below, published by the IDF, shows the strikes that day.

visualization

“I don’t control Israeli airstrikes,” al Astal says. “The Israelis simply saw armed Hamas military groups and struck them.”

In April, two months before he founded the militia, al Astal’s own tent was hit by an Israeli bomb. The strike killed his 22-year-old daughter, Nihad, who was seven months pregnant.

“People accuse me of collaboration,” he says. “How can anyone speak about me like that? Were the Israelis ‘joking around’ with me with a missile?”

He believes the strike was intended for a Hamas member living nearby.

“If I listed every crime against children and women, the blame wouldn’t rest on Israel but on Hamas, which hid among the people.”

Support from outside powers

Multiple sources also told Sky News that the militias are also receiving support from outside powers.

The deputy leader of Abu Shabab’s militia, Ghassan al Duhine, has twice been photographed next to a vehicle with a UAE-registered licence plate.

Ghassan al Duhine poses in front of a car with a UAE licence plate, which is incompletely obscured. Pic: TikTok
Image:
Ghassan al Duhine poses in front of a car with a UAE licence plate, which is incompletely obscured. Pic: TikTok

Sky News also found that the logo of the group’s armed wing, the Counter Terrorism Service, is almost identical to that used by a UAE-backed militia of the same name operating in Yemen.

The logo used by al Astal’s militia, the Counter Terrorism Strike Force, similarly uses the same illustration as that used by a different UAE-backed militia, also based in Yemen.

photo-slider visualization

The UAE did not respond to Sky’s request for comment.

When we asked al Astal whether he enjoyed the backing of the UAE, he smiled.

“God willing, in time everything will become clear,” he said. “But yes, there are Arab countries that support our project.”

That project, al Astal says, has a name: The New Gaza.

‘No war… no Hamas, no terrorism’

“Very soon, God willing, you will see this for yourselves; we will become the new administration of Gaza. Our project is ‘The New Gaza’. No war, at peace with everyone – no Hamas, no terrorism.”

Two days after Sky News spoke to al Astal, Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior advisor, Jared Kushner, used the phrase himself while suggesting that Gaza could be split indefinitely along the yellow line.

“No reconstruction funds will be going into areas that Hamas still controls,” Kushner told reporters on Wednesday.

“There are considerations happening now in the area that the IDF controls, as long as that can be secured, to start the construction as a ‘New Gaza’ in order to give Palestinians living in Gaza a place to go, a place to get jobs.”

The IDF declined to comment on these findings. Hamas, the PA and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, the Israeli agency which manages the Israel-Gaza border, did not respond to our requests for comment.


The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Blue Jays rout Dodgers 11-4 in World Series opener : NPR

0


Toronto Blue Jays’ Daulton Varsho runs past the Los Angeles Dodgers dugout after hitting his two run home run during the fourth inning in Game 1 of baseball’s World Series, on Friday in Toronto.

David J. Phillip/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

David J. Phillip/AP

TORONTO — Addison Barger launched the first pinch-hit grand slam in World Series history, Alejandro Kirk added a two-run homer in a nine-run sixth inning and the Toronto Blue Jays overwhelmed the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers 11-4 in the opener Friday night.

“That’s the epitome of our offense,” said Blue Jays third baseman Ernie Clement, who laced a tiebreaking single in the sixth. “It’s a collective effort and everybody just doing their job.”

Daulton Varsho started Toronto’s comeback from a 2-0 deficit with a two-run drive in the fourth off two-time Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell.

“I’ve faced him before plenty of times. He’s obviously dominated me,” Varsho said. “It’s one of those guys where you’ve got to get your best swing off and whatever happens, happens.”

The longball barrage was fitting as the Fall Classic returned to Toronto for the first time since 1993, when Joe Carter hit the second walk-off homer to end a World Series. And in an unusual tie to that night 32 years ago, Varsho is named after Darren Daulton, the Philadelphia Phillies catcher Mitch Williams was throwing to when Carter connected.

Shohei Ohtani hit his first Series home run for the heavily favored Dodgers, seeking to become the first repeat champion since the New York Yankees took three titles in a row from 1998-2000. Los Angeles was trailing by nine when he went deep off Braydon Fisher for a two-run shot in the seventh, his fourth homer in two games.

Fans angry that Ohtani spurned the Blue Jays to sign a $700 million contract with the Dodgers in December 2023 chanted: “We don’t need you!” when he came to the plate in the ninth.

“Don’t poke the bear,” Toronto pitcher Chris Bassitt said.

Game 2 in the best-of-seven series is at Rogers Centre on Saturday night.

“They bring it every night,” Clement said, referring to Blue Jays fans. “The last few months, honestly, they’ve been selling this place out and giving us a ton of energy. We’re lucky to have these fans.”

Playing after a one-week layoff following its National League Championship Series sweep, Los Angeles took a 2-0 lead against 22-year-old rookie Trey Yesavage on RBI singles by Kiké Hernández in the second and Will Smith in the third.

Yesavage made his fourth postseason start — one more than his regular-season career total. At 22 years, 88 days old he became the second-youngest pitcher to start a World Series opener behind Brooklyn’s Ralph Branca at 21 years, 267 days in 1947 at Yankee Stadium.

Yesavage made some key pitches during his four innings, leaving the bases loaded in the second by retiring Ohtani on a groundout and stranding a runner at third the next inning when he struck out Max Muncy.

Seranthony Domínguez got the win with 1 1/3 hitless innings.

Varsho’s homer was the first off Snell by a left-handed hitter since Juan Soto connected for the Yankees on June 2 last year. Snell gave up a career-high five hits on changeups and allowed five runs, eight hits and three walks in five-plus innings.

“Blake just didn’t have good fastball command,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “There were just a couple bad walks in there.”

Snell pitched in the Series for the first time since 2020 with Tampa Bay, when he was removed in the sixth inning of Game 6 while pitching a shutout against the Dodgers. Los Angeles rallied against the Rays’ bullpen for its first championship since 1988.

Now the Dodgers are chasing their third title in six years.

Coming off a seven-game ALCS against Seattle that ended Monday, Toronto got 14 hits and key contributions from Bo Bichette and Varsho, who combined with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to become the first trio of sons of former major leaguers to start for one team in a Series game.

Returning from a sprained left knee that had sidelined him since Sept. 6, Bichette played second base for the first time in six years and favored the knee. He singled in the first, ranged to the left side of the infield to field a grounder and save a run, then with the score 2-2 drew a full-count walk from Snell starting the sixth.

Twelve batters went to the plate in the inning. Clement singled off reliever Emmet Sheehan for a 3-2 lead, pinch-hitter Nathan Lukes drew a bases-loaded walk and Andrés Giménez added an RBI single.

Barger greeted left-hander Anthony Banda with a 413-foot drive to right-center on a hanging slider to put Toronto ahead 9-2.

“Just a blackout moment. Just crazy,” Barger said. “I was choking up a little bit, just trying to put the ball in the air and get a run in.”

Kirk, who singled off the right-field wall a pitch before Varsho’s homer, added his fourth home run of the postseason.

“We just didn’t make pitches when we need to to keep that game close,” Roberts said. “We need to be better.”

Up next

Dodgers RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Blue Jays RHP Kevin Gausman start Saturday night. Yamamoto won Game 2 of the Series last year, allowing one run and one hit over 6 1/3 innings in a 4-2 victory over the Yankees and is coming off the first postseason complete game in eight years, a three-hitter against the Milwaukee Brewers. Gausman will be making his Series debut.



This story originally appeared on NPR