Devin Das and Parker Seaman make films that catch you by surprise—not through spectacle, but through moments that feel honest and unshakably real. Their work lives in the quiet spaces between humor and heartache, often turning on a dime from something absurd to something unexpectedly moving. With a sharp eye for tone and rhythm, they craft stories that resonate in ways you don’t always see coming. Wes is Dying continues that trajectory—often silly and chaotic, yet grounded, and full of the emotional nuance they’ve come to master. In Wes is

Pop Culturalist is excited to be partnering with Amazon MGM Studios to give away tickets to a NYC screening of The Accountant 2. You and a guest will see the film before it’s released on April 25th. All the details are below. Good luck! About the Film Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) has a talent for solving complex problems. When an old acquaintance is murdered, leaving behind a cryptic message to “find the accountant,” Wolff is compelled to solve the case. Realizing more extreme measures are necessary, Wolff recruits his estranged

Warfare opens with no introductions, no origin stories, no guiding hand. What follows is not a traditional narrative, but an unrelenting immersion into war as it’s endured—moment to moment. Former Navy SEAL Ray Mendoza brings the weight of his own combat experience, teaming with filmmaker Alex Garland to dismantle the familiar architecture of the war genre. What emerges is a harrowing and immediate film shaped by memory, not mythology—one that resists romanticism and leans into the brutal realities of combat. Warfare doesn’t just chronicle a mission; it pulls you into

Christopher Landon has long been a master of genre reinvention. From the biting satire of Freaky to the time-loop chaos of the Happy Death Day franchises, his films are known for blending scares with smarts—and always centering characters you care about. With Drop, he returns to the thriller space with a stripped-down, high-stakes story that trades jump scares for psychological tension, while still keeping his signature sense of play. Set over the course of one unsettling evening, Drop follows Violet (Emmy nominee Meghann Fahy), a widowed mother on her first

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