James Wan has no idea how they filmed this brilliant mirror scene from Contact, but I do. Let's break it down.
The Queen's Gambit's Anya Taylor-Joy reveals if she's met Charlize Theron in the wake of playing Furiosa in the prequel to the Mad Max franchise.
Ticket to Paradise's Julia Roberts revealed she has an A+ nickname for George Clooney in her phone contacts.
Mission: Impossible 7's Cary Elwes revealed how director Christopher McQuarrie filmed scenes after contracting COVID.
Resistance is futile, but time travel's still pretty easy in this case.
With today’s news that Star Wars Celebration wouldn’t happen this year, with the official Star Wars convention not returning until 2022, we thought it might be fun to look back at Disney’s first, all-but-forgotten attempt at an official sci-fi convention: Contact 96. Don't worry if you've never heard about it because honestly nobody has (people who were there barely remember it), but from its inauspicious beginnings, it would end up inspiring one of the key special events at Walt Disney World for decades and feed into the resort's emphasis on food …
Star Trek: First Contact director and star Jonathan Frakes sat in for IGN's WFH Theater to discuss the film and reveal new tidbits from behind the scenes.
Join a special live watch-along Q&A of Star Trek: First Contact with Riker himself, director Jonathan Frakes, this Wednesday at 5 p.m. PT!
After seasons of speculation over when the community would appear, The Walking Dead season 10 has finally made contact with The Commonwealth.
Godzilla: King of the Monsters was jam-packed with characters and Kaiju action, so it's no surprise that some of the slower scenes ended up on the cutting room floor. With King of the Monsters storming on to digital media today, we've got an exclusive look at one of those scenes; a quiet moment with Millie Bobby Brown's intrepid Madison Russell trying to make contact with the outside world mid-monster mayhem, but finding only terror instead. The follow-up to Gareth Edwards' 2014 Godzilla reboot introduces a cast of new characters, led by the Russell family, …
Star Trek: First Contact landed in theaters way back in November 1996, and it still remains one of the better received outings by the crew of the USS Enterprise. The first film in the franchise to focus solely on the cast of the Next Generation TV series, First Contact pits Patrick Stewart’s Captain Picard and his allies against merciless hive mind, the Borg.