Technology
The Roses cast reveals the secrets of that heated dinner party
What's it like to have front row seats at the most toxic dinner party of the year?
Well, if you buy tickets to The Roses, you can get pretty close. The new comedy adapted from the 1981 Warren Adler novel The War of the Roses stars heralded English actors Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch as Ivy and Theo Rose, a once deeply besotted couple who is now on the verge of divorce, and ravenous to drag each other down — even with dinner guests present!
To celebrate the film's release in the U.S. and UK, Mashable UK editor Shannon Connellan interviewed The Roses' cast, including Sunita Mani, Ncuti Gatwa, Jamie Demetriou, Zoë Chao, and Kate McKinnon, as well as screenwriter Tony McNamara and director Jay Roach. Together, they delved into what it was like to shoot this scene and watch the fireworks pop off in person.
The supporting cast was overwhelmingly in awe of Colman and Cumberbatch, as they slugged McNamara's scorching dialogue back and forth. Yet even over days of shooting this scene, the laughs (and dining) carried on into the night, with the cast going out for supper afterwards.
To see how all this offscreen camaraderie translates to the divorce comedy, be sure to catch The Roses, which is now in theaters.
Over 300K Plex Servers Are Still Vulnerable to Attackers, Despite Emails
People skipping security updates despite being marked as important is nothing new. In the case of Plex, though, the latest urgent security fix not being in most Plex servers by now might quickly become a problem.
College students can get Google AI Pro for free, as company launches new guided learning mode
Google wants to get its AI tools into the hands of more students, following the lead of other industry giants as it attempts to retain its educational dominance. An easy way to do that? By making those tools free.
Starting today, students 18 years or older can sign up for one whole year of Google's AI Pro plan for no cost, which includes access to a suite of Google's most popular AI offerings. It's not just U.S. students, either, with the deal available to university-level students across Japan, Indonesia, Korea, and Brazil, too.
SEE ALSO: GPT-5 arrives imminently. Here's what the hype won't tell you.The Google AI Pro Plan includes an expanded Gemini 2.5 Pro, the company's latest chatbot model, as well as its Deep Research model and NotebookLM, an AI-powered teaching tool that can turn user-uploaded files into custom lessons and study guides. The plan also gives users access to advanced video generator Veo 3 and Google's coding assistant, Jules.
These offerings come alongside a $1 billion commitment to AI education and training programs, which the company will dole out over the next three years, and a brand new Google AI for Education Accelerator, providing free training and Google Career Certificates, in addition to access to AI tools, to every college student in America. The company will also announce new education-focused upgrades to its existing products.
A new learning mode for GeminiOne of those enhancements includes a new Guided Learning mode for Google's chatbot Gemini, or what the company describes as a "personal AI learning companion." With Guided Learning turned on, Gemini will skirt direct answers and instead provide open-ended conversations and step-by-step explanations, getting at the "how" and "why" rather than just spitting out the solution.
"Learners told us that they want to be able to go from quick answers to deep understanding, but don't always know how to. They also valued having a safe place to ask any question they might have," wrote Google. "We designed Guided Learning to help with this by creating a conversational, judgment-free space for anyone to explore topics in an enjoyable way at their own pace, putting the power of a great learning experience in their own hands."
In addition, Gemini will now be able to produce flashcards and study guides based on user-uploaded materials, and include "high-quality images, diagrams, and YouTube videos" in responses to complex questions.
A week earlier, OpenAI announced Study Mode, a new set of system prompts for the AI assistant that uses common teaching principles, like the Socratic method, to encourage users to learn with the chatbot rather than just take answers at face value. Many users had already theorized the company was working on a "ChatGPT Tutor" in addition to its existing partnerships with educational tech companies, like Canvas. OpenAI, Microsoft, and Anthropic also recently joined together with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) to launch the National Academy for AI Instruction.
Google has been developing its education offerings and AI tools for years, including a collaboration with the college admissions nonprofit College Board and recent AI-powered accessibility features.
Back to school, AI edition: College students get big discounts on AI tools like Gemini and Grammarly
AI in schools has been a point of contention. On the one hand, some tools can definitely help get that mountain of homework done. On the other hand, some take it too far and help students cheat, which has befuddled college professors. If you’re ready to include AI in your studies in a responsible way, many companies are offering back-to-school specials on their tools.
Per Google, universities such as Boise State, Wake Forest, and San Diego State have been using tools like Google’s NotebookLM and Gemini to help both students and faculty take more efficient notes and create more optimized lesson plans. Since AI is becoming so huge, many major colleges, like The Ohio State University, have lists of approved AI tools for student use, along with the college’s own generative AI models specifically designed for student use.
So, as long as you’ve cleared it with your college and you plan to use these tools responsibly, here is a list of AI tools that you can get at a discount for being a student. More may pop up over time. For instance, OpenAI had a two-month free subscription for students that ran from March to May of 2025. The offer isn’t valid anymore, but OpenAI may bring it back someday.
Most AI services have free tiers as well. They aren’t as strong as the pro models, but if all you need is some assistance with a math problem, the free tier can usually get you there.
Google GeminiGoogle is working overtime to attract college students away from ChatGPT. And to do that, Google recently announced that it's offering the Google AI Pro Plan to college students for free for an entire year. Normally $19.99 per month, this plan unlocks access to Google's most popular AI tools. As of Aug. 6, college students 18 years and older can sign up for free, and this deal isn't limited to the United States, either.
Google's AI Pro Plan includes:
Expanded access to Gemini 2.5 Pro, the company's latest AI chatbot model
Try Google's Deep Research model
NotebookLM, which can create study guides, podcasts, and other content on specific subjects.
Veo 3, Google's AI video maker
Jules, Google's coding assistant
It’s a pretty generous offer. The two highlights for Gemini are using the chatbot to help with homework and Google’s NotebookLM, which is one of the most underrated AI tools available in 2025. It can help summarize documents and add them to your notes, and you can talk to it and ask it questions about the material. If you do get Google’s offer, it’s a good idea putting something in your calendar to cancel after a year because it will charge you once the trial ends, and a year is a long time to remember.
GrammarlyGrammarly does offer a student discount, although it is a pain in the rear end to find on the brand’s website. Per Grammarly, they offer a 40% discount to students, educators (K-12 and higher learning), and several other groups. To get it, you’ll need to use SheerID, which checks your name against your university’s Office of the Registrar to make sure you’re a student before giving you the discount. Once done, you’ll get your promo code. Plug it in and you’re good to go.
It’s a good tool for students. The grammar and punctuation checking can help keep simple mistakes from invading essays and reports, while the brand’s plagiarism checker can help keep students honest. The AI portion of Grammarly can also help by summarizing notes and giving you feedback on your writing. Since there’s a lot of writing in college, it’s a good first choice.
AdobeFor students in creative fields, Adobe has long been friendly to students and educators, although the company’s generosity has ebbed and flowed over the years. In any case, for 2025, Adobe is offering a 57% discount. You can get more than 20 Adobe tools and access to Creative Cloud for $29.99 per month, down from $69.99 per month. Some colleges may also offer some apps, like Photoshop, for free as part of the curriculum. You’ll need to email your school to find out those details.
Adobe has spent the better part of the last two or three years peppering AI into its existing products. Photoshop has a bunch of AI tools, as do other tools like Lightroom and Acrobat. There is also Adobe Firefly, which is a generative AI model developed by Adobe that you can use to generate various things. Adobe’s AI implementation is quite nice since it works within existing tools that students are likely to use professionally as well.
Otter.aiOtter.ai is mostly sold as a business solution, but it also has student pricing. Per the company’s help center, discounted plans are available on Otter.ai Pro monthly and annual plans. It should apply to any nonprofit educational institutions, accredited colleges, and most school districts. The discount is 20%, which can reduce the plan by quite a lot, especially if you spring for the full year, which already discounts the monthly price. Click the link above for instructions on how to get it.
For the most part, Otter.ai is marketed as a business solution to collaborate among coworkers, record and summarize meetings, and take notes during those meetings. However, all of that is also applicable in the educational space, especially if you take classes with a lot of lectures. Otter.ai can listen to those lectures, summarize them, and help you take notes so you can study more effectively.
Notion AINotion AI does have student discounts, although obtaining them is fairly complicated. Eligible students can get a 50% discount on Notion AI with the proper add-on, but based on stories I’ve read, it seems this can be easily confused with adding a different add-on that negates the discount. So, while it is available, I recommend contacting customer support to help you apply the discount so things don’t get messed up.
Notion AI is much like Otter.ai in that it can be situational as to how useful it is in an educational context. It operates mostly as a workspace assistant where you input data, and the AI assistant helps you summarize, organize, and remember everything. You can find a full list of features on Notion AI’s website. There is some good stuff there and if Notion is on your radar, the 50% discount is quite excellent.
Microsoft 365 (including Copilot)When it comes to student discounts, Microsoft has long been one of the better options. Its Office 365 subscription gives you Office apps at a 50% discount that isn’t difficult to obtain. It turns out, you can get Copilot for the same discount. Once you get verified, you can get three months of Microsoft 365 Personal on the house, which includes Copilot. After that, students can continue to get a 50% discount. The free part isn’t available for students outside of the U.S., but those students may still be eligible for the 50% discount.
You already know what Microsoft is all about here. Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, along with 1TB of cloud storage and some other stuff. For Copilot, Microsoft says that Copilot is baked into many of its productivity apps, and you get access to Copilot itself, albeit not in its full capacity like Copilot Pro plans. The mixture of AI and productivity is a potent combo for students, and 50% is a hefty discount.
Does OpenAI have any ChatGPT offers for college students?In the past, OpenAI has offered free access to ChatGPT subscriptions for college students, but that discount is no longer available. However, OpenAI works directly with some universities to offer college students access to ChatGPT. In addition, OpenAI recently rolled out its most advanced model ever, GPT-5, and it's currently free to use for everyone. You can also check out ChatGPT's new "study mode" tool.
Using AI effectivelySometimes it’s not what you have but how you use it, and AI certainly fits into that category. When using AI for educational purposes, it’s not much different from using it for work. If you’re in classes where lectures are infrequent, then you probably don’t need Otter.ai. Check and see if your school does Google for Education, you likely don’t need the Microsoft 365 Personal plan. Make sure you’re spending your money effectively and only getting the AI tools you actually need.
Acer Made a Google TV Streamer Box (And It Has Tons of Ports)
It’s not every day that a new Google TV box is announced, and Acer is almost certainly not the brand you would expect to see one from. However, the company, mostly known for PCs and peripherals, is launching a 4K Google TV streamer with ports galore.
Apple Watch Charging Cables Are As Low As $11 Today
You can now get an Apple Watch Magnetic Fast Charger for a surprisingly low price on Woot. The price for a single charger has dropped to just $15, with multi-packs also available at an impressive discount of up to $35 for three. If you are always forgetting your watch's cable, or you just need replacements, now is the time to stock up.
How (and Why) You Should Be Removing Metadata From Your Photos
Most photos—whether clicked by you or downloaded online—typically have metadata embedded in them, which can reveal various details, including sensitive information, such as your location. Knowing what metadata your photos contain and how to remove it thus becomes essential before sharing photos online.
Kickstart your fall cleaning routine with the Roborock Saros 10 robot vacuum and mop for its lowest price yet
SAVE $300: As of Aug. 29, get the Roborock Saros 10 robot vacuum and mop for $1,299.99, down from its usual price of $1,599.99. That's a discount of 19% and the lowest price we've seen.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon Roborock Saros 10 $1,299.99 at Amazon$1,599.99 Save $300 Get Deal
Tired of spending an inordinate amount of time on vacuuming and mopping? Here's the good news: you don't have to do it on your own. Not when robot vacuums exist. If you're looking for a great pick that can do it all, you'll find it with this Roborock model, which you can save a bundle on right now at Amazon.
As of Aug. 29, get the Roborock Saros 10 robot vacuum and mop for $1,299.99, down from its usual price of $1,599.99. That's $300 off and a discount of 19%. It's also the lowest price we've seen.
SEE ALSO: I tested 10+ budget robot vacuums. I found 3 that really work.This powerful robot vacuum and mop combo is meant for havy duty messes. It boasts 22,000Pa of suction with a tangle-free main brush and a hot water sonic vibration mop that spins up to 4000 times a minute per vibration. Both of those tools combined mean you get a superior clean that you don't have to do all the work to achieve.
Set up the Roborock Saros 10 to be on a customized cleaning schedule and let it run on its own with reactive AI 3.0 obstacle recognition and LiDAR navigation so it can plot a course through your home and avoid anything in its way. It can clean the edges of your room, your carpets, heavily-trafficked areas, and anywhere else that needs special attention.
You can control and schedule the vacuum via app, and you can also issue easy voice commands to go totally hands-free. It's even compatible with your favorite assistant: Alexa, Siri, and Google Home as well as Matter 2.0.
If you need a reliable robot vacuum, this is the one to watch, especially as you can snag some serious savings. Grab one and be ready for a much-needed fall refresh.
2 ways to personalize a Pixel 10, according to Google
Google wants you to know you can customize the experience of your Pixel 10 phone.
The company published a blog with some hints and tricks to get more personalization out of your phone. Google listed off four tips — you should check out the whole list — but we've picked a couple we felt were most surprising or useful.
1. Make full use of Magic CueA major tool Google recommended for personalization of a Pixel 10 is the addition of Magic Cue, an AI-powered assistant aimed at making your life easier. The idea is that it should be able to trawl through things like your messages and emails to automatically solve problems. It should prove to be a time-save because, as Mashable's Cecily Mauran wrote, it "proactively finds information you might need to look up."
Google wrote that you "can also turn Magic Cue on or off at any time, and control what data it has access to" — so it might make sense to play with those settings to get the most out of your phone. If it does a good job, for instance, of managing your meetings, then you'd want to make sure it has access to your calendar and work emails.
2. Switch up the visual designGoogle's latest Pixel interface, Material 3 Expressive, gives users plenty of options to change the look their phone. Mashable's Alex Perry wrote that it offers "deeper color customization" and a "livelier" look.
Google noted in its blog that users have lots of options, like customizing their wallpaper and shifting how buttons look. The company wrote:
"Coming only to Pixel, Material 3 Expressive’s Live Effects provides more expressive photo wallpapers by adapting to your notifications and surfacing contextual information in a more immersive and glanceable way. Material 3 Expressive also includes 14 new or updated components that feature more configuration capabilities, like emphasizing typography differently in different spots, switching up color schemes or changing the shape of various icon buttons."
There are obviously lots of cool features to explore with a new Pixel 10 phone. It promises, for instance, a top-of-the line camera and live translation. But it is also neat that there are ways to make the phone distinctly yours.
EOMONTH Function: How to Calculate Any Month-End Date Easily
The EOMONTH function in Microsoft Excel returns the last day of a month in the past, the current month, or a month in the future. Whether you need to calculate end-of-month due dates, deadlines, expiration dates, monthly revenues, or forecasts, the EOMONTH function helps speed up this process.
So You've Set Up Linux On Windows Using WSL, Here's What You Can Do With It
So you just installed and set up Windows Subsystem For Linux (WSL) on your Windows machine, and now you’re wondering what this blinking terminal can do. Here’s a quick guide to get you started.
Windows 11 Is Removing Another Built-in App
Windows is officially retiring the built-in Mobile Plans app. This change means that instead of using a dedicated app, you'll be using your web browser and the Windows Settings app to buy and manage cellular plans. Windows claims the main reasoning is to create a "more integrated" experience.
Tote your Stanley tumbler in style with this All Day Quencher Carry All for its lowest price yet
SAVE $20: As of Aug. 29, get the Stanley All Day Quencher Carry All for $20 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $40. That's a discount of 50% and the lowest price we've seen.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon Stanley All Day Quencher Carry All $20 at Amazon$40 Save $20 Get Deal
Staying hydrated is essential to your health. You should make sure you're drinking enough water, but doing it in style? That's equally important. If you've already nabbed a Stanley Quencher to make sure you're getting enough quality H2O, you're probably working on meeting your hydration goals. But are you looking cool while doing it? Or are you just carrying your cup around and always looking for a place to put it? No more. That ends today with this deal.
As of Aug. 29, get the Stanley All Day Quencher Carry All for $20 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $40. That's $20 off and a discount of 50%. It's also the lowest price we've seen. This price only applies to the Lilac colorway.
SEE ALSO: What's so special about a Stanley? A guide to conspicuous consumption on TikTok.This on-the-go carry-all transforms your Stanley tumbler into a crossbody bag with a detachable strap. It fits your 40 oz. tumbler so you can sip hands-free while doing everything you need to do in your day. It comes with three pockets: a phone slot, mesh compartment, and card sleeve, as well as a key clip and sunglasses sleeve.
Its adjustable strap makes it easy to fit on your frame, with a lightweight design so you don't feel like you're adding too much bulk to your Quencher. There's plenty of room for the essentials you need to take with you so you don't have to carry a separate bag. Plus, it has a lifetime warranty should you run into any issues.
Drink all the water you need for the day while making your tumbler function as a chic bag. You'll be glad you sprung for this accessory while it's on sale.
The Galaxy Z Flip 7 FE Makes More Sense at This Discounted Price
Saving money is always nice, but sometimes a discount just makes a product what it should've been all along. That’s the case with the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 FE, which just got a major price drop that makes it a much more compelling purchase.
The Roses review: Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch face off in white-hot divorce comedy
It needs to be said: Danny DeVito is underrated as a comedy director. The movie star turned It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia savior is certainly best known for a long list of film and television appearances (including Taxi) that are outrageously, unforgettably funny. But he's also helmed such memorable movies as the whimsical Matilda, the twisted Strangers on a Train parody Throw Momma from the Train, the cruelly underrated Barney-inspired Death to Smoochy, and the hot comedy The War of the Roses. In fact, the shadow DeVito cast is so long that even as I discuss a remake of The War of the Roses that he has nothing to do with, I can't help but herald his contribution to comedy — in part because DeVito would never have given us The Roses.
Look, on paper, The Roses sounds sensational.
Adapted from the same Warren Adler novel as DeVito's 1989 The War of the Roses, this modern screenplay is written by Tony McNamara, whose scripts for The Favourite and Poor Things earned him Oscar nominations and critical acclaim. Promisingly, The Roses reunites him with Olivia Colman, the Academy Award–winning comedic dark star of The Favourite, and an actress who's been cracking this critic up since the British series Peep Show. And she's paired opposite Benedict Cumberbatch, who is less known for comedy but has been mixing it up with films like The Phoenician Scheme and The Grinch.
Adding a generous slathering of comedy chops, the supporting cast is stacked with the likes of Andy Samberg, Kate McKinnon, Allison Janney, Sunita Mani, Ncuti Gatwa, Jamie Demetriou, and Zoë Chao. The Roses should be wall-to-wall laughs, ranging from giggles to guffaws to shocked gasps.
And yet, this just isn't all that funny. I blame director Jay Roach.
The Roses isn't funny or ferocious enough. Credit: Jaap Buitendijk / Searchlight PicturesDeVito's The War of the Roses is framed as a parable against divorce, told by the director himself, who plays the central couple's friend and a divorce attorney who serves as a sage narrator across the decades-long rise and fall of the Roses. From the start, McNamara's approach goes for something different by introducing a framing voiceover by the Roses themselves, Ivy (Colman) and Theo (Cumberbatch). In singsong voices, they reflect on how the film will end (true to the first movie), but with a surprisingly upbeat attitude. While there will be a twist on this voiceover's context, this chipper change does reflect the overall tonal shift from the biting 1989 version and the bizarrely bouncy 2025 remake.
The general plot is the same: Theo was once the breadwinner of their household, while his wife, a baking genius who could make amazing culinary constructions modeled after landmarks, cared for their two kids — who have gotten too chubby for Theo's liking. When his career takes an unexpected downturn, hers is on the rise! And resentments grow. He takes on raising their kids, turning them away from sweets and toward sprints. She is working long hours and experiencing an adult world that feels increasingly distant from Theo. When divorce comes, it's acrimonious, and centered on who will get their dream house.
The new twist here is that the husband is an architect who built his dream house with the profits from his wife's restaurants. So, Theo doesn't want to give up his masterpiece, and she — bitter over the split — doesn't want to give him it exactly because he wants it. (In DeVito's, the husband was a lawyer whose wife bought and led the renovations on their home, which he paid for.) An increasingly immature series of pranks becomes increasingly dangerous, and even deadly. And while some dialogue and certain ploys at revenge hit hard, many of the jokes don't land. What happened?
Jay Roach lacks the bite for The Roses. Credit: Lara Cornell / Searchlight PicturesTo Roach's credit, he succeeds in establishing Ivy and Theo as a couple once ravenously in love. The scene of their first meeting feels exciting and hot, climaxing with the pair rushing into a restaurant's freezer for a quickie before they've even shared their names. This irreverence for common decorum surfaces throughout the film, reflecting a shared impulsiveness as they exchange barbs brutal but funny even to each other, or ditch a dull dinner party by faking an utterly bizarre emergency.
Cumberbatch and Colman have solid chemistry in such scenes, and both have the devastating intensity to make McNamara's most stinging lines land. But the tone that Roach offers is just achingly middle-of-the-road. Punches feel pulled at nearly every turn. A mean comment is almost immediately undercut by an emotional catharsis, be it a burst of screaming or a jaunty justification.
Roach's Roses lacks the gothic flair of DeVito's, which had its stars perform with an almost soap opera-like theatricality as they spat invectives against a rollicking musical score, which played like a storm brewing. By contrast, Roach's tone is broader, in the vein of his hits like Meet the Parents or his similarly lackluster remake Dinner for Schmucks. The flare, daffiness, and daring he brought to Austin Powers is long behind him. And The Roses is the worse for its absence.
Not until the final act do the Roses amp up their war to the blisteringly comic levels teased in the trailer, and by then it feels too little too late in terms of verve or style. Worse still, the transition from bouncy American comedy with occasional mean jokes feels downright jarring when it comes to the point where they're actually aiming to kill each other. Rather than the inevitable path DeVito's lawyer once warned us of, this last act of The Roses just feels like we've walked into a different movie altogether.
Kate McKinnon is woefully miscast in The Roses. Credit: Jaap Buitendijk / Searchlight PicturesThroughout the film. Roach seems to regret taking on a dark comedy, peppering his cast with comedians far more known for goofiness than wilting wit. Samberg is in the DeVito role of the husband's friend/lawyer, but is saddled with a barrage of cliched asides about the "inertia" of marriage. Even his signature warmth and silliness can't shake off the cobwebs of such dusty jokes.
His partner onscreen is fellow SNL alum McKinnon, who, though she was a wondrous scene-stealer in Barbie, is actually exhausting here, beating a one-note joke into the ground. As a horny wifey, she wants to bang Cumberbatch's Theo. It's her only character trait besides being awkward. And whether it's flirtations that are vaguely threatening or done in front of her husband as brazen emasculation, they just aren't funny, even in a cringe sensibility. Yet Roach treats this thread like rich terrain, endlessly giving McKinnon screen time to flirt clumsily, but never hilariously.
Other comedic talents are likewise misused. Sunita Mani (Death of a Unicorn) and Ncuti Gatwa (Doctor Who) have bit parts as Ivy's loyal sous chef and head waiter, mugging possibly more often than they actually get lines. Jamie Demetriou, a master of offbeat comedy, and Zoë Chao, who shined in The Afterparty, get only a couple of scenes as an annoying couple who can't read social cues.
The only scene where supporting players bring the heat this comedy desperately needs is when Allison Janney and Samberg face off in a scene that's very reminiscent of A Marriage Story. Samberg is the bumbling male attorney cowed by the ferocious female lawyer, who is equal amounts vicious and step-on-my-neck sexy as hell. Janney is perfectly cast and makes a meal out of every diva-like line. Joan Crawford would be proud.
The Roses lacks thorns and pricks.While Cumberbatch is committed, Colman is a heavier hitter when it comes to nasty comedy. His cutting remarks score the occasional chuckle, but hers land like you'd expect from a royal bitch (like her queen in The Favourite) — devastating and regal. In these moments, we see a glimpse of what this could have been for The Roses. But Roach seems scared of giving his audience some truly detestable characters, so at every turn their bitterness is undercut by sidekicks yukking it up or an earnest attempt to even the scales with a new emotional twist or revealed vulnerability. All this softening blunts the cutting comedy that was the dark heart of DeVito's The War of the Roses (no, I never read the book). And here, it feels less dark and more a tad saucy.
A comedy about a couple gone so toxic that they're actively competing to murder each other over their dream house should be more dynamic, darker, and damned funny. The Roses by any other name would still be a middling comedy, but compared to the caustic and sexy '89 gem? It can't shine.
The Toxic Avenger review: Gory cult classic reboot is the perfect antidote to superhero fatigue
In a world oversaturated by bland, same-y superhero films, only one movie can rise above and deliver the most gonzo hero we've seen in years. That film is The Toxic Avenger, and it's here to give all your favorite MCU and DC denizens a radioactive kick to the nuts.
The Toxic Avenger reimagines independent film company Troma Entertainment's ultra-campy, ultra-violent 1984 cult classic of the same name. The original film sent up superhero tropes with mean-spirited glee, especially when it came to its protagonist: a nerdy janitor-turned-toxic monster. Now, director Macon Blair (I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore) looks to do something similar with his take on The Toxic Avenger — albeit in a very different media landscape.
Despite slowly increasing fatigue from audiences, there's no doubt that superhero movies are a dominant culture force. And given that it is, by nature, a superhero movie, The Toxic Avenger inevitably finds itself walking the line between the big comic book films of today and its own countercultural roots. That tension is evident throughout the movie, right down to its production companies: Legendary Entertainment (which brought us The Dark Knight trilogy, the MonsterVerse, and Dune) and Troma itself.
So what happens when you push the rebellious, bonkers, and often offensive energy of the original Toxic Avenger into a 2023 studio superhero flick? Gloriously bloody mayhem, for starters. Yet there is also the sense that The Toxic Avenger is holding itself back — and while that thankfully doesn't last too long, it recalls the restraint of other modern-day superhero films in a way that feels antithetical to The Toxic Avenger's madcap project.
The Toxic Avenger's backstory hits some familiar beats before letting loose. Peter Dinklage in "The Toxic Avenger." Credit: Legendary EntertainmentMost of this restraint occurs in the first third of the movie as we first get to know the Toxic Avenger himself, aka Winston Gooze (Peter Dinklage). He's a down-on-his-luck janitor trying to connect with his stepson, Wade (Jacob Tremblay), who recently lost his mother to cancer. When Winston discovers he has a terminal illness and that his health insurance won't cover a crucial experimental treatment, he appeals directly to his boss, Bob Garbinger (Kevin Bacon), for help.
The only problem? As his last name suggests, Bob is a garbage person. He heads up the sinister BTH corporation, which pollutes the town of St. Roma's Village with toxic waste and peddles carcinogenic wellness products to its customers. So, no, he has no desire to help a dying, low-level employee.
A desperate Winston attempts to take matters into his own hands with a BTH robbery, but an unfortunate chemical accident at the factory leads to a toxic makeover. Armed with his hideous new looks and staggering new super strength, Winston teams up with investigative reporter J.J. Doherty (Taylour Paige) to destroy BTH once and for all.
The band known as the Killer Nutz. Credit: Legendary EntertainmentBetween the evil boss, the father-son bonding, and the corporate vigilantism, The Toxic Avenger treads well-worn ground here. While these elements do provide higher emotional stakes for Winston, they also fit snugly into the framework of other superhero stories, even as The Toxic Avenger works hard not to fall into that box.
Blair acknowledges this superhero familiarity with meta nods like a literal "save the cat" moment and a dark, brooding opening voiceover. "I didn't want any of this," Dinklage snarls, right before a sped-up montage of the film's most WTF moments. Think of it as the most extreme "record scratch, freeze frame" meme ever — one that garners laughs, but also promises that while you'll have to sit through some story beats you've seen before, the weird stuff is on its way.
To The Toxic Avenger's credit, there's certainly no shortage of strangeness right before Winston gets toxified. Tongue-in-cheek location names like "Ye Olde Shithead District" and "Depressing Outskirts" establish the film's screwball self-awareness. Elsewhere, the introduction of a killer "monstercore" band called the Killer Nutz — part Insane Clown Posse, part Satanic cult — teases bizarro battles to come. But for Winston, it's superhero origin story business as usual — at least, until he rips a man's arm off.
The Toxic Avenger unleashed is the most fun a superhero movie can be. Elijah Wood in "The Toxic Avenger." Credit: Legendary EntertainmentFrom that arm rip on, the vibe shifts for the wilder — and the better. As the Toxic Avenger (or Toxie, as he becomes affectionately known), Winston goes on a violent rampage for the ages. Faces get smashed. Eyeballs get popped. Entire bodies get shredded. Blood and viscera pile up; butts and guts receive their moment in the spotlight; gore fiends everywhere rejoice.
These fight scenes, in all their gloopy glory (minus some less than convincing CGI blood), are a major testament to The Toxic Avenger's use of practical effects. The effects truly shine when it comes to the Toxic Avenger's look itself. Dinklage disappears beneath layers of impressive prosthetics, boasting nasty green muscles, burbling purple boils, and a disconcerting (and detachable!) red eye. Yet we never lose sight of Winston himself, with Dinklage doing an admirable job emoting with Toxie's get-up. From twirling in a tutu to kicking ass with a radioactive mop, Dinklage is clearly game for anything — and it's that total commitment to the ridiculousness that makes his performance shine.
That attitude extends to the rest of The Toxic Avenger's ensemble. As Bob's brother Fritz, Elijah Wood enters peak weird little goblin guy mode, and the film is all the better for it. Elsewhere, Paige channels her inner action hero, and Tremblay brings the house down with a dance — sorry, "property movement" — piece to be remembered. And of course, there's the total delight of Kevin Bacon as an unhinged villain. Bob swans around his mansion in a gold robe and flexes shirtless in TV commercials, with Bacon never missing a chance to go as big as possible.
Like Bacon, The Toxic Avenger gets better the bigger it goes, especially since "going bigger" means further distancing itself from the casings of standard superhero flicks. No major lore or superhero homework here (although you will catch a Troma Easter egg or two if you're looking). Instead, once The Toxic Avenger truly gets the ball rolling, you're in for the kind of sheer, stupid insanity you won't find in other major superhero IP. Let the blood and guts rain down — here, there's no such thing as overkill.
The Toxic Avenger is now in theaters.
UPDATE: Aug. 29, 2025, 9:47 a.m. The Toxic Avenger was reviewed out of its world premiere at 2023's Fantastic Fest.
EV tax credit ends on September 30, but theres a way to extend it
If you're looking to buy an electric car in the U.S. and get the $7,500 tax credit after it ends on September 30, there is now a way to do that – but not by very long.
Yes, the $7,500 federal EV tax credit still ends on September 30, per Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," which was signed into law in July. But previous rules required buyers to actually receive the car before that date, and this is no longer the case.
Per CNBC, new IRS guidance, released on August 21, changes the rules slightly in favor of the buyer.
"A vehicle is 'acquired' as of the date a written binding contract is entered into and a payment has been made. A payment includes a nominal downpayment or a vehicle trade-in," say the new rules.
This means that you only have to sign a contract and make a payment for an EV by Sept. 30, but the vehicle itself can be delivered at a later date.
SEE ALSO: New Tesla Model Y Performance: Lightning quick acceleration, great range, and moreOf course, just like before, you still have to make sure both you and the car you're buying can qualify for the tax credit. You can search for eligible vehicles over at the United States Environmental Protection Agency's website. As for potential buyers, individuals must have an income under $150,000; a head of household must earn less than $225,000, and married couples must make less than $300,000.
The Thursday Murder Clubs Helen Mirren reveals the word she hates to be called
Whether or not they'd read Richard Osman's The Thursday Murder Club, heralded English actors Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, and Sir Ben Kingsley were all elated to join forces for the best-selling novel's highly anticipated adaptation.
In an interview with Mashable entertainment editor Kristy Puchko, Mirren, Brosnan, Kingsley, and director Chris Columbus share not only their enthusiasm for working together and the challenges of bringing this beloved book to life, but also a particular pet peeve touched on in the film itself.
The Thursday Murder Club follows a quartet of pensioners who dedicate their free time to solving murder mysteries. So when a couple of acquaintances turn up dead, they're on the case! And they won't take any guff from those who underestimate them because of their age — even each other.
In one scene in particular, Joyce Meadowcroft (Celia Imrie) and Elizabeth Best (Mirren) are going undercover, and in her excitement, Joyce says, "This is ever so exciting. I feel like we're in one of those Sunday night dramas about two bright-eyed, feisty old lady detectives, outsmarting the police at every turn. Do you feel like that?"
To which Elizabeth responds, "No. And Joyce, never use the words 'bright-eyed feisty old ladies' in my presence again."
When asked if Mirren could relate to Elizabeth's disdain for this phrase, the legendary actor declared, "I loathe the word 'feisty,'" adding, "Just hate that word, like 'Fuck off,' basically." She went on to call it an "awful, awful word."
In The Thursday Murder Club, Mirren and her co-stars show there is much more to their characters than ageists might assume. In the interview above, each of them touches on the pleasures of finding these characters' depths and working as an ensemble.
For more Mashable interviews with your favorite stars, check out our Say More series.
The four-pack of Apple AirTags is just over $5 away from their lowest price ever
Save 29%: As of Aug. 29, you can pick up a four-pack of Apple AirTags for $69.99 at Amazon, saving you $29.01 on their full price of $99.
Opens in a new window Credit: Apple Apple AirTag (4-pack) $69.99 at Amazon$99 Save $29.01 Get Deal
Apple might be releasing a new AirTag alongside the iPhone 17 this fall, but if you've been in the market for a Bluetooth tracker, this deal is making a solid case for anyone who doesn't want to wait.
As of Aug. 29 at Amazon, you can grab a four-pack of AirTags for just $69.99 — that's $29.01 cheaper than their $99 list price. It's not quite the lowest price we've seen this pack hit, but it is just $5.50 away from its lowest price ever, according to the price tracker camelcamelcamel.
SEE ALSO: Apple AirPods 4 are under $90 ahead of Labor Day — don't miss outEven at full price, the four pack of AirTags is a better value than buying them piecemeal: you pay $24.75 per tracker, compare to $29 per tracker. With this sale price, the value gets even better, bringing the per-tracker price down to $17.50.
Apple's Bluetooth trackers use the enabled Find My devices to help track its location, meaning you're not just bound by the range to your own devices. As with most products within the Apple ecosystem, AirTags are also easy to set up. While they're not compatible with Android devices and require the purchase of a key ring or lanyard, they are a great tracker for Apple users, and at this price point, they're a great value, too.
How to watch Djokovic vs. Norrie online for free
TL;DR: Live stream Djokovic vs. Norrie in the 2025 US Open for free on 9Now. Access this free streaming platform from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
There are a number of really interesting matchups in the third round of the 2025 US Open, but Djokovic vs. Norrie might be the best. All eyes will be Djokovic to see if he can roll back the clock and make his first Grand Slam final of 2025. Alcaraz and Sinner will likely stand in his way in the latter stages, but for now, he needs to get past Cameron Norrie.
If you want to watch Djokovic vs. Norrie in the 2025 US Open for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
How to watch Djokovic vs. Norrie for freeDjokovic vs. Norrie in the 2025 US Open is available to live stream for free on 9Now.
9Now is geo-restricted to Australia, but anyone from around the world can access this site with a VPN. These handy tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to secure servers in Australia, meaning you can unblock 9Now from anywhere in the world.
Access free live streams of the 2025 US Open by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in Australia
Visit 9Now
Watch the 2025 US Open for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but leading VPNs do tend to offer free-trial periods or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can gain access to free live streams without committing with your cash. This is obviously not a long-term solution, but it does give you time to watch the 2025 US Open before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for 9Now?ExpressVPN is the best service for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including Australia
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Up to eight simultaneous connections
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A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $99.95 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee. Alternatively, you can get a one-month plan for $12.95 (with money-back guarantee).
Live stream Djokovic vs. Norrie for free from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.


