Since "M3GAN" came out in 2023, artificial intelligence has now become a constant talking point and more of a part of our daily life and culture. Yet strangely, the killer robot girl who shimmied and ...
“M3GAN 2.0” is another shiny display case for its violent antiheroine, an artificially intelligent doll with little regard for human life. In the new movie, there are two of them: Meet AMELIA, a ...
What would an Avengers-level event set in the M3GAN universe look like? Star Allison Williams and director Gerard Johnstone normally don’t have to think about such questions, except now they have ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover Hollywood and entertainment. M3GAN 2.0, a sequel to the 2022 hit M3GAN starring Allison Williams, is now in theaters. When ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover Hollywood and entertainment. M3GAN 2.0 — the sequel to the 2022 horror hit M3GAN — has footage in the end credits. What ...
M3GAN gets her 'Terminator 2' moment in an action-packed sequel that loses some of the first film's horror charms. Reading time 4 minutes M3GAN 2.0 delivers a bloody slay of a sequel, one that ...
Running time: 119 minutes. Rated PG-13 (strong violent content, bloody images, some strong language, sexual material, and brief drug references). In theaters June 27. Toys “R” Ugh. M3GAN, the AI doll ...
“M3GAN 2.0” is bringing its eponymous killer robot back, and this time, it is giving her another murderous android to fight. The bonkers new “M3GAN 2.0” trailer begins with the titular M3GAN (played ...
“M3GANs, can you look into the distance please?” a choreographer asks, watching a photo shoot unfold. “Thank you!” Two actors dressed as the enigmatic villain from “M3GAN,” the 2023 film about a ...
The problem with M3GAN 2.0, the sequel to 2022's surprise hit/meme-generator about a killer robot determined to protect her young charge, is that its title denotes something that the film's audience ...
Any technology we don’t fully comprehend we turn into horror, a truism that reaches back to Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” (medical science) and ahead to “The Ring” (VCRs). Of late, the bogeymen have ...