Surprise? The most popular film on Letterboxd in 2023 is perfectly predictable

Ken and Barbie driving away from an atomic bomb.

In 2023, cinema was so back with cultural moments like Barbenheimer and new releases from Greta Gerwig, Martin Scorsese, and Yorgos Lanthimos, making it a busy year for Letterboxd’s 11 million users.

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The social media platform used by online cinephiles to log, rate, and review films just dropped its Year in Review, revealing which movies its users watched and loved the most. Unsurprisingly, Gerwig’s Barbie was the most popular “based on volume of activity” and the most obsessively rewatched. Its star Margot Robbie had the most eyes on her, as she was the platform’s most-watched actress.

But fear not, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer got its flowers too: It was the third highest-rated film, highest-rated drama, and Nolan was the most watched director for the third year in a row.

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The second animated Spider-Verse movie, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, was the highest-rated flick followed by Poor Things. The highest-rated directorial debut and romance movie was Celine Song’s gorgeous Past Lives. The most watched actor was Jason Schwartzman — who certainly got a boost from his starring role in Wes Anderson’s latest, Asteroid City.

Poor Things was the highest-rated comedy, fantasy, and sci-fi movie and Talk To Me the highest rated horror film. And Beyoncé beat out Taylor Swift for the highest-rated concert film.

Despite Scorsese joining Letterboxd to promote it, Killers of the Flower Moon didn’t rank in any category, but this data only speaks to the kind of person attracted to the platform.

And what are Letterboxd users are most looking forward to in 2024? Dune: Part Two, of course.

Shop the best winter clearance sales at Amazon, Target, Best Buy, and Walmart

Winter clearance deal items from Amazon, Walmart, and Best Buy

It’s peak post-holiday sale season. Grab home goods, tech, fitness gear, toys, and more products on winter clearance sale from Amazon, Best Buy, Target, and Walmart.

A quick look at the best winter clearance sales:

Amazon Winter Sale

Peloton, FitBit, Beats Earbuds, and more

Save up to 85% off

Amazon logo


Best Buy 3-Day Sale

Apple, Dell, Samsung, and More

Save up to $1,600

Best Buy Logo


The Target Clearance Run

LEGO, clothes, and holiday decor

Save up to 50% off

Target logo


Walmart End-of-Year Clearance

Home, tech, toys, and furniture

Save up to 50%

Walmart logo


The holiday season may be over but some of the biggest retailers are still launching excellent deals as part of winter clearance sales. You can expect savings on home essentials, big-ticket tech items like TVs and Laptops, and discounted holiday decor for next year.

Below, we’ve highlighted some of our favorite winter clearance sales as of today, Jan. 5.

Best winter clearance sale overall

Amazon logo

Credit: Amazon

Our pick: Amazon Winter Sale

Save up to 85% on home, tech, and fitness

Why we like it

Amazon’s Winter Sale features deals for every aspect of life: Keurig coffee makers, Samsung monitors, and Peloton bikes and accessories all pop up right away under the Winter Sale Favorites header. What’s more, there are enough deals on electronics, apparel, home, kitchen, and sports goods to fill 338 pages of discounted items. The sale will run through Jan. 7, so score these deals while you can.

Best winter clearance sale for tech

Best Buy Logo

Credit: Best Buy

Our pick: Best Buy 3-Day Sale

Save up to $1,600 on TVs, laptops, tablets and more

Why we like it

From today, Jan. 5 to Jan. 7 at 11:59 p.m. CT, Best Buy is running its massive 3-Day Sale on all your favorite major tech items. TVs, projectors, computers, laptops, tablets, cell phones, and headphones are all on sale with savings as high as $1,600. (As in the case of the Samsung 77-inch Class S89C OLED 4K UHD Smart Tizen TV.) You can shop 28 different categories, including Exclusive Member Deals.

Best winter clearance sale for toys and kids

Target logo

Credit: Target

Our pick: The Target Clearance Run

Save up to 50% on toys, clothes, and holiday decor

Why we like it

If you have little ones, you won’t want to sleep on the Target Clearance Run. As of today, Jan. 5, you can save up to 50% on baby clothes, children’s clothes, toys, shoes, home goods, and more. With prices dropping as low as $8.50 for baby pajamas and $6.79 for select LEGO sets, these prices are hard to beat. Plus, you can even get ahead on next year’s shopping when you take advantage of the holiday clearance deals. The Target Clearance Run has been going on since Dec. 26 and will remain active as supplies last, so you’ll want to shop before these deals are gone.

Best winter clearance sale for home and furniture

Walmart logo

Credit: Walmart

Our pick: Walmart End-of-Year Clearance

Save up to 50% on home, apparel, tech, and furniture

Why we like it

When you shop Walmart’s End-of-Year Clearance sale, you can save up to 50% off winter clearance items spanning 14 different categories including home, fashion, tech, furniture, and toys. If home improvement is on your New Year’s resolution list for 2024, then this is the sale for you: You can find robot vacuums for under $100, save $259 on a rolling tool chest, and score a Dyna-Glo charcoal grill for a little over $300.

More winter clearance sales:

  • Dick’s Sporting Goods — up to 70% on apparel, footwear, and sports gear

  • Kohl’s — up to 70% off on clearance clothing for the whole family

  • Macy’s — save 40%-60% on clothes, kitchen, and bed and bath

  • REI — save up to 50% on outdoor apparel and camping, hiking, and climbing gear

YouTube demonetizes public domain ‘Steamboat Willie’ video after copyright claim

Steamboat Willie

Planning to utilize new public domain works featuring Mickey Mouse this year? Well, here’s a case you should certainly pay attention to.

On Thursday, voice actor and YouTuber Brock Baker uploaded a new video, titled “Steamboat Willie (Brock’s Dub),”  to his YouTube channel with more than 1 million subscribers.

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How people are using Mickey Mouse in his post-copyright era

The video contains the entirety of the 1928 Disney animated short “Steamboat Willie,” with Baker providing his own comedic voice overs and sound effects throughout the less than 8 minute long cartoon.

According to Baker, shortly after uploading the clip though, YouTube demonetized the video, evidently on behalf of the erstwhile copyright owner, Disney. Baker also shared a screenshot to his X account showing the video was also being blocked from view in some territories as well.

Prior to this year, nothing here would be out of the ordinary. Disney is very protective of its copyrighted works and would likely be especially so of a film like Steamboat Willie as it stars its most iconic character, Mickey Mouse.

However, Steamboat Willie along with that 1928 version of Mickey Mouse, entered the public domain on January 1, 2024. This means that a video like Baker’s should be completely fine for the YouTuber to not only create and distribute, but monetize as well.

Baker could likely make a fair use or parody defense for his dubbed version of Steamboat Willie, but as Duke University’s Jennifer Jenkins, a professor of law teaching intellectual property, told Mashable this week, he doesn’t even need to make that argument. Public domain works are considered public property. 

“Reproducing and adapting the footage in whatever way you like is legit,” Jenkins told Mashable.

As soon as “Steamboat Willie” became public domain earlier this week, multiple different creative projects using the iconic mouse were announced. Some of these creative works include a horror movie and a video game.

So, what happened with Baker’s video? Mashable has reached out to YouTube to find out more information and will update this post when we hear back. However, due to how quickly Disney’s copyright claim was issued after Baker uploaded his “Steamboat Willie” video, it’s likely the video was a victim of the automated Content ID process.

“Videos uploaded to YouTube are scanned against a database of audio and visual content that’s been submitted to YouTube by copyright owners,” reads YouTube’s policy page on its Content ID feature. “When Content ID finds a match, it applies a Content ID claim to the matching video.”

If this is the case, YouTube nor Disney appear to have updated the database to remove works that have recently entered the public domain. And, if so, it seems that should certainly be programmed into the Content ID system as an automated process, much like the valid claims are.

Mashable will keep you updated on the status of Baker’s video.

Government site crashed minutes after posting Jeffrey Epstein documents

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell

The government site hosting the newly unsealed Jeffrey Epstein case files had one job.

Unfortunately, PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records) couldn’t withhold the strain of demand for the documents mentioning figures like Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, and Stephen Hawking in relation to Jeffrey Epstein. According to Vice, the PACER site crashed soon after the documents containing flight logs, un-redacted testimony, and incriminating details about Epstein’s relationships to several household names were uploaded.

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On Wednesday night at 7 p.m. EST, U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ordered documents pertaining to a civil lawsuit against Epstein’s helper/madame in sex trafficking Ghislaine Maxwell. But within minutes, the site had crashed.

The PACER site is notoriously antiquated and buggy. Most people don’t have to deal with the tedious and overly complicated platform on a regular basis. But this is one of the most high profile cases in recent history, which suddenly put PACER in the spotlight. PACER is evidently in desperate need of a site overhaul, but the crash also underscores the immense demand for details about Epstein’s black book and high profile figures complicit in his dealings.

Luckily, some people were quick enough to download the documents before the site crashed, so there are many places where you can view the 900 pages of case documents. However, it’s not a great look for digital age democracy.

You can read and download the documents for free through sites like PlainSite and 404 Media. But to access them on PACER you have to pay 10 cents a page. That’s right, PACER charges you to access public records.

The site seems to be back up, but what’s the point when you can get them elsewhere for free?

How to enable Link History on Facebook

How to enable Link History on Facebook

Have you allowed Link History on Facebook?

Many users on Facebook are being prompted with a pop-up when they log onto the app on their phones that reads: “Easily get back to recent links you’ve visited with your Facebook browsing activity now saved in one place. When you allow link history, we may use your information to improve your ads across Meta technologies. You can manage your link history in settings in your Browser settings anytime.”

SEE ALSO:

I tried out Facebook’s ad-free tier. Here’s what it’s like.

Link History, as the name suggests, enables users to find links they’ve clicked on the app. So, for instance, if you clicked on an ad for a jewelry two weeks ago and want to find it later, you’d be able to with Link History. You can also see this with your “Recent Ad Activity,” but Link History will show you every link you click — not just ads.

“You can view websites you’ve visited on Facebook in the past 30 days in the Link history page, Facebook wrote. “Link history is a list of links to the websites you’ve visited on Facebook’s mobile browser.”

As Social Media Today pointed out, this isn’t new for Meta, but this pop-up is a sign that it’s opening up to more regions. If you didn’t get the pop up and want to enable it, head to your profile, tap settings and privacy, tap link history, and click “allow link history.”

But keep in mind that if you do decide to allow Facebook to save all your link clicks, Facebook “may use this link history information from our browser to improve your ads across Meta technologies.”

There’s a keyboard for the iPhone now, and it reminds me of my old BlackBerry

Clicks mobile accessory

Today’s phones are zippier, larger, smarter, and more powerful, arguably making them better than the phones of the distant past. But there’s one thing — in my opinion — that has gotten worse: typing.

Whether I’m typing on the iPhone 15 Pro Max or the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra (I’m a tech reviewer so I’m often juggling several phones), the typing experience isn’t optimal. I miss the days of the physical keyboard, à la the once-popular Sidekick or BlackBerry Curve, which made it easier for my fingers to fly while texting.

We thought we just had to grin and bear it. After all, it’s a trade-off of having a slick touchscreen. However, it seems like the days of just “dealing with it” are over, thanks to a new mobile accessory.

Clicks mobile accessory


Credit: Clicks Technology

‘Clicks’ adds a keyboard to your iPhone

Clicks is billed as new keyboard accessory that “brings a real keyboard to iPhone,” according to the press release.

It solves three problems:

  1. The awkwardness of typing on a touchscreen with poor tangibility

  2. The invasiveness of virtual keyboards that take up too much screen real estate

  3. Not having access to keyboard shortcuts (e.g., CMD + A for Select All)

With Clicks snapped to your iPhone, you can now enjoy a physical keyboard that reportedly feels more natural. Plus, you get more screen real estate and you can use shortcuts like “CMD + H” to pull up the Home Screen and “CMD + H” to launch Search.

“We use keyboards on our desktops, laptops and tablets every day – so it’s kind of odd that we abandoned physical buttons on the smartphone,” said Clicks co-founder Michael Fisher, a YouTube tech reviewer with 1.2 million subscribers. “Clicks brings the tactility and precision of a physical keyboard to iPhone, so people don’t have to wait until they get back to their desks to create or communicate with the satisfying feedback only real buttons can provide.”

Clicks is the first product from Clicks Technology, a new company launched with Fisher (also known as MrMobile) and Kevin Michaluk (also known as Crackberry Kevin). 

Clicks can connect to your iPhone via Lightning or USB-C. It’s available for pre-order now at Clicks.tech with a price of $139 (USD). It will begin shipping Feb. 1.

‘Night Swim’ review: More like Amityville bore

Kerry Condon is under water in

Last January, Blumhouse gave us the absolute treasure that is murder doll M3GAN. This January, the horror studio has tossed us Night Swim. The former was an instantly iconic horror hit that played with genre conventions through a gleefully queer lens. The latter is an uninspired slog that plays in the deep end of cliches until it drowns. 

Written and directed by Bryce McGuire, Night Swim shamelessly riffs on unforgettable moments in Jaws, It, and Ghostbusters, while snatching the framing device from The Amityville Horror. Genre devotees will catch the references, as none are subtle, but these allusions only serve to remind us we could be watching a much better movie instead of this mid-winter fumble.

Grimly, this film doesn’t even satisfy as a so-dumb-it’s-fun horror romp — though I’d be remiss not to admit there are some highlights.

What’s Night Swim about?

Gavin Warren in a pool in "Night Swim."

Gavin Warren goes for a day swim in “Night Swim.”
Credit: Universal

Wyatt Russell stars as Ray Waller, a family man and professional baseball player who was recently forced into retirement by a multiple sclerosis diagnosis. As he struggles with his new reality, his wife Eve (The Banshees of Inisherin‘s Kerry Condon) and kids (Amélie Hoeferle and Gavin Warren) set up their new home, which boasts a big in-ground pool fed by natural spring water. Having bounced around for his career, the family is giddy about this suburban dream and the chance to finally put down roots. But the pool has other plans — because it’s haunted. 

Much like The Amityville Horror, the paranormal influence of this home most dangerously impacts the frustrated father. While his family witnesses horrific visions in and around the pool, Ray feels rejuvenated by the waters. So, like the abusive fathers who came before him, his priorities become dangerously selfish. Might Ray overcome MS with continued used of the pool? Could he return to the pro league? At what cost? Can the Waller family survive his devotion to his “water therapy”?

Wyatt Russell is woefully miscast in Night Swim.

Wyatt Russell plays Ray Waller in "Night Swim."

Wyatt Russell is a cinnamon bun.
Credit: Universal

Key to the tension of The Amityville Horror movies — specifically the 1979 original and the 2005 remake — is the toxic masculinity that exudes from the father figure. In both instances, you have a man who wants to be a good dad, but the evil influence of the poltergeists in the house pushes him to a place of bullying and violence. Night Swim attempts to reconstruct this arc, but half-heartedly. For instance, Ray may be more focused on his workouts than spending time with his young son Elliot (Warren), whom Ray is generally supportive of even though the boy is (gasp!) not great at sports. 

But part of the problem is that Russell has such Golden Retriever energy that he just doesn’t read as a threat — even when the third act pitches Ray into full-on rage mode. The rampaging father should come off as menacing, but audience members were giggling as Russell shouted one-liners about the pool and the rules of Marco Polo. It’s less Jack Torrance and more Jack Lemmon. 

Night Swim is just not scary.

Shot of swimming pool through the pool filter.

Pennywise, is that you?
Credit: Universal

Aside from an underwhelming bad dad, this haunted pool thriller is awash with predictable jump scares and unoriginal creepy crawlies. An opening sequence set 30 years ago introduces a toy boat that serves as a lure for an innocent child. This light allusion to It becomes groan-inducing when another kid follows a toy toward the pool filter, which looks so much like the sewer grate setup of Pennywise the Clown attacking doomed Georgie that it flat-out feels like plagiarism. 

Night Swim‘s first onscreen death in the pool works the same way, copying the iconic stunt choreography in the opening scene from Jaws beat for beat. Although McGuire is copying a master in these sequences, his versions fall flat. Perhaps because they feel like pale imitations, so too do the monsters that lurk in the depths. Some resemble generic scribbles of ghouls from any number of forgettable horror movies, while one bloated fellow looks and sounds comically like Ghostbuster‘s Slimer.

Further frustrating is the movie’s explanation for why the pool is haunted. To his credit, McGuire manages to jam in some compelling backstory. But to do so, he delivers an overlong sequence that employs stock horror imagery, like eyes dripping black goo, as well as a tiger mom stereotype that is as insensitive as it is uninspired. And all that leads to a climax that — while studded with spookiness and action — is just a mess, completed by a shrug of a resolution. 

The scariest sequence is the Marco Polo bit revealed in the trailer. 

Amélie Hoeferle night swims in "Night Swim."

Amélie Hoeferle makes a splash in the scariest scene from “”Night Swim.”
Credit: Universal

Night Swim makes frequent use of water as a cinematography device, with shots of people looking into the water or through the water up to the surface to build tension. While McGuire’s movie plays with the unnerving visual distortion therein, there is little lasting terror to be enjoyed. Perhaps this is because he’s pulling so much from recognizable horror hits that we are inured; even the film’s best sequence might be considered a riff on The Conjuring‘s sensational hide-and-clap sequence, notably constructed by Night Swim producer James Wan. 

At night, teen daughter Izzy (Hoeferle) has snuck her new beau over for a night swim. While her character is as thinly sketched as the rest of the Wallers, here the stakes are clear. Teen lust, flirtation, skin, fear of rejection — there are layers of vulnerability here, even without the pool poltergeists. The shots of Izzy with her eyes closed, stepping cautiously into the deep end as she calls out “Marco,” rattle with suspense. From this jumping-off point, McGuire dives into real terror with a scare that is the stuff of nightmares. But it is all too brief. 

The supporting players of Night Swim shine. 

Nancy Lenehan and the Waller family in "Night Swim."

Nancy Lenehan is a selling point as real estate agent in “Night Swim.”
Credit: Universal

While the Waller family is let down by a script that has little interest in their personalities and generally bland dialogue, a couple of character actors manage to break through. High Maintenance star Ben Sinclair scores genuine laughs as a pool tech whose main job is to drop some clues to the pool’s creepiness. Sporting a smug grin and a ball cap for Orca Pool Services (Jaws reference noted), he manages to make a meal out of this scrap of a part. 

Also splendid is consummate That Guy Nancy Lenehan. The moment you see her strained smile, you might remember her from Veep or My Name Is Earl or over 100 other performances. In Night Swim, she plays an eager-to-please real estate agent who at first seems like she might be a one-scene wonder like Sinclair. But then — thankfully — she turns up for a pool party with a bizarre blue dessert and plenty to say.

Where other performers in this film are anchored by the exposition dumps, Sinclair and Lenehan manage to make their characters come alive while delivering their dark details. In these moments, characters enthrall and entertain! There’s the promise that Night Swim might right itself and plunge into fun and thrills. Spoilers: It won’t. 

Pulling inspiration from a flood of uniquely terrifying movies, Night Swim wades into horror with the right moves but no fluidity in how they come together. While it has splashes of fun, it’s ultimately a lazy effort that feels totally disposable.

Night Swim is in theaters Jan. 5.

See the moment a 13-year-old seemingly beats Tetris for the first time in history

A screenshot of Gibson's winning screen on the left, and Gibson's reaction on the right. His mouth is open in shock and he has put his hand to his head.

In a video uploaded to YouTube on Jan. 1, Willis Gibson plays the video game Tetris until the game freezes. In that moment, the 13-year-old from Oklahoma is thought to have been the first human player to advance so far into the original Nintendo version of the game.

The remarkable moment happens around 38 minutes and 29 seconds into the video, after which the teen is overcome by the shock of his own achievement. We’ve timestamped the moment for you in the video below.

Tetris is a puzzle video game created by Soviet software engineer Alexey Pajitnov in 1985. A portmanteau of “tetra” (meaning “four”) and “tennis,” Tetris is played by maneuvering falling block pieces into solid horizontal lines, at which point the lines disappear and make room for more lines. Players lose when the build up of blocks breaches the upper limit of the playing screen. The game becomes more difficult at upper levels as the blocks fall at faster and faster speeds.

In the past, enthusiasts have developed artificial intelligence to play the game at levels thought too advanced for living, breathing players. Gibson’s performance, during which he reached Level 157, was practically superhuman. “It’s never been done by a human before,” Vince Clemente, the president of the Classic Tetris World Championship, told the New York Times. “It’s basically something that everyone thought was impossible until a couple of years ago.”

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In October, Gibson placed third at the Classic Tetris World Championship, after joining the competition as a relative unknown. He has only been playing Tetris for around two years, and has made about $3,000 in Tetris tournaments so far, according to the Times. Gibson posted the recording of his feat to his YouTube channel, where he regularly shares mesmerizing footage of him playing puzzle game under the name Blue Scuti.

‘Abbott Elementary’s Quinta Brunson teaches Cookie Monster about kindness in sweet ‘Sesame Street’ clip

Muppets Abby Cadabby and Elmo.

What do you get when Sesame Street and Abbott Elementary join forces? A supremely wholesome crossover, that’s what.

Abbott Elementary star and creator Quinta Brunson teaches Muppets Elmo, Abby Cadabby, and Cookie Monster all about kindness in a school-focused episode. While Elmo and Abby seem to understand the concept, Cookie Monster’s having a tougher time. He knows it’s kind to clean up, but unfortunately, his version of cleaning up means eating all of Brunson’s school supplies. (In a nod to the pilot of Abbott Elementary, Brunson mentions he’s even eaten her important story time rug.)

Sesame Street pays further tribute to Abbott Elementary by framing the clip as a mockumentary, allowing Brunson to channel some Janine Teagues. But will she be able to get through to Cookie Monster in time, and save her classroom from being devoured?

‘Saltburn’ gives ‘Murder On The Dancefloor’ new life 20 years after its release

Barry Keoghan lying shirtless in the grass in 'Saltburn.'

While everyone was holed up at home for the holidays, Emerald Fennell’s shocking — or not-so-shocking depending on who you ask — tale of class and obsession in the early 2000s, Saltburn, hit streaming…and bombarded our Twitter/X timelines and TikTok FYPs.

Starring Barry Keoghan as Oliver, a weird little freak, and Jacob Elordi as Felix, a gorgeous charismatic rich boy, the film generated endless discourse as seen in the emergence of Felix “fancams” and the now infamous bathwater-drinking scene inspiring homemade goods, but no part got more air time than the film’s final sequence where Oliver dances around Felix’s family’s estate fully naked to the 2001 hit “Murder On The Dancefloor” by Sophie Ellis-Bextor. So perhaps it’s unsurprising that its impact has left the Film Twitter-verse and entered the charts.

SEE ALSO:

‘Saltburn’ review: Sick, savage, and satisfying

It’s joined the likes of Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill” as songs given a second life by zeitgeisty media in the TikTok era. On Dec. 31 — three days after Saltburn became available on Amazon Prime Video — “Murder On The Dancefloor” had its highest daily global streams on Spotify clocking in at 1.5 million. It also entered the Global Spotify chart for the first time. Today it reached no. 1 on Spotify’s Viral 50 chart.

On New Year’s Eve, Ellis-Bextor posted a TikTok recreating Oliver’s dance moves wearing antlers similar to the ones he sports in the film. It garnered over 4.3 million views and nearly 500,000 likes.

That’s not the only use of the song on TikTok. A video posted by @ellie__.e dancing to the track in a large house was recirculated on Twitter with the caption, “Saltburn gave rich people a trend to do and I love it,” which sparked debate over the film’s murky class politics.

But the song is mostly being used on TikTok either to react to Saltburn or the “things I suffer from” trend where users list the acronyms of all the things they suffer from. Regardless, “Murder On The Dancefloor” is a testament to Saltburn‘s online impact — and Keoghan’s dance moves.