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Miss the Golden Age of Weird Netflix? Try ‘Frankenstein’s Monster’s Monster, Frankenstein’
TV & Streaming

Miss the Golden Age of Weird Netflix? Try ‘Frankenstein’s Monster’s Monster, Frankenstein’

by jummy84 November 22, 2025
written by jummy84

This surreal half-hour comedy special came to the streaming platform in 2019. But with Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” and “Stranger Things” Season 5 in the news, it’s never been more timely.

November 22, 2025 0 comments
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First Look at Season 2 of 'Monarch: Legacy of Monsters' Kaiju Series
Hollywood

First Look at Season 2 of ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters’ Kaiju Series

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

First Look at Season 2 of ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters’ Kaiju Series

by Alex Billington
November 13, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Attention surfers – the beach is closed!” Hello there, big guy! Apple TV has unveiled the first look teaser for their next exciting Season 2 of the hit sci-fi show Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, about Godzilla and King Kong and all the Kaiju (which are known as “Titans” in this series). This is a spin-off series based on the recent Godzilla movies, following people working for the secretive organization known as Monarch. The first season launched in 2023 and turned out to be pretty damn good. The next season continues onward in February 2026 after filming earlier this year. Based on Legendary’s Monsterverse, the 10-episode epic series follows two siblings find themselves revisiting the past to uncover the truth behind the secret “Monarch” organization and the many emerging monsters. Season 2 picks up with the fate of Monarch — and the world — hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The show stars Kurt Russell and Wyatt Russell (both are returning again), with Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Anders Holm, and Joe Tippett. It’s looks quite gnarly so far! Take a peek.

Here’s the first promo for Apple TV’s series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters – Season 2, from YouTube:

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Series Season 2

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Series Season 2

You can still watch Season 1 of Apple TV’s Monarch: Legacy of Monsters series streaming on Apple TV now.

Season two will pick up with the fate of Monarch — and the world — hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals many buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The ripple effects of the past make waves in the present day, blurring the bonds between family, friend and foe — all with the threat of a Titan event on the horizon. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters is a sci-fi action thriller series co-created by Chris Black (“Star Trek: Enterprise”, “Ugly Betty”, “Outcast”) & Matt Fraction (comic book writer; story consultant). Season 2 is showrun by Chris Black. With writing by Andrew Colville, Joe Pokaski, Kari Drake, Dan Dworkin, Ralph Eggleston, Tanner Hansinger, & Maria Melnik. And with episodes directed by Mairzee Almas and Lawrence Trilling. Executive produced by Chris Black, Jen Roskind, Matt Shakman, Lawrence Trilling, Joby Harold, Tory Tunnell, Andrew Colville, Hiro Matsuoka, Takemasa Arita. Co-produced by Toho Co., Ltd. Apple will debut the series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters – Season 2 streaming on Apple TV+ worldwide starting on February 27th, 2026 early next year with new episodes arriving weekly until May. Who’s ready for more?

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Find more posts in: Sci-Fi, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Ryan Reynolds
Bollywood

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Before the word “franchise” meant superheroes and crossovers, Universal Pictures built an empire of the undead. The studio’s 1930s run of horror classics did not just change cinema. It redefined how we see fear, beauty, and even ourselves.

When Dracula arrived in 1931, followed by Frankenstein, The Mummy, The Invisible Man, Bride of Frankenstein, and The Wolf Man, the world was only beginning to crawl out of the Great Depression. These were not escapist fantasies. They were reflections of unease, uncertainty, and guilt. Directors like Tod Browning, James Whale, and Karl Freund turned flickering shadows into psychological mirrors. They borrowed the visual grammar of German Expressionism, full of crooked lines, tilted worlds, and faces half-swallowed by light, and gave audiences a language for their fears.

It was never just about the monsters on screen. It was about what they said about us.

When Horror Learned to Feel

Boris Karloff’s Frankenstein’s Creature changed everything. Under thick makeup and silent agony, he brought a soul to horror. In one unforgettable scene, the creature kneels by a lake beside a little girl. She hands him a flower, he smiles, and then, not understanding his own strength, he throws her into the water. The moment is heartbreaking because it is human.

James Whale’s direction turned what could have been grotesque into something strangely poetic. The monster was never evil. The cruelty came from the villagers, from science without conscience, from a creator who abandoned his creation. That tragedy made audiences weep even as they recoiled. You can trace that same empathy in Edward Scissorhands, The Shape of Water, and King Kong. Horror became a place where compassion and terror could exist together.

If Karloff gave the genre its heart, Bela Lugosi gave it its swagger. His Dracula was not a beast hiding in shadows. He was the shadow. Every movement was measured, every syllable a seduction. Fear became something elegant. Since then, every vampire, from Anne Rice’s tormented Louis to Robert Pattinson’s glittering Edward, has borrowed a little from Lugosi’s cape.

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

The Birth of the Modern Monster

What Universal created was not just a set of films. It was the genetic code for horror as a genre. The misunderstood outsider in Frankenstein became the foundation for a thousand sympathetic monsters. The cursed soul of The Wolf Man showed that true horror often comes from within. The Invisible Man captured the madness of power. The Mummy turned the ancient past into an eternal haunting.

Even today, when Jordan Peele examines the dark reflection of self in Us or when The Babadook explores grief made manifest, they are still walking the same haunted corridors Universal built nearly a century ago. Those films taught us that monsters are not alien. They are metaphors made flesh.

From Page to Shadow

The Universal cycle was built on some of literature’s deepest nightmares. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, and H. G. Wells’s The Invisible Man were born from a world wrestling with science, morality, and faith. Shelley questioned creation long before bioethics was a word. Stoker’s Dracula was a vessel for Victorian terror about disease and sexuality. Wells’s invisible man embodied the dangers of ego without empathy.

Universal did not simply adapt these stories. It transformed them. The gothic prose became chiaroscuro. The philosophy turned into performance. In that translation, these creatures stopped belonging to books and began to belong to everyone.

When you picture Frankenstein today, you do not see Shelley’s articulate and tragic creature. You see Karloff’s green skin, square head, and sadness in the eyes. The films rewrote the mythology so completely that they replaced the originals in the public imagination.

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

Why We Cannot Stop Looking at Monsters

Every October, the same faces return. Dracula, Frankenstein, the Wolf Man, the Mummy, or the Gill-man from Creature from the Black Lagoon. They have outlived the stars who played them, the studios that made them, and the wars that raged outside the theatres. The reason is simple. Monsters let us meet ourselves.

Psychologically, horror is a rehearsal for danger. We confront what we fear in a safe space and leave feeling alive. But there is something deeper. Carl Jung called it the “shadow self,” the part of us we hide. The Universal Monsters gave that shadow a face. Watching Karloff or Lugosi was never just entertainment. It was catharsis. They showed the pain of rejection, the hunger for belonging, and the fear of desire. Horror made those emotions visible, forgivable, even noble.

Larry Talbot in The Wolf Man says, “Even a man who is pure in heart,” and it still cuts to the bone. Every man and woman carries a beast. The movies simply had the courage to show it.

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

The Fear That Built the Century

The Universal Monsters were not born in a vacuum. They emerged from a world changing too fast for comfort. The 1930s brought industrial innovation, social upheaval, and the first stirrings of modern war. Frankenstein warned of science outrunning its soul. Dracula personified fear of the foreign and the forbidden. The Mummy reflected guilt over colonial plunder. The Wolf Man captured the trauma of losing control in a violent world.

Their relevance has not faded because the same anxieties keep evolving. Today’s fears are digital, viral, and artificial. But the emotional core remains. Every panic about AI, every film about contagion or isolation, still carries the fingerprints of those black-and-white classics. The faces have changed, but the psychology has not.

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

The Curse of Living Forever

Universal has tried to bring them back many times. The 2017 Mummy reboot, meant to launch a shared “Dark Universe”, collapsed under its own ambition. What it proved was that you cannot manufacture myth. The originals endure not because they were franchises, but because they were sincere.

There was honesty in their terror. The sets were handmade, the lighting theatrical, and the effects charmingly crude. But the emotions were raw. They were not trying to sell sequels. They were trying to understand what it means to be human. Modern filmmakers like Guillermo del Toro, Mike Flanagan, and Robert Eggers carry that spirit forward. They use monsters the way James Whale did, as lenses to study loneliness, faith, and decay. Del Toro once said, “Monsters are the patron saints of imperfection.” That could easily be the motto of the entire Universal canon.

Monsters That Made Us: How Universal’s Icons Still Define What We Fear

Why They Still Matter

As Halloween rolls around again, the streaming shelves fill with jump scares and gore fests. But the Universal Monsters endure because they offer something rarer: empathy. They remind us that horror is not about the thing in the dark. It is about the heart that beats inside it.

Dracula’s hunger, Frankenstein’s confusion, and the Wolf Man’s guilt are all fragments of the same truth. Fear is never just about death. It is about being seen, being judged, being alone. A century later, the old monsters still walk. And maybe they always will, because they are us.

Also Read: Ram Charan, Allu Arjun to Attend Allu Sirish and Nayanika’s Engagement Tomorrow

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Ghostface, Nicholas Hoult in
TV & Streaming

A Ranking of the 19 Hottest Monsters in Movies and TV Shows

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

From brooding vampires to growling werewolves, reanimated heartbreakers to chaos-causing slashers, horror has gifted us some of the most unexpectedly sexy creatures in pop culture. Let’s get honest: Some of these characters could get it. These are the monsters who make us nervously check our phones… and maybe our closets. They’re scary, dangerous, and maybe just a little bit irresistible. Our hearts are beating fast, whether that’s from a little bit of desire or mostly fear, we’ll never know.

In the spirit of Halloween, Swooon has rounded up the hottest monsters across movies and TV, from the undead to the unhinged, the furry to the fanged. Some will haunt your dreams, some will make you laugh, and all of them are totally deserving (in some universe) of a swipe right.

 

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Monsters Inc. Monday Night Football Game Coming to ESPN, Disney+
TV & Streaming

Monsters Inc. Monday Night Football Game Coming to ESPN, Disney+

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Sulley, meet Saquon.

The Walt Disney Co. will once again present a live animated alternative broadcast of an upcoming NFL game, this time featuring characters and a stadium set in the world of Pixar‘s Monsters Inc. ESPN announced the game during halftime of Monday Night Football.

The special edition of Monday Night Football, called Monsters Funday Football, will be televised Dec. 8, when the Philadelphia Eagles take on the Los Angeles Chargers. It’s the third straight iteration of the animated altcast for Disney, following a Toy Story-themed effort in 2023, and Simpsons-themed game last year.

The new Monsters Inc. altcast comes as Disney inked a multi-year deal with Sony’s Beyond Sports to develop more animated altcasts for NFL, NHL, NBA, and WNBA games across The Walt Disney Company and ESPN platforms through 2027.

The game will taker place inside the Monsters Inc. building, and will feature appearances by Mike Wazowski and James P. “Sulley” Sullivan, joining Jalen Hurts [and Saquon Barkley] and the Eagles and Justin Herbert and the Chargers, respectively. Billy Crystal and John Goodman will reprise their roles in prerecorded voiceover work for the game, with Drew Carter and Dan Orlovsky set to call the game joined by Katie Feeney as social media correspondent.

Notably, this year’s game won’t just stream on ESPN+ and Disney+, but will also be available on linear TV via ESPN2, Disney Channel and Disney XD.

“Each iteration of Funday Football has pushed the boundary of what’s possible in sports technology. By blending real-time NFL data and tracking with cutting-edge animation, we’re transforming the way fans experience an NFL game,” said Michael “Spike” Szykowny, ESPN VP of graphics innovation. “Our continued innovation with partners like the NFL, Beyond Sports and Disney+ showcases how technology can turn a live game into a fully immersive world, giving fans an additional way to consume sports.”

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Of Monsters and Men (Credit: Eva Schram)
Music

Of Monsters and Men Share Their Essential Things to Do the Next Time You’re in Reykjavík, Iceland

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’ve been wondering what Of Monsters and Men have been up to in the six years since their last album, the answer is: a lot. The Icelandic folk-rock group released a documentary, Tíu, and an accompanying EP in 2023 to mark the 10th anniversary of their debut, My Head Is an Animal. In the years since, they’ve pursued solo projects, started families, and eventually regrouped to create what became their new album, All Is Love and Pain in the Mouse Parade.

The title may sound cryptic, but it clicks once you understand the record’s focus on duality—looking both inward and backward at the band’s lives, families, and communities, the collective “Mouse Parade.” The album has a quiet intimacy to its sound and delivery, and a warmth to its themes that feels grounded and familiar.

(Credit: Eva Schram)

No strangers to the screen, Of Monsters and Men’s song “Dream Team” appears in A Big Bold Beautiful Journey starring Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell. And who could forget their cameo in Game of Thrones, performing as a traveling theater troupe’s band during a Braavosi play as Arya Stark watched from the audience?

Next up, the band brings their unmistakable stage presence to North America this fall, with an extensive tour hitting nearly 20 cities and multi-night runs at both the Brooklyn Paramount and Hollywood Palladium. The tour continues through the U.K. and Europe in early 2026—on an itinerary that looks like Rick Steves himself might have planned it, except for one curious omission: their hometown of Reykjavík. Not to worry, since they’re the experts, Of Monsters and Men share their top 10 essential things to do if you find yourself aimlessly wandering Reykjavík, courtesy of co-vocalist Nanna Bryndís Hílmarsdóttir with input from the rest of the group.

(Credit: Eva Schram)
(Credit: Eva Schram)

The public pools are the best way to start your day, and it’s one of the things I miss the most when I’m not here. Vesturbæjarlaug or Sundhöllin are both great, but different. Soak in the hot tub, listen to people rant about politics, then do a cold plunge, sauna, and you’re ready for the day.

If you’re thirsty and hungry for some lunch after swimming, Kaffi Vest is right around the corner from Vesturbæjarlaug.

Bakeries

They are everywhere and they are all good in their own way. The one I find myself going to is Baka Baka. It’s right downtown, and next to it there’s a punk museum in a public bathroom…good little detour with your croissant in hand.

Coffee

Reykjavík Roasters is always solid. They have a few different locations, but I like the one in Ásmundarsalur. It’s a beautiful building that used to be the home and studio of Ásmundur Sveinsson, one of Iceland’s most-loved sculptors. Today the house is a coffee shop and an art space, with performances and exhibitions happening on the second floor. (And if you’re in Iceland before Christmas, they have a really lovely market with local artists selling their pieces.)

Record store for all your vinyl needs—you’ll find some Icelandic gems here. They also serve coffee and beer and sometimes there are live events, so it’s a good place to hang out for a while.

Ocean Time

There are many nice paths by the ocean for a walk. I like going to Nauthólsvík to swim in the ocean. Most of our beaches have black sand, so it’s a strange sight to see this manmade golden-sand beach. After dipping into the ocean, you can relax in the hot tub and order coffee.

(Credit: Eva Schram)
(Credit: Eva Schram)

The Reykjavík Art Museum has three locations. Plenty to explore, and all beautiful in their own way. The museums regularly exhibit works by Iceland’s most well-known artists. Always a good place to wander.

A Nordic-style bistro—good cocktails, good food, good times.

Drive Aimlessly / Rúnta

You’re never far from nature when in Reykjavík. Drive 30 minutes out of town and there’s plenty to see and many beautiful hikes. But if we are sticking to the downtown area, I’d say take the car and drive to an ice cream shop. Order a bragðarefur, then drive to the lighthouse at Grótta.

Best place for good wine… perfect place to end your night. Not loud, not too quiet. Just kinda perfect.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Scary Fun Trailer for 'Scurry' Underground Alien Monsters One-Take
Hollywood

Scary Fun Trailer for ‘Scurry’ Underground Alien Monsters One-Take

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Scary Fun Trailer for ‘Scurry’ Underground Alien Monsters One-Take

by Alex Billington
September 25, 2025
Source: YouTube

“No one is coming! They’re all dead!” Yep – probably true. Signature Ent. has launched an official trailer for a scary horror thriller creature feature called Scurry, made by Australian filmmaker Luke Sparke. This is the same guy who also made the dinosaurs in Vietnam War movie Primitive War also out this year. Though Scurry was actually made and premiered before that one – it opened in Australia last year. But it’s just now showing up outside of Australia and will be out on VOD in the UK soon + hopefully in the US, too. When an unthinkable attack devastates their city, two strangers find themselves trapped beneath the chaos, wounded and disoriented. As they fight to survive in a narrowing underground tunnel, their injuries worsen, and their chances of escape dwindle. But something else is lurking in the darkness, something relentless and hungry. Shot in real-time using a single continuous take, Scurry delivers a gripping, claustrophobic experience that will keep audiences on edge until the very last moment. Starring Jamie Costa and Emalia. As someone on YT commented, this kinda has a low budget Tremors vibe, but the creatures are even scarier in here. Enjoy.

Here’s the official UK trailer (+ poster) for Luke Sparke’s horror film Scurry, direct from YouTube:

“From the moment I first envisioned Scurry, I knew I wanted to create an experience that would keep audiences on the edge of their seats—something fast, relentless, and deeply immersive. Creature features have always held a special place in cinema, blending tension, survival, and awe-inspiring spectacle. With Scurry, I wanted to bring a fresh, visceral energy to the genre while staying true to what makes these films so thrilling: the fear of the unknown, the power of nature, and the resilience of the human spirit.” –Director Luke Sparke

Scurry Movie Poster

Scurry Movie Poster

When an unthinkable attack devastates a city, two strangers find themselves trapped beneath the chaos, wounded & disoriented. As they fight to survive in a narrowing underground tunnel, their injuries worsen, and their chances of escape dwindle. But the collapsing passageways aren’t their only threat—something else is lurking in the darkness, something relentless & hungry. Shot in real-time using a single continuous take, Scurry delivers a gripping, claustrophobic horror experience that will keep audiences on edge until the very last moment. Scurry is directed by the Australian genre filmmaker Luke Sparke, director of the films Red Billabong, Occupation, Occupation: Rainfall, Devil Beneath, Bring Him to Me, Primitive War previously. The screenplay is written by Tom Evans. It’s produced by Carmel Imrie and Carly Sparke. This first premiered at the 2024 Sydney Science Fiction Film Festival last year. Signature Ent. will debut Sparke’s Scurry movie direct-to-VOD in the UK starting on October 3rd, 2025 this fall. Who wants to watch this?

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Find more posts in: Horror, Indies, Sci-Fi, To Watch, Trailer

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Anima Vitae Follows 'Niko' With 'Eek! Ghosts!,' 'Trash Monsters'
TV & Streaming

Anima Vitae Follows ‘Niko’ With ‘Eek! Ghosts!,’ ‘Trash Monsters’

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Finnish animation studio Anima Vitae ain’t afraid of no ghosts. Or monsters. 

The company behind the successful trilogy about Niko the Reindeer – “Niko – Beyond the Northern Lights” sold almost 3 million tickets globally – is developing 3D animations “Eek! Ghosts!” and “Trash Monsters.” 

Based on beloved books by Mauri Kunnas, “Eek! Ghosts!” follows two trick-or-treating kids who end up at a party hosted by actual ghosts and monsters. Oops. 

“Families love these stories because of their warmth and humor in them. The original IP is really strong – the books have been read by many generations in Finland, Europe and even in Japan,” said Anima Vitae’s CEO Antti Haikala. 

Paying respect to Kunnas’ “rich illustrations,” full of little details and jokes, proved challenging at first.  

“It has taken a while to transform this into animation. We’ve been working with Mauri on multiple shorter projects now and we’ve found a way to bring the spirit of the books into films, and to capture the spark of his original work.”      

Haikala added: “Creating ‘safe excitement’ for families and telling meaningful stories is key, and Mauri’s stories already have these attributes. They can be just silly, but they often examine how instead of being scared you can actually learn something.”

Same can be said for “Trash Monsters,” also looming on the horizon. 

In the film, a girl accidentally creates a monster out of trash. Soon, she befriends him and can lean on him also when facing big dangers on her grandmother’s island – one that’s on the verge of ecological catastrophe. 

“We would like to find partners from south-east Asia as the story is located in that region,” he stressed. An original story, “Trash Monsters” comes from Australian writer-producer Joseph Taylor, based in Bali.

Nordic stories often combine darkness and humor. For Anima Vitae, it feels “natural to follow this path.”    

“It all boils down to never underestimating your audience. Kids will need to face many of these themes as they grow up. We want them to experience them through our films, in a fun setting,” said Haikala. They also recently premiered “Fleak” at Annecy. The film be released in the U.S. by Impossible Dream Entertainment and The Fithian Group’s theatrical distribution unit Attend.   

Director and scriptwriter Kari Juusonen, who also helmed the “Niko” movies, is working on story development for both projects. Screenwriter Leo Viirret will work on “Ghosts,” while art director Mikko Pitkänen (“Niko” and “Fleak“) is overseeing both titles. 

The success of “Niko” allowed the company to experiment a little, especially while “testing the boundaries of what content can be produced within the family space.”

“At the same time, we need to be mindful of our audience. Our films only matter if the audience sees them. We need to be able to offer them a great experience as a family, in the cinema or at home,” he noted. 

“[At Anima Vitae] we have been developing a style that’s not ultra-realistic – it’s cinematic. We think animation is about the visual world and not some downgraded copy of it. You shouldn’t just keep adding pixels to the screen.”

“Animated films are more identifiable and leave more of an impression if they have a stylized look. If you have a style, it’s a statement that doesn’t get old quickly.”  

Although the Finnish film industry is currently facing steep cuts, Haikala isn’t giving up just yet. 

“We’ve been around for 25 years and seen many mayhems on the road. It’s always worrying, but your only option is to try and find a way through the stormy waters. So far, we’ve been lucky,” he said. 

“We have always prioritized sustainability and long-term development, and this has led us to make choices that are hopefully more long-lasting. We try to see opportunities instead of threats. And we are stubborn.” 

‘Eek! Ghosts!’
Doghill Productions / Otava

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Get Ready For The Mother Monster's Makeover: Lady Gaga Transforms Into Enigmatic Rosaline Rotwood In Wednesday Season 2! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Get Ready For The Mother Monster’s Makeover: Lady Gaga Transforms Into Enigmatic Rosaline Rotwood In Wednesday Season 2! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Months of anticipation, and finally, Netflix revealed the first official look at Lady Gaga in the eagerly awaited second season of Wednesday. The news came on September 1, two days before the Part 2 premiere on September 3. The pop star takes on the role of Rosaline Rotwood, a new and mysterious teacher at Nevermore Academy.

The first picture is Lady Gaga wearing an otherworldly white dress, complete with long blonde hair and perfectly shaped eyebrows. Riding on her shoulder is Thing, the favorite disembodied hand from the Addams family realm. Netflix tagged the photo: “A vision in venom. Here’s your first look at Lady Gaga as Rosaline Rotwood.”

Who is Rosaline Rotwood?

Netflix has not spilled any details about Gaga’s character. We do know that Rosaline Rotwood is a “legendary Nevermore teacher who intersects with Wednesday.” Whether she’s a new member of the faculty or a character from the school’s dark past remains to be seen. Fans are already speculating over whether she might be connected to past characters — or even the Addams family line.

New Music Release Together with the Show

In line with her guest spot on the show, Lady Gaga will also debut her brand-new song called “The Dead Dance” on September 3. The hit was originally teased at the Graveyard Gala of the events that took place in New York City by Netflix and Spotify. The song will allegedly connect with the themes and atmosphere of Wednesday, merging Gaga’s classic dark glam aesthetic with the gothic tone of the show.

Netflix announced the music release on social media:
“You heard it from Mother Monster. Lady Gaga’s new song The Dead Dance will be out on September 3 and in Wednesday Part II.”

What to Expect from Part 2 of Wednesday Season 2

The latter half of Season 2 has high stakes and surprise twists in store. A surprising teaser announced the return of Gwendoline Christie’s character, Principal Weems, who passed away in Season 1 now seen as Wednesday’s spirit guide. The story will trace Wednesday’s steps as she unravels a dark family book to prevent a prophecy and save her best friend Enid’s life, ending in a clash with Tyler.

You heard it from Mother Monster

Lady Gaga’s new song ‘The Dead Dance’ will be out on September 3 and in Wednesday Part II ☠️ pic.twitter.com/Fx9UTBg7s4

— Netflix (@netflix) August 29, 2025

Guest stars this season are Joanna Lumley, Thandiwe Newton, Haley Joel Osment, Christopher Lloyd, and more bringing even more excitement to the already star-filled show.

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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