Byun Sung-hyun discusses Netflix's 'Good News,' a black comedy based on a real 1970s hijacking, and his fourth collaboration ...
The National Interest on MSN
F-15E Strike Eagle: How the Air Force Turned a Dogfighter Into a Strike Aircraft
The transformation was profound, and the F-15E made for a remarkable strike aircraft, proving itself in combat during Operation Desert Storm. The F-15E still serves today, a testament to how solid and ...
Popcorn Roulette on MSN
Jonathan tries to ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK (1981) Movie Reaction FULL WATCH ALONG
Escape from New York is a 1981 American independent science fiction action film co-written, co-scored and directed by John ...
Driver will play John Chapman, an Air Force combat controller killed in Afghanistan, in 'Alone at Dawn.' Ron Howard will ...
Hosted on MSN
The Air Force One Scene Glenn Close Refused To Film
Glenn Close drew a firm line on set, refusing to film a controversial Air Force One scene that could have changed the movie's legacy. Trumpworld Goes to War Over Nobel Peace Prize Loss Zohran Mamdani ...
All the films that deal with an event like this one, there's just so much detailed process of the hijacking part,” Byun tells ...
Lifestyle Asia on MSN
‘Good News’ ending explained: What really happens to the passengers on Flight 351?
Good News, the new Korean movie on Netflix, concludes with Nobody and Seo Go-myung successfully averting a major catastrophe ...
Air Force Times on MSN
He was awarded a Silver Star for a battle the US said never happened
On Aug. 11, 2025, 57 years after the battle, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency has announced the recovery of James Henry ...
In this ending explained piece, we break down the suspense, twists and hidden details of the latest Korean Netflix movie Good ...
In the summer of 1970, a young documentary filmmaker named David Seltzer flew to Munich chasing a lucky break. Seltzer had ...
Byun Sung-hyun’s ‘Good News’ turns a real 1970s hijacking into a sharp, funny, and unsettling look at power, media, and truth ...
On Oct. 14, 1884, George Eastman received his first "film" patent No. US306594 A for negative paper, paving the way for the ...
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