SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy

SciFi and Fantasy

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Bugs Bunny Returns in Coyote vs. ACME Trailer
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Bugs Bunny Returns in Coyote vs. ACME Trailer

News Coyote vs. Acme Bugs Bunny Returns in Coyote vs. ACME Trailer The movie found a second life after getting shelved by Warner Bros. By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on June 2, 2026 Credit: Ketchup Entertainment Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Ketchup Entertainment The hybrid animated/live-action feature Coyote vs. ACME has had a tumultuous past. Back in 2023, Warner Bros. scrapped the completed film as a tax write-off, but the movie then got a second chance via Ketchup Entertainment to make its way to theaters. Today, we got our first trailer for the film, and in it we see Wile E. Coyote looking to take on capitalism/big ACME, represented by John Cena, with the help of a flesh-and-blood Will Forte serving as his lawyer. The trailer also revealed the silhouette of Bugs Bunny in a trench coat, confirming that the rabbit will make an appearance in the film. It’s exciting stuff! And Coyote vs. ACME’s official synopsis sheds more light on what we’ll see on screen: After decades of being blown to bits by bombs, demolished by dynamite, mangled by magnets, battered by boulders, trampled by trains, tricked by tunnels, sprung by springs, steamrolled by steamrollers, maligned by misfires, bedeviled by bungees, rattled by rockets, backstabbed by bat suits, rocked by rocket skates, upended by unicycles, quaked by quake pills, rubberized by rogue bands, and hurled headlong off every cliff in the Southwest, Wile E. Coyote (Genius) finally fights back. Teaming up with billboard accident lawyer Kevin Avery (Will Forte), he takes on slick corporate counsel Buddy Crane (John Cena) and ACME, Inc., the profit-obsessed conglomerate behind every one of the Coyote’s chaotic catastrophes. Coyote vs. ACME is directed by Dave Green (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows). The story comes from James Gunn & Jeremy Slater and Samy Burch, with Burch penning the actual script. In addition to Cena and Forte, it stars Lana Condor, Tone Bell, and the Road Runner. The movie premieres in theaters on August 28, 2026. While we wait, check out the trailer below. [end-mark] The post Bugs Bunny Returns in <i>Coyote vs. ACME</i> Trailer appeared first on Reactor.

Read an Excerpt From The Sixth Nik by Daniel Kraus
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Read an Excerpt From The Sixth Nik by Daniel Kraus

Excerpts Science Fiction Read an Excerpt From The Sixth Nik by Daniel Kraus Deep into space soars The Sickness: a ship woven from biomatter and capable of reacting to every need of its human crew. By Daniel Kraus | Published on June 2, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from The Sixth Nik by Daniel Kraus, a science fiction novel publishing with Saga Press on June 23rd. Deep into space, far past the triworld outposts, beyond range of the lethal trollbot internet, soars The Sickness: a ship woven from biomatter and capable of reacting to every need of its human crew. Sisilla, a nine-year-old cultist with a brain enhanced by arcane tech known as “niks,” has boarded to investigate the enigma of Fém—a plague-riddled planet that has abruptly gone rogue.The mysterious crew includes a faceless assassin, a beautiful engineer jigsawed by plastic surgery, a peyote-addicted medic, and—most lethal of all—a rugged, NonModded captain with a score to settle with Sisilla. Other dangers abound. A hacked robot begins to believe Sisilla is its daughter. The Sickness itself is mutating, possibly even pregnant. And the secret of Fém is more horrific than anyone could have imagined. To survive, Sisilla will need to forsake her predetermined fate and embrace the unknown. “Are you all right?” I asked. A long silence preceded the Murder’s reply. “We find ourselves wishing to answer that.” “Then do,” I encouraged. “The answer shouldn’t matter. Acceptance of the Murder Tenet negates all physical, emotional, or intellectual emotions. And yet.” “And yet you were ready to hurt Arzan.” “Yes.” “Ready to befriend Jayne.” “Yes.” “Ready to feel loss over Feng’s death.” Murder 005 continued to stare. I felt empathy. Niffakoq, too, were trained to execute a task and nothing else. A peculiar thought entered my mind. What if the whole ship, not just the placentapool, was a womb? Only inside it did full-grown adults like Murder 005 and Arzan develop at rapid rates. I was preparing to posit this theory when my nikking struck a spike of caution. Something in Murder 005 had shifted. Though I nikked no negative feelings toward me, I detected unambiguous danger. Murder 005’s blue lenses blazed. “You sense we might hurt you,” they said simply. It was unthinkable. But true. I monitored my pulse. “Yes.” “So strange, all these things we feel.” Doubt did not conform well to a Murder. My discombobulation re-called the time Tûma and I had blundered into a goliath musk ox on the Petermann Glacier, rabid and unnikkable. I mentally traced an escape path to Captain Arzan, who had, at least, demonstrated a willingness to ply both axe and sword. But I did not flee. Murder 005 had lost their legs to protect me. It was illogical they would harm me now. “It’s often believed Murders don’t care for people,” they said. “In fact, we care deeply. We care more than anyone. Culling humanity is not easy work. Imagine harvesting a field of grain in which every stalk believes it has the right to live.” “Humans do have that right.” “Right? Or privilege? If one doesn’t contribute to furthering the species, they are, in the end, only chattel.” “You are speaking of individuals. Real individuals.” “The Murder Tenet is rooted in the awareness that individuals aren’t worth knowing. They’re weak. Greedy. False. Craven. In a word, disappointing.” I did not disagree with these adjectives, though I would have added considerably more. Giving. Loyal. Stalwart. Courageous. No description of humanity was complete without contradictions. I regretted that the mask Murder 005 wore, metaphorically speaking, did not allow them to see this. Regret expanded into sadness. Murders had one purpose, and now, with their legs gone, Murder 005 would struggle at it. “Do you find me disappointing?” I asked. Murder 005 at last looked at me. The synaptic lights from scar tissue turned their lenses the color of the Grønland Sea. “The opposite, Sisilla. We’ve come to respect you. No, that’s not the truth. It’s worse than that. We suspect we’ve come to like you.” Not even while suffering crushed legs had Murder 005’s voice had been so shaky. It was indisputable that they wanted to hurt me, more with every passing second. Yet I could not quell my desire to comfort. “Is it so wrong to like someone?” “Look out the windows, Sisilla. The cold, the dark. The unforgiving infinity. Our universe is absent of mercy. We Murders were taught to reflect this mercilessness. It’s the sole means we have to bring fairness to an unfair world.” “Perhaps the world only works if it is unfair.” Buy the Book The Sixth Nik Daniel Kraus Buy Book The Sixth Nik Daniel Kraus Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget “What do you mean?” “Perhaps the boldest acts of advancement only happen from the backs of tyrants. Heartless capitalists. Ruthless politicians.” “It’s a dour thought,” Murder 005 said. Then they produced a huff I nikked as a caustic laugh. “You see? We shouldn’t be capable of thoughts classifiable as dour. Or cheerful. We shouldn’t have opinions on capitalists and politicians. Murders must stay apolitical in order to effectively murder.” With the windblown thrill of standing upon the striped cliffs of the Segelsällskapet Fjord, I ignored the pleas of my niks and stood beside Murder 005. “You are not apolitical to me,” I said. “As I am not apolitical to you.” Murder 005 lifted lenses that were somehow sad. “You’re right. Your safety has always been, and will always be, our first concern. Which is why it brings me great discomfort to do what I must do.” At that moment, I cared little for my own destruction. “What must you do?” I asked softly. “This,” my bodyguard said. Murder 005’s lack of muscled legs had no effect on their upper-body vigor. The blow came with the speed of a striking viper: a twist of the torso away, then slingshotted forward, a sledgehammer fist against the side of my face. Excerpted from The Sixth Nik, copyright © 2026 by Daniel Kraus. The post Read an Excerpt From <i>The Sixth Nik</i> by Daniel Kraus appeared first on Reactor.

Vegetable Neighborhoods, Clan Wars, and Hunting Strategies: Zoë Schlanger’s The Light Eaters
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Vegetable Neighborhoods, Clan Wars, and Hunting Strategies: Zoë Schlanger’s The Light Eaters

Books Seeds of Story Vegetable Neighborhoods, Clan Wars, and Hunting Strategies: Zoë Schlanger’s The Light Eaters What the cutting-edge science of plant behavior and intelligence can teach us about the world and our place in it… By Ruthanna Emrys | Published on June 2, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share Welcome to Seeds of Story, where I explore the non-fiction that inspires—or should inspire—speculative fiction. Every couple weeks, we’ll dive into a book, article, or other source of ideas that are sparking current stories, or that have untapped potential to do so. Each article will include an overview of the source(s), a review of its readability and plausibility, and highlights of the best two or three “seeds” found there. This week, I cover Zoë Schlanger’s The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth. It describes the increasing scientific evidence for plants as active organisms that respond to—and shape—their environments every bit as much as animals. Plant senses and plant communication were once treated as nonsense, but are now helping us understand the ecosystems on which we depend. What It’s About When I was younger, there was a song with a chorus that began “I’ve heard the screams of the vegetables…” It was a joke, of course. Who would imagine that plants could feel you plucking their fruits, or care? So it’s fascinating to join Zoë Schlanger in a lab, where researchers are studying Arabidopsis responses to touch. Rub a leaf, suggesting possible predatory threat, and the whole plant lights up with electrical signals. As quickly as you can stub your toe, the whole organism knows what’s happening. Following this kind of signal, plants may produce chemicals to make their leaves bitter or sticky excretions to gum up caterpillar mouths. They also warn each other through airborne chemicals. Plants that haven’t yet dealt with a pest pay attention to these signals, and start proactively preparing for attack. Lest you find yourself now feeling guilty about that carrot, many plants have mutualistic relationships with things that eat them. They work to look, smell, and taste attractive to reproductive symbionts, from humans to wasps—not only over generations but in the moment. Nasa poissoniana raises stamens at whatever rate bees have been visiting, adjusting when they grow more frequent or neglectful. Initial resistance to these findings stemmed from backlash against a bit of ’70s pseudoscience titled The Secret Life of Plants. The book was responsible for a big houseplant fad, and also for making scientists very shy of vegetal intelligence claims. (A similar dynamic delayed scientific acceptance of airborne rather than droplet-based transmission in the early years of COVID; apparently it sounded too much like miasma theory.) But the tide is turning. Current work doesn’t suggest that plants have preferences between rock and classical music, but they do redirect roots toward the sound of running water, and produce tannins in response to recordings of chewing caterpillars. Not only can plants hear and communicate, but they also have some degree of vision. This makes sense after a moments’ thought: a plant that grows toward light can clearly sense it, and it would be odd if they didn’t have a way to pick up the presence of their solar food. At that point, there’s an evolutionary advantage to sensing more details about that food, and using it to learn about other aspects of the environment. Many species, it turns out, use changes in light passing through leaves to recognize and respond to other plants. There’s also at least one species, the chameleon vine, that changes its leaves to blend in with whatever plants appear around it. Explanations vary (and all are pretty cool), but at least one study has shown it doing this with plastic plants, suggesting detailed visual processing. As we already know from Entangled Life, plants are terrifically social across species and kingdoms. Mycelial networks play a core role in their lives, trading nutrients and passing messages. So do animals. But plants also have relationships with each other. Like animals, they often share and protect kin more than strangers. Closely-related sunflowers point in different directions to avoid blocking each other’s light; many species crowd out the roots of unrelated plants while sharing high-nutrient patches with siblings and cousins. One pictures them like great Italian Renaissance families, plotting for control of the nitrogen. Schlanger quotes J.B.S. Haldane: “I would lay down my life for two brothers or eight cousins.” These findings have serious implications for agriculture—you can get considerably more yield from the same rice crop with just the right level of genetic diversity. But plants also cooperate across species, and do better in richly varied “neighborhoods.” Schlanger touches on Robin Wall Kimmerer’s research, showing that beautiful-to-humans flower combinations also attract more pollinators by growing together—and they put more energy into flowering when they have this opportunity. Plants change height, leaves, roots, to best fit the communities around them. They offer more carbon to fungi that share more phosphorus (and vice versa), but can also maintain relationships that balance only over many seasons. Vegetal interaction doesn’t look much like animal behavior—unless you watch a speeded-up film of a vine seeking a good climbing stem. But they can do things that animals can’t, as well. Their chemical adaptability goes far beyond ours, allowing orchids to tailor their scents to available pollinators, sunflowers to discourage nearby seedlings, and many species to fight off a variety of predators. Ironically, modern human cultivation often discourages variation and selects for qualities that undermine natural pest resistance. It’s time, Schlanger argues, that we took plant behavior seriously in its own right, and learned to work with it rather than against. Buy the Book The Light Eaters Zoë Schlanger Buy Book The Light Eaters Zoë Schlanger Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget I’m a big fan of active plants. Show me a B-movie anthropophagus green monster, and I shiver in delight. I’m sympathetic to anything that speaks and acts for itself, when people expected it to remain conveniently passive. I’m also sympathetic to the idea that living in this world is a complex challenge, requiring complex behavior for anything larger than a bacterium. (Stay tuned, no doubt, for a book about the complex social lives of bacteria. Honestly, the first primitive cell to take in the first mitochondrial organism probably has a lot to share, a love story for the aeons.) Plants are large, multicellular, and face the same basic challenges as us—sessility should be no more a constraint on their intelligence than it is on human babies. But what an alien intelligence it must be! Slow movement, shape-changing rather than traveling, processing distributed across the body and perhaps beyond, into the fuzzy boundaries of entwined roots and mycelia. So I’m excited by the scientific results and arguments that Schlanger shares here. But I’m frustrated by the way she sometimes presents those arguments. Debate and disagreement are natural parts of research. Stubborn resistance to new scientific paradigms is a real thing. But that resistance is practically the only narrative that Schlanger has for scientific disagreement. Every cutting-edge researcher is risking their reputation, every failure to get an NSF grant is an indication of skepticism, every young scientist fears being ostracized for admitting to belief in plant intelligence. It’s true that the Society for Plant Neurobiology (now the Society of Plant Signaling and Behavior) picked their original name to make a sharp point, and received a fair amount of blowback. But resistance hasn’t been one-size-fits-all, and Schlanger treats fringe theorists, well-meaning researchers whose experiments fail to replicate, and tenured eminences with the same scripted brush. This feels like a minor point, but it’s also incredibly frustrating as someone who cares how people think about science. The idea of resistance followed by paradigm shift isn’t wrong, but it isn’t complete either. And this kind of simplification is what leads vaccine deniers to think “scientists disagree” just makes them brave mavericks—that the preponderance of evidence doesn’t matter, and that truth is the polar opposite of consensus. Schlanger’s not doing that, but she’s feeding it unnecessarily. A lot of her mavericks look less like Galileo and more like one faction among many trying to hash out the interpretation of exciting new results. I’ve been in that room, it was just that we were arguing about the right framework for studying reconstructive memory. Nobody ostracized us; they didn’t even usually schedule us for separate sessions. The new results really are exciting all on their own. Combined with The Sounds of Life, Is a River Alive?, An Immense World, Braiding Sweetgrass, and Entangled Life, they add to my increasing sense that our world is an interconnected place of thriving awareness, connection, and communication—and that we are on the verge of dramatic breakthroughs in how we participate. The Best Seeds for Speculative Stories Growing Together. Hey solarpunks! We’ve written about regenerative agriculture and the death of monocultures—but wouldn’t farming be even cooler if it involved mediating relationships between plant neighborhoods, or using plant behavior findings to build the best cooperative vegetable gardens? That is, gardens where the vegetables cooperate with each other. What about sending translators into the food forest to figure out why the spicebush isn’t thriving? At the end of the book, Schlanger also brings up the Rights of Nature movement centered in Is a River Alive? She mentions a couple of failed efforts, in particular the Ojibwe effort to give legal standing to wild rice. But the tide is shifting on this as well—and it seems like it ought to make a difference if the rice can testify. Talking to Trees. Every time I write, lately, I imagine communication with non-human life. Not just extraterrestrials, with whom I’ve always been obsessed, but octopuses, ravens, fungally-networked swamps—and plants. It’s the attitude shift that most appeals. We’d have to slow down, to think about what a redwood is likely to say, and what we could possibly say in return that it would care about. What would a future look like where we could have these conversations? It probably wouldn’t be much like talking to another human, or even a whale. But we already have longstanding relationships with these organisms, which have shaped us as much as we’ve shaped them. Grains changed the shape of the human jaw; human cultivation changed the shape of grains. There’s a mutual aspect to domestication—much as dogs benefited from our trashpits and then from hunting with us, grasses like rye evolved to blend into our early wheat fields. Robin Wall Kimmerer talks about longstanding traditions of plant communication, and the evidence for their value. Technology for translating plants’ chemical, electrical, and acoustic communication could add its own layer to those connections. About That Mean Green Mother… Yeah, I’m still not tired of triffids. We could—and should—use new findings about plant capabilities to imagine how those abilities might be turned against… us. Da-da-dum! New Growth: What Else to Read Schlanger quotes Sue Burke’s Semiosis, in which humans submit to alien plants, and Ursula Le Guin’s “‘The Author of the Acacia Seeds’ and Other Extracts from the Journal of the Association of Therolinguistics.” Both are great. She also recommends the poetry of Báyò Akómoláfé, a Yoruba poet of interspecies interconnection. I’ve recently been introduced to Tractor Beam, an SF magazine focused on “soilpunk.” They’re publishing cool stories that aren’t like anything else. I particularly liked T.K. Rex’s “Like a Skeleton in Desert Sand”—not actually related to plant communication, but how often do you see stories about the future of paleontology? If you want dangerous plants more recent than Little Shop of Horrors (Da-doo!), Mira Grant’s Overgrowth and Jenn Lyons’ Green & Deadly Things are recent favorites. The former is an alien invasion in the tradition of Audrey II and the triffids; the latter is epic fantasy and, unexpectedly, a strong critique of the Jedi Order. Probably that bacteria book I’ll eventually cover will be Ed Yong’s I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life. Peter Godfrey-Smith’s Living on Earth: Forests, Corals, Consciousness, and the Making of the World looks like an interesting take on multi-kingdom intelligence. Riley Black’s When the Earth Was Green: Plants, Animals, and Evolution’s Greatest Romance covers our early symbiosis. Do you sing to your plants? Or listen to them? Tell us about it in the comments![end-mark] The post Vegetable Neighborhoods, Clan Wars, and Hunting Strategies: Zoë Schlanger’s <i>The Light Eaters</i> appeared first on Reactor.

What the Backrooms Movie Doesn’t Tell You About the YouTube Series’ Lore
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What the Backrooms Movie Doesn’t Tell You About the YouTube Series’ Lore

News Backrooms What the Backrooms Movie Doesn’t Tell You About the YouTube Series’ Lore There is so much more to the Backrooms than what you saw in the movie By Matthew Byrd | Published on June 2, 2026 Image: A24 Comment 0 Share New Share Image: A24 This article contains spoilers for the 2026 Backrooms movie and the Backrooms YouTube series Backrooms becoming one of the biggest box office hits of 2026 (so far) is the culmination of a rather remarkable creative journey. What began as a random photo of a liminal space in an abandoned furniture store that began making the rounds online sometime in the 2010s eventually grew into a creepypasta legend about the backrooms: an infinite series of similar rooms you can accidentally fall into and never escape. That horrifying idea eventually became the basis for a series of YouTube shorts created by Kane Parsons, who, in turn, recently directed and co-wrote the Backrooms movie. And while there are threads that bind the original backrooms photos to the original movie, the connection between those YouTube shorts and the recently released film is much stronger. The movie is, for all intents and purposes, a continuation and, in some ways, a culmination of the story presented in those shorts. That story began as a video of a person who accidentally falls into the backrooms but soon grew into a sweeping epic with a mythology as vast and confusing as the backrooms themselves. In fact, the YouTube series actually goes into far greater detail about plot points that the Backrooms movie either only hints at or doesn’t reference at all. And while it’s a fool’s promise to suggest that anyone can easily explain the entirety of the backrooms lore (so much of it is intentionally unknowable), there are a few of the more pressing pieces of lore you may not know about if your first trip into the backrooms was via the movie. Async’s History and True Purpose The Backrooms movie doesn’t properly introduce the Async corporation until the very end and keeps their purpose, origins, and methods somewhat vague. The only thing it really tells us about them is that they used to make MRI machines and know about the backrooms. The film gives the impression that we’re simply not meant to know about this shadowy organization. In reality, the Backrooms YouTube series explains quite a bit about Async’s true nature. Yes, Async used to manufacture medical equipment (primarily MRI machines). However, the nature of their work changed quite dramatically in the late 1980s when they decided to continue the research conducted by an organization known as the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. That research facility was working on a device known as the Low-Proximity Magnetic Distortion System (later referred to as “The Threshold”). It’s an electromagnetic field generator that was seemingly capable of accessing a vast, inexplicable space. That space is often offhandedly referred to as “the backrooms,” though Async began officially referring to it as the “Complex” and unofficially referring to it as the “Hallways.” Why does Async care about the Complex in the first place? Their idea was that the seemingly infinite space could be used to solve everything from global housing shortages to storage issues. Essentially, they saw it as the greatest real estate opportunity in the history of mankind. The idea was so popular that Async even began receiving government funding to help continue their research. The extent of Async’s exploration of the Complex is massive. Think of the Complex as a frontier. Or, maybe more accurately, think of it as a galaxy that a Federation-level organization is exploring in the distant future. They sent teams of researchers to set up stations in every corner of the Complex they could access. What began as an effort to map the area for eventual commercial purposes soon proved to be a futile endeavor. It wasn’t just that the space was massive; Async researchers soon found that the architecture of the Complex made no sense. Rooms violated the laws of physics and would often even shift. Any intentions to use that space in a productive way were slowly pushed aside when Async began to understand that they could never really tame what they had discovered. As you probably know, Async’s exploration of that space also soon revealed a number of horrors that converted them from explorers to reluctant guardians. Did Async Create the Backrooms? It’s not entirely clear whether Async created the backrooms or simply discovered them. A popular theory suggests that the Complex always existed in some form or another and that Async simply opened a door that led to the area. However, given that the Complex seems to be at least partially based on variations of our reality, another theory argues that the Low-Proximity Magnetic Distortion System actually created the Complex space rather than simply unlocked it. One possible argument for the “discovery” of the backrooms rather than their creation is the fact that it took Async multiple tries to successfully access the Complex for a prolonged period of time. It wasn’t until the sixth test of that technology that they were really able to create a sustainable doorway to the area. That successful test coincided with a massive earthquake along the San Andreas fault that killed hundreds and injured thousands. That would seem to suggest that they really created a dangerous gateway, but again, it’s an unanswered question at the moment. Time Distortion One element of the Complex that the Backrooms movie doesn’t really dive into is the idea that time (much like space and architecture) doesn’t function normally in that area. The specifics of the differences between how time works in that area compared to our world are left intentionally ambiguous. There are actually competing theories among fans about the nature of time in that space. Some argue that time moves slower in there, while others say it’s actually faster. A few theories suggest that it depends on what area you’re in, and a popular idea argues that time ceases to function in the traditional sense in our world so long as you are navigating the Complex. There is also the more complicated idea of temporal anomalies. Basically, being in the Complex isn’t just a matter of figuring out the hour, day, week, or year. There’s also the idea that the entire area exists at the convergence of multiple timelines. At the very least, the Complex has displayed evidence of distortions and temporal anomalies that strongly suggest it is not limited to our perception of traditional realities. So while the film focuses on a slightly smaller story based on a core group of characters, the nature of that space is much greater than what we are focusing on at any given moment. Missing People Arguably the most important element of the Complex that the Backrooms movie only hints at are the various missing people who accidentally found their way into that space at some point. We see people go missing there, and the movie references the idea that doors into the Complex are opening up more frequently, but it undersells the scope of the problem. Since the Complex was “opened” in 1989, there has been a dramatic spike in reported missing persons cases. The exact number of missing persons is unknown, but you’re potentially talking about hundreds of people that accidentally wandered into the backrooms via one portal or another, if not more. The first Backrooms video Parsons ever created (though not the first chronological video in the series) involved a young filmmaker who fell into the backrooms via an unseen portal underneath his feet. This also brings us back to the time distortion element of the whole thing. See, Async members have not only discovered some of those missing people in the Complex but, in some cases, discovered decomposed versions of those people in rooms where they weren’t just shortly before (at least in terms of how we perceive time). We again catch a hint of this concept in the movie when we see the tattered clothes of one of the soon-to-be-missing people in one of the Complex’s rooms, but it’s the missing people that have really accelerated the need for Async to get a hold of this situation. The Lifeform The Backrooms movie invokes the idea that the Complex contains variations of real-life individuals who have been mutated in various ways. We see at least one of those individuals (Pirate Clark) behave violently, but the film also suggests that these mutations are not inherently dangerous. For that matter, the movie seemingly offers a pretty big answer to a major backrooms lore question by saying that the space is, at least in part, essentially perpetual copies of our reality, mutations of ourselves included. In the Backrooms YouTube series, though, there is another threat we don’t clearly see in the film: an entity commonly referred to as The Lifeform. The Lifeform is a tall, gangly creature that is seemingly born from the black mold-like substance that is found throughout the Complex. Like many elements of the Complex, the exact origins of this creature remain unknown. The idea that it is born from this strange bacteria which somehow appears native to the Complex hints that The Lifeform was, in fact, born from these rooms. However, arguing for that idea also forces you to determine whether or not you believe that Async created these rooms and whether or not their presence/experiments may have altered them in ways that led to The Lifeform’s creation. Actually, a popular theory suggests that The Lifeform is able to alter its form by consuming or even just examining some of the objects it finds that have been left behind by Async researchers. Regardless, The Lifeform is consistently hostile in ways that the doppelgangers seen in the film are not. It is hostile to anyone it encounters, and Async researchers began to pack weapons in the (sometimes vain) hopes of defending themselves against it. What that says about The Lifeform in relation to the mutations we see in the movie is another mystery. Perhaps its openly hostile nature suggests a fundamental difference between it and the copies, or maybe the copies themselves are some sort of variation of the material and methods that resulted in The Lifeform’s existence. If you’re interested in learning more about Backrooms, you can find a playlist of the entire original YouTube series here. [end-mark] The post What the <i>Backrooms</i> Movie Doesn’t Tell You About the YouTube Series’ Lore appeared first on Reactor.

The Trailer for Silo’s Third Season Finds Yet More Ways to Make Juliet Suffer
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The Trailer for Silo’s Third Season Finds Yet More Ways to Make Juliet Suffer

News Silo The Trailer for Silo’s Third Season Finds Yet More Ways to Make Juliet Suffer Seriously, where do they get all their furniture? By Molly Templeton | Published on June 2, 2026 Image: Apple TV Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Apple TV As if the many almost-drownings weren’t enough! (Maybe it wasn’t that many. But it felt like so many.) In the third season of Silo, there is a new and unexciting way for Juliette (Rebecca Ferguson) to suffer. She’s already lost her boyfriend, discovered a pile of secrets, survived being sent outside to “clean” and getting nearly murdered by some children, and solved the mystery of Steve Zahn—but then she had to go back. To the silo where it all began. Where apparently she lost her memories. It’s a little bit hard not to feel like forced memory loss is a way to drag out the plot, a feeling intensified by the show’s second season, which felt like several episodes of story dragged out into as much misery as possible. But the thing is, this show has such a good cast (certain parties excepted) that I’ll keep watching it anyway. Here’s what Apple TV says about season three: Based on Hugh Howey’s New York Times bestselling trilogy, season three of Silo reveals an origin story set centuries earlier, while continuing the saga of a dystopian society of 10,000 people living underground under mysterious circumstances. In the present, Juliette Nichols (Ferguson) survives her forced “cleaning” but returns with memory loss as the silo recovers from rebellion and faces a dangerous new threat. Meanwhile, in the “Before Times,” journalist Helen Drew (Jessica Henwick) and Congressman Daniel Keene (Ashley Zukerman) uncover a conspiracy that pulls them into a chain of events with catastrophic, irreversible consequences. The most intriguing parts of this new trailer are definitely the bits from the before times (which I am not going to put in unnecessary quotation marks or use unnecessary capital letters for). They are, to put it lightly, dour as fuck. “The end of the world cannot be stopped,” a man intones. “It can only be survived.” But this contrasts with the bright sunny scenes of the silo planning, with a handy-dandy site map, no less! Is it green and beautiful or doomed forever? Is it both? It’s always both. Probably. There are three primary reasons to watch this show: Ferguson, who plays it all with a straight face even as her accent slips; Alexandria Riley, who plays a woman with far less power—but far more smarts—than her husband; and Harriet Walter, who is a genius who should be watched in absolutely everything. I don’t know how they got her into this show, but bless whoever did so. Returning cast also includes Common, Chinaza Uche, Avi Nash, Shane McRae (also an excellent reason to watch), Remmie Milner, Rick Gomez, Billy Postlethwaite, Clare Perkins, and the aforementioned Steve Zahn; newcomers to season three include Laura Innes, Jessica Brown Findlay, Morven Christie, Reed Birney, Matt Craven, and Colin Hanks in a recurring role. Oh brave new ended world, that has such people in’t! Silo’s third season premieres July 3rd. It’s already been renewed for a fourth, so this is not the end, my friends.[end-mark] The post The Trailer for <i>Silo</i>’s Third Season Finds Yet More Ways to Make Juliet Suffer appeared first on Reactor.