New Photo - Hulk Hogan's Son Nick Fights Back Tears as WWE Pays Tribute to the Late Wrestler at SummerSlam

Hulk Hogan's Son Nick Fights Back Tears as WWE Pays Tribute to the Late Wrestler at SummerSlam Escher WalcottAugust 3, 2025 at 10:29 PM Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty; WWE/WWE via Getty I Nick Hogan at SummerSlam on Aug.

- - Hulk Hogan's Son Nick Fights Back Tears as WWE Pays Tribute to the Late Wrestler at SummerSlam

Escher WalcottAugust 3, 2025 at 10:29 PM

Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty; WWE/WWE via Getty I

Nick Hogan at SummerSlam on Aug. 02, 2025; Hulk Hogan at Wrestlemania 18 in March 2002

Nick Hogan attended WWE's SummerSlam in honor of his late father Hulk Hogan on Saturday, Aug. 2

During the event, Nick was seen getting emotional as a WWE tribute was shared in memory of Hulk

Hulk, real name Terry Bollea, died from a heart attack at age 71 on July 24

Nick Hogan had an emotional moment as his father Hulk Hogan was honored by the WWE at SummerSlam.

On Saturday, Aug. 2, Nick, 35, was seen getting choked up as a tribute played for the late wrestling icon while attending the WWE summer event with his wife Tana Lea at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

In a video of the tribute posted on X, WWE announcer Michael Cole said, "Hulk Hogan was larger than life, sports entertainment personified [and] the greatest performer in our history."

"He was undefeated [at SummerSlam] … just so many great moments, too many to talk about really in the career of a man who carried professional wrestling on his back for three decades. Rest in peace brother," he concluded.

As Hulk's classic theme song "Real American" played at the end of the tribute, Nick was seen holding back tears in the crowd as he stood clapping alongside his wife. He then made a prayer motion and placed his hand on his chest as fans cheered in the stadium.

Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty

Nick Hogan and his wife Tana Lea attend SummerSlam at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on Aug. 2, 2025

Hulk, whose real name was Terry Bollea, died of a heart attack at age 71 on July 24. He shared his two children, Nick and daughter Brooke, 37, with his ex-wife Linda Hogan.

Nick's appearance at WWE SummerSlam comes after he attended WWE's Monday Night RAW program, where another tribute was given to his late father by the wrestling community on July 28.

At certain points during the tribute, Nick appeared to wipe away tears and clapped along with the audience while standing center stage with the show's wrestling roster alongside his wife Lea, who was also emotional as she held his arm.

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

WWE/WWE via Getty

Hulk Hogan poses with the World Heavyweight Championship Title during WCW Monday Nitro in 1999

On Saturday, Aug. 1, Hulk was honored in another way as the state of Florida, where the late wrestler lived most of his life, marked the date as "Hulk Hogan Day."

Nick commemorated the day on Instagram, writing, "Tomorrow, Aug. 1, is officially 'Hulk Hogan Day' in the state of Florida. My dad was a true Floridian and loved his home state. Thank you for this honor @flgovrondesantis. He would be so proud of this."

Alongside his message, he posed a photo of the official document issued by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declaring the day as "Hulk Hogan Day."

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Hulk Hogan's Son Nick Fights Back Tears as WWE Pays Tribute to the Late Wrestler at SummerSlam

Hulk Hogan's Son Nick Fights Back Tears as WWE Pays Tribute to the Late Wrestler at SummerSlam Escher WalcottAugus...
New Photo - A-List Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027

AList Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027 Alex GurleyAugust 3, 2025 at 10:10 PM Photo by XNY/Star Max/GC Images AList Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027 originally appeared on Parade.

- - A-List Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027

Alex GurleyAugust 3, 2025 at 10:10 PM

Photo by XNY/Star Max/GC Images

A-List Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027 originally appeared on Parade.

Tom Holland has plans to take a well-deserved break from the spotlight in 2027.

The 29-year-old Spider-Man star recently opened up about his upcoming career plans and revealed that while he's got a few projects on the horizon, he's looking forward to taking a break in a few years.

While speaking with British GQ, Holland shared that he feels "really blessed to be at a point in my career where I can take time off, reset, and come back ready to go."

"You can't be in every movie, and you can't do your best work when you're burnt out. What I've learnt is that it's important to set boundaries — to be mindful about overworking," Holland shared with the outlet.

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Holland, who has taken breaks from the spotlight before, added that he plans to take some time off in 2027.

"I've got a slightly busy year next year, and then I'll probably take a bit more time off in 2027. We'll see," the actor revealed.

Holland most recently took a step back from his acting career in 2023, following an emotionally exhausting and difficult experience filming his Apple TV+ series The Crowded Room, which he both starred in and produced.

"'It was a tough time, for sure," Holland told Extrain 2023. "We were exploring certain emotions that I have definitely never experienced before. And then on top of that, being a producer, dealing with the day-to-day problems that come with any film set, just added that extra level of pressure."

Holland has also spoken out about his plans to "disappear" once he becomes a father sometime in the future.

"When I have kids, you will not see me in movies anymore," he explained toMen's Healthearlier this year. "Golf and dad. And I will just disappear off the face of the earth."

A-List Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027 first appeared on Parade on Aug 3, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 3, 2025, where it first appeared.

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A-List Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027

AList Actor Says He'll Step Away From the Spotlight in 2027 Alex GurleyAugust 3, 2025 at 10:10 PM Photo by XNY...
New Photo - Hurricane center tracks tropical system off North Carolina coast, large tropical wave

Hurricane center tracks tropical system off North Carolina coast, large tropical wave Jennifer Sangalang, USA TODAY NETWORK FloridaAugust 3, 2025 at 11:31 PM Two months after the start of hurricane season, something big may be brewing in the tropics. In the 8 a.m. Sunday, Aug.

- - Hurricane center tracks tropical system off North Carolina coast, large tropical wave

Jennifer Sangalang, USA TODAY NETWORK - FloridaAugust 3, 2025 at 11:31 PM

Two months after the start of hurricane season, something big may be brewing in the tropics.

In the 8 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025, tropics advisory from the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida, a non-tropical area of low pressure (nicknamed AL95) in the western Atlantic about 180 miles off the coast of North Carolina may become a tropical or subtropical depression or storm Sunday or Monday while it moves east-northeast, away from North Carolina. And in the central tropical Atlantic, a tropical wave was forecast to move off the west coast of Africa.

A day earlier, "AL95" had formed along a frontal boundary about 150 miles off the coast of North Carolina, and its chances of formation had slightly increased. Although it appears close to North Carolina and South Carolina and increased to a 50% chance of cyclone formation as of Sunday, it's important to note that the tropical system is moving away from the coast.

The National Hurricane Center referenced the large tropical wave off the west coast of Africa (see graphic below) in its Saturday night tropics advisory on Aug. 2.

Additional slow development could occur through early next week.

The Atlantic hurricane season is from June 1 to Nov. 30 every year, with the most activity between August and October.

Should another weather system develop into a tropical storm, the system would be named Dexter, which is next on the list of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season names (see below).

More: Tropical Storm Gil briefly becomes hurricane: See tracker

In addition, the hurricane center is tracking two tropical waves in the Caribbean. Both are moving west and do not pose a threat at this time.

The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season runs from Sunday, June 1, to Sunday, Nov. 30, with the most active months between August and October.

➤ Weather alerts via text: Sign up to get updates about current storms and weather events by location

Keep reading for information about tropical storm activity for Sunday, July 13, 2025.

National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida, forecast on tropical activity: Is there a tropical storm or hurricane now?

According to the 8 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025, tropics advisory from the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida, here's information about "AL95" and "Disturbance 2":

In the western Atlantic (AL95, marked "orange" in the National Hurricane Center graphic):

A non-tropical area of low pressure located along a frontal boundary about 180 miles off the coast of North Carolina is producing disorganized showers and thunderstorms. Environmental conditions are marginally conducive for this system to become a tropical or subtropical depression or storm today or on Monday while it moves east-northeastward at about 10 mph, away from the coast of North Carolina. After Monday, environmental conditions become less conducive for development.

Formation chance through 48 hours was medium at 50 percent.

Formation chance through 7 days was medium at 50 percent.

In the central tropical Atlantic ("Disturbance 2" is marked "yellow" in the National Hurricane Center graphic):

A tropical wave was forecast to move off the west coast of Africa in the next day or two. Thereafter, some gradual development of the wave is possible during the middle to latter part of next week while it moves generally west-northwestward across the central tropical Atlantic.

Formation chance through seven days was low at 30 percent.

Formation chance through 48 hours was low at nearly 0 percent.

In addition to AL95 and "Disturbance 2," National Hurricane Center forecasters are tracking two tropical waves in the Caribbean. At this time, they do not pose a threat:

A tropical wave is in the Caribbean, moving west. Scattered moderate convection (or rain) is occurring over Hispaniola and adjacent waters, including the Windward Passage.

A tropical wave is in the western Caribbean, moving west. No significant convection is observed in the vicinity of this wave.

The USA TODAY Network in Florida will produce daily tropics watch advisories.

2025 Atlantic hurricane season predictions

The Atlantic basin consists of the northern Atlantic, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of America. NOAA changed its naming convention for the Gulf of Mexico after the U.S. Geological Survey changed the name on U.S. maps per President Trump's order.

Is it raining in Florida today? Live weather radar

Weather watches and warnings issued in FloridaWhat are the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season names? Did your name make the hurricane season names list? -

Andrea

Barry

Chantal

Dexter

Erin

Fernand

Gabrielle

Humberto

Imelda

Jerry

Karen

Lorenzo

Melissa

Nestor

Olga

Pablo

Rebekah

Sebastien

Tanya

Van

Wendy

Interactive map: Hurricanes, tropical storms that have passed near your cityStay informed. Get weather alerts via textWhat's next?

We will provide tropical weather coverage daily until Nov. 30 to keep you informed and prepared. Download your local site's app to ensure you're always connected to the news. And look for our special subscription offers here.

Contributing: Cheryl McCloud, USA TODAY Network-Florida

This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Hurricane center tracks tropical system and large disturbance

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Hurricane center tracks tropical system off North Carolina coast, large tropical wave

Hurricane center tracks tropical system off North Carolina coast, large tropical wave Jennifer Sangalang, USA TODAY NE...
New Photo - Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open

Mimi Rhodes sinks holeinone off another golf ball at Women's British Open John Leuzzi, USA TODAY NETWORK August 4, 2025 at 1:48 AM Mimi Rhodes, you wizard. Tip your cap.

- - Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open

John Leuzzi, USA TODAY NETWORK August 4, 2025 at 1:48 AM

Mimi Rhodes, you wizard. Tip your cap.

On Sunday, whether it was designed or not, the young Ladies European Tour golfer masterfully played the par-3, 214-yard Hole 3 during the 2025 AIG Women's British Open at Royal Porthcawl in Porthcawl, Wales, for a hole-in-one.

Rhodes' ace, however, didn't come without some help, as it ricocheted off Stephanie Kyriacou's ball that was placed inches away from the hole to bounce in.

My. My. Mimi. 💯Hole-in-one for Mimi Rhodes. pic.twitter.com/yEjXrxqmgJ

— AIG Women's Open (@AIGWomensOpen) August 3, 2025

REQUIRED READING: AIG Women's British Open leaderboard updates: Miyu Yamashita in control down the stretch

Noted by Golfweek, part of the USA TODAY Network, it is the second ace this week at the AIG Women's British Open, as Kyriacou made the first ace during Friday's second round competition on the par-3 eighth hole.

Despite her ace and several birdies, Rhodes, who has won three events on the LET this season, finished two over par in the final round of competition on Sunday. On the back nine alone, Rhodes recorded two bogies and a double bogey on the par-four sixth hole. At the time of this writing, Rhodes was tied for 19th on the leaderboard at one under par 288.

The AIG Women's British Open concludes on Sunday in Wales for the final major of the season.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mimi Rhodes records hole-in-one at AIG Women's British Open

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Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open

Mimi Rhodes sinks holeinone off another golf ball at Women's British Open John Leuzzi, USA TODAY NETWORK August 4,...
New Photo - French rider Pauline Ferrand-Prévôt wins women's Tour de France at her first attempt

French rider Pauline FerrandPrévôt wins women's Tour de France at her first attempt August 4, 2025 at 3:58 AM 1 / 2APTOPIX France Tour De France FemmeThe winner of the Tour de France Femmes Pauline FerrandPrevot from France of team Visma Lease a Bike celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win ...

- - French rider Pauline Ferrand-Prévôt wins women's Tour de France at her first attempt

August 4, 2025 at 3:58 AM

1 / 2APTOPIX France Tour De France FemmeThe winner of the Tour de France Femmes Pauline Ferrand-Prevot from France of team Visma - Lease a Bike celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win the 9th stage of the 4th edition of the Women's Tour de France cycling race, 124,1 km from Praz-Sur-Arly to Chatel Les Portes du Soleil, in Chatel, France, Sunday Aug. 3, 2025. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP)

CHATEL, France (AP) — French rider Pauline Ferrand-Prévôt won the women's Tour de France at her first attempt on Sunday, launching an attack to clinch the final stage and increase her overnight lead.

It gave Ferrand-Prévôt a resounding victory. She finished 3 minutes, 42 seconds ahead of 2023 champion Demi Vollering of the Netherlands and 4:09 clear of defending champion Kasia Niewiadoma of Poland.

"After my Olympic title, I said I would try to win the Tour de France in the next three years," said the 33-year-old Ferrand-Prévôt, an Olympic champion in mountain biking at last year's Paris Games. "So here I am, the first (time)."

There was little of the drama of last year's final day, which produced a four-second winning margin for the narrowest victory in the history of the women's and men's races.

"My teammates worked super hard for me all week long. I just want to say thank you and congrats to them," said Ferrand-Prévôt, who rides for the Visma–Lease a Bike team. "I love you so much girls, and thank you for everything."

Ferrand-Prévôt had put herself largely in control by winning Saturday's eighth and penultimate stage with an audacious solo breakaway on the last climb. That gave her an overnight lead of 2:37 seconds over Australian rider Sarah Gigante and 3:18 over Vollering.

Sunday's ninth stage from Praz-sur-Arly to Châtel was a 124-kilometer (77-mile) trek featuring three big mountain climbs.

But Ferrand-Prévôt did not face any big attacks and instead launched one of her own with 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) left.

The crowds cheered her all the way to the finish line and, moments later, the tears flowed as she lay on her back, exhausted but elated.

Vollering was 20 seconds behind in second place and Niewiadoma followed in third place as they sprinted to the line.

Earlier, Ferrand-Prévôt was with Gigante and a few others when they tackled the mammoth climb up Col de Joux Plane — an 11.6-kilometer grind with a gradient of 8.5%.

Gigante is known to have trouble descending at speed and was dropped on the long downhill. She could not make the time up, especially with no teammates to help her, and lost her podium spot, finishing sixth overall.

Having won Olympic gold and conquered the cobblestones of the Paris-Roubaix classic, Ferrand-Prévôt added another line to her glittering resumé with a Tour victory, 11 years after winning the world road race title.

___

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French rider Pauline Ferrand-Prévôt wins women's Tour de France at her first attempt

French rider Pauline FerrandPrévôt wins women's Tour de France at her first attempt August 4, 2025 at 3:58 AM 1 / ...
New Photo - Why Is Wall Street Obsessed With AI (Artificial Intelligence) Leader Palantir?

Why Is Wall Street Obsessed With AI (Artificial Intelligence) Leader Palantir? Jennifer Saibil, The Motley FoolAugust 3, 2025 at 10:05 PM Key Points Palantir stock trades at an astronomical P/E ratio. Investors see a huge growth opportunity in this relatively small company.

- - Why Is Wall Street Obsessed With AI (Artificial Intelligence) Leader Palantir?

Jennifer Saibil, The Motley FoolAugust 3, 2025 at 10:05 PM

Key Points -

Palantir stock trades at an astronomical P/E ratio.

Investors see a huge growth opportunity in this relatively small company.

10 stocks we like better than Palantir Technologies ›

Investors have gone wild over data analysis company Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR). Palantir stock has already more than doubled this year, and it's up nearly 1,500% over the past three years.

It continues to rise despite an astronomical valuation that also keeps climbing. At today's price, it's trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 660. Here's why investors are keep pushing it higher.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

A person at a desk with many applications open.

Image source: Getty Images.

Niche AI services

Artificial intelligence (AI) is the biggest trend in the markets today, and with so many companies providing exposure to it in different ways, it can be challenging to parse the best AI stocks to buy. What appeals to many investors are huge growth opportunities and technology that provides a moat. That's where Palantir comes in.

Some of the large AI companies like Nvidia and Amazon are already so big that it's debatable how much bigger they can get. Stocks generally move on growth, and the larger the foundation, the harder it is to increase it in percentages. Finding a younger company with growth prospects that can still move the needle can be much more attractive to growth investors.

Palantir provides an AI platform that organizes data, connecting data from different places to simplify complex operations. Its original product was built for government clients, but it now has a product for commercial use as well, which is growing quickly.

Its government and defense contracts give it stability and create a high barrier to entry, while the commercial platform in the U.S. is growing at a faster pace -- up 71% year over year in the 2025 first quarter, outpacing total company revenue growth of 39%. As more companies see the benefits of using AI, this segment has a long growth runway.

With total company revenue of only $3.1 billion over the trailing 12 months, Palantir could continue to enjoy high and profitable sales growth for many years, with a stock gain to match. That's something for investors to get excited about.

Should you invest $1,000 in Palantir Technologies right now?

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Jennifer Saibil has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Nvidia, and Palantir Technologies. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Why Is Wall Street Obsessed With AI (Artificial Intelligence) Leader Palantir?

Why Is Wall Street Obsessed With AI (Artificial Intelligence) Leader Palantir? Jennifer Saibil, The Motley FoolAugust ...
New Photo - Every major Batman and Superman movie, ranked from worst to best

Every major Batman and Superman movie, ranked from worst to best Darren Franich, Devan Coggan, Christian Holub, Nick Romano, Kevin JacobsenAugust 3, 2025 at 9:00 PM Jessica Miglio; Clay Enos/Warner Bros; Stephen Vaughan/Warner Bros David Corenswet as Superman in 'Superman'; Ben Affleck as Batman and...

- - Every major Batman and Superman movie, ranked from worst to best

Darren Franich, Devan Coggan, Christian Holub, Nick Romano, Kevin JacobsenAugust 3, 2025 at 9:00 PM

Jessica Miglio; Clay Enos/Warner Bros; Stephen Vaughan/Warner Bros

David Corenswet as Superman in 'Superman'; Ben Affleck as Batman and Henry Cavill as Superman in 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice'; Christian Bale as Batman in 'The Dark Knight'

Batman and Superman are two of the most popular heroes in movie history, and while they share a common goal of fighting crime and corruption, their backgrounds couldn't be more different. As has been explored in numerous films, Bruce Wayne comes from a place of great wealth and privilege, which he uses to procure the tools to battle as his alter ego, Batman. Meanwhile Kal-El, an alien from the planet Krypton who embraces a new identity on Earth as Superman, comes well-equipped with superhuman abilities.

Their respective films are often pitched quite differently, too, with Batman's darker aesthetic complementing Superman's brighter, hopeful tone. Sometimes, the caped heroes appear together in a crossover event, though such films have varied in quality.

Ahead, we're ranking every Batman and Superman movie released in cinemas, from 1966's Batman: The Movie to 2025's Superman, to find out who really comes out on top.

20. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016)

Warner Bros. Ben Affleck as Batman and Henry Cavill as Superman in 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice'

Batman versus Superman? Cool! Even cooler with Gotham across the river from Metropolis, suggesting cultural divides between super-cities. Too bad 2016's epic nonstarter bungles its smash-up with spinoff teases, Iron Man 2's government-oversight plot, and whatever Lois Lane (Amy Adams) is doing with that bullet. Director Zack Snyder had a big idea pairing Ben Affleck's seasoned Bruce against Henry Cavill's rookie Clark, but they're identical monoliths of brute-force melancholy. The ultimate battle suffers from CGI sludge, an obvious eventual alliance, and "Martha!" If only Warner Bros. had just let Snyder make his Killer Superman vs. Machine Gun Batman movie. —Darren Franich

19. Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987)

Everett Collection Christopher Reeve as Superman and Mark Pillow as Nuclear Man in 'Superman IV: The Quest for Peace'

This infamous cheese-fest is better than Batman v Superman for two reasons: It's one hour shorter, and Christopher Reeve. No question, the star's final superfilm exemplifies diminishing returns. Peace begins topically with Kal-El eradicating all nukes. That plan requires hurling missiles into the sun, which — thanks to Lex Luthor (check-cashing Gene Hackman) and his nephew, Lenny (oh, Jon Cryer) — creates evil charisma void Nuclear Man (Mark Pillow). Scholars can debate whether the long-haired blond anti-Superman is sillier than BvS' digital sewer monster Doomsday. We choose the mullet. —D.F.

18. Superman III (1983)

Warner Bros. Christopher Reeve as Superman (left) in 'Superman III'

Anyone who turns this on expecting to see a buddy comedy between Superman and Richard Pryor (already a strange proposition) is bound to be disappointed, because they spend most of the runtime separated into two different movies. Christopher Reeve's Clark Kent embarks on a comedic homecoming trip to Smallville (which doesn't really make sense because the bumbling "Clark" persona was invented for his double life in Metropolis and would be unrecognizable to high school classmates, but whatever). Meanwhile, Pryor's Gus Gorman is so good at embezzling money that he somehow becomes a corporate cyberterrorist. Annette O'Toole makes a super cute Lana Lang (which led to her even better Superman-adjacent performance as Ma Kent on Smallville), drunk naughty Superman is a pretty fun sight, and the evil computer climax resonates a bit now that we're all freaking out about A.I. again — even if it makes you wonder why they won't just do Brainiac in one of these movies already. —Christian Holub

17. Justice League (2017)

Clay Enos/DC Comics/Warner Bros. Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Ezra Miller as the Flash, and Jason Momoa as Aquaman in 'Justice League'

Look — this superteam bonanza remains a mulch of career-ending controversy, paradoxical corporate missions, and the questionable need for another gigantic film about teasing Darkseid for later. Viewed just as a Superman movie, Joss Whedon's rewrites give Cavill his best material, reimagining Man of Steel's moody messiah as an old-fashioned pose-for-the-kids champion (with, yes, a visible non-mustache). Viewed just as a Batman movie, Snyder's HBO Max expansion lets Batfleck plasma-rifle a crapload of parademons. Any Justice League cut stitches one bad comic saga (the '90s Death of Superman) into an alien invasion commanded by the unbelievably lame Steppenwolf (Ciarán Hinds). —D.F.

16. Batman Forever (1995)

Everett Collection Tommy Lee Jones as Two-Face and Jim Carrey as the Riddler in 'Batman Forever'

Jim Carrey was on top of the world in 1995. Having just starred in The Mask, Dumb and Dumber, and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective in the previous year alone, Carrey's over-the-top performance as the Riddler must have seemed fresh and zeitgeist-y to those seeing Batman Forever in theaters. Absent that context, it's nonsensical and cringe-inducing (his master plan involves terrorizing Gotham citizens with a...brain box?) especially since Tommy Lee Jones is bringing the exact same manic energy. You'd think that a movie featuring Two-Face would have more time for differentiation and tonal surprise. Ah well, we got one eventually.

Val Kilmer makes for a pretty middle-of-the-road Batman — not as painfully miscast as George Clooney, but not as delightfully kinky as Michael Keaton. Speaking of kink, the film's true highlight is Nicole Kidman's performance as Dr. Chase Meridian, the world's worst criminal psychologist, but more importantly, a beautiful woman who is unapologetically horny for Batman. Amidst our modern deluge of completely sexless superhero fare, that's one element that has actually aged well. —C.H.

15. Man of Steel (2013)

Warner Bros. Henry Cavill as Superman (left) in 'Man of Steel'

Nothing has been more polarizing in modern superhero movie discourse than the Snyder-verse, which began with a 2013 film that feels like a direct response to Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. ("Oh, you liked a grittier, darker Batman? Well, we're going to do the same thing now for DC's beacon of hope.") Nolan produced the flick, and with Zack Snyder at the helm, Man of Steel brought us a more brooding, haunted Kryptonian strongman seemingly destined to wander the world a shell of himself. He's trapped in endless philosophical and moral debates with the ghostly memory of his dead father while struggling to integrate into his adopted home world of Earth. Despite what you think about the still-ongoing debates about Superman killing Zod, the joyless factor deserves its critiques. It also takes some of the intrigue away from what this film is setting up. (If you're going to pit Batman against Superman, but both of them are emotional cutters, where exactly is the nuance?) Henry Cavill, though...I mean...the hunk of man-meat made chest hair great again in pop culture. —Nick Romano

14. The Dark Knight Rises (2012)

Ron Phillips Tom Hardy as Bane in 'The Dark Knight Rises'

The last and least of Christopher Nolan's Batman films, The Dark Knight Rises also made minimal impact on pop culture — outside, that is, of Tom Hardy's still-baffling performance as Bane. Everyone who's seen this movie probably has their own impression of the guttural guerrilla leader, though none is better than James Adomian's incredible work on the Harley Quinn animated series. The rest of the movie is full of equally indecipherable choices (Anne Hathaway has many talents, but Catwoman she is not) and head-scratching questions (how does Batman make it from a pit in the Middle Eastern desert to a sealed-off Pittsburgh Gotham in such a short amount of time, anyway?), but at least Hardy is having fun. As ridiculous as either of the Joel Schumacher Bat-films without the self-awareness to realize it, The Dark Knight Rises does deserve credit for giving its hero a proper finale in an age of never-ending zombie franchises. —C.H.

13. Superman Returns (2006)

Warner Bros. Brandon Routh as Superman and Kate Bosworth as Lois Lane in 'Superman Returns'

Arguably the first major legacy sequel, this 2006 curio embeds newcomer Brandon Routh in Christopher Reeve's movie world, borrowing John Williams' score, Marlon Brando's face, and so many Kryptonian crystals. This Superman returns after five years in deep space, finding Lois (Kate Bosworth) a mom to young Jason (Tristan Lake Leabu) and engaged to handsome Richard White (James Marsden). Jason is secretly Superman's child, a plot twist that focalizes the unusual lost-love mood of this Lois and Clark relationship. It could've been a superpowered Before Sunset — except the baby-faced leads are way too young. Nowadays, Kevin Spacey costarring in a Bryan Singer flick makes Returns a film without many loud defenders, though it's an endearing labor-of-love attempt to honor the Richard Donner films' soaring sincerity. —D.F.

12. Batman & Robin (1997)

Everett Collection Uma Thurman as Poison Ivy in 'Batman & Robin'

We've reached the point where Batman & Robin is so bad it's now good. No. It's camp, which means it has achieved immortality. George Clooney may not jump to the top of the charts when ranking Hollywood's best Batmen, but the 1997 film has taken up space in the minds of queer movie lovers. A cult hit may be too strong of a phrase, but its appreciation has only grown. A Batsuit with nipples! Flashing close-up shots of Clooney and Chris O'Donnell's rubber-clad bubble butts! Mr. Freeze's legion of evil hockey players! Clueless star Alicia Silverstone! It's like Uma Thurman is declaring from inside her sexy pink gorilla suit, "I'm going to give the gays everything they want." One could even call the film timely again. Before the Poison Ivy of HBO Max's Harley Quinn came along, here was a climate-conscious villain whose only mission was to save Mother Gaia. She walked so Greta Thunberg could run. —N.R.

11. Batman Begins (2005)

Warner Bros. Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne in 'Batman Begins'

It feels right to place this film so close to Batman & Robin, since Christopher Nolan's supposedly "gritty" take on the Bat-mythos was a direct response to the candy-colored campiness of Joel Schumacher. Batman Begins successfully revitalized the Dark Knight as a film franchise, but, nearly 20 years later, Liam Neeson's Ra's al Ghul doesn't necessarily seem any less outsized than Arnold Schwarzenegger's Mr. Freeze, while Nolan's portrayal of Gotham City clearly owes more to Blade Runner (1982) than Taxi Driver (1976).

Still, Batman Begins powerfully expressed the aspirational nature of its central hero: "If you make yourself more than just a man, if you devote yourself to an ideal, then you become something else entirely: A legend, Mr. Wayne." It also had an undeniably seismic influence on subsequent franchise reboots — which, depending on your opinion of the current Hollywood landscape, is either awesome or terrible. —C.H.

10. Batman: The Movie (1966)

ABC Television Group Adam West as Batman in 'Batman: The Movie'

Like a sparrow with a machine gun, this ecstatic spandex caper makes sweet, loud music. Between TV seasons, Adam West and Burt Ward headlined a big-screen Bat-venture full of more: more villains, more vehicles, more brassy surf-jazz melodies. The shark punch is one sight gag among many, and Lorenzo Semple Jr.'s daffy script makes room for a delirious double-crossing romance, with Lee Meriwether's Catwoman undercover as a Wayne-attracting Soviet. Batman '66 looks more unconventional with every passing decade of by-the-numbers Gotham grimness. Like, name one other Batman who fought bad guys on a submarine while holding a kitty cat. —D.F.

9. The Batman (2022)

Jonathan Olley/DC Comics/Warner Bros. Robert Pattinson as Batman in 'The Batman'

Gotham's broodiest vigilante has gotten darker and grittier with every iteration, so it was only a matter of time before he went full emo. Matt Reeves' ambitious 2022 noir tries to put the "detective" back in World's Greatest Detective, following a new millennial Bat (Robert Pattinson) as he hunts the murderous Riddler (Paul Dano). The result is a dark mystery with even darker color grading — more hard-boiled whodunnit than smash-'em-up superhero blockbuster.

Not everything here works: The indulgent, 167-minute runtime (!) should have been slashed in half, yet somehow we still wish more time was devoted to Batman's budding romance with Catwoman (Zoë Kravitz). But even amidst all the doom and gloom, Pattinson shines, slathering on the black eyeliner and moping around to Nirvana. Gotham has never seemed so...goth. —Devan Coggan

8. Superman (2025)

DC Comics

Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr., David Corenswet as Superman, and María Gabriela De Faría as Angela Spica/the Engineer in 'Superman'

Following the grim tones of Snyder/Cavill's Superman, writer-director James Gunn offered a delightful throwback to the character's more hopeful, humble beginnings in this well-received reboot. Skipping past the well-trod Kal-El origin story in favor of skillfully dropping us three years into his role as Superman, the film centers on the superhero's public image issues after interfering in an international conflict.

David Corenswet proves why he was the right choice for the title role, with his character-appropriate good looks and easy charm serving the action and his romance with Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) well. Gunn finds the right tone of unabashed earnestness and crowd-pleasing thrills, delivering the rare modern superhero movie that works as a standalone feature rather than a franchise entry. —Kevin Jacobsen

7. Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993)

Warner Bros. Andrea Beaumont (voice: Dana Delany) and Batman (voice: Kevin Conroy) in 'Batman: Mask of the Phantasm'

Kevin Conroy is often overlooked by the mainstream when debating the best Batman portrayers of all time, but the actor undoubtedly gave a definitive performance, and Phantasm is his tour de force. Paired with inspired Joker voice work from Mark Hamill, a hero-villain dynamic that has echoed throughout the animated space, the film is an effective Batman story.

Bruce Wayne is torn between his two lives as a wealthy businessman and a masked vigilante, and there are two brand-new characters we hadn't yet met in any form to facilitate that conflict. Andrea Beaumont (Dana Delany), a woman Bruce first meets while the two are visiting their dead parents' gravesites, could've been his shot at a normal routine if she hadn't Dear John-ed him. And just as Bruce worries Gotham's criminals have stopped fearing Batman, in comes the Phantasm, a figure directly linked to Bruce's past, whose crimes (e.g., killing the city's mob bosses) get blamed on the Dark Knight. Mask of the Phantasm proves that some of DC's best movies have already been happening for years in animation. —N.R.

6. Batman (1989)

Everett Collection Jack Nicholson as the Joker and Michael Keaton as Batman in 'Batman'

Technically, the 1989 movie is the first "serious" Batman film, a far cry from Adam West cavorting in a cape. But there's a delightfully zany energy to Tim Burton's first superhero flick, which reimagines Gotham as a noirish playground of dark alleys and over-the-top parade floats. Michael Keaton is better in the later Batman Returns (more on that one in a minute), but he brings a glowering charm to his first outing as the Caped Crusader. Meanwhile, Jack Nicholson oscillates between campy and menacing: One minute, his sinister Joker is pontificating about the devil in the pale moonlight, and the next, he's boogieing to Prince.

In fact, the entire film can't decide whether to embrace the silly or the serious — and yet somehow, that atonal balance works. It's the cinematic equivalent of Burton turning to the audience and saying, "You wanna get nuts? C'mon, let's get nuts." —D.C.

5. The LEGO Batman Movie (2017)

Warner Bros. Pictures Batman (voice: Will Arnett) in 'The LEGO Batman Movie'

Is LEGO Batman the movie that best understands Batman? It might be! In an onscreen canon littered with campy vigilantes, broody emo kids, and gun-toting psychopaths, Will Arnett's tiny toy hero might be Batman in his purest form. Under all the self-referential jokes and sight gags, 2017's LEGO spinoff understands who Bruce Wayne is: a troubled, slightly narcissistic man-child who'd rather put on a cape than confront past traumas.

The result is a film that's clever, heartfelt, and very, very funny. It's certainly the only Batman movie where Jemaine Clement's Sauron teams up with Eddie Izzard's Voldemort, and the entire thing has a sort of ramshackle, kids-in-the-sandbox charm. (It's also the rare example of IP crossover done right, and it's way better than Warner Bros.' other braggy crossover films, like the extremely subpar Ready Player One and the even subpar-er Space Jam reboot.) The LEGO Batman Movie is proof that sometimes, the biggest heroes are only 3 inches tall and made of plastic. —D.C.

4. The Dark Knight (2008)

Warner Bros. Heath Ledger as the Joker in 'The Dark Knight'

Batman Begins introduced audiences to a starkly different Batman than they had seen before, but it wasn't taken so seriously until 2008's The Dark Knight. That's largely due to Heath Ledger's approach to Joker, a role the late actor reshaped into the new Macbeth — the kind of "prestige" character that can earn the star attached to it Oscars love. (Both Ledger and Joaquin Phoenix have now won Academy Awards for playing Joker.) We can talk endlessly about this complex villain and the moral conversations the film has in real time with its audience — which critics and fans already have had — but it's also just a blast.

It's the kind of superhero movie that can be both gritty and fun: a riveting cat-and-mouse game bolstered by a Hans Zimmer score that slaps, dynamic camera shots from cinematographer Wally Pfister, layered supporting players like Aaron Eckhart's Harvey Dent and Maggie Gyllenhaal's Rachel Dawes, and iconic lines we're all still quoting to this day. Some men just want to watch the world burn, and some audiences want to watch those men watch the world burn. —N.R.

3. Superman II (1980)

Warner Bros. Margot Kidder as Lois Lane and Christopher Reeve as Clark Kent in 'Superman II'

Fans of this 1980 classic generally fall into two camps. Maybe you're Team Richard Donner, the original director who was fired halfway through and treated Superman with a kind of solemn awe. Or maybe you prefer the Richard Lester cut, the Hard Day's Night director who infused the sequel with goofy slapstick. Either way, there's one thing we all can agree on: Christopher Reeve has never been better. Reeve is Superman, whether he's facing off against a glowering Zod (Terence Stamp) or getting beaten up in a diner.

It's long been said that Reeve is the greatest special effect in superhero film history, and that's never been truer here: Nerdy Clark Kent and noble Supes have never felt so real, and the actor switches effortlessly between the two, just by raising an eyebrow or relaxing his shoulders. The love affair between Clark and Lois Lane (Margot Kidder) is both swoon-worthy and heartbreaking (although the less said about that amnesia kiss, the better). You really will believe a man can fly — especially if that man is Christopher Reeve. —D.C.

2. Superman (1978)

Everett Collection Christopher Reeve as Superman in 'Superman'

From one point of view, it might seem odd to say that the first modern superhero film is still one of the best. Are we really arguing that the genre hasn't improved at all since 1978? Not exactly. It's just that superhero movies have changed so much since Richard Donner's pioneering effort that watching the original Superman in 2025 now feels like opening a mysterious alien object that traveled across countless sparkling galaxies in a spiky spinning starship to remind the human race of beauty and wonder. None of our modern green screens and volume technology can compete with the simple magic of watching Christopher Reeve fly through the sky on those invisible wires — or switch effortlessly between Clark Kent and Superman just through posture and syntax.

Gene Hackman's Lex Luthor has the coolest supervillain lair this side of Watchmen's Ozymandias — wouldn't you also want to hang out with your henchmen in a bachelor pad beneath Grand Central Station, complete with indoor pool and Belle-worthy library? Although Superman II makes a convincing case for the value of pitting the Man of Steel against equally powerful enemies, the climax of the first Superman is a testament to the true value of superhero stories. After all, what is the point of this fantasy if not imagining a role model so powerful and so good they are willing and able to save us from anything — even time itself? —C.H.

1. Batman Returns (1992)

Warner Bros. Michelle Pfeiffer as Selina Kyle/Catwoman in 'Batman Returns'

Glorious cinematic mania. Burton made a 1992 Bat-sequel that's part-fairy tale, part-satire, nonstop horror show, and still the greatest superhero screen romance. Michelle Pfeiffer is beyond legendary as Selina Kyle, lonely everygal–turned–sadomasochistic feline avenger. She's a mad woman in every sense, well-matched by Oswald Cobblepot (Danny DeVito) as a ravenous fish-manstrosity. An embarrassment of riches gives Returns a third antagonist, the vampiric tycoon Max Shreck, played with maximum weirdosity by Christopher Walken. Keaton isn't sidelined, though. He's more bemused here than in 1989's Batman, and the baddies offer psychological challenges to his caped crusading. Sparks fly between Bruce, Selina, and their costumed selves. A merrily deranged prologue gives Penguin an inverted Dark Knight origin, making Oswald another baby aristocrat orphaned by parents who didn't want him. ("You're just jealous because I'm a genuine freak and you have to wear a mask!" is still the sharpest Batman take in any Batman screenplay).

Famously more demented than any studio or every parent expected, the film's final act edges into tragedy, even as the missile-armed waterfowl start marching. Returns tops this list because it is this list, encompassing luscious absurdity and twisted emotional psychology, going fully biblical (watch out, firstborns!) while giving every character a playful sense of humor. It's the move equivalent of a sonnet and a dirty limerick. All that on Christmas? Oh, Holy Knight, Batman! —D.F.

on Entertainment Weekly

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