Barry star Bill Hader breaks down that bonkers bike chase in '710N'

All Barry wanted to do was bring some beignets to a dinner party. In the HBO comedy's bleak yet hilarious third season, Barry Berkman (Bill Hader) is a hitman without a purpose. His nascent acting career is stalled, and his former acting teacher and mentor, Gene Cousineau (Henry Winkler), now loathes him for killing the woman he loved. Barry's girlfriend, Sally (Sarah Goldberg), dumped him after he missed her TV show's big premiere event — and because she finally realized he had a violent temper.

Barry Williams is determined to make it further than Brady Bunch sister Maureen McCormick on Dancin

The Brady sibling rivalry never dies! Barry Williams, who played eldest son Greg Brady on the classic sitcom, is currently competing on Dancing With the Stars alongside pro partner Peta Murgatroyd. He follows in the dance steps of eldest Brady girl, Maureen McCormick, a.k.a. Marcia Marcia Marcia, and he is determined to leave her in his dust. On season 23, McCormick and her partner Artem Chigvintsev went home in week seven.

Barry's 'Crisis' death, Monitor's warning, more

This article contains spoilers from the season 6 premiere of The Flash, “Into the Void.” What do you do when you learn the exact day you’re going to die? Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) will have to figure that out this fall on The Flash. In the superhero drama’s season 6 premiere, the Monitor (LaMonica Garrett) revealed that the Flash is indeed destined to die on Dec. 10, 2019, in the coming crisis, as foretold on the updated future newspaper.

Bastards, treason, and plague, oh my!

Welcome back to the decline of Catherine of Aragon on The Spanish Princess. This week Catherine struggles to fight for not only herself but also her sisters in royalty, Meg and Mary. Plague sends the court out of London to Wolsey’s abode at Hampton Court, where it’s also discovered that Bessie Blount is pregnant with Henry’s bastard. Maggie and Thomas More hole up back at the palace, just in case they were infected.

Batman Begins

Before becoming attached as director of Batman Begins, Christopher Nolan (Memento, Insomnia) told Warner Bros. that if he was going to make a Dark Knight movie, it wouldn’t be sweepingly gothic like Tim Burton’s or cartoonishly campy like Joel Schumacher’s. His Batman would be grounded in the real world and play to the twisted psychology of Bruce Wayne. It would be an original story that would answer the question: What kind of man puts on a bat costume and goes around fighting crime?

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice: EW Exclusive Photos

1 Clay Enos Batman and Superman are finally meeting face to face – and fist to fist. EW's new cover focuses on the first film to unite the DC Comics universe on the big screen, and here we present a collection of new images from director Zack Snyder's Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. "It’s been a serious haul,” says Snyder, who’s been working on the film for three years after finishing 2013’s Man of Steel.

Be Cool

Based on Elmore Leonard’s 1999 novel about mobsters and music stars, Be Cool is like two sequels in one. Ostensibly, it’s the follow-up to 1995’s Get Shorty. But it also marks the on-screen reunion of John Travolta and his Pulp Fiction costar Uma Thurman. And once again they take to the dance floor. ”It doesn’t have that same kind of heroined-out feeling,” Travolta laughs about their rug cutting. ”We’re healthier characters.

Beagle mania! Great movies starring dogs

We know how exhausting it can be coming up with new ways to say no to your kids every time they hound you for a dog. They’ll promise to do chores around the house. They’ll swear that they’ll feed him and walk him and even tend to the smellier doodies…er, duties. Worst of all, when you’re down to your last hanging thread of resolve, they’ll flash you the look: that wounded, here comes-the-waterworks look that says, ”If I don’t get a puppy, one day you’ll be the heartless villain in a bestselling memoir of emotional abuse.

Behind the scenes of ''End of Days''

Millions of Arnold Schwarzenegger fans who turned out to see ”End of Days” weren’t the only ones surprised by what they witnessed. Even Arnold’s costar Robin Tunney wasn’t prepared for what she saw — that’s because she’d filmed most of her scenes before the special effects had even been created. ”I didn’t realize how sweeping the sets are and what the scope was until I saw the movie,” Tunney tells EW Online.

Behind the scenes of the cult classic

In 1991, aspiring animator Mike Judge was a touring musician and grad student living outside of Dallas, Texas, when he channeled his past cubicle-life angst – from his former life as an engineer – into a 16mm short film called Office Space, featuring Milton. The vignette about a mumbling office worker and his condescending boss – which Judge drew, voiced and scored –would air on Comedy Central. It was a low-key launch for one of Hollywood's most singular comedic voices who brought us the generation-defining MTV cartoon Beavis and Butt-Head, the eerily prescient 2006 satirical feature Idiocracy, and HBO's Emmy-winning tech-nerd lampoon Silicon Valley among others.