Contrary to what conversion therapy might have you believe, it’s impossible to turn someone gay or bisexual. That is, unless you watched the first “Scooby-Doo” movie at a young, formative age. If that ...
"I think it was the reason I actually signed on to the movie," Gellar told host Andy Cohen on Thursday's episode of Watch What Happens Live. "It was less family-friendly to begin with." The revelation ...
"I feel like the world wants to see it, but I don't know where it is," she said of the deleted scene Tommy McArdle is a Writer-Reporter on the Movies team at PEOPLE. He joined the brand in 2022. Sarah ...
Shane Romanchick is a TV and Movie News author for Collider. He also runs his own blog Entershanement Reviews where he writes about and reviews the latest movies. He graduated from Regis College in ...
Sarah Michelle Gellar said that 2002's live-action "Scooby-Doo" movie was originally "less family-friendly" and included a number of scenes that were left on the cutting room floor, including a ...
Raja Gosnell's "Scooby-Doo" might have flopped with most critics, but it was a major sexual awakening for (at least) one of them. Contrary to what conversion therapy might have you believe, it’s ...
Scooby-Doo, what happened to you? As Sarah Michelle Gellar tells it, her 2002 movie live-action adaptation of the beloved kiddie cartoon, was going to be a lot different from the G-rated flick that ...