The best movies under 90 minutes

You hear the grumbling all the time these days. ‘Ugh, two hours? Why are movies so long these days?’ It’s not a great sign for our collective attention spans in a content-saturated world that we can’t sit still and absorb a story longer than the average rush-hour commute. Sometimes, though, you really do just need a quick film fix that’ll allow you to get a dose of entertainment and then move on with your life. And so, with apologies to Martin Scorsese and Andrei Tarkovsky, here are 20 of the best movies you can watch in 90 minutes or less. Because length doesn’t always matter.Recommended:
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Sheinelle Jones Announces Her First Book Through Mom’s Eyes, Including Interviews with the Moms of Famous Celebs

Sheinelle Jones’ new book is an ode to mothers.
On the Thursday, Sept. 19 episode of the Today show, Jones, 46, officially announced her first book, Through Mom’s Eyes, will be released on April 15, 2025. Described by publisher G.P. Putnam’s Sons as an “inspiring collection of heartfelt life lessons from hardworking moms who raised some of our favorite celebrities,” the book includes Jones’ interviews with the moms of stars including Lady Gaga, Stephen Curry and Lin-Manuel Miranda.

“If you are a mom, a grandmom, an auntie, a big sister, a cousin — if you take care of any children, and I say children ages 0 to even 62, because mothering never stops, this is my love letter to you,” the morning show host said.

Sheinelle Jones (center) with her three children in 2023.
Nathan Congleton/NBC/Getty

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Jones went on to explain how the project has been in the works for “so long,” and was born out of a recurring Today segment focused on her interviews with the mothers of celebrities. “As a mom of three, I thought, ‘Man, what did their mother feed them? Why are they so delightful?'” she recalled.

Her interest in understanding how people like Matthew McConaughey’s mother Mary Kathleen raised such a well-rounded person led to Jones deciding to put together a book sharing the advice and experiences of some of her favorite celebrities’ moms. The news anchor even took her journey a step further by trying out some of their tips on her own kids.

The result is a book that looks at all aspects of motherhood. “When life gets really hard, mothering doesn’t stop,” she added, before sharing that the book includes Kevin Durant’s mom Wanda’s journey as a single parent, which paralleled that of her own mother’s.

Jones previously teased Through Mom’s Eyes to PEOPLE during her fellow Today show host Al Roker’s 70th birthday celebration in August.

Through Mom’s Eyes by Sheinelle Jones.
G.P. Putnam’s Sons

“I do a series on the show, it’s called Through Mom’s Eyes, where I interview moms of people we admire, from Steph Curry to Shaq[uille O’Neal], Lady Gaga, Lin-Manuel Miranda, you name it,” Jones said, at the time. “And I noticed after interviewing about 20 of them that I was taking all of these jewels and applying it to myself for my own kids, calling my girlfriends and being like, ‘Can I tell you how Steph Curry’s mom got him to do his chores?’”

“And then I finally realized maybe I should share the wisdom,” she continued. “And so I sat down and I thought, you know what? Let me see if I can write about what I’ve learned. And it has been one of the most fulfilling things I have ever done.”

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Through Mom’s Eyes comes out on April 15, 2025 and is available for preorder now, wherever books are sold.

How to Watch Indiana Fever at Washington Mystics for Free on Prime Video

It’s time for the final Prime Video-exclusive “Thursdays with the W” game of the season, this time featuring Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever!

Today is the very last day of the WNBA regular season, and there’s still one playoff spot open for the taking.

The Fever, who are currently sitting at .513 with 20 wins and 19 losses, are officially in, while Washington is in 9th place but not completely out of the playoff hunt yet.

The only place to watch tonight’s game is Prime Video, but you can do it for free — keep reading to find out how.

How to Watch and Stream Indiana Fever at Washington Mystics Game:

Prime Video is the exclusive broadcaster of tonight’s Indiana Fever at Washington Mystics game, so you’ll need an Amazon Prime subscription to watch the game.

How to Get Prime Video:

If you aren’t already an Amazon Prime subscriber, head over to Amazon and pick a subscription plan; you can pay monthly ($14.99) or annually ($139), plus there are plans available at discounts for young adults in addition to income-verified customers.

New subscribers will get a 30-day free trial for everything Amazon Prime offers.

After that, just provide your payment details and start taking advantage of all things Prime. Amazon Prime costs $15/month or $139/year and comes with free shipping, exclusive deals, and more in addition to Prime Video.

What Time Does the Indiana Fever at Washington Mystics Game Start?

The Indiana Fever vs. Washington Mystics game tips off at 7:00 p.m. ET on Prime Video.

Where is the Indiana Fever at the Washington Mystics Game Being Played?

Tonight’s game will take place on the Mystics’ home court at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC.

Indiana Fever and Washington Mystics Points Per Game Leaders:

Indiana Fever:

Points per Game: Kelsey Mitchell (19.6)

Rebounds per Game: Aliyah Boston (9)

Assists per Game: Caitlin Clark (8.4)

Washington Mystics:

Points per Game: Ariel Atkins (14.9)

Rebounds per Game: Aaliyah Edwards (5.6)

Assists per Game: Julie Vanloo (4.4)

Why Trust Decider Shopping

This article was written by Angela Tricarico, Commerce Writer/Reporter for Decider. Angela keeps readers up to date with cord-cutter-friendly deals, how to watch your favorite sports teams and movies on each streaming service and the very best in tech, like soundbars, to enhance your viewing experience. Not only does Angela test and compare the services, devices and merch she writes about, but she’s also a superfan specializing in the intersection of shopping, tech and pop culture. Prior to joining Decider and the New York Post in 2023, she wrote about streaming and consumer tech at Insider Reviews. 

For more like this, check out the Decider Shopping section.

Acapulco Season 4 Starts Filming in Puerto Vallarta This Month

Cameras will return to Las Colinas soon! The filming of the fourth season of Apple TV+’s bilingual (Spanish and English) comedy series ‘Acapulco’ will start in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, in September and conclude in December. Sam Laybourne serves as the showrunner, and Jaime Eliezer Karas is on board as a director. Inspired by the film ‘How to Be a Latin Lover’ (2017), the show was created by Austin Winsberg, Eduardo Cisneros, and Jason Shuman.

By Endorsing Political Candidates, Science Mag “Inflames Disdain for Science,” Says Science Writer

Photo credit: CDC on Unsplash.
At the American Council for Science and Health, science writer Cameron English has blasted Scientific American for endorsing Kamala Harris for President: “It’s a senseless, shortsighted move that will inflame America’s disdain for science.”

He added, however, “The upside is that it could incentivize needed reforms in our ideologically slanted academic and public health institutions.”

How? 

A Poison Pill, Apparently

Several high-profile scientists blasted SciAm for once again endorsing the Democratic nominee for president. “A science magazine should not be endorsing presidents,” evolutionary biologist Colin Wright tweeted. “This is why you have lost all credibility. And yes, I’d be equally critical if you had endorsed Trump.” Behavioral scientist Gad Saad was less gentle: “Authoritarian Leftist partisanship has hijacked everything: academia, science, journalism, medicine, business, law, entertainment, culture, Justice system, etc.”

Several other influential academics were equally critical of SciAm’s endorsement on the grounds that it would further undermine the public’s trust in science. They’re correct, but we’re long past the point of pressuring science institutions to revert to ideological neutrality. The only real solution is to allow them to engage in naked partisan advocacy until they erode their dwindling credibility with Americans. After that, we can begin replacing them with credible institutions that actually advance science. 

English cites a number of areas of serious corruption in science, prefacing his comments with “The unfortunate reality is that mainstream science — the existing cohort of academic journals, universities, popular publications, and regulatory agencies–is ideologically corrupt to the core. Scientific American’s endorsement of Harris is a clear indicator of this devolution, but there are many others worth highlighting.”

Scientific American Versus Science Consensus?

One example English cites: “The American Academy of Pediatrics endorses ‘gender-affirming care’ in healthy children, bucking the growing global consensus of health professionals.” Indeed. Wesley J. Smith noted recently that a top children’s doctors’ conference featured two speakers pushing that point of view who in no way represent what most pediatricians or parents think (or what the global consensus thinks).

And as Smith noted, the SciAm endorsement also retails urban legends around Harris’s opponent, former president Donald Trump:

For example, the editorial repeats the lie that Trump told people to inject bleach to fight Covid. From the editorial:

Trump touted his pandemic efforts during his first debate with Harris, but in 2020 he encouraged resistance to basic public health measures, spread misinformation about treatments and suggested injections of bleach could cure the disease.

No. He. Did. Not …

Trump was floating a half-baked idea — which was not helpful. But he never told people to inject bleach or any other substance into their bodies …

How can an editorial in a supposedly factually based scientific publication be trusted as dispositive when it pushes a lie that has repeatedly been debunked — even by Snopes? This alone should discredit SA as a reliable guide to voting.

That’s one of the problems when scientists engage in political partisanship — they become persuaded that abandoning accuracy is a form of righteousness as long as it helps the Good party win.

But — and this is the point that the scientists-turned-partisans miss — once people come to see them as partisans, one thing is sure to happen: Those people will stop believing the scientists even when they insist that they are speaking as scientists. They may well be right. But how is a layperson to know? And in a serious matter, why should we take a chance?

Trust in Science Is in Steady Decline

The public has noticed, sort of. Among Americans, public trust in science has declined sharply in recent years, with further declines clocked in 2023 and in 2024.

Explanations (why, why, why don’t people trust science any more?) are all over the map. Tribal loyalty, too much information, and lack of outreach all strut their stuff — and the decline continues. Maybe Cameron is onto something. Kudos to him for raising a serious question that may bear on the future of public funding of — as well as trust in — science.

Cross-posted at Mind Matters News.

By Endorsing Political Candidates, Science Mag “Inflames Disdain for Science,” Says Science Writer

Photo credit: CDC on Unsplash.
At the American Council for Science and Health, science writer Cameron English has blasted Scientific American for endorsing Kamala Harris for President: “It’s a senseless, shortsighted move that will inflame America’s disdain for science.”

He added, however, “The upside is that it could incentivize needed reforms in our ideologically slanted academic and public health institutions.”

How? 

A Poison Pill, Apparently

Several high-profile scientists blasted SciAm for once again endorsing the Democratic nominee for president. “A science magazine should not be endorsing presidents,” evolutionary biologist Colin Wright tweeted. “This is why you have lost all credibility. And yes, I’d be equally critical if you had endorsed Trump.” Behavioral scientist Gad Saad was less gentle: “Authoritarian Leftist partisanship has hijacked everything: academia, science, journalism, medicine, business, law, entertainment, culture, Justice system, etc.”

Several other influential academics were equally critical of SciAm’s endorsement on the grounds that it would further undermine the public’s trust in science. They’re correct, but we’re long past the point of pressuring science institutions to revert to ideological neutrality. The only real solution is to allow them to engage in naked partisan advocacy until they erode their dwindling credibility with Americans. After that, we can begin replacing them with credible institutions that actually advance science. 

English cites a number of areas of serious corruption in science, prefacing his comments with “The unfortunate reality is that mainstream science — the existing cohort of academic journals, universities, popular publications, and regulatory agencies–is ideologically corrupt to the core. Scientific American’s endorsement of Harris is a clear indicator of this devolution, but there are many others worth highlighting.”

Scientific American Versus Science Consensus?

One example English cites: “The American Academy of Pediatrics endorses ‘gender-affirming care’ in healthy children, bucking the growing global consensus of health professionals.” Indeed. Wesley J. Smith noted recently that a top children’s doctors’ conference featured two speakers pushing that point of view who in no way represent what most pediatricians or parents think (or what the global consensus thinks).

And as Smith noted, the SciAm endorsement also retails urban legends around Harris’s opponent, former president Donald Trump:

For example, the editorial repeats the lie that Trump told people to inject bleach to fight Covid. From the editorial:

Trump touted his pandemic efforts during his first debate with Harris, but in 2020 he encouraged resistance to basic public health measures, spread misinformation about treatments and suggested injections of bleach could cure the disease.

No. He. Did. Not …

Trump was floating a half-baked idea — which was not helpful. But he never told people to inject bleach or any other substance into their bodies …

How can an editorial in a supposedly factually based scientific publication be trusted as dispositive when it pushes a lie that has repeatedly been debunked — even by Snopes? This alone should discredit SA as a reliable guide to voting.

That’s one of the problems when scientists engage in political partisanship — they become persuaded that abandoning accuracy is a form of righteousness as long as it helps the Good party win.

But — and this is the point that the scientists-turned-partisans miss — once people come to see them as partisans, one thing is sure to happen: Those people will stop believing the scientists even when they insist that they are speaking as scientists. They may well be right. But how is a layperson to know? And in a serious matter, why should we take a chance?

Trust in Science Is in Steady Decline

The public has noticed, sort of. Among Americans, public trust in science has declined sharply in recent years, with further declines clocked in 2023 and in 2024.

Explanations (why, why, why don’t people trust science any more?) are all over the map. Tribal loyalty, too much information, and lack of outreach all strut their stuff — and the decline continues. Maybe Cameron is onto something. Kudos to him for raising a serious question that may bear on the future of public funding of — as well as trust in — science.

Cross-posted at Mind Matters News.