When it comes to naming the greatest talents to have ever graced the silver screen, no conversation is complete or even worthy of consideration unless Meryl Streep is very near the top of the list.
It can't be denied that Tim Burton's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was an unqualified success, earning $475 million at the box office back in the summer of 2005, while it was greeted warmly by critics and wound up securing an impressive Rotten Tomatoes score of 83%.
It was recently revealed that the final batch of Money Heist episodes had topped the Netflix most-watched list in 85 countries around the world, almost as many as Red Notice, the latter of which went on to become the platform's biggest original movie ever.
Given that Uncle Ben was out of the picture the first time we met Tom Holland's Spider-Man in Captain America: Civil War, many fans had resigned themselves to the fact they may never hear the single most iconic line of dialogue from the character's near 60-year history in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
When you assemble the caliber of cast that Adam McKay has gathered together for upcoming Netflix disaster comedy Don't Look Up, the marketing campaign is always going to be heavily reliant on the raft of famous faces in an attempt to draw in the widest possible audience.
Will Ferrell has spent pretty much the entirety of the last 20 years doing the same character in perpetuity, but at some stage the 54 year-old is going to have to admit that his days of playing either a petulant or oblivious man-child have come to an end.