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SDCC – ‘King Arthur: Legend of the Sword’ Reimagines Arthurian Lore

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From director Guy Ritchie comes his reimagining of the Arthurian legend, having the would-be-king as a ruffian unaware of his destiny.

Arriving in theaters on March 24, 2017, King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (rumored to be the first in a six film series) stars Charlie Hunnam as King Arthur, Àstrid Bergès-Frisbey as Guinevere, Jude Law as Vortigern, Djimon Hounsou as Bedivere and Eric Bana as Uther Pendragon.

So, that means no Merlin, Lancelot, Galahad, Gawain, Isolde, Lady of the Lake, Mordred, Morgan le Fay, Percival, or Tristan.

Sure hope it’s better than the trailer.


SDCC – DC on TV: News on ‘The Flash’, ‘Arrow’, ‘Supergirl’, ‘Gotham’, ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ and More!

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We certainly live in a golden age of live-action super-heroes in television. Growing up, there wasn’t much. Although The Incredible Hulk and Wonder Woman had multi-season runs and there was a single season of Spider-Man and a Saturday morning Shazam! series, none of these took place in a comic book universe.

There have been other attempts throughout the years; 1990’s The Flash, the syndicated Night Man, The Tick, and Lois & Clark, for example; no series had yet established itself as part of a a comic book universe.

Although Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D and Agent Carter were set within the established cinematic universe, DC has made a concerted effort to establish a television universe.

This weekend at San Diego Comic-Con International, secrets regarding what’s to come were revealed.

 

Gotham

Gotham-s3-poster-picThe lone DC drama not on the CW (NBC also has the mid-season comedy, Powerless), Gotham explores the early years of Bruce Wayne as he follows his path to becoming Batman.

Planned for this season is the introduction of The Court of Owls, a Gotham Secret Society with their own group of assassins, Jervis Tetch (The Mad Hatter),Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum, the now aged-up Poison Ivy, Valerie Vale (aunt to Bruce’s future love interest, Vicki), Solomon Grundy, the return of Fish Mooney, the possible resurrection of Jerome, and that Jim Gordon might be taking on the dual identity of an iconic DC character).

Arrow

Planned for this season as the big bads are Prometheus (though not the JLA villain) and Chad L. Coleman as Tobias Church (not sure if they are one and the same).  New Team Arrow recruits include Evelyn Sharp, later Artemis (Madison McLaughlin), Renee Ramirez aka Wild Dog (Rick Gonzalez) and Curtis Holt aka Mr. Terrific (Echo Kellum).  Other DC characters appearing include Josh Segarra as the Vigilante and Joe Dinicol as Ragman.

The Flash

Things will be off for some of the season as the result of Barry’s changing the timeline at the end of last season, aka Flashpoint (which will carry over a bit into the other CW series).  One of the two big bads of the season is Doctor Alchemy (voiced by Tobin Bell), the other an as of yet unrevealed speedster.  We’ll also see Wally as Kid Flash and Tom Felton joins the cast as Julian Dorn, a fellow CSI, who doesn’t trust Barry.

Supergirl

There wasn’t a lot of news out of SDCC regarding the once CBS-now-CW series.  Cast additions include Floriana Lima as Maggie Sawyer and Ian Gomez as Snapper Carr.  Who (or what) was in the pod in the season finale has been revealed to be actor Chris Woods who is rumored to be playing Legion of Super-Heroes character, Mon-El.  Lynda Carter will also appear as the President of the United States.

Oh, yeah.  Tyler Hoechlin will appear as Supergirl’s cousin, Superman.

Legends of Tomorrow

This ensemble will bring more characters into the time-traveling fold.  In addition to the Justice Society (and members Hourman, Stargirl, Obsidian, Dr. Mid-Nite, Commander Steel and Vixen), Arrow star Stephen Amell will appear in the season premiere and Johnathan Schaech will reprise his role as Jonah Hex later the season. Also debuting in Legends of Tomorrow will be the villainous Legion of Doom, consisting of Malcolm Merlyn (John Barrowman), Damien Darhk (Neal McDonough), the Reverse-Flash (Matt Letscher) and Captain Cold (Wentworth Miller).

Previously announced were contracts for several actors to appear across all series. Already announced were Barrowman, Miller and John Wesley Shipp, and now a similar contract has been signed for McDonough and Katie Cassidy. Rumored to have a similar deal in the works is Matt Ryan who would reprise his role as John Constantine.

SDCC – Marvel Studios Introduces Captain Marvel; Panels For ‘Black Panther’, ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’, ‘GOTG2’ & More!

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Marvel Studios once again got the audience into an uproar as they introduced the casts to several of their upcoming films and introduced Bree Larson as Captain Marvel, who gets her own film, premiering March 8, 2019.

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The Oscar-winning actress received an enthusiastic response to say the least…

Black Panther

In Theaters February 16, 2018

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Star Chadwick Bosemen appeared with director Ryan Coogler and they introduced cast members Academy Award-winner Lupita Nyong’o (Nakia), Danai Guira (Okoye) and Michael B. Jordan (Erik Killmonger)

Spider-Man: Homecoming

In Theaters July 7, 2017

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Despite the presence of star Tom Holland and director Jon Watts, little was revealed about the film.  Three short clips were shown of Peter Parker in high school and was reminiscent of the work of John Hughes.

Cast members include Michael Keaton, Zendaya (Michelle), Donald Glover, Jacob Batalon (Ned), Laura Harrier (Liz), Tony Revolori (Flash), Tyne Daly, Bokeem Woodbine, Marisa Tomei (Aunt May), Robert Downey Jr. (Tony Stark), Logan Marshall-Green, Michael Barbieri, Kenneth Choi, Martin Starr, Isabella Amara, Jorge Lendeborg Jr., J.J. Totah, Hannibal Buress, Selenis Leyva, Abraham Attah, Michael Mando, Garcelle Beauvais, Tiffany Espensen,and Angourie Rice with rumored villains to include the Vulture, The Tinkerer and The Shocker.

Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol. 2

In Theaters May 5, 2017

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Director James Gunn brought out his cast, including Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Karen Gillan, Dave Bautista, Pom Klementieff, Elizabeth Debicki, Michael Rooker, and Kurt Russell (who’s portraying Star-Lord’s father, Ego The Living Planet.

The Ravagers were also in attendance.  Also confirmed, but not in San Diego, was actor Sylvester Stallone.

Thor: Ragnarok

In Theaters November 3, 2017

peftdwo7x5cydddtaskoA pre-taped message was sent, but SDCC confirmed one anticipated detail: Hulk’s Gladiator armor!

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Doctor Strange

In Theaters November 4, 2016

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We ran the trailer yesterday, so check out the panel!

 

SDCC – ‘Sherlock Series 4’ Gets a Trailer

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First look at the rumored final season of the series.

 

SDCC – TV Trailers: ‘The Walking Dead’, ‘Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency’, ‘Outcast’ & More!

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tvAmong the other reveals from this year’s Comic-Con, are trailers to upcoming TV series.  Here’s a bunch to check out:

The Walking Dead

Outcast

Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Lucifer

The Originals

Timeless

The Expanse

Fear The Walking Dead

 

 

SDCC – Muggles, Here’s The Latest ‘Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them’ Trailer!

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The wizarding world of author J.K. Rowling continues, with the latest trailer for the upcoming Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them.

The film focuses on the adventures of writer/magizoologist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) must track down an array of magical creatures in 1926 New York.  The cast also includes Katherine Waterston, Dan Fogler, Alison Sudol, Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton, Ezra Miller, Jon Voight, Ron Perlman and Carmen Ejogo.  Written by Rowling and directed by David Yates, Fantastic Beasts arrives in theaters November 18, 2016

SDCC – IDW Announces Post-Revolution Debuts!

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This September, the 5-part bi-weekly REVOLUTION will forever impact the future of Transformers, G.I. Joe, ROM, Micronauts, Action Man, and M.A.S.K.: Mobile Armored Strike Kommand, establishing a cohesive comic book universe for all these characters and titles. Spinning out of those universe-defining events, multiple exciting new Hasbro-licensed titles will follow shortly thereafter to pick up the story where Revolution leaves off.

G.I. JOE will re-launch as an ongoing with a new creative team and new #1 this December following a Revolution tie-in one-shot in October. Writer Aubrey Sitterson (Street Fighter X G.I. Joe) and artist Giannis Milonogiannis (Prophet) will collaborate on this fresh take on the long-running series, putting a unique spin on the Joe legacy in a post-Revolution world while delving into the cast’s deep roster of iconic characters.

M.A.S.K.: Mobile Armored Strike Kommand gets a monthly series for the first time courtesy of writer Brandon Easton (Transformers: Deviations) and artist Tony Vargas (Rot & Ruin). A one-shot Revolution tie-in will coincide with the September launch of Revolution #1 & #2. The ongoing series launch will follow in November. The take on this beloved series will be contemporary but with a slight touch of nostalgia to satisfy fans of the 1980’s cartoon.

The Revolution ripple effect continues to shake things up as IDW’s Transformers line will see some changes with the introduction of two new ongoing titles: Transformers: Lost Light and the first-ever ongoing Optimus Prime series.

Transformers: Lost Light will continue the fan-favorite adventures told by More Than Meets the Eye writer James Roberts, joined on art by Jack Lawrence (Doctor Who Adventures). Beginning in December, this new series will take Rodimus and the crew of the starship Lost Light into the farthest reaches of the universe, searching for the long-lost Knights of Cybertron.
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Next, John Barber, who recently exited his post as IDW’s Hasbro Group Editor, won’t be straying too far from his IDW roots as he tackles Optimus Prime, the first solo series to star the eponymous Autobot. John will be joined by artist Kei Zama (Scarlett Witch). Optimus Prime has declared Earth to be under his protection—and this November, he’ll have to face the consequences.
unnamed(7)All those titles will join the currently running Transformers: Till All Are One, Micronauts, and upcoming ROM, which will each continue on, their storylines now converging with this newly established universe as their backdrop.

Guest Post: Top 5 Female Heroines

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By Shelagh Rowan-Legg

By Shelagh Rowan-Legg

Whether #YoureWithHer or not, one thing’s for sure; more and more, women are fighting for and claiming their rightful place alongside men in industries where the balance of power was in sore need of more balance.

Ghostbros notwithstanding, the world of genre film is rife and ready for parity. Here to help celebrate the female heroine is guest writer Shelagh Rowan-Legg.

And she should know a thing or two about women kicking ass in genre film — she’s an author, academic and film critic. And if that weren’t enough, she’s currently crowdfunding her second short film, Flow, an action/comedy written and directed by, produced by and starring women. Take a peek at her campaign and then peruse her personal list of top five female heroines.

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Kick-ass heroines comes in all shapes and sizes, and their qualities go far beyond how well they can take on the villain. Here are five of my favourites, some you probably know, others might be a little off the radar.

5. Angela Bassett, Strange Days

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Only Angela Bassett could play such a kick-ass bodyguard who can look awesome in a tailored suit while at the same time taking out a bunch of baddies. In an era of strong-yet-vulnerable action heroines, Bassett takes it to another level; she is not golden-hearted, but she is loyal even when perhaps she shouldn’t be. Her not-so-hidden unrequited love, her protection of her child, and her conflicting desires for safety and justice culminate into a mass of fierce power, all the while she barely keeps her personal demons at bay.

4. Kim Hye-ja, Mother

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Bong Joon-ho’s Mother is often a neglected film in the canon of Korean thrillers. Veteran actress Kim Hye-ja, as a mother trying to prove the innocence of her mentally challenged son who has been accused of murder, is a force of nature. She walks miles, reasons, pleads, cajoles, screams, and finally commits violent acts herself in order to save her son, often while blind to the truth. It’s a role not often given to women, and even more rarely given to older women, and Kim plunges into the role with a determination rarely seen in younger actors.

3. Michelle Yeoh, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

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Michelle Yeoh is no stranger to action films, having starred in Supercop and several other movies in which she gets to kick some serious ass. But nothing has quite matched her performance in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

Her character, Shu Lien, might be a great fighter, but she still is not perfect, and Yeoh makes this visible, to show that not all action can be effortless. Her struggle is an integral part of her action, and also showed that Yeoh was far more than just a martial arts heroine, but an incredible actress as well.

2. Charlize Theron, Mad Max: Fury Road

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If Charlize Theron had dipped her toe into action in films such as Prometheus and Aeon Flux, she dived right in for Mad Max: Fury Road, and gave filmgoers an action heroine we didn’t know we needed.

Disabled, but certainly not unable; strong, but smart enough to know when to trust to others. For Furiosa, violence is a necessity rather than a way of life, but she is unafraid to kill if she must or perhaps even to take pleasure in the kill when it’s someone deserving of death. No risk is too great, even if the reward might not go to her.

1. Lori Petty, Tank Girl

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Sometimes, you just want a film that is batsh*t crazy; it might not be perfect; it might have an incomprehensible story, but when Lori Petty appears as Tank Girl, nothing else matters. Tank Girl might be annoying, but she is damn clever, and meets every adversary and difficulty with such brazen aplomb, that you can’t help but root for her. She has no idea what she’s doing, but she knows exactly how to do it.

From the manic costume changes to complete sexual liberation, Petty’s Tank Girl is the kick-ass heroine we should all aspire to be.

To support the FLOW Indiegogo campaign, Click HERE!

 


Los Angeles’ Best Indie Bookstores, Why You Should Read YA Lit, A Conversation Between Stephen and George & More!

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UK Indies Fight Back

How independent bookstores in Britain are finding ways of getting customers in their stores.

More Dark Tower

Everyone’s getting excited with the adaptation of Stephen King’s opus and here are some more groovy photos.

L.A. Indie

The next time you’re in Los Angeles, check out these awesome bookstores.

Why You Should Read YA

A great article with nine reasons why you should be reading young adult books.

Henrietta Lacks News

Oprah’s adaptation of the bestselling book now has a lead.

When Titans Chat

Stephen King interviews George R.R. Martin

SDCC – Far Beyond The Stars: The Influence of ‘Star Trek’

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ST50-Group21On Sunday, Comic-Con fans were worked into a frenzy with the Star Trek 50th Anniversary panel. In addition to information on the new show, Star Trek: Discovery, longtime fans were given the opportunity to share a moment to cast members from different “Treks” to share their experiences.

After the panel, William Shatner (Star Trek), Scott Bakula (Star Trek: Enterprise), Michael Dorn (Star Trek: The Next Generation & Deep Space Nine), Jeri Ryan (Star Trek: Voyager), Brent Spiner (Star Trek: The Next Generation) and Star Trek: Discovery exec producer/mad genius Bryan Fuller shared their thoughts and the new show, as well as the far reaching influences of the Star Trek franchise.

fullerAs far as Discovery, Fuller was stoked for the latest chapter in the Star Trek opus, but was  careful to not give away too much info.

“It’s in the Prime timeline, but I don’t think we are supposed to say yet because there are so many new things about this series that we are trying to step out of the information that we give,” said Fuller. “There are a lot of new and exciting things we are doing with this show. We want to tease you. That’s the first tease: the title and the ship.”

There is no double that the impact of Star Trek is far reaching. It’s significance is felt beyond just the mere television industry.

For 50 years, the show has touched upon the science community, it helped inspire those who fought for civil rights and it gave people stretch goals for the future. For five decades, Star Trek changed the lives on not only fans, but inspired many in ways that seem unfathomable.

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During the intimate press panel, Shatner talked about the far reaching influence of the show and how it changed society.

“I do a show called the The Truth Is In the Stars. I interview people in the science community, and it culminated with Stephen Hawking. I met some of the most remarkable people who are alive today that are driving our lives with the information and discovery they make. These are things that are affecting our lives completely. The line of this show is, ‘How did Star Trek affect you?’ All these people were affected by Star Trek.

“It was a television series that we did. It’s a lot of fiction. But at the same time, science fiction is mythology, and it tries to tackle those things that we can’t explain. The Greeks picked up these large bones and thought of them as giants. We now know that they were dinosaur bones. But they thought it was giants, and they invented a whole new mythology about the giants…

“We invented though science fiction a mythology. Star Trek is a huge part of that. So many great science fiction writers had ideas for Star Trek

“So for 50 years, this weird television show over various generations had expanded to affect a great deal of our culture.

“I recall Stephen Hawking’s statement when he walked into the steps of Star Trek and he saw the cheesy boards painted to look like dilithium crystals. It’s a device to let us cover the vast distances of space. Yet, Stephen Hawking said, ‘I’m working on that.’”

Others on the panel also looked at the sci-fier as a beacon of hope, a positive message for those who need it.

trek“The state of this country right now terrifies me and saddens me, and I feel like we need something like Star Trek to remind us that collectively as the human race we can get our shit together and build a better future,” said Fuller.

“I’m astounded by anything surviving on television for 50 years,” said Bakula. “It’s show has a collective conscience that has expanded the minds of many.”

Star Trek is just the most amazing phenomenon,” agreed Spiner. “Because anything that has gone on for 50 years you have to take seriously. There are some people who think Star Trek is practically a religion, others who think it is silly. It’s somehow all of those things combined, and that’s what makes it wonderful.”

“There is something going on here. We all had people come to us and say, ‘It’s because of your show, or you that I’m a doctor, or a scientist. So, there is something more going on here than meets the eye,” concluded Spiner.

“It is just so positive, and we need that now, just so desperately,” said Ryan. “It’s about embracing everyone…the message was always inclusion.”

ST50-Dorn1“It’s very interesting, I always thought Star Trek was the great television. Science fiction back in the day was doing stuff that was very groundbreaking. Out of that, you can see that Star Trek was leading the way. It had this new voice that really embraced the ‘60s,” said Dorn. “It was saying, ‘It doesn’t have to be this way. It doesn’t have to be the way it was before, like it was for my parents. This is something new.’”

shatAt the end of the panel, Shatner took a moment to honor a good friend who was essential to the show and was deeply missed: Leonard Nimoy.

“It was a friendship that lasted over 50 years,” recalled Shatner. “Actor families disperse over the years….you can really love that person, but because of life in the way, you lose track. But with Leonard, I was thrown into this company often because of conventions like this, and press, and moves, so we had a lot to do with each other…

“He was the brother I never had, as we used to say to each other. He was my brother.”

‘T2: Trainspotting’ Gets a Teaser Trailer!

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Choose life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose a fucking big television, Choose washing machines, cars, compact disc players, and electrical tin can openers. Choose good health, low cholesterol and dental insurance. Choose fixed-interest mortgage repayments. Choose a starter home. Choose your friends. Choose leisure wear and matching luggage. Choose a three piece suite on hire purchase in a range of fucking fabrics. Choose DIY and wondering who the fuck you are on a Sunday morning. Choose sitting on that couch watching mind-numbing spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing fucking junk food into your mouth. Choose rotting away at the end of it all, pishing your last in a miserable home, nothing more than an embarrassment to the selfish, fucked-up brats you have spawned to replace yourself. Choose your future. Choose life . . . But why would I want to do a thing like that? I chose not to choose life: I chose something else. And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who needs reasons when you’ve got a sequel?

 

T2: Trainspotting Will Arrive on February 3rd, 2017

‘Brüssli – Way of the Dragon’ by J-L Fonteneau and J. Etienne (review)

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Brüssli – Way of the Dragon
Written by J-L Fonteneau
Illustrated by J. Etienne
Published by Humanoids Publishing
Release Date: August 16, 2016
EAN 9781594651502
Price: $24.95

We live in age where nearly all media rely on references. From an innocuous sitcom on cable television to a meme to this review itself, we are surrounded by various works of media that have crutches made of the media of the past.

For that reason, many TV shows, books, films, and comicbooks, feel recycled, diluted, and irrelevant; by depending on the references to the past, they become weak imposters that fail to capture the fundamental essence of the present and the transcendent nature of the past.

No genre is more vulnerable to this problem and flooded with it than fantasy, particularly that of a medieval quality. Sure, plenty of modern works of fantasy are competent, even good. They rarely evoke disgust, which cannot be said of all genres, but they rarely innovate. So, most fantasy creations will not offend you, but they will not challenge you with any new thoughts or perspectives. They will feel safe in their use of familiar archetypes, but they will ultimately feel stale.

Occasionally, children’s works of fantasy can succeed (and provoke more than indifference from me) through playfulness and energy to get to the theme of most fantasy: the battle between good and evil. I hoped for this when I opened up Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy, but alas, within the first twenty pages, I defaulted to my normal thought of regret caused by fantasy creations, the one that asks, “Shouldn’t I just read Le Morte d’Arthur, The Lion, Witch, and the Wardrobe, Idylls of the King, The Iliad, or Greek mythology instead?”

Originally published as three books, Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy presents the journey of Brüssli, a half-dragon boy who has reached the age to notice that he differs from the people around him in the village of Stillendorf. Brüssli initially sets out on his journey in order to save his town from wolves and a notorious dragon, but as with all tales about a quest, the adventure turns inward, with Brüssli searching for his identity by locating his birth parents, forming a standard bildunsgroman structure for the graphic novel.

As Brüssli veers on and off course to his goals, he gathers up a mötley team consisting of Aldo, the town peddler and immigrant from Italy (a fact that author Jean-Louis Fonteneau is almost too enthusiastic to consistently remind you about), Margot, the loud-mouthed flea, and Dorette, the doll-like, aspiring opera singer and child of the Von Fonfon family, the wealthiest family of the region. On the voyage to save Stillendorf, Brüssli and company uncover a ring of slavery run by Dorette’s sister and the existence of a red dragon living in the nearby salt mine. While the main conflict of saving the town of Stillendorf gets resolved by the end of Book Two, Brüssli’s internal travels do not end, for he has become fixated on finding his biological parents. Book Three dedicates itself to this search and in the process, reveals the most insidious part of the story.

Brüssli comes from far more royal stock than anyone would have expected, and by the end, after a battle with demons representing the seven deadly sins (could there be a more trite group of villains?), he meets and reunites with his biological parents, leaving behind his adopted family who raised him and his traveling family who helped him on the journey. Brüssli now lives in a castle with monarchs with a life of luxury and power, giving Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy a too perfect storybook ending true to the messages of familial strength and unity promoted during feudal eras and extinguishing a way to make the whole tale relevant today and across time.

Fantasy succeeds when we as the audience can relate to the protagonists, even when they have experiences far away from our reality. Most decisions in our realities have overlapping conflicts and various complications, so a great amount of fascination into human behavior and fictional characters exists in simply understanding how we handle clashing internal, external, and combined motivations. This is why the Knights of the Round Table, King Arthur, and Odysseus will still capture my attention and Brüssli will be forgotten. Brüssli does not experience any complex conflict in Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy; he has no struggle with understanding the balance between his human and dragon nature. He does not wonder about what family should be the one he spends his time with: the biological family who was not able to take care of him due to circumstance or the adopted families who accepted him and nurtured him. Brüssli knows states what he wants and gets what he wants, and that, overall, makes for a pretty boring protagonist.

With a visual style much like the Disney animations of Beauty and the Beast, Pinocchio, Sleeping Beauty, and Cinderella, the art of Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy looks as beautiful as those iconic films but offers nothing new or particularly outstanding. To add to the dullness of the novel, the peripheral characters have nothing unique or interesting about them, and most damagingly of all, Brüssli’s quest for his own identity has its solution and end entirely in the discovery of his bloodline, which defeats the entire purpose of the journey, rendering what should be an enlightening adventure into the world and self into a lame, glorified medieval path to aristocracy and royalty.

Thankfully, Brüssli: Way of the Dragon Boy starts and finishes in 166 pages, taking about 90 minutes to read in total. I would not be able to finish reading Edith Hamilton’s Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes in the same time, so at least I feel a little less regretful about the time taken to read a far more inferior work.

 

Nick Gillespie’s ‘Tank 432’ review (Fantasia Fest 2016)

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tank-432Produced by Jennifer Handorf,
Finn Bruce, Ben Wheatley
Written and Directed by Nick Gillespie
Starring Rupert Evans, Steve Garry,
Deirdre Mullins, Michael Smiley,
April Pearson, Gordon Kennedy

A few years ago I took a bit of heat for putting Ben Wheatley’s psychedelic, line mumbling, yet utterly brilliant take on the English Civil War, A Field In England, on my list for the top ten films of the year.

Wheatley and his collaborator, screenwriter Amy Jump, had been on a hell of a role with their narrative features from 2009’s Down Terrace to Kill List to Sightseers in 2011 and 2012 respectively, but I was still somewhat skeptical walking into A Field In England, given the ambitious task of encapsulating the struggle of such a wide conflict that Wheatley and Jump were trying to accomplish with a few actors and such a low budget.

The eventual product of their labor was a visually jarring, comedic, and experimental method of storytelling that was unmatched in creativity for any film released that year. Wheatley and Jump’s newest film, an adaptation of the dystopian, but still socially relevant J.G. Ballard novel, High Rise, will also most likely be on my best of list for the year, and like A Field In England, that choice will also most likely draw the irie of some of my reviewer and cineaste friends.

Simply put, I have credited Wheatley and Jump for having fine creative instincts as they are making film in a consciously high-minded way that may baffle people now but will most likely make more sense in a few years from now, which is one of the highest pieces of praise that I can bestow on any artist.

Now that I have extended my abundant praise for Ben Wheatley, my mind boggles as to just what possessed him to allow having his name attached as executive producer to Tank 432, a complete disaster of a film that his camera operator, Nick Gillespie has just directed as his second feature, which recently had its world premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival.

Gillespie has operated a camera in all of Wheatley’s features (except for Down Terrace), and so I cannot exclude the possibility that Gillespie’s contributions to his executive producer’s previous directorial efforts may have lead to this decision. Perhaps there was also something of value in Gillespie’s other feature-length effort, 2015’s A Shadow Seamstress, which I admit to having not seen. Or perhaps a third option, which is too upsetting to imagine, is that Wheatley saw some some of homage to his own work because Tank 432 comes off as a poorly conceived, acted, scripted, edited, and therefore diluted version of Wheatley’s own A Field In England.

Like A Field In England, Gillespie’s film begins with a group of soldiers of unidentified allegiances who are thick in the middle of a retreat from battle. The pace is frenzied and scattered with what seems like intentionally garbled dialog to add to some foreboding doom that the soldiers may be feeling. I will write at this time that what salvages this same kind of confused construction in A Field In England is the ability to reference the goings on by using the specific historical framework of the English Civil War, instead of an even more confusing and banal idea of supplanting one war with various conflicts over eras into one overarching statement about “war being a bad thing, so don’t do that,” as Gillespie so amateurishly does here.

Our soldiers bring on their retreat, two pieces of “cargo” in the form of hooded, clad in orange, Guantanamo Bay-styled prisoners who are tied up in western-era lassos. The chemical refinery that our wounded cast descend on for cover is doused in an Agent Orange-looking power that makes the soldiers vomit profusely, which our fierce warriors just shake off as minor problem even though their reaction is similar to the sickness that Vietnam veterans and civilians who came in contact with the chemical still suffer from to this day. Soon a spectre enemy of unknown origin will approach the team, and they will find refuge in the place that will become location of two-thirds of the narrative: a still operational troop carrier tank that will be the stage for the remainder of the film’s further ode or should I say “bootlick” to Wheatley via a tritley executed psychedelic light show.

Tritely, because you would think that given Gillespie’s skill as a camera operator that the saving grace of Tank 432 would be the visuals, but even the visual style amounts to very little in terms of creativity and purpose. You get the numerous and monotonous tight focus shots of hypodermic needles filling with blood while distributing morphine, which seemed ripped directly from cinematographer, Matthew Libatique’s expertly shot and now iconic drug abuse scenes in Darren Aronofsky’s 2000 film, Requiem for a Dream. Bodies writhe and violently shake from PTSD like those of the Vietnam veterans do in Adrian Lyne’s criminally overrated horror film, Jacob’s Ladder.

As for clever dialog, well, the soldiers in Tank 432 do of course say “fuck” more times in a minute than a thousand low-rent party clowns in giant shoes falling down a long flight of stairs would say in a week. Gillespie’s protagonists also say all of the “gritty,” tongue-in-cheek phrases that soldiers usually say in other contemporary war films like the witty gem, “We’re sticking out here like a turd on a pool table,” which seems to be ripped right out of the mouths of any of the doomed bivouacking army men in Neil Marshall’s infinitely superior low budget horror film, Dog Soldiers. Sadly and irritatingly, Gillespie’s dialog packs the same comedic punch contained in any repeat viewing of an episode of the 1960s sitcom McHale’s Navy, a now forgotten show about the exploits of the portly, but lovable, Captain McHale and his merry band of loveable burlesque-era reject actors.

In the end, Tank 432 just becomes another collection of tired, borrowed ideas disguised as an homage that does nothing more than emphasizes the strong merits of the works that Gillespie vampirizes here. I again have to wonder: what could’ve been done by Wheatley to right this ship during production in order to get this mess into a place where it could be an even barely tolerable watch? For his executive producer credit, did Wheatley bother to check in on his longtime collaborator to tell him that writing a script requires more than knowing about other films within the genre, or did Ben just show up few times on set to give Gillespie moral support while turning a blind eye to the poorly thrown together mess before him? I only hope that the backlash from Tank 432 reaches Mr. Wheatley’s ear and makes him cautious before adding his name to future projects.

It is never my goal to put down a young filmmaker, but Tank 432 is even more horrendously inept than I could ever describe in this review.

Tank 432 will screen at the Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal  July 26th at 3:15pm, at the J.A. De Seve Theatre.

SDCC – ‘Star Trek: The Original Series – The Roddenberry Vault’ To Showcase Unseen Original Footage

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rod-vault-headerCBS Home Entertainment, Paramount Home Media Distribution and Roddenberry Entertainment announced today at Comic-Con International: San Diego that STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL SERIES – THE RODDENBERRY VAULT, a collector’s edition Blu-ray set, will be released later in 2016.

During the production of Star Trek: The Original Series, bits and pieces of episodic footage were left on the cutting room floor, then stored away in film cans for decades by the Gene Roddenberry Estate. Now, in celebration of the show’s 50th Anniversary, The Roddenberry Vault has finally been opened. Along with 12 of their favorite episodes, fans can see and own behind the scenes footage from the making of the series as well as alternate takes, deleted scenes, omitted dialogue, outtakes, and original visual FX elements.

STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL SERIES – THE RODDENBERRY VAULT Blu-ray set includes newly-produced special feature documentaries that incorporate the “Vault” materials and feature all-new interviews with cast and production personnel, including new insights from William Shatner (Captain James T. Kirk), writers Dorothy “D.C.” Fontana, David Gerrold, & John D.F. Black, director Ralph Senensky, casting director Joseph D’Agosta, visual effects artist Richard Edlund, and more. Also featured is an exploration into the series’ long-lasting appeal through interviews with some of Star Trek’s biggest fans including The Big Bang Theory co-creator Bill Prady, The Simpsons writer/producer David Mirkin, Family Guy writer/producer David A. Goodman, NASA’s Bobak Ferdowsi, Bill Nye (The Science Guy), and many more. The special feature documentaries are:

  • Inside The Roddenberry Vault– A multi-part glimpse at classic episodes from new angles and perspectives.
  • Star Trek: Revisiting A Classic – A look at life on the set during production.
  • Strange New Worlds: Visualizing The Fantastic – An inside look at the groundbreaking work of the series’ designers and visual effects artists.

STAR TREK: THE RODDENBERRY VAULT includes 12 classic Star Trek episodes in high-definition Blu-ray chosen for their relevance to the Vault’s lost/unseen material:

  • The Corbomite Maneuver
  • Arena
  • Space Seed
  • This Side of Paradise
  • The Devil in the Dark
  • The City on the Edge of Forever
  • Operation: Annihilate!
  • Metamorphosis
  • Who Mourns for Adonais?
  • Mirror, Mirror
  • The Trouble With Tribbles
  • Return to Tomorrow       

STAR TREK: THE RODDENBERRY VAULT Blu-ray set is executive produced by Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth. Special feature documentaries are produced by Roger Lay, Jr. and Michael and Denise Okuda.

‘2 Days In The Valley’ 20th Anniversary Screening and Reunion

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John Herzfeld, Charlize Theron, Glenne Headly, and Catherine Hardwicke.  Photo by Generoso Fierro

John Herzfeld, Charlize Theron, Glenne Headly, and Catherine Hardwicke. Photo by Generoso Fierro

As a man in my forties, I have to first establish how dumbfounded I still am that it has been twenty years since the release of the film, 2 Days In The Valley. A fact that I only realized when The Cinefamily, the community film lovers group that I am a part of here in Los Angeles, announced on their website that they would be hosting an anniversary screening of the quintessentially 90s film, combined with a reunion of every possible member of the cast whom they could find.

Recently, big screen talent arriving in person with their films has become almost commonplace at The Cinefamily, with the likes of legendary actor, Al Pacino, doing a three day stay at the theater to screen his directorial effort, Salome, or young stars like this year’s best actress Oscar winner Brie Larson stopping by to show Room, but with the 2 Days In The Valley screening, the seemingly ageless and immensely talented A-list actress, Charlize Theron, would be there to talk about her feature film debut, which I imagined caused such a commotion that the event was soon moved from the smallish confines of the Silent Film Theater on Fairfax, The Cinefamily regular home, to the recently refurbished, NeueHouse, an impressively sleek and massive space on Sunset Boulevard which was once the home of CBS Radio beginning in the 1930s. It was clear that this was going to be The Cinefamily’s biggest night of the year so far.

So, before I discuss the goings on that occurred at NeueHouse in Hollywood on July 8th, 2016, I would like to go back to the year that 2 Days In The Valley was released, 1996, to get a sense of where my head was in terms of American cinema when I first saw the film and why, short of the presence of Ms. Theron, I would even be interested in attending this event.

Since the late 1980s, I had been completely caught up the independent film revolution that was sweeping America. It was an exciting time during those days as theaters were suddenly showing smaller, more personal, low budget films like Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise or Allison Anders’ Border Radio, which were so radically different from the bigger budget dramas and comedies that Hollywood was producing post Star Wars. The exact origins of this bizarre phenomenon were lost on me until John Sayles, the king of indie cinema, described it in the interview Lily and I did with him back in February of this year:

I think that we were just lucky that we stumbled into filmmaking right about when the few independent distributors that there were were starting to have to deal with this new thing called ‘home video,’ and so the theaters that showed non-Hollywood movies can’t just trot out 400 Blows every August 5th and play it for two weeks because people could now own that movie, so what else are we going to show now? So, there was an audience, and there were playdates for independent movies.”

By the early 1990s, these independently produced features were making decent enough returns on their small budgets to keep the demand flowing and with that demand, a wider range of niche topics that could now be explored as the financial loss risk was minimal; that is until 1994, when Tarantino’s tawdry, dialog-heavy film crime film, Pulp Fiction, which was produced for a mere eight million dollars, grossed over two hundred million, which made the suits in Hollywood stand up and notice.

Suddenly the major studios saw a need to tap into the alternative youth culture by doing the only thing that they know how to do best: copy every single facet of what they believed made Pulp Fiction the success that it was by creating a formula that yielded a few happy accidents and a larger, more wretched collection of pale imitations.

2-Days-in-the-ValleyBy the fall of 1996, the internet was all the rage and the average American citizen was feeling immense prosperity in an unprecedented way, and with this dizzying wealth, you had the lowest crime statistics in over thirty years, but you would never know that based on what you were seeing on the big screen as Hollywood went dime store novel crime crazy with all of the violent tropes witnessed in Pulp Fiction. American Strays, Bound, and The Immortals all were seemingly produced in a matter of months after the release of Tarantino’s magnum opus to cash in on that film’s success.

Many films like, American Strays, deservedly went straight to video and vanished; Bound received critical praise, but tanked at the box office, and next to be released in another of what seemed to be fitted into the Tarantino mold, was 2 Days In The Valley, which features indie stalwart, Eric Stoltz (who in terms of indie cinema of the 1990s is the male counterpart to Janeane Garofalo), Danny Aiello, Jeff Daniels, James Spader, Glenne Headly, Teri Hatcher, and in one of the most striking film debuts in that decade’s history, Charlize Theron.

Directing Two Days In The Valley was John Herzfeld, whom a few critics noted at the time as the man in charge of the disastrous 1983 John Travolta/Olivia Newton-John vehicle, Two Of A Kind. Not the kind of press you need when releasing your first feature in thirteen years, and after the release of 2 Days In The Valley garnered some mixed reviews, the film was soon blended into that post-Pulp Fiction era of American crime cinema and is rarely spoken about these days.

No Merchandising. Editorial Use Only. No Book Cover Usage Mandatory Credit: Photo by Everett Collection / Rex Features (420944d) 2 DAYS IN THE VALLEY, Charlize Theron, 1996 VARIOUS CHARLIZE THERON, FILM STILLS

Photo by Everett Collection / Rex Features

On July 8th, 2016, any sign of 2 Days In The Valley’s failure to achieve an audience in the mid-1990s was lost shortly after Herzfeld lovingly welcomed the packed house at NeueHouse. To be fair, most were in attendance for an opportunity to see Charlize Theron in person, but the enthusiastic crowd still reveled in the anniversary screening of her debut film, which, despite some seriously clumsy issues with the dialog and a few needless cultural misrepresentations for effect, is still a pretty clever metaphor for the fading face of old Hollywood wrapped in an Elmore Leonard-inspired wrapper.

Having not seen the film in two decades, my real takeaway was how genuine the performance was from the late director Paul Mazursky, who essentially plays the onscreen persona of Herzfeld, who in real life had been languishing in TV movie hell for years after the Two Of A Kind mishap, having even directed one of the three notorious Amy Fisher biopics that all aired on the same night in 1993. If you’re keeping track of such things, Herzfeld’s version was the one that starred Alyssa Milano.

Immediately after the screening, the cast of Herzfeld, Theron, Headly, and production designer, Catherine Hardwicke took the stage and began to lovingly reminisce about their experiences during the production of the film, but again, it was Theron, who dominated the conversation as Herzfeld’s film was her first featured role in a Hollywood production as she explained:

“I had been in L.A. for about 10 months. I really didn’t know where my life was going to go. I was so intrigued by this aspect of storytelling, even though I wasn’t crystal clear about what it was. I think my naivety and stupidity kind of helped me in a weird way. And John was crazy enough to give me the job.”

Soon after that statement, Theron floored the audience (many of whom were budding actors themselves) by admitting that 2 Days In The Valley was only the fourth audition that she had ever gone on since arriving in Hollywood. In the short pause after she delivered that tasty tidbit of news, the entire room let out a collective gasp, which seemed to be filled with amazement and a tinge of envy. Hadrian Belove, the evening’s host and Executive Director of The Cinefamily, responded to Theron’s statement by announcing that he had, courtesy of Herzfeld, the star actress’s original audition tape cued up and ready to screen, which caused Theron to hide in embarrassment.

Charlize A-Watching Theron’s audition tape

Catherine Hardwicke, now a fine director in her own right, followed Theron’s moment of shame by boasting of the joy she felt in creating the random ridiculous and mostly oversized objects d’art that would be found in the home of one of the film’s heavies, a ponce of an art dealer, superbly played by Greg Cruttwell, who seemed to have a knack for portraying jerks as he is well remembered as the vile cultural elitist, Jeremy, in Mike Leigh’s masterful 1993 film, Naked. Actress, Glenne Headly, then humorously recalled the overdramatic fuss that Danny Aiello made when he was asked to shave his head as his hitman character, Dosmo Pizzo, was supposed to have a poorly affixed hairpiece that comedically falls off from time to time. Director Herzfeld then explained that the bizarre character name of Dosmo Pizzo came from the same place that was the source of inspiration for the entire film: a graveyard. As Herzfeld explained, one day he was laying flowers on his mother’s grave when he noticed the name, Dosmo Pizzo, on a nearby tombstone which inspired him to take out a tape recorder and dictate to himself not only some of the other odd names of the nearby entombed, but also the plot for what would be Two Days In The Valley.

The most entertaining moment of the evening occurred once the panel began to take questions from the audience. Immediately, someone connected to the film yelled out that “Danny Aiello was trying to get Herzfeld on the phone to be part of the evening’s discussion.” Herzfeld then called his friend, Danny, who sadly couldn’t make the event, and once being broadcast through a hand mic, Aiello chastised the director for never having written a sequel to 2 Days In The Valley as he always wanted to see the trajectory of Dosmo Pizzo and the Glenne Headly character of Susan Parish, who defiantly drive off together at the end of the film. Aiello, heard throughout the building as he was yelling through Herzfeld’s cellphone into the microphone, said, “We could’ve lived happily ever after and opened up a pizzeria on the East Coast like I did in Do The Right Thing.”

Danny Aiello Is On The Phone. Photo by Generoso Fierro

Danny Aiello Is On The Phone. Photo by Generoso Fierro

Not too long after Aiello’s manic phone call did Belove call the evening to an end, but not before the cast began a very endearing sequence of hugs to each other with genuine appreciation to the audience for being there and honoring their film, which despite its lack of initial success, still meant a lot to them as one of the most entertaining experiences they had ever had on a film set, and for one young actress, it was the break that made for a very successful film career that is still going strong till this day.

Photo by Generoso Fierro

Photo by Generoso Fierro

 

 


‘Me Before You’ Arrives on Blu-ray & DVD on 8/30; Digital HD on 8/16!

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mbuExperience the joy of what life and love have to offer when the global box office hit “Me Before You” arrives onto Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD.

Based on the critically acclaimed, bestselling novel by Jojo Moyes, New Line Cinema’s and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures’ “Me Before You” stars Emilia Clarke (“Game of Thrones”) and Sam Claflin (“The Hunger Games” series), under the direction of Thea Sharrock, making her feature film directorial debut.

“When Louisa Clark (Clarke) —Lou, as she’s known—unexpectedly loses her waitressing job she must scramble to replace the income that her tight-knit family depends upon.  Desperation drives her to take a job as a caregiver to Will Traynor (Clafin), a man who used to be a wealthy banker with an adventurous soul, living life to the very fullest, but for whom those days are in the past. 

After a tragic accident, Will lost the desire to live and now keeps everyone at a distance with his caustic, overbearing attitude.  But unlike his family, Lou refuses to tiptoe around him or cater to his moods.  In fact, her sparkling personality and easy nature are hard for even Will to ignore, and soon enough each becomes exactly what the other needs.”

The film also stars Oscar nominee Janet McTeer (“Albert Nobbs,” “Tumbleweeds”), Charles Dance (“The Imitation Game”), Brendan Coyle (“Downton Abbey”), Stephen Peacocke (“Hercules”), Matthew Lewis (the “Harry Potter” films), Jenna Coleman (“Dr. Who”), Samantha Spiro (“From Hell”), and Vanessa Kirby (“About Time”).

Sharrock directs from a screenplay by Jojo Moyes, based on her book. The film is produced by Karen Rosenfelt (“The Twilight Saga” films, “Max”) and Alison Owen (“Saving Mr. Banks,” “Suffragette”), and executive produced by Sue Baden-Powell (“Elysium,” “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies”).

“Me Before You” Blu-ray and Standard Definition DVD contains the following special features:

  • Me Before You: From Page to Screen
  • Outtakes
  • Deleted Scenes

Me Before You” will be available on August 30 on Blu-ray for $29.98, and includes the film in high definition on Blu-ray disc and a digital version of the movie in Digital HD with UltraViolet*. Fans can also own “Me Before You” via purchase from digital retailers beginning on August 16.

SDCC – ‘iZombie’ Cast Talks About Upcoming Season

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It is hard to keep a secret at Comic-Con. There is something about sitting down with a group of bloggers and social media experts in Doctor Who t-shirts that makes folks want to open up.

And the gang of the hit CW show iZombie was no different.

Despite possible warnings from stuffed shirt network execs, the cast and crew behind the zombie dramedy were super excited about the upcoming season.

Like, really excited.

IMG_1520

Diane Ruggiero

“I’m going to tell you everything,” said show exec producer/writer Diane Ruggiero. “We have a nice Clive centric episode coming up that will have flashbacks and we’ll get to see a bit of Clive before we met him.”

“And David (Anders) will be singing! We are very excited about that.”

Ruggiero also opened up about the season finale revelation of the network of zombies that work secretly, plotting to take over the world.

Or at least Seattle.

“There’s more zombies than we thought, and their are organized and secretly kind of getting together and have a plan,” she continued. “I can’t pretend that was always the plan. We had different plans up in the air, and this is one that was settled on.”

“It will definitely changed things. You know, Clive just found out about zombies, and now there is a little zombie army and a lot of things happening. It’s a lot to contend with. This season is percolating. It’s all coming to a head.”

“There are more zombies that we will find out about. Clive knows about zombies, all the main characters know about zombies, but it’s still not a common knowledge thing. It’s still a case of the week, but now when Liv starts acting like a dominatrix, Clive isn’t going to be thinking, “Well, is that your jam?’”

IMG_1513Malcolm Goodwin who plays Clive also shared some insight on the big revelation for his character.

“Even with Liv stabbing herself in the heart and all that, I don’t think he even processed that to being a zombie. It’s something he doesn’t really understand. It’s something supernatural and he doesn’t know quite what to call it,” said Goodwin. “At the Max Rager party, when those guards got attacked, I think that’s when it really, really hit him. It’s more of a shock.”

“I read the first episode and it literally starts a few minutes after the whole Max Rager blow up, zombie psuedo-apocalypse. So it’s him still trying to process exactly what happened and I’m trying to deal with it in an honest way. And it changes the dynamics of him and Liv because it is the first time they are really that their friendship has no secrets.”

iZombie star Rose McIver also had a few thoughts on the upcoming change in the Clive-Liv relationship.

IMG_1552

“It’s one of the things I’m most curious about this season now that the dynamic has shifted,” said McIvers. “A lot of the humor was derived from him coming into the morgue and us trying to hide this other storyline. But with his own logical, rational self, he’ll have his own ideas on how a brain will work. It might actually be even stronger.”

As for upcoming episodes, Liv was a little wary about what the writers have in store for her.

“I’ve run out of skills, All that’s left is ice skating,” joked McIver. “I did just find out today that I’ll be eating the brain of a dominatrix, which is so Rob (Thomas) and Diane to throw that at me at Comic-Con. I’m just thinking of the costumes. It will be hilarious.”

And as for her relationship with Major?

“I think it’s a little risky to push it too many times to hastily. They have a friendship, and ultimately there is so much more at play right now that needs to focused on…they just found a delicate balance. I’m the cautious one in this relationship.”

anderDavid Anders who play Blaine on the show also shared a few insights on possible future plotlines, especially when it comes to his amnesia.

“I want it to all be a game, because I miss the snarky, swarmy charm of Blaine and his juicy dialogue. It feels like he’s been castrated, but it’s a fun soap opera trope to play with.”

And like Clive, there is a possibility to digging deeper into Blaine’s past and exploring the rocky relationship with his father Angus, played by Robert Knepper.

“There is the possibility of more work with Knepper because he is frozen. Blaine had him tortured and he’s still in the freezer. I don’t know if I can reveal, but it’s a strong possibility. Now I’ve said too much”

Even iZombie fearless leader Rob Thomas was in on the spoiling game, despite his own rules and warnings he laid down for the cast.

IMG_1542

“I sent everyone a text of me frowning saying, ‘Don’t spoil things!’”

But that didn’t seem to stop the showrunner from sharing.

“The title of episode 301 in the wake of the massacre is ‘Heaven Just Got A Little More Smoother,’ as people lament the death of the other Rob Thomas,” joked Thomas.

As for other future episodes, Thomas was happy to share the menu of upcoming brains. I n addition to a dominatrix brain and a yogi brain, Thomas was stoked about one particular upcoming episode.

“It’s one of the things we don’t mind talking about,” he said. “I think episode 302 is one we are so looking forward to. Part of it is knowing how good Robert Buckley will be on this brain. In 302, there is a murdered Phil Dunphy-like father and his sarcastic daughter. And because Liv and Clive assume the murder is related to the father, Liv eats the dad brain and Major, because no one thinks it will matter, eats the teenage girl brain. So Liv and Major are father-daughter. Robert Buckley was born to play a 15-year-old girl.”

‘Banshee: The Complete Fourth Season’ Explodes Onto Blu-ray & DVD 10/4

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131344_frontWhen the final episode of the Cinemax fan-favorite action-drama Banshee aired in May, it sent legions of “Fanshees” into a tailspin.  For four electrifying seasons, the Emmy-winning series, packed with white-knuckle action and gripping storylines, built a passionate fan base who turned the show into the highest rated original series on the network and a modern-era cult classic.  Discover what A.V. Club calls “one of the best things on television, period” when Banshee: The Complete Fourth Season arrives on Blu-ray and DVD (both including Digital HD) on October 4, 2016.

Sure to lift any “Fanshee” out of the doldrums, the 3 disc sets are packed with behind-the-scenes extras including audio commentaries, exclusive deleted scenes, episode recaps, “Banshee Origins” (which tells the story behind the story with eight prequel videos featuring the cast of Banshee), “Zoomed In Eps 1 – 8” (an on the set feature highlighting how key, adrenaline-filled scenes were created), and specially-created cast retrospectives on “Best Fight Scenes” and “Job’s Best Outfits.”

Created by Jonathan Tropper and David Schickler, this MAX action drama charts the final twists and turns that follow Lucas Hood, an ex-convict who assumed the identity of sheriff in the Amish-area town Banshee, where his former lover and partner-in-crime was living under her own alias, Carrie Hopewell. The final season takes place two years after Lucas gave up his badge after a bloody, multimillion-dollar heist at the Camp Genoa Marine Base which proved costly: Carrie’s husband Gordon was killed, and Lucas’s longtime computer-hacker partner, Job, was abducted by a shady criminal ring. After settling a score with a “recruiter” from Lucas’s past whom he hoped would have intel on Job, Lucas went on a bender before being rescued by an unlikely savior, Proctor’s niece.  Emerging from a self-imposed exile, Lucas returns to Banshee to find it a changed town. Brock Lotus is now sheriff, Kai Proctor is the mayor, and the old “Cadi” police station has been replaced by a state-of the-art facility. A new deputy with ties to Proctor, Nina Cruz, has joined Brock’s team, along with Kurt Bunker, the skinhead-turned-deputy who continues to make amends for his dark past while fighting the racist overtures of the group led by his younger brother Calvin. After reuniting with Carrie, their daughter Deva, and ex-boxer Sugar Bates, Lucas becomes immersed in a new Banshee crisis: rooting out a vicious serial murderer whose latest victim is someone near and dear to his heart.

For more information, visit www.cinemax.com

‘MAD Magazine’ Dumps on Trump with New E-Book

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MAD-Magazine-Dumps-On-Trump-Cover_578e54de2eb3a5.45978969MAD’s newest digital exclusive book, MAD Dumps on Trump, is FREE to read online! It covers all his stupidity from The Apprentice to the 2016 election, and whether you love Trump or hate him, you’ll agree: you get what you pay for!

MAD-Magazine-Trump-Harambe-Gorilla_578e557f78d217.29651740 MAD-Magazine-Trump-Hairkeepers_578e55039e9707.29321212 MAD-Magazine-Trump-vs-Bible_578e55335d40b9.97699449

What’s that? You want MORE of a bad thing? Here’s an even dumber deal! If you subscribe to MAD, you’ll get exclusive access to a special bonus section that mocks Hillary! There’s something for everyone (who has very low standards)! Click here to subscribe!

 

COOL SHIRTS: A Look At T-Shirt Offerings From NerdKungFu.com!

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Henry-Winkler-The-Fonz

There’s no doubt that the boldest and most personal fashion statement anyone can make is in one’s selection of t-shirt.  Personally, I love them.  It’s an opportunity to show the world what pop culture I care about, a wonderful flashback to the past and a fantastic way to initiate any nerd discussion.

For this installment of Cool Shirts, I took a look at some of the shirts from Nerd Kung Fu, which might very well have the largest selection of pop culture t-shirts that I’ve ever seen.  What’s even more awesome is that their nerdy wares isn’t limited to their shirt collection.  They also sell a wide array of posters and a number of geek-centric ephemera including coffee mugs, shot glasses, pint glasses, blankets, wallets, buttons, magnets, playing cards, hoodies and much more.

If summer movies are dictating your fashion choices, they have plenty of shirts focused on the biggest releases including Suicide Squad, Captain America: Civil War, Star Trek Beyond, Finding Dory, plus new Atari, Silicon Valley, Batman, Evel Knievel and Supergirl shirts.  They also carry shirts in sizes small through 7XL and the site is filled with lots of nerdy trivia on the history of t-shirts!

There is something for virtually any nerdcentric provocation. These are some of my recent favorites.

 

SQD156-AT__06679.1464850768.1280.1280Suicide Squad T-Shirt – Bubble

There’s no doubt the popularity of Harley Quinn won’t increase dramatically when audiences see Margot Robbie as The Joker’s number one girl in Suicide Squad.

Wearing short-shorts, blowing a bubble and brandishing a well used baseball bat, Robbie looks menacingly adorable, ready to clobber Batman or any other threat to her ‘Puddin.

As Ms. Robbie states in the trailer, “I’m known to be quite vexing…”

And she is.

 

 

EK586__26073.1421026297.1280.1280Evel Knievel T-Shirt – Wallenda

Sure, he might have crashed more than twenty times. Sure, he suffered 433 bone fractures by the end of 1975. Sure, he pleaded guilty to battery and was sentenced to three years’ probation and six months in county jail.

But he was our Evel.

Add, The Great Wallenda (no particular member of the daredevil Wallenda family is actually identified, or performed with Knievel) and you’ve got an unforgettable bill of danger and a potential unhappy ending.

 

 

RK5345__87230.1431398303.1280.1280Rocky T-Shirt – Cityscape

From the streets of South Philly, boxer Rocky Balboa got his shot.  Small time pugilist and enforcer Balboa is given the chance to fight the World Heavyweight Champion, Apollo Creed, who has announced his plans to hold a match in Philadelphia during the upcoming United States Bicentennial.

Thus began the legend created by writer/actor Sylvester Stallone which began in 1976 and continued through, most recently, Creed in 2015.  This amazing image captures the Italian Stallion and his victorious moment at the top steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Yo!  Get it!

 

BMT146-AT__00603.1445833229.1280.1280Batman Classic TV T-Shirt – Pop Cast

Meanwhile, in Gotham City!  This shirt is a must have for any pop culture aficionado/Bat-fan!

Reimagined as if interpreted by pop artist Andy Warhol, this shirt depicts Adam West as Batman, the Caped Crusader; Burt Ward as Robin, The Boy Wonder, Cesar Romero as The Joker, Clown Prince of Crime, Burgess Meredith as The Penguin, Maestro of Criminal Umbrellas;  Frank Gorshin as The Riddler, The Prince of Puzzlers and Julie Newmar as Catwoman, The Princess of Plunder.

Holy Must Needed Wardrobe Addition!

 

 

ALI587__72522.1420664136.1280.1280Muhammad Ali T-Shirt – All Over Again

Ali passed away on June 3, 2016, forever known as “The Greatest”.

On May 25, 1965 Ali faced off against Sonny Liston in the ring, their second bout in sixteen months. Between fights, Ali converted to Islam, changing his name from Cassius Clay, evoking widespread public condemnation. When he and Liston entered the ring, and their match ended with one of the most controversial in boxing history, with Ali knocking Liston down.  This shirt captures the moment of Ali standing over Liston, gesturing and yelling at him, “Get up and fight, sucker!”

Ringside photographer Neil Leifer photographed this moment which has since gone on to become one of the most iconic images in sport. Forever The Greatest.

 

HAL509__30037.1456898194.1280.1280Halloween T-Shirt – This is Halloween

Still one of the most terrifying films ever made.  Created by John Carpenter and Debra Hill Halloween tells the tale of Michael Myers who returns home to Haddonfield to kill, after sitting in a mental hospital for 15 years for stabbing his sister to death.

His psychiatrist, Dr. Sam Loomis, described the experience of meeting Michael Myers:

“I was told there was nothing left; no reason, no conscience, no understanding; and even the most rudimentary sense of life or death, of good or evil, right or wrong.

I met this six-year-old child, with this blank, pale, emotionless face, and the blackest eyes… the devil’s eyes. I spent eight years trying to reach him, and then another seven trying to keep him locked up because I realized that what was living behind that boy’s eyes was purely and simply… evil.”

Wear the evil.

For more details, visit NerdKungFu.com

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