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Marvel Teases ‘Secret Empire’ Series With Political Slant

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In a timely move, Marvel announced the return of the politically villainous Secret Empire, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The comic publisher released a teaser image for the series, which features no information beyond the name of the series and Captain America’s shield. The image included the tagline “A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand”–a quote appropriately borrowed from President Abraham Lincoln concerning the American Civil War. “Secret Empire” follows on the heels of Civil War II, a line-wide event that tore the Marvel Universe apart.

Secret Empire And Tricky Dick

Secret Empire has popped up in Cap comics before, most notably in Steve Englehart’s 1973 run on Captain America And the Falcon. Without showing his face or explicitly naming him, “Number One” turned out to be the POTUS. 1973 was the heart of the Watergate scandal that eventually lead to President Nixon’s resignation. Even beyond Nixon’s resignation in ’74, political events continued to show up in Englehart’s writing.

Nick Spencer, currently writing both Captain America titles, has similarly included politics in his writing. This combination, while logical, has drawn plenty of criticism from fans and detractors alike. Considering the Presidential Inauguration is only days away, it’s likely Spencer will use Secret Empire’s pedigree to comment on current events.

Captain America Hydra Secret EmpireSpencer is still in hot water with many Marvel fans for introducing Hydra-Cap last year. While the story line has taken a few twists and turns since its inception, fans are still divided. However, it does present a unique opportunity. Secret Empire’s leader is more a figurehead than a person himself (think Dread Pirate Roberts a la Princess Bride). Perhaps this time around Rogers is the real Number One.

Secret Empire will release later in 2017.

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Twin Peaks Revival Set For May Premiere

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David Lynch’s Twin Peaks is aiming for a May 21st premiere on Showtime. David Nevins, Showtime CEO, states viewers can also watch the episodes through Showtime On Demand.

As IndieWire reports, the two-hour premiere airs on May 21st at 9 p.m. Showtime will then stream the third and fourth hours. Fans can also view them via Showtime On Demand.

“The version of Twin Peaks you’re going to see is the pure heroin version of David Lynch,” Nevin says.

During the second week, the third and fourth hours will air back to back. Then the rest of the series will air one hour per week.

Lynch is going to direct all 18 episodes. This marks his first TV series since Inland Empire.

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New ‘Riverdale’ Character Portraits Are Bathed in Sexy Noir Angst

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With a little over two weeks before the premiere of the long-awaited Riverdale series, a collection of new character photos has been released by The CW (via CBR). The portraits, displayed below, were shot by acclaimed photographer Frank Ockenfels III and show (in order) the moody teens, Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, Josie and Cheryl in an otherwise empty diner, a location we saw in the trailer.

The series is based on the characters created by Archie Comics, written by their chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and executive produced by Greg Berlanti. The show is a subversive take on Archie and his friends, a group of teens negotiating small-town life and a bubbling weirdness complete with love triangles, teen angst and murder:

“Riverdale may look like a quiet, sleepy town, but there are dangers in the shadows…”

K.J. Apa stars as Archie Andrews, Lili Reinhart as Betty Cooper, Camila Mendes as Veronica Lodge, Cole Sprouse as Jughead Jones, Ashleigh Murray as Josie McCoy and Madeleine Petsch as Cheryl Blossom.

Riverdale premieres on the 26th January 2017 at 9/8c on The CW.

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Review: ‘Voltron: Legendary Defender’ Season 2: Separation and Growth

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Spoiler Alert For Season One

After months of waiting, the second season of Voltron: Legendary Defender is about to come out. Before it does, Monkeys Fighting Robots has been given the unique opportunity to check out the first three episodes of the new season and review them for the public. Needless to say fans have a lot to look forward to and this review will try not to spoil anything too thrilling which came from this small sample of what’s to come.
Voltron

Across The Universe

Picking up from the moment when the first season ended, the team is thrown into a wormhole which causes them to be separated from one another. Keith and Shiro wind up on a savage planet which wishes to tear them appear, Pidge land in space junk, and Coran and Allura wind up in a reality bending loop. Of the three, its Coran and Allura’s adventure which turns out to be most entertaining. The episode also features a moment which truly calls back to the original series. No spoilers of what it is because it’s too good to wreck. This episode is the perfect balance of action, drama, and comedy and starts the season off on a very high note.

Voltron

The Depths

Next up is Lance and Hunk’s turn as they go under the sea. Stuck on a water planet they meet a race of merpeople who welcome them into their safe and warm society. Unfortunately, it’s far from a perfect utopia and the pair must find a way to get out before it’s too late. Just as it seems like there won’t be much development, it takes a turn, and makes the episode one which shouldn’t be passed up.

Fans will notice Weird Al and Mae Whitman (Katara from Avatar: The Last Airbender) providing their voices in this episode. They do such an entertaining job, fans will no doubt be hoping they show up again later in the series.

Voltron

Shiro’s Escape

The title is a little misleading for this one. A flashback to Shiro escaping from the Galra empire is mentioned but from there it instead explores another element introduced in the flashback. The team also confronts Allura about Zarkon being the original paladin of the black lion but it doesn’t get flushed out nearly as much as it should. Also the show names Zarkon’s creatures Robeasts, the original name for the large monsters from the original series. Probably a good idea as the fan community have already been referring to them as such since the series began. This episode is filled with far too many revelations to discuss any further but it leave this reviewer wanting the rest of the season to be here as soon as possible.


Voltron: Legendary Defender Season 2 will premiere on January 20th. Are you looking forward to more action staring the paladins of Voltron? Leave a comment below and let us know.

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JJ Abrams Has Had Enough of the Reboot/Franchise/Sequel Business

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JJ Abrams told People Magazine on the Golden Globes red carpet that his relationship with reboots, sequels and franchises has run its course, and that he wants to tell original stories from now on, according to Screen Crush. Abrams was at the Globes on Sunday representing Westworld, for which he is executive-producer, the hugely popular sci-fi thriller nominated for three awards including Best Television Series – Drama. When asked what he plans to do next, he said he hopes his future lies outside the world of non-original content:

“You know, I feel incredibly lucky to have gotten involved in things that I loved when I was a kid. In fact, even Westworld, which we’re here for tonight, is one of them. But I don’t feel any desire to do that again. I feel like I’ve done enough of that that I’m more excited about working on things that are original ideas that perhaps one day someone else will have to reboot… You know, I do think that if you’re telling a story that is not moving anything forward, not introducing anything that’s relevant, that’s not creating a new mythology or an extension of it, then a complete remake of something feels like a mistake.”

Besides his singular departure from trend with Super 8 in 2011, Abrams has focussed his attention on sci-fi and thriller franchises including Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Star Trek (multiple) and a handful of Missions Impossible. He concedes that he is incredibly lucky to have been a part of the projects that have been part of pop culture for decades, but he’s looking forward to developing new stories that might even be revived by others one day.

It has to be said, Abrams has put himself in a great position to do so. If it hadn’t been for all the sci-fi spectacle that he has directed, produced and written in his career so far, he’d have no hope of getting original content near the cinema. But Abrams has dealt with the Hollywood machine admirably, producing popular movies and television, and earning reputation and acclaim to support his ambitious future.

Before we get to see what his future holds, however, we still have an Abrams-produced Star Wars: Episode VIII to look forward to on December 15th 2017. Then in 2018 we can expect an untitled Star Trek sequel and a summer release of Mission Impossible 6.

What sort of “mythology” do you expect to see JJ Abrams create? Let us know in the comments.

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Forgotten Films Archive: ‘Bringing Out the Dead’ (1999), the Best of Martin Scorsese’s “B-Sides”

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Every great filmmaker with enough time and experience under their belt has a considerable selection of, for lack of a better term, “B-sides.” Scattered amongst the output of Jaws, Raiders of The Lost Ark, and Schindler’s List, Steven Spielberg has 1942, Empire of the Sun, Hook. David Lean has Lawrence of Arabia and Bridge on The River Kwai on his ledger, but he also has Madeleine and Summertime; these undercard films have their fair share of fans out there, and some of the movies are terrific in their own right. But they will never be confused for the best of the best.

Of all the greats, Martin Scorsese has one of the most curious collection of “minor” works. Films like Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and Goodfellas all helped cement Scorsese as one of the very best (if not THE best) American filmmakers of all time. But scattered throughout his classics are smaller films: the underrated After Hours, the off-kilter King of Comedy, and the 1999 story of an ambulance driver, haunted by the ghosts of patients he couldn’t save, losing grip on his own sanity: Bringing Out the Dead.

At the time, the Scorsese/Nicolas Cage collaboration – made back in the days when Cage was more concerned with delivering his very best work than digging himself out of tax debt – was a film without an audience, as strange as that sounds. It was a little manic, a little zany, incredibly dark. And late 90s, pre 9/11 Manhattan was depicted as a much more pleasant world than what Scorsese shows here. Audiences weren’t drawn to such a bleak tale of burnouts and drifters making their way through the midnight hour of downtrodden Manhattan. Outsiders had no interest in the disturbing world of a New York ambulance driver scuffling through night shifts and crack dens.

Bringing Out the Dead

Bringing Out the Dead exists in the same theoretical world of Travis Bickle, an underbelly of Manhattan that seems to be literally on fire, melting in a pit of its own insanity (the comparison makes sense, given that Taxi Driver scribe Paul Schrader helped pen the screenplay). But unlike Taxi Driver, Scorsese regularly abandons the confines of reality here to flirt with spiritual explorations of the afterlife. Fitting, given that his protagonist this time is an ambulance driver, Frank, trying his damnedest to get fired. Except his boss won’t hear of it.

Like it’s unofficial anthem, Van Morrison’s “TB Sheets,” screeching and crying on the soundtrack, Bringing Out the Dead is a passionate trip into a dispassionate world. The gallows humor of Frank’s desperation often keeps us afloat as an audience through all the underlit, depressive Manhattan apartment buildings.

There is no tangible plot here, only the warped existence of our poor protagonist. Frank has three different partners throughout the movie: there is Larry (John Goodman), a despondent, jaded pragmatist more concerned with dinner than saving lives. Then, Marcus (Ving Rhames) treats his shifts like a mixture of barroom banter and spiritual evangelism. And finally, Frank’s third partner is Walls, a man who’s gone totally off the rails, played fittingly by Tom Sizemore. There is the interpretation out there that this film as an adaptation of A Christmas Carol, which makes real sense if you assign each partner a ghost of present, past, and future.

And along the way, Frank finds comfort in the daughter of one of his patient’s, Mary (Patricia Arquette), who’s saintly name should absolutely be read into, depending on which angle you approach the film. Interesting side note, and one I forgot altogether: Cage and Arquette were married at the time.

Bringing Out the Dead

As is usually the case, Martin Scorsese is more concerned with mood and feeling than technical precision. His films are often messy and manic, but they capture the exact tone for which Scorsese is aiming. Bringing Out the Dead is a dark, dreary, unforgiving look at a dark, dreary, unforgiving profession in a city that seems to be barely hanging on, still in need of Travis Bickle’s cleanse so many years prior. Nicolas Cage is at his frazzled best here, matching the gaunt stare and sunken eyes he had in Leaving Las Vegas… without the crippling alcoholism. It’s a tough performance physically and emotionally, but one that late 90s Cage was game to play.

Calling this one of Scorsese’s undercard films isn’t a slight against the incredible energy he pours into each and every scene – despite the fact he admitted the shoot was particularly grueling, given the late night sets in the middle of December. Some of your favorite bands’ greatest songs are on the flip side of that vinyl. Bringing Out the Dead may not be in the same stratosphere as Goodfellas or Raging Bull, or any other handful of Scorsese’s classics. But a step down from that level is nothing to shake a stick at.

Silence is in wide release this Friday.

___

Other Films in The Archive:

Judgment Night (1993)

Shoot to Kill (1988)

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Looking Back 30 Years At The Awesome Action Movies Of 1987

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No two cinematic solar cycles are ever the same. Though hundreds of movies are released every year, some years are better than others. This is particularly the case when you look at specific genres. One year will see the release of a host of great horror films, for instance, while other years don’t have any worth mentioning. Thirty years ago, 1987 experienced one fantastic 365 days of awesome action movies.

 

Predator

“You’re one ugly mother fu@#er!”

predator-movie-scifi-actionBy 1987, Arnold Schwarzenegger was in full-swing as an action movie star. Nothing proves this more than him having TWO great action films in one year — The Running Man and Predator. While The Running Man failed to catch on, The Predator was a smash hit that spawned sequels, comics, video games, and more. Director John McTiernan takes a very simple story and fills it with colorful characters and pulse-pounding action. Legendary creature and effects creator Stan Winston, with a tip from James Cameron (mandibles!) worked his magic on the now-iconic Predator creature.

RoboCop

“Dead or alive, you’re coming with me.”

robocop-action-movieThe 80s were all about excess and by 1987 the more blood packs you could erupt in a film, the better. Paul Verhoeven’s RoboCop features the director’s over-the-top violence mixed with satire and social commentary. RoboCop made multinational corporations and excess itself the enemy and a working class cop the hero who rises to help the people. And it’s all deliciously quotable!

Running Man

“Who loves you and who do you love?!”

running man-action-movieSchwarzenegger’s second action movie of 1987 was The Running Man. This prophetic film saw the collapse of society to sensationalist television and economic meltdown. Schwarzenegger plays, Ben Richards, a man forced to play on a deadly game show called Running Man. Like a video game, Schwarzenegger has to defeat several levels, including mini-bosees and a main boss. The scratchy, exuberant voice of Richard Dawson, host of Family Feud when the film was made, plays the perfect game show host/villain.

Lethal Weapon

“I’m too old for this shi—!“

lethal weapon-action-movieThe films that seem to become timeless are the ones that are the most quotable. Special effects evolve rapidly and age quickly, but a great character delivering an iconic line lives on for ages. When quotes become part of pop culture, generation after generation will rediscover the film. There’s no shortage of quotable lines in 1987, and Lethal Weapon has a few of them packed into a fine wine of a buddy cop movie.

Beverly Hills Cop II

“F@#k, Rambo!”

beverly hills cop-action-movieBelieve it or not, kids, but there was a time when Eddie Murphy was a supremely edgy comic with the number one action movie and a feature-length hit comedy special in the same year. Murphy was the 80s version of Kevin Hart, if you will. Beverly Hills Cop II was the biggest action movie of 1987. Murphy’s return to play Detroit-based cop Axel Foley is spot-on in a solid sequel.

The Untouchables

“So much violence …”

untouchables-action-movieIn 1920s and 30s Chicago, infamous gangster Al Capone ruled the streets. Like any great villain an even bigger hero, Eliot Ness, in this case, was there to put an end to the criminal’s activities. A star-studded cast with Kevin Costner, Sean Connery, and Robert DeNiro as Capone, put out great performances in this underrated action movie of 1987.

Masters of the Universe

“I must possess all, or I possess nothing!”

he man-action-movieThe 80s were a decade of pop culture classic cartoons and the race to get those animated characters to film was in full swing. Transformers and GI Joe scored hits with animated movies. But Producer Edward R. Pressman took Mattel’s homoerotic He-Man and went live action. The result is a film that’s so bad it’s good. The worst part is the plot device which brings He-Man and the gang out of Eternia, the world in the cartoon, and drops them on present day Earth. The best parts were a young Courtney Cox, Dolph Lungren’s cheesetastic performance, and Frank Langella as skin-deprived villain Skeletor.

The Princess Bride

“You’re trying to kidnap what I’ve rightfully stolen!”

princess bride-action-movieA classic action comedy that’s only improved with age. Cary Elwes is perfect as Westley, the farmhand turned hero in the name of love. The object of Westley’s affections is Buttercup played by Robin Wright. Quotable as quotable can be, The Princess Bride exists in that stream of films that works for kids and adults alike. It’s reminiscent of a Bugs Bunny cartoon in that watching it as a kid and then again as an adult reveals jokes you never knew were there.

Honorable Mention: American Ninja 2: The Confrontation

“This is really beginning to get on my tits!”

american ninja-action-movieRight here is purely a guilty pleasure pick. Michael Dudikoff’s American Ninja is one of my favorite 80s action b-movies and American Ninja 2 is more of what I love. The acting is shaky by the entire cast, the plot doesn’t entirely make sense, and the villain is ridiculous. But that’s sort of the reason to love it. It’s a live-action cartoon with above-average action.

What action movies from 1987 would you add to the list?

Author’s Note: 1987 was also a good year for horror movies. But that’s an article for another time. 😉

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Synopsis Revealed For ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Telltale Series

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Although we’ve known about Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Telltale series for awhile now, the plot has just now been released by Gamestop. Check it out below.

“Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series’ delivers a brand new story of the universe’s unlikeliest heroes, the rag-tag band of outlaws who go by the names Star-Lord, Gamora, Drax, Rocket, and Groot. In the wake of an epic battle, the Guardians discover an artifact of unspeakable power. Each of the Guardians has a reason to desire this relic, as does a ruthless enemy who is the last of her kind, and who will stop at nothing to tear it from their hands. From Earth to the Milano to Knowhere and beyond, and set to the beat of awesome music, this five-part episodic series puts you in the rocket-powered boots of Star-Lord in an original Guardians adventure, told in the unique and award-winning Telltale style, where your decisions and actions will drive the path of the story you experience.”

The first installment in this episodic series comes to consoles later this year, likely around the release of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 in theaters.

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Ben Affleck Says ‘The Batman’ Script Keeps getting “Better And Better”

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While reports claim that production on Ben Affleck’s solo Batman movie has been pushed back, the actor, writer, and director continues to work on the script and develop the idea. IGN recently sat down with Affleck to discuss his new movie Live By Night, and while he didn’t offer too many details he acknowledged that the script for The Batman is in a good place and that he wants to make it better and better.

Also Read: Ben Affleck Discusses ‘The Batman’ & ‘Justice League’

“There’s great stuff in it now. It just needs to get better and better. It’s the same way I felt about Live By Night when I was prepping it, it’s just that no one was asking me questions because nobody gave a shit, because there wasn’t any click-throughs.”

“It took me a year plus to get (Live By Night) ready to launch. Hopefully it won’t take me that long for Batman. We’re working, I think we’re ahead of the curve, and we’re excited.”

If the reports are true and production on Affleck’s Batman movie has been pushed back, it can only mean good things. This gives Affleck the time he needs to work on the script and make the best possible movie about a character we all love. You can watch the full interveiw with Ben Affleck below.

Ben Affleck will next appear as Bruce Wayne in Zack Snyder’s Justice League alongside Wonder Woman, Superman, Aquaman, The Flash, and Cyborg. The solo film is expected to go into production in the Summer.

 

Justice League lands in theaters on November 16, 2017. 

Source: IGN

 

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‘Star Wars: Episode VIII’: Rian Johnson Provides New Details

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With Rogue One still dominating the box-office, fans are looking ahead to the release of Star Wars: Episode VIII. USA Today recently conducted a preview of 2017’s biggest films and talked to Episode VIII writer-director Rian Johnson. While the director couldn’t reveal too much, he did acknowledge that the film won’t jump ahead, but will deal with the conflict set up by the first film, he also states that Episode VIII will focus on the relationship between Rey and Luke.

Remember that Star Wars: The Force Awakens cliffhanger with new heroine Rey (Daisy Ridley) bringing Jedi master Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) his old lightsaber on a remote intergalactic island? Writer/director Rian Johnson is picking up right where they left off in the beginning of the Star Wars saga’s still-untitled next chapter. “I don’t want to skip ahead two years,” Johnson says. “I want to see the very next moment of what happens.” How Rey and Luke relate to each other is the key relationship in Episode VIII, and Johnson says “a large part of the movie” will be spent addressing why Luke’s there and what he’ll do next. Like Luke, Rey has been pulled into a bigger world by connecting with the Force, “but part of what’s she’s dealing with is the realization that she has this power and this gift,” Johnson adds. “She’s taking her first step to coming to terms with this thing inside her that she never knew was there and is just starting to reveal its potential.” Another cliffhanger: How General Leia might figure in the film in light of Carrie Fisher’s death last month.

It makes sense that Johnson doesn’t want to jump ahead in time. The Force Awakens did a great job setting up this new trilogy, and creating these relationships it would be a disservice to jump ahead instead of developing these new relationships. It is also exciting to hear how Johnson plans on expanding Rey’s knowledge of the Force and the internal struggle that her role in the Galaxy demands.

Star Wars: Episode VIII opens December 15th.

 

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