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Robbie Reyes’ Origins On S.H.I.E.L.D. Revealed by Gabriel Luna

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Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. is back tonight, but if you can’t wait for the later premiere time, actor Gabriel Luna is already chatting about the origins of the newest character on the show: Robbie Reyes, or Ghost Rider. According to Heroic Hollywood, Luna revealed not only details about Ghost Rider’s history, but also how he connects personally with Reyes.

Robbie Reyes Helps Marvel Diversify

Reyes is the latest incarnation of the anti-hero Ghost Rider. Before Reyes, the Rider’s human host was either Johnny Blaze or Danny Ketch–both white guys with motorbikes. Reyes steps out of that mold in several ways, not the least of which being his Latino heritage. Reyes also steps away from the bike in favor of a muscle car. We can’t help but imagine a scenario where Coulson tries to fight Ghost Rider while driving Lola.

Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is just one of many Marvel properties under scrutiny from those of us seeking more diversity in the media. While S.H.I.E.L.D. is on the better end of the diverse spectrum, it is no accident that Reyes was chosen over Blaze and Ketch.

During his interview with Collider, Gabriel Luna, who will play Robbie Reyes on the television show, discussed what he has in common with his character.

“When I read the books by Felipe [Smith] and Tradd [Moore], and all the people who contributed to doing those first 12 issues of the All-New Ghost Rider, the first thing that I identified with was the orphan nature of his upbringing and some of the hardships that he deals with, at a very, very young age. He’s raising his little brother, from the age of 13. There were some striking similarities to my background and my past, and some similar family dynamics.” 

Robbie Reyes Gabriel Luna

Daisy Vs. Vengeance

This season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is supposed to be different than the previous three. Not only do we get the show in a later time slot, but there have been hints of Doctor Strange tie-ins, as well as a break from the typical season arc dealing with Hydra. But details on story and character have been scarce, even as teasers and a sneak peek at episode one rolled out. We know Daisy Johnson (Chloe Bennett) A.K.A. Quake is on the run. We know there’s a new director. We know Fitz and Simmons have finally crossed the event horizon. But how Ghost Rider and Robbie Reyes fit into the whole mess is largely a mystery.

Reyes enters the scene when inhumans are at odds with the rest of the world, the Sokovia Accords have caused the events of Civil War, and, on a smaller scale, Daisy has gone rogue. Unlike his predecessors, Reyes is possessed by a serial killer rather than a demon spirit, and he roams the earth using The Rider to his advantage rather than fearing and loathing him. So is Reyes going to befriend Daisy? Will they team up? And how long will Coulson last under the new Director who, according to creators Maurissa Tancharoen and Jed Whedon, will be cracking down on new rules and regulations.

Based on characters from Marvel comics, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was created by Maurissa Tancharoen and Jed and Joss Whedon. The show stars Clark Gregg (Phil Coulson), Ming-Na Wen (Melinda May), Chloe Bennett (Daisy Johnson), Elizabeth Henstridge (Jemma Simmons), Iain de Caestecker (Leo Fitz), Henry Simmons (Mack), and Gabriel Luna (Robbie Reyes).

Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. season four premieres tonight, September 20th at 10pm on ABC.

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Jared Leto To Do Some Serious Method Acting For ‘Warhol’

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Jared Leto has signed on to play Andy Warhol in an upcoming biopic, so any other actor interested in this project, be ready to put up with some irritating method acting.

Terrence Winter, creator of Boardwalk Empire and screenwriter of Wolf of Wall Street, will write the script, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The story will be based on Victor Bockris’s book Warhol: The Biography.

Andy Warhol basically birthed pop culture in the 60s with his artwork that highlighted consumerism in America. He was a renaissance man most well known for his Campbell’s soup art and Marilyn Monroe portraits. The guy had a fascinating life, even beyond that silver shock of hair he had, and a biopic on his crazy life seems well overdue. Leto has the build and the look to capture Warhol, but how can anyone think about any film he’s going to do in the future without his corny method acting coming into play?

Leto will also produce along with Michael De Luca. There’s no other cast attached to the film yet, and no release date as of yet. It will probably be a while before we see it so Leto can get into character and order pallets of Campbell’s soup to send to his costars.

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Don’t Trust Rotten Tomatoes on ‘Criminal’

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Most of the time I am in total agreement with Rotten Tomatoes. Until this week, the only other rating I ever disagreed with was Cowboys and Aliens, an underrated action extravaganza. This week brought a new disagreement: the 2016 film Criminal has an audience score of 50 and a critics score of 30. Now admittedly, it is not the world’s best film. It wasn’t trying for great drama. It was trying to be an exciting cross-genre thriller, and it succeeded. It doesn’t deserve the critic’s hate nor an audiences’ avoidance for it’s low approval rating. Criminal is a movie that has a lot going for it.

First, it has several brilliant concepts. The primary idea is that procedures and set rules exist for transferring one person’s memories into another person. A lesser movie would have just shown the process without any attempt at explanation. Even movies that would have explained the science wouldn’t have based the plot around the science explained for the film. In Criminal the science is integral to the plot: what’s needed is a person with an underdeveloped frontal lobe, and the transfer is for a restricted term. It’s a science-driven science fiction film.

criminal

Another main concept derives from the first. That person with an underdeveloped frontal lobe would be a sociopath. Giving them the memories of a spy would make them much more dangerous. In fact, when Jericho, the protagonist/memory recipient, is equipped with CIA training, he’s easily able to overpower highly trained bad guys.

It’s also significant that Criminal has a phenomenal cast of A-list actors who gave noteworthy performances. Kevin Costner and Gal Gadot were both compelling and entertaining. Costner’s role was one of the more interesting of his career. Tommy Lee Jones’s performance was on-point, although he had little screen time.

Criminal

It would be a mistake to try and compare Criminal to films like The Departed or Mad Max Fury Road. The film is not a thought piece. Criminal is a fun and enjoyable thriller for people who like action movies.

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Keanu Reeves Digs For ‘The Whole Truth’ In New Trailer

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Lionsgate Tuesday morning, released the first trailer ‘The Whole Truth,’ starring Keanu Reeves and Renée Zellweger.

Defense attorney Richard Ramsay (Keanu Reeves) takes on a personal case when he swears to his widowed friend, Loretta Lassiter (Renée Zellweger), that he will keep her son Mike (Gabriel Basso) out of prison. Charged with murdering his father, Mike initially confesses to the crime. But as the trial proceeds, chilling evidence about the kind of man that Boone Lassiter (Jim Belushi) really was comes to light. While Ramsay uses the evidence to get his client acquitted, his new colleague Janelle (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) tries to dig deeper – and begins to realize that the whole truth is something she alone can uncover.

‘The Whole Truth’ is directed by Courtney Hunt, from a script by Rafael Jackson, and stars Keanu Reeves, Renée Zellweger, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Gabriel Basso, and Jim Belushi.

The crime thriller hits theaters and VOD on October 21.

Since you have the option of watching ‘The Whole Truth’ at home, is it a must see?

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Marvel Launching New Classified ‘Star Wars’ Comic

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Marvel will be launching a new Star Wars comic this December, a mysterious ongoing series being solicited as Star Wars: Classified.

Kieron Gillen will write the series, fresh off his 25 issue run on Darth Vader, while Kev Walker is on art. Walker’s only experience in the galaxy far, far away was a cover he did for Star Wars: Republic in 2003.

You can see Marvel’s solicitation for the first two issues below:

Star Wars Classified

Marvel has not revealed any plot details, or if Classified will be the series’ official title (it’s likely a placeholder). New York Comic Con is only a few weeks away, so it’s possible that fans can expect to get answers then.

One of the biggest mysteries surrounding the series is when it will take place in the timeline. Will it be set pre-A New Hope in order to line up with Rogue One, also coming out in December? Or will it continue to fill in the 30 year gap between Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens?

What do you hope Classified will be about? Let us know in the comments below!

Source: Newsarama

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Watch Chris Pratt & Jennifer Lawrence In The First Trailer For ‘Passengers’

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What would you do if you found yourself alone in space? The first trailer for Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt’s sci-fi romance film, Passengers has finally been released.

Passengers

Sony Pictures released the first trailer, giving fans a first look at the upcoming space film. Other than various images, this is the first look at the Morten Tyldum directed movie, which is surprising since Passengers has a December release date.

This is the first movie starring Chris Pratt and Jenifer Lawrence as a pair, but they’re already getting a lot of attention for their on-screen chemistry. Talking to Entertainment Weekly Tyldum said, “I honestly couldn’t ask for a better cast. They’re so great together, and both of them are so hard-working.”

“A spacecraft is transporting thousands of people to a distant colony planet that has a malfunction in one of its sleep chambers. As a result, a single passenger is awakened 90 years before anyone else. Faced with the prospect of growing old and dying alone, he eventually decides to wake up a second passenger.”

Passengers stars Chris Pratt, Jenifer Lawrence, and Michael Sheen. The film is set for release on December 21, with a later release scheduled internationally.

Be Sure To Let Us Know What You Think Of The Trailer In The Comments Section Below!
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‘Black Panther’: Chadwick Boseman Teases Other Black Panthers?

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Black Panther, one of Marvel Comics’ most anticipated, newest character to share the silver screen spotlight in Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War, is about see double or triple, according to Comicbook. Black Panther actor Chadwick Boseman plays the T’Challa iteration, and most well-known iteration, of the titular character.

However, Boseman stated recently that their might be other Black Panther version that will be heading to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the big screen.

“You’re going to learn about Wakanda, its culture, its traditions, the past.You can go through all the comic books and know that there’s more Panthers that have existed in the past – that’s origin.”

He stressed that Black Panther’s appearance in Civil War wasn’t “necessarily an origin story,” and there was a reason for that.

“It’s not necessarily an origin story because he remains a mystery through most of the movie. When I take the mask off and it’s revealed that it’s the Prince of Wakanda, that’s the guy who’s father was just killed – it’s a surprise. So then, you’re learning – as you watch the movie – what his powers are, because you’re not sure. He remains a mystery through most of the movie.”

Black Panther Civil War Scene

Chadwick Boseman explained that the intent with Black Panther’s Civil War appearance was to keep everything “airtight,” so as to not give anything away about where the character is going for his solo outing that is still yet to be released. Unfortunately, though his vague discussion seemed to imply the possibility of brining in others who have worn the Black Panther suit moniker, he couldn’t give anything away.

“I think that’s why they made his arc so complete, so that it is contained. You have to, in doing that, make sure you leave room for a lot of things that you want to happen. I can’t say what they are but that was thought out by me, thought out by the producers, the directors, I’m sure Stan Lee had something to say about it, Ryan Coogler had something to say about it.”

Black Panther has been a highly anticipated Marvel character, so it makes sense that they want to carefully craft his big screen solo debut, and make sure they get it right. After all, other character from Marvel and DC Comics have had pretty poor adaptations (Ghost Rider, Fantastic  Four), whether all fans think so or not.

[Images Via Marvel Entertainment]

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30 Years Ago, David Lynch’s ‘Blue Velvet’ Dismantled Suburban Serenity

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It’s been thirty years since David Lynch pulled back the curtain on idyllic suburbia, exposing a toxic sort of madness and mayhem in his early masterpiece, Blue Velvet. And he doesn’t take long getting right to the point.

The opening scene  is a Norman Rockwell portrait come to life, a neighborhood bathed in soft focus sunshine with emerald-green lawns outlined by white picket fences. It’s Lumberton, the sort of small town you’d see in 50’s magazine adverts; but as we push in on a man watering his lawn, everything begins to fall apart. The man falls down, having some sort of nondescript attack, and Lynch’s camera pushes past this man writhing in pain, beyond the blades of pristine grass, showing us a world of screeching insects and grub worms crunching and digging in the soil.

And it’s all you need to know. From here on out, now that Lynch has dropped such a clear-cut metaphor on us, all bets are off. He will show us the dark side of suburbia here, but the on-the-nose nature of this opening sequence allows him the freedom to unleash hell on the audience. That way when Jeffrey, our hero played by Kyle MacLachlan, finds a severed human ear in the middle of a field, that robust metaphor in the opening triggers our consciousness; this is the darkness seeping through the underbelly.

We learn that the man on death’s door in the opening scene is Jeffrey’s dad, and Jeffrey is back home to tend to his father’s hardware store while Pops is on the mend. But then he finds this ear, and he takes it to the cops, and they tell him there’s nothing to see here. Move on. Jeffrey knows better, and with the help of the Detective’s daughter, Sandy (Lynch regular Laura Dern), the kids begin their own investigation, and it leads them into a hellish photo negative of the halcyon world in which they were raised.

This disturbing other world involves lounge singer Dorothy Vallens, played by Isabella Rossellini, whom Jeffrey has a bizarre encounter with after she discovers him hiding in her closet. But more frightening, and more of an issue here, is one Frank Booth, played with an expected brutal madness by the late, great Dennis Hopper. You see, Frank is Dorothy’s “keeper” of sorts, an unhinged madman with a rogue’s gallery of buddies and a serious addiction to both nitrous and sexual deviancy; and when Frank gets wind of Jeffrey’s presence, he takes Jeffrey down a wormhole of insanity in a way only David Lynch can perfect.

My relationship with David Lynch has been an odd one. At least it has on my end, I seriously doubt he has any clue of my thoughts on his work. I find Lynch to be incredibly brilliant and incredibly frustrating in just about the same breath. There is a love hate with his work I cannot escape, no matter how hard I try. His work in the 90’s, from Twin Peaks to Wild at Heart to Lost Highway, somehow manages to be rewarding on a number of cinematic levels while simultaneously proving to be maddening on some profound levels. It took me time, maturity, and multiple viewings to appreciate Blue Velvet as the work of brilliance it most certainly is.

Here is a film that hammers its point home in the opening scene, then works upward and outward from there. It pushes the madness up from the ground, and into the forefront, and the way it casually corrupts Jeffrey manages to be a subtle shift in our hero’s arc in the midst of such in-your-face thematic elements. Lynch lets us know his plan at the beginning, but he doesn’t tell us the means to which he will reach these ends. He unleashes bizarro hell on us in a number of characters and scenes, none more memorable than Dean Stockwell’s rendition of “Candy Colored Clown”:

This is the very epitome of what makes David Lynch a master of emotional manipulation. It drops in the midst of a world unraveling, and the nightmarish sheen of the moment – namely the under lighting of Stockwell – is “Lynchian” to its core. These are the moments in Blue Velvet that separate it from so many Suburbia-is-dark tales that came in its wake, all the way up to Sam Mendes’s American Beauty and beyond.

Blue Velvet was hailed upon its release, almost exclusively. Except for the Godfather of film criticism. Yes, Roger Ebert had some issues with Blue Velvet upon the film’s release, namely with the degradation of women on display in the ritualistic rape scene in the middle. In his one-star review (!), Ebert had this to say:

Rossellini is asked to do things in this film that require real nerve. In one scene, she’s publicly embarrassed by being dumped naked on the lawn of the police detective. In others, she is asked to portray emotions that I imagine most actresses would rather not touch. She is degraded, slapped around, humiliated and undressed in front of the camera. And when you ask an actress to endure those experiences, you should keep your side of the bargain by putting her in an important film.

He has some points here, but perhaps he didn’t know the mood on set, the way Lynch and Rossellini could barely keep their laughing in check during the rape sequence. Because they knew the dark, dark satire at the core of what they were saying. It may have been ahead of its time, but the years have caught up with Blue Velvet, and it is no more dated now than it was in 1986.

What makes this film forever relevant is the performance of Dennis Hopper, channeling all his own manic and problematic (at some times throughout his career) energy to create an iconic villain without a single redeeming factor. It’s pure evil, an its the catalyst for the entire film once Jeffrey is forced out of Dorothy’s closet and pushed into Frank’s unstable world.

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The Heroes Prevailed At Fan Fest Orlando

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The creators of Walker Stalker Con and Heroes & Villians put together Fan Fest Orlando, a charity event to benefit the victims and families of the Pulse Night Club mass shooting. Twenty-five celebrities and hundreds of volunteers came together on Saturday to become the real heroes.

According to event staff, the goal was to raise one million dollars. 100% of the profits from autographs and photo ops would be donated to the OneOrlando Fund. The stars of ‘The Walking Dead,’ WWE Superstars, superheroes of the CW, and the villains of Gotham came out in force. ‘Arrow’ star Stephen Amell rallied the troops, but each celebrity had their own personal reason for volunteering his or her time.

“It’s important for me to be here because I think in this day and age giving back is one of the best things we can do as human beings,” said Shantel VanSanten of ‘The Flash.’

Several actors had personal ties to the Orlando area, Jordan Woods-Robinson is a Blue Man and Jeremy Palko worked at Universal Studios.

“I’m hoping this is going to raise a huge amount of awareness. That it’s great for not just generating income for support, but also just the show of support for the community, the LGBTQ community and everyone affected by the shootings,” said Woods-Robinson of ‘The Walking Dead.’

“A lot of people who were affected by this tragedy were in the entertainment community. I personally worked at Universal Studios and that entire family there was just really taken back by this. So to be a small part of giving back to this community has been really great,” said Palko of ‘The Walking Dead.’

Others hoped for changed and some demanded it.

“It’s hard to define it. I think it’s going to be inexpressible, the impact, at least I hope. I hope that people feel a sense of comfort and a sense of hope from the unity that is here, that is represented here. And I pray that people feel loved and supported. That’s what is most important about this. I think that’s all the impact we can hope for, and I think even beyond that, change would be ideal as well. If this could insight even the smallest amount of change, I think that is a success,” said Sonequa Martin-Green of ‘The Walking Dead.’

“People give so much relevance to what we do, so if we’re able to bring attention to a tragic situation, and I’m always trying to turn tragedy into triumph. So I think it is important as a community to rise up and say no. That’s not what we stand for. So hopefully this will bring healing to some of the families and let people know that we stand together for peace,” said Chad Coleman of ‘The Expanse’ and ‘Arrow.’

The emotions ran high on Saturday, but everyone knew the goal and dropped what they were doing to come together for a good cause. If you would like more information on the OneOrlando Fund or to donate, click the link provide.

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Review: ‘Snowden’ A Blase Approach To A Scintillating Topic

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Snowden is a mediocre portrait of the most notorious whistleblower in the world. What’s shocking is that director Oliver Stone shied away from themes that are synonymous with his films (government power, war, secrecy) and sought to humanize a man who risked it all to do what he felt was right. While it was refreshing to see Stone taking a different approach with this highly topical film, humanizing Snowden creates an incredibly bland narrative that transforms a highly engaging topic into a tepid one.

Stone uses Laura Poitras’s Oscar-winning documentary Citizenfour (about former NSA contractor Edward Snowden) as a launching pad into a relatively complex narrative. While it would have been easy to make a political statement (which, given Stone’s past projects, would have been no surprise), he crafts an entirely logical sequence of events that doesn’t side with those who would make Snowden a hero or those who would execute him on sight… the epitome of milquetoast story-telling. In spite of this, Joseph Gordon-Levitt delivers his best performance to date. It’s apparent that he’s studied up on Edward Snowden and embodies the controversial former NSA contractor while on screen. His performance is the buoy that keeps this film afloat.

Levitt portrays Edward Snowden as a man who is disenchanted with the United States monitoring our every move and begins to question the powers that be. Indeed one could make an argument that Snowden is similar to some other famous characters in previous Stone films. For Example, Jim Garrison in JFK became disenchanted with authority as he attempted to unravel a vast conspiracy surrounding the assassination of John F. Kennedy.  However, in JFK we saw a gritty filmmaker who sought out a truth and didn’t shy away from controversy. Snowden brought out a complacency in Stone that I was unaware he possessed. Where was that urgency to point the finger at the government for conducting illegal surveillance of its citizens? Why even tackle this subject matter if you weren’t going to do anything with it?

Instead of taking a more deliberate approach to telling the story of what transpired at the NSA, Stone shines a big spotlight on Edward’s relationship with Lindsay Mills (Shaline Woodley). Mills doesn’t move the story along but does certainly interject a heavy dose of melodrama. Will he tell her the truth? Why won’t he tell her truth? Will she stay with him? Why is she staying with him? The moment we were forced to endure a scene involving Snowden gazing into a glass kitchen door and observing his girlfriend talking to another man, this film became less of a movie directed by Oliver Stone and more like one directed by the late Gary Marshall. Woodley’s performance is a very stilted and typical portrayal of a girlfriend in “turmoil. It’s perplexing what the director saw in her. Why would you give such a typical portrayal more screen time than you gave Joan Allen’s tremendous performance as the first lady in Nixon?

Fall Movie PreviewOne of the few highlights of Snowden was the music composed by Craig Armstrong and Adam Peters. Armstrong and Peters have written notes that are both haunting and evoke and anxious undertones found throughout the film. So if anyone reading this is moved by great music, then, by all means, please purchase a ticket to see this movie ASAP. However, if you are irritated by bland retellings of a story that has been all over the news, then avoid Snowden at all cost.

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