THE HOLOGRAMS struggle to come to grips with the emotional ramifications of Silica and their short tour gone wrong, The unsure what recent events mean for their band’s future. Is there even a future for JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS?
Writing
The previous issue promised things were going to change. This issue delivered on these promises, but not in the way many probably would have predicted. There is a definite change which will be affecting the series from here on, but it also employed the use of excellent set up and misdirection for what was actually coming to the group. Writer Kelly Thompson really succeeded in taking the story a totally different way, but still made sure to leave it with plenty of emotion for people to have the proper reaction to the entire things.
What is the big change? You’ll have to go read it for yourself. Though, as a small spoiler, the Stingers do show up again and it appears as if they will be a main part of the next story. The use of these new characters to shake things up will definitely have fans eager to read the next issue.
Artwork
This issue features good character work, which is what makes the issue stand out most visually. Unfortunately, there is lot less holographic effects or pages of the bands performing than there were from previous issues. Jen Bartlet does a great job at the end of showing she can draw a great performance page, but a few more of these in the issue wouldn’t have hurt.
Conclusion
The issue has the perfect setup for change and, with the Stingers coming, things are only going to get worse for the group. This is a fantastic issue which fans will not want to miss out one. Especially as things won’t be the same from here on out.
Season three gets a little crazy on The Flash, where the show will parallel the comics story “Flashpoint”, according to Entertainment Weekly.
Flashpoint on Paper
The story line includes an alternate timeline, “the Reverse Flash”, “Kid Flash”, dead parents coming back to life–all the good stuff. While only Barry’s mom comes back to life in the comics, both his parents are brought back for the small screen counterpart. In the comics, all the cities heroes have gone dark side, with Captain Cold hailed as the laudable “Citizen Cold”. We wonder how Cisco feels about the name change.
Flashpoint on Screen
Thanks to Katie Yu at the CW, we’ve got a whole series of images from the upcoming season of The Flash. Barry is facing friend and foe alike. Now the only question is, where’s Detective West in all this? Is that the trade off for having parents? I feel as though his absence from all promo images is suspicious. Then again, we did get to see him tap dance at Comic Con. Maybe I’m just being greedy.
Based on DC characters, The Flash was created by executive producers Greg Berlanti (“The Flash,” “Supergirl”), Geoff Johns (“Arrow,” “Robot Chicken”) and Andrew Kreisberg (“The Flash,” “Supergirl”). The show stars Grant Gustin (Barry Allen), Candice Patton (Iris West), Danielle Panabaker (Caitlin Snow) and Carlos Valdes (Cisco Ramon).
The Flash returns Tuesday, Oct. 4 at 8 p.m. ET on The CW.
Richard Linklater’s next film sounds pretty strange, but the director has assembled a solid trio of stars to headline.
The Hollywood Reporter just broke the news that Bryan Cranston, Steve Carell, and Laurence Fishburne will be in Last Flag Flying, Richard Linklater’s sequel to… The Last Detail?
Well, as is the case with Linklater, whose last picture Everybody Wants Some!! was a sort of spiritual sequel to both Boyhood and Dazed and Confused, Last Flag Flying will “sort of” be a sequel to the 1973 Hal Ashby military comedy. It will be based on the 2005 Darryl Ponicsan novel, also a sequel to Ponicsan’s The Last Detail novel. Linklater has been circling this project since 2006, and now it seems his schedule has cleared up. Enter Cranston, Carell, and Fishburne.
The Last Detail starred Jack Nicholson and Otis Young as two Naval officers who are tasked with brining a young offender (Randy Quaid, Oscar nominated) to prison. But they decide to show the kid a good time before sending him off to jail. Quaid was nominated, as was Nicholson and the adapted screenplay from Hal Ashby.
Last Flag Flying will, according to THR, take place in this Post-9/11 world:
[The film] reunites the reader with the trio, now living in a post-9/11 American life: the former Naval Petty Officers come to the aid of their former prisoner who needs their help to bring home the body of his son, the latter who was killed in Iraq. The request that sends them back retracing their journey from Norfolk, Virginia, to Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
It’s definitely a weird idea for a long-gap sequel, but Richard Linklater paired up with that cast is worth the price of admission. The film should start production this November.
The Hollywood Reporter revealed an exclusive first look at key art for season three of Fox’s DC Comics drama, Gotham, featuring Ben McKenzie’s ‘Detective James Gordon’ holding a crystal ball showcasing the infamous villains Gordon will have to deal with in the upcoming season. Penguin (Robin Lord Taylor), Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith) and Edward Nygma, aka the future Riddler (Cory Michael Smith), along with Selina Kyle (Camren Bicondova), Barbara Kean (Erin Richards), Tabitha Galavan (Jessica Lucas) and Butch (Drew Powell) pose in the snow globe along with the newly recast, grown-up version of Poison Ivy (Maggie Geha)
A noteworthy addition is the brand new tagline “Mad City,” which replaces the “Heroes Will Fall” moniker previously used for season three. It follows season two’s “Rise of the Villains” and “Wrath of the Villains” , At the end of which, Hugo Strange (BD Wong) let all his unscrupulous experiments, that included a Bruce Wayne look-alike (which is sure to give actor David Mazouz a fun challenge next season) , escape Indian Hill and into the City of Gotham. Gordon left Gotham to find his ex Lee (Morena Baccarin) and repair their relationship at the end of season two, but will most likely be drawn back to Gotham with the chaos sure to come from the Indian Hill escapees.
on the new season, executive producer John Stevens promises fans “a natural continuation” of the events of season two, saying;
“In season three you’re really going to see how villains have taken up residence inside the city,” . Adding that “The villains have become more and more a part of the fabric of the city of Gotham. It’s less and less a police show like it was in season one. It’s a natural continuation of that in season three.”
Check out the new GOTHAM: MAD CITY poster below
GOTHAM returns to small screens for season three on September 19th on Fox Network.
Season five on Arrow is going to hell, according to Deadline Hollywood. David Meunier, known for his role on FX’s Justified, joins the CW’s Arrow for season five as the demonic Ishmael Gregor. Meunier has appeared in many television series as both a regular and single episode character. His resume includes Damien, Scandal, CSI: Miami, Legends, and Burn Notice. Most recently he played Charlie Manson’s gatekeeper Roy Kovic on NBC’s Aquarius.Arrow is Meunier’s first comic-based show.
David Meunier: Demon Beast or Regular Baddie?
Although Gregor, in the comics, transforms into a massive hell-beast form, we likely won’t see him take that shape on Arrow. Showrunners, stars and Executive Producer Wendy Mericle all discuss season five in terms of a return to the originally gritty and grounded world of season one.
This probably means we get to see David Meunier as an terrifyingly human character, like his role on Justified. According to Deadline Hollywood, the show transforms Gregor into “the slick and intimidating Pakhan (“Godfather”) of the Bratva, whom Anatoly (David Nykl) reports and takes a special interest in Oliver Queen”. This plays off Gregor’s double life in the comics, where he was a Russian crime boss whose ambitions led him to the demonic Sabbac.
Oliver’s Got a Lot on his Mayor’s Desk
Who keeps hurting this Cinnamon Roll?
Last season, Oliver Queen won the race for Mayor of Star City while watching his team dwindle in numbers. If that weren’t enough to make any man go batty (wrong guy?), now the City has dueling vigilante teams. Once Green Arrow took down Damien Darhk, a group of new guys joined the fray. However, like a boy wonder with no field experience, they often get in the way rather than providing any help.
Adversaries old and new are on the scene this season. Long-time viewers will likely remember Anatoly Knyazev, from the shows first two seasons. According to ComicBook.com “His reappearance isn’t entirely a surprise, since most fans had hoped David Nykl would reprise the role once it became clear this year’s flashbacks would deal with the Bratva storyline, but there were doubts: most characters tend to vanish from the CW DC Universe once they’re headed for the big screen, and Knyazev played a key role in this spring’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.”
Based on DC characters, Arrow was created by executive producers Greg Berlanti (“The Flash,” “Supergirl”), Marc Guggenheim (“Eli Stone,” “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters”) and Andrew Kreisberg (“The Flash,” “Supergirl”). All three are Executive Producers along with Wendy Mericle (“Desperate Housewives,” “Eli Stone”) and Sarah Schechter (“Supergirl,” “Blindspot”). The show stars Stephen Amell (Oliver Queen), David Ramsey (John Diggle), and Emily Bett Rickards (Felicity Smoak)
Arrow Season 5 premieres Wednesday, October 5, on the CW.
SEARCH FOR THE TIME TRAVELERS! OZ says he knows where they are… but does anybody know what finding the secrets of the TIME TRAVELERS will mean for MICROSPACE… and for Earth?
Writing
After an impressive previous issue, this one stumbles back on its own faults. The heroes come back into the picture and more of their personality can be explored, but nothing really comes from it. Instead, there is simply more exposition, but not anything memorable from the characters.
The classic rule of writing could come into play here. It says show, don’t tell. One of the best examples comes from the character Oz. It’s been established he is related to the Time Travelers and may have information which both of the Barons could find useful. Instead of showing the torture and having the readers grow attached to the characters, he’s simply dropped back in the prison cell and the story continues without time for the characters to truly shine.
Artwork
This issue is lacking in any of the glorious two pages splashes of battle which were present in the last issue. The art is serviceable but not exceptional. There just isn’t enough action scenes to really showcase the talent the art team has at their disposal. There is a panel or two in the issue which are memorable but this isn’t the best work that artist Max Dunbar has delivered.
Conclusion
This book is barely standing on its own and now it’s about to be a part of IDW’s crossover event, Revolution. All things considered, this doesn’t fill fans with a sense of ease. Maybe interacting with the other titles may help it, but there is a better chance of this book being overshadowed by some of the other books such as Transformers or G.I.Joe. Unless of course the book can find a way to finally rise to the occasion.
That’s right, kids, there was a time before the 1980s. And, frankly, it was an excellent decade for movies. The 70s saw the release of some of the greatest films ever made. Star Wars in 1977. The Godfather in 1972. Jaws, 1975. In 1976, the world was introduced to two beautiful things: me, though that depends on your point of view, and a host of flicks which left a lasting impact on cinema. Here are five of my favorite films of 1976.
One of the single most quotable movies all time, Rocky is Stallone’s masterpiece which earned three Oscar statues. Four decades later, Rocky has seven sequels, including Creed in 2015, a critically acclaimed movie in its own right. Stallone’s writing and acting encapsulate the time, place, and tone of the story, Conti’s score is brilliant and timeless, and the direction, plus phenomenal, captured boxing like never before in cinema.
Taxi Driver
“Loneliness has followed me my whole life, everywhere. In bars, in cars, sidewalks, stores, everywhere. There’s no escape. I’m God’s lonely man. “ – Travis Bickle
Scorcese has created some great films over his long career, but Taxi Driver is perhaps his grittiest. Robert DeNiro stars as Travis Bickle, an unhinged American stalking the streets in a perpetual boil over what he sees every day in a 1970s New York City, before it’s transformed into a giant theme park. The streets are ugly, Bickle is hideous, and the film is a powerhouse of direction and performance.
Logan’s Run
“We’ve been outside! There’s another world outside! We’ve seen it!” – Jessica
Watching it today will make most people cringe. If you’re not able to put yourself in the time and place, a film was made then it’s difficult to enjoy any movie from a previous era. Logan’s Run is experimental 70s science fiction at its best. Wild, psychedelic imagery and costumes. Pseudo-philosophical themes. Logan’s Run tells the story of a society where dying young is a way of life.
Carrie
“It has nothing to do with Satan, Mama. It’s me. Me. If I concentrate hard enough, I can move things.” – Carrie
Brian DePalma has quietly made some brilliant films over the years. He’s often overshadowed by contemporaries like Scorcese and Coppola, but DePalma has a unique signature that’s worthy of a movie night devoted to him. DePalma took Steven King’s novel about young Carrie White and added a visual richness that’s all DePalma. The 1976 film is famous for its “pig’s blood” finale. The iconic ending often overshadows the subtle themes at play beneath the surface of this horror classic.
Assault on Precinct 13
“The very least of our problems is that we’re out of time.” – Leigh
Two years before director John Carpenter would become synonymous with horror by unleashing Michael Myers on the world, the director made a visceral, brutal action film called Assault on Precinct 13. Carpenter is sometimes an acquired taste as director’s go and it took many years for this film to settle into the minds of viewers and critics. Carpenter is methodical in his approach but doesn’t hold back once he unleashes the payoff.
It’s pretty clear in today’s movie climate that Hollywood has found a fat, juicy cash cow in the remake/reboot/rebake business. Audiences, young and old, seem to crave seeing the same thing all over but slathered in CG. Over the course of the last ten years, we’ve seen more reboots than in the 30 years prior. Hollywood is high on nostalgia and yet has ignored one reboot that’s a perfect match for today’s cinema — The Last Starfighter. I know Seth Rogan is doing a TV comedy that’s heavily inspired by Starfighter. Original writer Jonathan R. Betuel is also busy re-imagining the show with virtual reality “scenes” (a cool concept that I wait to see). But those are just all wrong. Think bigger. We’re in the age of cinematic universes.
There is only one creative trio who should be allowed to reboot The Last Starfighter — Nick Frost, Simon Pegg, and Edgar Wright.
If you don’t know, The Last Starfighter then consider yourself a heretic. It’s every fan-boy/girl’s duty to go back in time and look at all the weird, quirky stuff that lead to all the shiny, polished reboots we know and love today. Along that Dr. Who-esque voyage, you will come across this 1984 sci-fi, comedy gem. Starfighter is the story of (old-school arcade machine) gamer Alex Rogan (Lance Guest) who, as it turns out, has been playing a game that’s training him for interstellar war. It’s a little Ender’s Game, a little Star Wars, and a whole lot of fun. Director (and original Michael Myers) Nick Castle (Major Payne, The Seat Filler) also featured some of the earliest CG work in film.
The Last Starfighter offers Hollywood a chance at rebooting something without super-heavy source material. It’s a movie about a video game, making multi-media product tie-ins easy and organic. Sci-fi is hot. Reboots are hot. Cast Frost as the neck-beard gamer, Pegg as Centauri, the mentor, and let Wright go nuts with his kinetic style of filmmaking. Trilogy. Spinoffs. Cinematic AND gaming universe. Boom. Fingers will be cramping from counting all the cash.
You’re welcome, Hollywood. And when you’re done, please stop with all the reboots already.
Scanning over the list of movies released in 1981, my birth year, it seems almost impossible to try and pick my five favorite films. The challenge among us MFR writers and editors was thrown down a few days ago by E.J. Moreno (and his 1990 choices), followed up Kris Solberg (and HIS 1990 choices). Jen Schiller talks 1988 in her post. I felt it was time for an old fart to take a look in the way back machine to Ron Reagan’s first year in office, and pick out the five films which have stuck with me over the years.
But how do I choose between the greatness of John Carpenter’s Escape From New York, the game-changing American Werewolf in London, Raiders of The Lost Ark (!), or the perfection of The Road Warrior? The list goes on and on. The only solace in making a list as exclusive as “Top Five” is the fact these are my favorites. There will be a dozen great films left off this list, but with the unique qualifier that these are movies speaking to a deeper part of my own personal experience with cinema, and not just the greatest, you’ll just have to deal with it. Here goes nothing…
5. Thief – It’s hard to believe Thief was Michael Mann’s first journey into feature-length filmmaking. This is the work of a seasoned veteran, a slick, stylish, but incredibly dense thriller that has more on its mind than crime. And it captures the essence of Mann’s signature aesthetics from the first frame. James Caan’s Frank is a seething knot of desperation, a safe cracker who’s on his way out and is pulled in for the fateful “one last job,” with the mob. Only the mob has other ideas.
Mann’s film is full of tense action and incredibly detailed technical authenticity. Once Frank decides to go scorched earth and get even with mob boss Leo (Robert Prosky, tremendous) the kinetic energy bleeds through the screen. But the film’s most powerful moment comes between Frank and his girlfriend, Jessie (Tuesday Weld), in a diner. It’s heavy with dreams and aspirations, history and desire, and it’s a beautiful eye of the storm. Balance is the modus operandi for Thief, and that balance builds a stunning thriller.
4. An American Werewolf in London – What’s so incredible about An American Werewolf in London is the fact that said werewolf (or werewolves) isn’t the focus of the film. The werewolf lives in this film as a curse, a specter existing in the undercurrent of mental anguish. There is the transformation scene, sure, groundbreaking and horrifying all at once, and plenty of “wolf action” as it were, but the story has much more working for it than geek-show thrills. And the wolf attacks are mostly shot through the wolf’s perspective. This is a story primarily focused on the plight of David (David Naughton), the days leading up to his transformation, and the strange psychological issues surrounding his slain buddy, Jack (Griffin Dunne, decaying into oblivion).
And it’s also incredibly funny, as hard as that is to believe. Even with these 2016 eyes, An American Werewolf in London holds up as a rather brilliant dark comedy. It also holds some shocking surprises along the way – did anyone expect those Nazi monsters to blow away David’s family in his dream sequence?
3. Raiders of The Lost Ark – I have held on to, and always will hold on to, the theory that your favorite Indiana Jones film is the one you grew up on. For me, that was Temple of Doom in 1984. I love that sequel more than any of the other in the franchise, because it was my first experience with Harrison Ford’s swashbuckling archeologist. Those a few years younger than me tend to latch on to The Last Crusade. Regardless of that adolescent connection, I recognize Temple of Doom‘s shortcomings, especially when held up to the whimsical energy of Raiders.
I watched Temple of Doom at least a dozen times before I took the time to soak in Raiders of The Lost Ark, and only in my later years have I truly come to appreciate its greatness. It is everything adventure films aspire to, and it has the unbridled energy of Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, two filmmakers whose youth was shaped by the serialized stories from which Indiana Jones was born.
2. The Road Warrior –Mad Max was born from the mind of Aussie auteur George Miller in 1979, but that film still has an air of uncertainty about what it could become. In 1981, Mad Max 2 (named The Road Warrior for American audiences who more than likely never saw the original) has the advantage of confidence, budget, and a story firmly locked into a unique, visionary world.
The original Mad Max was on the precipice of a society unraveling. Here, society has long-since abandoned all recognizable structure. The Road Warrior is a fascinating film, and a masterpiece of action on a practical level. It was, like so many Americans, my true introduction to Gibson’s Max Rockatansky, and the streamlined energy and incredible stunts – bested only by Fury Road 34 years later! – are timeless.
1. Blow Out – When I was a teenager I remember my mother hyping up Blow Out. It was one of her favorite movies, and I should watch it, but she was my mom and I was a teenager so she didn’t know what she was talking about. It wasn’t until college before I watched Blow Out. I liked it okay, but then I moved on to other things, different movies, and it was just a thing I saw for a long time.
Then, eventually, I began to appreciate the technical mastery of Brian De Palma, and understand the way he riffs on Hitchcock (and Antonioni here) while still managing to create unique visions. Then I watched Blow Out again, and came to understand it may very well be De Palma’s crowning achievement. John Travolta is great, John Lithgow incurable, and the timeliness of the plot and unbearable suspense permeates each and every scene.
‘The Walking Dead’ returns to AMC for its seventh season on October 23. The season premiere will be a gruesome sad day as viewers find out who Negan’s victim was in the season finale, and witness the brutal death.
Season 7 Spoilers Below
One of the potential victims is Abraham Ford play by Michael Cudlitz. It appears that Abraham may have a bigger role in ‘All Out War’ as Negan and Rick faceoff. Cudlitz talked with POPSUGAR about death of Denise and how in the comics that arrow was meant for Abraham, and now Cudlitz’s character is in uncharted territory.
“Her death spurs on a whole bunch of other stuff, and then the audience knows that Abraham will continue for a while now. Now we get to see what a world with Negan and Abraham both in it will be like. That’s something we don’t see in the graphic novels. So a lot of cool stuff happens. For me, knowing that his potential death had come and gone, it was a moment to go, ‘Oh cool, they really aren’t going to stick with what the graphic novel does.’ As a fan of both the novel and the show, it was cool,” said Cudlitz.
With ‘The Walking Dead’ you never know how long a character will survive, but it looks as though Abraham will make it through the first episode and could be Rick’s military mind for the battle to come.