Ryan Reynolds is probably having more fun promoting Deadpool than should be allowed. This month we’ve all been highly enjoying his antics during The 12 Days of Deadpool (A 12 day promotional blitz centered around the release of a brand new Deadpool trailer on Christmas Day). The bad news is that the 12 days of craziness are about over as we’ve reach Day 11. Tommorow we all get a new trailer for the film, as a christmas present from a different guy in a red suit. Over the span of The 12 Days Of Deadpool, We’ve been treated to a variety of gifts that center around the upcoming film. Some of the gifts have included teaser trailers and exclusive IMAX posters promoting the films release. Well, on the 11th day of Deadpool we were treated to this.
Hugh Jackman posted Deadpool’s Xmas Eve(which they are are calling trailer eve because a newDeadpool trailer drops tomorrow) trailer and it’s all sorts of awesome. Check it out!
Based upon Marvel Comics’ most unconventional anti-hero, Deadpool tells the origin story of former Special Forces operative turned mercenary Wade Wilson, who after being subjected to a rogue experiment that leaves him with accelerated healing powers, adopts the alter ego Deadpool. Armed with his new abilities and a dark, twisted sense of humor, Wade Wilson hunts down the man who nearly destroyed his life.
Deadpool is directed by Tim Miller, starring Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, T.J. Miller, Gina Carano, Ed Skrein, and Brianna Hildebrand. Deadpool will be in theaters on February 12, 2016.
Summary: With Masaomi’s help, the rest of the Commoner Club members arrive at the Arisugawa estate to break off Reiko’s engagement. Kimito makes an impassioned plea, but ends up saying more than he intends.
Called it! So called it! Despite the chaos and detrimental effects it would have normally, Reiko’s marriage is called off with no overall repercussions even though Kimito’s plea sounded like a proposal and her family now thinks they are engaged. Hurray for the status quo and no changes occurring at all.
Though the story doesn’t change, the comedy for this episode is over the top. Karen has moves to rival Kenshin Himura from Rurouni Kenshin and fights a giant robot. Hakua hacks the Matrix (seriously, the control panel she goes to has the falling letters as its background), and there are references to both Dragonball Z and Yu Yu Hakusho. Where were these jokes when the series felt stagnant in the middle? If there was more humor like this every episode, the series would have been one of the greatest shows of the year.
Sadly, the ending is very open and the manga is still being published. A sequel is no doubt inevitable. No word of a second season yet but give it some time. If a harem show makes money, the studio will milk it for all its worth. Yippie.
Tarantino’s back with more blood, more swearing, more scene-chewing opportunities for his favorite Hollywood performers plus a few new ones, and yet another homage to his favorite kinds of films and film making techniques. But is The Hateful Eight, his eighth film as both writer and director, up to the standards he has established for his own work with the critical and commercial success of the Kill Bill films, Inglourious Basterds, and Django Unchained?
No, but it comes pretty close, and by the end of its 3 hour and 2 minute running time, it does give audiences a great deal of what they come to theaters to see in a Quentin Tarantino film. If you’re a fan, you should come away happy.
Set a few years after the end of the American Civil War, the film follows the meeting of the titular “Hateful Eight” as they find themselves snowed in at Minnie’s Haberdashery, a rest stop/trading post in the frigid mountains of Wyoming on the way to the town of Red Rock. Each of them has their own reasons for being there. Bounty hunter John Ruth (Kurt Russell), known as “The Hangman” in that part of the country, intends to claim the large bounty on the prisoner literally chained to his wrist, Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh) by delivering her to Red Rock’s sheriff. Major Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson), another bounty hunter who still wears the uniform and livery of the Union Calvary he served during the “War of Northern Aggression”, has his own charges he intends to claim bounties for in Red Rock, only his are already dead, and thus much easier to manage transporting. On the way to Minnie’s, John Ruth, Daisy, and the Major come upon Chris Mannix (Walter Goggins), a troublemaker from down south who claims to be en route to Red Rock to take over as the town’s new Sheriff. The cheerful and loquacious Oswaldo Mobray (Tim Roth) meets them once the four reach Minnie’s, and introduces himself as Red Rock’s hangman, while “cowpuncher” Joe Gage (Michael Madsen) chooses to keep his reasons for being there to himself. The eldest of the “eight”, Sanford Smithers (Bruce Dern), a retired Confederate General, sits by the large fireplace at the Haberdashery and rebuffs most efforts at conversation. And finally, there’s Bob (Demian Bishir), currently looking after Minnie’s while she’s off visiting family.
This “colorful” group, trapped by a blizzard at Minnie’s and forced to deal with and get to know one another over the course of days until they can continue on their way to Red Rock, soon find themselves at each other’s throats as reputations and past histories are revealed, old scores in need of settling come to the fore, and well-laid plans by those with hidden agendas slowly and deliberately play themselves out. Not everyone who arrived at Minnie’s during that blizzard will leave alive once the storm is gone, and once the bloody ball gets rolling, the possibility that none of them, in fact, will ever make it to Red Rock grows with each passing minute.
From Tarantino’s choice to film in “glorious Ultra Panavision 70”, utilizing anamorphic camera lenses of a design not used in Hollywood films in almost 40 years, to the film being preceded by an overture composed by iconic spaghetti western score composer Ennio Morricone (who also composed the score for the entire film), to its lengthy running time necessitating an intermission at around the 90 minute mark, The Hateful Eight is top to bottom a testament to the growing eccentricity of its director. A man of immense talent, vision, and capacity for creative use of profanity and carnage in cinema, Tarantino as the years pass seems more and more inclined to make films with only himself and like-minded individuals as the target audience, with little to no heed to the fact that the casual movie goer doesn’t care a whit for technical details such as what kind of camera lenses were used to make the film, or what combination of films and genres’ ideas and themes were used to synthesize whatever he creates.
Luckily, what he creates for the most part is still enjoyable even without a film degree and exhaustive knowledge of all the films and TV Tarantino’s seen in his life, thanks to his ear for memorable and impactful dialogue, the caliber of performers he’s able to recruit time and again, and all that blood and violence, which, let’s face it, people look forward to seeing in his movies. The Hateful Eight is certainly no exception in regards to those qualities. Yes, the somewhat stiff, exposition-laden dialogue of the film’s early chapters, as well as the outlandish characterizations of some of the principals, takes some getting used to, but in addition to serving the purpose of seeding information that will be important later in the film, that style of writing was a feature of the films Tarantino seeks to emulate and honor with his work here. For the genre he’s working in, it’s appropriate, if a bit hard on the ear.
And yes, when it comes to the choice of using the Ultra Panavision 70 lenses to capture both the sight and spectacle of the snow-capped mountains and frozen landscape through which the characters travel to get to Minnie’s, or conversely to deliver the right sense of claustrophobia once all those characters are contained within that very small space with tension mounting and the threat of violence growing with every word spoken, the man ain’t wrong. The film at all times looks absolutely gorgeous, the effect of the widescreen format very reminiscent of the grand cinematic adventures shot in the 60’s using the very same equipment, films like Ben-Hur, Mutiny on the Bounty, and Battle of the Bulge.
https://youtu.be/6_UI1GzaWv0
As for the performers themselves in The Hateful Eight, they deliver exactly what you’d expect them to. Each character is given a moment of vulnerability as well as a moment to show just how ornery they really are, and the actors make the most of those opportunities, with some performances standing out more than others. If you’re a fan of Tombstone, then you’ll absolutely love what Kurt Russell delivers here, and similarly, if you’re fan of Walter Goggins’ work on FX’s “Justified” series, his every minute of over-the-top scene chewing will be a delight. Tim Roth, on the other hand, while no stranger to Tarantino fare himself, looks and feels like he’s standing in for Christoph Waltz, who won Oscars playing characters similar to Roth’s Oswaldo Mobray in both Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained. As for Samuel L. Jackson, well, he ALWAYS gets to have fun when working with Tarantino, and that fun translates into bringing to life characters you either love or love to hate. Here, it’s most likely the former, though he brings some serious nastiness in one of the film’s most memorable scenes, one that more or less kicks off the film’s considerable mayhem.
But the real standout performer in The Hateful Eight is Jennifer Jason Leigh. Always a fearless performer throughout the length of her acclaimed career, Leigh brings just as much if not more grit and toughness to her turn as Daisy Domergue as her fellow castmates do to their roles. She’s the newcomer to Tarantino films here, along with Demian Bishir, and that certainly adds to her on-screen allure, as unlike Jackson or Russell, who have delivered Tarantino’s dialogue before, you don’t know going in just how all that colorful language is going to sound coming from the newbie. Without a doubt, Leigh rewards your attention with a performance that’s at different times disgusting, terrifying, and hilarious in the most vicious manner imaginable. She simply owns it, and in doing so makes such a lasting impression that it’s difficult to imagine anyone else in the role once you’ve seen it.
So with all that said, is The Hateful Eight worth that considerable time investment come Christmas Day when it opens in select theaters across the country, or on December 31st when it opens everywhere? Yes, especially if you’re a fan of the director and/or the stars here, and if you’re a fan of westerns. Again, it isn’t AS good a film as Tarantino’s last two, particularly in terms of pacing and the inescapable sense that you’ve seen him do everything he does here in earlier films, but it’s still pretty darned good. If you do go see it, try to see it on the big screen at one of the select locations during its initial run, as those theaters actually have the equipment to show the film in its intended format, rather than digitally. After all, if you’re giving up that much time to see it, you might as well see it in all its glory.
The Hateful Eight
Starring Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walter Coggins, Demian Bechir, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Bruce Dern, James Parks, and Channing Tatum. Directed by Quentin Tarantino.
Running Time: 182 minutes
Rated R for strong bloody violence, a scene of violent sexual content, language and some graphic nudity.
Okay, we’ve already gone over what went right and what went wrong in 2015, it’s now time to discuss what’s coming up in 2016. The slate of films in 2016 promises to be as unique a year as we have ever had at the movies. DC Comics is set to jump in the superhero film phenomenon, Bill Pullman, and Jeff Goldblum are once again leading the fight for our independence, one of Marvel’s most popular characters is set to get the treatment he deserves, The Avengers are about to throw down, and Jon Favreau is set to tackle one of Disney’s most iconic properties – those are just some of the most anticipated projects on tap for 2016. So in keeping with the new year… let’s look at the 16 most anticipated films in 2016. To start off … let’s look at our honorable mention.
Honorable Mention – Doctor Strange
Benedict Cumberbatch and Rachel McAdams round out a strong cast as Cumberbatch takes on the title role of the disgraced surgeon who gets a new lease on life when a sorcerer takes him under his wing.
16. Ghostbusters
This movie hasn’t even released its first trailer and I can’t think of a movie that has received more heat. What’s infuriating about this is that most of the criticism centers around the cast being all female rather than all male (the way it was in the original film). Before we sit here and condemn this film, we need to give this film a chance and judge it on its merit. Kristen Wiig, Melissa McCarthy, Leslie Jones, and Kate McKinnon are great actresses and could very well redefine the Ghostbusters brand (in a good way).
15. Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them
This prequel to the Harry Potter Series, starring Eddie Redmayne as a Magizoologist has muggles everywhere counting the days until November.
14. The Girl On The Train
Based on the 2015 Paul Hawkins best seller, has the potential to be a smash hit, in the same way, Gone Girl was. Emily Blunt, Rebecca Ferguson, and Justin Theroux are set to star.
13. Moana
Coming out in November, it stars newcomer Auili’i Cravalho playing a teenage Polynesian princess in search of a fabled Island.
12. Finding Dory
Disney/Pixar’s most forgetful fish returns in this sequel to the 2003 Finding Nemo.
11. Independence Day: Resurgence
Twenty years after the humans narrowly escaping destruction by Aliens, they have to do it all over again.
10. Star Trek: Beyond
I’m a huge fan of Star Trek but to say that I’m a little nervous about Justin Lin taking over for J.J. Abrams as director for this 3rd installment in the rebooted franchise would be an understatement.
9. X-Men: Apocalypse
Apocalypse (Oscar Issac) is pretty intent on destroying the world and a band of mutants unite to stop him.
8. Warcraft
The fact that I’m going to have to watch this film actually causes me to dry heave, but there is no denying just how big this movie is going to be with gamers.
7. Zoolander 2
It’s been 15 years and Derek Zoolander and Hansel McDonald are back and the mission, this time around is to prevent the assassination of music’s brightest stars.
6. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
In light of recent events, I feel like I might have this film a little too low but none the less it is a spinoff that takes place between Episode III and IV. It’s story of a band of resistance fighters as they fight to get the plans to the Death Star.
5. Jungle Book
A live action adaption of the 1894 Rudyard Kipling story directed by Jon Favreau and starring Bill Murray as the voice of Baloo … I’m in!
4. Captain America: Civil War
I’m probably going to catch some heat for ranking this film this low in the Top 16 but it’s warranted. The Marvel films have become a tad cookie cutter, thus taking away that edginess that we love about Comic Book Films. This film should be massive and maybe the Russo Brothers can do something that will get me jazzed again about Marvel films.
3. Deadpool
Truth be told, I could have easily put this film as number one overall but three actually fits for Deadpool. This is the 8th installment of an X-Men type film and it promises to be the raunchiest as Ryan Reynolds is set to portray a super hero that we have quite frankly never seen before on the big screen.
2. Suicide Squad
2016 could very well be the year of DC Comics; as not only will we be treated to the introduction of Justice League (in Batman v Superman) but we are going to be see the most unique concept ever done in the Comic Book Genre. A band of villains brought together to accomplish a mission and to top it all off .. we have Jared Leto portraying Joker. If you aren’t excited about that, then you must be dead inside.
1. Batman v Superman
Picking this film as the most anticipated film of 2016 was the easiest part of this article. Batman v Superman has so much riding on its success (basically the whole DC Film brand hinges on this film) that Zack Snyder has to produce a hit (much in the way that J.J. Abrams had to for Star Wars). Lucky for all of us, we won’t have to wait too much longer to see whether or not the DC universe is set to explode on screen.
Happy Holidays dear readers. The time has come to go over the releases coming to Netflix in January 2016. There are a plethora of great series and movies coming for you viewing pleasure so let’s get to it. 1. 2 Fast 2 Furious (January 1st)
With the seventh installment of the series fresh out this year, why not take the time to go back and see some of the earlier installments. This one is bit weaker but at least it’s not Tokyo Drift.
2. Angry Birds Toons (January 1st)
Everyone loves Angry Birds. It’s so beloved a movie based on the game will be coming out next year. Until then why not watch this series of shorts to tide you over until it is out.
3. Catwoman (January 1st)
Called one of the worst comic adaptations ever. Is it true? Yes, but if you are in the mood for a terrible film you can mock with a bunch of friends, this will not disappoint.
4. Constantine (January 1st)
Not a great adaptation but not a bad one either. With the Constantine show no longer around, fans will be able to enjoy this movie and watch Keenu Reeves as John Constantine getting caught in a war between Angels and Demons.
5. Training Day (January 4th)
One of the best cop movies ever made. Denzel Washington plays Detective Alonzo Harris, a corrupt cop who takes a rookie through his first day of what it takes to be a cop in the city. Definitely, not your typical first day at work.
6. Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Season 10 (January 5)
Another season from the show which gave us Kitten Mittens, the Nightman, and Green man. This time around the gang take a flight, go on a group date, and join a cult, all with chaotic and hilarious results. If you haven’t taken the time to watch this show you should really binge on it over a weekend.
7. Dragons: Race to the edge: Season 2 (January. 8th)
If you can’t get enough of Dreamworks: How to train your dragon, Netflix has provided another season of their own series based on the popular franchise. Watch Hiccup and Toothless have more adventure and torch anything which tries to keep them down.
8. Park and Recreation: Season 7 (January 13)
The fantastic comedy starring Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman comes to an end but has us laughing the entire time. This time the season picks up three years later but despite how much the characters grow they still come back to the town of Pawnee.
9. Z: Nation: Season 2 (January 17)
A show about trying to survive in a zombie apocalypse? Yes please. If you need a zombie fix with Walking Dead on its mid season break, this show will satisfy your need for flesh craving zombie action.
10. Sharknado 3 (January 22)
A movie so bad it’s incredible. This third installment involves sharks being dropped on the Daytona 500, sharks in space, and an energy chainsaw. Also there is apparently going to be a fourth one, so make sure to watch this one or you won’t be able to follow the intricate storytelling.
His father John Landis is an icon in the directing world with too many films to list, but below are the ‘must watch.’ The elder Landis made some duds in the 90s, but his early work is untouchable. Also, he was producing shows on HBO 20 years before it was cool.
Quintessential John Landis
1990-1996 Dream On
1988 Coming to America
1986 ¡Three Amigos!
1985 Spies Like Us
1983 Michael Jackson: Thriller
1983 Twilight Zone: The Movie (prologue & segment 1)
1983 Trading Places
1981 An American Werewolf in London
1980 The Blues Brothers
1978 Animal House
1977 The Kentucky Fried Movie
Enter in 30-year-old Landis who is coming off a terrible year in the film world with America Ultra and Victor Frankenstein. The writer claims America Ultra is this generation’s True Romance. One thing is for sure, Landis has become more infamous for his social media rants than his film work. His latest rant involves dislike for Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
I’m not sure how Hollywood works, but you’re sure as heck don’t want to piss-off J.J. Abrams, Lucasfilm, and Disney if you want to make action / science fiction films. Oh, that’s right! None of them can hear Landis because they are swimming in money like Scrooge McDuck!
Landis in his video below comes off as a spoiled little brat and the epitome of what people consider a millennial to act like. Breaking news for you Max Landis, you haven’t earned anything yet! Shut up and get to work, because you have talent. Don’t waste it worrying about everything and everyone else.
Wednesday morning Colorado-based New Belgium Brewing announced they have teamed up with St. Petersburg-based Cycle Brewing for Beers with Vrienden to create Of Snow and Sand, a toasted coconut Baltic porter.
Doug Dozark, Cycle Brewing’s owner and brewmaster will join New Belgium’s Ross Koenigs, employee owner and pilot brewer, in Ft. Collins, Colo. for the official Of Snow and Sand brew day on January 15, 2016.
“Our logos both have the beloved bike on them, so it was only a matter of time before we had to get together and brew,” said Lauren Salazar, New Belgium’s specialty brand manager and blender. “What we’ve created for this first collaboration beer is something that’s a winter-ready porter built for the beach. The white caps of the Rockies are our playground in the winter, but sometimes we can’t help but dream of the sand and so this beer merges our worlds.”
About Of Snow and Sand: A tropical twist thanks to a dose of experimental hop HBC 472, which offers a breezy coconut aroma, plus the addition of hand-toasted coconut. The complex malt line-up includes Maris Otter, Black Prinz, Honey and Caramel malt. At 8.3% ABV and 38 IBUs, Of Snow and Sand is hearty enough to enjoy in the winter, yet also great to take along to the beach.
Cycle Brewing will hold a release party in St. Petersburg for Of Snow and Sand from February 18-21, followed by a second brew date Of Snow and Sand on February 19.
Marvel announced Tuesday, an ongoing series for the character Gwenpool starting in April. The Unbelievable Gwenpool has the creative team of Christopher Hastings and Gurihiru.
About Gwenpool: Gwen Poole used to be a comic book reader just like you…until one day she woke up INSIDE the Marvel Universe! Now the characters she read about are all real! But they can’t be really real, right? This must all be fake, or a dream or something right? You know what that means – NO CONSEQUENCES! First order of business, get a costume and start fighting crime. Why? Because that’s what everyone who has a solo series does!
“The series is a lot about her believing she’s in a fictional world with no consequences,” says series writer Hastings, speaking with Entertainment Weekly. “She’s seen everyone come back to life at some point, and it sort of seems like she’s living in a video game. And then the book is going to be the universe fighting back at that. Like, ‘you can’t really get away with everything’ is kind of the struggle there.”
Annapurna Pictures and Paramount released the trailer for Everybody Wants Some from the creative genius that is Richard Linklater. A Van Halen song is always a good start to a film (Better Off Dead, Superbad).
Officially billed as a “spiritual sequel” to Linklater’s seminal Dazed and Confused, the film takes place in the world of 1980s college life and follows a group of college baseball players as they navigate their way through the freedoms and responsibilities of unsupervised adulthood.
Everybody Wants Some stars Will Brittain, Zoey Deutch, Ryan Anthony Guzman, Tyler Hoechlin, Blake Jenner, Glen Powell, and Wyatt Russell and will have its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in March before opening in theaters on April 15, 2016.
Linklater has been nominated for five Oscars, most recently for Boyhood (Best Motion Picture of the Year, Best Achievement in Directing, Best Writing, Original Screenplay).
Into The Badlands season finale begins with Sunny paying a visit to the River King, presenting him with a head, as the King demanded in the previous episode. Sunny expresses his need to leave the Badlands that very night, the River King tells him that he will depart at midnight, and to not be late. Telling Vail they are leaving tonight, she demands to know how her parents died. Sunny finally tells her the truth, that Quinn killed her parents with his sword while he stood by. Vail questions whether Sunny can be different if they do leave the Badlands, and not the Clipper he has been his whole life.
Last weeks’ episode saw Jade collapse in Quinn’s arms, the Widow wounded in her fight against Sunny and barely escaping, while Quinn looked on and witnessed M.K.’s hidden power.
A lone traveler walks along the road, heading towards a mysterious building in the distance. Inside, three monks sit in meditation and the traveler tells them that a dark one has been found.
At the Fort, while Lydia comforts Jade, Quinn has discovered that Lydia poisoned Jade and that the poisonous flowers she used were also responsible for the death of Quinn’s previous wife, Beatrice. Quinn spares Lydia’s life and opts to cast her out of the Fort. Pleading with Ryder to help prove her innocence, and her pleas falling on deaf ears, Lydia returns to her father and begs to be taken back by the father she abandoned for a better life with Quinn years before. Meanwhile, Ryder sets his plan into motion to become Baron, making the Widow’s infiltration look like a betrayal by Sunny. Quinn confronts Sunny, accusing him of treason, stripping him of his position as Regent, and has him put in chains. Sunny vows to clip Quinn first once he gets free.
Sunny (Daniel Wu) accused of treason and taken prisoner Photo: AMC Networks
Vail is taken, not by Quinn, but by the Widow’s butterflies. Wounded from the battle at the Fort, her wound has become infected and requires immediate treatment. Treating her to bargain for release, Vail gives Tilda a choice, heal the widow with medicine she has left, or poison her and make her own path.
In chains, Sunny receives a visit from Waldo. Two swift moves later, Waldo has disabled the guard and released Sunny, revealing himself as the Widow’s spy inside the Fort. Quinn, having cast Lydia out and imprisoned Sunny, decides to take M.K. to the doll house to celebrate a new beginning for both of them. Ryder and Zypher confirm their plans to unseat their respective masters when Quinn heads into town that evening.
Calling out his attackers before they strike, Quinn is not surprised to see Jacoby and Zypher, but is taken aback when seeing Ryder. Taking his father’s lessons to heart, Ryder seeks to take power, as his father took it from the previous Baron. As stated in previous reviews, and pretty much any article talking about this show, the fight scenes and action sequences, they are superb and the final one of this season is no different. Cutting M.K. to give himself the advantage, Quinn steps aside while the three attackers attempt to subdue him. Quinn slinks off and looks to wait out the fighting and runs into Sunny. Clipping his Baron as promised, Sunny tells Quinn that he will be his last tattoo before attempting to stop M.K. from doing further damage, and then the monks show up.
Monks have come for M.K. Photo: AMC Networks
Shutting M.K. down in efficient fashion, the leader (former UFC fighter Cung Le) look to leave with M.K. and Sunny isn’t about to let that happen. Taking on the other two, Sunny holds his own, but the leader takes him on head to head. At this point, Sunny may stand a chance but then all three monks are shown to be what M.K. is, their pupils go black and they thump Sonny through 3 walls and into darkness.
Vail gets back to town to find nothing but bodies and Sunny’s broken blade. We next see Sunny in the hold of a ship, the River King knows Sunny lied about the head he bought him. In chains, the River King tells Sunny that a man of his skill has value and that his wish to leave the Badlands has been granted, and M.K., is taken by the monks into parts unknown.
A solid season finale has answered a few questions but leaves many more. Quinn is dead, it is unsure if Ryder and Jacoby survived their encounter with M.K., and the Widow is alive but wounded. Lydia has returned to her father Penrith and his religious order, of which we know very little about, and there is a whole lot of territory left unclaimed.
A 6 episode first season of Into The Badlands has raised the bar for any action series going forward. Engaging characters, strong performances, and action sequences that would make a Hollywood blockbuster question its’ own worth, we’ll have to wait until late 2016 for season two.
An upcoming column will feature the best fight scenes in the show this season.
Did you like this episode? Let me know in the comments