The CW’s The Flash and Arrow spin-off show, Legends of Tomorrow, will start airing on January 21 2016 at 8 p.m., as announced in its first trailer.
Both The Vampire Diaries and The Originals will move to Fridays in order to accommodate the new DC superhero show of The CW network.
It’s no secret that everybody loves superhero team-ups. From Marvel’s Avengers and X-Men to DC’s upcoming Batman V Superman or Suicide Squad, and from the experience of tv show crossovers, studio execs and tv producers know how easy a superhero show can reach success. Greg Berlanti, the mastermind behind DC and The CW’s superhero shows and CBS’ Supergirl, said as much, stating that Legends of Tomorrow was developed to be “most similar to our crossover episodes, where you feel that ‘event-iness,’ but all the time”. Legends of Tomorrow was born from the premise of it being good for business, which doesn’t take away from the fact that it looks like it could be a fun show. Berlanti actually cares about the material, too: “For us, first and foremost, with all of [our shows], it’s about ‘how is it its own thing?’ Because we don’t just want to do it to do it”.
In Legends of Tomorrow we have a rogue time-traveller, Rip Hunter (Arthur Darvill), who recruits a tag-team of “legends” with superpowers – and superweapons – in order to free the Earth from an apocalypse in the form of a powerful dictator. As we know, challenging the order of space and time will have consequences. The team of heroes and villains chosen by Hunter is composed by some of the most recognizable characters from The Flash and Arrow: Ray Palmer/The Atom (Brandon Routh), Prof. Martin Stein (Victor Garber) and Jefferson “Jax” Jackson (Franz Drameh) as Firestorm, Sarah Lance/Black Canary (Caity Lotz), Leonard Snart/Captain Cold (Wentworth Miller), Mick Rory/Heatwave (Dominic Purcell), Kendra Saunders/Hawkgirl (Ciara Renée), and Carter Hall/Hawkman (Falk Hentschel). We’ll also meet a few never-before-seen DC Comics characters, including Vandal Savage (Casper Crump) as the main villain.
The full trailer for the new series looks promising, like a mash-up between Terminator and Looper with a bit of 70s feel thrown in, not to mention special appearances and references: “I’ve seen Man of Steel die and The Dark Knight’s fall”.
Time-travel and multiverse action is what made me fall in love with The Flash, along with the characters and the comic-book vibe. I’m intrigued by Legends of Tomorrow and the different dynamic the creators will bring to the table with this original team, based on DC characters, but not on actual comics.
To nobody’s surprise in particular, Fantastic Four 2 has disappeared from FOX’s future schedule of films. It was an inevitable decision, given that the first (of the reboots of) Fantastic Four this summer was a failure on just about every front. One of the most epic failures in comic-book movie history.
Box Office Mojo had the upcoming schedule of FOX films, and changed the date of Fantastic Four 2 to the ominous TBD. This means, in so many words, it ain’t happening. Whatever the issues may have been between Josh Trank, the studio, and the actors on set – and it all depends on who you believe – this was the best Fantastic Four film so far. But, again, that is the faintest of praise given the dumpster fire that was mid-2000s films and the Roger Corman B-fest that exists in legend and thin footage.
I have a sneaking suspicion this film will get a new appreciation in five to ten years. It’s different than what people wanted, a little darker and more threatening than most Marvel properties, and it might just need time to percolate in the court of public opinion. Whatever the case, I’ll check back in with you before the decade changes and we’ll see what you think…
Henry Rollins is what many would call “a jack of all trades”. Aside from being the former front man for Black Flag, arguably the most highly influential hardcore punk band ever formed, he is also a writer, author, spoken word artist, comedian, actor, radio and television host, activist, and as of this week he is the name of a fossil. Rollinschaeta myoplena is a newly discovered prehistoric fire worm that is a relative of modern day leeches and earthworms. Aside from having a name that sounds like an 80’s hardcore punk band, it also shares the Rollins trademark of a strong muscly figure. Though it is unlikely that the worm scared off predators through the use of harsh menacing vocals, the University of Bristol felt the desire to pay homage to the hardcore legend. However, this is not his first debut into the world of paleontology. Back in 2007 a species of jelly fish was named Amphinema rollinsi after the Punk Rock God because the person who named him happened to be a fan.
Though Rollins might be one of the first major hardcore punk rock icons to have been acknowledged among the world of paleontology, he is one of several famous musicians and celebrities to have their names fossilized. Such music icons include Carole King, Frank Zappa, Ozzy Ozbourne, Bob Marley, Mick Jaggar, Jerry Garcia, Shakira, and a surprising amount of others. Though it does not look as though Jello Biafra or Glenn Danzig will be getting a fossil named after them anytime soon, hardcore punk will now forever immortalized among scholars, archaeologists, and paleontologists through this Henry Rollins fossil. It is starting to look as though in case his massive assortment of projects and occupations do not end up working out then he just might have some luck at paleontology.
In it’s second episode, Into The Badlands keeps the pace going, answering some questions from the previous episode and giving the audience a whole slew of new ones. Opening with The Widow (Emily Beecham), meeting with her former Regent in the Badlands equivalent of a dive bar, he informs her that he left because while the other Barons recognize her claim the title of Baron, Quinn still does not. She offers to take him back, and is interrupted by an assassination attempt. Showcasing another fight scene that will spoil fans of any other action show, The Widow dispatches about eight attackers with nothing more than two sets of daggers and six-inch heels. Interrogating the last attacker, she discovers that they were hired by Ryder (Oliver Stark), Quinns’ son, who seems to be working his own angle in this power struggle.
The Widow (Emily Beecham) ready to go to work Photo: AMC Networks
Having escaped, with Sunnys’ assistance in the first episode, M.K. emerges from a tunnel and crossing out of Quinns’ territory, he meets Matilda (Ally Ioannides). Telling her his parents were free farmers and attacked by nomads, she then takes him to her home and her mother, The Widow. Deducing he is not the child of farmers, as it is harvest season and his hands are soft, The Widow knows he came from The Fort and offers him shelter…for the time being.
Back at the fort, the news of the attack on The Widow reaches Quinn. Wanting to make sure it was not anyone from his organization, which would be considered an act of war, Quinn asks Sunny to accompany him outside the walls. Making a visit to the doctor, Quinn learns he has less than year to live due to a brain tumor. Sunny is beseeched by the doctors wife to take Vail, his pregnant lover, and leave the Badlands. Sunny refuses, stating he cannot as Quinn would hunt him down and Clippers are forbidden to have families. The scene does a great job of showing a conversation about death and life. Daniel Wu says very little but communicates so very much in scenes like this.
Quinn (Marton Csokas) Photo: AMC Networks
Upon departing Quinn orders Sunny to kill the doctor and his wife. Claiming that the knowledge of his health is a weapon that could be used to destroy him. Sunny refuses, Quinn takes a sword from Sunny and does the deed himself. Walking out of the home covered in blood, he tells Sunny he doesn’t give second chances and as far as he’s concerned, Sunny killed them.
While The Widow attempts to forge an alliance with the leader of the same nomads who attempted to kill her, she also pursues her theory about M.K. Offering to train M.K., she tasks Tilda with drawing his blood to bring out his powers. Tilda, thinking better of it, cuts her own hand, smears it on his face, thus misleading her mother. In her attempt to help M.K. escape, he is handed over to the nomads when they are both caught in The Widows’ study.
Ryder, visiting a doll house (the Badlands version of a brothel), we learn two things. Ryder is crippled or disfigured, missing three toes on his left foot, and that a group of nomads has been stealing his fathers’ opium. Reporting to his father, Ryder presses for retaliation, Sunny opts for caution, suggesting he and Ryder scout the warehouse the nomads are hiding out.
The last five minutes of this show is absolute eye candy if you love well choreographed action. Walking into a trap, Sunny and Ryder are surrounded by nomads. Finding out that The Widow wants Ryder dead and is ready to move on Quinn, Sunny does what a Clipper is made to do and what Sunny seems to excel at. Facing off against roughly 18 nomads ready to chop him to kibble, Sunny proceeds to dismantle the opposition. A sequence on the ground, a couple tight spaces, and up on crossed beams above the warehouse floor, Daniel Wu showcases that this is HIS show. Two swords versus a whole lot of axes makes quite the statement. Discovering M.K. again, Sunny returns to Quinn with a gravely injured Ryder and asks to take M.K. as his “colt”, Quinn reluctantly agrees and tells Sunny to get ready to go to war.
Another solid episode with a bit more world building, and a lot more fleshing out of character motivations, Badlands continues to deliver. A world that continues to expand, characters that continue to be intriguing, and action that you aren’t seeing on any other TV show.
Into The Badlands airs Sunday nights on AMC at 10pm EST
Saoirse Ronan is an Irish actress, but what was surprising is that she actually was born in the Bronx. That combination had to seal the deal for the twenty-one-year old actress to be cast as Eilis (a county Wexford immigrant on her way to 1952 America) in the wonderful new film Brooklyn. That on top of the fact she is one of the more intriguing young talents in the industry.
No matter how old the performer might be, some actors have a way of holding the screen while still not revealing too much. Saoirse Ronan is not a stranger to being part of wonderful, quiet, introspective films. Ronan received an Oscar nomination at the age of 13 for her role in Atonement. In that film she demonstrated such a depth of reflective intelligence and the ability to navigate scenes that involve the character’s complex life that it may have prepared for her best work to date. In Brooklyn, a wonderful adaptation (by Nick Hornby) of Colm Toibin’s 2009 novel, she plays Eilis. Eilis’s life in Ireland seems, at first, to be run by her mother and sister, her village, and her burning desire to leave the shop where she works for a more challenging job. It becomes increasingly obvious she needs to re-center her life so she moves to America in search of her prosperity (a new vocation, a husband, a family of her own).
Brooklyn, directed by John Crowley, focuses on the idea of a heart in transit, and in development. Can a person who truly loves her country just pick up and start a new life? Can you find love when the only love that you have known is the love of a family member?
Rose (played by Fiona Glascott), arranges a new life for her sister. Through a local village priest she secures a job abroad, and a room for Eilis in an Irish-run boardinghouse in Brooklyn. Julie Walters is cast as the God-fearing boardinghouse owner, in a brilliant performance. Walters brings depth and complexity to her role as owner of the boardinghouse and “mother” figure to all her girls. She even goes as far as to remind a very provocative tenant that “Giddiness in a woman is worse than slothfulness in a man.”
Jim Broadbent portrays Eilis’ Brooklyn parish priest, who plays a critical role in Brooklyn as not only her connection to her previous life in Ireland but also the reason she meets the man of her dreams. On the weekends, Eilis’s priest runs a very tame dance party in the parish hall and it’s at that party she meets Tony. She begins a relationship with her very Italian-American plumber and she no longer seems to pine for home and now enjoys life as a New Yorker (Whether it’s dates at Coney Island or working at department store on Fulton Street). Eilis even seems to have a certain strut in her step as she walks about town sporting better clothes that are brighter than anything that she would wear if she was back home. Eilis seems to be finding her prosperity. A death interrupts her happiness, however, and she has to sail back to Ireland. The familiarity of being among friends, the surroundings, and an interested suitor (Domhnall Gleeson), who has no clue about Tony, brings Eilis to a breaking point.
Brooklyn is special for so many reasons. First and foremost, Saoirse Ronan’s performance brings so much heart and insecurity to the role Eilis that it’s like we are watching through the window of someone’s life story. Saoirse Ronan received praise for her role in Antonement mostly due to the complexity and the authenticity that she portrayed on screen, and the same is true in Brooklyn. Could history repeat itself and she end up with another Oscar nomination? She certainly has thrust herself into the discussion.
Director John Crowley has really surrounded himself with such a stellar team of individuals that it truly enhanced the quality of Brooklyn overall. Nick Hornby should receive heavy consideration for an Oscar nomination in the category of Best Adapted Screenplay. Hornby made just enough tweaks to the original source material to enhance the overall quality of the film. At points Hornby went for more a comedic approach (example Julie Walters) and at times he went for a more sentimental approach (example- Tony and Eilis’s first date). Overall, Hornby stepped away just enough from the original source material to develop a stellar script. Speaking of stellar, Yves Belanger does a masterful job with the cinematography in Brooklyn. His shots were so expansive and so deliberate that it truly made the bustling borough of Brooklyn come alive. Don’t be surprised if Crowley and Belanger are nominated in their respective categories.
Overall, Brooklyn is one of the best movies of 2015. It generates a wonderful sort of old-fashioned suspense. How is she going to sort it all out? You won’t find a more deeply satisfying film in 2015.
Because What’s More American than the Over Consumption of Mediocrity?
Welcome to “40 ounces of Freedom.” This is going to be a weekly review of various large bottled beers, malt liquors, and things of that nature. The liquid I consume doesn’t have to be 40 ounces, as some of these options only come in 32 ounces. Also, if I find something that catches my eye I might mess with that instead.
Unnecessary Rules:
I must keep the alcohol in the bottle I purchased it in!
I must finish the bottle, unless I puke.
I should finish the bottle within an hour.
For this first week, I’m drinking an Olde English 800, often called, “The King of Malt Liquor.” It varies in alcohol content depending on geographical location, but I believe mine is 5.9%. Research tells me it’s brewed by Miller, which is fine, although still a tad upsetting. Not even our 40s are free from commercialism! The fact it’s in a plastic bottle is the most alarming. I don’t care if it’s shatterproof, glass is better! At the store I even debated picking up two glass 22 ozs instead of this monstrosity.
Welp, time for the first sip. It’s smooth, it’s fruity, it’s good enough. It has a strong aroma kind of like if a small amount of gasoline was dipped in it. It stings the nostrils. I mess with this stuff though. When you’re on a budget and you want, no need, alcohol 40s are the way to go. My palette has adapted, and while I prefer quality beer I can still put this stuff down without being repulsed. I honestly don’t hate it. It does the job.
I’m halfway through this plastic debauchery and I’m pleasantly buzzed. The disgusting instant-white-cheddar-mac n’ cheese that I had to make with soy milk hasn’t destroyed my stomach, so life is swell. The flavor tastes more and more like water and Anthony Bourdain is becoming more tolerable, as well. (I’m watching various episodes of his travel shows with a pal).
Final sips…not going to lie. It doesn’t taste good. It’s mixture of backwash and poorly brewed malt alcohol. Bourdain just ate some drug laced pizza in Cambodia and I don’t know what is real anymore. Drunk or sober that was weird, and it really happened.
Closure: Olde English 800 does the job of being a palatable alcoholic beverage. It’s drinkable and kind of comparable to a Pabst. I’m at a good level. I’m not drunk enough to expect a hangover. I’m comfortable. My only critique is the damn plastic. Bring back the glass!
The DC Cinematic Universe is taking shape and appears that the Black Canary will make her debut in the Justice League Part 1 or 2, according to Latino-Review.
The report states that Abbey Lee and Alona Tal are the current frontrunners for the role. If the character and actress are received well, Warner Bros. has plans for a Birds of Prey movie. The project is in development.
Jena Malone has a part in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, with the rumor mill leaning towards Barbra Gordon a.k.a. Batgirl. Gordon and Black Canary are the founding members of the all-female team, Birds of Prey.
Who would you like to see cast as Black Canary?
DC Comics Warner Bros. Film Schedule
2016:
March 25: Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice
August 5: Suicide Squad
2017:
June 23: Wonder Woman
November 17: Justice League, Part 1
2018:
March 23: The Flash
July 27: Aquaman
2019:
April 5: Shazam
June 14: Justice League, Part 2
2020:
April 3: Cyborg
June 19: Green Lantern Corps
It’s hard to imagine that were he alive today, Dalton Trumbo, whose Hollywood screenwriter career was severely damaged and later defined in Hollywood history by his blacklisting for his political beliefs, wouldn’t look upon the new film that bears his name, Trumbo, and love every minute of it. Full of sharp wit and humor to balance out the tragic story it tells of one of Hollywood’s darkest periods in the mid-20th Century, it’s full of the sort of moxie and spirit that the real-life man displayed in the years when the fear of the “Red Menace” turned the entertainment industry on itself. Smartly written and brilliantly acted by an all-star cast led by Bryan Cranston (AMC’s “Breaking Bad“), it’s a film that should have people talking for hours after the credits have rolled, for its quality and for the undeniable parallels between the fear-driven atmosphere depicted in the film and our own extremist-driven political and social climate.
In the mid to late 1940’s, Dalton Trumbo (Cranston) was among Hollywood’s most sought-after and well-paid screenwriters. He was also a loving husband to his wife Cleo (Diane Lane), a doting father to his three children, a loyal friend to many other Hollywood screenwriters, directors, and actors, and a fiercely outspoken liberal democrat who joined the Communist Party of the U.S.A. a decade prior in order to fight for the civil rights of African-Americans and for the rights of American workers to unionize. A man of tremendous intellect, talent, and personal charisma, he seemed to have it all — wealth, success, and love — all while displaying an independent spirit and a willingness to wear his beliefs about his rights and those of all Americans on his sleeve, no matter who those beliefs might antagonize.
That attitude made Trumbo the face of the enemy to more politically conservative elements within Hollywood’s industry circles, who years before had formed the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals to establish a united front against the perceived threat of infiltration by communists and fascists. To members of the MPA, like its long-time president John Wayne (David James Elliott) and Hollywood gossip maven Hedda Hopper (Helen Mirren), Trumbo and his associates were nothing less than traitors, and the worst threat imaginable to America and its way of life, as they were capable of crafting entertainment for the masses laced with their subversive and supposedly anti-American ideas.
In 1947, Trumbo, along with 10 other noted screewriters, actors, and directors, were called before Congress’ House Un-American Activities Committee to answer questions about their affiliations and political beliefs, questions which they refused to answer in the belief that Congress had no right to ask them, and their very presence before the committee was a violation of their civil rights. The “Hollywood Ten”, as Trumbo and those who followed his lead in not answering HUAC’s queries, were held in contempt of Congress, and as criminal proceedings began with the intent of sending them to prison, Hollywood’s major film studios, under pressure from the MPA, blacklisted them from working on films or productions of any kind.
Trumbo’s subsequent eleven month prison term proves to be simply the beginning of the trials he and his family would face, as the Hollywood Blacklist would hold sway over the entertainment industry for the next 13 years. The ways he finds to keep writing and to keep up the fight against the injustice visited upon him and his colleagues, all deprived of their livelihoods by fear mongers and those who bow to their tactics, make up much of the balance of the film, but important here, too, is the collateral damage Trumbo’s fight inflicts those closest to him, which at times threatens to destroy the family that was the center of his world before his fight for his right to work and have his thoughts and beliefs be his own.
Trumbo is a bit of an oddity considering the prior resumé of its director, Jay Roach. Better known for his work on big screen comedies such as Meet the Parents, The Campaign, and the Austin Powers films, usually if he chooses to work on more serious and politically-minded fare, it’s for HBO. His prior efforts on such films as 2008’s Recount and 2012’s Game Change show he’s especially adept at taking on stories built up on contentious and complicated political situations and the larger-than-life figures we historically associate with them, so if you’ve seen and enjoyed those films, you already know you’re in a for a treat with Trumbo. Roach for the most part keeps the story moving at a comfortable, efficient pace, and effectively balancing smart, occasion-appropriate humor with arresting drama. Though he keeps Bryan Cranston and the titular character in just about every frame, he provides plenty of opportunities for the rest of the cast to shine, resulting is a performance-centric film that provides tons of entertainment due to the actors bringing to life legends of Hollywood’s Golden Era in vibrant and memorable ways.
Speaking of standout performances, Cranston simply rules the screen here. Whether he’s hacking away at a typewriter, editing a manuscript while soaking in a bathtub, or verbally sparring with members of Congress while flashbulbs go off in all directions, his is a committed and commanding turn that should garner him lots of awards attention in a few months when Oscar season gets going, but it’s not only accolade-worthy work here. Diane Lane brings warmth, soft-spoken strength, and undeniable presence to Cleo, while Helen Mirren is positively hissable as Hedda Hopper, who the film portrays as motivated in her anti-communism fervor by more than simply misguided patriotism. Michael Stuhlbarg, who earlier this year displayed his considerable talents in Pawn Sacrifice and Steve Jobs, delivers a truly impactful and sympathetic turn as screen icon Edward G. Robinson, while Louis C.K. turns in solid work without straying too far from his established comedic persona as one of Trumbo’s more contentious colleagues in the “Hollywood Ten.” Also watch for David James Elliott’s take on “The Duke”, which is simply uncanny, and John Goodman bringing trademark toughness and humor to his turn as schlock film producer Frank King, for whom Trumbo cranked out middling scripts under various pseudonyms for years while blacklisted. It’s conceivable that Cranston, Lane, Mirren, Stuhlbarg, and even Louis C.K. could all come away from Trumbo with Oscar nominations — not likely, considering the strength of the respective Best in performance categories are this year, but it is conceivable. Everyone really is that good.
But even if you’re not one to really keep track of actors and individual performances and you simply enjoy great storytelling in film, Trumbo is certainly still worth your while. Looking past all the Hollywood history, screen icons, and social commentary, the film at its heart is a story about fighting back against bullies, about staying true to your ideals and fighting the good fight in any way you can, no matter how long that fight might take. Living in today’s world, where often the personalities people gravitate towards and the voices that are most often heard are simply the loudest and most extreme ones, it shouldn’t be hard for audiences to see parallels with the times that Dalton Trumbo lived in, and indeed, how those difficult times foreshadowed our own. Given that, the story of his eventual vindication and triumph should be even more inspiring, or at the very least, just really enjoyable to watch. It’s the story of a giant who became an underdog, who then fought and fought and fought until the bullies’ day was finally done and he could stand tall again. What’s not to love about that?
Trumbo
Starring Bryan Cranston, Diane Lane, Elle Fanning, Louis C.K., John Goodman, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alan Tudyk, and Helen Mirren. Directed by Jay Roach.
Running Time: 124 minutes
Rated R for language including some sexual references
Syfy released the first episode of The Expanse on Youtube three weeks before the 2-night premiere on December 14.
In the future, where the Asteroid Belt has been colonized, the investigation into the mysterious disappearance of a young heiress sets off a series of events that will change humanity.
The series stars Shohreh Aghdashloo, Cas Anvar, Wes Chatham, Thomas Jane, Steven Strait, Dominique Tipper, Athena Karkanis, Drew Carrymore, Chad L. Coleman, and Elias Toufexis.
The hour-long, ten episode series is based on the New York Times bestselling book series collectively known as The Expanse, written by Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck (under the pen name James S. A. Corey).
Disney believes that you haven’t seen enough footage of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, so the media giants released 15 more seconds of the film.
Watch Finn and Rey run very fast and argue at the same time.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens will be in theaters on December 17.
TV Spot 9
Directed by J.J. Abrams, the highly-anticipated December 18 release stars Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Lupita Nyong’o, Andy Serkis, Domhnall Gleeson, Anthony Daniels, Peter Mayhew and Max Von Sydow. Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. Abrams and Bryan Burk are producing with Tommy Harper and Jason McGatlin serving as executive producers. The screenplay is by Lawrence Kasdan & J.J. Abrams and Michael Arndt.