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Mark Ruffalo Wants ‘Hulk Vs Banner’ In ‘Thor: Ragnarok’

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Mark Ruffalo, who galavanted around New York Comic Con in disguise earlier this month, was back in New York Thursday for GQ’s The Gentlemen’s Fund Awards. At the ceremony Ruffalo spoke with the Huffington Post about Thor: Ragnarok.

The actor didn’t say much, but he did mention the direction he would like to take the character.

“I play Dr. Bruce Banner, and occasionally I turn into a big green, mean monster. I am excited to keep coming back to this role. I see a lot of space for it to grow. I feel like there’s a lot of cool stuff to explore still, especially the relationship between Banner and Hulk. Hopefully, we’ll see the two of them in a scene together. That would be cool! I don’t want to overstay my welcome, and I hope I never do,” he said. “If I do, I’ll be the first one to bow out,” said Ruffalo to the Huffington Post.

Ruffalo wants Hulk and Banner on screen together, the next chance that will be possible would be in Thor: Ragnarok.

Edward Norton’s Incredible Hulk was back in 2009; it has been six years since a solo film. Avengers: Age of Ultron added a new wrinkle to Bruce Banner mythos, with his relationship with the Black Widow. The film left an opening for a Planet Hulk film. In the comic book, Banner is Hulk through 95% of the story, but the idea of splitting the character adds a new dynamic that could make Planet Hulk plausible in the eyes of Hollywood.

In Asgard, it would be easy to explain the separation of Hulk and Banner. The banter between Hulk, Banner, and Thor would be epic. This idea would be a brilliant play on Marvel’s part if they split the character up in Thor: Ragnarok.

Thor: Ragnarok will be directed by Taika Waititi and stars Chris Hemsworth and Mark Ruffalo. The film will destroy the universe on November 3, 2017.

Do you want to see Hulk and Banner split into two characters? Leave you comments below.

Got to hide out and enjoy #comiccon2015

A photo posted by Mark Ruffalo (@markruffalo) on

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REVIEW: Young Black Jack ‘In Vietnam: Part 1’ – Charlie is in the trees

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I hope you love the smell of Napalm in the morning because the latest episode of Young Black Jack finds Hazama right in the middle of the Tet Offensive. For those of you not up on your history, this was a major offensive by the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War. Not exactly the best time to take a trip there.

Turns out Hazama’s friend Yabu, in an effort to harden himself as a Doctor, sets up shop in Saigon. Hazama travel there only to find Yabu’s clinic in shambles and Yabu nowhere to be found. Hearing Yabu is now practicing in a small village, Hazama journeys there with a group of American soldiers, only to have the transport come under attack. In the ensuing crossfire, one of the American Soldiers is shot. Hazama has no choice but to perform surgery in the firefight to patch up the Soldier’s artery. Hazama can save the Soldier’s life but is immediately captured by the Viet Cong. A perfect place to leave the viewer with the “To Be Continued.”

The action and drama are spot on with this series. It’s questionable though if Hazama needs this type of reinforcement to hold a hatred for war. His scarred appearance came from accidentally stepping on a landmine when he was a child which also put his mother into a coma. The man obviously would have distaste for any military combat. Still, this episode and the next one will help cement just how far Hazama is willing to go to save lives, no matter the hell he has to endure to operate.

Young Black Jack is being simulcasted at Crunchyroll

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Review: Glass Mask Episode 2 ‘The Mask of Vivi’ – More Greatness

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We continue where we left off, with Maya sitting in a theater, watching a play. But boy does the episode zoom along from there. I guess it’s been a while, but I didn’t think the Vivi arc when by so quickly. It only has an episode and a half of time!

Last week I spent most of the article discussing the concept of ‘Magic’, but not too much on the episode itself. To remedy that, this week we’ll discuss solely the episode, you won’t hear about Magic again… maybe.

An interesting thing I noticed while rewatching this episode was how much Glass Mask wants you to get creeped out by Tsukikage. She looks creepy, is stalking Maya throughout the first half of this episode, is usually framed in an intimidating manner, and creepy music plays when she shows up. Pretty dishonest about Tsukikage motivations, unless we are supposed to see Tsukikage through Maya’s eyes.

Seriously, I have written in my notes every time Tsukikage is stalking Maya. First she watches Maya in the theater, than we peeks into the restaurant, then orders ramen just to get to Maya, and then stalks Maya in the park. Pretty creepy. Especially considering we all know Maya is going to be trained by Tsukikage. It’s an obvious trope, Tsukikage outright says it, and even does it towards the end.

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W-wow, Tsukikage, that’s… a little creepy

Maya gets a bit of development. This episode also showcases her three main talents, memorization, obsession, and ability to fully understand her character. The first is obvious (she recites a three-and-a-half hour play verbatim from memory after a single watch for crying out loud!), the second is apparent as well (Maya stays up all night reciting her few lines), and the third is also not that hard to spot (Maya intuitively understanding the sadness buried deep within Vivi).

Glass Mask Body 3
Still creepy

It’s also interesting to see how differently Maya approaches stories and it’s characters compared to others. The clear example being the teacher. He sees the character of Vivi as nothing but a joke generator for the other characters. Whereas Maya approaches Vivi as an actual person, and sympathizes with the feelings found from a real person is the same circumstances. Speaking of the teacher, it’s pretty clear that putting her in the role of Vivi is his form of punishment. Tsukikage may say it requires subtlety, but that’s not true, not the way the teacher wants Vivi performed.

 

We also get Maya’s inciting event! This is the moment that puts Maya on the path of acting as her future. This is obviously seeing the play, watching theater portrayed right in front of her has clearly affected Maya far more than movie and TV can.

We also get introduced to a new character this episode, that being Director Onodera. You’ll be seeing a lot of Director Onodera for the first fifteen episodes or so, he’s an… interesting character. Let’s just say he’s not all that likable.

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Maya’s Mom is a jerk

Speaking of unlikable characters, Maya’s mom is trying her hardest for us to hate her. Constantly belittling her own daughter, unwilling to watch Maya’s biggest moment due to pride, Maya’s mom is not a nice one. At all. At least Sugiko doesn’t try very hard to be a jerk, it just comes naturally for her.

That’s really it, things don’t begin to truly pick up until next episode, with the true introduction to Ayumi, but this episode has continued where the first left off, in both story and quality.

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Sugiko is a jerk

What did you think of Glass Mask Episode 2? Did you like it? Did you hate it? Are you ready to watch the next episode? Let me know in the comments! And as always, you can watch all of Glass Mask at Crunchyroll.com

 

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Edgar Wright, Johnny Depp to Team Up for Book Adaptation

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Edgar Wright and Johnny Depp are in early negotiations with 20th Century Fox to collaborate in a Neil Gaiman’s children’s book adaptation as part of a package deal.

Their pitch consists in a live-action and animation hybrid film, adapted by screenwriter Bret McKenzie (Flight of the Conchords) from Neil Gaiman’s New York Times bestseller Fortunately, the Milk. The story, told from a boy’s point of view, is about the imaginative adventures a father tells his children about his trip to get milk that morning before breakfast, while his wife is away on business.

“I bought the milk,” said my father. “I walked out of the corner shop, and heard a noise like this: t h u m m t h u m m. I looked up and saw a huge silver disc hovering in the air above Marshall Road.”

“Hullo,” I said to myself. “That’s not something you see every day. And then something odd happened.”

Edgar Wright and Johnny Depp

Johnny Depp, who can be seen currently in theaters starring in Black Mass, will also star in this new project and produce through his company Infinitum Nihil, along with Zareh Nalbandian, of the awarded animation and visual effects studio Animal Logic Entertainment (The Lego Movie, Happy Feet).

Edgar Wright is in pre-production for Baby Driver with Ansel Elgort, Lily James, John Hamm and Jamie Foxx. Depp has in post-production the Alice in Wonderland sequel, this time directed by James Robin (The Muppets), Alice Through the Looking Glass and the fifth installment of Pirates of the Caribbean titled Dead Men Tell No Tales, to be released in 2017.

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Geekflix – Top ‘Netflix’ Picks For November 2015

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Welcome to Geekflix, your monthly update of what’s coming to Netflix next month. Sadly it’s slim pickings next months for fans of pop culture but we are getting a special treat at the end of the month. So at least we have that to look forward too.


Spongebob the movie

1. The Spongebob Squarepants Movie (November 1)
“Who lives in a pineapple under the seas?” While episodes of the show can be hit or miss, this movie, thanks to an incredibly hilarious appearance by David Hasselhoff is entertaining enough even for the most closeted of Spongebob fans.

WpMDD9u

2. Black Butler Season 3 (November 18)
Every fangirl’s favorite rich boy with a demon butler is back to enter into the Book of Circus and Book of Murder arcs of the series. Pour yourself a cup of tea and enjoy.

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3. Lego Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu: Season 3 (November 20)
For all the Lego fans out there, another season of the popular Ninjago series is coming. Watch as the series takes a more futuristic turn, and the team works to save Sensei Wu from the new villain.

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4. Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Season 1 (November 20)
The moment we have all been waiting for is finally here. The next installment of the Netflix exclusive series set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Jessica Jones is a woman with super powers who takes as a private investigator. This one will definitely be essential viewing.

ultimate spiderman

5. Ultimate Spiderman: Season 3 (November 20)
The third season of the new Spiderman cartoon has our favorite wall crawler teaming up with Ant-Man, Clock and Dagger, and… a crossover with Jessie? Still should be entertaining.

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REVIEW: Shomin Sample ‘It was Like the Garden of Eden’- Two for the price of one.

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The episode starts with Kimito finding out his parents are living sweet off the money they got for him becoming the ‘Commoner Sample.’ From there he is finding it rough being the only guy in the school. His terrible day is only intensified when he comes across a girl who is so engrossed in her work she strips off her clothes. Luckily it’s more for shock factor then fanservice that leads to a ‘pervert’ joke as Aika walks in on the two of them. Which is good because they say she is 14 years old but looks 6. Hakua, a young genius who gets lost in a trance and begins scribbling physics equations on any surface she can find. She quickly forms a bond with Kimito, which comes off more like a “sweet brother and sister” bond than the sexual one Anime has been pushing a lot lately. It’s a bit refreshing not to have the Big Brother complex character.

Next, the show introduces a katana carrying, Samurai girl named Karen, who thanks to a misunderstanding challenges Kimito to a duel. She begins by cutting a group girls and Kimito down to their underwear. As the fight continues, Karen cuts off Kimito’s underwear. If it’s not evident, she’s not good at fighting.  As she accidently cuts off her uniform. Feeling defeated she bows to Kimito and calls him her master. Karen and Hakua, start hanging around Kimito’s room, and Hakua even supplies Aika with a box of cell phones for her latest plan to become more popular.

More hilarity ensues thanks to the new cast additions. This show still won’t be on anyone’s list for the greatest anime of the year or even the season for that matter. Still, it’s a fun harem show and is entertaining to watch. For those who follow the genre, though, it may be a dream come true.

Shomin Sample currently simulcasts streaming on Funimation.

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Review: Sakurako-san Episode 3 – A Waste of Potential

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The third episode! Now that Sakurako-san has had two episodes to settle down and get comfortable, it’s time for the plot to really kick in, this is where the rubber meets the road, where Sakurako-san shows its true colors. And how did the show fare??? Not well.

Spoilers

Before we get to the bad, let’s cover what this show did right. First of all due to finals and all, school shouldn’t have much of a presence on Sakurako-san. Instead the focus will be Sakurako and her bone obsession. This isn’t too much of a surprise, but it’s a nice confirmation.

Second, the show still looks gorgeous. The backgrounds are detailed, motion is mostly fluid, and the character designs are fantastic. The only issue the visuals have is the over reliance on CG for the bones, especially when some skeletons aren’t CG and they look a million times nicer.

Now on to the bad stuff, first I’ll cover all of the little nitpicks, of which there are many, I had to filter out many others, then to the bigger issues.

One of the smaller things that really bugged me was the sexual tension when Shoutaro and Sakurako are in the cave. This was completely unnecessary, seemed out of character, and detracts from the relationship Shoutaro and Sakurako currently have. If they never touched it again after this it wouldn’t be too bad. Just an odd moment, but it seems to hint at a romance developing later in the series. This would completely destroy the chemistry Shoutaro and Sakurako have together. One of the best elements of any Watson-Sherlock relationship is the lack of romantic elements, it’s best when the two are friends, or have a mentor-type relationship.

When Shoutaro and Kougami were having cake at the cafe, Kougami says “You found my Grandma’s bones.” This is a really weird and stilted way of saying this. It would have been much more natural to say, “You found my Grandma’s body.” Or “You found my Grandma’s corpse.” It’s possible this is a translation quirk, but I think it’s more likely that Sakurako-san is just as obsessed with bones as Sakurako herself.

When asked, Shoutaro described his relationship with Sakurako as a ‘guardian,’ which, apparently, is him. The problem with this is that Shoutaro has not acted like a guardian at all. He doesn’t take care of her at her house, that’s the old woman’s job, he doesn’t determine what they’re agenda is, Shoutaro is not the one with power in their relationship. Shoutaro is actually just along of the ride. I guess a better word to describe their relationship would be ‘freeloader,’ Shoutaro, of course.

Kougami is really, really, overly dramatic. The show as it’s moments (such as the “It’s your duty to live, as one so young.”) But to the level that Kougami reacts to everything this episode in particular. Felt very… anime. That’s not a bad thing, some shows, such as Anohana, Clannad, and Shigatsu, also have this over-the-top drama. But so far Sakurako-san doesn’t have that style of drama, so Kougami as a whole feels kind of out-of-place.

This episode has confirmed that the bone parade scene is here to stay, and probably will show itself every episode. It’s pretty annoying. There is way to much CGI, and it feels empty. The purpose of the scene is obviously to get us excited about what’s about to come, Sakurako’s observations and clues to solve the mystery. The problem is we don’t care. The bone parade happens right after the body is found, Sakurako-san fails to get us invested in the mystery. Because of this, the bone parade scene lacks any of the excitement that it’s supposed to.

Before I move on to the big, troubling issue, I would like to clarify a mistake I made last week. In the article for the second episode of Sakurako-san, I mentioned the episode having a fresh corpse, thus adding to the stakes, unlike the first episode, however the first episode did have a murder to solve. The couple killed and tossed into the ocean. While this is an error on my part, it doesn’t bode well for the show if I’ve forgotten the meat of the episode less than a week later.

As for the big issue Sakurako-san has, it’s beginning to feel unrealistic. This is due to two majors flaws with the writing. One, Sakurako’s observations often make no sense. First she is a true Sherlock with her observations, seemingly knowledgeable in all fields, even though she’s only obsessed with bones. The show has never painted her as anything other than a bone fanatic, so how does Sakurako-san know so much about sailor knots?

That’s easy to answer, she doesn’t. In the first episode, Sakurako made an observation claiming that due to they way to knot was oriented it would be impossible for the male to have tied it with his dominant right hand from his position. However, this isn’t true. The knot can be tied to that orientation from that position, you just have to tie it a little differently. And based on the lack of background known about the male it’s impossible to know whether he would have the knowledge to tie it this way, if at all. To sum up, Sakurako’s knowledge is far beyond what she has been known to… know, and her observations are really just bogus delivered with lots of confidence.

Also, the ‘Soutaro’ plot line I had mentioned last week has shown up this week as well! But, Soutaro was just Sakurako’s little brother. It’s not surprising, but it is disappointing. The cliché set up of this plot line combined with the shows willingness to shove any emotion there under the rug does not bring promise.

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A proper reaction to this episode

To sum up, Sakurako-san is a gorgeous and flawed show. It has it’s good aspects, but the negatives far out weight them. Ultimately, Sakurako-san isn’t bad enough to drop, at least not yet, but if nothing worthwhile comes out of this by episode five, I’m done.

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‘Preacher’ Trailer to Premiere Sunday, November 1

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AMC Network will release the trailer to Preacher on Sunday, November 1, during the 90-minute episode of The Walking Dead, according to Bloody Disgusting.

AMC’s Preacher is an adaptation of the comic book series of the same name created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, and published by DC Comics’ Vertigo imprint.

Preacher is one of the most celebrated graphic novels of all time, the story of a man of God in a small Texas town who sets out to avenge the decimation of his hometown by supernatural forces.

The plot of the show revolves around Jesse Custer, a conflicted preacher in a small Texas town who merges with a powerful creature that has escaped from heaven. Along with his ex-gal, Tulip, and an Irish vampire named Cassidy, the three embark on a journey to find God.

AMC’s Preacher stars Dominic Cooper as Jesse Custer, Joseph Gilgun as Jesse’s Irish vampire best friend Cassidy, Ruth Negga as Jesse’s girlfriend Tulip O’Hare, Ian Colletti as Arseface, and W. Earl Brown as Arseface’s father Sheriff Hugo Root. There is no firm date for when Preacher will hit the airwaves, but mid-2016 looks to be the target.

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REVIEW: “Steve Jobs” – Fassbender, Rogen stellar in Sorkin’s Jobs-inspired opus

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Though it has the misfortune of following in the footsteps of two other feature films released in recent years centered around the brilliant and complicated life of the man whose name the film shares, Steve Jobs is without question the most innovative and impactful of the three. With its elegant structure and willingness to separate itself from historical accuracy in order to focus on distilling character essence, the film succeeds where its predecessors failed in terms of rendering a portrait of the man and his relationships with those closest to him that is intimate, compelling, and most of all substantive. It’s as though by getting away from trying to re-create places and events in a semi-accurate way, Steve Jobs gets audiences closer than they’ve ever been to the true essence of the man behind the pop culture superstar. What audiences experience may not be true in the sense of how it actually happened, but it feels true in terms of the personas and emotions involved.

Narratively built around three key events in Jobs’s career both within and outside of Apple — the product launches of the Macintosh in 1984, the NeXT cube computer in 1988, and the iMac in 1998 — the film focuses on Jobs (played by Michael Fassbender) as he interacts with and/or finds himself confronted by a specific group of people whose lives and career paths orbited his. Almost always by his side is Joanna Hoffman (Kate Winslet), originally the marketing director for the Macintosh, who balances managing the events themselves with managing Jobs and his specific concerns and priorities as he prepares to take the stage. Then there’s Andy Hertzfeld (Michael Stuhlbarg, Pawn Sacrifice), a member of Jobs’s original Mac team who unfortunately finds himself bearing the brunt of his boss’s ire as a function critical to Jobs’s idea for the Mac’s consumer appeal doesn’t want to work less than an hour before showtime. There’s also Jobs’s one-time closest friend and collaborator, Steve “Woz” Wozniak (Seth Rogen), with whom he co-founded Apple and whose design and vision for the Apple II led to years of financial success for the company, and John Scully (Jeff Daniels), the former Pepsi CEO who Jobs lured away from the “cola wars” in order to perform the same function for Apple and allow Jobs to focus on design and development. And finally, there’s Chrisann Brennan (Katherine Waterston, Inherent Vice), Jobs’s former girlfriend who insists that her daughter Lisa (played at age 5 by Mackenzie Moss, age 9 by Ripley Sobo, and age 19 by Perla Haney-Jardine) is also Jobs’s daughter, a claim he vehemently denies both publicly and privately.

Each in their turn — Hoffman, Hertzfeld, Woz, Scully, Chrisann, and Lisa — get solo time with Jobs during the forty minutes immediately prior to each of the product launches. Each in their turn, they attempt to bargain and reason with Jobs and are subjected to his exacting demands, his long memory for slights and grudges, his patent denial of ever being wrong about anything, and other expressions of the narcissism that’s become as much a part of our collective cultural memory of the real Steve Jobs as is his visionary genius. Jobs never lets anyone forget that he really is the smartest man in any room, and just how on board each of the characters is with that particular concept in a given moment determines how he treats them in that moment. See things his way (which almost no one ever does), and he’s warm and appreciative. See things differently? Yeah, have fun with that conversation.

Steve Jobs one-sheet

What makes Steve Jobs a must-see film starts and ends with screenwriter Aaron Sorkin. Once again, the writer responsible for such cerebral, dialogue-driven dramas as The Social Network, Moneyball, and many, many years ago A Few Good Men delivers a film that deliberately has the dynamic sound and rhythm of a stage play. The rigid three act structure, the symmetry of each act’s real-time progression (each is approximately 40 minutes, to match the conceit in the film that the events take place 40 minutes before the start of the launches), the ways in which scenes move forward as characters around Jobs enter and exit, all contribute to the experience feeling smaller, more intimate and immediate, than a more conventional film might.

Complementing Sorkin’s efforts here is the vision of Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle. In addition to his effective staging and use of the locations chosen for the backdrops of each act, Boyle chooses to film each of the three acts in different film stock, altering the physical, visual look of the film as it transitions from act to act to reflect the movement forward in time and the evolution of technology. It’s these artistic flourishes — Sorkin’s sense of symmetry and Boyle’s visual aesthetic — that make Steve Jobs the film very much like a product Jobs the man might have designed: in form and function both artistic and effective.

But what about the acting? It’s no overstatement to suggest that Steve Jobs might succeed come Oscar season in landing one or even two nominations in each of the primary acting categories. Much will be made of Michael Fassbender’s effort at portraying Jobs, and every ounce of praise will be well-deserved, as his is a commanding performance. But Fassbender is an actor from whom commanding performances have come to be expected, particularly in character-driven dramatic roles, and thus his fine efforts here may not impress audiences as much as they should simply because they already know he’s that good.

In comparison, the performer who may really blow people away with his work here is Seth Rogen. The stoner persona Rogen so often inhabits in the films that made him a star is completely camouflaged behind a bushier beard, large eyeglasses and slumped shoulders as the actor plays the awkward but earnest foil to Fassbender’s charismatic but often inscrutable and duplicitous Jobs. Jeff Daniels also turns in tremendous work here as he brings to life John Scully, and Kate Winslet is every bit as good as you might expect her to be given the quality of this material. Everyone is good here, and Fassbender’s work with them makes them exceptional. But it’s Rogen’s Woz that audiences will most likely find themselves cheering for every time he verbally spars on Jobs, and that’s a credit to just how strong Rogen’s work here truly is.

All that said, it’s important to note that speaking in terms of plot and plot development, there isn’t much of one in Steve Jobs aside from witnessing how Jobs as a person evolves to face personal challenges he wasn’t expecting to face in the course of fomenting the technological revolution that he truly believed only he was capable of leading. Essentially, it’s a character sketch; perhaps one of the most elaborately conceived and entertainingly executed character sketches in modern film, but nonetheless, still a character sketch. That aspect of the film alone may prove a turn-off to those going in hoping for a more conventional narrative, but the fact that it’s not constructed to be a crowd-pleaser shouldn’t be considered a flaw. After all, the last cinematic effort at bringing Steve Jobs to life on the big-screen, 2013’s Jobs, starring Ashton Kutcher, was conceived and executed as a conventional biopic, and people didn’t like that movie, either.

So who cares if it’s “another” movie about Steve Jobs? Go see it, anyway. He was a remarkable individual, one whose character and essence is likely to inspire interpretation in yet more films and other media as time goes on and his creative legacy continues to touch our daily lives. But now, perhaps for the first time, in this film, you have an attempt to capture who and what Steve Jobs was to those around him that’s as innovative in its efforts as Jobs himself was at the work for which we remember him. For that reason alone, Steve Jobs the film deserves your attention, especially if you own or regularly use an iAnything.

Steve Jobs
Starring Michael Fassbender, Kate Winslet, Seth Rogen, Jeff Daniels, Michael Stuhlbarg, Katherine Waterston. Directed by Danny Boyle.
Running Time: 122 minutes
Rated R for language.

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Batman To Appear in ‘Wonder Woman’ Film

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Wonder Woman is expected to start filming in November and plot details are starting to leak out.

What we know as fact is Patty Jenkins is directing from Jason Fuchs’ script, Gal Gadot is Wonder Woman, with Chris Pine as Steve Trevor. Wonder Woman will be in theaters on June 23, 2017.

The rumor is that film will take place between World War I and modern day with Circe and Ares as the main villains (Heroic Hollywood).

JoBlo is reporting that Wonder Woman takes place a few months before Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and that Batman will be in the film. First as an observer of the movie’s climatic battle and later to introduce himself to Diana. JoBlo also reports that the invisible jet will make an appearance in the film as well.

Wonder Woman will make her first appearance in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice on March 25, 2016.

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