Episode Summary: The gang return to the family barn to build robots.
Continuing the story arch from the previous two episodes, Peridot has not decided to work with the Crystal gems to find a way to stop the Cluster from waking up and destroying the planet. They decide the best course of action would be to build some kind of drilling device and dig to where it’s slumbering in the planet’s core. This takes the team back to the Universe Family barn and the massive amount of junk there which can be turned into a drill.
Peridtot and Pearl start butting heads almost immediately and one of the biggest theories about a cast member is proven: Pearl(s) is/are a mass produced gem. That’s right! By the way Peridot describes their use, they are essential the servant class of the Gem race. Wishing to prove that she is no ordinary Pearl, and thanks to a suggestion by Steven, a new competition is suggested: Giant Robot fighting! You have to admire Steven’s train of thought. The two Gems try to showcase who built the better machine and prove who is the better technician. Peridot comes out on top but sees the value in Pearl’s skills and the two decide to work together to stop the Cluster.
The fact about Pearl being a mass-produced gem is a theory that a several fans have been speculating for a while, and sometimes it’s better just to give them what they want. Considering Steven Universe prides itself on making references to Animes, it was surprising that neither Pearl’s nor Peridot’s giant robots resembled some kind of homage to the classic robots that fans would quick to pick up on. The interactions between Peridot and the rest of the Crystal Gems are amusing, and the current streak of engaging and entertaining episodes continues. Let’s hope it doesn’t stop anytime soon and they’ll keep the impending doom of The Cluster in the forefront of the episodes as they move ahead.
The Age of Ultron meets the iron fist ruler of the The Office in this hilarious mashup. Fans of The Office surely remember Robert California, the eccentric boss who’s opinions and philosophies would constantly border on not only what is acceptable in the workplace but life in general.
James Spader portrayed Robert California and voiced Ultron on screen so the voice doesn’t miss a beat but the content of the conversations could not be any different.
Courtesy of Red Letter Media, Robert California’s strangest quotes have been spliced into dramatic scenes from the second Avengers installment, Age of Ultron.
The video does a great job of not only picking dialogue from the NBC sitcom but also reactions from the mighty members of the Avengers, which only add to the fun.
Robert California was known for such bizarre rants and phrases that make Ultron come off as more of a faulty piece of equipment that really doesn’t like the Black Eyed Peas instead of a war loving piece of machinery.
As we stretch deeper into October and the sun sets earlier each night, it can be difficult to cross the finish line at the end of the work week. This should give you everything you need to power through your work day.
There is an injustice in this world. Far too many anime fans have gone at great lengths about how the best anime to have come out is Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood, Steins;Gate, or even Avatar: The Last Airbender (truly a statement that reveals ignorance) without having considered the best anime to have graced us with its presence.
None consider the anime that has influenced entire generations of anime, the show that started a literal religion, the show that has characters so likable and recognizable that they’ve jumped whole genres successfully.
The show, is Glass Mask, specifically the 2005 rendition. You probably haven’t heard of it, that’s why I’m writing this in the first place. I’ll admit that last paragraph was a little hyperbolic, the author started a religion, not the story itself, and the ‘other genre’ version is a three-minute flash animated comedy. But it still has affected and inspired multiple generations of anime.
It’s a show that not many people have watched, but nearly all who have loved it.
In an effort to help educate people on why this show is so fantastic, and why it’s taken my number one spot, I’ll be covering an episode a week for the shows duration.
But before we begin, I figure I should cover some of the interesting history behind Glass Mask.
Glass Mask was, and is currently, written by Suzue Miuchi (Dynamite Milkpie) in January of 1976, and is currently still ongoing. Due to its massive success, an 1984, 23 episode anime adaptation was in order. Needless to say, I’ve only heard terrible things about it.
About ten years later, in 1997, a live action drama adaptation began airing.
A screen shot from the OVA series
About the same time, in 1998, a three-part OVA series was also animated. I haven’t heard anything terribly positive, nor negative about it. A completely average adaptation.
Seven years after that we get the mind-blowingly good 2005, 51 episode adaptation (the one we’ll be covering, in case you haven’t figured that out).
And in 2013 we got a 17 episode, flash parody animation that “reimagined Maya and Ayumi as a pair of rival delinquent girls vying to become the new leader of the Crimson Goddess gang.” (Source)
This wasn’t the only thing we got that year, an animated movie titled “It’s Glass Mask But… the Movie: Female Spy’s Love! The Purple Rose Has a Dangerous Scent!?” This is also in line with the flash, as it was “a parody which reimagined Maya and Ayumi as a pair of students who become junior spies after their mentor, Chigusa, is kidnapped.”
And now, in the present (actually a year in the past) the author has stated that she’s almost done with the series.
The history of Glass Mask is a little strange, full of many iterations that perhaps we’ll check out after this one.
But for now, let’s take this one episode at a time, I hope you’ll watch Glass Mask with me, you’ll probably love it (I wasn’t the only one).
You can watch Glass Mask for yourself legally free at Crunchyroll. Check it out, I hope you do.
Producer Scott Rudin has taken over the Justice League Dark project according to The Tracking Board.
The report also states that the project is looking to start filming in 2016, Rudin is making updates to the script and approaching directors. Guillermo Del Toro will stay on to produce but he is not in the running to direct.
The team for Justice League Dark has been rumored to consist of Constantine, Swamp Thing, Deadman, Zatanna, and Etrigan The Demon.
Ridley Scott is coming to an end of the promotional tour of his latest film Martian, and the 78-year-old British filmmaker spoke with The Daily Beast about Prometheus 2 – Alien: Paradise Lost and in the conversation he mentions that Neill Blomkamp’s Alien film will be out in 2017. That comes as a shock as the we reported earlier that two films would come out in back-to-back years, 2017 and 2018.
“I’m actually going to be working again with Michael Fassbender in February on Prometheus 2. It’s written, so I’m not chugging along and trying to work out where we’re going to do it. With something like that, it’s six-month prep. We’re going to call it Alien: Paradise Lost. We’re getting closer and closer to the creation of the beasts—how and why they were created—and the first Alien film that I made over thirty years ago. And we have Neill Blomkamp’s Alien, which will be out in 2017. We just have the first [screenplay] draft in so far but it looks pretty good,” said Scott.
Is 20th Century Fox going to release two Alien films in one year? Alien: Paradise Lost is scheduled for May 3, 2017, would Aliens 5 come out around the Christmas holiday.
Alien: Paradise Lost is in pre-production mode and filming begins in February. As of now Blomkamp is still working on the script for Alien 5 but for the film to make a late 2017 released date, filming would need to start by late summer of 2016. Sigourney Weaver and Michael Biehn are planned to return for the sequel.
As soon as an official announce is made we will have it for you.
Do you ever wish that everyone is on the same page at work? 20th Century Fox is thinking the same thing. The film company announced a partnership with M&M’S® Chocolate Candies and kind of, sort of, released the full synopsis of X-Men: Apocalypse.
“Since the dawn of civilization, he was worshiped as a god. Apocalypse, the first and most powerful mutant from Marvel’s X-Men universe, amassed the powers of many other mutants, becoming immortal and invincible. Upon awakening after thousands of years, he is disillusioned with the world as he finds it and recruits a team of powerful mutants, including a disheartened Magneto (Michael Fassbender), to cleanse mankind and create a new world order, over which he will reign. As the fate of the Earth hangs in the balance, Raven (Jennifer Lawrence) with the help of Professor X (James McAvoy) must lead a team of young X-Men to stop their greatest nemesis and save mankind from complete destruction.”
X-Men: Apocalypse is directed by Bryan Singer and stars Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, James McAvoy and Nicholas Hoult, Oscar Isaac (Apocalypse), Sophie Turner (Jean Grey), Tye Sheridan (Cyclops), Alexandra Shipp (Storm), Lana Condor (Jubilee), Olivia Munn, and Kodi Smit-McPhee.
The film takes place in the 1980s and we will see younger versions of previously seen characters.
X-Men: Apocalypse opens in theaters on May 27, 2016.
Full Press Release:
HACKETTSTOWN, N.J., Oct. 8, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Spoiler alert! The X-Men are adding a few new colorful members to the mix: Red, Yellow, Green, Orange, Blue and Brown.
Today, Mars Chocolate North America announced a partnership between M&M’S® Chocolate Candies and 20th Century Fox’s upcoming motion picture event “X-Men: Apocalypse.” The deal makes M&M’S the exclusive chocolate and confectionary promotional partner of the film, which opens Friday, May 27 and is considered one of the most widely anticipated movies of 2016.
“This deal truly brings together two of the biggest superheroes of Hollywood – M&M’S and X-Men,” said Berta de Pablos-Barbier, Vice President, Marketing, Mars Chocolate North America. “X-Men is one of the most popular and thrilling franchises in movie history, and we like to say M&M’S are the official chocolate candies of the movies. Together, we hope to make the experience even more fun for movie lovers.”
“Who doesn’t love M&M’S and their hilarious band of characters? M&M’S Chocolate Candies are a part of the movie experience, so what better movie to pair them up with than the next film in our epic X-Men film franchise,” said Zachary Eller, Senior Vice President, Marketing Partnerships, 20th Century Fox. “The work that Mars is doing to bring this partnership to life is fantastic.”
M&M’S Brand plans to leverage the partnership with a full 360-degree campaign including retail displays and packaging; digital and out-of-home media; TV and in-cinema advertising; consumer promotions; public relations; and social media content. M&M’S World® and My M&M’S® also will support the partnership with themed merchandise and special blends of candy featuring icons from the film.
M&M’S will tease the partnership at the Mars booth space at New York Comic Con, Oct. 8-11 at the Javits Center in Manhattan.
About Mars, Incorporated In 1911, Frank C. Mars made the first Mars candies in his Tacoma, Washington kitchen and established Mars’ first roots as a confectionery company. In the 1920s, Forrest E. Mars, Sr. joined his father in business and together they launched the MILKY WAY® bar. In 1932, Forrest, Sr. moved to the United Kingdom with a dream of building a business based on the objective of creating a “mutuality of benefits for all stakeholders” – this objective serves as the foundation of Mars, Incorporated today. Based in McLean, Virginia, Mars has net sales of more than $33 billion, six business segments including Petcare, Chocolate, Wrigley, Food, Drinks, Symbioscience, and more than 75,000 Associates worldwide that are putting its Principles into action to make a difference for people and the planet through its performance.
Mars brands include: Petcare – PEDIGREE®, ROYAL CANIN®, WHISKAS®, BANFIELD® Pet Hospital, CESAR®, SHEBA®, DREAMIES® and NUTRO®; Chocolate – M&M’S®, SNICKERS®, DOVE®, GALAXY®, MARS®, MILKY WAY® and TWIX®; Wrigley – DOUBLEMINT®, EXTRA®, ORBIT® and 5™ chewing gums, SKITTLES® and STARBURST® candies, and ALTOIDS® and LIFESAVERS® mints. Food – UNCLE BEN’S®, DOLMIO®, EBLY®, MASTERFOODS®, SEEDS OF CHANGE® and ROYCO®; Drinks – ALTERRA COFFEE ROASTERS™, THE BRIGHT TEA COMPANY™, KLIX® and FLAVIA®; Symbioscience – COCOAVIA® and WISDOM PANEL®.
About “X-Men: Apocalypse” Following the critically acclaimed global smash hit X-Men: Days of Future Past, director Bryan Singer returns with X-MEN: APOCALYPSE, opening in theaters everywhere May 27, 2016. Since the dawn of civilization, he was worshipped as a god. Apocalypse, the first and most powerful mutant from Marvel’s X-Men universe, amassed the powers of many other mutants, becoming immortal and invincible. Upon awakening after thousands of years, he is disillusioned with the world as he finds it and recruits a team of powerful mutants, including a disheartened Magneto (Michael Fassbender), to cleanse mankind and create a new world order, over which he will reign. As the fate of the Earth hangs in the balance, Raven (Jennifer Lawrence) with the help of Professor X (James McAvoy) must lead a team of young X-Men to stop their greatest nemesis and save mankind from complete destruction.
About 20th Century Fox One of the world’s largest producers and distributors of motion pictures, 20th Century Fox produces, acquires and distributes motion pictures throughout the world. These motion pictures are produced or acquired by the following units of 20th Century Fox Film: Twentieth Century Fox, Fox 2000 Pictures, Fox Searchlight Pictures, Fox International Productions, and Twentieth Century Fox Animation.
Ever heard of Rifftrax? No? Then you’ve been missing out on some of the best geek humor around. It has a basic set up: A group of comedians watch a terrible movie and make jokes about it for the audience’s amusement. If you are familiar with a show called Mystery Science Theater 3000, then you should know the crew behind it are the creators of Rifftrax. Their website is full of plenty of hilarious audio commentary to play with some of the more popular films in recent cinema history including Transformers 4 and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Every few months, the group has special screens on one night only (with an Encore the following week) where they watch a film live and rip into it. The movie they choose this month was Miami Connection, an 80’s music laced, ninja filled, action movie, with a cast who learned most of their karate in the week of lessons they got back in the 6th grade. The setup involves an evil group of Miami based ninjas who want to distribute cocaine through the clubs, thanks to one of their members named Jeff (because Jeff is a perfect ninja name). Jeff is creepily jealous that his sister Jane is involved with a band named Dragon Sound, the film’s heroes. The band juggle going to college, practicing martial arts, and singing about integrity and honesty in a way which makes the songs from My Little Pony sound metal in comparison and all while remaining shirtless for a good portion of the film. The film follows the band as they fight against Jeff who wants them to stop playing their terrible music.
If this premise sounds terrible, it should be, and this is what makes the movie so enjoyable. The jokes the crew were able to make about the cheesy acting, Jeff’s prominent beard, and the terrible songs that the band played were hilarious. If you watch a Rifftrax showing and don’t laugh you should really question your humor.
The film also came with the short Superman knockoff called “Measuring Man” who taught a young boy all about units. You can already see the comedy possibilities that were present. The jokes made about these poorly outdated informational videos are some of the best material the comedians feature.
Rifftrax are always a joy and this one was no exception. Come December you need to be on the lookout as the team will have one last screening with film known as Santa Claus and the Ice Cream Bunny. It looks truly horrify and thereby amazing to watch.
New York Comic Con is going on right now, but one best parts of a big convention is the after hours party and the hotel bar scene. Rich Johnston of Bleeding Cool is reporting that he was in a bar conversation with some Hollywood insiders that were discussing the budget to Avengers: Infinity War Part 1 and 2.
The insiders are saying the combined production budget for the two films will be one billion dollars!
Johnston continues to say that the budget for the screenwriter, director, producers and principal actors will be four hundred million dollars, Robert Downey Jr salary will be half the actor’s budget.
Downey Jr is the A-Rod of the Avengers!
Avengers in 2012 made $1,519,557,910 worldwide and Avengers: Age of Ultron brought in $1,402,791,599 this summer. If you are not good at math that is a grand total of $2,922,349,509. Disney can afford to risk a billion on the sequels.
Filming is expected to begin in fall of 2016.
Avengers: Infinity War – Part 1 will be released on May 4, 2018, and Avengers: Infinity War – Part 2 will open on May 3, 2019.
99 Homes is a film that’s quite likely to get under your skin, to scare you and/or anger you with its surreal images of families forcibly uprooted from their homes, their lives and memories built within the walls and rooms of their houses regarded as less than meaningless by the people who stand to profit by working the very system that left those families homeless. It should prove especially tough to watch for Floridians, some of whom are still living through the foreclosure crisis that serves as the film’s backdrop. But even for those outside the Sunshine State who invest any emotional meaning into what the very word “home” means, its story and images may prove to be as unnerving as any horror film or suspense thriller, thanks to a strong, character-driven script and stand-out performances from its leads, Andrew Garfield (The Amazing Spider-Man 2) and Michael Shannon (HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire“, Man of Steel).
Shannon plays Orlando real estate broker Rick Carver, who in 2010, in the aftermath of the real estate bubble bursting with devastating effect across the country and in particular in Florida, has turned taking families out of homes via bank foreclosure and eviction into a seemingly unending supply of cash and profit. His success and wealth comes with a price, of course: his work often leads to ugly confrontations with homeowners suddenly faced with having to vacate their homes in minutes under the scrutiny of county law enforcement, and watch strangers enter their home and dump all their belongings on what was previously their front yard. Carver insists he’s not the one taking their homes away — it’s the banks, and he’s just their licensed representative — but the fear and hostility borne of his arrival and his unwillingness to show pity has led him to, among other precautions, carry a handgun in an ankle holster at all times. Carver is wholly unapologetic about what he does and the aggressiveness with which he does it. He’s simply figured out how to be a winner in a system that’s been rigged by winners to favor winners — in his mind, if you haven’t figured out what he has, then you’re a loser and not his problem.
One of the “losers” he encounters in the course of his work is Dennis Nash (Garfield), a single father whose work and income in construction has completely dried up as developers have stopped building homes in the wake of the crisis. Unable to forestall the bank foreclosing on the home he grew up in with his mother, Lynn (Laura Dern) and in which he’s raising his own son Connor (Noah Lomax), Nash, like so many others, begs and pleads to Carver and the sheriff’s deputies at his door to put them on the street for more time, to no avail. But a second encounter between the two men leads Carver to notice something potentially useful in the prideful, tenacious Nash, and he offers the desperate young man a chance to learn to do what Carver does and thus turn his fortunes around. Reluctant at first to be an agent of the process that just recently victimized him, Nash accepts only when he comes to see it as a chance to buy back his family’s home from Carver. The Faustian bargain struck, Nash begins his education in the shady ins and outs of making cash off of the government and the banks while acting as their representative in evicting families from homes, all without telling his mom or Connor that he’s gone to work for the same man that took their home away.
But as the money starts to roll in, the secrets pile up, the work gets more dangerous, and it gets more and more difficult for Nash to rationalize what he’s doing to people just like him, except they’re desperate enough to resort to violence. For Carver, who killed his own soul in order to make a killing in this land of opportunity, the escalating tensions are just a part of what they do. But for Nash, who still has his own soul and his family to lose, it becomes a question of just how far he’s willing to go, and how much longer can he justify doing the work by saying it’s for the family he has to hide that work from every day.
Andrew Garfield is quite good here as the desperate but still conscientious Nash, who finds out early on that the odious work he’s taken on as Carver’s protegé never gets easier, and for whom the struggle to keep doing it is visible in his every physical expression. But without question the performer who drives 99 Homes is Michael Shannon. His is a performance that’s likely to remind audiences of Michael Douglas’s original take on Gordon Gekko in Oliver Stone’s original 80’s cautionary tale of greed and corruption, Wall Street, only here, rather than the villains being the New York financial sector masters of the universe, it’s the bottom-feeder opportunists who took advantage of the subprime mortgage crisis to make millions off the plight of consumers defaulting on bad loans that they never had a prayer of paying off in the first place. Shannon’s take on Carver is masterful in that he’s entirely loathsome as “the bad guy” while still not being a caricature of a human being. He makes this work by injecting just enough self-awareness into Carver for audiences to see in his eyes that the man knows on some deep level what he’s doing is horribly, horribly wrong, but he’s spent so much time and energy justifying his actions to himself and others that he truly believes his own rationalizations. Carver doesn’t like hurting people or destroying lives, but he does like making money and not being on the short end of the stick when it comes to opportunity. Adding that level of nuance makes the evil Shannon brings to life in Carver relatable, believable, and all the more hateable all at once.
Director Ramin Bahrani, who also came up with the story for 99 Homes and co-wrote the script with writer/director Amir Naderi, puts his characters through the emotional wringer in one heart-wrenching scene after the next, often using non-actors to portray the many nameless families being forced out of their homes as well as the law enforcement agents called upon to clear them out. He keeps the cameras focused squarely on the shell-shocked looks on their faces as they carry baskets of belongings away from what was once their properties, or the impotent rage that explodes when they try to refuse to leave and their pleas for more time and explanations of appeals and lawyers working on their behalf fall on deaf ears, and the effect is (or at least it should be) pure horror. Along with the body of work turned in by Shannon, it’s in these moments that the film is most evocative and memorable; there is a “thriller” aspect to the film that’s seeded early on and leads to a somewhat forced and contrived finale, but as well as that’s staged, it’s the one part of the film that feels like Hollywood melodrama. By then, however, 99 Homes has likely already made its mark on you, and it’s just one more gut-punch of a scene in a film that’s full of them.
99 Homes
Starring Andrew Garfield, Michael Shannon, Noah Lomax, and Laura Dern. Directed by Ramin Bahrani.
Running Time: 112 minutes
Rated R for language including some sexual references, and a brief violent image.
Marvel announced Wednesday that Now Phase 2 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe has officially reached its conclusion with the release of Marvel’s Ant-Man, they are adding four more films to their schedule.
Marvel has green-lit a sequel for Ant-Man for July 6, 2018, Ant-Man and the Wasp.
The announcement of Ant-Man and the Wasp will lead to two films shifting their dates, with Marvel’s Black Panther moving up to February 16, 2018 and Marvel’s Captain Marvel landing on March 8, 2019.
The big hidden gem of the announcement was that Marvel has three more films slated for May 1, 2020, July 10, 2020, and November 6, 2020.
Ant-Man has earned $178.5M domestically and $231.3M internationally for a global total of $409.8M.
Could we be getting a Planet Hulk announcement soon or Spider-Man 2 and 3? What new superhero do you want to see enter the Marvel Cinematic Universe?
Marvel Studios Schedule
2016
May 6: Captain America: Civil War
November 4: Doctor Strange
2017
May 5: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
July 28: Marvel Studios co-produced Spider-Man film (Sony)
November 3: Thor: Ragnarok
2018
February 16: Black Panther (new date)
May 4: Avengers: Infinity War, Part 1
July 6: Ant-Man and the Wasp (new addition)
2019
March 8: Captain Marvel (new date)
May 3: Avengers: Infinity War, Part 2
July 12: Inhumans
2020
May 1: Untitled Marvel Studios film (new addition)
July 10: Untitled Marvel Studios film (new addition)
November 6: Untitled Marvel Studios film (new addition)