A Reddit user claiming to work for a music sync company posted details to Marvel’s Luke Cage staring Mike Colter in the lead role. There are quite a few interesting details in the post, but take everything here merely as a rumor.
I work for a music sync company and we recently had this description come through for music needed in an episode of Luke Cage.
Luke Cage is written by Cheo Coker (Ray Donovan, Southland) and the first two episodes are being directed by Paul McGuigan (Sherlock Pilot, Scandal Pilot). Played by Mike Colter, it is the story of a bulletproof, super-powered man on the run from the law who, despite his checkered past, can’t help but become a hero. We like to say it’s all Marvel but closer in tone to The Wire.
TONE: Luke Cage is a dark, yet vibrantly kinetic world with cinematic scope — SHAFT meets CITY OF GOD. The music is hip-hop in all its bombast and complexity, a living, breathing character in the show, with song choices ranging from the instantly recognizable classics to the fresh, next big thing. This unique tone will be the backdrop as we tell the story of a superpowered escaped convict at war with himself, who sets up shop in a community at war with itself. Marvel represents family entertainment. Our series will never show tobacco smoking or drugs. We are PG-16, never rated R.
SETTING: The Harlem of right now. A patchwork of brick-and-mortar history and a highrise future. Predominantly Black, the area is nevertheless a mosh pit of income brackets and ethnicities. Our hero, LUKE CAGE, moves in several worlds – he lives above a Chinese restaurant, and works for cash at a beloved barbershop by day. At night, he’s a dishwasher at a slick, gangster-owned nightclub. Within these different worlds Luke will notice a pattern: Harlem is plagued by crime, corruption, and gangsters, and needs a hero.
THEMES: Identity. Power. Manhood. Who is Luke Cage? Is he the escaped con that just wants to be left alone, or is he railing against his destiny to become a hero and better his community? Over the course of season one, Luke will grow into the hero we’ve been waiting for.
Luke Cage is the third of five Marvel premium Netflix series. It’s a dark, grounded, adult, premium cable show. Luke is one of Marvel’s most iconic “street-level” superheroes, with his origins going back to the early 1970’s, and he’s a huge fan-favorite.
Marvel’s Luke Cage is currently filming and will be released on Netflix in 2016.
Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy were on Jimmy Kimmel Live Monday night promoting their new show The Muppets which premieres Tuesday night on ABC.
The interview led to questions about the couples break up and Kimmel helped Miss Piggy get back in the dating scene by setting her up a Tinder account.
The cross promotion of The Muppets across the Disney owned family of channels has been just awful. It feels way too forced, ESPN NFL Countdown had Muppets everywhere and it was a chore to watch. This appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live is no better, hopefully the show is better than the promotion.
CBS released a new trailer for Supergirl Monday evening as the show approaches the October 26th premiere.
A Negative Zone prison crash lands on Earth releasing all the Kryptonian prisoners and it is up to Supergirl to stop them. WHAT?! The series is definitely going bold but it won’t last if each episode is the “prisoner of the week” storyline. What makes The Flash so endearing is Barry Allen is a lovable loser and the viewer understands his struggles and wants him to succeed. Supergirl has this potential!
The first trailer has been released for The Big Short, one of Paramount’s big Oscar hopeful films starring a quartet of serious talent: Brad Pitt, Christian Bale, Ryan Gosling, and Steve Carell. The film focuses on the housing crisis in the mid 2000s, and is based on Moneyball author Michael Lewis’s book of the same name.
Here is the trailer:
Here is a brief synopsis of the film, directed by Anchorman‘s Adam McKay:
“THE BIG SHORT” is the remarkable true story of the genius contrarian investors who, recognizing just how insane the housing bubble had become, figured out how to “short” the market prior to the financial collapse of 2008.
The decision to add The Big Short into this season’s crowded awards gauntlet came as an apparent surprise to some, as Paramount has added it last minute. It may turn out to be a good idea, as this is the sort of film Academy voters go crazy over.
The Big Short opens in limited release December 11, and will go wide December 23.
According to a rumor that originated from MakingStarWars.net, it seems that a former cast member from the Star Wars prequels is set to make his return in Star Wars: Episode VIII.
The site reports a rumor that Hayden Christensen will return to the Star Wars universe in the sequel to Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
“A team in the U.K. are soon heading to the U.S. to begin training Hayden Christensen for a Star Wars: Episode VIII appearance of some sort,” said Jason Ward Editor-In-Chief of Making Star Wars.
Christensen’s return would seem to point towards either a flashback scene or perhaps an even bigger story arc involving resurrection. Either way his return in Episode VIII would be nothing short of shocking to mega Star Wars fans around the globe.
What do you guys think of possible return of the second most hated character in the Star Wars Universe?
Rian Johnson has screen play and director duties for Episode VIII and Benicio Del Toro has been cast as the villain.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens hits theaters on December 18, a year later Rogue One comes out on December 16, 2016 and then Episode VIII will hit theaters on May 26, 2017.
It appears that Sicario 2 is already being planned ahead of the wide release of Denis Villeneuve’s cartel thriller. According to a report from Variety, the sequel will turn the attention from Emily Blunt’s story line to focus on Benicio Del Toro’s character.
“Before the release of this movie, I was talking to Denis and I said what happened to this character?” said Patrick Wachsberger, co-chair of Black Label Media, with regards to Del Toro’s mysterious character. Black Label Media is co-financing Sicario along with Lionsgate, and clearly is interested in Sicario 2 down the road.
Writer Taylor Sheridan is front and center regarding the sequel, and Denis Villeneuve is not far away from the project either. However, it’s unclear whether or not he would return for Sicario 2. The first film, out in wide release October 2, is easily my most anticipated of the fall movie season. We’ll see if a sequel is truly a good idea.
Featuring stellar performances from a top-notch cast lead by a raw and riveting Tobey Maguire, Pawn Sacrifice brings to fascinating life the very unlikely story of the late Bobby Fischer, who at the height of the Cold War seemingly took on the entire Soviet Union as he sought to become the first American to ever win the title of World Chess Champion by defeating the champion at the time, Russian chess grandmaster Boris Spassky. Part classic David-vs-Goliath sports story and part biopic, the film delves deep into the psyche of the notoriously eccentric and volatile Fischer as his successes mounted, his fame grew, and his mental stability seemingly deteriorated even as he got closer and closer to his lifelong goal. It’s a slow-building, consistently intense film, one that will command your attention and engagement, even if you don’t know anything about the real-life Fischer or chess, and will probably have you wanting to learn a little more about both after the credits have rolled.
Pawn Sacrifice focuses on key moments and events in Fischer’s life leading up to Fischer’s 1972 face-off with Spassky, the “Match of the Century”, as it was dubbed by the worldwide media. It starts in Brooklyn in 1951, when at age 6 young Bobby obsessively played game after game against himself in voluntary seclusion in his room while his single mother, Regina (Robin Weigert) worked hard to both support him and his sister Joan and to further the goals of the Communist Party of which she was openly a member. Hoping to perhaps bring Bobby out of his shell a bit, Regina introduces Bobby to a local chess guru, Carmine Nigro (Cornrad Pla), who within a few hours recognizes Bobby’s uncanny level of focus and unorthodox but effective approaches to the game. It’s not long before Bobby is participating in Brooklyn Chess Club matches, mowing down all he plays against, until at age 13 he becomes the youngest-ever U.S. Junior Champion. It’s there that he announces publicly his long-held ambition to take on the Russians, arguably the finest chess players in the world at the time, and beat them all.
Flash forward to 1962. After walking out of a competition when he sees what he believes to be collusion among Russian players to keep him from attaining the victories he needs to challenge World Champion Spassky, Bobby gives up competitive chess entirely. It’s then that his future manager, Paul Marshall (Michael Stulbarg) approaches him and draws him back into the game, promising to push forward Bobby’s demands for reform in order to level the playing field with the Russians. To help Bobby in his quest, Marshall brings on board Bill Lombardy (Peter Sarsgaard), a Catholic priest and chess master in his own right who is one of the few American players that Bobby genuinely respects. With Marshall greasing the wheels and Lombardy coaching, Bobby begins his quest to take on and defeat as many international grandmasters as it takes to earn the right to challenge Spassky. His victories earn him international media attention and fame, as well as the attention of powerful politicians on both sides of the Cold War divide, who begin to see both Bobby and Spassky as proxies in their ongoing war of public perception and ideology.
All that attention brings pressure, as well, and for Marshall and Lombardy, the task of keeping the volatile and abrasive Bobby simply showing up to play matches becomes more and more difficult. As the match with Spassky draws closer and closer, the question soon becomes who or what truly will be Bobby’s greatest opponent in terms of becoming World Champion: Spassky, or Bobby’s own eccentricity and growing paranoia, which threatens to derail a confrontation that comes to mean far more to the world than simply pieces moving on a chessboard.
Director Edward Zwick (Glory, Courage Under Fire, The Last Samurai) is arguably best known for his consistent ability to take watershed events from world history and distill them into commercial films while still maintaining a commitment to historical accuracy and detail. In particular, he’s proven to be extremely adept at depicting battlefields and battlefield strategy and how it unfolds in a way that’s accessible and enjoyable to watch. That talent is why Zwick is perhaps the perfect choice to helm a film whose focus is something as cerebral and strategic as the game of chess, and also one that focuses on Fischer, who by most published accounts was waging his own war with the chess establishment and its rules which seemed (to him, at any rate) to be aimed at keeping him from reaching the pinnacle of the sport.
Working from a script by Stephen Knight (Locke, Eastern Promises), Zwick’s vision for Fischer’s quest is a reflection of actor Tobey Maguire’s take on the man himself: moody, complicated, and ultimately unpredictable, even if you know the story and how it all eventually unfolded. Zwick keeps the narrative balanced between Bobby’s very personal and internal struggle with the unseen forces his mind told him were conspiring against him with the impact of both his victories and his increasingly unreasonable demands regarding competition upon those closest to him and the world at large. It’s a difficult balancing act that managed in part through a slower narrative pace and many dialogue-driven scenes, which admittedly may try the patience of audiences wanting more “bang” for their box office buck.
Zwick’s measured and character-driven approach to storytelling in Pawn Sacrifice is certainly justified by the collection of superb performances he gets from his ensemble, starting with Tobey Maguire delivering work that should put him on the map again as a performer who can carry a film in a demanding leading role. Maguire conveys Fischer’s intelligence, arrogance, volatility, and paranoia primarily with his eyes: always intense, always moving, often wide with realization, fear, or panic. As Maguire steers Bobby toward more and more erratic behaviors, watching how those around him react becomes a showcase for the film’s supporting talent, in particular the two men playing his chess peers, Peter Sarsgaard as Lombardy and Liev Schreiber as the placid, almost unflappable Spassky. Lily Rabe of “American Horror Story” fame also stands out in limited screen time as Bobby’s sister Joan, who at times in the film is Bobby’s only truly trusted confidante, and at others is the one most hurt by his very public antisemitic comments regarding governmental and corporate conspiracies.
Zwick also takes great care to make sure audiences never lose sight of just what else happened to be going on in the world at the time of Bobby’s ascent to global stardom and his pursuit of Spassky and the World title. This was the era of Vietman (in its final stages, at any rate), Nixon, Watergate, and continuing political and social tension and change, so the fact that something as niche as competitive chess could capture the world’s imagination, and someone as eccentric and difficult to understand as Fischer could become the equivalent of a rock star in America, is, in the view of Zwick and those behind this film, in great part what makes this story so fascinating.
The other part is, of course, Fischer himself, and the mystery of just how much of his behavior was calculated and how much, if not all, was due to genuine mental illness. As chess historians and those who have studied the life and times of the real-life Fischer continue to debate that mystery, the film also avoids giving a definitive answer to the question, though it does seem to lean more toward one theory than the other. That deliberate ambiguity only makes the film even more entertaining to watch.
Pawn Sacrifice
Starring Tobey Maguire, Peter Sarsgaard, Liev Schreiber, Michael Stulbarg, Lily Rabe, Robin Weigert. Directed by Edward Zwick.
Running Time: 114 minutes
Rated PG-13 for brief strong language, some sexual content and historical smoking.
Wrestling icon Sting was part of the main event during last nights WWE Night of Champions which saw him take on Seth Rollins for the WWE World Heavyweight Title. The match was actually very good given Sting’s age, but he showed up in tremendous shape and put on a great match.
Unfortunately, the pace of the match took a nosedive after a big spot in the match saw Sting seemingly lose all his strength and collapsed.
Sting is 56 years old. This was also the second time during the match which this powerbomb into the turnbuckle was performed.
This was only Sting’s second high profile match for World Wrestling Entertainment, but was actually his third of the week after taking part in two matches on Monday Night Raw. Sting should be used in a similar vein to high profile veterans in other sports whose minutes become a factor. To have him wrestle three matches in one week, regardless of the stress level, is foolish.
Not to mention, he got put through a table and very clearly hit his head on one of the outdated monitors which probably aren’t even used by the announcers.
Some speculated that Sting’s injury was a work and was part of an act to sell the audience on the damage that had been done but that is not the case as it has been confirmed by backstage sources and even the WWE themselves that Sting did in fact suffer an injury.
The night ended with Sting getting his finisher, the Scorpion Deathlock, reversed into a pin which allowed Rollins to retain his championship before —in true WWE fashion— all hell broke loose.
WWE has plans for Sting to appear on tonights edition of Monday Night Raw and hopefully it is not a retirement party for “the Icon”. Sting showed last night that he can still put on a great match as long as he isn’t getting dragged through the mud. WWE used him to put over the company at Wrestlemania and now he took a clean loss to the current champion.
It’s time that WWE returns the favor to one of the last few legends who really deserves it.
In an interview with MCU Spider-Man’s director Jon Watts, Empire Magazine established that Peter Parker will be about 15-years old in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the death of Uncle Ben will be skipped in this film. If you ask me, that’s not a bad idea since we have been there and done that plenty of times.
Captain America: Civil War is set for release on May 6, 2016.
John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein are working on the script, and Tom Holland stars in Spider-Man due out on July 28, 2017.
In the one of the highlights of this Monday was Clark Gregg posting the behind the scenes look at the cast of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. recreating Miley Cyrus’ Wrecking Ball for charity. They are in a viscous dubsmash battle with the cast Marvel’s Agent Carter.
So far #TeamCarter has raised $27,513 for Stomp Out Bullying! and #TeamSHIELD has raised $25,620 for St. Jude Chrildren’s Research Hospital.
As requested: #wreckingball making of vid. #teamshield https://www.crowdrise.com/DubsmashWars @stuntsunlimited
Win a trip for you and a guest to Hollywood to have lunch with Hayley, Clark, James & Chloe From Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Marvel’s Agent Carter at www.crowdrise.com/dubsmashwars – Every dollar you donate is 1 vote for your favorite team in the Dubsmash War and gives you 1 entry into the contest. The more you donate / vote the better your chances. Stay tuned for more exciting prizes too.