Marvel has announced 45 new titles for its “All-New, All-Different” re-launch and it certainly seems to be living up to its name. The complete list is as follows:
A-Force #1
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. #1
All-New All-Different Avengers #1
All-New Wolverine #1
All-New X-Men #1
Amazing Spider-Man #1
Angela: Asgard’s Assassin #1
Ant-Man #1
Captain Marvel #1
Carnage #1
Contest of Champions #1
Daredevil #1
Deadpool #1
Doctor Strange #1
Drax #1
Extraordinary X-Men #1
Guardians of the Galaxy #1
Hawkeye #1
Howard the Duck #1
Howling Commandos of S.H.I.E.L.D. #1
Illuminati #1
Invincible Iron Man #1
Karnak #1
The Mighty Thor #1
Ms. Marvel #1
New Avengers #1
Nova #1
Old Man Logan #1
Sam Wilson, Captain America #1
Silk #1
Scarlet Witch #1
Spider-Gwen #1
Spider-Man #1
Spider-Man 2099 #1
Spider-Woman #1
Squadron Supreme #1
Star-Lord #1
The Totally Awesome Hulk #1
Web Warriors #1
Ultimates #1
Uncanny Avengers #1
Uncanny Inhumans #1
Uncanny X-Men #1
Venom: Spaceknight #1 [What a title…]
The Vision #1
Any titles catch your interest? Let us know in the comments below.
Transformers. Gundam. Voltron. Medabots. Robotech. Knights of Sidonia. Zoids. Megas XLR.
Our child-hoods, and for many of us our Netflix queues, are filled with stories about giant robots fighting other giant robots. Some are nuanced, some are complex and some are just plain fun.
In recent years, properties such as Pacific Rim have renewed mainstream interest in the genre within the world of science-fiction. However, it would seem that the world of science-reality has never forgotten and has been working to bring our fantasies to life.
Back in January, Suidobashi Heavy Industry announced that they had created their own version of the Gundam: the Kurata. The robot is 12.5ft (3.8m) tall robot that weighs 5 tonnes and has a top speed of 10kph. Today, Megabots Industries unveiled they had created a giant robot of their own; the Mark II. In a press video, the American creators of the Mark II challenged Suidobashi Heavy Industry to a showdown between there two robots.
While the chances of this actually happening are pretty slim, I think we all know that this would be awesome. Check out the video below and let us know what you think in the comments. Personally, my money is on the Kurata.
The Spring season for anime is pretty much closed up and you can bet I have some thoughts on a select few shows that I watched. But lets save that for another article. For now lets focus our attention on the summer anime season and what it has to offer. Or to be more precise, what I plan on watching.
Now I won’t be going over all the shows airing because there is just too many. And if you don’t want to hear my opinion on certain shows and just check em out for yourself you can click the link here to see the whole summer anime season list.
Lets hit the ball rolling with a little guilty pleasure that I am looking forward too. A show that any lesser man would be utterly embarrassed to even confess an interest in. But alas this is probably my most anticipated show this summer anime season, and for very specific and shallow reasons, I’ll admit. Monster Musume or formerly known as Monster Musume no Iru Nichijou is a show about a twenty year old boy who is thrust into the monster girl exchange program. These duties entail taking in a Lamia named Miia and help Monster Girls such as her integrate into society. But interspecies breeding has very strict laws and he won’t be able to deny at least getting a little frisky with this half snake half bodacious babe.
Okay now before you jump to conclusions let me assure you I know exactly what this show will most likely be, who it’s pandering too and the amount of artistic value it holds. And in my defense, I just find something super sexy about monster girls. Thats it, I can’t explain it. So I’ll be watching this show mainly for eye candy and raunchy comedy. But who knows, shows with less potential have surprised me before.
Now onto a more tasteful selection is God Eater, a post apocalyptic action show that just by the trailer gives off an Attack on Titan vibe. Since the trailer doesn’t give much away I had to do little digging to find out that it’s based off a psp japanese exclusive game. It takes place where humanity has been driven to near extinction by beings called “oracle cells”. And no modern weaponry is effective against them. That is until humanity develops living weapons infused with “oracle cells” called “god arcs”. The fighting force tasked with using these new weapons to fight back for humanity is dubbed God Eaters.
The animation looks a little weird but sure is crisp, which could surely make some great and fluid action sequences. Also its being handles by ufotable animation studio, and I usually like their stuff. This is a toss-up too I’m afraid, but I’m still expecting big things from this show.
Next is a show that isn’t really my style of genre, but I feel that since we gets so few anime like this I might as well give it a shot. Gansta takes place in the city of Ergastulum, a shady ville filled with made men and petty thieves, whores on the make and cops on the take, there are some deeds too dirty for even its jaded inhabitants to touch. Enter the “Handymen,” Nic and Worick, who take care of the jobs no one else will handle. Until the day when a cop they know on the force requests their help in taking down a new gang muscling in on the territory of a top Mafia family. It seems like business (and mayhem) as usual, but the Handymen are about to find that this job is a lot more than they bargained for.
The art looks great and it appears to be a very gritty kind of show. If I had it my way this would turn into some sort of episodic tale like Cowboy Bebop but I doubt it will follow such a structure. But at the least I can expect to see some serious adult situations with potentially good writing to string it all together. That alone is enough to give this show a chance.
Charolette is probably the show I have the highest expectations for this season, and for good reason. The script is done by Jun Maeda who has had such famous works as Clannad and Angel Beats. He’s pretty much a king when it comes to making you feel deeply for characters, while weaving a compelling tale. The synopsis is somewhat a secret I guess, seeing all I could find is that it’s about a boy with powers who meets a girl, then everything changes. Almost nothing to go on, but by the tone of the trailer alone I can tell this is gonna be a good one. If you only check out one show this season, this should be it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQpOIrg_uvA
And to wrap it up, another somewhat guilty pleasure. This one a little more forgiving, maybe. Prison school is a long running manga adaptation about five boys being admitted to an all girls school. But it’s not all sunshine and roses, the school they’re transferring too is Hachimitsu Private Academy a revered and elite all-girls’ boarding school on the outskirts of Tokyo. And lets say this experience could be heaven or hell for these new transfer students. Or maybe even a little bit of both. Personally I’ve been reading the manga for a long time and have loved it ever since I picked it up, so this pick is an obvious for me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbtHgPBTWhw
So those are my picks for now. Mot likely in a couple of weeks when the season has come in a little bit my list will have changed on what I’m watching. And i’ll be sure to do a follow-up article when that time comes. But for now This is what I plan to watch. And if you want to watch any of these shows, they will be simulcasting with english subtitles on Funimation.com and Crunchyroll.com.
If there’s one thing certain about every sequel in the Terminator franchise that’s come down since 1991’s Terminator 2: Judgement Day, it’s that they’ve all been consistently a letdown in one way, shape, or form. Sadly, Terminator Genisys continues that not-so-grand tradition: though its many nods to the original 1984 film as well as its very impressive CGI offerings make it easily the most enjoyable of the sequels made without series creator James Cameron at the helm, it still can’t escape the “been there, done that” feeling that’s dogged the franchise since T2 set the bar so impossibly high more than 30 years ago. It’s a worthy effort, but the results, even with Arnold Schwarzenegger’s presence and charisma powering them, don’t even come close.
In the seemingly-inescapable apocalyptic future where humans fight to reclaim their world from the technological tyrant they themselves created, Skynet, legendary human resistance leader John Connor (Jason Clarke, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes) leads what he hopes will be the final push to end Skynet once and for all, his loyal lieutenant Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) at his side. They arrive at a secret installation where John knows Skynet holds its final doomsday option in case its existence is compromised by humanity: a temporal displacement device (“time machine” in geek speak) meant to send one of its hulking, nearly unstoppable human infiltration units — Terminators — back in time to kill Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke, HBO’s “Game of Thrones”), John’s mother, before John can even be born.
Of course, they arrive too late, and though Skynet seemingly lies in ruins in the future, the past is in danger of being terminated. Reese volunteers to follow the Terminator back into the past to protect Sarah, just as he is supposed to, but when he arrives in 1984 ready to protect a helpless Sarah, he finds instead a situation far different than what John had led him to expect. Immediately he finds himself under attack by a model of Terminator he’s never seen before, one seemingly composed of liquid metal (Byung-hun Lee, playing one of the T-1000 models made infamous by Robert Patrick in T2), as well as being rescued by none other than the person he came expecting to save, Sarah Connor.
As a very confused Reese learns, not only is Sarah far from helpless in the face of the Terminator threat, she’s battle-trained, fully aware of how the future will play out and her role in the birth of the resistance, and being protected by an aging T-800 model Terminator she’s dubbed “Pops”(Schwarzenegger). He also learns that the timeline he knew, the one John told him about over their years together in the resistance, was wiped out when Skynet sent a different Terminator after Sarah at age 9, and someone else — not John — sent “Pops” back to save her and keep her alive in order for her to fulfill her destiny.
Still confused? Sorry, but things don’t get any easier to follow from there, as the trio are forced to come up with a new plan involving more time travel to avert Judgement Day coming at a different time and in a different form thanks to the alternate timeline, and find themselves against yet another new and even deadlier model of Terminator wearing a horrifyingly familiar face. (If you’ve seen the trailer for the film, you already know whose face it is, but just in case you don’t know yet, you’re not going to find out about it here. Sorry.)
If Terminator Genisys is proof of anything at all, it’s that the heart and soul of these movies is entirely bound and beholden to the big Austrian guy playing the supposedly-heartless robotic killing machine. Just about all of this new film’s most entertaining moments, both action and dialogue-driven, involve Schwarzenegger, and admittedly much of the little humor there is in the film revolves around Schwarzenegger’s T-800 model — the “Guardian”, as he’s billed in the credits — coming face to face in various ways with his age. No doubt, the most memorable of those confrontations is the most literal one, where he battles another T-800 wearing his face as it was in 1984 thanks to quite possibly the best job of CGI facial duplication we’ve seen yet in this series. (Schwarzenegger’s 1984 face was also duplicated via CGI in 2009’s Terminator Salvation, but it didn’t look anywhere as authentic as it does here.)
Unfortunately, Schwarzenegger is just about all that’s right about the casting of this film. Emilia Clarke, taking on the role made iconic by Linda Hamilton in the first two films and also once played by her “Game of Thrones” cast mate Lena Headey in the TV series “Terminator: the Sarah Connor Chronicles”, simply is never convincing as a Sarah Connor forged from childhood to be a fighter and the mother of a revolutionary. It’s not entirely her fault that this version of Sarah doesn’t work — the character’s story arc is woefully lacking in any subtlety or nuance — but also Clarke simply lacks the presence that even a young Linda Hamilton playing the original Sarah seemed to exude. Similarly, Jai Courtney lacks the piercing intensity of Michael Biehn, and he never really has any chemistry at all with Clarke. The film’s other “Clarke”, Jason, picking up a role last brought to life rather lifelessly by Christian Bale, brings a certain likability and believable charisma to John Connor that’s necessary in order to make the film’s second half really hit home, and thus is a second bright spot in terms of casting. But any positive effect of his presence is essentially muted by the fact that the film’s leading couple simply do not click.
Terminator Genisys is also sorely lacking compared to earlier Terminator entries in terms of scale and visual impact. That’s not to say that the special effects, chases, and fights aren’t impressive or entertaining to watch — they are, in their own limited, repetitive way. But if there’s one thing James Cameron can do that few other major Hollywood directing talents can do consistently well, it’s conceptualize and execute large-scale sci-fi action in a way that leaves audiences breathless and agape, and arguably he was near the height of his powers with T2. Following in his footsteps and consciously aping Cameron at all times in this film is director Alan Taylor (Thor: The Dark World), and though the story throws new dangers and new Terminators with abilities unrivaled by what’s come before, there’s nothing in what Taylor delivers that feels new, dynamic or groundbreaking in any way. The early action with the T-1000? Ho-hum, seen it before. New model Terminator taking the Arnie-model apart piece by piece while it stoically finds creative ways to fight back? Seen that in two previous iterations now, so nothing new there, either.
Maybe in a stand-alone science fiction action vehicle or even a different film series what Taylor does deliver might be enough. But not here, not with a franchise that’s reached the heights that Terminator has thanks in part to the vision of a director considered to be among the most talented of his generation. Terminator and Terminator fans simply deserve better, because the bar was set that high.
Again, its important to reiterate that Terminator Genisys does represent a rebound from the depths of mediocrity that the series reached with Salvation, and the film’s structure leaves little doubt that more sequels are coming. Perhaps in one of those upcoming iterations the heights that the franchise once reached will be reached again, or even surpassed. Anything is possible — after all, if these film’s have preached anything, it’s that the future is not set.
Terminator Genisys
Starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jason Clarke, Emilia Clarke, Jai Courtney, J.K. Simmons, Matthew Smith, and Byung-hun Lee. Directed by Alan Taylor.
Running Time: 125 minutes
Rated PG – 13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and gunplay throughout, partial nudity and brief strong language.
Kelly Knievel spoke with Matthew Sardo about the documentary I AM EVEL KNIEVEL and what his father’s legacy looks like today.
Knievel discusses the chances of another American Icon rising up in today’s 24/7 media circus, and he updates the prospects of a feature film about his father. At the end of the interview Knievel gives us a special moment when he explains how he would like the public to remember his father.
I AM EVEL KNIEVEL
A Star Studded Cast Pays Tribute to the World’s Original Daredevil and Fearless Entertainer in a Feature Documentary Coming this June to Digital Platforms, Blu-Ray, and DVD From Virgil Films
“All my life people have been waiting around to watch me die.” – Evel Knievel
Evel Knievel is a name you can’t forget. And the new film I AM EVEL KNIEVEL, coming to Digital platforms, Blu-Ray and DVD on June 30, 2015, from Virgil Films, reveals the story behind the man you can’t forget.
Evel Knievel’s rise to superstardom was built on nerves of steel and the ability to get up and do it again no matter the severity of the fall. He lived life like every day was his last, which led to a tumultuous life filled with stunts no man would ever dream of, encompassing meteoric success, wild hubris, egomaniacal mistakes, and ultimately redemption. Sporting flashy leather jumpsuits and a determined grin in the face of death, Knievel became a national hero whose outrageous feats were broadcast on live TV. “My father was truly an awe inspiring character and an original in every sense of the word, and his legacy has grown even more amazing over the years”, states Kelly Knievel, “There was a reason my dad so captured the imagination of the world. This film captures the man’s character, determination, successes and failures.”
I AM EVEL KNIEVEL is the untold story of this legendary figure who gave birth to the culture and the meaning of the word “extreme”. The film also showcases Knievel’s rise from a small town rebel in Butte, Montana, to a cultural icon. The enduring legacy of Evel Knievel is his unforgettable death-defying jumps. The film – from producer-director Derik Murray (I Am Chris Farley, I Am Steve McQueen, I Am Bruce Lee), and writer-executive producer Paul Gertz (I Am Chris Farley, Johnny Cash: American Rebel) – features footage of Knievel’s greatest jumps, including his first major attempt, over the fountains at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, the Snake River Canyon jump in Idaho and London’s Wembley Stadium jump.
A cast featuring those who knew him best and were inspired to achieve greatness of their own, including Matthew McConaughey, Kid Rock, Michelle Rodriguez, Guy Fieri, Robbie Maddison, daredevils Spanky Spangler and Mike Vallely, Willie G. Davidson of Harley-Davidson, funnyman Bob Einstein (known as Super Dave Osborne), Chris and J.C. Agajanian, and family members including sons Kelly and Robbie, and former wives Linda Knievel and Krystal Kennedy-Knievel.
“Evel Knievel didn’t have a death wish.
He had a life wish, man.”-Matthew McConaughey pic.twitter.com/pGGtSLbSFK
The first teaser trailer for Oliver Stone’s Snowden has been released. While there is no footage, there is plenty of exposition about the infamous whistleblower, played here by Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
Here is the Snowden teaser:
Here is the official synopsis:
“Snowden stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt and is written and directed by acclaimed filmmaker Oliver Stone. The script is based on the books The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Wanted Man by Luke Harding and Time of the Octopus by Anatoly Kucherena.”
Aside from Gordon-Levitt in the title role, Snowden also stars Nicolas Cage in a rare non-batshit-crazy role, Melissa Leo, Zachary Quinto, Tom Wilkinson, Shailene Woodley, and Rhys Ifans. Naturally, Stone was able to cobble together an impressive cast for the film, we’ll see how the final result works.
One of my favorite films last year was The Guest, by the creators of You’re Next (2011), Adam Wingard and Simon Barrett. Admittedly, I’ve never seen one episode of Downton Abbey, so Dan Stevens was a revelation for me after watching his brilliantly creepy performance. Another highlight of The Guest, apart from the atmosphere and the soundtrack, was Maika Monroe’s performance. She’s a 22 year-old Santa Barbara native, kite surfer turned actress and fairly new to the industry. Her big screen debut was with At Any Price, opposite Zac Efron and Dennis Quaid, only three years ago. Monroe went on to work with some other big names in Hollywood, under the direction of Sophia Coppola in The Bling Ring (2013) and Jason Reitman in Labor Day (2013).
Earlier this year, It Follows wowed audiences around the world. Since it began screening in film festivals I heard rumors about how great and scary this horror flick was. Needless to say, the fact that Maika Monroe was in it sold it for me instantly. Now, the film is not flawless, especially because of its third act, but Monroe is. She has something so refreshing about her that makes the characters she plays extra interesting and convincing.
So if you haven’t seen any of those films, do yourself a favor and go watch them. After that, be prepared to see much more of this woman, because it seems like she’s here to stay, and I love that.
In her filmography schedule for the next couple of years we find: Bokeh, a scifi drama which I’m very excited about; The Tribes of Palos Verdes, with Jennifer Gardner, still in pre-production; The 5th Wave, based on a novel by Rick Yancey and including Chloë Grace Moretz, Liev Schreiber and Maria Bello in the cast.
But the one fact that has brought Maika Monroe’s name up in movie news outlets has been her involvement in the upcoming Independence Day sequel, recently revealed to be titled Resurgence. Maika has been cast as the daughter of the President of the United States, Patricia Whitmore, who was portrayed by Mae Whitman in the original 1996 film. Some of the cast, including Bill Pullman and Jeff Goldblum, reunited last June 23rd and were joined by newcomers Liam Hemsworth and Maika Monroe herself for a Q&A event to announce the release date: Summer of 2016. Look out for our review by then.
I don’t know about you, but I am actually excited to see what’s coming next for this young, ambitious and talented actress, seeing how I’ve loved her in everything she’s worked on so far.
We’re still not where we need to be with The Brink: there’s a whole storyline that’s pretty painful to watch, easy and hacky shit/piss/puke jokes run amok and water torture is played for a laugh… maybe? Still, The Brink is definitely taking some steps to move away from the brink this week–hey, that’s a fresh joke, I bet–with a better understanding of its main characters and more interest in being legitimately clever in the face of all its junior high-level potty humor.
This weeks The Brink sees our crew taking up where they left off in the arguably tense final moments of last week. Larson (Tim Robbins) and the rest of the President’s cabinet, argue over whether to attack Pakistan, Talbot (Frank Black) turns himself over to an angry militia while Rafiq (Aasif Mandvi) attempts to rescue him, and Zeke (Pablo Schreiber) and his co-pilot count down the minutes until they unload an unholy payload on the city of Islamabad. Things get zanier from there.
Did I mention that those last two–the pilots that is–are tripping on Zeke’s own pain medication, a dosage that is far too potent for Zeke’s co-pilot, Glenn? In fact, it’s this storyline that does this week’s The Brink the most damage. Playing a similar role as the classic Slim Pickens part–Major T.J. “King” Kong in Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove–Zeke and Glenn are largely at the whim of their superiors, their fingers on the trigger nevertheless. Here though, they’re also at the whim of this bad mixture of medications that have at least left Glenn–the one helming the missiles, of course–completely out of it and actively dangerous, covering the fighter plane in vomit and firing off a missile after trying to wipe down his own mess. While this moment of “vomit for vomit’s sake” certainly up’s the ante from Slim Pickens’ earlier depiction of a good ol’ boy out of his element, Zeke and Glenn’s many moments leading up to their anticipated attack, do nothing more than point out how frustratingly awful these two guys are. Where Major Kong’s actions grew out of an endearing naiveté and a strong willingness to follow his orders until the very end, Zeke and Glenn are just idiots. Loud, pill popping, pill puking idiots. Sure, they serve the plot, but each time they show up on screen, it’s groan-inducing.
Luckily, in contrast, Jack Black and Tim Robbins have rebounded from last week’s premiere, showcasing some actual character moments here and there in this second outing, and thus getting a chance to utilize some of their considerable acting chops. Talbot proves in form that his role as cowardly no-life is still up in the air, after he commits a few noble acts for the people he already screwed over. Sure, he’s still quick to get himself out of hairy situations any way he can, but it at least seems to be outside of ruining other people’s lives. Larson meanwhile, has a conversation with his wife that shows a different side of him; one that has respect for a woman other than his assistant, mainly due to his and his wife’s shared debauchery and interest in getting ahead in politics. When she proves to do as much manizing as he womanizing, we’re left with a relationship far more interesting than the classic “politician who cheats on his wife” scenario. We also get some male nudity, which I give The Brink credit for in contrast to its consistent objectification of women. On The Brink, all sexes are objectified! Meanwhile, this week’s The Brink finds its sideline characters getting less play, with Rafiq starting off slowly on his own journey to save Talbot whilst his family disappears after the first five minutes. Larson’s assistant, Kendra, gets some nice scenes bouncing off of her boss, but it’d still be nice to see the supporting cast get a little more screen time.
The Brink is definitely heading in the right direction–especially since the more ridiculous pilot scenes should be in the rearview–but it’s nowhere near above water. The writer’s room will need to up its ability to satirize the ridiculousness of foreign policy and U.S. officials, rather than relying on two idiot pilots vomiting all over a camera broadcasting directly into the Situation Room. It’s something we haven’t seen before, sure, but clever, calculated and biting it isn’t.
Brief images and small tidbits of information are now steadily dropping in regards to Paul Feig’s Ghostbusters all-female reboot. Yesterday, Feig tweeted a photo of the ladies’ new uniforms:
These proton packs are much less streamlined than the original films, indicating this new team might be working with a little less in the technology department. We’ll see. Aside from the new Ghostbusters team of Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon, Leslie Jones, Feig’s remake stars Chris Hemsworth as the team’s secretary.
Julia Robert, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Nicole Kidman star in The Secret in Their Eyes, an English-language remake of Juan José Campanella‘s 2009 thriller. The Argentine film won the Academy Award that year for Best Foreign Language Film, and now has a rather intriguing American adaptation.
Here is the trailer for The Secret in Their Eyes:
Here is the official synopsis:
“A tight-knit team of rising FBI investigators – Ray (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and Jess (Julia Roberts), along with their District Attorney supervisor Claire (Nicole Kidman) – is suddenly torn apart when they discover that Jess’s teenage daughter has been brutally and inexplicably murdered.
Now, thirteen years later, after obsessively searching every day for the elusive killer, Ray finally uncovers a new lead that he’s certain can permanently resolve the case, nail the vicious murderer, and bring long-desired closure to his team. No one is prepared, however, for the shocking, unspeakable secret that will reveal the enduring, destructive effects of personal vengeance on the human soul.
Interweaving past and present, this deeply layered mystery explores the murky boundaries between justice and revenge, and asks the question: how far would you go to right an unfathomable wrong?”
The film is directed by Shattered Glass filmmaker Billy Ray, who has traversed this avenue before in the superior and underrated film, Breach. Along with Roberts – who it is nice to see in something different from her familiar territory – Ejiofor, and Kidman, The Secret in Their Eyes also stars Breaking Bad‘s Dean Norris.