According to a source that spoke with Vigilantist, Netflix has started to plan out “Phase 2” of the Marvel TV Universe and the first series they want to work on is Frank Castle (The Punisher).
You don’t need a source to know this makes sense. I’m sure Marvel and Netflix probably talked about having the Punisher in “Phase 1” as well. Castle would fit right in with the style of season one of Daredevil. Would you like to see Thomas Jane or Ray Stevenson reprise the role?
Scarlett Johansson was on the Ellen Show promoting Avengers: Age of Ultron when Chris Evans scares the crap out of her. Ellen sets up the prank beautifully as Johansson is describing what a close relationship her and Evans have.
Make sure to look at Ellen’s expression in the above photo.
Rob Liefeld held a live broadcast on Periscope Thursday morning to announce that he will finish and unpublished X-Force story that was drawn by Herb Trimpe.
Trimpe passed away on April 13, 2015. He is best known for drawing the first Wolverine in Incredible Hulk and the first issue of ‘G.I.Joe A Real American Hero.’
Liefeld mentioned that he would finish the original pages and then Herb’s wife and agent would auction the pages off and all proceeds would go to a charity in Herb Trimpe’s name. There is no agreement at this time for Marvel Comics to publish the unfinished project. Liefeld stated that more details would become available as the project is completed.
It is with heavy heart that I mourn the loss of the great Herb Trimpe. A childhood idol of mine, it… https://t.co/BMB9ca1QaO
We are just at the beginning of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Phase 1. And we’ve had ten films in this first phase, leading up to Avengers: Age Of Ultron. While there is no denying the cultural stamp the Marvel films have put on modern popular culture, and the films are widely celebrated, they can’t all be winners.
From the original Iron Man to Captain America: The Winter Soldier, let us (or, me I suppose) rank the films of the MCU as we ramp up to the Avengers assembling once more…
10) Thor: The Dark World – This second Thor film is easily the most overlooked and forgotten film of the MCU. Released in November, which was a weird choice in and of itself, The Dark World builds certain aspects of the Universe in order to push the story along, but the dramatic thrust and general fun of the original film is lacking here.
9) The Incredible Hulk – Poor Hulk, he just can’t seem to get a stand alone film right, even though fans now have their true Bruce Banner in Mark Ruffalo and are clamoring for another shot. This early entry into the MCU, starring Edward Norton as the tortured Doctor, was a fanboy improvement on the too cerebral and too Shrek-like Ang Lee version in 2003. But still, something is missing for this character to truly be able to carry a film on its own. Now that the technology has made the tricky look of green goliath something of a reality, perhaps it is time for Marvel to take another chance. They just need those rights back from Universal.
8) Iron Man 2 – This one sits at number eight not because it is a poor entry, but it isn’t quite as good as what’s left. Iron Man 2 had some strong points, but they were glossed over too quickly in order to set up the Universe. The battle between Stark and Whiplash (Mickey Rourke) on the racetrack is thrilling, but it is here and gone much too quickly. The enjoyable plot points are shoved aside for set up, and it makes the film as a whole feel more like a chore than a film.
7) Captain America: The First Avenger – Chris Evans is spot on as Steve Rogers, the first superhero who is frozen in time. The opening half of Captain America is a wonderful adventure in the vein of Indiana Jones films, and The Red Skull is a fantastic adversary here. However, the second half of the film feels like nothing more than set up, much like Iron Man 2.
6) Thor – Thor’s mythical background makes him the trickiest of the Avengers, but director Kenneth Branagh did just about everything right here. Chris Hemsworth is cocky and strong as the title character, and the film itself is lean and to the point. Nothing about the story feels like it is purely setup, despite the fact Loki, one of the most important villains in the MCU, is introduced.
5) Iron Man 3 – This Iron Man story is almost completely devoid of the MCU. Directed by Shane Black, Iron Man 3 has merely passing mentions of The Avengers from the year before, and it goes off the reservation with Tony Stark getting lost in Tennessee and the plot involving simple, intimate revenge. Iron Man 3 goes rogue and the result is a breath of fresh air.
4) Captain America: The Winter Soldier – Finally, the setup and the personal aspects of a story come together in this Captain America sequel. Everything about The Winter Soldier is setting pieces in place for the next Avengers and Phase 2, but at the same time the action and adventure in the film itself is thrilling. We are introduced to Falcon (Anthony Mackie) and, of course, The Winter Soldier (Sbastian Stan), one of the cooler adversaries in the MCU thus far.
3) Iron Man – The 2008 original, the birthplace of this new MCU, is still one of the best entries in the Universe thanks to the absolute perfect match of Robert Downey Jr.’s sarcasm and the cocky nature of Tony Stark. The original Iron Man was a perfect origin story for arguably the most popular character this side of the not-so-jolly green giant.
2) Guardians of The Galaxy – Many may consider this to be the outlier in the MCU, but it ties in quite well with the story even though it may never fully cross over. Chris Pratt’s inching pad for his new stardom as, ironically enough, Star Lord, is as funny and fully realized as it is exciting and refreshing.
1) The Avengers – Joss Whedon has a tough task with these films, and he may never get it quite as right as he did with the original Avengers. With a wide array of superheroes large enough to carry their own set of films, The Avengers fought an uphill task of giving them all something to do, and it won. The battle of New York is head and shoulders above the rest of the action set pieces thus far in the MCU, and the introduction of – finally – a perfect Incredible Hulk put this film over the top.
Avengers: Age Of Ultron, opens for U.S. audiences tonight. How would you rank the MCU films thus far?
To defend against a major alien invasion, SHIELD Director Nick Fury must secure permission from the World Security Council to assemble Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. The only thing standing in his way are all the bugs, glitches and technical difficulties that come with any teleconference…
A spoof of Marvel’s The Avengers and Age of Ultron.
Director/Editor/VFX: Joe Nicolosi
Producer: Stephanie Noone
Director of Photography: Jason Harter
Assistant Camera: Nick Longoria
Gaffer: Cody Hawkins
Location Sound: Paul Toohey
Stylist and SFX Make-Up: April Swartz
Sound Mix: Eric Friend
Nick Fury: Avery W. Hite
Councilman McKinney: Gerald Brodin
Maria Hill: Chelsea Bunn
Councilman Uribe: Danu Uribe
Councilman Whitaker: Asaf Ronen
Councilman Whitaker’s Son: Joaquin Christian
Councilman Chu: Joseph Tran
Did you really need Monkeys Fighting Robots to explain this video to you? No, I thought not, but if you want the back story; Ryan Adams performed at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on Tuesday and out off nowhere started playing Bryan Adams’ 1984 hit ‘Summer of ’69.’
Avengers: Age of Ultron doesn’t disappoint. In fact, it delivers just about everything a fan of Marvel Studios’ Cinematic Universe could hope for in a big screen depiction of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes taking on one of their most implacable foes: Epic set pieces, clever banter laden with references to the previous films and Marvel canon, lots of appearances by supporting players from the series, and memorable performances from every member of the ensemble, especially the newcomers. And while this latest entry isn’t quite the game changer for Marvel’s entire line of films and TV series that perhaps Captain America: The Winter Soldier was last year, it certainly proves to be more than just any other mission for the Avengers themselves, as by the end the group is fundamentally changed and set in a new, bold direction.
The film opens with a James Bond-style pre-credits sequence featuring the team — Iron Man/Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.), Captain America/Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson), Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner), and the Hulk/Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo) — attempting to wrap up one final loose end from the battle that initially brought them together. Their target is the scepter wielded by Thor’s half-brother Loki during that battle in the skies and streets of New York, the one he used to control the minds of S.H.I.E.L.D. agents and friends of the group in order to open a portal to another dimension and let in a whole army of nasties from outer space. In the course of the mission, they meet for the first time two people who’ve been given powers thanks to the energies of the scepter, the Maximoff twins — super-speedster Pietro (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and telepathic/telekinetic Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) — who have reasons to hate Tony Stark that go back to his less-than-charitable days as a weapons manufacturer.
Despite the twins’ interference, the Avengers complete the mission, head home scepter in hand to their swanky tower headquarters in NYC, and prepare to celebrate bringing the case at last to a close. But unbeknownst to the heroes, Stark’s encounter with Wanda and her abilities, along with what he discovers while studying the scepter, sets him on a course to accomplish something far greater than anything the team has done since they’ve come together, and make the world safer than they could ever do themselves. He enlists a somewhat reluctant Banner in helping him utilize his findings to jumpstart a project the two had been working on for some time, an artificial intelligence they call “Ultron”, that would eventually supplant the Avengers as the ultimate force for peace on Earth. “I see a suit of armor around the world,” Stark says, fully certain (as he always is) that his is the best possible solution to protecting everyone from whatever threat that may appear in the future.
As it turns out, Ultron itself (played via motion capture by James Spader) is that next threat. Fully self-aware, connected electronically to Stark’s army of mechanized armor drones, the Iron Legion, and convinced that the only path to peace on Earth is through humanity’s extinction and its own evolution, Ultron sees the Avengers as the only ones who can possibly stop its plans. It almost succeeds in wiping them out during their first encounter, and soon it has allies in the Maximoffs, who throw their lot in with the machine hoping for another shot at Stark and his friends. On the defensive and on the run, Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, now questioning just how much they can trust Stark and, to a lesser extent, even each other, must figure out what Ultron’s true endgame is and how to stop it, as well as finding a way to overcome the personal demons stirred up by their encounters with the Maximoffs and the doubts created about one another thanks to Stark’s actions.
As massive a challenge as it must have been the first time around for writer/director Joss Whedon to bring together so many moving parts, so many personalities, egos, and backstories to create the first Avengers film, this time it must have been even larger, considering that this time there are even higher expectations due to the first film’s record-breaking success. Whedon’s response to this challenge was apparently to craft an entirely different kind of film, one whose resemblance to 2012’s The Avengers pretty much starts and stops with the list of top billed cast. While the first film kept much of its action located to a small number of settings, Avengers: Age of Ultron takes its heroes all over the globe, placing its elaborately-staged set pieces against the backdrop of snow-covered forests, mountain fortresses, crowded cities and, of course, the skies above them.
The depictions of the characters, and just how they interact with one another, are different in this film, too. In Age of Ultron, for as much time spent as there is watching all the fighting and stunts going on, there’s almost equal time spent watching the team just be a de facto family. The ensemble is allowed to be far more human this time out than they were in the first film, bonding and bantering with each other, exploring relationships that get closer and take surprising turns, coming into conflict with one another in ways that they never expected. So much of the film’s fun comes from these moments, and it provides these wonderfully talented performers opportunities to do more than just punch out lots and lots of bad guys.
Arguably, including all those moments of levity and character drama contribute to some minor pacing issues, particularly in the film’s first act. Also, just as in the first film, with an ensemble this large, it’s inevitable that one or more characters doesn’t get as much to do or as many opportunities to shine on screen as they probably should. In the first Avengers film, that character was Jeremy Renner’s Hawkeye; this time out, it’s the twins, Pietro and Wanda. No doubt folks who pick up the movie in its inevitable home video release will find lots of their non-action character moments in the “deleted scenes” extras and think, “Oh, that should’ve been in the film!” Perhaps, but then the movie might have stretched closer to three hours, which is something Marvel has been careful to avoid with all of their films so far.
That’s not to say that what we do get from the new cast additions doesn’t all register or measure up to what the returning Avengers bring to the proceedings. Spader is just as good as one might expect as the twisted machine intelligence Ultron, and Taylor-Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen hold their own in their scenes, but of all the new additions, the one who perhaps registers strongest is one who has been there all along, only never as more than a voice. Paul Bettany is a wonderful addition to this cast, bringing to life the android Avenger Vision — it’s an elegant and fitting evolution for the part in the Avengers saga that Bettany has been playing up to this point, providing the voice of Stark’s megacomputer JARVIS since the first Iron Man film. Now, Bettany gets to be physically part of the action, and the fact that the strong, memorable presence he and Joss Whedon are able to establish with Vision, a character many fanboys and girls might have argued before this would be well nigh impossible to translate from the comics page to the big screen, is yet another testament to just how good Whedon is with this sort of material.
But all that said, if you were worried at all that Avengers: Age of Ultron might finally be the overhyped, overproduced, and ultimately disappointing film that the Marvel Cinematic Universe seems more and more due to have with each successive unprecedented success, or if you were worried that all those preview clips the Marvel and Disney people have been releasing on YouTube over the past few weeks to build up the fan frenzy gave away all the good parts, you can finally put all those worries aside, because they’re all for naught. Once again, Whedon and his Marvel-ous cast and crew have delivered the ultimate summer blockbuster, one that no doubt you’ll want to see more than once before it departs theaters.
Avengers: Age of Ultron
Starring Robert Downey Jr, Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Don Cheadle, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Cobie Smulders, Anthony Mackie, Hayley Atwell, Idris Elba, Stellan Skarsgård, with James Spader and Samuel L. Jackson. Directed by Joss Whedon.
Running Time: 141 minutes
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action, violence and destruction, and for some suggestive comments.
Vin Diesel hasn’t done much in recent years outside of reprising his role as Dom in the Fast and the Furious films. And why would he? Those things print money hand over fist. There was the voice of Groot in Guardians of The Galaxy, but it seems like its been forever since he starred in a feature role in something not involving insane car stunts.
Now here is Diesel, fighting off witches and the occult in The Last Witch Hunter, which looks like an amalgamation of about a dozen other movies.
Here is the first teaser trailer for The Last Witch Hunter:
I’m not sure what direction The Last Witch Hunter is headed regarding rating, audience, demographic, etc. But that trailer did have an MTV logo attached to it, so it might be safe to assume this will be a watered-down PG-13 film looking for a franchise.
Aside from Vin Diesel, The Last Witch Hunter stars Elijah Wood and Michael Caine – who is working hard for those paychecks – along with a cavalcade of young talent. The film hits theaters October 23.
What are your thoughts on this attempt to get Vin Diesel into another franchise?
Award-winning publisher BOOM! Studios is pleased to announce the June debut of Broken World, a new sci-fi thriller and survival adventure series from Frank J. Barbiere (Five Ghosts, Avengers World) and Christopher Peterson (Grindhouse, Mayday). Broken World explores the lives of people left behind on the last days of Earth, perfect for fans of Y: The Last Man or The Massive.
“It’s hard not to fall in love with a well-crafted survival story,” said BOOM! Studios Editor-in-Chief Matt Gagnon. “From zombie viruses to post-apocalyptic wastelands, we all love to cheer for the last survivors. For BROKEN WORLD, Frank and Christopher have created an intense, riveting story about a woman who chooses to live on in a world facing an extinction-level event from the stars.”
With a meteor days away from causing an extinction-level event on Earth, time is running out for Elena Marlowe. While most of the planet’s population and her family were approved by the government to escape on one of the giant spaceships headed to another planet, her application was denied due to her mysterious past. With the meteor fast approaching, Elena tries desperately to find a way to fake her way onto the last ship or else be left behind to die with the rest of Earth’s rejected denizens.
Matthew Sardo of Monkeys Fighting Robots has an in-depth conversation with New York Times bestselling artist Mike Perkins of Marvel Comics. The two discuss the state of the comic book industry, the convention scene, diversity in the industry, and Free Comic Book Day.
Mike will be at Heroes Haven Comics in Tampa for 10am – noon this Saturday for Free Comic Book Day.
Bonus: ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ review – a bit darker with a few more surprises.
About Mike Perkins: Mike Perkins believes that he first picked up a comic at the age of two – swiftly followed by a pencil and a piece of paper. There are vivid memories of illustrating a striking full-figure resemblance of the Lone Ranger in nursery class – which must place him at, about, four years old.
Jump ahead eight years and the young Mike Perkins is making his own anthology comics (FutureTense, Warp 10), photocopying them and selling them at school during lunchtime – with a cunningly attached fun-size Mars bar offered as further incentive to the hungry hordes.
Fast forward another three years and, having been nurtured on a steady diet of 2000AD, Captain Britain and Doctor Who monthly, Mike Perkins – now working a Saturday job in a local comic shop – is not only exposed to a wider world of comics but also to the professional side of the industry when attending comic markets around England.
Monkeys Fighting Robots holds two weekly podcasts, the Movie Show and the Comics Show. The Comic Show goes live Wednesday with the Movie Show going live on Friday (holidays could change scheduling).
If you are looking to sponsor either podcasts email matt@popaxiom.com as well.
Thank you for listening!
About the Movie Show:
A Gen Xer and a Millennial debate the latest topics in pop culture. One guy is a filmmaker and the other is a journalist, but both are nerds. We make your slowest days at work better. Hosts, Matthew Sardo and EJ Moreno.
Never heard of Matt Sardo? For starters, he made the Kessel Run in less than 11 parsecs. Prior to that, he gave Doc Brown the idea for the flux capacitor and led the Resistance to victory over SkyNet – all while sipping a finely crafted IPA. As a radio host, he’s interviewed celebrities, athletes and everyone in between. He’s covered everything from the Super Bowl to Comic-Con.
Who’s EJ Moreno? Is he a trained physician? No. Is he a former Miss Universe contestant? Possibly. But what we know for sure is he’s a writer, filmmaker, and pop culture enthusiast. Since film school, EJ has written & directed several short films. He’s used his passion of filmmaking to become a movie critic for MonkeysFightingRobots.com.