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‘Rick and Morty’ Ranking Season 3, From Worst To Best

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The third season of Rick and Morty has come to an end. Fans waited for two years for this season, and they were pleased (except for a vocal minority). However, the quality of the episodes in the third season ranged from tremendous and inventive to merely good. Now fans properly have another long wait for the fourth seasons so to tide us over let us look at the third season episodes from worst to best (the term worst being used in the loosest way possible).

10. Vindicators 3: The Return of Worldender

Kicking off this list is the fourth episode of the season “Vindicators 3: The Return of Worldender”. Even the showrunner Dan Harmon thinks it’s the worst Rick and Morty episode. While it is a funny episode, it paled in comparison to the rest of the series and did not quite live up to its potential. It had a great premise that could have allowed for a parodying the superhero genre, particularly The Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy and the Justice League yet does not make full use of the material and the use of ultra-violence and scatological humor was more akin to South Park than Rick and Morty. The episode is not without its charms: blackout drunk Rick (or as I like to call him Shitfaced Rick) was hilarious, there is a parody of the series’ emotional moments and references that Morty can pick one in every ten adventures.

9. Rest and Ricklaxation

“Rest and Ricklaxation” had two great elements – the opening that parodied Star Wars which showed Rick and Morty and the creation of Toxic Rick, a foul-mouth, unfiltered version of Rick who has all of Rick’s negative aspects. However, it was the stuff involving the Healthy versions of Rick and Morty that was lacking, particularly the Healthy Morty who came off as self-absorbed douche. Some of the highlights of the episode were when Healthy Rick and Toxic Rick were having a destructive fight in the Smith house and when Toxic Rick was able to turn the world toxic – allowing for some hilarious social commentary.

8. The ABC’s of Beth

“The ABC’s of Beth” marks the first time Beth goes on an adventure with her father and the strength episode was exploring the relationship between father and daughter. Beth has rarely been used as a character in the series and Sarah Chalke underutilized as a voice actress. “The ABC’s of Beth” is the emotional episode of series and mixes it with the show’s nihilistic themes – offering the closest the series has come to the “Nobody exists on purpose” scene. The episode also shows off the series ability to cross bright, colorful visuals and an ancient cannibal incest cult. The pink sentient switchblade was a great one-off character, but Jerry showed how low he could go as an individual.

7. Morty’s Mind Blowers

Instead of Interdimensional Cable this season Rick and Morty made “Morty’s Mind Blowers,” or as Rick described it as a ‘clip show based on clips, you haven’t seen before’ as the duo look at some of Morty’s erased memories. The framing device was nothing to write home about, – yet there was a funny joke when Rick and Morty accidentally erase their own memories. The meat of the episode was Morty’s memories which were mini-stories, and that made it better than the random skits that make up the Interdimensional Cable episodes. The episode was able to mix the series’ love for movie parodies, and existentialism and some of the best memories of the episode were the Contact parody and Morty finding out who runs the world.

6. The Rickchurian Mortydate

“The Rickchurian Mortydate” was a hilarious episode in its own right, but as the season finale, it underwhelms. “The Rickchurian Mortydate” sees the famous duo enter into a feud with The President of the United States after Rick and Morty refused to follow his orders. To leads to what Rick does best and puts all his efforts into one-upping the president, including securing peace in the Middle East and making contact with a mini-race in the Amazon Rainforest. The episode has one of the best fights in the show’s history, and Keith David gives a funny performance as he trades insults with Rick and Morty. However, the episode tries to wrap up the season’s storylines too quickly as Beth and Jerry rekindle their relationship and shoehorn in Rick’s nihilistic beliefs.

5. Rickmancing the Stone

“Rickmancing the Stone” was the obvious movie parody in the third season – being a riff of the Mad Max films. This episode saw Rick, Morty and Summer go to a post-apocalyptic world as the Smith family struggle with Beth and Jerry’s divorce with Summer being the most hard-hitting. The episode has been criticized a vocal minority because shock-horror it developed a female character and some even declared it feminist propaganda. These viewpoints can be ignored because “Rickmancing the Stone” was an entertaining episode showing Summer’s dark side, had a surprising emotional subplot involving Morty and his genetically enhanced arm and played on the show’s existentialist themes with Robot Morty.

4. Pickle Rick

When the promotional material featured Pickle Rick fans quickly became enamored by him: he even appeared on T-Shirts before the episode was broadcast. “Pickle Rick” did not quite live up to the expectations but it was entertaining and a more grounded episode (by Rick and Morty standards). Rick is tested to his limit when he transforms himself as a pickle and gets washed into the sewers to avoid going to family therapy and ends up battling an embassy full of Eastern European secret agents. It surprisingly turned into a parody of films like Taken and John Wick and one scene has even been edited by a fan into a quick Duracell commercial. The episode also continues and odd tread in Rick and Morty of having jokes about coprophagy.

3. The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy

“The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy” is a first in Rick and Morty‘s history: it was a Rick and Jerry adventure. Starring with Rick pulling a naked depressed Jerry out of bed to go to outer space the extent of the Rick and Jerry relationship and even develop a grudging respect for each other. They were plenty of dark jokes, some surreal imaginary, and there were scenes that will launch a thousand slash-fics. The episode also shows more of what makes Beth tick, sharing her father’s arrogance and stubbornness as well proving that Morty is smarter than people think. Morty even shows off his dark side when confronting Ethan after the senior upset Summer.

2. The Ricklantis Mixup

“The Ricklantis Mixup” is the most unique episode in Rick and Morty‘s run showing alternative versions of the titular character in the Citadel. This episode was the equivalent of The Simpsons episode “22 Short Films About Springfield” – made up of a collection of loosely connected stories. This included four Mortys trying to find a fabled wishing portal, a rookie Rick cop partnering with a corrupt Morty cop, and a showing of a Morty having a surprise run to become the President. It was an episode filled with movie parody big and small, from Stand by Me to Training Day to Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and it was filled with political and social commentary. It was one of the most ambitious and intelligent episodes in the series and adds to the long-running story of the show.

1. The Rickshank Rickdemption

Topping this list is the first episode of the season “The Rickshank Rickdemption.” Originally broadcast on April 1, 2017 “The Rickshank Rickdemption” was worth the wait for long-suffering fans. Picking up where the Season 2 finale left off Rick was arrested by the Galactic Federation after taking over Earth. It was a love letter to fans as the episode built on previous plot ideas and used its continuity – such as picking up on where the episode “Rick Potion #9” left off. Rick ended up acting like the Doctor in the episode as he plays the long game, acts like an unstoppable force of nature, and has an ingenious way of bringing down the government which added plenty of satire on modern economics. The episode also had emotional moments featuring Morty and Summer – lots of jokes (my favorite being Lawyer Morty) and plenty of sci-fi action. The episode was also responsible for McDonald reintroducing their Szechuan sauce in limited numbers.

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Review: ‘Mr. Higgins Comes Home’ From Mike Mignola & Warwick Johnson-Cadwell Has Plenty Of Bite

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Preparations begin at Castle Golga for the annual festival of the undead, as a pair of fearless vampire killers question a man hidden away in a monastery on the Baltic Sea. The mysterious Mr. Higgins wants nothing more than to avoid the scene of his wife’s death, and the truth about what happened to him in that castle. However, these heroic men, sworn to rid the world of the vampire scourge, inspire Higgins to venture out and to end the only suffering he really cares about–his own.Mr. Higgins Comes Home

Mr. Higgins Comes Home
Written by: Mike Mignola
Art by: Warwick Johnson-Cadwell
Cover by: Mike Mignola and Dave StewartMr. Higgins Comes Home

Writing

Mike Mignola is a master when it comes to classic monsters. He pretty much perfected that in Hellboy. But outside of his most well-known creation, Mignola has also played with the genre. In Mr. Higgins Comes Home, he takes another stab at the classic vampire tale and nails it.

This is fast and fun read that brings to mind classic Hammer films, with a nice slice of dark humor cut in. There is also a decent amount of gore and blood. It has genuine love for the horror genre and folklore (as most Mignola projects do). It has vampires, vampire hunters, satan worshipers, hunchbacked servants, talking black goats, and a werewolf. So if monsters are your thing, there is also plenty of that.

The story itself is simple enough, but there is a charm to it that gives it an identity of its own. And it’s also genuinely tragic despite the sort of cute storybook elements. It actually reminds me of Tim Burton, Henry Selick and Neil Gaiman in its vibe, so that should give you an idea as to what this book feels like. Mr. Higgins Comes Home

Art

The art is where this book really shines. Warwick Johnson-Cadwell has a style that brings to mind Charles Addams, Edward Gorey, and New Yorker cartoons. It’s heavily stylized and brightly colored. But like Gorey and Adams, there is true craftsmanship in the linework, layouts, and panels. It’s delicate and elegant, yet playful. Th gore I mentioned before is illustrated in a way that isn’t gross, but still impactful. This is the kind of comic art where you can almost feel the artist drawing it with pencils and pens on paper right in front of you. It’s all comes off as refreshingly hand drawn in this day and age of overtly digital comic book art.

Conclusion

Mr. Higgins Comes Home makes a great addition to to the library of any comics or classic cartoon fan. It’s an elegant yet fun book that, despite its ghoulish nature, should appeal to quite a few readers.

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Star Wars Rebels Review: Whitaker’s Back “In the Name of the Rebellion”

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Imagine, for a moment, that you had the chance to go back in time and stop the greatest tragedy in the history of the world. And all it took to stop it was the death of a handful of innocent bystanders. Do you still do it?

That’s the question Rebels set out to explore in the third and fourth episodes of Season Four, “In the Name of the Rebellion.” Jedi Ezra Bridger and Mandalorian warrior Sabine Wren find themselves wrestling with questions of morality in war after the Rebel base on Yavin 4 is contacted by the militant cell leader Saw Gerrera.

Gerrera denounces the Cold War-style tactics and reliance on the Senate of the Rebellion, while championing his Partisans’ more direct approach. Ezra and Sabine begin to question whether he’s right, given the need for assistance – denied by Mon Mothma – to Lothal and Mandalore.

This same theme runs through the entire arc across both episodes, allowing the leads to be faced with a several versions of the same problem. Ezra and pilot Hera Syndulla want to blow up an Imperial relay, rather than maybe-tapping into it. The feeling of success from hurting the Empire in some way, any way, is more attractive than long-term plans that often fail.

It’s wonderful to see these ethical questions continue to play out in a show that is known to be “for kids.” Rebels continues to prove two important points:

1) Star Wars has always dealt with deep ethical questions, especially those related to war. If anything, shows like this have a deep thematic continuity to the “source” material.

2) A show being labeled as “for kids” and also having thematic depth, dramatic character arcs, and morality questions are not mutually exclusive. When the latter is present, it also doesn’t make it “not really a kids show.” If anything, it supports the idea that people of any age can grapple with these questions, just at different levels.

Rebels continues to impress, and as the timeline of the show moves closer to Rogue One and A New Hope, the connections are growing ever deeper. While liberties of continuity are taken (how the heck does a U-Wing take out an Imperial cruiser all by itself?), it never strays beyond reckoning.

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An ‘Eyes Wide Shut’ Documentary is Coming Our Way

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Eyes Wide Shut, Stanley Kubrick’s final film before his untimely passing in 1999, is arguably his most divisive work. The film left a certain swath of viewers scratching their heads, a.k.a. the people who went to see it just because Hollywood power couple Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman were the stars.

Over the years Eyes Wide Shut has, like all of Kubrick’s films, split fans down the middle. Some still dismiss it as a rare misfire in the auteur’s decade-spanning career, others have wisely come around to realize it is one of his greatest achievements – just in case you can’t guess what side I’m on.

The exploration of monogamy, sexual desire, and the fever-dream isolation of Tom Cruise’s flaccid doctor is begging for a deep dive, and it seems now we are getting that very thing. Filmmaker Tony Zierra recently told Variety he is working on a documentary about the controversial picture:

“The one movie that I feel is the wrinkle in Kubrick’s filmography is ‘Eyes Wide Shut.’ The people that love him always say, ‘He’s a genius, but I’m not sure what the hell that movie was about’… Many people just don’t get it. It makes no sense to them. The casting doesn’t make any sense to them. The story doesn’t make any sense to them.”


The documentary has the working title of SK13, in reference to the director and the fact was his 13th film. Zierra just recently premiered Filmworker, a story about Kubrick’s right-hand man Leon Vitali, so he seems like the perfect fit for this project.

Stay tuned as more details emerge.

 

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Review: ‘The Walking Dead’ 100th Episode

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‘The Walking Dead’ on AMC is back, and Rick is ready to battle it out with Negan in hopes of rebuilding society.

It is always good to have ‘The Walking Dead’ back on the air, but the writing of this episode prevents the viewer from going on a season-long journey with Rick. ‘Mercy’ explained more than it needed, the best experience is when the viewer can react and grow with the show. When too much is revealed, the viewer gets pulled out of the episode as the intrigue is diminished.

Season 8, Episode 1 ‘Mercy’
Rick and his group, along with the Kingdom and Hilltop, have banded together to bring the fight to Negan and the Saviors.

Watch our breakdown of the episode below?

What did you think of Sunday night’s episode? Comment below.


Season 8, Episode 2 ‘The Damned’
The plan involving Alexandrians, Kingdommers and Hilltoppers unfolds. As Rick continues to fight, he encounters a familiar face.

Check out the teaser for next week’s episode below.

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We Need More Doctor Aphra in the STAR WARS Universe

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I want more Doctor Aphra! That’s Doctor Chelli Lona Aphra, to be exact. I want her to have her very own Star Wars The Black Series figure, a Funko POP!, posters, stickers, lunchboxes and clothing. I want to see her in future movies and TV shows. I want it all. Everything. She is basically the Star Wars version of Lara Croft. There is so much to love in a sarcastic, fun-loving archaeologist that hangs out with two assassin droids, 0-0-0 and BT-1.

The enthusiasm for this character is contagious. The awesome Catrina Dennis wrote, ‘5 Reasons Doctor Aphra is Dominating Marvel’s Star Wars Universe’ and comicbook.com wrote ‘Why Star Wars Needs Doctor Aphra’. She also won Hasbro’s Star Wars Figure Fan Vote, has seen a wave in cosplay and was even featured in The Hollowood Reporter, to name a few.

Aphra first appeared in Darth Vader #3 (2015), where she was recruited to take on several missions before falling out of favor with the Sith Lord. She was stalked most of the series by Vader, only to survive the entire 25-issue run, propelling her into her very own series.

There is an outside shot she could have ties to Star Wars: Episode 8 – The Last Jedi (2017). Don’t pass it off as crazy just yet. Here me out. Fresh off her recent five-issue crossover with the ongoing Marvel Star Wars series, ‘The Screaming Citadel, she teams up with Luke Skywalker in search of said temple. Now, we have all read the theories, rumblings and reports that Aphra might only exclusively date women (more HERE and HERE), but the back-and-forth with Luke is undeniable. It’s similar to the exchange between Han and Leia when they first met. If indeed Rey turns out to be the daughter of Skywalker, could Aphra possibly be the mother? We’ll see on December 15, 2017.

It is never too late to catch up. Jump on board! You can get Aphra comics digitally HERE or physical copies HERE.

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Five Favorite Films from the Year 1980

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The 1980s were crazy! You could still smoke on airplanes and people were fighting each other for Cabbage Patch Kids. By the time the late 1970s rolled around, America was going through big changes. Many Americans no longer trusted the government and were tired of the struggle. Hollywood was really beginning to attack social issues. I mean, a former Hollywood star was newly named president in Ronald Reagan. That swell guy not only cut taxes, introduced ‘Reaganomics’ and ended the Cold War, but he also racked up 82 credits as an actor.

The Blue Lagoon came out in 1980, starring a 14-year-old Brooke Shields alongside Christopher Atkins, in which the pair played naked teenage cousins that were experiencing their budding sexuality while marooned on an island. Moviegoers took issue with watching real-life teenagers having fake sex. Never mind the fact that the two, well … conceived a child. Oh, can you believe that, at one point, parents didn’t even want their kids playing Dungeons and Dragons? With that, see below for my favorite five movies from 1980. This was a tough list to put together and I still hate myself for not including The Shining (Please feel free to yell at me for omissions in the comments section below).

5. Friday the 13th

The original Halloween (1978) was the first horror flick I ever watched. It prompted me to want to check out movies like Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm St. (1984). Just like JAWS (1975) had people scared to go in the water, this movie had folks terrified to go to camp. The premise is simple, as a group of camp counselors, trying to reopen a summer camp a few years after a child drowned, are murdered by an unknown stalker. For all the trivia buffs out there: the actress who played Mrs. Voorhees, Betsy Palmer, thought the movie was going to be a bust and only took the role so that she could buy a new car. This movie, to me, is really a feel-good story about the lengths a mother will go to prove how much she loves her child.

4. Caddyshack

I first watched this movie with a group of friends in high school. It was our favorite movie for an entire summer. We could all literally quote the movie, word-for-word. Still can. I have a legitimate man crush on Bill Murray and I don’t care who knows it. True story – I was Carl Spackler for four Halloweens, including three-consecutive. In my opinion, Ted Knight as Judge Smails, quietly steals the show among a star-studded cast that included the Murray brothers, Rodney Dangerfield and Chevy Chase. I can still see him swinging his grandson around from his arm and saying, “You’ll get nothing and like it!”, and yelling, “Spaulding, get your foot off the boat!”. This is a true underdog story for caddies and slackers everywhere.

3. Superman II

Before Michael Shannon took on the role of General Zod in Man of Steel (2013), that honor belonged to one Terence Stamp. He was great! He played the part so well. Superman is one of my favorite superheroes, ever. Just a guy that wants to be a regular guy, but has amazing powers like a super guy. When Dan Jurgens and Co. killed him off in the Death of Superman-Doomsday graphic novel in the 1990s, I legitimately cried (No, you’re ridiculous!). That was Earth-shattering stuff. Henry Cavill is excellent, but Christopher Reeve really set the bar high. He was a fantastic Superman and an even better Clark Kent.

2. Airplane!

I remember seeing this movie in high school and not really appreciating it (please be kind). After seeing it again when I was in college, it was – it is – to this day, one of the most-hilarious movies I have ever seen. Great writing with a calming blend of dry humor. Leslie Nielsen was an absolute genius in everything he did. I loved his brief role in this movie as Dr. Rumack, but it was after seeing the absolutely incredible The Naked Gun (1988-94) series, where I completely became a fan of his. He was one of my favorite actors and always made me laugh with his stern comedic delivery.

1. Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back

Harrison Ford is my acting hero. It feels good to say that out loud. My favorite movie trilogy of all-time is that of Indiana Jones (1981-89). Yes, I, like so many others, refuse to acknowledge that the fourth installment, 2008’s Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, ever happened. Not much I have to say here. We all love Lucasfilm flicks and this movie had it all. I mean, Luke meets Yoda and, in what I would consider the greatest reveal in cinematic history, his father, (gasp!) Darth Vader. Lando invites the crew to Cloud City for his own version of the ‘Red Wedding’ and Han gets frozen in carbonite! How about that Millennium Falcon, huh?

Honorable Mentions:  The Shining, Raging Bull, Stir Crazy, Blues Brothers, Flash Gordon, Smokey and the Bandit II, Humanoids from the Deep, Maniac!, Popeye, Prom Night.

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ALERT! Here is The Trailer for Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘Phantom Thread’

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The trailer for Paul Thomas Anderson’s second collaboration with Daniel Day-Lewis, Phantom Thread, is finally here. And it is everything PTA fans should expect. Full of mystery, suspense, quiet tension and, yes, an aging Daniel Day-Lewis, this one should not be missed.

Check it out:

Pus, we have a new, detailed synopsis:

Set in the glamour of 1950s post-war London, renowned dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville) are at the center of British fashion, dressing royalty, movie stars, heiresses, socialites, debutants and dames with the distinct style of The House of Woodcock. Women come and go through Woodcock’s life, providing the confirmed bachelor with inspiration and companionship, until he comes across a young, strong-willed woman, Alma (Vicky Krieps), who soon becomes a fixture in his life as his muse and lover. Once controlled and planned, he finds his carefully tailored life disrupted by love. With his latest film, Paul Thomas Anderson paints an illuminating portrait both of an artist on a creative journey, and the women who keep his world running. Phantom Thread is Paul Thomas Anderson’s eighth movie, and his second collaboration with Daniel Day-Lewis.


This looks unsurprisingly fascinating and gorgeous. Alongside Daniel Day-Lewis you see relative unknowns Lesley Manville and Vivki Krieps, both who will undoubtedly captivate audiences. Radiohead guitarist Johnny Greenwood is back scoring Phantom Thread, and Anderson is doing his own cinematography.

Phantom Thread opens Christmas Day. Be there or be square.

 

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REVIEW: ’78/52: Hitchcock’s Shower Scene’ a Detailed Look at a Watershed Moment in Cinema

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Alfred Hitchcock’s thriller Psycho landed like a cinematic atomic bomb in 1960, shocking audiences and changing the face of film forever. On a micro level, it was the shower scene that, for a myriad of reasons, completely upended the notion of what suspense and horror could be. Director Alexandre O. Phillippe’s documentary, 78/52: Hitchcock’s Shower Scene, examines the impact of Psycho, specifically those few moments in the film where everything changed.

The title refers to the shower scene. There were 78 camera setups, and 52 cuts in this brief moment of savagery. Phillippe’s film uses archived interviews of Hitchcock, moments from the previews, and dozens of interviews from an impressive collection of celebrities and family members. Jamie Lee Curtis, Peter Bogdanovich, Karyn Kusama, Guillermo del Toro, Danny Elfman, Bret Easton Ellis, Mick Garris, Eli Roth, and Elijah Wood are mere highlights of who speaks on the film and the scene. We even have an appearance from Richard Stanley, a filmmaker made infamous for his failed attempt at The Island of Dr. Moreau which is chronicled in its own fascinating documentary.

While the bulk of 78/52 tackles the dynamics of the shower scene, with specific insight from Marli Renfro who was Janet Leigh’s body double, the history and the impact of Psycho is also examined in great detail. Alfred Hitchcock was coming off a decade of incredible success, with enough films in a span of ten years to cement his status as a master filmmaker. But those 50’s films – To Catch a Thief, Rear Window, North by Northwest – were splashed in technicolor and the sensibilities of the decade.


With Psycho, Hitchcock was basically trolling everyone, killing off his star in the first act and telling a gruesome, salacious story in black and white. Not only did the manic editing of the scene, and Bernard Herrmann’s score, shock audiences and change the face of cinema, the marketing and screenings of the film readjusted audience expectations. To that point, people would often come and go during films (which was shocking enough for me to even think about); with Psycho, Hitchcock put in the provision that everyone must be there in the beginning, and could not come and go as they pleased.

78/52 celebrates a pivotal moment cinema, even if it does sometimes devolve into tedium. A few of the celebrity interviews, sometimes shot as they are watching the scene on a monitor somewhere off camera, feel a bit contrived. But for movie historians and film geeks, there is more than enough to chew on here. No matter how much you might know about the shower scene, odds are you will learn something new somewhere in these 90 minutes.

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‘Iron Man 3’ Actor Ty Simpkins Joins ‘Avengers 4’ Cast

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It appears as if it really will be all hands on deck for the untitled Avengers 4. According to IMDb, Iron Man 3 star Ty Simpkins will be reprising his role as Harley Keener in the sequel to Avengers: Infinity War.

You’ll remember Simpkins’ Keener as Tony Stark’s companion in Iron Man 3 following his crash landing in Tennessee. Keener’s garage was given a complete tech makeover by Iron Man himself after assisting in Tony’s escape from AIM agents. The child actor has also been featured in such films as Jurassic World and Insidious.

It’s unknown what role Simpkins will be playing in the larger picture of the film. His return will likely be due to a large event that involves Tony Stark and following the end of Spider-Man: Homecoming, it could very well be a wedding.

“As the Avengers and their allies have continued to protect the world from threats too large for any one hero to handle, a new danger has emerged from the cosmic shadows: Thanos. A despot of intergalactic infamy, his goal is to collect all six Infinity Stones, artifacts of unimaginable power, and use them to inflict his twisted will on all of reality. Everything the Avengers have fought for has led up to this moment – the fate of Earth and existence itself has never been more uncertain.”

Avengers: Infinity War stars Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Bradley Cooper, Vin Diesel, Pom Klementieff, Karen Gillan, Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Holland, Sebastian Stan, Chadwick Boseman, Josh Brolin and is directed by Joe and Anthony Russo. 

The untitled Avengers 4 will be released on May 3, 2019.

Where do you think Harley will be up to in ‘Avengers 4? Let us know in the comments below!

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