Paramount Television has reached a deal to adapt Geoff Johns’ Image Comics title Geiger. Set in a Mad Max-esque dystopia in 2050, Geiger tells the story of a man named Tariq who survived the Unknown War of 2030 and now protects the people of the wastelands from criminals and scavengers. According to Deadline, Johns will write the pilot and then serve as showrunner and executive producer alongside Justin Simien.
Published in 2021, Geiger’s first story arc ran for six issues and was followed up by an old-school 80-page giant-sized issue that looks to be setting up a Geiger-verse full of characters called The Unnamed who are somehow connected by through fighting in wars dating back to American Revolution of 1776. One of the characters, a robot named Junkyard Joe who fought in the Vietnam War, recently debuted his own solo series.
As of publication, no timeline for the start of production of the series was given, but it’s safe to say fans shouldn’t expect it to hit the screen until late-2023 at best, but more likely 2024.
With a new director and a writing team, Marvel Studios is beginning to make moves on their long-awaited Fantastic Four film. Announced at SDCC ’19, Fantastic Four has been delayed by the departure of original director Jon Watts and was recently bumped into 2025 as part of a slate-wide reshuffle. However, with things looking settled in, they’ve begun the search for a cast and with the onset of casting comes a fascinating new rumor.
According to the Hot Mic podcast, Adam Driver may have previously met with Marvel Studios for an unknown role in the film a few months ago. The 38-year-old actor has taken a bit of a break from Hollywood tentpoles after holding down the role of Kylo Ren in the Star Wars sequel trilogy but has continued to build a strong resume, including garnering a second Academy Award nomination for his role in a Marriage Story.
Though the rumor doesn’t attach Driver to a specific role, thoughts immediately turn to Driver taking on the role of Victor Von Doom. While there’s plenty of interest in who Marvel will cast as the First Family, Doom may be the biggest role in the history of the studio. One of Marvel’s richest and most complex characters, Doom should have a major role in the next decade of the MCU, potentially making it attractive to a star like Driver while also tempting Marvel to look for known quantities.
Of course, until there’s official word from Marvel Studios, there’s no reason to get too attached to anyone associated with the role of Doom or any other. Sneider himself has said the tip was from an unproven source. Marvel Studios, under the leadership of long-time casting director Sarah Finn, has rarely missed on these type of major castings in part because they tend to take their time. Fans should expect that to be the case again here, as production on Fantastic Four isn’t expected to kick off until the second half of 2023.
More than any other MCU project to date, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law opened the doors for some of Marvel’s most obscure D-list characters. Leap-Frog made a memorable MCU debut. Emil Blonsky’s retreat introduced Man-Bull, Saracen, Porcupine, and El Aquila, none of whom would many many Top 1000 favorite Marvel characters lists. Regardless, She-Hulk gave those characters their moments in the spotlight along with introducing slightly more well-known characters like The Wrecking Crew and Mr. Immortal.
To no one’s surprise, those characters were just some of the many that the writer’s room of the series considered and while we’ll never know the entire list, writer Zeb Wells did name drop one character whose exclusion from the project might indicate an appearance in another project down the road.
“Yes, for sure. We went through a lot of them. I think Stilt-Man was probably thrown in there at one point. Saracen, he started off as someone else we couldn’t get for some reason. I think there is a character at Marvel called ‘The Matador’ and we couldn’t use him [laughs].”
One of Daredevil’s recurring foes, Stilt-Man is precisely the type of character who is more well-aligned with the sensibilities of the MCU than the Netflix Defenders-verse. If the character was indeed in the mix for She-Hulk, it’s possible, perhaps even likely, that he’ll be in the mix again. While primarily an adversary of Daredevil, the character also played a role in Armor Wars, which Marvel Studios is currently adapting as a feature film. So while he didn’t make the cut in She-Hulk, Stilt-Man’s dozens and dozens of fans can keep their fingers crossed he turns up down the road.
When the news of the cancellation of Daredevil reached fans in November of 2018, a group of fans took it upon themselves to start an online campaign to get Cox back in the role. Over the years, the Save Daredevil campaign grew into a massive, highly organized undertaking who were able to celebrate their success when news broke that Cox was returning to the role in Spider-Man: No Way Home. According to Cox, he has them to thank for his return to the role…and the future of the character.
Charlie Cox at a rooftop party with the Save Daredevil crew in NYC Photo credit: Save Daredevi
There’s so much I want to say. Whatever happens to my career going forward from this point on, I owe most of it to the “Save Daredevil” campaign. That even when I had lost hope years ago, they did not, and they continued to campaign and support. And over the years, I’ve met many of them, and they’re such an enthusiastic, passionate crowd.
Charlie Cox
While Marvel Studios worked hard to keep Cox’s return a secret in the past, the future is a wide-open book. Following his work on She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, he’s expected to appear in Echo, though he’s played coy about that appearance so far, and then star in Marvel Studios most ambitious Disney Plus streaming series yet: Daredevil: Born Again. Demonstrating his trademark passion for the character, Cox explained that he can’t wait to get started on the new series, which he’s called “a whole new deal” for the character.
I’m so excited about the future. I can’t wait to get on the set from the first day of the new show. I’m already starting to train. As you know, I’m already starting to make plans in terms of living and training and having conversations with the writers and all of those things. So it’s starting to feel very real.
Charlie Cox
Principal photography on Daredevil: Born Again is expected to begin sometime early in 2023 with some work set to be done in New York City. The actor had indicated that production is expected to both physically and mentally challenging, given the ambitiousness of the project, but the payoff should be great. With an 18-episode run, fans can expect to see a lot of Cox on Disney Plus throughout 2024.
In true Marvel Studios’ fashion, their latest project, She-Hulk: Attorney At Law, has continued to make news nearly a week beyond its finale streamed on Disney Plus. Most of that news has come from post-finale interviews and most of those have been focused on guest star Charlie Cox, whose appearance as both lawyer Matt Murdock and the costumed vigilante Daredevil in Episode 8 fully integrated his character into the MCU after a brief appearance in Spider-Man: No Way Home. Cox has a lot of MCU in front of him, with a rumored appearance in Echo and an 18-episode series of his own, Daredevil: Born Again, set for 2024. With all that ahead of him, however, much of the focus remains on his past and whether or not this Matt Murdock is the same one introduced in Netflix’s Daredevil.
Interestingly enough, EW addressed this very topic in a recent interview by asking Cox if he was playing Daredevil “the same as in the Netflix series”
It should be and it is always the same character. The difference is just like with people, we morph and change and are very different based on what’s going on in our lives. The Matt Murdock from the Netflix show, that world and what was going on for Matt meant that most of the time we were living with a man who had a huge amount of pressure and strain and tonally the show was very dark and gritty and heavy. I don’t know what the new show will be like, but when I came over to do Spider-Man and She-Hulk, the tone is much more lighthearted and tongue in cheek and fun and witty and full of levity, so the hope was that Matt is able to fit into that world and participate in it without it being a different character, a different person.
Charlie Cox
Pretty clear cut. Same character, same person. However, asked by THR if the character he will be playing in Daredevil: Born Again will be “the exact same character” as the one from the Netflix series, Cox’s response was a little different.
I honestly don’t know. I haven’t read any scripts yet, and we haven’t really talked at length about what this current iteration will be like. Just by the fact that they’re using me as an actor to play the part, it’s clear that there are going to be some consistencies and … some differences. We have an opportunity to at least take what worked really well and then also add some cool elements, ideas, concepts and themes that we weren’t able to do before. So it’s Daredevil, but upgraded.
Charlie Cox
Given that Daredevil entered the MCU in the Multiverse Saga, the second statement seems to fall in line with what Marvel Studios has put on film so far in Phase 4. Plenty of examples exist of characters who are almost identical, but just a little different. And that statement also points out the creative freedom of choosing to portray Daredevil (and Kingpin or any other Netflix character for that matter) as a Variant. As Cox says, they would have the “opportunity to at least take what worked really well” while also having the freedom to change parts of the story they didn’t like. A well-placed Nexus Event essentially makes Matt Murdock the same character at his core but allows Marvel Studios to retell stories (as Cox indicates they are willing to do) in a way that fits their shared narrative rather than having to force the Netflix stories into it.
Fans of the Netflix series may not love it, but Cox said it himself: “it’s Daredevil, but upgraded.” Ultimately it’s clear that Cox isn’t even sure himself what’s happening and the truth is that the longer he and fans are kept in the dark, the better it is for Marvel Studios because it allows them to do what they do best: keep interest in their characters and project alive even when there’s nothing new to see.
“Wouldn’t you rather give it all at once to something real?”
At the time they were spoken to Cassian Andor by Luthen Rael, those words seemed to be a foreshadowing of the known end of Andor’s story: his death on Scarif in service of the Rebellion as seen in Rogue One. In a story like Andor where the ultimate fate of the main character is a known quantity, an easy argument can be made that there are no stakes for that character and that everything that happens to them is irrelevant. Episode 7 of Andor goes a long way in disproving this argument as it strips Cassian of everything the series has made important to him so far, providing stakes that are a payoff of the emotional investment made through the first six episodes.
Predictably, the heist on Aldhani has caught the attention of the Empire and their response, detailed by Colonel Wullf Yularen in a brilliant cameo, is crushing and ultimately speaks to the ruthlessness of the Empire. As terrifying as the Empire’s response sounds for the rest of the galaxy, Cassian believes himself to be relatively safe from them. However, over the course of the episode, Cassian is faced with the consequences of his choices. Returning home to Ferrix, Cassian is sequentially dismissed by Bix and Maarva while the audience learns that Luthen Rael intends to tie up the loose end Cassian created when he killed one of his crew and bailed. Now on his own, Cassian ends up on the resort planet of Niamos where he ultimately finds himself detained by an Imperial Security Droid and given a six-year prison sentence. Choices have consequences and Cassian experienced them all in rapid succession. By the end of the episode, it would appear he has given it all even though we know there’s more in store for the character.
The strength of this episode, then, isn’t in the cliffhanger ending of Cassian’s sentence. True tension is absent given the known outcome of the character. Rather the strength lies in Diego Luna’s performance as Cassian struggles to accept that he’s created his own hell. Even in the episode’s closing moments, Cassian can’t help but try to dig himself out of a hole when it’s clear he’s only making it deeper. Luna’s performance has been strong across the board, but his understanding and care for the character are on full display in this episode.
The episode also continues to provide a fascinating look inside the burgeoning Rebellion by focusing on the stark contrast between two of its key figures. As Mon Mothma makes a surprise appearance at Luthen Rael’s storefront, a scene plays out where Rael’s ruthlessness is shown to equal that of the Empire. Rael’s blunt words to Mothma, spoken while he displays the blunt-force Utapauan monk cudgel, serve to symbolize that there’s dirty work to do for the fledgling Rebellion, no matter the cost to those who may not even be aware it’s happening. There’s work to be done and Rael will see it through, no matter the consequences, including ordering the death of Cassian, who he seemed to hold value in so recently. Despite her horror at what Rael’s plan has wrought, Mothma continues to do her part in finding a way to financially back the Rebellion. Genevieve O’Reilly shines during Mothma’s dinner party where she demonstrates how invisible her character is to those in power by setting up plans to fund the Rebellion at her own dinner party. Seen as an “annoyance” to those in power, Mothma continues to keep up appearances (“Smile.” “Smile.”) while putting herself in a position similar to Cassian’s where she may well lose everything.
Fascinatingly enough, even as Mothma advances her plan, Andor finds a way to make us root for the character that might ultimately prove her greatest foe: Deedra Meero. Slighted so far at every turn, Meero cleverly takes advantage of the Empire’s response to find the information she’s needed to help prove her theory of a connected Rebellion forming. Challenged at an ISB meeting, Meero boldly makes her claim about the Rebels, finally catching the attention of Major Partagaz in a positive way. Like Mothma, Meero has been seen as an “annoyance” until now. It appears Meero will become a major player in Andor’s game, and one whose investigative brilliance may find her on the opposite side of the board from Mothma.
Though it takes its foot off the gas pedal again, Episode 7 provides a much-needed reset following the last 3 episode arc that culminated in the Aldhani heist. Perhaps in hindsight, the Aldhani heist will almost certainly prove to be a pivotal moment in the history of the Rebellion. They’ve announced their presence to the Empire and the Empire’s response, as Yularen says is to determine how tightly they will close their fist in response. Those words are almost certainly meant to cause fans to remember Princess Leia’s warning to Governor Tarkin in A New Hope: “the more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers.” So perhaps, in hindsight, the Empire’s response to the Aldhani heist, as seemingly predicted by Rael, will also prove to be a pivotal moment in the history of the Rebellion. Episode 7 allows for think time about the repercussions of the choices made in the first six episodes, both on an individual and galactic scale. The Empire has announced its response. How will the galaxy respond in kind?
Through the first six episodes of its twelve-episode first season, Lucasfilm’s Star Wars streaming series Andor has fought the urge to drop character cameos into its developing story. Other than a reference here or there, the series has largely ignored the other goings on in the galaxy tied to the growing rebellion, choosing to focus on its own characters rather than name-drop or show-off characters from other Star Wars media. Episode 7 changed that in a fairly major way with the inclusion of one of the most memorable characters from one of Star Wars most beloved IPs.
As news of the heist on Aldhani spread throughout the galaxy, the Imperial Security Bureau convened on Coruscant to discuss their response. However, rather than Major Partagaz leading the meeting, a more senior officer was called in: Colonel Wulff Yularen. Fans of Star Wars: The Clone Wars will remember Yularen as the Republic Navy Admiral assigned to Anakin Skywalker. Though Yularen and Skywalker often disagreed, especially in their early endeavors together, the two grew to respect one another and became one of the Republic’s top teams.
Though he’s most well-known from his nearly two dozen appearances in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Yularen “first appeared” in Star Wars: Episode IV-A New Hope. While in actuality the character was unnamed, retcons over the years turned the character into Colonel Yularen of the ISB. Placing the Colonel in Andor during this time of galactic unrest, especially when the ISB will be facing major questions about its procedures, aligns with what’s known about the character. Canonically, after helping reform the ISB, Yularen took a post with the Naval Intelligence Agency during the events of Star Wars: Rebels. In his time there, Yularen helped Thrawn track down the traitor known as Fulcrum, who was revealed to be one of Yularen’s own students, Agent Kallus.
Voiced by Tom Kane in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Yularen is portrayed in Andor by actor Malcolm Sinclair. Given the character’s prominence in the time covered in Andor’s first season, Yularen’s appearance makes for a near-perfect cameo: one that isn’t too distracting fits the plot of the show and illustrates the connectivity of the series to the larger franchise. A+ for creator Tony Gilroy and team and Pablo Hidalgo, who works on keeping continuity between all the Star Wars projects.
According to a new report, Aquaman and Candyman star Yaha Abdul-Mateen II is in talks to add a third man to his resume: Wonder Man. According to Screen Geeks, the information comes from a casting grid that also indicates the Marvel Studios streaming series is casting from a female lead and a talent manager for Simon Williams, aka Wonder Man.
The report indicates that talks with the star are ongoing, meaning it’s not a sure thing that Abdul-Mateen will ultimately take on the role of the Ionic Avenger. In the comics, Williams was born into a wealthy family as one of the sons of Sanford Williams, a successful weapons manufacturer. When Simon’s brother, Eric, declined to take over the company, Simon did…and shortly ran it into the ground. Eric, who became the villain known as the Grim Reaper, came to his brother’s aid by setting him up with some shady characters. Eventually, Simon found himself in debt to Baron Zemo, who experimented on him turning him into Wonder Man, a being composed of ionic energy. A few wild turns later, Simon was an Avenger who then became a stuntman, taking advantage of his inability to sustain damage.
The MCU series will be produced by Destin Daniel Cretton and is being written by Brooklyn Nine-Nine scribe Andrew Guest. It’s believed that it will be a Hollywood parody and pick up Simon as a failed actor. No timeline has been given for production on the show and Marvel Studios has yet to officially place in among their two upcoming phases, but if casting is underway now, it would be reasonable to assume it might begin filming in the first quarter of 2023.
With Wilson Fisk and Matt Murdock both making their respective ways into the MCU, it’s just a matter of time before the two meet up. Whether that meeting is a reunion between the two characters or their first meeting in a vast multiverse continues to be a hot topic of debate, but one thing has been clear since Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onoforio worked together on Daredevil: they each have a great deal of respect for the other. The two shared the stage briefly at D23 to discuss Daredevil: Born Again, an upcoming 18-episode streaming series and fans have been thrilled at the prospect of seeing them together again since. Fans aren’t the only ones excited about the reunion, however.
In an interview with GQ following his appearance on She-Hulk: Attorney At Law, Cox gushed about D’Onofrio’s talents:
He’s obviously a lovely guy, but more than that, he’s just such an extraordinary performer. He’s such a great actor. To be able to work opposite him and show up for a day of filming and see what he brings to the scene-which is always so much richer and more nuanced and more interesting [than] you could even have imagined in your mind I probably learned more from him about acting than I have from anyone else I’ve worked with. I think he’s made me a much better actor. Hopefully, I can learn more as we can continue working together.
Charlie Cox
D’Onofrio’s investment into the psychology of Wilson Fisk has been well-documented and paid huge dividends over the course of his time on the Netflix series. The actor has made it clear that he’s bringing the same energy to the character as he enters the MCU, meaning that when it comes time for him to meet Daredevil on screen, fans can expect something special.
According to a report by THR’s Borys Kit, Warner Bros. expects a script treatment for Patty Jenkins’Wonder Woman 3 to be ready soon. Jenkins first brought the character to the big screen in 2017 and then again in 2020 and has been working to finish the script for the third film for the last year. At one point, it was expected that production on Wonder Woman 3 might kick off in 2023, but no updated timeline has been made available since the Warner Bros./Discovery merger.
Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman has been one of the highlights of the DC Universe’s modern era and her character will be the first to complete a trilogy of films for the studio. She’s already appeared in 4 films and has an appearance the upcoming Shazam!: Fury of the Gods. With the news that Cavill is back as Superman, it would seem that it’s only a matter of time before the two reunite on screen…with Batman?
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