Author: Hunter Radesi

  • ‘The Last of Us’ Creator Explains Why Movie Adaptation Failed

    ‘The Last of Us’ Creator Explains Why Movie Adaptation Failed

    The Last of Us is set to land as a series on HBO soon, but the high-profile video game adaptation wasn’t always going to be a big-budget show. Originally, the revered PlayStation exclusive was optioned as the basis for a feature-length film. In 2014, Screen Gems, the company behind the semi-successful and long-running Resident Evil movie franchise, secured the rights to put The Last of Us on the big screen. They attached legendary horror maestro Sam Raimi to direct, and game creator Neil Druckmann even held a table read to rehearse an early script. Oddly enough, that movie never panned out, and Druckmann is now ready to say why.

    In an interview with The New Yorker, the acclaimed video game director explained it was creative differences behind the scenes that ultimately lead to Screen Gems’ The Last of Us being canned. Druckmann claims he was only interested in adapting his story as a smaller indie tale, while Screen Gems and Sony instead wanted what he describes as “a particular kind of movie.” For Druckmann, the aesthetic touchstone to aim for was No Country For Old Men, while the studio wanted something more along the lines of World War Zwith massive set pieces where intimate storytelling should be. The final straw came when Druckmann began to fear a 15-hour video game could not accurately be condensed into a 2-hour film, causing the project to enter development hell.

    While he says he respected Raimi as a creative, Druckmann did not trust the other executives involved. He clashed specifically with Carter Swan, the man in charge of I.P. expansion at Sony, who told him screenwriter Craig Mazin had also expressed concern over turning the game into a movie. Druckmann responded, “Wait, the ‘Chernobyl’ guy? Why can’t I meet with him?”, and the idea for a live-action series came soon after. It’s a decision most fans are probably thankful for.

    The Last of Us debuts on HBO on January 15, 2023.

    Source: The New Yorker

  • ‘The Last of Us’ Premiere Runtime Revealed

    ‘The Last of Us’ Premiere Runtime Revealed

    Ever since it was announced The Last of Us would receive a television adaptation on HBO, fans have wondered how much of the game’s story could fit into a single season. Past comments made by creator Neil Druckmann and showrunner Craig Mazin have indicated the show will cover pretty much the entirety of the first video game in its initial nine-episode run, with elements from the second game included as well, and the marketing for the show thus far seemed to confirm this. With only nine episodes to pull the whole of The Last of Us off, it’s natural that anticipatory viewers wonder how long each first season installment will be.

    An early schedule listing from HBO Latino has revealed the first episode will be a whopping 85 minutes in length. As discovered by YouTuber DomTheBomb, the January 15th premiere event is set to run almost feature-length, giving audiences a fair amount of time to become acquainted with the characters and world of The Last of Us.

    HBO is known for producing series with large-scale episodes, with Game of Thrones famously averaging 72 minutes per episode in its final season. While it’s neither confirmed nor likely that every episode of the upcoming Naughty Dog adaptation will be an hour and a half long, The Last of Us following Game of Thrones‘ example means there should be plenty of space for Druckmann and Mazin to retell the tale of Joel and Ellie. The original video game takes about 15 hours to complete, and nine increments of 90 minutes would result in a 13-hour season. Not as far off as people might have expected.

    The Last of Us premieres on HBO on January 15th.

  • New Animated ‘Avatar’ Series Rumored for 2025

    New Animated ‘Avatar’ Series Rumored for 2025

    Earth, wind, air, and fire. These are the four elements that drive storytelling in the animated Avatar franchise, which began with 2005’s critically-acclaimed series The Last AirbenderFor a long time, that series (and its lesser-loved film adaptation) was all fans had, until a sequel series titled Avatar: The Legend of Korra launched in 2012 and helped respawn interest in the franchise. Since then, multiple prequel novels and comic continuations have been produced, with several more films, video games, and another attempt at live-action on the way. Yet, despite all the incredible content, there’s always been one thing fans have hoped for more than anything else – another full-length show. Now, according to a rumor from Avatar News, it would appear they might just get it.

    Most materials set in this world, created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, revolve around one of the titular “Avatars” – a bender with the unique ability to manipulate all four elements, who is considered the protector and unifying force of all people and spirits in existence. The Avatar is a singular being who reincarnates with each new generation and is born cyclically throughout the four fictional elemental nations. The Last Airbender told the story of Avatar Aang, who was, obviously, an airbender, while The Legend of Korra told the story of his successor, a waterbender named, obviously, Avatar Korra. If Avatar News is correct, it would seem Avatar Studios is now working on a second sequel series that would take place after Korra, with the intent to release in 2025 and follow the life of the earthbending Avatar who would be born after Korra’s death.

    At this time, there is no other information regarding who the next Avatar would be. However, based on the average time jumps between each previous Avatar, it can be surmised that the Earthbending Avatar would live in the Avatar equivalent of modern times. The Last Airbender was set in an ancient world, and The Legend of Korra took place during an Industrial Revolution. Hopefully, Avatar Studios are cooking up an interesting take on the technological landscape viewers live in now, and hopefully, this rumor has some credibility to it. It’s definitely something to be wishful for.

    Source: Avatar News

  • ‘The Flash’ Promo Will Air During Super Bowl LVII

    ‘The Flash’ Promo Will Air During Super Bowl LVII

    Despite everything that’s happened at Warner Bros. Discovery over the past few months, The Flash is still speeding into theaters on June 16th, 2023, and apparently, he’ll also race across television screens during the Super Bowl on February 12th. The Wrap is exclusively reporting that the film will air its first major promo during one of the game’s many famed commercial breaks, snapping a 17-year drought for Warner Bros. advertising during the Big Game. The last time Warner Bros. aired trailers for its slate of upcoming films was in 2006 when the company dropped new footage for V For Vendetta, 16 Blocks, and Poseidon. The full-length trailer for The Flash will make its big screen debut a week later, playing before showings of Marvel Studios’ Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.

    Marketing for the superhero project is reportedly full-steam ahead after early screenings tested positively with audiences. That being said, The Flash currently finds itself in a unique situation, with a creative overhaul behind-the-scenes at DC Studios likely positioning the film as one of the DC Extended Universe’s last. The cinematic future of the character, his controversial performer Ezra Miller, and the DC Universe at large are all in question as James Gunn and Peter Safran give the comic book world a major makeover.

    The Flash, directed by Andy Muschietti, co-stars Michael Keaton, who is set to reprise his role as Batman in the movie for the first time since 1992’s Batman Returns, and Sasha Calle, who will bring Supergirl to life. Ron Livingston, Kiersey Clemons, Michael Shannon, Saoirse-Monica Jackson, and Ben Affleck are also expected to appear.

    Source: The Wrap

  • Original ‘Into the Spider-Verse’ Sequel Idea Featured ‘Endgame’ Style Conclusion

    Original ‘Into the Spider-Verse’ Sequel Idea Featured ‘Endgame’ Style Conclusion

    When Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse was first announced, the end of its title came with a little disclaimer – (Part One). The highly-anticipated sequel to 2018’s surprise hit Into the Spider-Verse was supposed to be a two-part event, but the creatives behind the project ultimately decided on turning (Part Two) into its own third film, Beyond the Spider-Verse. Unbeknownst to everyone, however, there was an even more ambitious idea that came before the two-part sequel pitch.

    Speaking exclusively with The Direct, lead character animator Ere Santos revealed the Spider-Verse follow-up was originally going to be one massive movie. Instead of a trilogy, the second Spider-Verse would have completed a duology, and it would have made up the majority of the two film’s storytelling. Santos described the initial concept as being similar to the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Avengers: Endgame in its size, elaborating:

    [We were asking] ‘Wait, so this is what a two-and-a-half-hour movie?’ This is a really large story that they’re telling. And with all the arcs that they wanted to put in, we were just thinking this was going to be an intense, quick, fast-paced, high-energy movie. But it would have been good. It would have been like, what they were planning was gonna be like ‘Endgame’-esque stuff. Like it was huge. And what they’re planning is still huge.

    Ere Santos

    Santos then went on to clarify that, in the end, splitting the story up between more films was the right move. As is to be expected, three movies allows for more space to tell a proper tale, and as the animator describes it, gives the characters and their arcs “breathing room“:

    But then kind of spreading it out and into two gives it that breathing room we all felt that it really needed to kind of go, ‘Okay, what do we need to set up in the second movie? And how can we resolve it in the third movie? Or not?’ I don’t know. We’ll have to see. It was a really ambitious movie, and at the beginning, it was insanely ambitious, versus what it is now. It’s still super ambitious, but it was like trying to fit two movies into one essentially. But now things can breathe a little bit more.

    Ere Santos

    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse swings into theaters on June 2nd, 2023, and from the looks of the promotional material, it’s still going to be a pretty epic journey.

    Source: The Direct

  • Daredevil Will Not Appear in ‘Deadpool 3’

    Daredevil Will Not Appear in ‘Deadpool 3’

    It would seem audiences will have to wait a little longer for the Man Without Fear to meet the Merc With a Mouth in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Earlier this month, during a guest spot at German Comic-Con in Dortmund, Daredevil star Charlie Cox stated he’d love to see his character appear in the next Deadpool film, which is currently set to feature Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman reprising their iconic roles in a wild, time-hopping adventure. The actor explained that, with the darker nature of his upcoming solo series Daredevil: Born Again, he felt that a cross-over with the Deadpool franchise would be both fun and possible. Unfortunately, though, a recent interview with TechRadar has thrown some cold water on fans’ hopes that this might actually come to fruition.

    When asked about his previous comments, Cox decided to set the record straight. He had only been pondering possibilities, and as of now, he’s “definitely” not in Deadpool 3:

    Oh god, what did I say again? Oh yeah, I said that in Germany, didn’t I? I can tell you now, I’m definitely not in Deadpool 3.

    Charlie Cox

    Cox made his MCU debut as Matt Murdock last year, making an important cameo as the lawyer of Tom Holland‘s Peter Parker in Spider-Man: No Way Home. He reappeared not long after in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law on Disney+, acting as a courtroom rival and part-time lover of Tatiana Maslany‘s Jennifer Walters, and wearing the Daredevil suit into action for the first time since the original Daredevil series ended its run in 2018. Now, fans are rabid to know who they might see him team up with next. Daredevil and Deadpool have a history of interacting in the comics, but it looks like a live-action adaptation of their complicated relationship is not currently in the cards at Marvel Studios.

    Source: TechRadar

  • 5 Spider-Man Villains You’ve Never Heard Of That Could Lead a Sony Movie

    5 Spider-Man Villains You’ve Never Heard Of That Could Lead a Sony Movie

    El Muerto. Hypno-Hustler. Jackpot. Together, they encompass a combined 27 issues of Marvel comics. Soon, they may also be the basis for three solo films in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe, with a shocking amount of A-List talent behind them. As strange is it may sound, Sony is seemingly fully prepared to shell out as much money as necessary to produce nearly any idea that’s thrown their way. So far, that strategy has had mixed results, but the essential anonymity of the projects they’ve lined up may actually give breathing room for some fairly creative and original films to be made. Their potential is enough to inspire thought towards the possibility of other future projects and the names that may bring them together.

    To clarify, for any readers who may not know, Sony Pictures still holds the film distribution rights to Spider-Man and any character who made their debut in a Spider-Man comic. This includes villains, sidekicks, love interests, and everything ranging from a full-blown supporting character to a one-off cameo. If their first appearance was in a Spider-Man product, Sony can make a movie about them, and as it’s beginning to turn out, Sony probably will. The string of Spider-Man films released as part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe were made as part of an agreement between Sony and Marvel Studios, and Marvel Studios can only continue making those Spider-Man movies as long as Sony allows them to do so. Venom, it’s sequel, and Morbius – along with the upcoming Kraven the Hunter and Madame Web – are strictly Sony projects and, as such, not part of the MCU.

    The idea here is to pitch film concepts for Sony’s Spider-Man Universe that fall in line with Sony’s recently-established formula. A character most people have never heard of, a way more famous creative behind-the-scenes, and a lead that makes sense but also feels like they should be doing something else. If anything, perhaps this can serve as inspiration for an actual movie sometime down the line. Let’s begin.

    MAN MOUNTAIN MARKO, dir. Robert Rodriguez

    Starring: Zac Efron, Harvey Keitel

    The tragic tale of a simple bodybuilder whose thirst for power consumes him. Michael Marko, known as the “Man Mountain”, is a low-IQ thug living on the streets of New York. His name meant to be ironic, Marko is constantly bullied and made to do favors for the gangs around him. It’s his only form of survival, until the day he’s pushed too far. Michael vows to become a mountain of a man, and finds an opportunity in the employ of Silvio Silvermane and the Maggia crime family. Marko is manipulated into undergoing genetic experimentation, with his body growing to unthinkable sizes. From there, the film follows his mental descent into criminality and desperate rise to power – a deconstruction of society and a unique look into the mind of a man obsessed.

    Robert Rodriguez would be the perfect man to bring this story to life, mixing the gritty surrealism of Sin City with the violent despair of his Mexico trilogy. Zac Efron could be the face of Marko, bringing an accurate physique to a role that could test his acting chops. As for Silvermane, only Harvey Keitel is fit to play the role. His resume is tailor-made for an elderly, abusive, smooth-talking crime boss. Just take a look at Taxi Driver, as any respectable filmmaker should.

    ROCKET RACER: BIG WHEEL, dir. F. Gary Grey

    Starring: Caleb McLaughlin, Jeremy Strong, Michael Chernus

    A high-octane thrill ride through the mean streets of Brooklyn, and a parallel story demonstrating key differences in the United States’ socio-economic hierarchy. Robert Farrell, a scientific prodigy confined by the limitations of his poor upbringing, finds himself responsible for the well-being of his six younger siblings when his single mother falls ill. Realizing the legitimate route won’t be enough, he combines his technological talent with an inner need-for-speed to construct a super-powered skateboard and become the Rocket Racer – a small-time thief with big-time talent.

    Elsewhere, Jackson Wheele is a wealthy, talentless business man embezzling money from his company. When it becomes clear he may soon be found out, he offers the Rocket Racer a hefty sum of cash to erase all evidence of his crimes. Instead, Robert uses the information to blackmail Wheele, angrily belittling him for the part he plays in systematic oppression and referring to him as a “Big Wheele”. In turn, an embarrassed Wheele contacts a black market weapons technician known as The Tinkerer, and asks him to construct a suit that nobody – not even the Rocket Racer – can intimidate him in. Something larger than Robert’s skateboard. The Big Wheel.

    A clash of ideology ensues, with the lead roles played by Caleb McLaughlin and Jeremy Strong. The Stranger Things breakout, with his youthful energy and dramatic acting chops, is perfect for the role of Robert Farrell, while Succession star Jeremy Strong is the embodiment of entitled, villainous businessman. Chemistry between the two has the potential to be unmatched, and become a comic book movie rivalry for the ages. As for The Tinkerer, who also has ties to Farrell, Michael Chernus is primed to reprise his role from Spider-Man: Homecoming, further connecting the Sony Universe with the MCU after his former associate, Vulture, transitioned between the two in Morbius. As for director, F. Gary Grey proved he could handle vehicular combat with The Fate of the Furious, and demonstrated his Oscar-worthy attention to character work in Straight Outta Compton. A match made in heaven.

    STYX & STONE, dir. Henry Selick

    Starring: Jordan Peele, Keegan-Michael Key

    A dark, twisted, animated tale from the mind behind The Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline. Gerald Stone, a scientist working for a new state-of-the-art medical firm, is looking for the cure to cancer. The problem is, his new treatment – which posits that controlled exposure to the disease will result in human immunity – will never be approved for testing. So, in a moment of agony-inducing hopelessness, he begins offering criminally-low amounts of money to the homeless of New York to act as test subjects. Jacob Eichorn, a former family man now down-on-his-luck, volunteers in the hopes that a successful outcome will make him a hero to his estranged children. Alas, the highly-experimental treatment instead transforms Jacob into a living cancer. Now a walking monster with a knack for killing anything he touches, Eichorn takes the name “Styx” and succumbs to his own madness.

    Feeling guilty for this tragic turn of events, Stone dedicates the rest of his life to finding a cure and keeping Styx alive. He constructs a rock-like suit that enables him to survive in the presence of Eichorn, and the two retreat into the shadows in search of a better life. They’re only convinced to return years later, and use their newfound powers for good, when the mysterious Cult of Entropy begin using Stone’s old treatment to drain the life of innocents across New York.

    A tale of overcoming past sins, told via the signature twisted stop-motion style of the maestro Henry Selick, Styx & Stone would be the perfect thematic follow-up to Netflix’s Wendell & Wild, with the added bonus of being set in the Marvel Universe. Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key, who only seem to reunite for animated projects these days, are the only duo who could accurately portray the dark humor and intense grief experienced by the two leads, returning to work with Selick after starring in his last film. They would, of course, be optioned to reprise their voice roles as CGI versions of the title characters should Sony choose to include them in any future live-action team-ups.

    CODENAME: WARRANT, dir. Ben Affleck

    Starring: John David Washington, Boyd Holbrook, Timothy Olyphant

    New York City has a rat problem, and only one man has the warrant to clean it up. Gray Garrison is a mercenary-for-hire, and one of the deadliest in the game. He’s prone to violent outbursts, fits of rage, and never taking hostages, but his mean exterior is hiding a past full of abuse. Raised by an alcoholic mother and an absent father, Gray became the target of a local skinhead group at a young age, and only survived his childhood by learning how to claw back. Now, as an adult, he’s a secret government weapon, augmented with cybernetic enhancements he uses to perform the United States’ dirty work as the only agent of Warrant, INC. – a bounty hunting agency the country can hire without responsibility. His handler, Mr. Reynard, is the closest thing Gray has to family, even if he’s never truly been able to trust him.

    Garrison’s latest assignment becomes personal, and forces him to confront demons he thought long deceased, when he’s hired to hunt and kill “Vermin”, a human-sized rat creature terrorizing New Yorkers from the depths of the city’s sewage system. A briefing reveals Vermin as Edward Whelan, Gray’s former skinhead tormentor who fell in league with surviving members of the Third Reich, whose geneticists accidentally transformed him into a monster while trying to create their own perfect Aryan symbol. It will take everything Garrison has to defeat Vermin, and come to terms with his heartbreaking origin.

    Ben Affleck has been looking for a new project to direct for quite some time, and after a few attempts at working with Warner Bros., it may be time for him to jump ship and head towards Sony. His work on films like Argo and The Town show he excels at high-tensity action-thrillers, and Live by Night proves he knows how to handle a protagonist who lives in a Gray area. John David Washington, an up-and-coming star in his own right, would be smart to nab his own superhero franchise before it’s too late, and clearly has the chops to bring a complicated character like Warrant to life. Timothy Olyphant would slide in organically as Mr. Reynard, his likable-yet-off-putting handler. Boyd Holbrook, always adept at putting a charming twist on detestable antagonists, has the proper look and feel to play Whelan, and won’t be afraid to commit to the motion capture performance necessary to create Vermin.

    THE WISP, dir. Sam Mendes

    Starring: Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Eiza Gonzalez, Hugh Grant

    The dawn comes over the silent hills,
    And calls to the winds of morn;
    The stars grow pale, and the sun cries, ‘Hail!’
    To the shadowy fields forlorn;
    And good-bye, good-bye, to the Will-o’-the-Wisp,
    Who dies when the day is born!

    “The Will O’ The Wisp”, by Annie Campbell

    Dr. Jacqueline Arvad is perhaps the most gifted electromagnetic researcher in her field, and she’s close to a breakthrough in electromagnetism. Unfortunately, she’s trapped working for an opportunistic, misogynistic boss – Jonas Harrow – who constantly takes credit for her work to become the star of the London branch of The Life Foundation. With essentially no credit to her name, Arvad is always under the pressure of being let go, and works incredibly long hours to compensate for her bold ideas. As a result, after multiple days without sleep, Arvad blacks out in her lab just before an absurd laboratory accident causes an eruption in her experimental new electromagnetic field. Jacqueline is caught in the blast, which weakens the attraction between molecules in her body and allows her to manipulate the density of her body. When Harrow learns of the accident, he assumes Arvad has died, and takes the remnants of her studies as his own.

    With her newfound abilities, Arvad embarks on a journey of self-discovery, advancing her own knowledge of electromagnetism and coming into a fresh sense of empowerment. She struggles with balancing her former ideals with the reality of her situation, eventually using her matter-altering powers to take what she feels she deserves, something she had never felt able to accomplish before. Tired of seeing Harrow bath in the glory of her intelligence on television, she devises a plan to infiltrate the high-security Life Foundation facility and assassinate him quietly, leaving behind documents that prove herself as the mind behind the Life Foundation’s recent successes. Things become complicated, however, when she bumps into someone else trying to infiltrate Life; Jacinda Rodriguez, the legendary thief known as Tarantula. The two develop a romance as Jacinda, an honorable criminal, convinces Jacqueline of her worth and potential, reciting a poem that persuades her to take on a new identity.

    Films like Revolutionary Road and Away We Go show Sam Mendes‘ ability to direct quirky romantic-dramas, and his recent work on Skyfall and 1917 are indicators of his skill with high-stakes action. Phoebe Waller-Bridge, who could also help contribute to the script, is a natural with complex characters, and her screenwriting talent would go a long way in making The Wisp a believable expose on workplace inequality. Eiza Gonzalez, who has been searching for a major superhero role since Bloodshot flopped, feels born to play Tarantula, while Hugh Grant is due for a grimy turn as the film’s villain.

  • What’s Next for ‘Avatar’? Rumored Sequel Titles Might Give It Away

    What’s Next for ‘Avatar’? Rumored Sequel Titles Might Give It Away

    After thirteen dormant years, James Cameron‘s epic story has at long last been continued as Avatar: The Way of Water has finally hit theaters. After releasing as the biggest film of all time in 2009, Avatar looked ripe to become the next major Hollywood franchise. However, to the surprise of nearly everyone, director Cameron famously pumped the brakes on the future of his hot new intellectual property to allow for technology to catch up to his grand plans. He didn’t spend the next decade just twiddling his thumbs, though. On top of eventually making The Way of Water, the iconic creative also filmed a second sequel, and outlined a full-blown saga lasting at least five total movies, with the potential for more should the audience demand be there.

    While plot details for the remaining films past The Way of Water are sparse, there may be an unexpected source that teases what Cameron has in store. All the way back in 2018, the BBC reported a list of leaked titles they claimed were for the planned Avatar sequels:

    Avatar: The Way of Water

    Avatar: The Seed Bearer

    Avatar: The Tulkun Rider

    Avatar: The Quest for Eywa

    At the time, fans took the names with an appropriate grain of salt, but it’s easy to see now why that’s no longer the case. The BBC is now 25% correct, which has caused many people to assume the rest of the Avatar title line-up is going to follow suit. In an effort to maintain mystique, executive producer Jon Landau recently stated he and Cameron had already decided on what the sequels will be called, and that online users shouldn’t go by the previously rumored movie names. It’s very possible that the creatives ultimately decided to change the rest of the titles at some point in the development process, but the specificity of the BBC nailing The Way of Water, a fairly non-generic moniker, and referencing a creature from the sequel, the whale-like Tulkun, so many years before it’s release would suggest the other labels were at least correct at some point.

    As such, the names may actually lend themselves well to an attempt at deciphering the events set to take place in the next three Avatar projects. Admittedly, combining the remaining titles with the plotlines established in the first two films still only paints a fairly vague picture, but theorizing is almost always fun and it can’t hurt to try. So, Murphy’s Multiverse is going to throw some thoughts at the wall and hope they stick.

    Avatar: The Seed Bearer

    Weirdly enough, the direct sequel to The Way of Water may be the most difficult to figure out. Unlike the other titles on this list, The Seed Bearer does not reference any specific concept or idea already set in place by the initial films. Luckily, The Way of Water does lay out a few obvious threads for the next movie to pick up on, so one can assume Cameron expands upon those and goes from there.

    The end of the second film features Jack Champion‘s human Na’vi appreciator “Spider” rescuing the villainous Recombinant clone of his father, Stephan Lang‘s Colonel Miles Quaritch, from drowning. Given his twisted nature has yet to falter, and the fact he’s confirmed to return in the next sequel, it’s insanely likely that Col. Quaritch once again plays an antagonistic role in Avatar 3. Cameron revealed in 2017 that Lang would act as the baddie of all five written Avatar movies, so don’t expect him to die off in The Seed Bearer either.

    It also stands to reason that the children of Sam Worthington‘s Jake Sully and Zoe Saldana‘s Neytiri will continue to play massive roles in the franchise. Each surviving youth seems to possess some sort of important character trait within the world of Pandora. Britain Dalton‘s strong-willed Lo’ak has a natural ability to understand the downtrodden, and is primed to take a leading role following the tragic death of his older brother, while Sigourney Weaver‘s Kiri has a strong, visceral connection to Eywa and the heart of all living things – something Sully is warned could kill her in the middle of The Way of Water before being all but dropped as plot device in the finale. It seems reasonable to say these characters and their development will be a big focus of The Seed Bearer and everything that comes after it.

    As for the title and overall plot, it’s still but a loose guess. The Way of Water saw Jake and Neytiri accept the sea-faring Metkayina as their people and new home, but that doesn’t mean the tree-dwelling Omaticaya are never to appear again. The beginning of Avatar 2 revealed much of the Omaticaya’s homeland was destroyed by the return of humans to Pandora, positioning the once-comfortable Na’vi in a fortified, cavernous mountain home as they stay prepared for assaults by their mortal enemies. When the Sully family departed their tribe, Neytiri was notably against leaving her home behind, and only did so out of concern for the safety of her kids. Perhaps The Seed Bearer has Neytiri growing uncomfortable with the Metkayina and her act of abandonment, eventually convincing her husband to travel back into the forest with a plan to save the Omaticaya, defeat the humans, and regrow the Hometree that fell during the events of the first film.

    Col. Quaritch would undoubtedly see this as another opportunity to bring down Jake Sully and claim Pandora for Earth, and it’s plausible he uses his undeniable charm to weasel his way back to the front of Earth’s brutal army. The identity of the titular Seed Bearer is hard to pin down, but it could end up being Kiri, whose connection to Eywa and the Tree of Souls might be the key to restoring Pandora to it’s former glory. Especially if she manages to gain access to her unconscious (or deceased) mother’s scientific knowledge of Pandora’s inner workings.

    Avatar: The Tulkun Rider

    It’s incredibly easy to figure out who this title is referring to. The Way of Water has a major subplot involving the Tulkun, the aforementioned whale-like creatures who form spirit bonds with the Na’vi of the Omaticaya. Specifically, it tells a riveting tale about Lo’ak and his growth into a young warrior, which occurs by way of his bonding with Pandora’s most feared Tulkun – an outcast called Payakan. Following the third act of the second Avatar entry, Lo’ak all but gains the honorary mantle of “Tulkun Rider”, and with his leading franchise role being taken into consideration, there’s a good chance he’s The Tulkun Rider in question.

    Yet, this doesn’t explain why the fourth Avatar might be named after him. Fortunately, a little digging gives further hints. In a 2021 conversation with Denis Villeneuve for Variety, Cameron stated that he was forced to film nearly a third of The Tulkun Rider at the same time as The Way of Water and Avatar 3, because he needed the children to stay the same age until a certain point in the movie. He elaborated at the time:

    I had to shoot the kids out. They’re allowed to age six years in the middle of the story on page 25 of movie ‘4.’ So I needed everything before then, and then everything after, we’ll do later.

    James Cameron

    This means that, partway through The Tulkun Rider, there will be a sizable time-jump of around six years. Lo’ak, already a young man in The Way of Water, will probably be allowed to grow into adulthood and find himself after the timeline skip. With the nature of storytelling in mind, there’s a very solid chance The Tulkun Rider revolves around Lo’ak’s ascent to a leadership position within the Na’vi people, and a succession of his father as their most legendary warrior. Potentially, if the third film does go back to the forests of Pandora, he will also be shown as a great unifying force between all of the Na’vi tribes. How the other characters factor into this concept is too difficult to tell, but a betting man would be smart to theorize Lo’ak as the essential lead of Avatar 4.

    Avatar: The Quest for Eywa

    Another somewhat difficult title to break down, but not entirely impossible. Based on the first two films, viewers know that “Eywa” – also known as the “Great Mother” – is the lifeforce that binds all of Pandora together. She is essentially the Na’vi’s greatest deity, and the power they hold most sacred. Though, if Eywa is something that exists in every living thing around Pandora, how could there possibly be a search for her? If taken at face value, this title sounds as if Lucasfilm titled the next Star Wars project something along the lines of Star Wars: The Search for The Force. A little goofy. Unless, of course, it isn’t.

    As mentioned in the theorized plot for Avatar: The Seed Bearer, Sigourney Weaver‘s Kiri has an unusual connection to Eywa and the planet of Pandora at large. She can communicate and direct both flora and fauna at her will, feels the pulse of Eywa at any given moment, and occasionally experiences intense, seizure-inducing visions when bonded with the ecosystem. Her birth is also a bit of a mystery, having occurred after the death of her genetic mother, from an Avatar body, with no known father or signs of pregnancy beforehand. Almost, one might say, a bit Christ-like. When Weaver‘s previous Avatar character, Dr. Grace Augustine, passed, she was connected to both her Avatar and the Tree of Souls. This is quite the pitch, but maybe, somehow, Eywa used this scenario to produce a child that could act as it’s physical embodiment on Pandora.

    In theory, Kiri could actually be Eywa. If this is true, then Avatar: The Quest for Eywa may be about the hunt for a missing Kiri, who has been realized as the true savior of her people and an essential part of Pandora’s future. What remains to be asked is this – if Kiri is gone, where did she go? Allow producer Jon Landau to give further insight:

    I wasn’t going to talk about it, but I’ve now subsequently heard that Jim has talked about it a little bit. In [‘Avatar 5’] there is a section of the story where we go to Earth. And we go to it to open people’s eyes, open Neytiri’s eyes, to what exists on Earth. Earth is not just represented by the RDA [the franchise’s evil organization known as the Resources Development Administration]. Just like you’re defined by the choices you make in life, not all humans are bad. Not all Na’vi are good. And that’s the case here on Earth. And we want to expose Neytiri to that.

    Jon Landau

    This quote, taken from a recent Variety interview, might be hiding a lot more than people think. Jake Sully, or any other Avatar character for that matter, doesn’t seem like the type of person to rationally take his native Na’vi wife to Earth as a way of sending a message. It seems as though Neytiri would end up on Earth for a different reason altogether, with Cameron using the experience as a way of progressing her development arc. Neytiri is fierce, and The Way of Water showed she’d do anything to protect her family. Next theory? Avatar: The Quest for Eywa sees Col. Quaritch and the RDA also coming to understand Kiri’s importance, and abducting her to weaken Pandora and advance their studies on Earth. Neytiri, among others, would then go to Earth to retrieve her daughter and restore Eywa to her homeworld.

    Along the way, Neytiri gains an appreciation for the common people of Earth, and her attitude toward the next step in Pandora’s relationship with humans begins to differ. This idea is, like the rest of the thoughts laid out here, not set in stone, but it is the best that Murphy’s Multiverse can come up with based on current information. Only an immense amount of time and money will actually pull back the curtain on the puzzle that is Avatar‘s future, and fans of the franchise are sure to be eagerly awaiting when it happens.

    Source: BBC, Empire, Variety

  • ‘Quantumania’ Director Says Cassie Lang is Central to Film

    ‘Quantumania’ Director Says Cassie Lang is Central to Film

    Cassie Lang has been among the biggest talking points of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania since it was first announced. The 2020 reveal that a third Ant-Man project was in development also brought the news that up-and-coming Freaky star Kathryn Newton would become the third actress to bring the character to life, following Abby Ryder Fortson‘s turn as the child version of Cassie in the first two films and Emma Fuhrmann‘s teenage take in 2019’s Avengers: Endgame. This sudden recasting caused some controversy among those who hoped to see Fuhrmann continue in the role, but director Peyton Reed is confident Newton‘s performance will help carry Quantumania to new heights.

    Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, the filmmaker explained Cassie and the relationship she has to her family will be central to the story of the upcoming Ant-Man threequel. The film’s trailer hinted the youngest Lang would be largely responsible for the chaos that ensues throughout, and Reed all but confirms this in his exclusive interview, stating fans will be able to see Cassie in a brand new light:

    One of the single most intriguing things that I was excited to do in this movie was progress the Scott-Cassie relationship. It’s been central to all the Ant-Man movies, the big difference here being that, as a result of Endgame, Cassie is now a young woman. She has become a scientific mind in her own right. She’s been going through Hank Pym’s old journals and notebooks, and has really latched on to this idea of quantum science and quantum technology.

    Peyton Reed

    In the comics, Cassie grows up to become a size-changing superhero much like her father. Initially known as Stature, and later as Stinger, she is known as a founding member of the Young Avengers and an important figure in the Marvel mythos. Newton can be seen wearing a fairly comic-accurate suit in the promotion for Quantumania, indicating the movie might also portray her turn to superhuman status.

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania hits theaters February 17th, 2023.

    Source: Entertainment Weekly

  • Peyton Reed Promises ‘Quantumania’ Won’t Be “Palate Cleanser”

    Peyton Reed Promises ‘Quantumania’ Won’t Be “Palate Cleanser”

    Ant-Man and the Wasp are going big. The traditionally tiny heroes have a long track record of being an afterthought among fans, with their films often viewed as simple Avengers epilogues or “smaller”, less important entries in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Paul Rudd‘s large supporting role in 2019’s Avengers: Endgame went a long way in solidifying the size-changer and his cohorts as major Marvel players, but it didn’t do much to change the reputation of his solo franchise. According to director Peyton Reed, this will change with the series’ third film, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.

    Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, Reed promised that the movie will not be another “palate cleanser” for the MCU. Instead, the film, which kicks off Phase 5, will match the expectations set by large-scale team-up projects like Captain America: Civil War and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Describing his attitude towards Quantumania, the filmmaker explained:

    People felt like, ‘Oh, these are fun little palate cleansers after a gigantic Avengers movie’. For this third one, I said, ‘I don’t want to be the palate cleanser anymore. I want to be the big Avengers movie.’

    Peyton Reed
    via EW

    Reed went on to say he “metaphorically kicked in Kevin Feige’s door” to demand the third Ant-Man adventure be considered very important to the greater MCU. If fans of the legacy character were worried Marvel Studios wasn’t taking him seriously, they can take comfort in knowing Reed is on their side. The director also described how the exciting new setting helps change the tone of the movie and create more “epic“:

    In the first one, we introduced the idea of the Quantum Realm, we kind of dipped our toe into it, and then even more so in the second one. But we obviously left a lot of unanswered questions. We wanted to go in a different direction, and create an epic movie where the bulk of it takes place in the Quantum Realm. For me, it was really exciting, because the other two films take place in San Francisco, and this one, we were creating this incredibly complex subatomic world, and all the environments and ecosystems and creatures and beings that inhabit that world.

    Peyton Reed

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania hits theaters on February 17th, 2023.

    Source: Entertainment Weekly