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  • Marvel Studios NOVA, Part 5: The Hero’s Journey

    Marvel Studios NOVA, Part 5: The Hero’s Journey

    In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.

    In Part 1 (which you can read right here), I took a crack at solving the problems surrounding the Xandarian Worldmind, the Nova Force and Richard’s kid brother, Robbie. In Part 2 (which you can read right here) I tackled a whole new set of problems surrounding the Human Rocket including his origin, why he wasn’t around during the events of Avengers: Endgame and what it is about him that makes him human enough to make mistakes and learn from them. Part 3 (which you can read right here) took a step back from the main plot to set up the story around the story and introduce Recorder 451, the bard of Rider’s legend. Part 4 (which you can read right here) introduced the film’s antagonists in the treasonous Super Novas and set up the long game of the MCU with a few surprising character introductions.

     

    Saving Rich’s story for the end is a little odd and this series has certainly been very non-linear, so hopefully after reading this you’re able to piece the film together in your head. Rich’s hero’s journey is going to begin in 2023 when the Hulk snapped him, along with everyone else back to life. Many of you will remember from Part 2 that Rich was snapped away by Thanos shortly after putting on the helmet of Rhomann Dey and briefly interfacing with the Worldmind. Much like we saw in Spider-Man: Far From Home, Rich is going to pop back up right were he was when he disappeared and jump right back into that uncomfortable interface with the Worldmind. I envision this as some pretty serious psychological trauma. While it would take Rich time to notice the changes around him, his connection to the Worldmind means he’s uploading 5 years of pretty horrible news instantaneously. As soon as his helmet restores the connection to the main node, Rich’s mind is overloaded with information. As it hits him, he begins to panic and experience some very real anxiety and it’s now that we hear the Worldmind say for the first time, “Richard, it is critical you pay attention at this time” before Rich passes out in the street.

    Rich is awakened shortly by the Worldmind and once he begins to hear the voice again, he quickly removes the helmet and, full of the knowledge that he has been gone for 5 years, heads for home unsure of what he’ll find. Try to think of his race home as similar to Luke Skywalker heading back to his home, only when Rich gets there his parents aren’t on fire. However, when he bursts through the door, the first person he sees is his brother, Robbie, now 17 years old, just like Rich. The sweetness of the reunion with his family is made bitter to Rich as he he hears all about Robbie’s accomplishments, including his acceptance into MIT and his work on quantum computers. Though they are all happy to see each other, Rich begins to believe that everyone moved on just fine without him and it begins to chip away at his already fragile mental state. Though there’s some tension with Robbie, Rich is proud of him and once he describes what’s happening with the alien helmet, Robbie begins to inspect it. After putting it on himself, he becomes aware that he’s dealing with a quantum node and thus becomes, as you’ve read in other parts, a huge part of Rich’s story and takes his first steps into his own.

    The rest of the first act of the film will see Rich continue to struggle to reclaim his life on Earth while experimenting with the helmet. Though initially hesitant, given the fact that putting on the helmet allows Worldmind to interface directly with his brain, Rich grows comfortable with the conversation and with the powers granted to him. After briefly flirting with doing some superhero stuff on Earth, including teaming up with Spider-Man, the call to adventure of heading into space with the ability to prevent the type of invasions Rich experienced in the past is too much to turn down and Rich heads to Xandar courtesy of our first Nova stargate!

    On the way to Xandar, Worldmind downloads the history of the Nova Corps into Rich dating all the way back to the first Nova Prime, Tanak Valt. Aware that Rich will be put at ease by meeting more human looking members of the corps, Worldmind arranges for him to be met by Centurion Gabriel Lan and his first officer, Denarian Pyreus Kril, who we first met in Part 4 and who both have their own destinies ahead of them as Air-Walker and Firelord, Heralds of Galacuts! Lan and Kril will pass Rich off to the Corpsman responsible for his initiation: Millennian Qubit. Qubit will introduce Rich to his fellow new recruits: the Rigellian Tana Nile, the Kakarantharan Fraktur, the Mephistoid Morrow, the Shi’ar Malik Tarcel and the blue-skinned Kree Ko-Rel that Rich can’t quite seem to take his eyes off of.

    Top, left to right: Gabriel Lan, Pyreus Kril, Ko-Rel, Tana Nile Middle, left to right: Fraktur, Qubit, Morrow, Malik Tarcel

    It’s incredibly important that Rich is the only human in the group. I want his interactions with his core group to feel strange to the audience so that we understand what Rich is feeling. I think it’s important to flip the sci-fi script here and rather than have the aliens follow the “oh another stupid human” trope, have Rich struggle with their acceptance of him. Also, as we follow the archetypes of the hero’s journey, Ko-Rel plays the innocent temptress and it’s his attraction to her that begins to break down the walls of his xenophobia. While the core team will go forward with Rich, you might remember from Part 4 that they don’t all make it. Ko-Rel and Qubit are on the 6-man team that take the mission to Cygnet VII along with Rich, Nile, Lan and Krill and, unfortunately, neither of them make it back. The rest of Rich’s team will arrive as part of the huge strike team that finally takes out the Super Novas after Rich disables their hack. Ko’Rel’s death will stay with Rich for the entirety of his MCU journey and, as in the comics, she will become the avatar of the Worldmind when Rich interacts with it in person.

    After surviving the adventure, Rich’s takes the final step of the hero’s journey, the return home. A very different person from when he left just a few short weeks earlier, Rich has the joyful reunion he should have had with his family when he first saw them post-snap. He and Robbie reunite and share a much more brotherly hug. Rich gives Robbie the helmet and as he interfaces with Worldmind we see a broad smile emerge on his face: Robbie is going to space (but you read Part 4 and you already knew that). After being briefly home, Rich and Robbie board the Way-Opener and head back to Xandar destined to take on the Universal Church of Truth, the Fraternity of Raptors and the Annihilation Wave.

  • Karen Gillan Talks Rebuilding Nebula in ‘GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 3’

    James Gunn has taken a lot of liberties in adapting the Guardians of the Galaxy to the screen. From turning Yondu into a space hillbilly to making Ronan more of a popcorn fart than a Cosmic powerhouse, Gunn’s MCU versions of some classic characters haven’t always landed with me. One character who puts a check in the plus column, however, is Karen Gillan’s Nebula. After being abused and tortured at the hands of Thanos, Nebula is finally free of her father’s cruelty and able to move in a new direction. Gillan talked about Nebula’s past and potential future recently at GalaxyCon Live.

    During a GalaxyCon panel, Gillan said, “I’m interested to maybe try and take her to a place now where she’s starting to rebuild her life,” something which, after killing her old, murderous self, should be interesting. She noted that ever since her introduction in 2014’s Guardians of the Galaxy, Nebula has “just had a really hard time of it.  Though she started off as a villain, the audience has come to see her with “sympathy and empathy” now that we’ve seen how terribly she was treated by Thanos.

    I was able to use a lot of psychology essays on that character, because she’s someone who has dealt with abuse from her father from such a young age. Not to make it too heavy, but he pitted the siblings against each other — she would be inferior and the scapegoat, while the other one was the golden child. It’s actually a quite common thing to happen within families and siblings. I don’t have any siblings, so it’s something I really had to read up on.

    To Gillan, watching Thor separate Thanos from his head in Avengers: Endgame seems to be a pivotal, if not cathartic, moment in Nebula’s life, freeing her up to think about her future for the first time.

    In Avengers, she had to face the source of her abuse, then actually watch him get eliminated from her life. I’m sort of thinking about future Nebula in the sense like, ‘What is she going to be like now that that person’s abuse has gone out of her life? How is she going to build herself back up again?’ Because it’s an odd feeling, I think, for someone who’s been abused by a parent, because they still love them and they’re sad that they’re gone, but also they hate them and they’re glad that they’re gone.

    Gillan’s portrayal of Nebula as the character has grown has been a highlight of Gunn’s films. Her transformation from villain, to begrudging ally to full on hero now complete, we can look forward to her next steps as someone trying to move on from an incredible amount of trauma as one of the Guardians of the Galaxy!

    The release date Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is, like everything else, is currently unknown but it is believed we will see it in theaters in 2023.

  • Marvel Studios ‘HAWKEYE’ Working Title Revealed

    Marvel Studios ‘HAWKEYE’ Working Title Revealed

    With productions delayed as the COVID-19 pandemic continues we aren’t quite sure when we can expect to see Marvel Studios Disney Plus streaming series Hawkeye start filming; however, we do know what the working title will be whenever that is! The Jeremy Renner led series that is set to introduce Kate Bishop to the MCU will be filming under the working title Anchor Point.

     

     

    The working title refers to the a spot on an archer’s face where they draw back their bow. A consistent anchor point is key to accuracy. It’s also worth noting that the collected first volume of Kelly Thompson’s Hawkeye series is called Anchor Points.

     

    Once on track for a late-September start, it’s no longer clear when we should expect production to begin as Marvel Studios has given no updates. While Renner is returning as Clint Barton, Marvel Studio have yet to cast their Kate Bishop though rumors persist that Hailee Steinfeld is their first choice.

     

    Stay tuned to Murphy’s Multiverse for more on this story as it develops. In the meantime, you can check out the titular story arc featuring Kate Bishop, written by Kelly Thompson.

     

     

  • ‘Tales of The Jedi’

    ‘Tales of The Jedi’

    Premiere: October 26, 2022

    Following the success of Star Wars: Visions audiences are getting a new Star Wars anthology series that will this time explore different Jedi characters from the prequel trilogy era. It will consist of six episodes split into two paths. The first one will follow Ahsoka Tano and the other a young Count Dooku before turning to the dark side of the Force.

    Liam Neeson is set to return to voice Qui-Gon Jinn and Matt Lanter and Ashley Eckstein will also reprise their takes on their Star Wars animated characters, Anakin Skywalker and Ahsoka Tano.

    It was announced at Lucasfilm’s D23 panel in September 2022 that the series would be premiering on October 26 and that, of the six episodes that comprise the first season, three would be dedicated to following Ahsoka Tano and three would focus on Count Dooku.

    Cast

    • Liam Neeson as Qui-Gon Jinn
    • Matt Lanter as Anakin Skywalker
    • Ashhley Eckstein as Ahsoka Tano

    Promotional Material

  • Skeleton Crew

    Skeleton Crew

    Premiere: December 3, 2024 (Two Episodes)

    Announced at Star Wars Celebration 2022, Skeleton Crew is an original series set to explore the story of a group of kids that get lost in the Star Wars galaxy, set in the same timeframe as The Mandalorian, Ahsoka, and Boba Fett.

    The show will be steered by Jon Watts and executive produced by Christopher Ford, Jon Favreau, Dave Filoni as well as by Watts himself. The cast will be led by Academy-nominated actor Jude Law. According to a trade report the series is set for a 2023 Disney+ release.

    In September 2020 it was announced that both Kyriana Kratter and Ravi Cabot-Conyers had joined the series’ cast.

    In May 2024, series creator Jon Watts revealed that Skeleton Crew was slated to debut on Disney Plus “around Christmas” 2024.The series will debut on December 3rd, 2024 with a 2-episode premiere.

    Cast

    • Jude Law Ja Na Nawood
    • Kyriana Kratter as KB
    • Ravi Cabot-Conyers as Wim
    • Ryan Kiera Armstrong as Fern
    • Robert Timothy Smith as Neel
    • Kerry Condon as
    • Nick Frost as the voice of SM-33
    • Tunde Adebimpe
  • ‘Star Wars: Visions’ (season 2)

    ‘Star Wars: Visions’ (season 2)

    Premiere: 2023

    Announced during Star Wars Celebration 2022, this animated anthology series will continue in the footsteps of season one as it will feature the inventiveness of several of the leading Japanese anime studios as they tell stories set in the Star Wars universe. But season two will go a step further and include a few other animated styles from across the world, meaning a lot more diversity in the stories being told and how they may be explored. It is set to premiere on Disney+ in 2023.

    Season one featured the voices of Joseph Gordon-LevittNeil Patrick HarrisAlison BrieKaren FukuharaDavid Harbour, George Takei, and Temuera Morrison meaning we should expect a similar celebrity list lending their voiceover talents for season two.

  • Andor Season 2

    Andor Season 2

    Premiere: TBD 2025

    The second season for Andor was confirmed at Star Wars Celebration 2022 before season one had even premiered. It will begin principal photography in the Fall of 2022. This second set of 12 episodes is set to conclude the series as it directly leads into the events of Rogue One. Diego Luna will obviously be returning as the titular character.

    Ahead of the series’ premiere, at Lucasfilm’s D23 panel in September 2022, Kathleen Kennedy teased that Season 2 would be starting production shortly after. Though it was originally believed to be intended to release in 2024, its production was paused during the WGA and SAG strikes, likely delaying it until 2025.

    During D23 2024, the second season of the series was confirmed for a 2025 release on Disney Plus.

    Cast

    • Diego Luna as Cassian Andor
  • EXCLUSIVE: Evan Peters Playing Mystery Role in ‘WANDAVISION’

    EXCLUSIVE: Evan Peters Playing Mystery Role in ‘WANDAVISION’

    The world needs some good news. Thanks to a familiar and trusted source (the same L.A. based source who told me about Peyton Reed signing on for Season 2 of The Mandalorian), I have learned that Evan Peters (American Horror Story, X-Men) signed on for a key role in the Marvel Studios Disney Plus streaming series WandaVision. The 33-year old Peters landed the role late last year and filmed his scenes shortly after.

    Evan Peters' Quicksilver is back for another "X-Men" run

    The nature of Peters’ role is being kept under wraps and that is likely to generate a great deal of excitement and confusion among fans given that the actor has thrice portrayed Wanda’s brother, Pietro, in Fox’s X-Men franchise. Of course Peters is also well-known for his portrayal of several terrifying villains over the course of 8 seasons of American Horror Story, opening up the possibility that he’s landed a role as WandaVision’s big bad. Given the nature of the series, Peters could be playing anyone from Nicholas Scratch to Mephisto.

    The waters would seem to get muddy quickly should Peters be reprising his role as Pietro and then crossing over into the MCU, but rumors have persisted that WandaVision will somehow feature Wanda’s deceased brother though Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who played the speedster in Avengers: Age of Ultron, has made it very clear that we shouldn’t plan on seeing him suit back up as Quicksilver any time soon. So if Taylor-Johnson isn’t back and Quicksilver is, that would mean a recast, something Marvel Studios has done successfully in the past, and Peters would be an interesting choice given the majority of fans seem to gravitate towards his portrayal of the character. This is just one possible option, of course, and perhaps not even the most likely, but it’s the one that quickly comes to mind.

    Time will tell exactly what role Peters is playing, but given his American Horror Story fan base and his resume as a superhero, this is, most definitely, some good news!

  • Marvel Studios NOVA, Part 4: The Villains, The Cameos and The Set Up

    Marvel Studios NOVA, Part 4: The Villains, The Cameos and The Set Up

    In considering what it would take to set Marvel Studios Nova film apart from its prior Cosmic offerings and prepare Richard Rider to ascend as the studios greatest Cosmic hero, I’ve found myself challenged over the past several days. The character of Richard Rider isn’t hard to crack, but there’s more to a film than its lead. Instead of trying to write up a script (I’m no script writer), I’m instead going to try to roll out a series of pieces explaining how I would chose to tackle some of these challenges I’ve encountered while imagining the Nova film.

    In Part 1 (which you can read right here), I took a crack at solving the problems surrounding the Xandarian Worldmind, the Nova Force and Richard’s kid brother, Robbie. In Part 2 (which you can read right here) I tackled a whole new set of problems surrounding the Human Rocket including his origin, why he wasn’t around during the events of Avengers: Endgame and what it is about him that makes him human enough to make mistakes and learn from them. Part 3 (which you can read right here) took a step back from the main plot to set up the story around the story and introduce Recorder 451, the bard of Rider’s legend.

    I’ll admit I lost quite a few hours of sleep in coming up with the villains of this piece. I had no fewer than 5 different options rolling around inside my head, but I ultimately chose the Supernovas.

    If you are unfamiliar, the Supernovas are basically Novas gone bad. They found a way to hack the Worldmind and to gain access to greater power than it was giving each of them. Though eventually defeated, their super-powered black helmets lived on in the black ops division of the Nova Corps that became known as the Black Novas. If you’re a Sam Alexander fan, you’ll be familiar with the story and the black helmet and while I’m not going down a path that leads to Sam’s father Jesse Alexander being introduced in this film, the foundation is there for the story to be told at some point.

    The Supernovas fit the Marvel Studios mold of the villains of the first film in a series being dark reflections of the hero. People get bored with it, but it’s an archetype that transcends culture and types of media. The idea that the heroes are facing off against similar characters allows the audience to think of how, had circumstances been different for the hero, maybe he’d be on the other side of things. Black Panther did this brilliantly. In this case, these Supernovas offer Rich, a kid who has struggled with his own perceived mediocrity, access to power, resources and spoils he’s never dreamed of. These guys aren’t bad guys, they’re fighting against a system that norms everyone, that doesn’t let anyone be any better than anyone else. Why should everyone only have an equal part of the Nova Force? This is the battle raging on inside Rich as he discovers these Supernovas and finds out what they’re up to. We all know Rich is a hero, here’s where he makes that choice.

    Fighting the Supernovas also allows Rich to be able to come out his film as a hero without being the biggest Mary Sue in the history of films. You can’t introduce the helmet and the powers and realistically expect him to stop the Annihilation Wave in 2.5 hours. In fact, this origin film is going to see Rich stripped of the helmet for a while and have to survive on his own physical prowess (he’s been studying MMA for the past several years, remember). Obviously he’s going to get it back and we’ll definitely see some great shots of Rich using the Nova Force, but he’s going to win this battle through the sheer force of will riding on the back of that righteous anger boiling up inside.

    In addition to the terrifying looking Mister Z’zz seen in the opening of the article, this team of Supernovas consists of Adomox, the mastermind of the operation; Titus, the cyborg muscle and the adorable Phlish, because we have to sell them toys.

    Here’s how we get to the good stuff. The Nova Corps has been rebuilding since the planet was left in ruins following the attack by Thanos. The Worldmind was never a target, so it remains fully operational, but Xandar doesn’t exist as we once thought of it. By the time we get to see it in Nova, it has become a cluster of fragments held together through freaky space science, just like this great art from Annihilation: Prologue. In the 5 years that passed, the Worldmind hasn’t just rebuilt Xandar, it rebuilt the Corps. The Corps is now larger than it’s ever been and has taken an active role in policing the galaxy with active posts throughout.

    When Rich arrives on Xandar and begins to really take in what he has become a part of (we’ll get to all that in Part 5), we immediately learn that there have been several outposts have been attacked over the past few weeks. Nova Corpsmen Z’zz and Phlish and Denarian Adomox are missing. Skrulls, who have begun to reemerge in various sects across the galaxy, are the primary suspects.

    We meet Centurion Titus through Rich’s eyes and it’s not a good feeling. Rich’s xenophobia is intense and there’s nothing human looking about Titus. Shortly after their first meeting, Rich is greeted by two Xandarians who are much more human looking: Pyreus Kril and Gabriel Lan who Worldmind has sent to help Rich acclimate.

    The Supernova plot plays out like this. Not too long after Rich is acclimated into the Corps, Worldmind assigns him to go with Titus and Kril as they inspect another outpost that’s been attacked. As they approach the site, they encounter what appears to be a stolen Nova Corps ship and enter into a little space dogfight while Kril stays on the planet to inspect. Rich, feeling the power at his disposal and the need to make an impression, leaves the ship to take on the ship on his own. Pretty cool fight, but the ship escapes as Titus has to save Rich and he is berated by Titus as they return to Xandar.

    The third act is, of course, the big reveal and the big villain set piece. Titus led another team to another planet and has disappeared. A 6 man team, including Rich,Kril and Lan is sent to investigate above the Xandarian ship Way-Opener. As they come into proximity with the planet, Cygnet VII, their connection to the Worldmind is severed. They can no longer communicate with it or access the Nova Force. As they prepare to leave, a black helmeted Titus unleashes his increased share of the Nova Force on the ship, disabling it, before bringing it to rest on the planet. The crew is taken off the ship and their helmets are taken from them.

    We learn that Adomox has learned how to hack the Worldmind to access greater power but it comes at the cost of the helmets of other Corpsmen. Some, like Z’zz and Phlish, are willing to give theirs up and join the cause, those who haven’t come along willingly have been disposed of. The third act will play out as sort of a mashup of Predator and Cliffhanger. The team is on the run, hunted by the Supernovas and cut off from the Worldmind (good thing Worldmind helped Rich and Robbie put together that super long distance communication device that Rich has and that Robbie uses to get a full on strike team to the rescue).

    And so the final act becomes Rich having to survive, powerless for a while, until help arrives. Robbie and Rich are in communication throughout and Robbie determines he knows how the hack works and tells Rich if he gets a helmet, he can reconnect them to the Worldmind. A powerless Rich gets the jump on Z’zz and gets to show off some MMA moves after separating Z’zz from his helmet. At this point, Rich takes the helmet and gets his first taste of what the extra Nova Force can do (something you’ll want to be well aware of for the future).

    Now powered up, Rich encounters 2 dead members of his team and a third (Nile) in bad shape. While tending to Nile, Rich makes short work of Phlish and then his makes his run on Adomox and Titus who have caught up with Kril and Lan and are giving them one last chance to join or become space dust. While Rich puts up a decent fight, he’s clearly not in the same league as Titus. He does get some “Han Solo shows back up in the Millennium Falcon” help when he’s able to blast Adomox, allowing Lan to pick up the helmet and use it in the fight against Titus. Lan takes a big hit, Rich makes one last run at Titus and fails and it looks like it’s over until Kril, Lan and the strike team of Novas, now all fully capable of accessing the Nova Force, take Titus down.

    Rich is exhausted, but he held. Titus and Adomox survive and go to the Kyln located near the Crunch. Robbie, who geniused up some ideas, is brought to Xandar to work with the Worldmind to replicate the same hack and create the Black Novas. It’s a party. You can walk away from Nova knowing that Jesse Alexander could exist and that Robbie Rider could have an adventure of his own.

    The Cameos

    This doesn’t fit here, but it really doesn’t fit anywhere and it’s too short to have its own piece. In between Rich’s first trip with Titus and his last, Kril, Lan and some other Novas who you will meet in Part 5 take Rich to their favorite hangout: Starlin’s Bar. It’s very much an homage to the Mos Eisly cantina and Rich is going to be VERY uncomfortable. To add to that discomfort, Rich is going to bump into everyone’s filthy, degenerate troll, Pip, in the bathroom of all places.

    Pip the Troll | Heroes Wiki | Fandom

    Pip’s cameo is going to be taken directly from the pages of my own life story. When I was 11, I went to a Detroit Tigers game and went into the bathroom by myself. I can remember there being no fewer than 50 open urinals in the bathroom and I took the one at the end. Just as I started to pee, an old guy walked in, stood right next to me (huge violation of the code) and said, “So I guess this is where all the dicks come to hang out.” I didn’t finish that pee; neither will Rich. I can’t think of a better intro to Pip.

    As Rich hurries out of the bathroom, we’ll meet our second cameo star and the Boba Fett of my Marvel Cinematic Universe. Rich will come face-to-face with Monark Starstalker.

    Monark Starstalker will return.