Marvel Studios is heading into new territory with their Special Presentation, Werewolf by Night. Composer Michael Giacchino is taking on directing duties for the first time, as he pays tribute to the classic black-and-white horror movies to offer something quite unique to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Many wondered if the character was always on Marvel’s radar, but it turns out this was actually Giacchino’s idea.
In an interview by ScreenRant from the post-D23 wrap-up, they got the chance to talk to the director on the project, and he reveals that he actually pitched the idea to Kevin Feige to bring this iconic horror character to life.
You know what, it was funny because Kevin [Feige] was talking to me and said, ‘So what would you want to do?’ And I was like, ‘I want to do Werewolf by Night.’ And he looked at me like, ‘Really? Like really? Werewolf–’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, that’s what I want.’ He was like, ‘Wow. Okay, alright. Let’s talk about that.’ And the conversation just kept going, and going, and going, and then, and here we are now.”
Michael Giacchino
He also highlights that this project is indeed going to be “standalone” and offered them the opportunity to do something different with such a unique character within the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
But it was a real gift to be given something that was different and standalone from everything else that they’ve been doing so, it was also a gift. But it was also terrifying because I was like… I didn’t want to mess it up. I felt like you know there was a lot, even though it was a smaller project, it felt like there was a lot at stake, you know, in terms of what we were doing. So I don’t know, but we had fun.
Michael Giacchino
There’s a lot of excitement about what Werewolf by Night has to offer and what could make it stand out from other projects. Its style and ambitions look like they could open the floodgates for future Special Presentations that offer something unique.
Andor is the latest Star Wars series heading to Disney+ but it’s taking a different approach this time around. We’re set to explore a new corner of the ever-expanding galaxy, as we move away from the many legacy characters and take a look at what this universe was like under the ruling thumb of the Empire. Instead of a former Jedi Master, we return to Diego Luna‘s Cassian Andor who offers a more grounded look that many fans may have not seen yet.
In the official press conference for the Disney+ series, Andor showrunner Tony Gilroy offered a glimpse of how they tackled the series but also highlighted how they couldn’t have truly shaped or even attempted this project without the Star Wars fandom behind it. They are not only making it for those that love this franchise but also exploring a more “real” part of this universe.
That’s what gave us the money and the momentum and the ability to make a show that’s this insanely big, I mean, this abundant and this difficult to make. That audience is our primary concern, and we want to bring something to them that is a completely different lane than what they’ve had before, but we’re doing it in a completely uncynical fashion.
Tony Gilroy
He goes on to highlight that very “uncynical fashion” approach they took with the series to make it stand out from the rest, especially in how they wanted to build it up for the community.
There’s nothing cynical about our show. The word we use more every day, and I was at Pinewood today prepping for two, is real. We want to make this real. This place is real to us. And we will bring a lot of things to that community that we hope they’re really interested in, and we hope they really appreciate it, and we hope they really appreciate the passion that we’ve tried to make it real. At the same time, it’s no secret.
Tony Gilroy
It’s definitely an exciting prospect to take the fantastical realm of Star Wars and take a more grounded look. Moving away from the Jedi and Sith that made it famous, we get a closer look at a much harsher world that lives under the thumb of a ruthless Empire. It feels like the Rogue One prequel was the perfect jumping-off point for Tony Gilroy to build upon. With a second season on the horizon, here’s hoping this might also set a new direction for the franchise.
The House of the Dragon, the major hit for HBO and HBO Max, has reached its halfway point with five more episodes to go. The project is taking a new direction as two of its main cast will be replaced to showcase the time that has passed since the events of its fifth episode. Outside of a promo teasing what’s to come, we will have to see what the future has in store for Visery, Daemon, Rhaenyra, and more.
With five more episodes to go, it seems that the Twitter page @HOTDsource may have gotten their hands on the runtimes for the final five episodes with the titles offering some interesting hints at where the story is heading, especially with the final episode’s title being “The Black Queen.”
6. The Princess and the Queen – 68 mins 7. Driftmark – 58 mins 8. The Lord of the Tides – 67 mins 9. The Green Council – 60 mins 10. The Black Queen – 63 mins pic.twitter.com/Zs17EaVHdo
The episode lengths are pretty normal for an HBO Max production, which normally moves around the full hour mark. We’ve seen a lot of shows vary in their runtime with 40 minutes to over an hour becoming the norm. Though Netflix has been very experimental with Stranger Things even having a full two-hour episode to wrap up its latest season.
As a second season is already renewed for House of the Dragon, they might be keeping an extended episode for when the time is right in a future season. With the season being among the biggest that HBO has ever seen, it’s very likely that we’ll get quite a bit more from the Game of Thrones franchise in the future.
Not too long ago we learned that the studio behind Just Cause, Avalance Studios, was working on an open-world Iron Man game. Yet, that project was swept under the rug some time ago. As it turns out, that wasn’t the end of that gaming franchise as Motive and Electronic Arts have just announced they are working on a new single-player, third-person action-adventure game exploring the character of Iron Man.
It seems that the game is only in early development. As such, we shouldn’t expect any news anytime soon. It will see a Marvel gaming veteran return with Olivier Proulx spearheading the project after his previous experience on the Guardians of the Galaxy game. He’s also joined by some industry veterans like Ian Frazier, Maëlenn Lumineau, and JF Poirier. Marvel Games’ Vice President and Creative Director, Bill Rossman, shared the following statement:
We are thrilled to collaborate with the talented team at Motive Studio to bring their original vision of one of Marvel’s most important, powerful and beloved characters. Their experience delivering both established entertainment worlds and thrilling gameplay — combined with their authentic passion for the armored icon — will fuel our quest to deliver a love letter to a legendary hero in the form of the ultimate Iron Man video game.
Bill Rossman
It’s certainly exciting to see the many iconic characters of Marvel’s history getting their time in the spotlight in gaming. There are still rumors of a Black Panther game on the horizon and while the reception has been mixed, Marvel’s Avengers is still going strong with Winter Soldier set to arrive at some point later this year. Spider-Man‘s getting a sequel while Insomniac’s also working on a Wolverine game. So, the future looks bright for Marvel.
Lucasfilm’s newest Star Wars streaming series, Andor, debuts with 3 episodes on September 21st but before fans have seen an episode, creator Tony Gilroy is already teasing the show’s second season.
Season One of Andor is comprised of 12 episodes that span the course of one year in the life of Cassian Andor and detail how he came to be a key piece of the Rebel Alliance and the plan to take down the Death Star. Through the first four episodes shown to the press, nearly a dozen characters new to the Star Wars universe were introduced. According to Gilroy, that’s just a fraction of what’s to come over the remaining eight episodes and many of those characters are headed to Season Two.
What’s cool is that we’ll be introducing new characters in the second half, but there’s 25, 30 characters of import that we’re carrying forward from one to the next. You already know them, you already know a lot about them.
Tony Gilroy
The second season of Andor, which will also consist of twelve episodes, will find a Cassian who Gilroy says will have made “a commitment to the Rebellion” by then, allowing that season to “explore a bunch of different things.” The second season will be uniquely structured to allow every three episodes to cover one year in the life of the characters. By the end of Season Two, the timeline will have caught up to where fans first met Cassian at the beginning of Rogue One. As Gilroy puts it, by the beginning of the second season, “time becomes our friend.“
Read our full review of the first four episodes of Andor, which begins streaming tomorrow only on Disney Plus to find out how Cassian starts the journey that leads him to the Battle of Scariff.
Lucasfilm played it safe with its last two live-action Star Wars projects, centering them around two of the franchise’s most well-known characters in Boba Fett and Obi-Wan Kenobi. While the responses to those were a mixed bag, the attractiveness of the characters to even the most casual of Star Wars fans can’t be questioned. The same can’t be said, however, of their next live-action project, Andor. A prequel to 2016’s Rogue One, Andor doesn’t have the luxury of banking on a beloved character. Instead, it looks to be an expansive dive into a time that has proven to be fertile ground for storytelling: the early days of the Age of Rebellion.
Andor begins in 5 BBY and immediately immerses the audience into a galaxy where the rapid expansion of the Empire has impacted planets and people in ways that are both eerily familiar but also rarely explored in the Star Wars universe to this level of detail. The 5 BBY setting means the story of Season One of Andor takes place concurrently with the opening of Season One of Star Wars Rebels and with Jyn Erso’s mission to Tamsye Prime on which she was abandoned by Saw Gerrera, an incident that caused a rift between the two as seen in Rogue One. Unsurprisingly, the first four episodes of Andor look and feel like Rogue One while also starting to share the same sense of urgency and impending darkness that effused from many episodes of Rebels. So while the first four episodes explore a time period that isn’t entirely new, they take the audience to brand new places where they meet brand new faces with nary a cameo in sight.
And it is the introduction of new places and new faces that will frustrate an impatient audience while no doubt drawing comparisons to another series that took its time in exposition to build a robust world in which any number of stories could be told: Game ofThrones. Creator Tony Gilroy uses the first four episodes to introduce an impressive roster of new characters that inhabit all sorts of different corners of the grimy, lived-in world already seen in Rogue One. The Game of Thrones parallels seem almost deliberate, from the heavy dose of characters with British accents of some kind or another to the time taken to explore the new characters in moments that don’t seem to steer the plot in any particular direction. Most familiar to GoT fans though will have the feeling that many of the characters seem like they’ll probably be important down the road, though through four episodes it’s not quite clear why…or on what side of things they’ll eventually fall. Imagine never having read the GoT books before watching the series. Without prior knowledge, the audience would never have known what to expect when seeing Ramsay Bolton appear for the first time. Andor puts the entire audience on common ground here, unable to know which of these new characters they’ll come to love or hate.
Of these new characters, Stellan Skarsgård‘s Luthen Rael makes the biggest impact on Cassian and the course of the story. Rael is a major player in the earliest days of a Rebellion that is still coalescing. A man of action who believes the time for talk has long since passed, Rael brings Cassian in on what looks to be one of the Rebellion’s first major moves against the Empire. And while he strives to push Cassian to bigger and better attacks against the Empire, he does so from right under their noses on Coruscant where he puts up appearances as an antiquities dealer. It’s here where his relationship with another major character in the series, Genevieve O’Reilly‘s Mon Mothma, plays out. Rael’s duality as a man willing to get his hands dirty while also working in the gleaming center of the Empire makes him one of the series’ most interesting characters and also places him somewhere firmly between Mothma and Saw Gerrera on the spectrum of Rebel-ism.
The series has been billed as a spy-thriller and the first four episodes serve to gradually ramp up the requisite tension for what promises to be an unnerving final 2/3 of the first season of the series. As Rael’s plan unfolds, Denise Gough’s sharp Imperial Security Bureau Leftenant, Dedra Meero, has already started to track coordinated movements and believes that the Empire should be concerned with what she sees as a growing threat of an organized rebellion. Though Meero’s efforts to dive deeper into the threat are frustratingly shot down by her superiors-and even her equals-at every turn, she’s clearly not ready to give up so readily. Meero, along with Kyle Soller’s overly-ambitious Syril Karn, whose overreaching cost him both his job as a corporate security officer on Ferrix and a great deal of embarrassment, are certainly primed to work as the series’ main antagonists. With the outcome of the story already known to audiences, it remains to be seen how Gilroy and crew make these characters matter, but the answer to that may just be in how they eventually help shape Cassian Andor into the more fully-developed character first met in Rogue One.
To that end, Diego Luna’s efforts in the first four episodes of Andor are noteworthy. It’s no easy feat for Luna to go back and flesh out a character whose death takes up a portion of the screen time dedicated to promoting the series, but Luna does it well. When audiences first meet him in Andor, superficially he’s still the same rough-edged character, willing to pull a trigger to save his own skin. Over the course of the first four episodes, however, it’s clear that Luna is playing a different version of that same man. This version of Andor is scrambling through a life he didn’t choose for himself and is still on the path to becoming the man who, as Rael says, will “give it all at once for something real.” It’s easy to get the sense that after watching two seasons of Andor, Cassian’s death following the Battle of Scariff will hit much harder.
In Andor, Gilroy has put together not only the most ambitious Star Wars streaming series to date, with its willingness to bank on less beloved characters to tell the story of the inciting moment of the Rebellion that changes the galaxy but also the best-looking streaming series as well. From the opening scene, it is immediately clear that this isn’t a Volume-made VFX spectacle. Gilroy’s choices here create a world more akin to Blade Runner than anything, one where the layers of the characters are developed by the layers of the society in which they live and operate. It’s incredible what can be gleaned about the Empire, the growing rebellion, and the way life in this galaxy really plays out in 40 minutes or so. In fact, there’s so much to take in that the series may play better to audiences on a second viewing.
It’s foolish and impossible to judge the quality of a 24-episode story after viewing just one-sixth of it. However, it can be said that through four episodes, Andor dares to do something that immediately stands out among Lucasfilm’s streaming efforts. Without a single major cameo and barely a mention of anything connected to any other projects (a little Scariff here, a little Ryloth there), Andor is a series that is willing to bet on itself. It’s willing to bet that the story it has to tell is one that will add to the overall mythos of the Star Wars universe and is willing to do so on its own merit. And through four episodes, it digs its claws in deeply enough to make sure you’ll come back to see what’s next.
Andor begins streaming on September 21st with a three-episode premiere.
There’s a term in baseball to describe an all-around great player. You can describe it as someone who can do a bit of everything. Hitting, defense, athleticism, intangibles, and a great locker room presence combined. That’s a five-tool player. In the MCU, Iman Vellani is a five-tool player.
With a report circulating that Ms. Marvel is getting a Season 2, the idea of expansion immediately came to mind: give Kamala Khan more to do. Embiggen her role! Yes, we’re getting The Marvels next July and that should be a grand team-up. However, let’s think beyond that; let’s think bigger. There are so many fun stories that can be told with Ms. Marvel by teaming her up with other characters, but one mean, green and straight poured into these jeans hero stands out.
As we’re more than halfway through She-Hulk: Attorney At Law, it’s truly been a refresher for the MCU. In terms of storytelling, humor, and tv structure it’s hitting home on a lot of levels. So you’re probably asking yourself why Jennifer Walters and Kamala Khan would work together. Let’s break it down.
A Vacation Visit!
Early in Season 1, Bruno Carrelli got accepted to Cal Tech. That’s not far from Los Angeles so if Kamala wanted to visit her pal it’s incredibly convenient storyline-wise. Set season 2 during the summertime. The Khans can go on a family vacation. You can continue to explore the Bruno/Kamala dynamic and potential romance whilst Ms. Marvel fights crime in the city of angels.
2. The defense will not rest
Let’s say the Wrecking Crew decides to stick around, or any other type of villain. One particular one that comes to mind is Graviton. Give him an introduction here as a villain that maybe a future West Coast Avengers team would have to contend with. In this instance, Ms. Marvel enters the fray and in the midst of fighting accidentally damages some property. Kamala gets sued by the owners of the building. She’s gonna need a really good lawyer. Enter She-Hulk.
3. Banter and character development
Just imagine if you dropped the Khans in She-Hulk’s world. It’d be such an incredible fit. As we presume Kamala and Jennifer would share some camaraderie we could get a great dual-family dinner. So many questions about superhumans, and maybe mutants? Yusuf and Morris as well as Muneeba and Elaine’s banter would be exquisite. Add a court case into the mix and you have the bones of a really fun season of TV. Jen can be a bit of a mentor to Kamala, and in-kind Kamala’s heroic nature might rub off on Jen.
4. Shang-Chi and Ms. Marvel meet
With the plot thread from Season 1 seeing the Ten Rings symbol, Shang-Chi’s inclusion would be quite the tease. With She-Hulk already referencing the events of Shang-Chi, there’s an immediate connection. Charles Murphy, in a past team-up, mentioned Ms. Marvel and Shang-Chi as characters he wanted to see together. If Marvel wanted to push their story forward, that would be a very fun way to begin that relationship.
5. Kamala, go break that fourth wall!
The fourth wall breaks in She-Hulk have been exceptional thus far. Granted, it’s not something that’s for everyone. However, if there’s anyone who can do it, Iman Vellani fits the bill. It’s hard not to laugh in advance as Jen and Kamala disagree on something and then it’s Kamala who breaks the fourth wall instead. That would be comedy gold.
Ms. Marvel can tell many stories in its second season, but this version would be the talk of the MCU for a long time if it ever came to pass.
When Avatar first hit theaters in 2009, no one could have imagined how big the film would become. Avatar would go on to set the record for the highest-grossing film of all time, passed Titanic‘s gross in a little over a month, and set records for how quickly it hit $500 million and above. To date, Avatar remains the highest-grossing movie of all time with $2.8 billion worldwide. Now, ahead of the long-awaited sequel’s release in December, Disney’s 20th Century Studios is set to re-release Avatar for a limited two-week engagement, allowing fans to see the movie in a brand new light.
To promote the upcoming re-release, writer and director James Cameron was on hand for a virtual press conference, where he recalled Avatar‘s impact on Hollywood. While Avatar was certainly not the first film to use highly advanced computer effects, Avatar did help Hollywood and audiences embrace 3D – at least for a brief moment in time. Although plenty of films failed to successfully make use of 3D technology, Avatar had been shot with a 3D digital camera and went on to earn best cinematography at the 82nd Academy Awards.
I think that there was a… I would say that the 3D was embraced in general for a period of time. I mean, Avatar won best cinematography with a 3D digital camera. No digital camera had ever won the best cinematography Oscar before. And then two out of the three subsequent years, the same cameras were used by the cinematographers that won the Oscars. So you’ve got three out of four years where digital cinematography was embraced by the Academy. And all three-all three of those films, three out of four, Oscar winners for four years, were in 3D. So, and then 3D has sort of, appears to most people to sort of be over. But it’s really not over. It’s just been accepted. It’s just now part of the choices that you face when you go to a theater to see a big blockbuster movie. So you could choose to see it in 2D, choose to see it in 3D, generally speaking these days. So I liken it to color.
Cameron
Cameron goes on to compare the use of 3D to when color was first introduced in movies. While some might’ve attempted the technology prior to Avatar, there is no denying 3D films became popular following the release of Avatar in 3D. Cameron, of course, acknowledges that the 3D format has seemingly died down, but with the release of Avatar: The Way of the Water this December, perhaps that could change yet again.
When color first came out, it was a big deal. People used to go see movies because they were in color. You know, and I think around the time of Avatar, people went to see movies because they were in 3D. Nobody’s gonna go see a movie today because it’s in 3D. It’s all the other factors by which we choose a film. So I think, you know, it had an impact on the way films were presented that’s now just sort of accepted and part of the zeitgeist and how it’s done. Terms of long-term cultural impact, well, I guess we’ll find out if people show up for Avatar 2.
Cameron
Avatar will be temporarily removed from Disney+ ahead of its re-release in theaters. The re-release will be for two weeks only beginning on Sept. 23rd and will see the film available in stunning 4K High Dynamic Range. Written and directed by Cameron, Avatar stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Stephen Lang, Michelle Rodriguez and Sigourney Weaver. The film was produced by Cameron and Jon Landau. The long-awaited sequel, Avatar: The Way of the Water, will finally be released in theaters this December, just in time for the holidays.
Andor will be another pre-A New Hope prequel for the Star Wars franchise but is taking a very different approach from Obi-Wan Kenobi. It’s moving away from heavy legacy characters and offering a much more grounded tale by exploring the dark past hinted at by Cassian Andor during Rogue One, which also had a much more grounded take on the galactic adventure.
It seems that very fact was also what inspired its star, Diego Luna, to make his return to the franchise. In the official press conference for the series, the star got a chance to talk about what drew him back to the role and it seems that the possibility to re-explore his character’s past beyond the limitations of the film’s original runtime led to his excitement for revisiting this world.
That, to me, is really interesting to know. He talks about a dark past. He talks about doing terrible stuff for the Rebellion. What is he referring to? I think that story matters. That story is interesting. And there is a lot of material there for us to play. So I was really excited to be able to go into that journey and give those answers, you know?
Diego Luna
In regards to the “material” mentioned, we’ve learned at one point that the original plan was to make five seasons that would explore a year in his life with each season. Yet, it seems that they realized that would be quite a time investment and decided to spread it out more evenly throughout two seasons, which will be interesting to see how they handle that balance throughout it’s run.
First Charlie Cox. Then Vincent D’Onofrio. Now, a new rumor has another major player from Netflix’s Defendersverse series set to join the Marvel Cinematic Universe. According to KC Walsh, Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones, whose rumored appearance in She-Hulk was nothing more than speculation, was set to join the cast of the Disney Plus streaming series, Daredevil: Born Again, but was unable to make the commitment because of a scheduling conflict. In her place, Marvel Studios has allegedly decided to bring Jon Bernthal’s Frank Castle on instead.
Basically Born Again is re-introducing the Netflix characters to the mainstream and they planned to bring in Ritter but there’s a scheduling problem for Born Again. So they needed another Netflix star to fill the role. It’s Jon Bernthal. Wouldn’t be shocked if Ritter cameos tho https://t.co/7OKGnij13Zpic.twitter.com/u2oJnKbmS4
Though Walsh didn’t mention Bernthal by name, the rumor mill has been active around the actor’s arrival in the MCU for months. Dating back to SDCC ’22, fans were buzzing about the possibility of Bernthal’s Frank Castle showing up in an upcoming MCU project, with some rumors even pointing to a Punisher series being in the works. While no further mention has been made of that possibility, the rumors continue to pile up about Castle’s appearance in Daredevil: Born Again. In early August, fellow Netflix star Rosario Dawson added to the buzz during an interview at the C2E2 2022 when she told the crowd she had recently learned “the Punisher was happening again.” Dawson later recanted her statement saying “I can’t be trusted”, but the rumors haven’t died down.
Bernthal first played Frank Castle in 2016 during the second season of Netflix’s Daredevil and his portrayal of the character was an instant hit with fans. He went on to star as the character over 2 13-episode seasons of The Punisher before the show was non-renewed in 2019. With the live-action rights to the characters reverting back to Marvel Studios and Cox’s appearances in Spider-Man: No Way Home and She-Hulk: Attorney At Law and D’Onofrio’s appearance in Hawkeye, it’s always seemed to be a matter of when other characters from the Defendersverse would arrive in the MCU, no if. With Daredevil: BornAgain not filming until 2023 and not streaming until 2024, fans may have to wait quite some time to find out exactly when that when is.
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