It’s time to find out a little more about the Marvel Zombies animated series just announced at Disney Plus Day 2021. The announcement was followed with a bit more detail on Marvel.com about the creative team working on the streaming series. It seems, fresh off his roles in the writers’ room for She-Hulk, that Hellions comic writer Zeb Wells will not only write the show initially but also be an executive producer alongside What If…? director Bryan Andrews. The Marvel Zombies are somewhat of a breakout from appearing in Ultimate Fantastic Four to a short run of their own in the Ultimate line before appearing in various comic sequels and most recently the What If…? episode. Marvel Studios’ approach to having creative talent be amongst the team on one project before leading another seems to have born fruit again! With the Marvel Zombies featuring flesh-eating versions of our famous heroes, it’s sure to blend well with Wells’ morbid humor!
Actor Jonathan Majors is currently filming Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania where he’ll be playing a different version of Kang that he played in Loki. In the Loki finale, He Who Remains suggests his variant, Kang The Conqueror, is worse than him. Majors has hinted he will be playing the variants differently, but he wasn’t entirely certain Marvel would like what he wanted to do at first.
Speaking to The Ringer, Majors has spoken about the weight of that responsibility both in relation to the MCU’s popularity and as a Black actor entering into that kind of space:
“I had watched the films. Love Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man, killed it [but] I was like, ‘I don’t think you want me. I don’t think you want what I’m going to do. Like, I don’t think you want that.’ That was my hesitation. I was like, ‘You got the right Black guy?’”
Jonathan Majors
Speaking specifically about how he was convinced to take the role, Majors mentions how another actor convinced him to do so. While on set filming The Harder They Fall,his co-star and fellow MCU alum Idris Elba urged him to step up to the responsibility of the role and how it could help bring other actors through behind him:
“We were talking about work and the legacy of Black actors and all that stuff. And he said, ‘You can do that.’ What Dwayne Johnson has done to the game, what Idris Elba has done to the game, what Will Smith did to the game. This idea that the Black men can enter into a highly commercial world. [It’s all part of] stretching it and stretching it and making more room for the fellow behind them. [Elba tells me] ‘It’s on you now.’”
Jonathan Majors
It’s exciting to hear about Majors’ excitement for the Marvel role. It’s also fascinating to hear about his understanding of the responsibility in taking on such a role. He won rave reviews for his part in Lokiso it will be thrilling to see not only the next take on the variants of Kang but also his growth in importance as an actor for the industry.
The upcoming Disney+ series Olaf Presents features the Frozen franchise’s beloved snowman sidekick retelling classic Disney films. Actor Josh Gad famously voices Olaf in the films and will be reprising his role for the series.
While actors and voice actors alike often truly embrace their characters, Gad seems to have gone above and beyond while bringing Olaf to life in Olaf Presents. At a press conference for the series, the actor talked about his recording experience:
“What I love to do is just play and run free, which I’m sure is what [directors] like the least. But they really, you know, gave me the opportunity to just go crazy and [Director Hyrum Osmond] from day one would just let the mic roll and allow me [to do that]. And at first I was recording it all from home–I was my own sound engineer throughout. And it was just one of those things where it was like 45 minutes for a one minute short of just me being an idiot.”
Josh Gad
Even though he was given plenty of leeway in how he went about voicing Olaf for the series, he apparently also had to fight for some of his performances. Gad explained:
“There were definitely a lot of moments where [Producer Jennifer Newfield] and Hyrum said ‘No, Josh. No, no, no.’ My favorite moments [were] early on figuring out what the boundaries were…I was like, oh, no, I’m going to Bob Iger with this. I’m going to the shareholders with this.”
Josh Gad
Olaf and Gad seem to be one of those rare castings where they not only seem inseparable, but the actor has the ability to influence the character in major ways outside of the writing process. Director Hyrum Osmond recognized that many of the choices as to what elements to bring into each episode “came down to we had Josh kind of just say it all.”
We finally got our first look at the Disney+ series introducing the world to Moon Knight. Oscar Isaac will play the iconic hero that fights with multiple personalities. So, he’s taken on different roles throughout his many runs but one has been a fan-favorite since they first appeared in Secret Avengers before gaining even more popularity in the Warren Ellis‘ 2014 run, Mr. Knight. His all-white suit was a visual standout and it seems that the new footage released on the upcoming series may have teased its appearance. In a brief sequence, we see Marc Spector on a bus and he’s wearing white gloves and what seems to be an all-white suit. So, he likely will become Mr. Knight at some point going by this image.
There have been quite a few goodies coming out in Disney+ Day, but the tease of Marvel Studios’ future had quite a few interesting hints at what is to come. Not only did we get our first tease of the Moon Knight costume and She-Hulk in action, but Secret Invasion also got some representation with a new logo and our first look at Samuel L. Jackson’s return as Nick Fury.
He certainly looks a bit more grizzled from the last time we saw him and it’s interesting that he has left his iconic eyepatch behind. Of course, given the title, this might be a Skrull in disguise as Fury. Here’s hoping we won’t have to wait too long until we get more from this series and what it has to offer.
There have been quite a few theories about when we might expect the Disney+ series Ms. Marvel. Originally, it was announced to release in 2021 but as time went by there was a noticeable lack of news, especially when Hawkeye took June. Rumors had it heading for a Summer 2022 release, which has finally been confirmed during Disney+ Day.
We also got a new look at the series with one moment teasing the also long-rumored new origin given to the character, as it’s uncertain if Ms. Marvel will remain an Inhuman in the MCU.
We just got the reveal that a new animated Spider-Man series with the subtitle FreshmanYear is heading to Disney+. It instantly caught everyone’s attention, as it might potentially take place within the MCU just like their previous animated project What If…? and luckily Marvel quickly confirmed that it is indeed. It’ll explore Peter Parker’s time as he becomes Peter Parker in the series in a style that celebrates “the early comic book roots.” Jeff Trammel is acting as executive producer. The only question remains if Tom Holland will return to voice the character, as he didn’t in What If…?.
Disney+ Day has finally arrived and we got a tease for the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Marvel Studios has been busy preparing for quite a few projects in 2022, and they used the day to offer a glimpse into what the future has to offer. Among them is the first Hulk-centric project since 2008’s The Incredible Hulk that’ll explore the story of his lawyer cousin, Jennifer Walters. The Disney+ series was announced back in 2019 and after all this time, we finally got our first tease of Tatiana Maslany in the role.
You can check out the teaser from the Disney+ special right here:
The first official look at the Fist of Khonshu has arrived! As part of Marvel Studios Disney Plus Day presentation, fans were treated to a first look at the 2022 streaming series Moon Knight. Oscar Issac has confirmed as Moon Knight this past May after months of rumors pointed to him taking on the role(s). Isaac will face off against Ethan Hawke. The new special has arrived and offers our first glimpse at the titular hero and his iconic white outfit.
— Marvel Plus FC | DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE (@MarvelPlusBR) November 12, 2021
The footage looks absolutely fantastic and some of the scenes line up with the leaked photo that surfaced online a few months ago. The dark and cryptic tone of this sneak peek is exactly what fans are looking for in a Moon Knight adaptation. One surprising detail in this footage is the seemingly Irish accent of Marc Spector, an attribute not usually associated with the character in the comics. Whatever the case is, this footage is more than enough to get anyone hyped.
If Marvel Television’s near-decade-long run was a concert, MODOK would be the song before the encore. The boisterous cult hit that every true fan knows by heart and normies won’t. Normally, it’s the song the artist pretends to end the night with, knowing that they’ll come out with their biggest hit for the real curtain call as the crowd chants, “More! More!” The band ends the night with a banger the arena can sing to and everybody goes home happy. In this Marvel TV concert, that’s not what happens. Instead of the big accessible hit for the encore, the band pulls out Hit-Monkey, a B-side that was deemed too heavy for Top 40 radio.
Hit-Monkey is a bewildering curtain call for Marvel TV, a show so ultra-violent that it would be rated NC-17 and likely banned in certain countries if done in live-action. Its animated medium practically serves as an airbag from the never-ending collision of steel and human entrails. A grandma gets sawed in half lengthwise! If that weren’t enough, trigger warnings feel appropriate for the show as it depicts extreme violence against animals. Disturbed fans numbed by the mass appeal of Marvel’s family-friendly brand may find this prospect enticing.
Like its titular sharp-dressed protagonist, the 10-episode season is stitched with a lot of style that draws upon the likes of Kill Bill and its cinematic progenitors. The show flexes a sophisticated sense of composition when it comes to its big set pieces, creating a contrast when put next to its comically gratuitous approach to gore. Showrunners Will Speck and Josh Gordon’s previous work like Blades of Glory and Office Christmas Party may say otherwise about their grasp on serious action but Hit-Monkey displays the directing duo’s deft understanding of the source material and action genre.
In spite of its edgy violence and flair, Hit-Monkey will not be for everyone, even for some Marvel enthusiasts, as its world feels like an obscurity. Based on a Marvel digital comic from 2010 by Daniel Way and Dalibor Talajic, Hit-Monkey is very much a deep cut in every sense of the Marvel universe, let alone in wider media. The character has appeared in only a handful of comics, most notably in Deadpool, and has appeared sparsely across the Marvel universe since his inception.
The show stays mostly faithful to the origins, essentially recreating the pages in animated form yet the rest of its world deviates from the familiarity of the Marvel universe in odd ways. The Immortal Weapon, Fat Cobra, makes a fun appearance as an ex-convict with seemingly no connection to the world of Iron Fist. Famed X-Men villain the Silver Samurai appears for an episode and is described as a mutant yet is also posited as the national hero of Japan, akin to Captain America, which he isn’t in the comics. His signature mutant abilities have also been eye-raisingly omitted for posterity.
Hit-Monkey’s hook is that of a humble buddy-cop thriller: a series of vigilante killings sends the Tokyo underworld into disorder following a political assassination gone wrong and all roads point to a Japanese Macaque wearing a suit and carrying a katana. Accompanying the monkey is the ghost of an assassin wronged by the underworld voiced by a blabbering Jason Sudeikis, who serves as the entry point of the story. Together, they embark on a quest for vengeance while uncovering political conspiracies and crossing paths with the deadliest of assassins, some of whom feel borderline problematic with their exaggerated portrayals.
An all-too-familiar premise doesn’t quite make Hit-Monkey the outlier B-sides usually are. The show marches to the beat of more famous revenge tales, saying nothing new about the genre’s tropes and clichés. Even a talented group of Asian-American voice talent can’t do much to salvage characters that are cut-outs. You have the grizzled disillusioned cop voiced by Nobi Nakanishi whose timbre brings a convincing weariness to the role. Cloak and Dagger‘s Ally Maki voices Nakanishi’s younger partner, a steadfast unwavering cop who does everything by the book. The legendary George Takei nets the show an automatic win simply by being in it but the writing for his character, politician Shinji Yokohama fails to make an impression. On the other hand, Olivia Munn gets to do a little bit more than Takei as Yokohama’s ambitious niece, Akiko.
All this is to point out how Hit-Monkey comfortably and confidently sits on its own branch, unbothered by what it isn’t. By design, the show seems intent on not engaging with any new ideas, opting to play it straight. But only because the goal isn’t to reinvent the wheel; it’s to see what a monkey does with it.
The show lives and dies by the charm of its simian protagonist and the surprising emotion he brings. Crippling Bojackian existentialism makes up much of the season’s pathos and when you have a monkey on the forefront dealing with it, you get the same dramatic depth found in equally compelling animal movies like the recent Planet of the Apes trilogy. Identity, family, and tribalism are all ideas Hit-Monkey‘s demons are wrestling with and it’s explored exceptionally. The howls, grunts, and hoots of Fred Tatasciore rival the same complexity Andy Serkis’ acclaimed performance gave Caesar but in a 2D plane.
Bolstering the show’s pathos is Hit-Monkey‘s friendship with a hitman named Bryce (or his specter). True to the DNA of any buddy-cop tale, it’s all about the growing pains for this unlikely duo. That the specter of Bryce serves as Hit-Monkey’s literal conscience and narrative mouthpiece makes their drama more engaging. Sudeikis feels insufferable in the role at first, whose grating quips of assholery in the midst of his pop-culture renaissance as Ted Lasso feel very trite and unwelcome. But as the show peels Bryce’s layers, you begin to feel tethered to his uneasy soul and start realizing the sadness Sudeikis brings to the character is magnetic.
Hit-Monkey isn’t quite the swansong Marvel Television needs nor is it the one it deserves. It’s the kind of encore that might garner a smattering of applause as audiences are left feeling unsure of how they cap off the night. But that it stands upright, chin-up, with a katana in its hand at the end of all things, in the face of everything the division went through, feels admirable.
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