Tag: Amazon

  • ‘The Boys’ Season 4 Adds Valorie Curry, Susan Heyward, Ups Cameron Crovetti

    ‘The Boys’ Season 4 Adds Valorie Curry, Susan Heyward, Ups Cameron Crovetti

    The fourth season of The Boys has added a couple of new faces to its cast, while also upping another actor’s role in the series. The Emmy-nominated series has upped Cameron Crovetti, who plays Homelander’s son Ryan, to a season regular for Season 4. While Valorie Curry and Susan Heyward have joined the series as Firecracker and Sister Sage, respectively. Both will be series regulars in the upcoming season.

    Curry has starred in The Twilight Saga – Breaking Dawn, as well as shows like The Tick, The Following, Veronica Mars and House of Lies. While Heyward has starred in shows like Netflix’s Orange is the New Black, and the short-lived Playstation live-action take on Powers based on the graphic novels by Brian Michael Bendis and Michael Avon Oeming.

    The Boys is based on the bestselling comic series of the same name by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. The TV series hails from Eric Kripke who works as a showrunner, writer and executive producer on the series. He produces the hit series alongside Point Grey Pictures’ Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and James Weaver. Season 4 of The Boys does not yet have a release date, although production is expected to begin soon.

    Source: Deadline.

  • Amazon Sets Release Dates for its Film Slate

    Amazon Sets Release Dates for its Film Slate

    Amazon’s Prime Video has unveiled a slew of release dates for some of its biggest movie titles, including the Harry Styles-led My Policeman. Deadline was able to exclusively reveal the release dates, as well as a mini synopsis for each project. According to the outlet, a fair amount of the films will see their world premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival, like My Policeman and Lena Durham‘s Catherine Called Birdy. While a couple of the films have already debuted at Sundance, including Nanny from Nikyatu Jusu and Run Sweetheart Run from Shana Feste.

    My Policeman, starring Styles, will hit theaters on October 21st and then move to Prime Video on November 4th. My Policeman is a tale of forbidden romance and changing social conventions. It follows a relationship between three people – Tom, the policeman, a teacher named Marion, and museum curator Patrick – and their journey throughout the decades. It was directed by Michael Grandage from a script by Ron Nyswaner and is based on the book by Bethan Roberts.

    While Sylvester Stallone‘s Samaritan will debut on Prime Video on August 26th. The film focuses on a thirteen-year-old boy named Sam Cleary, played by Javon Walton, who suspects that his reclusive neighbor Mr. Smith (Stallone) is a “legend hiding in plain sight.” That legend would be none other than the super-powered vigilante, Samaritan, who was thought to be dead after a firey warehouse battle with his rival, Nemesis. However, Cleary has a plan to coax his neighbor to reveal his true identity. The film hails from director Julius Avery and also stars Pilou Asbæk, Dascha Polanco and Moises Arias.

    Something from Tiffany’s, a film we previously announced was happening here on Murphy’s Multiverse, will debut on Prime Video on December 9th. It stars Zoey Deutch, Kendrick Smith Sampson, Ray Nicholson, Shay Mitchell, Leah Jeffries, Jojo T. Gibbs, Javicia Leslie, Chido Nwokocha, Stephanie Shepherd and Michael Roark. The project is an adaption of the Melissa Hill novel of the same name. It tells the story of two men who find themselves shopping at Tiffany’s for the women in their lives. Gary, one of the men, is merely looking for a charm bracelet, while Ethan is looking to purchase an engagement ring. When a mix-up is made with the shopping bags, the two couples will find their lives intertwined.

    Other release dates include Nanny on December 16th, following a limited theatrical run kicking off on November 23rd, Run Sweetheart Run on October 28th, and Catherine Called Birdy will hit theaters on September 23rd before moving to Prime on October 7th.

    Source: Deadline.

  • First Set Video of Prime Video’s ‘Fallout’ Series Teases a Familiar Location

    First Set Video of Prime Video’s ‘Fallout’ Series Teases a Familiar Location

    The last time we heard anything of the live-action adaptation of Fallout by Amazon Prime Video was back in June when they added Kyle MacLachlan to the cast. While things have gone silent, it seems that they are already setting up some iconic locations from the gaming series for the adaptation. Now, a new video has surfaced teasing the production getting ready to showcase the post-apocalypse with a rather familiar location.

    The video is quite short and shared by @frankpappalardo on his TikTok account. While it doesn’t reveal much, it does give us our first look at the series take on the iconic Super Duper Mart, we also see that they are definitely sticking to the traditional dusted version of a post-apocalypse.

    It’s great that they are using iconic locations, and it’ll help highlight that this is definitely a Fallout adaptation. The trouble with the amount of post-apocalypse storylines nowadays is that it’s difficult to find a concept that makes you pop. Luckily, the Fallout franchise always had a charm that was uniquely it’s own and perhaps we’ll get more teases of iconic landmarks from the various gaming entries. We still don’t know where in the United States (if at all) that’ll take place. So, future set photos could give us further hints where this entry will take place and if it’s a location familiar to fans of the gaming franchise.

    Source: TikTok

  • REVIEW: Prime Video’s ‘Paper Girls’ Doesn’t Deliver

    REVIEW: Prime Video’s ‘Paper Girls’ Doesn’t Deliver

    Over the past few years, there have been enough comic book adaptations for audiences to understand that the medium can either work tremendously well when made into a live-action TV series or turn into a failure of epic proportions. From the incredible Deadly Class, the long-running The Walking Dead, and the utter disgrace that was Jupiter’s Legacy, comic book TV adaptations come in all shapes and sizes. In most cases, not even being extremely faithful to the source material proves to be a guaranteed winning formula making it easy to accept when certain changes are made to make the show work better through a different medium. But in other cases, such as with Prime Video’s Paper Girls, some of the charm, scope, and even ambition that the original comic series displayed, which to a point were at the very heart of it, seems to have been lost along the way making the show worse for it.

    Brian K. Vaughan and Cliff Chiang‘s Paper Girls, published by Image Comics, began its run on October 7, 2015, and ended on July 31, 2019 with its 30th issue. It won the Eisner for Best New Series in 2016 with its creative team winning multiple awards throughout its run. For several years it remained as one of the best-regarded series being published thus making a TV adaptation being greenlit in 2020 a not-so-surprising validation of the broader appeal of the source material.

    Prime Video’s Paper Girls

    As for the show, when the story begins, much like in the comic series, four Paper Girls cross paths on November 1st, 1988, Hell Day. They are soon brought into a timestream conflict between The Old Watch (similar to the Marvel Cinematic Universes’ Time Variance Authority) and the STF Underground. Following a random encounter with two STF time-travelers, they find themselves in 2019 where they learn a bit more about what is really at stake. Initially wanting no part in the war, wishing only to get back home to their 1988’s Stony Stream, they soon realize where their loyalty should reside as new friends, and older versions of themselves find themselves targeted by the Old Watch with the four girls needing to play a big part in the fight in order for the war not to be lost.

    The heart of the series is, obviously, in its four leads: Erin, Mac, Tiffany, and KJ (played by Riley Lai NeletSofia RosinskyCamryn Jones, and Fina Strazza). It is through their eyes that the story beings to unfold, and it is their fears and expectations that move the story along. But albeit the portrayal of all four girls is on point with the source material, the way audiences are expected to get to know them and, from there, connect with their personal journeys is somewhat sabotaged by the pacing in which the story is being told.

    Prime Video’s Paper Girls

    For context, the first episode, Growing Pains, manages to fit the entirety of the first arc of the comics. Such a breakneck pace doesn’t leave enough room for audiences to breathe. Events just happen without being fully explored, both in their meaning and in the way the girls are experiencing them. Several whoa moments from the comic series are left out making the story feel flatter and more generic than the source material deserved it to be treated. The pace throughout the rest of the season is staggering, to a fault. Some moments are borderline boring and should probably have been a bit more dynamic and fast-paced. Had the show been able to maintain a constant rhythm the entire season, taking a bit more time with the setup but not letting go once all the plot pieces were set in place, the benefits would likely be enormous. 

    The slow pace is also made worse by the choice to have the girls time travel to relatively similar periods. Unlike the comics, where there they either go to or reference the year 20000 and 11706 BCE, in the show we see them go from 1988 to 2019, to 1999, and eventually to somewhere in the late 50s or 60s. This dramatically reduces the impact of the possibilities presented to the girls through time travel and just how big of a scope the story is missing out on. We still get the mech robots, the pterodactyls, and the giant steampunk blimp, but all that craziness seems more like an exception rather than the norm that Paper Girls deserved.

    Prime Video’s Paper Girls

    What still manages to be present in the show, albeit in a not very focused way, is how it manages to capture both sides of expectation management towards the future. And the past. Paper Girls is all about how the envisioned future always seems to find a way not to present itself, and just how much that sometimes has to deal with the inability people have to move and work towards it. But that can be okay, sometimes life happens and people just have to manage to do the best they can with the cards they are dealt with. Other times, we find the best versions of ourselves in unexpected places, even if somehow we should have really seen it coming a mile away. The perfect future isn’t always the right one, and the possibilities ahead are always more important than the ones left behind. And in that regard, Paper Girls might still also have the time to make better choices in its own future.

    All in all, Prime Video’s Paper Girls is overall a letdown when regarding expectations that a fan from the comic series would naturally have ahead of the show. But even with all its troubles in terms of pacing, the diminished scope that takes away from the epicness of the plot, and even some issues when it comes to sound mixing, shot composition, and editing, this might not be it for the show. Both the season finale and the main cast, which will continue to grow and perhaps lift the entire show to new heights, could still help turn things around in season two, which has already been greenlit. That display of confidence ahead of the series premiere is something not to be taken lightly, and the fact that there is still much to improve should be an opportunity to bring the series one step closer to the unforgettable nature of the source material.

    Paper Girls season one is now streaming, in its entirety, only on Amazon Prime Video.

  • ‘Wheel of Time’ Renewed for Season 3

    ‘Wheel of Time’ Renewed for Season 3

    Fans of the Amazon series, The Wheel of Time, learned some additional good news ahead of the series’ Season 2 premiere. At the show’s panel presentation at San Diego Comic-Con, it was announced that the series has been renewed for a third season.

    Rafe Judkins, the series executive producer and showrunner, shared the news during the panel:

    I’m so thrilled that we’ll be making a third season of ‘The Wheel of Time’…The Shadow Rising has always been my favorite book in the series, so being able to bring it to television and introduce new audiences to the stories that made me fall in love with these books in the first place is such an honor, and something I’ve been working toward since I first pitched the show years and years ago.

    Rafe Judkins

    The fantasy series first debuted in late 2021. While the second season does not yet have a premiere date, it wrapped production back in May. The first season of the show followed the tale of Moiraine Damodred (portrayed by Rosamund Pike) on her quest to find the Dragon Reborn, who is prophesied to either save the world from the evil that currently consumes it or be the harbinger of its destruction.

    In addition to Rosamund Pike, the series stars Daniel HenneyZoë Robins, and Madeline Madden among others. Dónal Finn will be replacing Barney Harris in the role of Mat Cauthon in season two. As well, it was previously announced that Killing Eve’s Ayoola Smart would be joining the cast for the second season. Rafe Judkins serves as the showrunner and executive producer. 

    The first season of Wheel of Time is available to stream on Prime Video now.

    Source: Variety

  • Amazon’s Prime Video UI Gets Major Overhaul

    Amazon’s Prime Video UI Gets Major Overhaul

    Of all the streaming giants, Amazon’s Prime Video has seemingly been the one needing an update for the longest time. Luckily, it seems that the streamer has been working on something for secrets besides just a few tweaks over the years as they have shared their first major overhaul. This will be its biggest step since Amazon started distributing content back in 2013 and is the perfect time as they start hyping up The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power‘s upcoming release.

    It looks like they wanted to make the navigation menu more user-friendly, especially in how one can access Prime Video’s library of originals. So far, it hasn’t been the easiest menu to maneuver, especially when it came to creating your own Prime experience with your favorite shows. There is now a side section for six primary pages: Home, Store, Find, Live TV, Free With Ads, and My Stuff.

    It seems they’ve tried to optimize the platform for users, especially given how diverse their offerings are with sports events, live TV, and more depending on your subscription model. It’ll also include a “My Subscriptions” addition for those wanting to switch between others like Paramount+ or AMC+.

    Overall, the design looks great and still adheres to some elements from the original, it gives their projects a bit more pop. Plus, it may help ease people to find what is actually part of their Prime subscription as it was mostly dependent on a small tag in the upper corner of the project. Will be interesting to see how people welcome the new design once it rolls out.

    Source: The Wrap

  • ‘Highfire’ Series Moving From Amazon to Paramount

    ‘Highfire’ Series Moving From Amazon to Paramount

    Nicolas Cage‘s oddity renaissance will continue on Paramount+. Highfire, a new series based on Eoin Colfer‘s novel of the same name, has officially moved from it’s originally announced home on Amazon Prime. The live-action adaptation is being described as “True Detective-meets-Pete’s Dragon“, and is set to star Cage as Lord Highfire, a once-mighty dragon who now lives in a shack in the swamps of Louisiana. Going by “Vern”, the beast spends it’s days as an alcohlic, drinking massive amounts of vodka and watching Flashdance on cable television. It’s not until Highfire meets Squib, a human teenager smuggling booze for the local mob, that he’s forced into another life-altering adventure.

    Highfire, a “gritty crime drama with doses of magical realism“, is only the latest in a recent string of high concept projects from Cage. The actor, whose image has become synonymous with over-the-top performances, has spent the past few years pumping out well-received indie flicks like Pig and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent. Next on his list are Renfield, in which he will appear as Count Dracula, and two separate Westerns, Butcher’s Crossing and The Old Way. The upcoming job with Paramount+ will be his first leading television role, after a previous attempt at bringing Joe Exotic to life at Amazon failed to materialize. Highfire will be adapted by Davey Holmes, the creator of Get Shorty on Epix, and will be produced by MGM. The project has been in development since 2020, when it was initially revealed by Deadline.

    Source: Deadline

  • ‘The Boys’ Season 4 Eyeing Production Start Soon

    ‘The Boys’ Season 4 Eyeing Production Start Soon

    The Boys latest season has been quite the hit with viewers, as the newly introduced Jensen Ackles‘ Soldier Boy has become quite the fan favorite. The group is once again falling apart due to their own egos while trying to avoid the superpowered heroes taking them down. While we still have two episodes left in this season, it seems that plans are already made to start work on Season 4 according to Karl Urban.

    Yeah, we’re starting I think August the 22nd, we’re going to be starting season four. So I’m getting back, getting my Butcher back on, and I can’t wait. It’s a fun gang to play with, we work hard and play hard, and I can’t wait to see where they take the characters from where we leave them at the end of this season.

    Karl Urban

    He highlights that he hasn’t seen the scripts yet. Urban is just as excited as we are about how they’ll continue to surprise audiences with some clever commentary.

    We’re about two months away from filming, and I have no idea. So that’ll tell you something, but yeah, not too far away. I mean, I expect that we’ll… I’m actually going to be seeing Kripke next week and I expect conversations will start to happen about what he’s got in store. I like to give them the respect of being able to do their writing process and not be harassed by actors going, “What are we doing?” But I can’t wait. They always come up with insane stuff, so yeah, it’s going to be fun.

    Karl Urban

    It’ll also be interesting to see how the third season wraps up, especially if some of the newly introduced characters are here to stay or who might not make it beyond the latest season. Homelander is seemingly about to meet his breaking point, which opens up a very dangerous future for our boys and everyone involved in the takedown of Vought Industries.

    Source: Collider

  • REVIEW: ‘The Terminal List’ Feels Like Chris Pratt’s Attempt at His ‘Breaking Bad’

    REVIEW: ‘The Terminal List’ Feels Like Chris Pratt’s Attempt at His ‘Breaking Bad’

    Amazon Prime Video has been building quite the rapport with Chris Pratt. Not only did he bring in quite the success during the pandemic with The Tomorrow War, but he’s now also working on a series adapting the novel by Jack Carr, The Terminal List. The series follows the story of James Reece, who after facing the loss of his entire Navy SEALs platoon starts to question his own memories and loses grip with reality as the story around him starts to unravel, which may endanger the ones he loves. Can the premise also deliver with this new series?

    One thing is for sure, the base premise is quite a promising one. Especially in the first two episodes it starts to play with the viewer’s understanding of what is and isn’t true. Audio clips and flashbacks start to intertwine in ways that make you wonder what exactly is real or isn’t. Pratt sells the performance as Reece, and it does push you to question what exactly is going on. The dramatic turn of these earlier episodes also adds some weight and further solidifies the difficulty of discussing topics like posttraumatic stress disorder in combat veterans.

    Yet, the series slowly devolves into a rather simplistic plot of vengeance with some political turmoil. There are some interesting ideas at play, but it does continue to throw in new characters and unravels the “bigger picture” at the expense of what was the initial personal drama that gave the series an amazing hook. It’s not bad mind you, but it does feel like a missed opportunity as its strongest moments still remain with elements from that core concept that help develop Reece as a character.

    There’s a lot of gray in this series, and no person is truly good. Some are definitely more corrupt than others, but it does become a boiling point where if you can’t go with Reece’s vengeance, you may lose interest in the series as that’s the main driving force. Chris Pratt gives a great performance and it is always strange to see comedic actors take on some rather dark roles. In a way, this is Pratt‘s Breaking Bad in a way, as he tackles a complex and broken character. It simply hinges on if you are going to join his journey or not to truly invest in this eight-episode series.

    There is a strong supporting cast here,e especially Taylor Kitsch’s Ben Edwards who plays a vital role in supporting Reece throughout his journey. Though Constance Wu may be a personal standout in this series as journalist Katie Buranek alongside Jeanne Tripplehorn‘s Lorraine Hartley. Though, I can’t help but highlight the hilarious twist on casting Jai Courtney as a war-loving multi-billionaire CEO given his perchance of action roles. The way they play with his character was probably the one thing I least expected from the series and it worked in its favor.

    The series is, at its core, a military conspiracy drama and works quite well as such. When they pull out their action sequences, they are great and you can see the influence of director Antoine Fuqua‘s experience with Training Day and Equalizer at play here. Though Ellen Kuras also offers some strong work here, especially echoing her work on projects like Ozark and The Umbrella Academy. Action is tight and purposefully dramatic when it needs to be, even if it does pull its inspirations from various military and gun-focused projects.

    You can tell this was a passion project for Pratt, who also was an executive producer on the series. The series hits its stride when it comes to emotional moments, as Reece is pushed further and further throughout the story, especially as he starts to have a hard time connecting what is and isn’t real. And, as a personal taste in what could’ve been shouldn’t overshadow what the series is going for, it should be praised for what it delivers. There’s an interesting intrigue at play that caught me off-guard even by the end, as sometimes the camera would play with us on where certain characters stand.

    There’s a middle section where the series seemingly takes a brief detour to introduce new characters that don’t have a stronger play into the overarching story. It was interesting as it added a new perspective on some characters, but it felt like the aspect of this story could’ve easily been tightened for the adaptation, as it pretty much feels like a brief detour in the middle of the story.

    I repeatedly caught myself wondering if that was the end until realizing I was only halfway through the series. It does come at the expense of dragging at times and making me wonder if they may have had to pad out the eight-hour run, but it was still interesting to see how the series continues to just escalate. It also has something to say about PTSD and how strongly it affects soldiers. It doesn’t paint a pretty picture of the military; not even a little bit. It doesn’t indulge in the violence but adds a visceral aspect that forces you to keep watching.

    For what the series is, The Terminal List pulls off what it’s trying to be. While I still wished it played a bit more with its audience, there’s something genuine at play here and it could’ve played a bit more morally grey on some character decisions. Yet, your enjoyment of the story strongly depends on how you feel about Pratt‘s character and his emotional journey throughout. There’s a strong supporting cast and while it has some moments where it could’ve tightened the plot, the series still has something to say that was worth telling.

  • Amazon Prime’s ‘Paper Girls’ Eyeing July Release, New Look at Cast

    Amazon Prime’s ‘Paper Girls’ Eyeing July Release, New Look at Cast

    It looks like the upcoming adaptation of Paper Girls has been steadily building up steam. Not only did we get a first look not too long ago, but now Amazon Prime released a close look at the team while also highlighting that the series is going to release on July 29th. It’s crazy to think how far the project has come that initially started shifting into gear back in October of 2020. The comic explores the story of a group of four young paper girls in 1988, who suddenly find themselves traveling through time.

    The previews certainly have teased quite the style for the project and it does seem like a trailer isn’t too far off with a July release. It is curious that they are taking the Netflix promotion route this time by having it showcased this close to its initial launch window. Either way, the adaptation looks quite promising and a time travel storyline is definitely something to grab people’s attention currently. We’ll see if the trailer can also tease the vibe that the comics offered and how they may bring it on Amazon Prime.

    Source: Twitter