Tag: DC TV

  • REVIEW: ‘Titans’ Episode 11 – The Call is Coming From Inside the House

    REVIEW: ‘Titans’ Episode 11 – The Call is Coming From Inside the House

    We’re nearing the end of Season 3 of Titans, which means the future is bright. Episode 11 makes sure to hold on to most if not all of the shortcomings the series has compiled this season and repeats many the same bad patterns that have pretty much been on a loop episode after episode. The remaining glimmer of hope is still Tim Drake, and his and Donna’s arc already greatly outshines everything else.

    The main Gotham plot, if it can be found, is once more based on character choices that either come out of nowhere or have been visited unsuccessfully numerous times. The idea of Scarecrow going about drugging all of Gotham with an anti-fear chemical just to play a video that says the Titans are bad and Red Hood is good is disappointing to say the least. But now Jason’s aggressive interest in taking on Nightwing one-on-one to somehow prove that Red Hood is a hero is not only another situation where Jason has done a complete switch of character, but is so meaningless compared to everything else going on at this point. There is no need to worry about Jason being consistent, though, as by the end of the episode he has an internal crisis on being Red Hood.

    Not to be outdone, Dick has gone all-in on being terrible. Not only have his terrible ideas gotten him and the Titans to the hiding places they currently reside in, the leader of this “family” stops at nothing to be able to fight Jason alone for absolutely no reason other than to just make it about himself. Shockingly, this gets him shot and then jumped by the dosed zombie-people of Gotham—not even Jason. Gar and Rachel, after needing a total of probably 45 minutes to learn about and then find a Lazarus Pit conveniently sitting open in a random abandoned building, pretty much hold up a neon sign that says, “Dick is going to die but we will put him in this pit and nothing matters.” 

    After letting Crane be the least threatening and most unnecessary villain around for the entire season, the show did put some type of effort into ramping up his crazy and violent side. The strange new complex about “the time for masks is over” somehow leads him to torturing the pizza guy and acting particularly manic. Why anyone cares whether this guy wears the Scarecrow mask or not is unknown at this time.

    In another part of Gotham, Tim and Donna reunite in the world of the living. Tim’s character and Jay Lycurgo’s portrayal of him is what so much of Titans is unfortunately not—good. We get a better glimpse at Tim through his family, and the episode appears to be setting up a moment where the remaining “hold out” neighborhoods of Gotham revolt. It’s a much more compelling concept than the rest of the current plot, and the street-level and ordinary people aspect of it could be refreshing if it stays that way.

    This episode seemed brilliantly self-aware that the series completely wrecks its most powerful characters for no reason. At least it can only be assumed it is aware considering it does it some more and somehow worse. For one thing, the best line of the episode is Conner telling Dick his is better than him in every way after kindly acting as Dick’s secretary. Because it would apparently be a shame for Superboy to be super, Dick promptly hits him and Krypto with some kryptonite so that the Titans can remain useless and he can get personal with Jason. 

    What they did to Starfire is almost unspeakable. Not only do we get some gnarly visions based on a random baby she saw in the street, but we learn that she was not born with the “fire”, her family used magic to give Blackfire’s fire to her, and now she unexplainably has new blue powers with no clear function or origin. It’s very difficult to understand why her new powers, which has “been with her all along”, are not even green–they won’t even let her be color-coordinated. Titans just won’t leave Starfire alone.

    All in all, nothing much actually changed in the plot or in how the series tries to spin the plot. It is a rehash of the villains being all over the place with no real motivation or personality; Dick being a real hindrance to everything and everybody for no reason; and most good characters being reduced to nothing. Tim and Donna’s neighborhood war could be promising, but only if the rest of the Titans do not get involved.

  • How ‘Titans’ Continues to Waste Its Superboy

    How ‘Titans’ Continues to Waste Its Superboy

    Ever since it first premiered, Titans has struggled to handle all of the characters it insists on introducing every other episode. This first became evident in the first season when we were introduced to Beast Boy. He was an instant fan favorite but was quickly sidelined and used as the series’ punching bag. It only got worse in the follow-up season, as it continued to introduce more and more characters. The tragedy was that it only continued the trend when it introduced Superboy.

    WATCH] 'Titans' Season 2 Trailer: Meet Superboy & Krypto The Superdog –  Deadline

    In his first appearance, Connor Kent stayed true to his origins. He’s a clone of Superman and Lex, who was created by Project Cadmus. While Joshua Orpin is in no way a bad fit for the role, the issue lies in that he’s not given anything to do. Even to this day, the character that can see through walls, punch holes through a wall, and so much more has no story arc.

    We will tackle spoilers from Titan’s third season in the rest of this article. If you haven’t watched the series yet, only continue at your own risk.

    In this season of Titans, we see Connor meander around Wayne manor. He only serves the story as a plot device. He even makes a device in hopes to stop the bomb that’s been bolted into Hanks’s chest. As such, he spends an entire episode doing nothing else. When he is unable to save Hank, he’s obviously quite distraught but the series quickly abandons that. Now, Superboy is suddenly in a relationship with Komand’r. There’s no real build-up outside of a minor flirt and oddly just happens.

    Titans" Conner (TV Episode 2019) - IMDb

    This fling seems to only be used as a means to bring back a chipper versionConnor. At first, you just kind of assume Blackfire could be using Connors solar energy to restore her abilities. Our indication was the inclusion of purple energy around the room, but that doesn’t seem the be the case after all.

    Titans had the chance to expand upon how Young Justice approached its Superboy, a person who didn’t know their place in the world. He was constantly at odds with himself as the models of his makeup are in a contrast, causing his excessive anger issues. Instead, this Connors genetic origin is used simply to push the story forward in a lackluster and uninspired way.

  • Wentworth Miller to Return in ‘Legends of Tomorrow’s 100th Episode

    Wentworth Miller to Return in ‘Legends of Tomorrow’s 100th Episode

    Looks like DC’s Legends of Tomorrow has found a special guest to celebrate its 100th episode. Wentworth Miller will reprise his role as Leonard Snart, or better known as the Flash villain Captain Cold. It’s set to air on October 27th as Caity Lotz revisits the past seasons through the eyes of the A.I. Gideon. Executive producer Phil Klemmer talked to TVLine and confirmed his appearance.

    Not just that, he also hinted that he’ll get joined by some other familiar faces on the way. While they prepare for a new generation of unlikely heroes, Klemmer teased that we’ll get one last hurrah with some familiar faces in the 100th episode.

    We also wanted to give a chance for the newest generation of Legends, the Astras and Spooners of the team, to meet up with some of the original gang.

    Phil Klemmer

    Of course, Klemmer didn’t go into detail or tease further additions. We still have some time until it airs, which could give them more time to tease returning actors. Brandon Routh will have a role in the upcoming The Flash crossover event. So, he may have filmed a few scenes for this series as well. Perhaps we also get one last moment with Martin Stein or Rip Hunter, who both heroically sacrificed their lives at one point in the series.

    Source: TV Line

  • First Look at ‘Batman: Wayne Family Adventures’ Live-Action Miniseries

    First Look at ‘Batman: Wayne Family Adventures’ Live-Action Miniseries

    Here’s a rather interesting announcement. It looks like the popular Webtoon series Batman: Wayne Family Adventures will get a live-action adaptation. Filmmakers Ismahawk will bring the series to life in a three-part miniseries. It’s going to premiere in mid-October and will explore Bruce Wayne’s extended family in a comedy. The series broke records for Webtoon and has become popular among DC fans. It’ll be the first live-action series to explore Wayne’s entire family, as most adaptations tend to focus on Dick Grayson. Titans is the first adaptation to introduce three Robins, but characters like Stephanie Brown, Cassandra Cain, Damien Wayne, and more never got the pleasure.

    IGN has also shared the first look at the adaptation alongside a casting overview:

    • Jonathan Bentley as Bruce Wayne
    • Yoshi Sudarso as Dick Grayson/Nightwing
    • Lisa Foiles as Barbara Gordon/Oracle
    • Tim Neff as Jason Todd/Red Hood
    • Peter Sudarso as Tim Drake/Red Robin
    • Meghan Camarena as Stephanie Brown/Spoiler
    • Gemma Nguyen as Cassandra Cain/Orphan
    • Carter Rockwood as Damien Wayne/Robin
    • Du-Shaunt ‘Fik-Shun’ Stegall as Duke Thomas/Signal
    • Marcus Weiss as Alfred Pennyworth

    It’s great to see the series’ popularity also lead to a very impressive-looking live-action series. The costume design for Red Hood can compete with the likes of Titans. It’s also great that characters like Spoiler, Signal, and Orphan get their time to shine. Of course, its continued opportunity might inspire HBO Max to expand beyond a miniseries.

    Source: IGN

  • James Gunn Confirms Development On One More DC Project Besides ‘Peacemaker’

    James Gunn Confirms Development On One More DC Project Besides ‘Peacemaker’

    All eyes have been on James Gunn, as he may have kickstarted a new era for DC. The Suicide Squad offered viewers an experience unlike previous entries, and it was only the beginning of his new tenure. While he’ll take a brief pitstop to finalize his Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy, he’s also already putting the finishing touches on the upcoming HBO Max Peacemaker series. In August, DC President Walter Hamada teased that they may have plans to continue working with the director, but there never was a confirmation he’s already developing something. At least there wasn’t until now.

    In a discussion today on Twitter, Gunn chimed in and confirmed that he is working on another DC project in addition to Peacemaker. Of course, he doesn’t give away what project it is exactly, but it’s great to know that once he’s done with the Guardians threequel, he’ll likely jump on whatever project is currently in the pipeline. He’s no stranger to working on multiple projects and we’ll likely get a hint once he’s wrapped up with his next Marvel project.

    https://twitter.com/JamesGunn/status/1444712947985620994?s=20

    There were rumors pointing to Idris Elba‘s Bloodsport potentially getting his own series, but the director shot that down rather quickly. He confirmed that it was in no state of development, which means he’s most likely working on something else. Of course, there’s a chance that Gunn is currently still preparing a pitch for his next DC project, as him working on it doesn’t mean it’s entered any form of pre-production. Whatever it may end up being, we’re definitely going to be in for a wild ride.

    Source: Twitter

  • ‘Superman and Lois’ Season 2 Adds ‘Teen Wolf’s Ian Bohen

    ‘Superman and Lois’ Season 2 Adds ‘Teen Wolf’s Ian Bohen

    It looks like the second season of CW’s Superman and Lois is already readying up its production, as Deadline announced Teen Wolf’s Ian Bohen is joining the upcoming season. He’ll play Lt. Mitch Anderson, who takes over the DOD and has quite the hatred for the Man of Steel taking things into his own hands. They also reveal he’ll have a multi-episode arc which may build him up as a threat or a new ally once he confronts the resident superhero.

    Tyler Hoechlin took over the role of Clark Kent all the way back in 2016. He joined Supergirl‘s second season as Superman and continued to play the character to this day. Yet, he faces a challenge worthy of the Man of Steel, he has to handle a family. Together with Elizabeth Tulloch‘s Lois Lane, they race a young Jonathan (Jordan Elsass) and Jordan (Alexander Garfin) to face a new tomorrow.

    It’s funny that the former Teen Wolf star is joined by another alum. Hoechlin famously played the character of Derek Hale in the series before he joined the Arrowverse. It was the film Road to Perdition that put him on the map similar to how Bohen‘s work on the AMC hit show, Mad Men as Roy Hazelitt. Who knows what other Teen Wolf stars might find their way into the series as it continues to grow.

    Source: Deadline

  • REVIEW: ‘Doom Patrol’ Episode 4 – Undead Patrol

    REVIEW: ‘Doom Patrol’ Episode 4 – Undead Patrol

    Undead Patrol is a hodgepodge of different elements framed as a zombie flick right off the bat given the title. There’s actually a lot more that goes on throughout the episode which is ultimately positively overshadowed by the zombie elements. It begins by keeping Niles (or just his head) alive and in play for a bit longer. Niles was completely absent for a solid one episode, so feels a bit redundant to yet again have him return. But his ultimate utility in the episode does find a way to fit into the larger story of grief. There’s an obvious irony in that eating Niles’ head cured the team of their undead-ness, whereas Niles had taken advantage of each of them in the past to avoid death. Maybe this is more apt closure on a Doom Patrol level, but it isn’t hard to imagine that cannibalizing the Chief could give them more of a complex over his death.

    Preview — Doom Patrol Season 3 Episode 4: Undead Patrol | Tell-Tale TV

    The episode is again packed with character plotlines and extensions of each’s individual stories. Of note, Larry is dying because of the negative spirit left, Cliff is attempting online therapy, and Rita is genuinely concerned about all of the suspicious and dangerous circumstances they have all been in, but no one seems to actually care yet. But Rita’s self-motivation to become involved is pulling more strings behind the scenes than might be apparent at the moment. 

    Vic is caught in the seemingly endless cycle of his self-identity crisis as a hero, his responsibilities as such, and his actual “rebellious” actions that depart from what is expected of him. Now, his dad lost his job at S.T.A.R. labs because Vic helped Roni escape, and Cyborg’s systems are shut off. While Cyborg has one of the more interesting arcs of the series, in theory, his constant back and forth with his dad feels stagnant and is beginning to take away from Vic’s journey with the team. It feels like it pulls him out of the show’s general context to a dangerous point where it sometimes comes across as though he doesn’t truly belong. But his constant battle of man vs. machine is no doubt a strong anchor for the character, but it feels stuck at the moment, much like Vic himself who is turned offline. 

    Doom Patrol Season 3 Episode 4: September 30 Release and Speculations Based  on Previous Episodes

    “Madame Rouge” (she is not named that yet) remains in the spotlight as some sympathetic character at the moment. She has no memory of who she is and only knows that she traveled in time via her underground drill-type time machine to find Niles. Her personality is very hard to pin down, but it works for now. It also arguably makes sense given her shapeshifting abilities that we have been teased that her identity would also be fluid. She and Rita learn from a hidden film that Rouge, actually named Laura DeMille, was previously associated with the mysterious Sisterhood of Dada and convinces herself she is a bird. Still, it appears that the hoped-for savior Niles actually recommended she be killed back in the day for being “insubordinate”. Hopefully, this kickstarts a graceful climb into a place of purpose and power for DeMille.

    But yes, amongst all of the above (and more), this episode is, indeed, a zombie episode. The hell demon vomit the characters were sprayed with at the end of the previous episode has caught up to them, apparently kickstarting the undeadening. There ends up being relatively little horror in it, though, and it actually plays out quite hilariously. The zombies are generally just locked out of a room that Kipling and DeMille are plotting in, but the zombie growls and moans are given coherent subtitles with often non-zombie thoughts and apparently, everyone can understand them. But the main benefit we get from their zombification is the big, over-the-top, and violent battle with the butt monsters first seen escaping the Bureau of Normalcy in Season 1. The sheer adrenaline of it all is a reminder that this aspect of the show is truly lacking, if not missing. 

    Doom Patrol Season 3 Episode 4: September 30 Release on HBO Max and  Speculations Based on Previous Episodes - Gizmo Story

    Despite the buzzwords/phrases in this episode – zombies, eating Niles’ resurrected head, butt monsters, etc. – the episode also managed to feel slow and sometimes tedious throughout. It certainly kept delivering quirky, small, bizarre elements, and similar moments were thrown into the pot almost non-stop. Overall, the episode felt like one the creators had a blast with, even if their play had a bit of an issue balancing its conventional plot points and story expositions with wild diversions. 

  • REVIEW: ‘Titans’ Episode 10 – Troubled Water

    REVIEW: ‘Titans’ Episode 10 – Troubled Water

    It’s hard to know where to start with episode 10. At the end of the day, the episode is as chaotic as Gotham after the water contamination from the end of episode 8. The show not only flubs the villain story but manages to implode the remaining slivers of an overarching, cohesive plot. In fact, the episode seems to decidedly prove that there is no genuine or comprehensible story. There’s certainly no storyline available with a meaningful, consistent, or valid goal or even journey throughout. 

    Titans Season 3 Episode 10 Spoilers Reveal Major Gotham Water Supply Bout -  MediaScrolls

    Even if Titans has some clue as to what that plot might be, the villains of the show absolutely do not. Apparently, dosing the entire city with the anti-fear (and now crazy zombie-esque?) drug was not really an end goal at all, but simply a throwaway to hype up Red Hood as Gotham’s true savior. All that to take down Nightwing and the other Titans. How this tracks with what the season has provided us thus far is mysterious, to say the least. After non-stop back-and-forth motivations and betrayals by Jason, he winds up at Crane’s side as if nothing ever happened. Crane is still just Crane, defined by mediocracy and unconvincing ever-moving plans and motivations to take over Gotham. At the very end of the episode, they make a toast to “bad seeds”, not knowing he was breaking the fourth wall in doing so.

    The episode moves into emergency territory with much of Gotham affected by the drug, the city put in full lockdown and quarantine, and general crime is causing generic chaos throughout the city – it is reminiscent of the episode as a whole. However, the true sacrifices to this setup are unfortunately our Titans, whose grand plan first involved showing up in random spots in the city to fight drugged criminals rather unsuccessfully. With that failure in plain sight, they somehow concoct the brilliant plan to turn themselves in as a group “for show”, with the idea being that they would post bail and then disappear. As a quick aside, the notion that these people – accused and arrested for poisoning and attacking an entire whole city – would be granted bail is just absolutely ridiculous to the point it almost hurts. 

    Titans Season 3 Episode 10: Release Date, Recap & Spoilers - OtakuKart

    Shocking, however, is that this plan did not work out. Not because they were not granted bail, but because some Gotham City police are in cahoots with Red Hood and the attack the Titans. Now they are simply in hiding—a large group of (depending on the day) highly superpowered individuals up against the occasional handgun did, in fact, run away from the situation. Again, how this squares with the first nine episodes that portrayed the group as a very confident, dedicated to Gotham unit is anyone’s guess. It’s probably safe to assume that separating the group in this sort of war zone atmosphere of Gotham would, in fact, give it more of a gritty war zone sensation. However, it’s not only completely arbitrary but flat-out disingenuous to any premise laid down thus far.

    If the episode felt bold with its general Gotham story decisions, it undoubtedly felt more empowered to make some bold character-specific moves. It could be compared to the brief allusions to a chess match between the Titans and Red Hood early in the season, except the Titans – and Jason Todd honestly – are making completely random moves without any rhyme or reason. Hence, this episode.

    Titans Season 3, Episode 10 recap: Anarchy in Gotham City

    We can start with Dick, who is given the most attention as always. While he just suffered some head trauma and is having occasional visions of the bat symbol, he otherwise comes across as mentally competent. While sane as he might be, his character is not consistent in the slightest. If he’s seeing bats, that would suggest he’s probably leaning into the “bad Batman” route some more, and one would expect that it would lead him to be more dark and batty, quite frankly. Here, though, he’s just lukewarm at best and making terrible, selfish decisions without the added necessary mental components to make it believable or understandable. The hardest pill to swallow is his line, “Gotham is on its own.” I mean, come on. Even in a “baddest Batman” situation, Gotham is very much attended to.

    Other characters can be looked at more briefly because the absurdity speaks entirely for itself. Blackfire somehow sustained a deadly gunshot wound through her Tamaranian armor. Starfire attempts to heal (really?) her with her fire, but her sister merely absorbed it and takes it from her. Moving past how all of that is bad, we are yet again at a space where Starfire’s character and powers are just wrecked. Shockingly, the admittedly evil and traitorous Blackfire appears to be following her passion. It might be worth harping on how this storyline has a negative amount of reasons to take place within the Gotham story. It’s hard to even care at times when it’s treated like it’s some mild sisterly squabble among the “real stuff”.

    Titans Season 3 Episode 10 Recap "Troubled Water" – Alexus Renée Celebrity  Myxer

    Donna and Lydia’s interactions were so unnecessary. Of course, the show feels the need to tie Donna’s just-came-back-from-the-dead issue in a very shoddy knot. But Lydia sneaking around in a potato sack outfit acting a bit crazed, the two “fighting” for four seconds in mystical woods only for Donna to be told she is the greatest of everyone just didn’t need to happen. Her arc within episode 9 was plenty enough to redeem and re-hype her character, and this only brought it down. 

    To end on a high note, the random never-before-seen police station GCPD officers/workers that gave Commissioner Gordon the rundown on the situation and advised her what to do actually provided some solid acting. While the (what felt like) 23 seconds of that scene at the very beginning go the episode left more to be desired, it was solid. 

  • First Look At John Wesley Ship in ‘Stargirl’ Season 2

    First Look At John Wesley Ship in ‘Stargirl’ Season 2

    Right off the bat, Stargirl threw us into a fight between the Justice Society of America and the Injustice Society of America. It left us with the question if we’d seen the last of the golden age heroes. The series would continue to explore a new generation of heroes, led by Courtney Whitmore. She picked up the cosmic staff in order and assembled a new JSA to defeat the ISA.

    While brief flashbacks would give us glimpses at the heroes of the JSA in action, we’d never really see them in their prime. The second season of Stargirl seems to be giving fans a glimpse into the past with episode nine set to feature the return of not just the JSA, but Jay Garrick. It was announced a while back the John Wesley Ship would be reprising his role as Jay Garrick for the series sophomore season.

    Ship is best known for portraying Barry Allen back in the 90s during the original Flash series. He would later play Henry Allen on CW’s The Flash, picking up the role of Jay Garrick of Earth-3 shortly after. This time around Garrick will be from Earth-2 following the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths in which the multiverse got a reboot. It lead to Earth-2 getting reshaped into the home of Stargirl and the JSA. The upcoming episode may tie into the overarching threat that is Eclipso and how he ended up imprisoned in the black diamond.

    Source: EW via Twitter

  • The Pulse: Collecting the Biggest News of the Past Week (Sep 20)

    The Pulse: Collecting the Biggest News of the Past Week (Sep 20)

    We Might Finally Know Who is Voicing Kro! Wait, Who the Hell is Kro?

    Eternals is next up for Marvel Studios and is going to introduce fans to the most obscure group of heroes and villains yet. The trailer revealed one of those villains: the Deviant warlord Kro. To be sure this Kro looks a whole lot different than his comic book counterpart but now we might know why he sounded so much like Dan Stevens. While talking to Collider, Stevens randomly namedropped the character and since only 0.05% of the population knows who it is, it might just be because he’s voicing him.

    Hit Monkey Trailer Indicates He’s Set to Square Off Against Some Killer Foes

    marvel hit monkey

    Marvel’s animated series Hit Monkey is set to debut on Hulu on November 17th and the first trailer for the series gave brief glimpses of a couple of characters that the merc turned macaque might find himself up against: Daredevil baddie Lady Bullseye and Immortal Weapon Fat Cobra! The trailer didn’t really give any context for their roles in the series, so they might be brief cameos for all we know, but they were certainly cool surprises in what was a fairly intriguing trailer.

    Marvel Studios Victoria Alonso Gets Promoted

    Marvel's Voices: Victoria Alonso on Marvel Studios' Approach to Filmmaking,  Stan Lee's Enduring Legacy, and Finding Your Inner Super Hero | Marvel

    One of the keys to Marvel Studios continued success is that the people who built it beginning with 2008’s Iron Man have stayed the course and followed their vision. One of those key visionaries, Victoria Alonso, who Kevin Feige called “one of the most dynamic, candid and accessible executives in the industry”, just got herself a new job within the Studio. Alonso is now President of Physical and Post Production, Visual Effects, and Animation Production and we have no idea what that means but it’s great to see Alonso continue to climb the ladder of the company she helped shape.

    Disney Plus Day Should Be Pretty Sick, Bro

    Disney+. Apple TV+. How the plus sign won the streaming wars - Los Angeles  Times

    We first heard about Disney’s planned Disney Plus Day last month but it was just this week that we finally got an idea of just what to expect. It seems Marvel Studios will release a D+ special with a look at its future plans and make Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings available on the platform. We also learned that Lucasfilm has a Boba Fett special on the agenda. We’ll keep you updated on any further changes to the schedule, but as of now it sounds like we’re going to be buzzing on November 12th!

    Here We Go! ‘Super Mario’ Animated Film Has a Bonkers Cast List

    Mario Vs. Luigi: Who Would Win In A Fight?

    One major announcement coming out of Nintendo Direct was the voice cast Illumination’s 2022 Super Mario. The animated film will hit U.S. theaters December 21st, 2022 and has a fully loaded baked potato of a cast. Chris Pratt and Charlie Day will voice Mario and Luigi, respectively, while Anya Taylor-Joy will voice Peach. Seth Rogen, Jack Black, Keegan-Michael Key and more will bring other characters from the iconic franchise to life.

    HBO Max’s ‘Batgirl’ to be Scored by Natalie Holt

    Natalie Holt on Creating the Score for Loki, Marvel's God of Mischief —  Composer Magazine

    Natalie Holt’s work on the Disney Plus streaming series Loki made quite an impression on fans. Now the composer will jump over to DC to put together the music for the upcoming HBO Max film Batgirl. Leslie Grace will star as Barbara Gordon/Batgirl and the film will stream some time in 2022.

    Netflix Bringing Back the Mythical Character from Bumf@uck Oklahoma in ‘Tiger King 2’

    tiger king 2

    Netflix has rung the bell and awakened the Tiger King. The studio has announced a second season of the absolutely insane documentary that first captured everyone’s attention right at the beginning of the COVID pandemic in 2020. Trapped in their homes with nothing else to watch, humans were exposed to the stories of Joe Exotic and Carol Baskin and nobody as been the same since. Hoping to kickstart the Apocalypse, Netflix is going to stream the follow up, presumably in 2022. I’m never going to mentally recover from this.

    ‘Ms. Marvel’ Will Stream in 2022

    MS. MARVEL Star Iman Vellani Opens Up About What It Means to Her to Be  Joining the MCU — GeekTyrant

    Once upon a time, Kamala Khan was set to make a cameo in The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Then COVID screwed that up. Then her solo series was set to stream on Disney Plus late this year. Then COVID screwed that up (maybe?). Now we’ll have to wait until 2022 to see Kamala embiggen on our TVs. According to Variety, the rumored delay has been confirmed though no official date has been given. Maybe we’ll get one during November’s Disney Plus Day.

    Olivia Colman’s Spy Character is Here to Stay

    Olivia Colman: Latest News, Pictures & Videos - HELLO!

    In a Murphy’s Multiverse exclusive, we reported that Academy Award-winning actress Olivia Colman’s unknown spy character will be sticking around the MCU in future projects. The character, described as a Fury-esque spy, will first be seen doing some shady work in Secret Invasion. Fury. The Contessa. Now this spymaster. Seems like things are going to get real interesting in the MCU. Who do you trust?

    ‘Aquaman 2’ Will Have a Shark, But Not King Shark

    7 Reasons to Watch the 1967 AQUAMAN Animated Series

    Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom is rounding out its cast and it looks like they figured that since everyone liked King Shark so much in The Suicide Squad, that they should have a shark too. And since they aren’t using King Shark, they decided to have a telepathic shark! Sounds like this one is going to get pretty wild.

    ‘Secret Invasion’ Will Be Quake-free

    Marvel's Secret Invasion: 10 Best Moments From The Comics The MCU Can Adapt

    Chloe Bennet will not be reprising her role as Daisy Johnson/Quake in the MCU…at least not yet…and probably not ever. The star of ABC’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. took time out of her day to break the news to her fans via Twitter. Nobody is exactly sure why she did it nor why anyone thought she was in Secret Invasion in the first place, but let’s not facts get in the way of fan theories. On a positive note, she has yet to deny that she will be joining the MCU as Mephisto, so keep your fingers crossed.