Tag: Disney Plus

  • Review: ‘Andor’

    Review: ‘Andor’

    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 of Thrones. 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.

  • ‘Andor’s Diego Luna Teases What Sparked His Interest to Return to Play Cassian Andor Once More

    ‘Andor’s Diego Luna Teases What Sparked His Interest to Return to Play Cassian Andor Once More

    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.

  • ‘Andor’ Showrunner Hints at Season 2 Release in 2024

    ‘Andor’ Showrunner Hints at Season 2 Release in 2024

    We’re only a few more days ahead of the release of Andor, the latest Disney+ series to release and further explore the Star Wars galaxy. We’ve known for a while that we’ll also be getting a second season, which will likely start production soon. As it turns out he’s expecting to start production by November according to showrunner Tony Gilroy in an interview with The Wrap. Even still, we shouldn’t expect the release until 2024.

    I have two more years to go. We start shooting in November on Part 2. And I don’t know if … Our past pattern was two years, but I mean, I’ll be on … We’ll shoot from November to August. And then our post[-production] last time was about a year.

    Tony Gilroy

    In an interesting tidbit during the interview, Gilroy hints at the fact that this might be the most time he’s ever spent on a franchise as he tends to jump from one project to the next; highlighting how dedicated he is to this project.

    This is the most home I’ve ever made. I’ve always had a very nimble approach to this. I never take a job in front of another job. I’ve always just done one thing at a time and moved around and never made a company or got a letterhead or I never had a production deal or anything. This is the longest I’ve ever spent anywhere.

    Tony Gilroy

    It’s definitely motivating to see that the project has Gilroy wanting to spend as much time as he can on it. His initial idea for Andor was originally going to consist of five seasons which would highlight just how excited he was to tackle the project moving forward even as he compressed the idea into two seasons.

    Source: The Wrap

  • ‘Andor’ Showrunner Praises Impressive Set by Former ‘Chernobyl’ Production Designer

    ‘Andor’ Showrunner Praises Impressive Set by Former ‘Chernobyl’ Production Designer

    Andor will be the first Disney+ series to take a step away from the Volume, which has become quite popular by many productions during the pandemic. Of course, it made sense considering that it helped work around the restrictions set by COVID and some countries closing their borders. Still, The latest Star Wars series ist focusing a bit more on using real sets to highlight the grounded aspect of what the project has to offer.

    In the official press event for the Disney+ series, Tony Gilroy got a chance to talks about the sets that were built for this series. They had production designer Luke Hull attached, who also gave us the chilling Chernobyl, and teased the “eight-and-a-half-acre city” they built for this production.

    You know, we talked before about the set and the thing that they were talking about, our production designer Luke Hull, who did Chernobyl, I mean, he really is in the brain trust that puts the show together with Sanne and Luke and Leo, my brother John Gilroy, Cathy, the core group of people that put this together. I mean, Luke is just, I mean, he’s Mozart, and he’s a young production designer, and he’s just soaring. And they built an eight-and-a-half-acre city for us that we will use for all 12 episodes.

    Tony Gilroy

    He also goes on to highlight how it helped them build an entire community around the set that brought this world to life. So, it’s not just establishing a practical set for them to film in but also ensuring that they have a chance to create a living community that changes across the timeline they hope to tell in this story.

    And as they said, it’s a 360 set. And the community that we were allowed to build within it and the social structures and the rituals of it, because there are some really intense rituals about it, it really feels like a place, like what is it? You get to play God. We built a place, we built a whole culture, we built a whole life, we built a whole tradition, we had people care about it and anyways. It’s a fantastic maximal expression of imagination to be able to do this. It just fantastic to be able to do it. It’s thrilling.

    Tony Gilroy

    Tony Gilroy certainly knows how to sell his series, and it’s exciting to see how they make use of this set. It’ll also be interesting to see how they showcase the change of this community throughout time. We’ll have to see as the three-season premiere releases on Disney+ on September 21st.

  • Tony Gilroy Explains the Inspiration Behind ‘Andor’

    Tony Gilroy Explains the Inspiration Behind ‘Andor’

    When Rogue One: A Star Wars Story debuted in theaters in 2016, no one expected to see the series continue years down the line. Especially not leading man Diego Luna. However, Tony Gilroy, who co-wrote Rogue One, had an idea on how to expand upon Cassian Andor’s story. During the virtual press conference for Andor, Gilroy was asked about his inspiration behind the Disney+ series, and the showrunner explained he wanted to be able to showcase the complexities of the character before the events of Rogue One.

    I think the main idea is we have a character in Rogue One.  And we know where he ends up.  And we know how accomplished and complicated he is.  And the idea that we can do a story that takes him literally from his childhood origins and walk him through a five-year history of an odyssey that takes him to that place, during a revolution, during a moment in history in a place where huge events are happening and real people are being crushed by it, the fact that we could follow somebody as an example of a revolution all the way through to the end, that was the walk-in for me. 

    Being able to showcase Andor and his life leading up to the revolution was ultimately the selling point for Gilroy. While the series has a ton of characters, including some we’ve already met previously, the series ultimately focuses on Andor and the difficult times and decisions that are made leading up the events of Rogue One – just on a “big canvas.”

    And Gilroy isn’t the only one excited to be expanding upon the character of Andor. Luna was quick to note how much he enjoys working with Gilroy, who he calls someone he admires, and how exciting the prospect of Andor is because it’s not just about a specific event.

    First of all, just the chance to be back working with this family, getting to do more stuff with Tony, which is someone I admire, and I love his company and, and collaborating with him is amazing.  So just being back felt great.  But I think Rogue One is a film about an event, you know?  You don’t get to know those characters.  You don’t get to understand exactly where they come from, what needed to happen. 

    Luna

    Star Wars: Andor will debut with three episodes on September 21st. The remaining nine episodes will then drop weekly on Disney+.

  • REPORT: ‘Ms. Marvel’ Renewed For Second Season 

    REPORT: ‘Ms. Marvel’ Renewed For Second Season 

    It looks like Iman Vellani is here to stay. According to a new report from Daniel RPK, Marvel Studios may have just given the green light to another season of Ms. Marvel, one of the latest Marvel Cinematic Universe series to drop on Disney+ and a hit with fans earlier this year. The show, centered around Vellani’s teenage hero Kamala Khan as she grows up in Jersey City, was initially believed to just be an origin story for the character. However, if true, this news would indicate Marvel has changed course and will alter the live-action title from “limited” to “ongoing.”

    Vellani can next be seen in 2023’s The Marvels, a sequel to 2019’s Captain Marvel that features Khan teaming up with Brie Larson’s Carol Danvers and Teyonah Parris’ Monica Rambeau after the trio’s powers begin to malfunction. It’s likely a second season of Ms. Marvel would pick up after the events of the film, with Khan resuming her personal life in New Jersey and continuing to grow into her new role as a superhero. There are plenty of loose threads left hanging from the first season that another batch of episodes could help resolve, taking the pressure off of future team-up films to do the heavy lifting when it comes to Kamala’s character arc within the MCU.

    Aside from Vellani, the cast of Ms. Marvel includes Matt Lintz and Yasmeen Fletcher as friends Bruno and Nakia, as well as Zenobia ShroffMohan Kapoor, and Saagar Shaikh as members of the Khan family. Laurel MarsdenRish Shah, and Aramis Knight also have supporting roles. Former Batgirl directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah directed most of the first season with Meera Menon and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy. Bisha K. Ali served as head writer.

    Source: Daniel RPK

  • Charlie Barnett Joins ‘Star Wars’ Series ‘The Acolyte’

    Charlie Barnett Joins ‘Star Wars’ Series ‘The Acolyte’

    Charlie Barnett is the latest actor to head to a galaxy far, far away. The Hollywood Reporter has announced that Barnett has signed on for the Star Wars series The Acolyte. While details regarding Barnett’s character are currently unknown, the outlet states his role is likely a supporting one. Should a deal make, Barnett’s casting would make for a Russian Doll reunion, as the show’s co-creator Leslye Headland is the showrunner on The Acolyte.

    Barnett joins a rather impressive cast that includes Amandla Stenberg, who is toplining the show, along with Squid Game star Lee Jung-jae, Jodie Turner-Smith (Queen & Slim) and Manny Jacinto (The Good Place). Outside of Russian Doll, where Barnett stars as Alan Zaveri, the actor has appeared in Arrow and You.

    The Acolyte is being described as a mystery-thriller that will take viewers into a “galaxy of shadowy secrets and emerging Dark side powers in the final days of the High Republic era.” The project was first announced in April 2020, with Lucasfilm finally confirming the series in December 2020.

    Russian Doll‘s Leslye Headland will serve as the series director, writer, executive producer and showrunner on The Acolyte. As of now, the series does not yet have a premiere date on Disney+.

    Source: THR.

  • Charlie Cox’s ‘She-Hulk’ Appearance Could Be the Death Knell for the Decanonization of ‘Daredevil’

    Charlie Cox’s ‘She-Hulk’ Appearance Could Be the Death Knell for the Decanonization of ‘Daredevil’

    In a few weeks, Charlie Cox’s Matt Murdock/Daredevil will make his highly anticipated appearance in Marvel Studios’ streaming series, She-Hulk: Attorney At Law. General audiences have seen footage of The Man Without Fear in teasers, trailers, and Episode 5 of the series, “Mean, Green and Straight Poured into These Jeans”, ended with a glimpse of Ol’ Hornhead’s new hornhead, getting fans primed for his eventual entrance. And while Murdock has already appeared in one MCU project in the past year, his brief cameo in Spider-Man: No Way Home didn’t give fans enough time to get a sense of who he is. That’s all about to change and it’s a foregone conclusion that a whole lot of fans aren’t going to like it.

    Reading between the lines-hell, just reading the lines-of everything anyone associated with She-Hulk: Attorney At Law has had to say about Daredevil appearing in the show, it’s clear that Marvel Studios, who regained the live-action rights to the character just a couple of years ago, is rebooting the character in a way that seems to knock the three season of the Netflix series off the required viewing list. It’s not to say fans of Daredevil can’t still enjoy the show and that new fans couldn’t watch it and glean some important information from it. It’s just that this doesn’t seem to be the EXACT SAME Matt Murdock.

    Marvel Studios is smart here to let this play out on screen without ever giving a definitive answer because it allows them to both keep the conversation alive (all publicity is good publicity) and to “keep” the parts of the story built on Netflix that they like attached to the character, if only in the minds of the people who watched it. So much as they did with Peter Parker, they probably won’t redo the whole origin story and new fans will just get a condensed version of how this seemingly ordinary, blind lawyer ended up as a ninja with supersenses. However, when the character appears on She-Hulk in a few weeks, it’ll start to become pretty obvious that this version has some different bells and whistles.

    As part of the Marvel Studios Showcase at D23 Expo 2022, fans were treated to an exclusive first look at a scene from the DD episode of She-Hulk: Attorney At Law. The scene, involving Jen as Jen and Matt as an All-New, All-Different Daredevil, complete in his brand new mustard yellow suit, took place on a rooftop and instantly gave the audience the visual equivalent of the new car smell. Everything about Cox’s performance from his demeanor to his cadence, to the flirtatious nature of his interactions with Jen felt intentionally different. It’s not to say Cox never smiled or had a good time playing the character on Netflix; it’s more that he’s playing the character with a different bent here and one that tonally fits what fans have come to know about She-Hulk.

    And it’s not just Cox’s delivery that’s different. It’s more nuanced and detailed than that. His movements, his body language and, most notably, the Man Without Fear front flip he does off the top of the building as the scene comes to a close all look and feel brand new. Other than the piss poor handling of The Hand, one of the most frustrating things about the Netflix series was the lack of high-flying, acrobatics. For a character known as, you know, Daredevil, he didn’t do much Daredeviling. Doing some light somersaulting across a rooftop is a long way from the character’s comic book roots and in a 2-minute clip, Marvel Studios managed to get more thrilling acrobatics in than I remember in 3 seasons. That’s not to say he didn’t do any high-flying bits in Daredevil, there were maybe 5 spread out over the years, it’s just to say that it certainly wasn’t a big part of who that character was. Add that to the fancy flip that fans have seen in promo material for the show and you have reason to believe that Marvel Studios is going to make that a part of their DD’s toolbox.

    It’s a hard argument to make, especially since his new costume seems to be nothing more than a repainted version of his old costume and that it is the same actor wearing it. And maybe it’s not an argument worth making based on a 2-minute clip, but everything in that clip FEELS like an incredibly intentional effort to let fans know that while this is the character they know and love, it’s not exactly the character they know and love.

    Ultimately, Cox’s one-episode and change appearance in She-Hulk: Attorney At Law may not provide enough evidence to definitively say whether or not this MCU version of the character really is an All-New, All-Different Daredevil. That might be something that isn’t entirely clear until his longer appearance in Echo ahead of his own 18-episode series, Daredevil: Born Again. It also might be something that’s never made crystal clear. However, what is clear is that when everyone sees Cox’s performance in She-Hulk, it’s going to cause quite the stir on social media and message boards, because no matter how hard people want to hold on to what they love, this appearance looks like it’ll sound the death knell for the canonical relevance for the Netflix version of the character, which may die a slow death over several years.

  • ‘Spectacular Spider-Man’ May Be Heading to Disney+ in October

    ‘Spectacular Spider-Man’ May Be Heading to Disney+ in October

    It’s felt like half an eternity ago when Sony announced that they’ve made a deal with Marvel to release some of their projects on Disney+. The first-look deal with Netflix had many wondering if that limits what they’ll add in but slowly throughout the last few months, we saw the iconic Spider-Man franchise find its way home to Disney+. Now, one of the most popular animated shows is finally getting the same love.

    As shared by Discussing Film on Twitter, it looks like Spectacular Spider-Man‘s first season is heading to Disney+ on October 19th. There’s no word when we might expect the second season but there’s a chance that is still a few more months out. Its addition to Disney+ and the upcoming X-Men: The Animated Series revival might have many hoping that this could give the classic animated series another chance on the platform with a third season.

    Disney+ is “the Home of Marvel” according to Disney and they seemingly are trying to make sure every property under the sun ever produced with that brand makes it there. The Sony deal is the first time they’re able to bring Spider-Man back and the cooperation for the Home-themed trilogy definitely played a big part in that movement. Perhaps the fallout that almost sank No Way Home‘s original vision made their connection stronger and led to the current climate of these projects getting released on the platform.

    Source: Discussing Film

  • New Marvel Studios Animated Series Finds Director in ‘Big Hero 6’ Artist Brian Kesinger

    New Marvel Studios Animated Series Finds Director in ‘Big Hero 6’ Artist Brian Kesinger

    Marvel Studios’ animation department has been increasingly busy over the last year and it seems there’s no slowing down now. In a post on his personal Instagram account, Lucasfilm and Marvel illustrator Brian Kesinger announced that he was helming a new animated series for Marvel Studios.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Cih8ZFcLddl/?igshid=NDc0ODY0MjQ%3D

    Kesinger has worked with Disney for over 20 years as part of animation departments on projects ranging from Tarzan (1999) to Big Hero 6 (2014) to Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018). Though he did not name the project, quite a few are known to be in the works at Marvel Studios, including one being developed by Todd Harris which may have ties to MCU artifacts such as the Ten Rings. Kesinger has also illustrated Marvel Comics in the past, including work for “Rocket Raccoon and Groot” and “Groot.”