Hulu and Peacock have been busy working on the next major project for DreamWorks Animation. The much-beloved How toTrain Your Dragon series is getting a new sequel that’ll switch things up in an interesting way. No longer are we exploring the times of the Vikings, but will not set out 1,300 years into the future, when dragons are now nothing more than legends. The first trailer has dropped for the series alongside a synopsis of what we can expect from the newest entry titled Dreamworks Dragons: The Nine Realms.
Set 1,300 years after the events of How To Train Your Dragon, dragons are now just a legend to the modern world. When a geological anomaly opens up an immense, miles-deep fissure in the Earth’s surface, scientists from all over the world gather at a new research facility to study the mysterious phenomenon. Soon a group of misfit kids, brought to the site by their parents, uncover the truth about dragons and where they’ve been hiding — a secret they must keep to themselves to protect what they’ve discovered.
The concept of going into the future is a promising one, but it’s shame we won’t revisit some of our beloved characters. Yet, the trailer does hint at one of Toothless’ offspring still living in the modern age and will be joined by a new group of dragons that become friends with these kids. The series will continue the CG-animation style from the original and bring a new adventure to life later this month.
The series will premiere December 23rd and includes Voltron: Legendary Defenders‘ Jeremy Shada, 10 Things I Hate About You‘s Julia Stiles, Marcus Scribner of Black-ish fame, Aimee Garcia from Lucifer, Fuller House‘s Ashley Liao, Lauren Tom from The Joy Luck Club, as well as The Good Place‘s D’arcy Carden, One Day at a Time’sJustina MachadO, and Keston John, who some might recognize from She-Ra and the Princesses of Power.
It looks like Hulu and Star’s popular mystery comedy series Only Murders in the Building has added Cara Delevingne in a new role. The actress will join the trio of Martin Short, Steve Martin, and not a Martin, Selena Gomez. Delevigne ‘ll play the character of Alice, who’ll end up entrapped in the mystery.
The story follows the main trio of strangers that end up getting ensnared in a murder mystery within the walls of their apartment building. They document their tale through a podcast as the hobbyists take it upon themselves to solve the mystery. The series was created by John Hoffman and Steve Martin, who both are executive producers on it alongside Gomez, Short, Jamie Babbitt, Dan Fogelman, and Jess Rosenthal.
Her addition will certailny add to the trio’s dynamic and we’ll see how they might twist up with her character’s arrival. She’s described as an art insider, who might also add an intersting twist to whatever story they find themselves in. There’s no word if she is just a temporary addition for the season or it might become a bigger role moving forward.
The streaming market has become quite competitive with many jumping in to get a piece of the action. Disney+ and HBO Max have been harsh competitors for Netflix, but also each other. This is especially a big factor in the fact that Warner Bros. still had an exclusive deal with 20th Century Fox to add their library to HBO and HBO Max. Well, it seems that this deal is slowly coming to an end.
In a new report by Variety, it turns out that HBO Max’s streaming access will end with one more year. Yet, they will also share the streaming releases with Disney+ and Hulu moving forward with Ron’s Gone Wrong being the first in December. The deal will end in 2022 however, and there’s no expectation it’ll get extended due to Disney wanting to include the library in their streaming service.
For now, they will co-share rights to 20th Century Studios and Searchlight Pictures productions with Disney’s in-house streaming offerings. Ron’s Gone Wrong will release on December 15th on both platforms. So, they’ll also share the same release date moving forward. Any production for an older audience will release on Hulu most likely and in the Star expansion of Disney+ in specific countries.
Hit-Monkey has just been released on Hulu and it seems the creators behind the series, Josh Gordon and Will Speck, have quite the plans moving forward. The series is one of the few survivors of Marvel TV’s original TheOffenders crossover plans. When the subsidiary was fused into Marvel Studios, we knew very little about these projects and if they’d even have a long-term future.
It looks like depending on its success, there might be plans for up to 10 seasons. Not just that, they’ve already mapped out a second or third, which are “enormously detailed and drawn out” according to Gordon. In his full statement he highlights that:
Certainly, the second and third seasons were enormously detailed and drawn out. We wanted the first season to work as its own complete meal and it really does sort of operate almost like an extended feature in that way, where it has a very strong beginning, middle and end and it does stand alone. But in terms of where these characters would go, including Lady Bullseye, there’s a lot to be had there.
Josh Gordon
We’re still waiting for a confirmed renewal for MODOK, which was well-received during its initial release. Yet, as we learned during Disney+ Day, their new animated projects are now given the Marvel Studios logo even if they aren’t MCU canon. So, Hit-Monkey still holds the “Marvel” title from Marvel TV’s era and we’ll see if they’ll be able to bring their future season ideas to life.
Marvel TV’s last bastion Hit-Monkey premieres tomorrow on Hulu, ending the department’s near-decade-long stint with a brutal and violent spectacle. The show is filled with lots of gore, emotion, and features a handful of Marvel characters that some comic readers may recognize. Characters like Silver Samurai, Fat Cobra, and Lady Bullseye all make memorable appearances all throughout.
One character that almost made the cut, however, was the original Bullseye. Once again, the old adage of corporate mandates hijacking creative visions took place, prohibiting showrunners Will Speck and Josh Gordon from using the fabled Daredevil character. In our exclusive interview with the directing duo, they said:
Yes, Bullseye. Bullseye was in the original issues of Hit-Monkey and that was who we originally thought we would use but for various reasons, we couldn’t. But Marvel offered us Lady Bullseye instead and we thought, ‘Wow. That’s so much more interesting since she’s a character we haven’t seen much of yet.’ We were thrilled that we got that pivot.
These things happen a lot with Marvel TV. Jeph Loeb and co. want to use a character for their shows but the powers that be at Marvel Studios veto it for reasons related to their own plans for the characters at hand.
In this instance, this could’ve been a case of Marvel not wanting to touch anything that had to do with the Netflix clause that prohibited the use of characters from their shows for an X amount of years, though the production timeline might say otherwise. Interestingly, this could also very well be a mandate from Marvel Studios as Kevin Feige begins to get his hands on some of Marvel’s most famous street-level characters.
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.
Once upon a time, Hulu was to be the new home for a slew of adult-oriented Marvel content, specifically an edgy animated team-up show titled the Offenders. Starring a line-up of offbeat characters that included the likes of Howard the Duck, MODOK, Hit-Monkey, Dazzler, and Tigra, the concept never saw the light of day due to Marvel Television shutting down. MODOK and Hit-Monkey, however, managed to survive the ordeal.
I spoke to Hit-Monkey showrunners Will Speck and Josh Gordon today and asked about what exactly Marvel had in store for an original concept like The Offenders.
It was a very loose plan. It was the idea that there were a few sidelined characters that could, at some point, join up and that was the vision. One of the original concepts, when they pitched it to Hulu, was, “Let’s design four separate shows that don’t necessarily have plans to combine and find a way to combine them.” We were always in talks with the other showrunners like [MODOK executive producer] Jordan Blum to figure out where the points of intersection were. Stylistically and humor-wise, the shows were never created to resemble each other. We always thought that it was such a cool choice to combine the different styles.
From the sound of it, it kinda seems like Offenders would have been a show that was unlike any other superhero show currently out there. The idea they had in mind sounds very familiar to a lot of the Adult Swim mashups like Harvey Birdman, Attorney-at-Law and Space Ghost, Coast to Coast; an idiosyncratic marriage of polarizing premises to create a crazy blob of a show.
As fun as it would have been to see a stop-motion MODOK interact with a 2D Hit-Monkey, it’s hard to imagine a Feige-led Marvel brand agreeing to something this wacky. MODOK, for all its oddities, was actually a well-made show. Saving more of my elaborate thoughts in my review, I’ll say that Hit-Monkey was also a pleasant surprise.
Sometime before Marvel Studios ventured into Disney+, there were plans for Agents of SHIELD to get a variety of spinoffs. Their first attempt never got an order but their second attempt caught everyone’s attention. Marvel TV was eyeing a Hulu series featuring Gabriel Luna as Ghost Rider. While Helstrom moved forward with the streaming service, the Marvel TV and Marvel Studios merger made Luna‘s project its first sacrifice. Little was known about the project at the time. Well, that was until now.
In an interview with ComicBook.com’s Adam Barnhardt, Luna discussed what would’ve been with the Ghost Rider project. Not only did the actor share his excitement to potentially return to the role one day, but also on what they had originally planned. They wanted to include many of Ghost Rider’s classic villains with Lilith getting highlighted. He even goes on to highlight that they wanted her as the main antagonist for a The Defenders-inspired crossover.
I remember when I was pitching stuff, I had a really awesome idea that would have kept Robbie in L.A. and that would have pitted us against classic Ghost Rider villains. And I think it would have led up to her being the big bad of what we were initially trying to start, which was this four-show, very Defenders-esque thing that was going to happen.
Gabriel Luna
The mother of all demons would’ve certainly made for an interesting threat, especially as they embrace the supernatural part of the Marvel franchise. Of course, Marvel Studios is doing something similar with Moon Knight and the rumored Werewolf by Night project. There are even some hints that Ghost Rider might make a return as part. We’ll see what the future has in store for the spirit of vengeance.
The new trailer for Marvel’s Hit-Monkey, set to stream exclusively on Hulu on November 17th, not only gave us a little more insight into the plot of the series, but also a look at another potential antagonist for the murderous macaque. The first look revealed that Hit-Monkey would be going up against Lady Bullseye and Fat Cobra and now it looks like we can add Wolverine’s one-time mentor and bad ass ninja sorcerer Ogun to the mix.
Ogun once trained Wolverine in the way of the samurai before betraying him and trying to inhabit his body to cheat death. He later abducted and possessed Logan’s student, Kitty Pryde, before being “killed” by Logan. Over the years, Ogun has returned to haunt Logan many times, including during the Death of Wolverine story line.
Though he’s not been revealed as part of the show, the trailer shows a character who seems to be wearing the trademark mask of Ogun and wielding two swords. In Hit-Monkey, it seems that Ogun is one of several “bosses” that the title character will face off against on his quest to avenge the death of the ghost of the assassin Bryce, voiced by Jason Sudekis, who becomes bound to Hit-Monkey following his murder. The trailer seems to set up what looks to be a pretty wild ride over the course of the series with a few other obscure characters whoing up as well.
We got our first look at Hulu’s animated Hit-Monkey series just last month and it gave us looks at potential antagonists Lady Bullseye and Fat Cobra. Now, a full trailer for the show has been revealed. And things are gonna get weird.
The series voice cast boasts Fred Tatasciore, Jason Sudekis, George Takei and Olivia Munn. Hit-Monkey is set to stream on Hulu beginning November 17th.
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