Tag: Team-Up

  • Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 12: Ranking the MCU, 1-32

    Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 12: Ranking the MCU, 1-32

    Dalbin Osorio

    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Avengers: Endgame
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Black Panther
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: Civil War
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    The Avengers
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Iron Man
    Captain Marvel
    Doctor Strange
    Loki
    Eternals
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Hawkeye
    WandaVision
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Black Widow
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Iron Man 2
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Thor
    Ant-Man
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    The Incredible Hulk
    Thor: The Dark World
    Iron Man 3
    What If…?

    Charles Murphy


    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Avengers: Endgame

    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Iron Man
    Loki
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Avengers: Infinity War

    The Avengers
    Black Panther

    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Hawkeye

    Captain America: Civil War
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    WandaVision
    Spider-Man: Homecoming

    Black Widow
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Ant-Man
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Doctor Strange
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier

    Iron Man 3
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Eternals
    Captain Marvel
    Thor

    What If…?
    Iron Man 2
    Thor: The Dark World

    The Incredible Hulk

    Joseph Aberl

    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Loki
    Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
    Iron Man
    Black Panther
    Avengers: Endgame
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    WandaVision
    Captain America: Civil War
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Iron Man 3
    Hawkeye
    Ant-Man

    Doctor Strange
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
    The Avengers
    Ant-Man and the Wasp
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Black Widow
    Thor
    Eternals
    Captain Marvel
    What If…?
    Iron Man 2
    The Incredible Hulk
    Thor: The Dark World 

    Megan Murphy

    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Iron Man
    Hawkeye
    Black Panther
    Avengers: Endgame
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Loki
    WandaVision
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: Civil War
    Iron Man 3
    Doctor Strange
    Ant-Man
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    The Avengers
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Black Widow
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Captain Marvel
    Thor
    Eternals
    Iron Man 2
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    The Incredible Hulk
    Thor: The Dark World


    *Megan did not watch What If…?

    Joao Pinto

    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Avengers: Endgame
    The Avengers
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
    Loki
    Captain America: Civil War
    Black Panther
    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    WandaVision
    Doctor Strange
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Hawkeye
    Iron Man 3
    Ant-Man
    Avengers: Age of Ultron

    Iron Man
    Ant-Man and the Wasp
    The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
    Spider-Man: Far from Home
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Black Widow
    Captain Marvel
    Thor
    Eternals
    What If…?
    Iron Man 2
    Thor: The Dark World
    The Incredible Hulk

    Mary Maerz

    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Avengers: Endgame
    The Avengers
    Captain America: Civil War
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Iron Man 3
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Black Panther
    Guardians of the Galaxy

    Ant-Man
    WandaVision
    Doctor Strange
    Iron Man
    Iron Man 2
    Hawkeye
    Loki
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Eternals
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Black Widow
    What If…?
    Captain Marvel
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Thor
    The Incredible Hulk
    Thor: The Dark World

    Filip Manka

    Eternals
    Black Panther
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

    Loki
    Avengers: Endgame

    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: Civil War
    Doctor Strange
    Spider-Man: No Way Home

    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    The Avengers
    WandaVision
    Ant-Man
    Iron Man
    Hawkeye
    Thor
    What If…?
    Captain Marvel
    Black Widow
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Iron Man 3
    Thor: The Dark World
    Iron Man 2
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    The Incredible Hulk

    Anthony Canton III

    Avengers: Infinity War
    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Avengers: Endgame
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Captain America: Civil War
    WandaVision
    Loki
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Black Panther
    The Avengers
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Hawkeye
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Black Widow

    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Ant-Man
    Iron Man
    Doctor Strange
    Eternals
    Captain Marvel
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Thor
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Iron Man 3
    Iron Man 2
    What If…?
    Thor: The Dark World
    The Incredible Hulk

    Arlyn Murphy

    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Hawkeye
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings

    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Black Panther
    Black Widow
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Avengers: Endgame
    The Avengers
    WandaVision
    Captain America: The First Avenger

    Iron Man
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Loki
    Ant-Man
    Doctor Strange

    Captain Marvel
    Captain America: Civil War
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Thor
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    The Incredible Hulk
    Eternals
    Thor: The Dark World
    Iron Man 3
    What If…?
    Iron Man 2

    John Sabato

    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Spider-Man: No Way Home

    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Loki
    Wandavision
    Eternals
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Thor: Ragnorak
    Hawkeye
    Black Panther
    Avengers: Endgame
    Captain America: Civil War
    Avengers
    Iron Man 3
    Captain Marvel

    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Black Widow
    Ant-Man
    Doctor Strange
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Iron Man
    What if…?
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Thor
    Iron Man 2
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Thor: The Dark World
    The Incredible Hulk

    Nathan Miller

    Avengers: Endgame
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Eternals
    Black Panther
    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Captain America: Civil War
    Loki
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings
    Hawkeye
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain Marvel
    Wandavision
    Spider-Man: Homecoming

    The Avengers
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier
    Doctor Strange
    Ant-Man
    Black Widow
    Captain America: The First Avenger
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Ant-Man and the Wasp
    The Incredible Hulk

    Iron Man 3
    What If…?
    Iron Man 2
    Iron Man
    Thor
    Thor: The Dark World

    Hunter Radesi

    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Avengers: Endgame
    Loki

    Avengers: Infinity War
    Shang-Chi and the Legend of The Ten Rings
    Avengers: Age of Ultron
    Spider-Man: No Way Home
    The Avengers
    Spider-Man: Homecoming
    Black Panther
    Hawkeye
    Thor: Ragnarok
    Captain America: Civil War
    Falcon and the Winter Soldier
    Spider-Man: Far From Home
    Eternals
    WandaVision
    Captain America: The First Avenger

    Iron Man
    Ant-Man
    Iron Man 3
    Doctor Strange
    Ant-Man and The Wasp
    Black Widow
    What If…?
    Thor
    Iron Man 2
    Thor: The Dark World
    Captain Marvel
    The Incredible Hulk

    Murphy’s Multiverse Ultimate Ranking

    ***In order to create the Ultimate Ranking, we created a point system, totaled up the points for each movie and divided by the number of rankers to create an average. Each rankers top film received 32 points, their bottom film received 1 point.***

    Captain America: The Winter Soldier (362 total points, average rank of 30.17)
    Avengers: Infinity War (341 total points, average rank of 28.42)
    Spider-Man: No Way Home (336 total points, average rank of 28)
    Avengers: Endgame (329 total points, average rank of 27.42)
    Thor: Ragnarok (300 total points, average rank of 25)
    Shang-Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings (299 total points, average rank of 24.92)
    Black Panther (297 total points, average rank of 24.75)
    Loki (283 total points, average rank of 23.58)
    Guardians of the Galaxy (267 total points, average rank of 22.25)
    Captain America: Civil War (256 total points, average rank of 21.33)
    The Avengers (244 total points, average rank of 20.33)
    Hawkeye (235 total points, average rank of 19.58)
    WandaVision (231 total points, average rank of 19.25)
    Spider-Man: Homecoming (229 total points, average rank of 19.08)
    Iron Man (201 total points, average rank of 16.75)
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (188 total points, average rank of 15.67)
    Spider-Man: Far From Home (186 total points, average rank of 15.5)
    Doctor Strange (178 total points, average rank of 14.83)
    Avengers: Age of Ultron (177 total points, average rank of 14.75)
    Eternals (168 total points, average rank of 14.00)
    Ant-Man (163 total points, average rank of 13.58)
    The Falcon and The Winter Soldier (162 total points, average ran of 13.5)
    Black Widow (146 total points, average rank of 12.17)
    Captain America: The First Avenger (142 total points, average rank of 11.83)
    Ant-Man and The Wasp (131 total points, average ran of 10.92)
    Iron Man 3 (130 total points, average rank of 10.83)
    Captain Marvel (120 total points, average rank of 10.00)
    Thor (72 total points, average rank of 6.00)
    Iron Man 2 (59 total points, average rank of 4.91)
    What If…? (52 total points, average rank of 4.33)
    The Incredible Hulk (30 total points, average rank of 2.5)
    Thor: The Dark World (27 total points average ran of 2.25)

  • Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 9: Favorite Comic Book Adaptation of 2021

    Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 9: Favorite Comic Book Adaptation of 2021

    John Sabato

    Sweet Tooth' Renewed for Season 2 on Netflix – The Hollywood Reporter

    My favorite comic book property this year had to be Netflix’s Sweet Tooth. Jeff Lemire’s original comic is one of my very favorites and was such an interesting read. The series mostly stays true to it’s source material but isn’t afraid to make creative changes that let it stand apart from the comic. It’s a sweet and wholesome story that sees a young hybrid boy and a grizzled survivor of the plague travel what’s left of the world to find the answers to what came first: the plague or the hybrids?

    Anthony Canton III

    Review: Doom Patrol season 3 ends on a solid if unremarkable note

    There’s something to be said for a show that continues to get better over each of its three seasons. Doom Patrol does that in spades. There’s a level of self awareness, humor, and introspection that makes it the best live-action comic book adaptation I’ve seen. The casts performances particularly this season have been extraordinary. Nuanced, tragic, and some even angry. Brendan Fraser in particular has been a standout in bringing such a broken character like Robotman to the screen. We’ve had a lot of good to great entries in comic book tv and film this year, but no property quite understands it’s assignment like Doom Patrol.

    Nathan Miller

    Eternals Earth Born Celestial 300 Miles Tall | Screen Rant

    My favorite comic book project of the year is EternalsI loved how the film made me feel. Through the performances, direction and soundtrack, I felt the weight of human history, the joy of friendships and found family, the terrifying vastness of space, and the drive of needing to pull together to tackle environmental problems. Intellectually I think the film points toward the future of storytelling, in leaving behind The Hero’s Journey and embodying a more collective journey beyond binary perspectives. It’s a shame more people didn’t initially appreciate the film’s complexity, but hopefully that will change over the next few years, as the Marvel Cinematic Universe enriches its appreciation retrospectively. I’m looking forward to Chloe Zhao’s sequel and the Eternals themselves eventually appearing alongside other established MCU characters.

    João Pinto

    This wasn’t my first choice, but someone with impeccable taste got to that one first (thank you to my friend, JJ!). But in a sense, this show deserves to take the top spot. WandaVision was a pop culture phenomenon. Due to many production delays that affected several projects, it ended up becoming the first Marvel Studios project to be released after the breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic and to say audiences were hungry for content is an obvious understatement. The weeks the show was on were some of the best ever to be a comic book fan. The theories ran wild as the show lent itself to the sort of online discourse that drove everyone insane by the sheer magnitude of some of the hot takes. Covering it was a blast as well. I must say that the Murphy’s Multiverse team covered that show as well as any other site, big or small, did. It showed us how much fun we could have while doing something that hopefully everyone enjoyed, and in a way, it became the stepping stone for the work we’ve been doing covering every show ever since. By the enjoyment I got from covering it to following it as a fan it deserves its spot on my favorite comic book adaptations of 2021 list.

    Joseph Aberl

    Both 'Shang-Chi' Post-Credits Scenes, Explained (Spoilers)

    I think my favorite comic book adaptation of the year must be Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. I have no prior knowledge or history with the character. So, I went in pretty open about the adaptation. I was hoping for at least some fun kung-fu actions inspired by classics from the genre. Yet, the film went above and beyond as I ended up with an incredibly heartfelt story that also manages to open up the MCU in a creative way. I cannot wait to see Simu Liu’s future with the character and what a sequel might offer.

    Charles Murphy

    The Suicide Squad Trailer Reveals Bloodsport Put Superman in ICU with  Kryptonite Bullet - Den of Geek

    This will probably come as a shock to absolutely everyone, most of all JJ, but my favorite comic book-based project of 2021 was not a Marvel property. James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad takes the top spot for me and it’s not a particularly close race. While I certainly loved Shang-Chi and The Legend of the Ten Rings, The Suicide Squad feels like the most complete story. While the casts of WandaVision, Loki and Black Widow were lights out, the cast of The Suicide Squad was all but perfect. And finally, while Marvel Studios did a great job bringing some less-than-popular characters this past year, Idris Elba’s Bloodsport stands as not only the best reinvention of a little known comic book character in the past year, but also arguably of all time. After a year in which the comic book-based entertainment we all love was painfully absent, we had plenty in 2021 but none of them quite matched the quality of The Suicide Squad.

    Hunter Radesi

    Loki' Is the Perfect MCU TV Show - Variety

    I’m as surprised as anyone to be writing this, but I think the quirky magic of Loki was my favorite experience with a comic adaptation this year. I was firmly against the idea of this project from the start, and you can probably find old tweets of mine stating the show would be a waste of resources on a character whose story I felt was already over. I couldn’t have been proven more wrong. Michael Waldron and Kate Herron managed to craft a fresh, unique spin on the genre that left me wanting more every week. Absolutely charming performances from every member of the cast, genuinely joyous twists and turns throughout, and constantly beautiful set pieces that begged you to keep your eyes on the screen. I think I finally understand why my friends love Dr. Who so much. Can’t wait for the next season.

  • Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 7: ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Trailer Thoughts

    Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 7: ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Trailer Thoughts

    Mary Maerz

    Was it worth the dramatic wait? Not really. Was it worth some kind of wait? Sure. By (unsurprisingly) not giving away any of the BIG reveals, it still kind of feels like a bit of a let down to me. Even though not much will actually be a surprise at this point, I still would have liked to see a bit more of a tease to the other Spider-People. I do really like the more sinister tone going on, and the references to all the villains’ fates being death by other Spideys (and Peter presumably not wanting to send them back to their deaths) gives it a bit more of a plot, BUT it’s still very fluffy and vague since they are avoiding a lot. But yay, action action. Doctor Strange is weird to me still. It bothers me more than anything, but his at least partially-antagonistic role is cool.

    Hunter Radesi


    The first full length trailer for Spider-Man: No Way Home delivers on all the promises the studio already made, but none that the fans had been holding out hope for. It’s definitely a good time, and I found myself grinning like an idiot when all the villains of Spider-Man past made their big debut, but something about it almost felt a little less grand than expected. I’m hoping that simply means Sony has learned to save the good stuff for the actual movie.

    Oh, and that quick look at Electro has me buzzing more than anything else. Bring on the goofy comic book goodness!

    Charles Murphy

    Since finding out what this movie would be all about, I haven’t really been excited. I really wanted this film to be a showcase for Tom Holland as Spider-Man, exploring parts of the character that we haven’t seen so far. I’ve been worried that we wouldn’t get that. This trailer does seem to indicate that we will get a much bigger dose of that than I thought. I’m still not super hyped up to see the movie (though I absolutely loved the Foxx’s new look as Electro), but I do have more hope for it being a story about the MCU’s Peter Parker than I did before.

    Joao Pinto

    I have just two major takeaways after watching the trailer. One is an interesting development where Doc Ock appears not to be an outright villain and even though he’ll play Peter’s antagonist he might also play a part in helping him both understand and get through the situation he finds himself in. The other one is the omission of all the characters that will help to even the playing field in Peter’s favor. The trailer already does explain a lot of what’s going on: the reason why so many characters from other franchises show up, who’s to blame for that and why they all seek Peter so it’s good to still have a few things to look forward to. Other than that, it does do a good job hyping up the movie. See you in a month’s time.

    Filip Manka

    I was looking forward to the second trailer of NWH because the first one left me unsatisfied. And the second one… also. I’m not a fan of this trailer. It lacks structure and there is a lot of narrative chaos in it. The CGI and the teaser for the 3rd act looks pretty weak and I hope it looks better in the movie itself. The parallels to “The Amazing Spider-Man 2” on the other hand are cheap nostalgia bait for the fans. On the other hand, there are some nice shots and it feels like it will be an emotional culmination of the trilogy. I am once again confused and wish the movie itself would positively surprise me.

    Anthony Canton III

    The two biggest things about this trailer are firstly Tom’s Peter Parker story. We have something to grasp on now as he tries deal with the idea of letting these villains die. How that plays into the conflict with Dr. Strange will be incredibly fascinating. The other is the fate of one of Peter’s loved ones. It feels like by Peter interfering with destiny he’s going to be responsible for a death, and it’s going to be heartbreaking for him, and heartbreaking for us.

    Arlyn Murphy

    The trailer made me overly excited for the movie to come out. I really liked that they brought in different characters that are from the other two universes. Seeing them tie in the previous Spider-Man stories into the MCU is very exciting for me. With all the villains from the previous movies in the film I expect Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield to show up too.

    Nathan Miller


    I’ve seen mixed responses to this trailer, which I think I share. In some ways it’s a perfectly Peter Parker scenario that Spidey finds himself in. Feeling obliged to try and save antagonists from their fate, that he, or his variants, may be responsible for. I like the Alfred Molina content in this trailer. In that sense, it’s a brilliant trailer for casual viewers who don’t know what else might be coming and will be truly surprised in the cinema when they see it. On the other hand, with all the hype surrounding the film the lack of freshness means more waiting for the excitement to be pushed forward, in which case it might be best to check-out of paying attention to the marketing for now, until tickets go on sale.

  • Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 6: Animated Revivals

    Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 6: Animated Revivals

    This week, we were lucky enough to have Adam Barnhardt join us for the Team-Up. Adam is the creator of the Scout Comics book Sh*itshow and the upcoming Keepers of the Cosmos. Adam also writes at Comicbook.com, where he covers Marvel, comics and Mountain Dew!

    Gargoyles' creator hopes Disney Plus popularity will pave the way for  sequels - Polygon

    If the rollout of Disney+ and the past two years have taught us anything, it’s that we’re more than ready to reboot Gargoyles. The show itself instantly trended once the service launched and now, it’s beginning to dominate collecting circles each time a new toy is released. It was the first of its kind — a dark and gritty series with a world that was intricately crafted and story arcs that lasted any number of episodes. In a world where IP is king, and Hollywood runs on reboots, reimaginations, and continuations, there’s little reason to not bring Gargoyles back into the mix.

    Filip Manka

    Kleefeld on Comics: The Silver Surfer Cartoon Review

    As a huge fan of Marvel’s space side, I would love to see a revival of the Silver Surfer animated series. The 1998 series has its charm and I have a lot of nostalgia for it, thanks to the great voice cast (James Blendick as Galactus!) and the many references to Stan Lee and Moebius’ series.  I would love to see a series about Galactus’ herald again, especially since What If…? appealed to me a lot in terms of style and portrayal of cosmic scale. Silver Surfer in a similar animation technique would look insane. Especially since this concept allows for different visual plays and animation techniques. One series that I have in my mind as a potential foundation for animation would be the Silver Surfer: Black series by Donny Cates and Tradd More. This kind of psychedelic and surreal imagery would look great in an animated series that could creatively portray the philosophical dimension of the Silver Surfer story.

    Nathan Miller

    The Best Moments From Spider-Man: The Animated Series

    I’m gonna have to go with another ‘90s show in Spider-Man: The Animated Series as that was not only the Spider-Man of my youth but also some of the first serialised television programming I remember watching. The series showed a great progression in it’s version of Peter over its 5 seasons and covered a great array of comic stories. It also showed an early version of translating the Marvel comics team-ups to screen in a crossover with  X-Men: The Animated Series in Season 2. It also featured a couple of memorable multiversal crossovers in Season 5 with Secret Wars and an early version a Spider-verse story which it mashed together with the Clone Saga which started in the comics at the same time, resulting in the ‘90s Peter meeting Stan Lee in ‘our world’ which blew my young mind. Occasionally the ambient themes of the series still pop into my head so I would love to see a return of that or at least see what became of Spidey in that world through X-Men ‘97 perhaps.

    John Sabato

    Gravity Falls - Pilot Highlight Reel - House of Cool Studios - YouTube

    An animated series is love to see revived on Disney+ would be Gravity Falls. Whether it be a film or another season I’d like to see those characters return and explore even more of the secrets behind the town. I feel like show needed quite prematurely and still had a lot more room to breath. If they were to bring it back it would be cool to see a bit of a time jump, with adult Dipper and Mable returning to Gravity Falls after all those years.

    Charles Murphy

    Hasbro Releases Full Episodes Of 'G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero' On  YouTube (For Free) - Goliath

    I grew up in the 80s when Saturday morning cartoons ruled. I could wake up and get a couple solid hours of cartoons in before my Mom rolled out of bed: Smurfs, Voltron, Jem (my God was Jem so cool!), Thundercats, Transformers, He-Man and my absolute favorite (which I almost always actually watched on weekday mornings before school) G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero. We got 95 glorious episodes that brought almost every one of my action figures to life but it was Doctor Mindbender usurped control of Cobra from Cobra Commander that shit got real. The animated series embraced the surreal aspects of the comics and line of action figures in a way the incredibly disappointing efforts at bringing the characters to life in live-action have been to scared to do and the pinnacle of that was in the beginning of season two when they introduced Serpentor. Seeing that bad sum’bitch flying around in his air chariot, carrying the DNA of the world’s greatest conquerors was the high point of the series and among my favorite memories of cartoons as a kid. With the people in charge of the live-action rights incapable of understanding that G.I. Joe isn’t a franchise that needs to be “grounded in realism”, G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero is the best version where likely to ever get, so bringing it back with all of its wild ideas is the best bet for the future of the franchise.

    Anthony Canton III

    Green Lantern: The Animated Series - Season 1 Review - IGN

    One of the more unsung animated series in comic book lore was Green Lantern, as we followed the adventures of Hal Jordan and Kilowog through space. The series only went one season and had a fascinating story with Hal and Kilowog welcoming Razer, a character with shades of gray to the team. The series chronicled battles with the Red Lanterns Corp who was trying to eliminate Green Lanterns. The animation was smooth and the story was sound. The characters were so fun and full of life I’d love to see that series brought back to the screen. Considering the live action Green Lantern series that’s coming, it wouldn’t be a bad companion.

    Mary Maerz

    Teen Titans: 10 Easter Eggs In The Animated Series Only Comic Fans Caught

    The original Teen Titans animated series from the mid-2000s will always be one of my favorite series of all time. Maybe I’m not giving enough credit to the Powerpuff Girls, but I think for me Teen Titans is the reason I ever fell in love with superheroes and their stories. Plenty of it was silly, but they also had some dark storylines from the comics like Judas Contract and introducing Trigon. Deathstroke was only known as “Slade” but he was pretty damn great and is still one of my favorite villains of all time. Unfortunately, Teen Titans got the Teen Titans GO! treatment, so a genuine revival seems like it’s been off the table for a while.

    Hunter Radesi

    Someone made a '90s cartoon version of the Spider-Man trailer - CNET

    If Marvel Studios wants to revive X-Men: The Animated Series, why not bring back even more of the Marvel Animated Universe and revive Spider-Man: The Animated Series as well? Yes, there’s already an animated MCU spider-series on the way, but if history has taught us anything, it’s that people will take as many versions of the web-head as they can swallow. If the X-Men series picks up where the old show left off, a new Spider-Man cartoon could serve to move the universe forward. I would start the series decades after the end of the last season, with Peter and MJ’s daughter Mayday taking up the mantle as Spider-Girl. Throw in an arc for Miles and use elements of both the MC2 and Ultimate comics to create an original and fresh new take on the Spider-Man mythos.

  • Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 5: Reviewing ‘Eternals’

    Murphy’s Team-Up, Volume 5: Reviewing ‘Eternals’

    Mary Maerz

    Eternals is confusing in how it comes across—somehow it could have both terrible and great moments in the same 30 seconds. The first third or so of the movie was, honestly, just not good. I don’t remember the last time I watched a MCU film for the first time and thought, “uh oh, this is bad.” But it picks up steam over time, and there are genuinely delightful moments of humor, action, and character focus. Personally, I thought Sersi and Ikaris were some of the most bland personalities around, so the film’s primary focus on those two definitely didn’t do it for me and weighed it down too much. There were phenomenal emotional moments between some characters throughout, but they were few and far between. Phastos, for example, has some incredible interactions with Ikaris in the climax, but it mostly felt like it came out of nowhere. I do think that there were too many things going, and not much was given enough attention to allow it to be great. Still, I am excited about a lot of the MCU elements that Eternals brought, including Celestials (visually, they were so stunning that I would have watched two and a half hours of them just hanging out), several of the Eternals themselves (my favorites going forward are Makkari, Druig, Phastos, and Kingo), and the expansion of the cosmic MCU overall. At the end of the day, I would not say it’s a “good” movie—there are too many forced, cringey, and otherwise bad moments compared to the good ones. But I’m still pretty happy with how Eternals fits in the MCU and the new material it gave us.

    Filip Manka

    Eternals opened a new chapter in the MCU that exudes freshness and uniqueness in terms of content delivery. Chloé Zhao confronted the myth of superhero, or in this case, God, by deconstructing and reinterpreting certain beliefs and myths. Zhao crafted a love letter to the world and humankind that also serves as a warning against our self-destructive nature, placing the film in the context of global issues such as climate change. Despite the narrative and script problems, Eternals will stay in my heart for a long time by its balance between scale and momentousness, and intimacy and proximity.

    Nathan Miller

    Eternals movie ending explained: Marvel links and sequel hints - CNET

    I loved Eternals! I can see that it isn’t a typical Marvel Studios film, and that’s OK. Part of the beauty of a cinematic universe is that teams can try out different things and still have the space to develop them. I thought it was brilliant and showed a continuing evolution of the studio, that there were no outright binary evil villains, but rather just different perspectives on the matter at hand. I adored the hope in the message of needing to band together collaboratively to prevent ecological devastation. The performances of the actors really played into this element. It’s clear that Sersi is burdened by the beauty of humanity, with her first line, in contrast to Ikaris’ stoicism. Chloe Zhao’s framing of shots and the lighting adds to the mythological feeling of the film.  I’m really looking forward to how the film changes the MCU. On one hand introducing 10 lead characters is a lot, but on the other hand that is again the beauty of a continuing universe that we will visit them again. Perhaps we can change our expectations somewhat to align with this, and in that way Eternals is changing cultural expectations of cinema. It would be brilliant for Marvel Studios to follow through on this forward charge by announcing a green-lit sequel sooner rather than later!

    DA Osorio

    The fight between Ikaris and the Eternals? Really great. Marvel doing super speed, and a fight between a speedster and a God, better than DC has ever done it? Amazing. The first half was a lot of mythology and deep Marvel cuts, and a GRC mention puts it at the same time more or less as FWS. That helps set this apart from Shang Chi, IMO, in the sense that the parts in the US didn’t seem to be connected to the rest of the Earth MCU (not a knock, just an observation). Thor knowing them was cool too, and I wonder if we are going to find out that the Asgardians were also created by the Celestials like they are in the Ultimates. I’d give it a 8/10. Kro was whatever, and some of the deviant designs weren’t great, and I don’t love them being advanced robots, but man, there was a lot of good there.

    Also: Mahershala Ali making his debut, with the Ebony Blade being tied to Dracula and Moon Knight, means that we are on the road to a version of the Midnight Sons. You know what I’d like? For them to go with Alejandra Jones’s Ghost Rider (she’s the female Ghost Rider), and be called the Avengers of the Supernatural instead. Either way, Eternals was very good.

    Hunter Radesi

    Marvel’s Eternals is an absolutely beautiful, earnest jumble of thoughts and ideas. The film gets off to a bumpy start, with a first act that tries to cram a plethora of characters and information into a total runtime that could have lasted over three hours. However, once the movie is allowed to hit the points it’s really trying to make, it begins to tell an epic story of humanity through the eyes of gods in a way only Chloé Zhao could muster. Ultimately, the film is imperfect and awkwardly paced, but a worthy and welcome addition to the zeitgeist of Marvel’s modern blockbuster.

    Joseph Aberl

    Eternals is a strange piece to me. It’s far from what we are used to from Marvel Studios, as it’s less about a bombastic setting but rather explores a more personal story in a larger setting. The lore and exploration of history are curious, but most everything is in service of character. The film is less a Marvel movie but an indie film with a blockbuster coat. It avoids linear storytelling to explore history in service of character rather than to build up to its end goal. In a way, it’s also its biggest fault, as revelations are giving less weight besides a large info dump. There are fewer highs in this that could mask its early troubles and the characters don’t earn their revelations. On the one hand, it plays into the story’s structure about a “higher purpose” which is more poignant in the finale than early on. What truly makes this film work for some and not others is dependent on your interest in the characters. The film takes more nuance in making you care for them than their actual journey, especially evident in the Emergence’s lack of a “timing.” We know it’s happening but not when or where until we enter the confrontation. The investment in these characters overshadowed this issue and made it quite a visually captivating and new take on heroic deconstruction.

    Joao Pinto

    Personally, Eternals is the MCU’s most intriguing entry to date. By only having watched it once, I’m trying to allow myself to go beyond my immediate response to the movie, which wasn’t all that positive. I’m now expecting to have a more definite opinion in the coming days after going back for more viewings. All things considered, I do believe it did way more things right than what it might have done wrong. The cosmology of the MCU has been reshaped in a way that I simply adore, opening the doors for the MCU to finally become a proper Universe in and of itself. At the same time I’m not completely sold on the pacing when introducing a dozen new characters and their relationships over millennia, all while world-building within such a large scope. At the end of the day I’m still highly intrigued by what might come next for these characters and the MCU as a whole, meaning Eternals accomplished what every entry this franchise has to see as a win: it kept audiences engaged and wanting more.

    Arlyn Murphy

    When I watched Eternals for the first time I was like “WHOA”. I honestly felt that it was a little too god and goddess-y for Marvel. I also felt that some of the characters were out of place, including, Angelina Jolie and Barry Keoghan’s Thena and Druig. In the end, I just didn’t connect with them; however, I connected with Sprite and Kingo who both made me laugh so many times. If I were to rank this movie in comparison to the other Marvel Studios’ movies, it would probably be right in the middle. I liked the story line, however, there was a lot of information in the movie and I feel as though it was just all crammed in. On the other hand, it had great introductions to the all of the new characters, some of whom I would like to see again and others…not so much.

    Charles Murphy

    New Eternals Image Offers a Detailed Look at Kumail Nanjiani's Costume

    After my first screening of Eternals, I felt a lot of frustration. Frustrated at the changes made to the origins of the Eternals; frustrated at the changes made to and the use of the Deviants; frustrated at some editing choices that took me out of the film. Outside of those frustrations, I was also really disappointed in some of the performances in the film. Angelina Jolie’s performance tops the list of ones that I wish I could forget, closely followed by Salma Hayek. Jolie seemed to be there just to pose and smolder while Hayek’s expressionless face belied the allegedly maternal emotions of the character. At times I could argue that Arishem emoted more than Ajak. Fortunately, these performances were balanced out by the rest of the cast. Kumail Nanjiani was brilliant and the Bollywood scene is among the high points of the film; Richard Madden played Ikaris as the arrow he is described to be; and Lia McHugh delivered an adult-sized range of emotions to the role.

    Following my second screening, it was clear that while the many of the problems remained the same, the film is less problematic than I originally believed it to be and I found myself less frustrated and enjoyed it quite a bit more. I originally thought it moved along great until the flashback around 35 minutes in (Tenochtitlan) and attributed the decision to flashback again there to taking me out of the film. In truth, that flashback isn’t the problem. It’s a huge part of the overall narrative as it explains Thena’s memory loss and why the group drifts apart. In my second screening, I realized it wasn’t the story that lost me but the really uninspiring performances by the two actors who shared the bulk of that chunk of the film: Jolie and Barry Keoghan. In fact, if the really wanted Druig to put Tiamut to sleep, they could probably just show him that part of the film and be done with it. At no point during the film, did either one these actors elicit any sort of emotion from me other than an eye roll. I’ve read criticisms that there are too many characters and while I can agree with that to an extent, I think some of that might be lessened if the people portraying them made them interesting.

    Chloe Zhao did do something magnificent here. This film’s scale was not too big for her, as some have said. She weaved a fascinating narrative against an incredibly beautiful backdrop. She explored the bonds between us that can just as easily form as they can break and the hold that memories can have on all of us. She wrote the earliest chapter of the history of the MCU and wow did she deliver on the size and scope of the Celestials; not just physically, but in who they are and what they do (I was thrilled to see them adopt the Earth X plot, which I guessed they might way back when). At the end of the day, it seems like she checked a lot of boxes but, as the director of these actors, missed one big one: getting solid performances out of all of them. This isn’t a top-tier MCU film, but I think it might end up being something like Avengers: Age of Ultron in that after a few years, it’ll be one to revisit and might look like an entirely different film. Zhao had a Herculean task here in not only telling the tale of the MCU’s entire past but also setting up a huge chunk of its future (including two great scenes in the mid and post credits, one of which is top 5 of its kind in the MCU); she did an admirable job on the first part and only in time will we be able to truly judge how she did with the second half of that task. While I didn’t love Eternals, I fully support Zhao’s return for the sequel.

    Megan Murphy

    Before watching Eternals I assumed that I would be diving into another team like the Guardians of the Galaxy or the Avengers, however, the plot of this story was much different. To start off, I think that the drastic timeline and different events that took place within the movie were a good way to incorporate real history into the MCU, but I also think it took away from the actual Eternals. When watching the movie I was more drawn into the plot and the setting of the movie than the characters. I believe that characters such as Thena and Druig could have had a much more present role in the movie because of the extent of their powers and what they are capable of doing. I also thought that the way the Eternals were portrayed was a little too much ancient Greece and not enough MCU. On the other hand, the way that Sprite was turned into a human was a very good addition to the end of the movie. With this action, in later movies we might be able to find Sprite to be a more influential character if she is able to be more comfortable as an adult. Overall, the Eternals was much different then the average Marvel movie but had a little too much going on to really understand the characters.

  • Murphy’s Team-Up: ‘What If…?’ Finale Wish List

    Murphy’s Team-Up: ‘What If…?’ Finale Wish List

    Murphy’s Team-Up brings the team together every Sunday to give their hot takes on a hot topic. This week: the finale of Marvel Studios first animated series, What If…?. Take a look at what the members of the team hope to see in the finale.

    Anthony Canton III

    What If…? episode 8 recap: Ultron brings Infinity Stone-empowered Marvel  chaos - CNET

    I want to see what actually defeats this Ultron. In a lot of these scenarios normally you can appeal to the villains humanity but that doesn’t apply here. As far as the Watcher, what will be the price of his interference and the additional interference? I want to see that story be told. Finally, will Supreme Strange have a connection to Multiverse of Madness? He’s seemed like the most important character in these stories.

    Charles Murphy

    WHAT IF...?' Marvel Legends Arrive, Hint at a Live-Action Captain Carter -  Murphy's Multiverse

    At this point I’m eager for the series to come to an end. I haven’t loved too many episodes and I feel like in most episodes they’ve made some really weak choices with how they’ve dealt with what could be a really freeing premise. So for me, I’m hoping that as the first season of the series comes to an end, we see some of the heroes step through a portal and morph into the live-action versions of their characters that we are rumored to see in upcoming films. I’m also hoping that once this is over, we get our first trailer for Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.

    Mary Maerz

    What If...?' episode 8 review: There are no strings on me | Hypable

    I would like to see Ultron upgrade himself one final time, and that upgrade just so happens to be voiced by James Spader. The series did very well with dark themes and stories without happy endings—so I’m rooting for Ultron. I’d love to watch him take down the array of multiverse Avengers/Guardians we’ll get and be established as an ongoing and genuine threat for the series and maybe even the MCU at large. I would also be a bit disappointed if we didn’t get some sort of tease of how What If… ? can or will connect to the Sacred Timeline.

    Nathan Miller

    Marvel's What If Assembles the Guardians of the Multiverse for New Hyundai  Ad

    I hope to see some thematic cohesion between the characters brought together in the What If…? finale. The somewhat abrupt ends of some episodes alongside an unresolved confrontation from What If… Ultron Won? suggest The Watcher will bring together a team to resolve those loose ends. When the Avengers came together they were all lost despite being powerful enough to be Earth’s mightiest heroes. They each found some sort of purpose they had been individually lacking in becoming a team. Whatever team might form in the finale of What If…? does seem like it has a couple of members that are lost like Captain Carter and Supreme Strange. Potential members T’Challa Star Lord, Party Thor and Killmonger each seem content in their universes so it will be interesting to see what the thematic thread between them is that pushes them to join a multiversal team.

    Hunter Radesi

    Marvel Retconned MCU Time Travel Rules For The 4th Time

    If there’s one thing Marvel’s What If…? is lacking, it’s long term consequence. The show has thus far utilized immediate, dramatic effect to highlight it’s differences in universes, but this takes away from the subtle charm that always drew people to the comics. There, a story would often start with an obvious change and end with some unexpected butterfly effect far down the Marvel timeline. If the finale of the show’s first season finds time to revisit any of the worlds it set up in prior episodes, it would do well to show the audience how the likes of Captain Carter’s existence ended up changing the modern MCU time period as well.

    Dalbin Osorio

    What If Episode 8 Ending, Explained: Is Clint Dead or Alive?

    For me, I want to see what comes out of the finale. During Endgame, time-travel was explained to us, but it wasn’t until Loki that we found out that this was just how the Avengers understood time-travel. In Loki, we figured “ok, this is the accepted framework for time.” What If has played in that sandbox, with variants and what have you, but there’s still a little bit that is unclear. Namely, is the Watcher pulling all the Guardians from different universes, or do some of these stories overlap? If so, what does that mean for the overarching MCU story that’s going on right now? I hope What If…? begins to clarify the rules because time is a confusing plot device as is, but it can cave on to itself if it isn’t explained correctly. I expect What If…? to do just that.

    John Sabato

    Chadwick Boseman loved What If...? and reimagining Black Panther's T'Challa  - Polygon

    I hope to see the finale episode of What If…? really set the stage for what’s to come. The series has yet to really wow me and I hope they can do that here. I think I’m mostly looking forward to to seeing what could be Chadwick Boseman’s final performance.

    The finale of Marvel Studios What If…? streams this Wednesday on Disney Plus.