Tag: TV

  • HBO Max Not Moving Forward With ‘The Boondocks’ Reboot

    HBO Max Not Moving Forward With ‘The Boondocks’ Reboot

    Here’s some rather depressing news, as it looks like Huey and Riley Freeman sadly won’t be returning to reboot the iconic animated franchise, The Boondocks. Originally, HBO Max ordered two seasons of the classic series from the original creator Aaron McGruder in cooperation with Sony Pictures Animation. They were going to launch the 24-episodes in the fall of 2020 with a 50-minute special. We were going to revisit the “Civil Rights Legend” Robert Freeman and his grandsons Huey and Riley, as they moved to the community in suburban Maryland before it gets taken over by Uncle Ruckes and a strange neo-fascist regime.

    There is some good news here, as Sony Pictures is not ignoring the project and is looking for alternatives to release the reboot. The original series ran from 2005 until 2014 on Adult Swim and went on to win a Peabody Award. McGruder was going to return as showrunner alongside Mainstay Entertainment’s Norm Aladjem. Boondocks veteran Cedric Yarbrough recently hinted at the show potentially being passed on on the Geekset Podcast.

    I hate to say this…right now the show is not coming back. We’ve been wanting to do the show and Sony and its…they decided they’re going to pull the plug,” he told the podcast host Rudy Strong. “Hopefully one day we’ll be able to revisit it…I wish the show was coming back

    Cedric Yarbrough

    Sony still actively looking for a home is promising for the reboot’s future. It’s uncertain how far the project has gotten before HBO Max decided to pass on it. So, we’ll see what the future has in store for the series. It’s quite the cult favorite and it wouldn’t be surprising for someone interested in bringing the iconic franchise back.

    Source: Deadline

  • Anna Fishko to Write ‘Orphan Black’s Sequel Series for AMC

    Anna Fishko to Write ‘Orphan Black’s Sequel Series for AMC

    AMC is working on a new sequel series based on Orphan Black, which was first hinted at all the way back in 2019. Variety just shared the news that Anna Fishko will write and act as an executive producer for the series continuation. So far, plot details still remain under wraps outside of the fact that it won’t act as a reboot of the original, but a new story set within the same world. Temple Street Productions is also returning to produce the series.

    Fishko has built up quite a reputation with AMC due to her work as a supervising producer of Fear the Walking Dead‘s fourth season. She also worked on Netflix’s The Society series, which sadly ended up getting canceled due to COVID indefinitely postponing production. She’s also worked on Colony, The Last Tycoon, and Tyrant in the past.

    The writer will take over the series which was created by John Fawcett and Graeme Manson, and ran for five seasons back in 2013. There’s no word if Tatiana Maslany might also appear in some capacity after leading the original series. It’s also uncertain if they might bring back the clone concept, or explore a different science-fiction concept. We might still have to wait sometime before we truly find out what the project has to offer..

    Source: Variety

  • RUMOR: David Tennant May Return to ‘Doctor Who’ As The 14th Doctor

    RUMOR: David Tennant May Return to ‘Doctor Who’ As The 14th Doctor

    We’ll have to take this with quite the grain of salt, but here’s a curious rumor that is making the rounds. Doctor Who has been struggling as of late even with Jodie Whittaker of fresh air. Still, we learned in September that Russell T. Davies would make his return as the series showrunner for the 60th anniversary. If the new rumor is to believe, he’ll be joined by another familiar face, as David Tennant may have been recast as a new version of the Doctor. You read that correctly, he isn’t returning as the Tenth Doctor but rather the next reincarnation of the Timelord.

    If this does turn out to be true, Tennant would be the first actor to play two different versions of the Doctor. His original run was from 2005 until 2010 and worked alongside Davies, which adds some potential to the rumored return. The timing of such a curious move might be fitting with the 60th anniversary of the franchise. It’s uncertain just how the next regeneration might take place, which leaves the door open to potentially “choose” the next body.

    Supposedly, Whittaker has already filmed her regeneration sequence. So, it’s more a question of time before we find out who is taking over for the 14th Doctor. Supposedly the rumor is hinting that this is just a temporary occasion before a 16th version takes over once the 60th anniversary ends. It seems also fitting with Tennant having played two versions of the Doctor in 2008’s “Journey’s End.” So, perhaps this might end up getting retroactively connected to the upcoming specials.

    Source: Plymouth Herald, Den of Geek

  • ‘That 90’s Show’ Adds Six New Cast Members

    ‘That 90’s Show’ Adds Six New Cast Members

    That 90s Show, a Netflix spinoff to the ever-popular That 70’s Show, has added more cast members on top of the previously announced returns of some cast members from the original.

    Debra Jo Rupp and Kurtwood Smith were previously announced to return as their respective characters of Kitty and Red Foreman, parents to Eric Foreman, the frontman for That 70’s Show.

    Alongside the returning cast members, we also have word that Callie Haverda (Shut-Eye), Ashley Aufderheide (Emergence), Mace Coronel (Pocket), Maxwell Ace Donovan (Gabby Duran & The Unsittables), Reyn Doi (The Boss Baby: Family Reunion), and Sam Morelos will be joining the cast as series regulars. This group of kids will likely be the main friend group, similar to the one comprised of Eric and his closest friends.

    The show is set to follow Leia Foreman, who is the daughter of Eric and Donna from the original, as she visits her grandparents over the summer. Hopefully, this means original cast members other than Red and Kitty are able to appear, especially the aforementioned main character and his high school sweetheart, Eric, and Donna. The show will be released on Netflix and is set to start production soon.

    Source: Variety

  • ‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Gets the Green Light

    ‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Gets the Green Light

    Given its growing ratings and cultural relevance, a renewal of the Paramount streaming series Yellowstone for a fifth season seemed more like a “when” than an “if.” Just a couple of weeks ago, executive producer David Glasser confirmed that the studio was already hard at work on the fifth season with hopes to start filming this summer and now, Paramount has made it official: the Duttons are coming back for another go around.

    The fourth season of the series, which concluded its run just over a month ago, saw a significant increase in viewers and social media buzz. While the fourth season ended on less of a bang than its predecessor, it did move along long-gestating feud between Beth and estranged adopted son Jamie. In the official announcement from parent company ViacomCBS Media Network, Glasser had the following to say:

    We are honored to be able to bring audiences another season of Yellowstone. The continued growth in viewership and the recent recognition from the guilds bolsters our commitment to continue to bring groundbreaking entertainment to audiences.

    Production on Season 5 is tentatively scheduled to begin this May with a late-2022 premiere date in mind.

    Source: Variety

  • ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Shifts the Focus of Star Wars From World-Building to Fan Service

    ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Shifts the Focus of Star Wars From World-Building to Fan Service

    Star Wars has always been a great, big galaxy. When A New Hope, simply titled Star Wars at the time, hit theaters in 1977, part of it’s alluring charm was the way it felt like an old friend. Audiences were meeting characters for the first time, but the universe they were being introduced to had clearly existed long before they ever got to see it. It was the perfect example of world-building, executed with more casual grace than perhaps any movie before it. This trait held true for most of the remaining entries in the “Skywalker Saga”, with each new installment giving us familiar designs and brand-new concepts in equal measure. The balance struck between expanding worlds and a concentrated, singular storyline made Star Wars feel special. While franchises like the Marvel Cinematic Universe packed as many references and cameos as possible into every new project, Lucasfilm maintained a large-scale sandbox that also somehow felt finite. So why, after decades of successful storytelling, has Star Wars lost this magic?

    When the first season of The Mandalorian dropped in 2019, it seemed a perfect callback to those early days of George Lucas wizardry. After the magnificent Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi tore through the fandom with it’s bold ideas and fresh direction, it was nice to see something that was both original and recognizable. At a certain point, it becomes nearly impossible to institute novel ideas without alluding to entities already known. So, it was a delight to see The Mandalorian play this chord flawlessly. However viewers may have felt about the movies being produced at the time, it was with near unanimous agreement that Pedro Pascal‘s dumb-good-dad-who-wears-armor found himself dubbed a perfect baseline for the franchise. Exciting, identifiable references, a hero with a thousand faces, and a focused story fans hadn’t seen told in a context they felt comfortable with. The downside to this massively positive response, it seems, was that Lucasfilm became a little confused.

    Perhaps it had something to do with the aforementioned, uber-prosperous Marvel Studios’ films and companion Disney+ shows taking over the box office. Maybe it was done in an attempt to find middle ground between sides in a wildly divided fanbase. Whatever the case, it seems each successive Lucasfilm production since that initial season of The Mandalorian has been less and less of what made it so great in the first place. 2020’s second batch of live-action Star Wars episodes saw tantalizing verbal remarks transition to full-blown character appearances, done with the intention of setting up multiple future spin-offs and side projects. The surprise seventh season of The Clone Wars was less guilty, but also dedicated chunks of it’s precious little screen time to propping up other works in development at that point. Luckily, these minor offshoots were, at the very least, also able to tie-in and support the stories they were a part of, so the slow Marvelfication of Star Wars was less noticeable and more tolerable.

    Then came The Book of Boba Fett. After making his grand re-entrance to the universe in The Mandalorian‘s second season, the legendary, fan-favorite character was finally set to have his own story. The brilliant Temuera Morrison, who had previously been relegated to mostly helmeted action sequences, voice-overs, and CGI duplicates, would finally have some dramatic meat to chew on. And he did, for the first few episodes, before being cast aside in his own show. The last two episodes of The Book of Boba Fett have been a surfeit of on-the-nose shout-outs and holy-crap-I-can’t-believe-they’re-in-this cameos. If that wasn’t bad enough, Fett himself has barely been in them. The title character appeared for, at best, a few minutes, with no spoken dialogue, over the course of two whole episodes, replaced as the main protagonist by Din Djarin, who already has his own series.

    This is not to say that the past few weeks of Star Wars haven’t produced some of it’s best moments yet. It’s simply to acknowledge that the franchise no longer seems interested in the saga format it once did so well, and it’s hurting the significance of their own protagonists. With a franchise like Marvel, it can be expected that large parts of any given solo project will be used to propel a different character’s story forward. That’s how their system is designed, and what they’ve been doing since the beginning. Yet, even Marvel appears to have an idea of when enough might be enough. Despite the controversy surrounding the weak third acts of their Disney+ series, the creatives involved have had enough sense not to force in characters that might take away from the spotlight and development of the titular characters. Din Djarin’s story is as compelling as it’s ever been, but it shouldn’t be taking place in the middle of Boba Fett’s show.

    The first four episodes of The Book of Boba Fett took their time to set up some sort of bigger payoff down the line, which may still come in the series finale, but has since been put on hold to tell entirely unrelated tales and continue plot lines established in completely separate series. It feels as though creatives Dave Filoni and Jon Favreau deem this sort of interconnectedness as a heightened form of Lucas’ praised world-building. Star Wars has now been around forever, and thus every reference and name-drop can be about something the fans will know. Unfortunately, in their attempts to weave all their projects together, the current focus of Star Wars has shifted from world-building to fan service. Audiences are no longer being given what they didn’t know they needed, and instead are being spoon-fed the things they’ve been demanding for years. The general reaction to The Book of Boba Fett so far has been that it’s failed to keep Fett’s story interesting, and that’s because right now, they aren’t even telling Boba’s story. He is simply a vehicle for whatever grand scheme is being devised. Whatever the endgame of the story begun in The Mandalorian is, one can only hope it’s worth the damage it’s caused to the projects that precede it.

  • ‘The Banks’ Roxane Gay to Adapt Graphic Novel as a Series for New Regency and TKO Studios

    ‘The Banks’ Roxane Gay to Adapt Graphic Novel as a Series for New Regency and TKO Studios

    It looks like another comic book storyline is making its way to television, as New Regency and TKO Studios are currently developing Roxane Gay and Ming Doyle‘s The Banks. Gay will also be heavily involved in the series, as she is set to write the adaptation. It joins Regeny’s expansion into TV with their Prime Video adaptation of the original 2005 film Mr. and Mrs. Smith. They’ve also recently worked on Tom Holland‘s The Crowded Room, which is heading to Apple TV+.

    The story of The Banks follows the most successful thieves in Chicago, the titular Banks family. Yet, they lose one of their own during the heist of a century, which brings the family together to take their vengeance. It was one among Roxane Gay’s many projects, such as the novels Ayiti, An Untamed State, and Bad Feminist. She also worked with Marvel on World of Wakanda. It’s her first step into adapting a series.

    Source: Deadline

  • Oscar Isaac Confirms ‘Moon Knight’ as a Limited Series

    Oscar Isaac Confirms ‘Moon Knight’ as a Limited Series

    As Marvel Studios isn’t following the usual TV format, you never know which of their new series may end up getting a sequel season or not. So far, the only confirmed series to get a second season are Loki and What If…? but everything else is pure speculation. It looks like their latest Disney+ series, Moon Knight, might just be a one-and-done, as during Variety’s Actor on Actor

    I’d never heard of “Moon Knight” before, and I collected comics when I was younger. I’d heard of “Morbius,” but I’d never heard of “Moon Knight.” I don’t know how the process was for you because it’s a feature film, we’re a limited series. There was a lot of room to try stuff because there wasn’t the pressure that we got to make sure we make however many hundreds of millions of dollars on the opening weekend.

    Oscar Isaac

    It makes sense that they might approach Moon Knight as a limited series, especially with how the initial trailer teases it like an analysis of Marc Spector’s psyche. So, a potential Season 2 might fall too much into a typical action storyline that the actor might not be interested in tackling. Of course, we don’t know if his fractured mind would truly come back together by the end of the story.

    Marvel Studios also has the freedom to potentially renew it at a later point, as they don’t have to make a direct second season shortly after but explore the character once they figure out a new take on the character. It’s also uncertain how active Oscar Isaac wants to be in an interconnected franchise, but it seems likely he’ll re-appear after the mini-series premieres on Disney+ on March 30th.

    Source: Variety

  • ‘Tales From The Walking Dead’ Anthology Adds Terry Crews, Jillian Bell, and More

    ‘Tales From The Walking Dead’ Anthology Adds Terry Crews, Jillian Bell, and More

    Nothing truly ends. The Walking Dead franchise proved that fact with its eleven-season run. In addition, the flagship series spawns two spin-off series. Announced a while back, Tales From The Walking Dead will join Fear The Walking Dead and Walking Dead: World Beyond as the third spin-off series to spawn from the main series. Set to premiere sometime this summer on AMC, and we finally got a cast announcement for the anthology series.

    Deadline has reported that Terry Crews, Anthony Edwards, Poppy Liu, Parker Posey, and Jillian Bell have all joined the upcoming series. This casting is said to be only the first wave of talent set to expand the world of the Walking Dead. Writer Scott M. Gimple shared his excitement about the new cast.

    Anthony, Jillian, Terry, Parker, and Poppy are the first wave of singular talents who will further expand the Walking Dead Universe into harrowing, hilarious, heartfelt, and horrifying new realms and we couldn’t be happier to welcome them to the family, along with these terrific directors. More announcements, more wonderful folks to come

    Scott Gimple

    The initial announcement of the series said that the series would feature new and established characters from within this universe. Currently, no actors previously seen on any of the three other shows have been announced for the anthology series. This would open up the possibility of many long-dead characters from the series returning for stories set before their debut in any of the other shows.

    Source: Deadline

  • REVIEW: ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Chapter 6 – From the Desert Comes a Stranger

    REVIEW: ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Chapter 6 – From the Desert Comes a Stranger

    So, the third season of The Mandalorian is going strong. It’s just strange they decided to rename it The Book of Boba Fett and ignore the titular character after a few episodes to fully embrace a follow-up story for Din Djarin. After last week’s episode, Temuera Morrison once again takes a backseat while the series further expands upon the greater mythos that was initially set up with Grogu’s journey to becoming a Jedi. It’s a shame that such a great episode is bogged down by the fact that it feels like you’re watching the wrong show.

    I will talk about spoilers in the review, so only continue at your own risk if you haven’t seen the episode yet.

    I love what Lucasfilms is doing with the Disney+ series, but I fear what this series’ pacing might mean for other spin-offs from the initial series that kicked off Disney+’s success. Pedro Pascal‘s Din remains one of the most compelling characters, but he also gets the most emotional arc throughout the entire franchise currently. Boba Fett at least shows up this time around, but barely even has a speaking line that makes you wonder if he’s even the protagonist of this story.

    Still, what we have is a great episode that is riddled with great cameos that are certain to make many long-time fans gush. The episode starts with Timothy Olyphant‘s return as Cobb Vanth – a personal favorite that I hope gets more focus in the future – and a small insight into what the Pykes trade is going on. You’d think for a large smuggling ring they’d do more than exchange money in the middle of nowhere like that, but it does lead to a powerful moment showing who he’ll side on once the main conflict happens.

    Yet, most of the episode is focused on Grogu, who makes his adorable return with some insight into his teachings by Mark Hamill‘s Luke Skywalker. They certainly learned from the previous appearance and the effect looks quite a bit better, even if still off at times. the performance is also quite subdued but works well for the Jedi way that he is trying to teach to his new padawan. It’s great to see the teachings, especially how Grogu echoes moves we’ve seen from Yoda in the prequels. That even gets paid off at the end of the episode.

    Din not being able to let go of his little fellow, and traveling all the way to see him was great – even if I don’t quite get how he knew to find them. R2D2 returns for a brief appearance, which seemed like a given with Luke there. However, I never expected Rosario Dawson‘s Ahsoka to make an appearance. It made sense in how she built upon the words she mentioned in her last appearance, and her interactions with Luke were heartwarming for Star Wars: Clone Wars fans.

    I do believe that the biggest moment comes at a later date for Clone Wars fans when bounty hunter Cad Cane arrived. Probably the best use of Tatooine’s landscape to build up his arrival and everything just worked incredibly well. Didn’t think the character would translate so damn well to live-action. The Western showdown matched his design so well, and he probably got the most intimidating introduction out of any character in this show yet. It’ll be a difficult one to top moving forward.

    We only have one more episode to go, and I am having a hard time imagining all these pieces falling together as they should. Boba is a no-show in his series for the last two episodes. We spent most of the first five revisiting the past and any main threat vanished before they even had a chance to become relevant. The Pykes offer some intrigue but not enough to make the upcoming events feel relevant. Outside of Morrison‘s performance and giving Boba Fett an actual character, it feels like this series is just The Mandalorian 2.5 rather than its own fully fleshed-out show. Even when the show catches back up with Fett’s empire, the big moment towards the end is overshadowed by everything else.

    I loved the episode, don’t get time wrong, but I wanted to spend time with Fett, as he raises the Rancor, takes down the underbelly, and sees the build-up to the final confrontation. They tease a big war, but we still don’t know why the Pykes are obsessed with the obvious Dune parallel. The problem lies that its main character was fleshed out in the past while nothing in the present is fully explored outside of fun cameos and Djarin’s story taking over. Perhaps they should’ve split it up into two series and just keep The Book of Boba Fett as a brief 5-episode mini-series.