‘American Horror Story’ Season 7 Title Has Been Revealed
Late last night, Ryan Murphy finally revealed the title of the upcoming season of American Horror Story, and now it all makes sense.
In a series of tweets, Murphy started by eliminating some options.
https://twitter.com/MrRPMurphy/status/888237216819847168
https://twitter.com/MrRPMurphy/status/888237286361411586
https://twitter.com/MrRPMurphy/status/888237446655168513
Then he teased fans even more:
https://twitter.com/MrRPMurphy/status/888237611893915649
To then finally reveal the title:
https://twitter.com/MrRPMurphy/status/888252781479378946
Billy Eichner, who will appear next season, posted on Instagram some art from the show.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BWy5o8ehTUF/
New ‘Inhumans’ Trailer Showcases Medusa’s Powers
A new Marvel’s Inhumans trailer dropped during Comic Con on Thursday, and we have good news: it’s an improvement!
The first trailer for the upcoming series got audiences very worried about the quality of the show, but this new trailer (even though it’s not perfect) certainly looks better.
The trailer showcases a bunch of new scenes and characters, but most importantly, it shows Medusa finally using her powers, and… well, once again, we’ll let you judge by yourself.
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLlD_djP0q8[/embedyt]
Before Comic-Con started, ABC also released three new character posters of our main royal family, check them out:
Marvel’s Inhumans is set to show its first two episodes on IMAX theatres on September 1, and later premiere on ABC on Septerber 29.
‘Wonder Woman’ Star Saïd Taghmaoui Joins ‘Legion’ Cast
It was announced during SDCC that Saïd Taghmaoui (played Sameer on Wonder Woman) will be joining the cast of Marvel’s Legion as Amahl Farouk, a.k.a. the Shadow King.
In the comics, the Shadow King is an entity of energy which feeds on humanity’s hatred. It manifests itself by possessing human bodies, with its primary human manifestation being Amahl Farouk.
The announcement was made during the first-ever Legion panel at SDCC, which the entire principal cast attended.
During the panel, it was revealed that the next season will consist of 10 episodes and will debut early 2018. Creator of the show, Noah Hawley, hinted at a possible introduction of David Haller’s father, Professor X.
Source: Comic Book Movie.
REVIEW: American Gods, Episode 101
As a book lover and a fan of “American Gods”, I know that this show is based on a book with the same name. But as a book lover, my “to-read list” is close to infinite, so I didn’t read this one yet. But I will. Hopefully before S2 starts.
The pilot, entitled “The Bone Orchard”, begins with the main character, Shadow Moon, an ex-con, in prison. He makes a phone call to his wife, Laura Moon, and we find out he is going to be released 5 days after, but Shadow is not all too happy about it because he has a strange feeling that something bad is about to happen. After that, Laura replies with a really interesting quote: “Waiting for the sky to fall is going to cause more bother than the sky actually falling”. Sometimes we worry too much about something that turns out didn’t deserve that much concern and that is what this quote is all about.
The next day Shadow wakes up to find out that his wife had died in a car crash and so they will release him a few days early. And that is when the action begins. He goes to the airport but finds out he has to wait a day to get a flight to the town he lives in. When the time comes, Shadow enters the plane and, because of a mistake with the sits (his was taken) he finds himself in first class, next to a very strange man who calls himself Mr. Wednesday. There, they have an interesting conversation about belief and faith. Wednesday asks Shadow how he thinks the plane flies: for technical reasons or because people want so hard to believe the plane will continue to fly instead of crashing that that is exactly what the plane does. In a show about Gods (old Gods and new ones) it is to expect that faith and belief will get to be an important subject, and the show doesn’t disappoint in that area, since there are some deep conversations about it, and also some scenes that relate to it, like for example the scene we meet the Goddess of Love. This scene was, in my point of view, very weird. I won’t describe it because I wouldn’t even know where I’d begin. But it became obvious that Bilquis was feeding on that man’s belief and worship.
Shadow wakes up on the plane to find out that, because of the storm, the plane had to perform an emergency landing and so he decides to continue his journey by car. He stops in a bar (maybe to stretch his legs) and, call it fate, he finds Mr. Wednesday once again, but this time he isn’t alone. Shadow meets a man who calls himself Leprechaun but, apparently, others call Mad Sweeney. Wednesday offers Shadow a job and, to prove that he will never take it, Shadow shows him a coin and says that if it is heads he will work for Wednesday, but if it is tails Wednesday must stop bugging him with that. After rigging the coin to make sure it is tails, Shadow tosses the coin, but apparently his con tricks have seen better days, because this time it wasn’t tails, meaning that Shadow found himself a job.
After finally getting to Eagle Point and after finding out that his best friend also died in the same crash his wife did, Shadow attends Laura’s funeral. There he finds Audrey (his friend’s wife) and she tells him that they had been having an affair for a while then and that is why they were together in the car. When the funeral was over, Shadow was walking to the motel he and Wednesday were staying in, and he found a very strange object that attacked him. Afterwards, Shadow founds himself in the strangest limousine where he meets a boy (the first New God we find in our screen: Technical Boy, God of technology). After not answering his questions, the God of technology orders his faceless minions to kill Shadow. And that is where I stop understanding what is going on. Technical Boy’s henchmen start beating Shadow, tie a rope around his neck and hung him in a tree. Then there is blood everywhere, the faceless guys start being ripped in half by an invisible force and the rope that was linking Shadow and the tree gets cutted allowing him to survive and fight another day.
Since the devil’s in the details, here are some I liked:
- Maybe it is unfair to describe the very scene of the episode as a detail, but I don’t know what else to call it. In it we see that Gods have been around for a long time and that they love sacrifices in their name;
- Before finding out his wife was dead, Shadow has a dream where he is in sort of a forest full of bones and skulls (maybe this explains the title of the episode). In the dream, Shadow is slapped by a tree. Since trees are supposed to represent life, I feel like the dream means Shadow is about to gets screwed over, since it is never a good sign when life slaps you in the face. It was from this point on that the actions started and that Shadow’s life began to turn in unimaginable ways;
- It was also nice (especially for the ones that are rewatching the season, like me) to see that during Laura’s funeral there was a malfunction in the machine that was lowering her casket, almost like she didn’t want to stay dead.
It was a good start to the show, but I feel like the synopsis they gave to it and to the book has a few spoilers since there is nothing in this episode (or even in other episodes to come) that suggests that this is a show about old and new Gods in the eve of a battle. But it is in fact a great idea to a story, because if what makes a God is people’s belief in him, then Gods we worship today are completely different from the Gods that used to be worshipped. Nowadays we tend to believe more in what we see, so things like information, technology, media… We don’t exactly worship that in a God like way, but we don’t have to.
The special effects in this show are also really good. In this episode this is more present in that last scene, since it doesn’t have many more, but the rest of the season is full of amazing scenarios. We also get to see some great things in the opening of the show (no wonder the show is nominated for Emmy of Outstanding Special Visual and Outstanding Main Title Design).
This was a nice episode, but it wasn’t the best of the season, so I will give it an 8.0/10.
Stay tuned for my review of episode 102 “The Secret of Spoons”.
Ryan Murphy Reveals a Final Hint About ‘American Horror Story’ Season 7 Title
Ryan Murphy has been posting cryptic hints on his Instagram for a while now about the upcoming season of American Horror Story.
He has used Instagram in the past for casting announcements and the revelation of an older character’s comeback, but now he’s taken the website to drop a final hint on the title of the next season.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BWqV_xwAfZg/
He promised the big reveal to come out on Thursday, but we can’t wait any longer.
Any guesses?
New Character Promos for ‘The Gifted’ Released
IGN released on Thursday nine new character bio videos for the upcoming X-Men series: The Gifted.
FOX also released a promo on Monday featuring some new scenes and lines from our main characters:
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ov105Mqg3lk[/embedyt]
Take a look at the characters:
Here's your first look at Reed from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/aCmtItOfaz
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Caitlyn from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/wv5nqmqXjx
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Lauren from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/M0eXrPg7Zk
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Andy from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/EpzY4yttYP
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Blink from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/PNLb0cGQ0t
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Polaris from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Read more: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/aoje48rxjJ
— IGN (@IGN) July 13, 2017
Here's your first look at Thunderbird from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/iHMWiQlFYf
— IGN (@IGN) July 13, 2017
Here's your first look at Eclipse from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/Sn4UaLOkxC
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2017
Here's your first look at Agent Turner from the new #XMen series: #TheGifted!
Learn more about the show: https://t.co/02A13BrHTg pic.twitter.com/87fGr6nPeh
— IGN (@IGN) July 13, 2017
The series already has a trailer, and it is set to debut October 2 on FOX.
REVIEW: Once Upon A Time in Wonderland, Episode 101
I don’t really like to compare shows, since one of them always gets downgraded, but I think it is inevitable to compare a spin-off and its main show. When Once Upon A Time in Wonderland started, Once Upon A Time was in its 3rd season (which is, in my opinion, one of its finest) and so I feel like OUATiW was a bit ignored by the fans. Maybe it would have been smarter to make it into a summer show, but what is done is done. In the end I was a bit sad it was cancelled but ultimately not too surprised.
Like the pilot of the main show, “Down The Rabbit Hole” begins with the words “Once Upon A Time”, which in itself often represents the beginning of a great story. There is also something in the beginning of the episode that reminded me of an amazing quote from OUAT. When Alice gets home, she tells her father what happened to her and how she visited a wonderful land (see what I did there?) and, even though he is at first a bit reluctant whether to believe her or not, he doesn’t in the end, which brought me back to 117 of OUAT when Jefferson said to Emma, who was also a non-believer: “Everyone wants a magical solution for their problem, and everyone refuses to believe in magic”. I think this quote kind of sums up the world we live in today, because even though some of us want to believe in something else other than what we have, there are always the ones that will constantly make sure we go back to believing only in what our eyes can see and that is exactly what cuts off imagination and creativity.
[WPGP gif_id=”5930″ width=”600″]
It was also incredible to see that Alice is not a damsel in distress and that she can take care of herself very well when we see that, on her own, she took care of all the employees of the asylum when Will came to her rescue (which turned out to be the other way around).
After the asylum we finally leave our world (not completely, but at least until the end of this episode) and enter Wonderland. I think they built this new world very well, because we are told in Lewis Carroll’s tale that nothing makes sense there. It is true that the special effects and the scenarios behind the characters are awful and evidently fake in some scenes, but it is still nice to see the Wonderland nonsense: dragonflies that are actually mini-dragons, a marshmallow lake, food that makes you smaller and drinks that make you bigger… and that is only some of the few things we see in this premiere, because more nonsense things will continue to arrive to the screen throughout the season.
While we see Alice talking to Dr. Lydgate (who also makes an appearance in S6 of the main show), we see some flashbacks of this young girl going through some adventures trying to prove to her father she is not crazy. While in this, she accidentally meets a guy who is destined to become her true love: Cyrus, the genie. Even though their love seems impossible (since genies are always changing masters and lands) they start having a lot of adventures and have an almost immediate Happy Beginning.
But of course there cannot be heroes without villains and this spin-off introduces two: The Red Queen (who had to be a regular villain, of course, since she is the trouble bringer on the original story) and Jafar (who shouldn’t belong here, since he is in the wrong story, but somehow fits completely). It is always nice seeing a villain team-up. Heroes join forces all the time, so why shouldn’t villains do the same? In the last scene we see Alice and Cyrus together, these villains go to distance to make Alice think her genie is dead. The Red Queen throes him into the Boiling Sea (right after he proposed), while Jafar catches him with a flying carpet (Alice doesn’t see this last part, of course).
The end of the episode is also something I thought was nice. Alice goes to the Mad Hatter’s looking for Cyrus (who was allegedly seen there) but finds nothing but lots and lots of hats (at least inside the house). About to lose hope and control over her tears, she goes outside and finds a necklace that belongs to Cyrus, making the assumption that if it survived, maybe Cyrus did too, right? And that brings us to the best quote of this episode: “When you really love someone, you don’t need proof. You can feel it”. This quote Alice makes is actually a repetition of what Cyrus says in flashbacks when they first meet, but I thought it had more impact in this last scene then on the previous one, maybe because this times Alice is referring to someone who will always believe in her, no matter how absurd she may sound.
Making now the last comparison between shows, it was cool to see that this pilot didn’t end in a major cliffhanger or plot twist, like most pilot episodes do. Instead (like Once Upon A Time’s pilot) it ends with a bit of hope and belief in something that cannot be seen, only felt. In the end of this episode, Alice knows for sure that Cyrus is alive, not only based on a rumor she heard, but also in the love they share (call her mad, but she is right).
Overall, it was a good episode, but better ones are coming our way. That being said, I will give this episode a 7 out of 10.
Hope you guys stick around for my upcoming review of episode 102 of this show entitled “Trust Me”.
‘Once Upon a Time:’ Dania Ramirez’s Character Revealed (Photos)
At this weekend’s D23 Expo, it was revealed that Cinderella will get a new story.
Executive producer of Once Upon a Time, Eddy Kitsis revealed this Saturday that new cast member Dania Ramirez will play Cinderella in the seventh season of the show.
It was also confirmed that Ramirez is playing Henry’s wife and mother of his child. “Dania Ramirez will be playing a different version of Cinderella,” said Kitsis. “If we remember Henry’s grandfather is Prince Charming [Josh Dallas], so we have the grandson of Prince Charming with a new Cinderella.”
Kitsis said that the new season will be set in Seattle, and flashbacks will take us into the Enchanted Forest. “Henry is in a new Enchanted Forest, with characters that we have seen before but with different tales.”
As for Storybrooke he said that “we may see it a few times throughout the year” We’re going to follow him as he leaves home,” Kitsis shared, adding that Henry “wants to find his own story.”
“We’re going to follow him [Henry] as he leaves home,” Kitsis explained, which means we will see at least a little more of Jared Gilmore’s Young Henry.
The seventh season of Once Upon a Time is set to air this fall, and it will air on Friday nights instead of Sundays.
Source: Deadline.
‘Cloak and Dagger’ Trailer Teases a Change in the Origin Story
Marvel’s Cloak and Dagger dropped its first trailer, and we’re here to fill you in and break it down!
Cloak and Dagger are a superhero duo appearing in the comic of the same name published by Marvel Comics.
Cloak a.k.a. Tyrone Johnson (played by Aubrey Joseph) has the ability to open a door to the dark dimension and send people into it, including him, which let’s Cloak teleport himself and others. The character has a hunger for light, which can be alleviated by either consuming the light of victims sent into the dark dimension or light produced by Dagger.
Dagger a.k.a. Tandy Bowen (played by Olivia Holt) has the ability to create “light daggers” that travel wherever she wishes. Her daggers can also cure certain people of drug addiction and drain living beings of vitality.
The TV show will follow Tyrone and Tandy, two teenagers from very different backgrounds who acquire superpowers while getting involved in a romantic relationship. Tyrone and Tandy’s powers work better when they’re together.
Here’s the trailer:
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5hrFVQiGyk[/embedyt]
From what we have so far, the biggest change we’ve noticed is the origin story,
Cloak and Dagger originally got their powers after they were experimented on (Deadpool style) by a criminal chemist who was developing a new synthetic heroin. The duo were the only ones to survived and managed to escape the facility.
In the trailer, however, it seems like they get the powers from some sort of car/water accident where Tyrone helps Tandy escape, to then have them not see each other again until they’re teenagers.
In the description showed above, and based off the trailer, it seems like the powers of Cloak and Dagger will be stronger when they’re together. This would be another change from the comics.
We could also find an interesting easter egg in this trailer: Roxxon Corp (a Hydra-like oil corporation that is very prominent in the comics).
Bonus points for having an awesome shot and a clever easter egg in one frame.
The upcoming Freeform series is set to air in 2018.
We Got a New Image from Marvel’s ‘The Defenders’
Another image for Netflix’s The Defenders has been released.
The poster features our “gang of four:” Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage (looking like he’s about to hurt someone pretty badly), and Iron Fist.
The image looks like it will be used as a promotional banner for an interview of sorts due to the text on it: “Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Iron Fist have united to form street-level supergroup The Defenders, the four stars brief us on what to expect.”
Here it is:
Marvel’s The Defenders is set to air on Netflix August 18.
Source: Comic Book Movie.