Quantcast
Channel: DailyDot Entertainment Feed
Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live

Meet the actor who gets eaten by a T-rex in the 'Jurassic World' trailer

$
0
0

You definitely watched Eddie J. Fernandez become part of a complete breakfast for one lucky dinosaur this week. When the latest Jurassic World trailer hit the Web on Monday—you know, the imminent reboot blockbuster starring breakout charmer Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard and directed by Colin Trevorrow—the longtime stuntman-turned-actor was impossible to miss.

First, he’s staring in awe of a giant predator.

Then, he’s running for it.

Finally, his expository life comes to an end.

“The T-rex was chasing us, and we did a lot of running. We did a whole day of running and then, you know, we had the weekend off, come back on Monday shot some more running, and guess what? I pull a hamstring,” Fernandez says on the phone from his home in Los Angeles. “Anytime you’re doing a stunt—I don’t care what it is—sometimes it’s the easiest and stupidest things that you get hurt.”

Like one of the countless soldiers he’s portrayed in his 25-plus years as a sort of pinch-hitting Hollywood mercenary, he swooped into Jurassic World’s Hawaii set to play an action-advancing bit role. The film credits list him as “Paddock Worker.”

“I am the first villain that, you know, encounters the beast,” he says. “It was a great experience, the director’s great… Chris [Pratt] is a nice guy. It was a good vibe.”

He hasn’t seen a final cut, though he says the film is “90 percent done.” He says directing legend Ron Howard—father of Bryce Dallas—has seen it and was proud. He expects to get a call soon enough to see for himself. Fernandez actually made his World trailer debut on Super Bowl Sunday.

“They showed the trailer, and I was like ‘hey, there’s me’ and I didn’t even know,” he says. “So that was cool on Super Bowl day because I was getting a lot of phone calls and a lot of texts.”

He’s been a soldier, or a villain, in bundles of action and war movies—though the longtime stuntman is carving his way into more fleshed-out acting roles. He’s a five-time nominee and two-time winner at the Taurus World Stunt awards (one from the latest Rambo, one from The Expendables). Per his site’s bio, Fernandez has expertise in “stunt driving, high work, fight choreography, wire work, and fire work” and he’s used that skill set across 300 film and TV appearances.

Fernandez is a first-generation Chicagoan, with parents from Mexico City—he has an affable, pensive demeanor and a disarming Midwestern accent. He’s one of those guys that refers to movies as “shows.” (“Oh I’m sorry, not for that show,” he says upon confusing professional field work.)

On film, Fernandez has been killed dozens of times—often several times in one sitting.

“I did Windtalkers with Nicolas Cage, and then I did We Were Soldiers with Mel Gibson… I must have died at least 18 times,” Fernandez says, describing the on-set process. “‘Eddie, change your wardrobe, change your hat, we’re going to shave your beard.’”

In the ’80s, Fernandez was a professional kickboxer. (“I don’t tell anybody that because I haven’t trained since.”) He says the stunt thing was something that “fell on my lap,” and that the experience of working with Blaxploitation legend and former Kansas City Chiefs star Fred Williamson gave him “the bug.”

These days, however, he’s jostling for more substantive screen time.

“I’m trying to be the action actor—be that Jason Statham, be that Sylvester Stallone… who can act and also perform so we don’t have to get a double in. So the director can get the shot they want,” Fernandez says. “I’ve doubled many actors before, and I love it, but I also like to be in front of camera so, you know, that’s my goal.”

Last summer’s 22 Jump Street was a career turning point. The script called for someone who could basically drive a semi and be easily disposed of. But as the “Mexican Wolverine,” he strong-armed a role that, he says, is in talks to return for 23 Jump Street.

“In the script I died. He kills me. And I was talking to the director, and I said ‘you don’t want to kill me, you want me in the next part’ and he goes ‘you know what, Eddie? Let’s just shoot you and get a shot, and we’ll decide’ and sure enough in the film I never die.”

It’s an important victory—jettisoning from faceless action reel extra to a commodity. It’s an illustrative lesson in the proverbial notion that no one else is going to toot your own horn.

But I ask if it bothers Fernandez that he’s such a decorative appetizer in Jurassic World that the trailer shows him being eaten.

“Everything I do in that expendable area, you know, I make sure that I do 150 percent because I want to make sure that even though it’s a small clip and that I die—it’s a helluva death scene.”

Still, he says that a big goal for him is to “be one of those Hispanics who can represent.” In other words, portray Latino characters as human beings and with fervent dedication to the tiniest of bit roles. He cites friendships with Hollywood Latinos like Danny Trejo and George Lopez, and explains that part of their fraternal bond is making a point to help each other, and new voices, out.

I mention that the trailer bothered me because, despite being set in Costa Rica, it appears to punt on fleshing out Latino characters in favor of reveling in a procedural buffet of brown men being killed by dinosaurs in crowd-pleasing fashion. Fernandez, again, hasn’t seen the final movie—all he can do about it is continue to kick ass.

“I did it all,” Fernandez says. “I don’t care what it is. It could be one word, it could be one fight scene, it could be just one look—that’s how I’m trying to build a career so one day there’ll be a big spot for me.”

Screengrab via Universal Pictures/YouTube


Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher laugh off the chicken lawsuit on Meerkat

$
0
0

When TMZ broke the story yesterday of Mila Kunis being sued for stealing a chicken from an alleged best friend in the Ukraine 25 years ago, it felt like Christmas. It’s not often that a celebrity story this simultaneously silly and harmless hits the interwebs—the chicken’s name was “Doggie,” for crying out loud—and it’s all so farcical that you can’t even get mad at TMZ for mocking the plaintiff, Kristina Karo, into oblivion:
Kunis, along with Ashton Kutcher, has now fired back at Karo’s claims that Doggie was stolen all those years ago. Aside from the fact that they’re both doing well enough financially that a $5,000 suit is unlikely to put the fear of God into them, they didn’t seem to take the matter too seriously at all when they held their livestreamed response on the social media network Meerkat (which Kutcher is heavily invested in):

Evidently, Kunis has not actually been served for the lawsuit yet, which raises the question of whether or not the lawsuit even really exists. The couple also does a little math in the video, and figures out that Kunis was 7 years old, while Karo was merely 1 month old, at the time of the alleged chicken theft, which makes the allegations sound fairly far-fetched.

Kunis also jokes that she’s considering filing a lawsuit of her own for damages caused by watching Karo's music video. “My body hurts. My eyes hurt—they’re burning. That requires money,” she says. Kutcher speculates on the suspicious convenience of this wacky lawsuit coinciding with the release of said video, which you can hurt yourself with by watching here:

We have to agree with TMZ: “If the judge would make the countersuit a class action, we'll gladly join.”

This entire situation is so insane that we're expecting Karo to ink a deal for her own reality show within the next few weeks. And the worst part? We'd totally watch that show.

H/T TMZ | Screengrab via NEWS24/YouTube | Remix by Joey Keeton

Disney is putting out 24 movies in 24 months

$
0
0

It’s no secret that Disney is one of the most powerful studios in Hollywood, but seeing what that means for the average moviegoer in real time is a bit of a shock.

At this week’s Cinemacon, Disney revealed its film lineup through late spring 2017, and you could practically see jaws dropping online when Mashable’s Christina Warren shared the snapshot she grabbed:

In case you missed all that, here's the lineup with release dates:

  • Avengers: Age of Ultron (Marvel) – May 1, 2015 
  • Tomorrowland (Walt Disney Pictures) – May 22, 2015 
  • Inside Out (Pixar) – June 19, 2015 
  • Ant-Man (Marvel) – July 17, 2015 
  • Bridge of Spies (DreamWorks) – Oct. 16, 2015 
  • The Good Dinosaur (Pixar) – Nov. 25, 2015 
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Lucasfilm) – Dec. 18, 2015 
  • The Finest Hours (Walt Disney Pictures) – Jan. 29, 2016 
  • Zootopia (Walt Disney Animation Studios) – March 4, 2016 
  • The Jungle Book (Walt Disney Pictures) – April 15, 2016 
  • Captain America: Civil War (Marvel) – May 6, 2016 
  • Alice: Through the Looking Glass (Walt Disney Pictures) – May 27, 2016 
  • Finding Dory (Pixar) – June 17, 2016 
  • The BFG (Walt Disney Pictures) – July 1, 2016 
  • Pete’s Dragon (Walt Disney Pictures) – Aug. 12, 2016 
  • Doctor Strange (Marvel) – Nov. 4, 2016 
  • Moana (Walt Disney Animation Studios) – Nov. 23, 2016 
  • Star Wars Anthology: Rogue One (Lucasfilm) – Dec. 16, 2016 
  • Beauty and the Beast (Walt Disney Pictures) – March 17, 2017 
  • Ghost in the Shell (DreamWorks) – April 14, 2017 
  • Guardians of the Galaxy 2 (Marvel) – May 5, 2017 
  • Star Wars: Episode VIII (Lucasfilm) – May 26, 2017 
  • Toy Story 4 (Pixar) – June 16, 2017 
  • Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (Walt Disney Pictures) – July 17, 2017

Woah. Even for a major studio, that’s, um, a hefty schedule. More revealing is that out of the 24 films Disney will be releasing between now and spring 2017, only 10 of them are coming out of Walt Disney Animation Studios or Walt Disney Pictures, the company’s longstanding sub-studios. 

Of these, one, BFG, is a hybrid child, directed by Steven Spielberg and produced in conjunction with his own Amblin Entertainment as well as sometimes-Disney-rival DreamWorks. The timeline also includes two live-action films, Bridge of Spies and Ghost in the Shell, which it will also be distributing on behalf of DreamWorks. 

The rest of the slate are films from other major studios that Disney has acquired: four from Pixar, five from Marvel, and three from Lucasfilm—including Episode VIII and Rogue One. The latter is part of the new Star Wars Anthology series of standalone films which are unconnected to the narrative of the main franchise.

The timeline doesn’t include other films that fall under the Walt Disney Studios umbrella, like Disneynature’s Monkey Kingdom, which opened this week. Others, like the Muppets Studio, which Disney also owns, have no major film releases currently planned over the next two years. 

And despite Disney’s recent confirmation of Frozen 2 and Pixar’s The Incredibles 2, don't look for either of them on the slate before mid-2017.

The timeline only goes through early 2017, but according to Box Office Mojo, the full slate of Disney pictures that the company has announced through 2019 is even more staggering. Here’s what comes after the timeline ends:

  • Thor: Ragnarok (Marvel) – Nov. 3, 2017
  • Untitled Pixar Animation – Nov. 22, 2017
  • Untitled Disney Animation – March 9, 2018
  • Avengers: Infinity War Part I (Marvel) – May 4, 2018
  • Untitled Pixar Animation – June 15, 2018
  • Black Panther (Marvel) – July 6, 2018
  • Captain Marvel (Marvel)  – Nov. 2, 2018
  • Untitled Disney Animation – Nov. 21, 2018
  • Avengers: Infinity War Part II (Marvel) – May 3, 2019
  • Inhumans (Marvel) – July 12, 2019
The Frozen and The Incredibles sequels will most likely comprise two of the “untitled” Disney and Pixar animated film slots. And Star Wars: Episode IX will also be appearing in that lineup, along with at least one other standalone Star Wars Anthology film.

The visualization of just how much of Hollywood Disney has managed to acquire or maintain a stake in over the years is startling—especially considering that the Mouse already owns half of Broadway and basically operates as an independent mini-nation in Florida.

Perhaps we should be grateful Disney is mostly content to use its terrifying power for the goal of churning out moralistic entertainment with twee musical numbers and billions of dollars in toy sales.

For now, anyway.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Fusion will air episodes of cult classic 'The Chris Gethard Show'

$
0
0

Cult hit The Chris Gethard Show is moving to the Fusion network next month, but it looks like the network will be showing ample love to Gethard and crew’s public access roots. On Thursday Fusion will air not one, but three best-loved episodes featuring comedy greats such as Amy Poehler, Zach Galifianakis, and Wyatt Cenac.

The Chris Gethard Show, often referred to as TCGS for short, started as a live show at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York, and moved to public access network MNN in June 2011. The inventive take on the typical late-night format features a revolving cast of oddball characters, viewer call-ins, and whimsical concepts and challenges that color each episode with its own strange flavor. No two shows are exactly alike, but the universe is always familiar, inviting, and brimming with energy.

In “We Will Predict Your Future” Gethard welcomes Poehler who assists him in telling fortunes, and doling out life advice to callers and audience members. “Who Needs a Haircut” features Galifianakis, Gethard, and other members of the TCGS community giving and receiving live, on-air, haircuts with what can only be described as delightful results. And in “Zero Laughs” the cast is challenged to forgo laughing for the duration of the episode, while some very funny people do their best to force the laughter out of them.

Fusion’s decision to air episodes from the show’s public access years may be very welcome news to fans, who call themselves GethHeads, many of whom may be wondering what a post-public-access incarnation of the show might look like.

Photo via Michael Dolan/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Cartoon Network and Adult Swim shows are coming to Hulu

$
0
0

A new deal between Hulu and Turner Broadcasting will bring Cartoon Network and Adult Swim shows exclusively to the streaming site, possibly making Jake and Finn shout "Hulu!" along with their excited cries of “Adventure Time.”

Under the deal, which takes effect May 1, viewers can stream original Adult Swim and Cartoon Network shows like Rick and Morty, NTSF:SD:SUV, and Steven Universe whenever they want. The deal also includes older series like Robot Chicken, Dexter’s Laboratory, and The Venture Bros. with a Hulu subscription.

"You know what that means?" Hulu Vice President of Content Acquisition Lisa Holme wrote on the company's blog. "No longer are the days when you have to wait until after dark to see your favorite Adult Swim friends—we have them anytime, anywhere (someday that will include your refrigerator’s video screen)."

A few Adult Swim shows were previously free to watch through Hulu, but the site didn’t always offer the smoothest viewing experience. The new deal fills the cartoon-shaped hole in our collective binge-watching hearts, one that Netflix hasn't yet been able to fill.

Although the deal is initially focused on Cartoon Network and Adult Swim, it will also bring some TNT and TBS shows to Hulu in the coming years.

Cartoon Network's shows will stream ad-free on the Hulu Kids section of the site—which is only available to Hulu Plus subscribers—even though Hulu knows full well that adults are going to jump on these shows like hotcakes.

You know where we'll be come May 1.

Screengrab via Adult Swim/YouTube

Insulted Native Americans walk off Adam Sandler's 'Ridiculous Six' set

$
0
0

When you think “Adam Sandler” and “Western,” you expect only the best, historically accurate, culturally sensitive comedy. Right? Unfortunately, since we don’t live in an alternate reality, where up is down, bad means good, and Adam Sandler is “smart comedy,” that is not the case.

On Wednesday, a group of Native American actors and a cultural adviser walked off the set of Sandler’s new movie, The Ridiculous Six, in response to the insulting portrayal of Native women, elders, and the Apache culture. Indian Country Today Media Network reports the script contains appalling depictions of Apache women, including names like “Beaver’s Breath” and “No Bra.” One actress had been instructed to squat and urinate while smoking a peace pipe.  

Loren Anthony, a member of the Navajo Nation and an actor who left the production, told ICTMN, “I was asked a long time ago to do some work on this and I wasn’t down for it. Then they told me it was going to be a comedy, but it would not be racist.” Happy Madison, Sandler’s production company, had hired a cultural adviser, and Anthony says producers assured him they would make an effort to portray Native Americans tastefully.

Dartmouth film grad Allison Young joined the film after her professor encouraged her to use this as an opportunity to study stereotyping. “We talked to the producers about our concerns. They just told us, ‘If you guys are so sensitive, you should leave’ … This is supposed to be a comedy that makes you laugh. A film like this should not make someone feel this way … Nothing has changed. We are still just Hollywood Indians.”

Indeed, Hollywood rarely portrays Native Americans outside of the common stereotypes—the stoic Indian, the bloodthirsty warrior, the beautiful maiden, and the magical medicine man. RidiculousSix perpetuates these ideas instead of amplifying awareness of Native American culture and history. But would you expect a responsible portrayal of marginalized people from Happy Madison? After all, this is the same production company that brought you Blended, The Waterboy, and basically every character Rob Schneider plays in all of these movies.

“Our dignity is not for sale,” says actor and activist David Hill. “We understand this is a comedy, we understand this is humor, but we won’t tolerate disrespect.”

The film, written by Sandler and long-time writing partner Tim Herlihy, is set for a Netflix-only release. It will star Sandler, Nick Nolte, Steve Buscemi, Dan Aykroyd, Jon Lovitz, Rob Schneider, and Vanilla Ice.

H/T Indian Country Today Media Network | Photo via Angela George/Wikipedia (CC BY SA 3.0)

Disney songs get '90s remixes and it's the ultimate nostalgia mixtape

$
0
0

Throwback Thursday just got a whole lot better.

There’s no reason why you can’t combine your playlist of Disney tunes with Spotify’s awesome curation of the best throwback jams. YouTube superstar Todrick Hall has done it for you.

In his newest video release, Hall collaborated with Shoshana Bean and in Disney-inspired garb, melded the stylings of popular ’90s hits like “Always Be My Baby” and “This Is How We Do It” with beloved classics like “Part Of Your World” and “Can You Feel the Love Tonight.”

This isn’t Hall’s first time paying homage to the company that has produced countless movies from our childhood. His other hits include a Beyoncé-fied retelling of Cinderella, a villain-filled version of “Cell Block Tango” from the musical Chicago, and of course, "Beauty and the Beat," a reimagining of the popular fairytale that arguably put Hall on the Internet’s radar.

This is how we do it.

H/T Huffington Post | Screengrab via Todrick Hall/YouTube

Chvrches singer fights back against rape threats

$
0
0

Lauren Mayberry might be the lead singer of popular indie rock band Chvrches, but that hasn’t made her immune from the types of threats that women on the Internet get all the time.

Mayberry has been vocal about the types of threats she gets online as a result of being in the public eye, and on Wednesday she shared one of the particularly brutal ones on Instagram.

She also shared it on Twitter, reiterating the message and showing she wasn't afraid to stand up against the faceless person.

This isn't the first time she publicly shared inappropriate correspondence to show what types of messages she routinely receives. A Facebook post from 2013 shows one of the more "polite" messages.

In a post on the Guardian that year, she explained the reactions to the post and wrote about what it's like to be in a band that "was born on the internet."

After making the post, I sat back and watched with an increasingly open mouth as more and more people commented on the statement. At the time of writing, Facebook stats tell me that the post had reached 581,376 people, over five times the number of people who subscribe to the page itself, with almost 1,000 comments underneath the image. Comments range from the disgusted and supportive to the offensively vile. My current favourites from the latter category include:

"This isn't rape culture. You'll know rape culture when I'm raping you, bitch"

"I have your address and I will come round to your house and give u anal and you will love it you twat lol"

"Act like a slut, getting treated like a sluy [sic]"

"It's just one of those things you'll need to learn to deal with. If you're easily offended, then maybe the music industry isn't for you"

But unlike her first negative experience with online feedback, this time around Twitter users and fans have been overwhelmingly supportive of the 27-year-old singer. Most are in disbelief that a person could possibly write such a thing.

If you use the Internet every day, it's sadly not that hard to believe.

H/T NME | Photo via Lennon Photography/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)


Tyler Perry to star as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles villain

$
0
0

Variety has confirmed the latest addition to the second installment of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film franchise, due out in June 2016. Tyler Perry has signed on to play the villainous Baxter Stockman.

Perry joins fellow series newcomer Stephen Amell, who will play Casey Jones. Megan Fox and Will Arnett, who played April O'Neil and Vernon Fenwick in the first film, are set to reprise their roles.

Upon news of Perry's casting, fans took to Twitter to express shock and—what else?—outrage.

In TMNT lore, Stockman was a scientist whose invention of the "Mousers" rat-munching machines attracted the interest of Shredder. In the 1987 animated series, Stockman was transformed into a human-fly hybrid, hellbent on destroying both the Turtles and Shredder, who had turned his back on him.

While Perry is best known for a series of self-referential film series, he has occasionally branched out into other projects. He played lawyer Tanner Bolt in Gone Girl and the head of Starfleet in the 2009Star Trekreboot.

H/T Variety | Photo via US ARMY/Wikipedia (PD) | Remix by Jason Reed

'Avengers: Age of Ultron' is bloated and untidy, but just entertaining enough

$
0
0

The opening act of Avengers: Age of Ultron gives fans exactly what they wanted after The Avengers in 2012: the whole team fighting together as a unit, then going home for a party at Avengers Tower. It's a who's who of Marvel cameos—plus some stilted excuses for absent friends like Pepper Potts and Jane Foster, who have been exiled to Offscreen Girlfriend Island (A.K.A. running Stark Industries and winning a Nobel Prize.)

Ultron is introduced early on, his half-formed metal body lurching into the aftermath of Stark’s party like a newborn Frankenstein’s monster. He was designed to protect the planet from alien threats, but he immediately goes rogue and decides to kill everyone instead. Of course. 

As soon as an Avenger throws the first punch at Ultron, we slam up against a problem that persists for most of the movie: Ultron isn't a single robot overlord, he's an artificial intelligence inhabiting multiple bodies at once. The movie acknowledges this, but still includes several scenes where people fight individual Ultron drones or fly across the world to confront him "in person." This tactic feels about as effective as punching the Internet.

Marvel put a lot of effort into publicizing James Spader's Ultron, rightfully concerned that he wouldn’t measure up to Loki’s emotional complexity as a villain. Unfortunately, the movie itself does little to flesh out Ultron’s desire for destruction. As a parable about the dangers of an over-protective military state, he doesn’t hold a candle to the more sophisticated Captain America: The Winter Soldier, whose human villains were hiding in plain sight for decades. We could have done with more scenes that explored Ultron's emotional depth, or how his destructive plan grew from Tony's paranoid desire to "create a suit of armor around the world."

When Joss Whedon set out to make an Avengers sequel, he wanted to write a smaller, more intimate story. But like Ultron, his creation mutated out of control. While we do get plenty of funny or touching interactions between the main characters, the film feels poorly structured and overly reliant on gigantic action sequences. Several of the longer action scenes could have been cut, as could some needless subplots like Thor’s mini-quest to bathe in a magical psychic cave pond (don’t ask).

With so much of the film's 142-minute runtime dedicated to people punching robots through walls, character development was a difficult feat. Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch get a sympathetic introduction, although Scarlet Witch's mind-control powers are a little underutilized. The real star is Vision, an android with the body of Paul Bettany (who voices J.A.R.V.I.S.) and the mind of a god. In the aesthetically bland world of Tony Stark's penthouse, Vision looks and feels like an ambassador from some long-dead age of comics. He is instantly one of the most exciting things onscreen, and is unexpectedly funny to boot.

Whedon has some obvious favorites among the Avengers. He has a real knack for exploring Bruce Banner's vulnerability and Tony Stark's darker side, and made sure to give Hawkeye the warmth and personality he lacked in the previous movie. Meanwhile, Black Widow's role did not go quite so smoothly. Her new storyline is a budding romance with Bruce Banner, which begins as a believably cautious flirtation but takes a drastic leap when she suggests they quit the Avengers and run away together.

It's difficult to tell if we're meant to take this at face value (which would be at odds with her previous characterization), or if she's employing reverse psychology to keep Banner on side. In one particularly bizarre scene, Widow describes herself as a "monster" after admitting that she is infertile. At best, this was an awkwardly worded reference to some other aspect of her troubled past. At worst, it's a deeply offensive scene in which a beloved superhero equates female sterility with the destructive power of the Hulk

Age of Ultron is entertaining enough, with Whedon's trademark wit balancing out some of the clunkier scenes. But all too often, it falls into a trap predicted by Marvel naysayers: focusing too much on set-up for future movies in the franchise. There’s no need to keep teasing appearances from Thanos and the Infinity Gems, because they're self-explanatory to anyone who has seen a Hollywood movie before. Here are some shiny space crystals, and at some point the good guys and bad guys will fight over them. Q.E.D.

On the bright side, the foreshadowing for Captain America: Civil War is already delicious. Tony Stark’s evolution from douchey billionaire to lone imperialist has been developing for years, and The Winter Soldier already set up Steve Rogers as an anti-establishment hero who trusts in humanity to make the right decision. Both want to save the world, but Stark wants to make an impact on a global scale while Rogers is an idealist, perfectly willing to save people one by one.

In a recent interview, Whedon said, “I don’t really think about the fans. I think about what I want.” In some cases this is the ideal attitude, leading him to make innovative and unpredictable choices with familiar characters. Banner’s mournful vulnerability is a great example, as is the unexpected animosity between Rogers and Stark. But there are some instances where Whedon’s choices will rub fans the wrong way. His interpretation of Black Widow has already inspired some mixed responses, while fans of The Winter Soldier may be frustrated by Rogers' return to his role in The Avengers: a straitlaced foil for Tony Stark's quips.

At the heart of this tangled web of overblown action sequences and multi-sequel storytelling, Age of Ultron’s greatest problem is that it doesn’t stand out. To a certain extent it relies our affection for characters we already know and love, and fodder for more speculation about the future of the franchise. As a film taken on its own, it doesn’t have the originality or fast-paced drive of The Avengers.

There are already enough high-octane blockbusters full of unlikely team-ups, urban battle scenes and evil robots. Over the next few years, Hollywood will give us many more. If Marvel wants to keep ahead of the pack, it should focus its efforts on movies with coherent story arcs and a compelling emotional core, rather than veering toward Transformers-style orgies of property destruction.

Photo via Marvel

Apparently Kid embarrasses 'Jurassic World' star Chris Pratt in dinosaur trivia

$
0
0

Apparently Chris Pratt is just faking that dinosaur expertise.

The Jurassic World star went head-to-head in a battle of jurassic wits against future paleontologist and Internet meme Noah Ritter (a.k.a. Apparently Kid) on Ellen Thursday. With bragging rights at stake, the two really got into it as they answered questions about dinosaur brains, time periods, and which species was bigger.

This isn’t your ordinary game of trivia. Ritter knows his stuff, and he’ll take every moment he’s not correctly answering questions to rub it in Pratt’s face. It doesn’t matter that Pratt is currently one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood. He’s bad at this game, and Ritter won't let him forget it.

Can Pratt call his raptor squad as a lifeline?

H/T Entertainment Weekly | Screengrab via ellentube team/ellentube

Mark Ruffalo answers the sexist questions Scarlett Johansson usually gets

$
0
0

After an awkward interview and a PR fiasco, the bloated Avengers: Age of Ultronpress tour is mostly back on track thanks to the Hulk and Black Widow.

While Chris Evans and Jeremy Renner were making lewd comments about Black Widow to Digital Spy on Wednesday, Scarlett Johansson and Mark Ruffalo were talking to Cosmopolitan UK. Instead of the classic interview setup where Johansson is forced to talk about her body while her male costars get to talk about their character and the film, the interviewer flipped it. Ruffalo would be asked the sort of questions Johansson usually gets while Johansson gets to talk in-depth about Natasha Romanov.

It’s kind of like Ruffalo’s pledge to answer the blatantly sexist questions for Johansson during the latest Marvel press tour come to life. Come for the squirming, stay for the demonstration of how well Johansson knows her character.

It’s clear that Ruffalo is made uncomfortable by the questions, even with some coaching from Johansson, and at certain points he has on a face that basically says, “You put up with this all the time?”

It’s also a nice contrast, as contrived as it may be, from the rest of the press tour. Johansson may have a bigger role this time around, but we’ll probably still hear even more about her suit.

Screengrab via cosmopolitanuk/YouTube

'Tonight Show' sidekick Steve Higgins and Shaggy have a very intense 'Shaggy Off'

$
0
0

Imitations are hardly ever better than the original, but Jimmy Fallon’s sidekick Steve Higgins tries his damnedest anyway.

So when we learn that Higgins can do a pretty decent Shaggy impersonation, who better than Shaggy himself to dispute his take on the rapper’s iconic voice? The two are squared off in The Tonight Show’s first-ever “Shaggy Off.” It’s basically a rapid-fire rap battle in Shaggy’s voice. It’s almost too much, but their enthusiasm evens out.

There’s no clear winner in this contest, but can we get a duet cover of “It Wasn’t Me” as a consolation prize?

Screengrab via The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon/YouTube

Terry Crews pops his pecs and lip-syncs Vanessa Carlton's 'A Thousand Miles'

$
0
0

It was muscle overload on last night’s episode of Spike TV’s Lip Sync Battle as Terry Crewsfaced off against former heavyweight champ Mike Tyson. Both contenders managed to get their punches in: Tyson struck with the Rolling Stones’ “Satisfaction” and Salt-N-Pepa’s “Push It,” and Crews hit back with Run DMC’s “Sucker MCs.” 

But it was Crews’ homage to his turn in White Chicks that stole the match, as he graced a grand piano for his rendition of “A Thousand Miles” by Vanessa Carlton. 

Crews—who is my fitness hero, second only to The Rock—took this as another opportunity to show off his physique, as he threw off his jacket and knocked out the audience with his signature move, the “Pec Pop.”

Terry Crews won the match floating like a butterfly (I mean, look at how he dances with that ribbon as though it’s an extension of his body) and stinging like a bee (Pec Pop). But even if he didn’t defeat “Iron” Mike, he would still be the champ of being hella awesome.  

Screengrab via Lip Sync Battle on Spike/YouTube

Pitchfork joins forces with multichannel network Collective Digital Studio

$
0
0

BY SAM GUTELLE 

As the Collective Digital Studio's multichannel network continues to rapidly add new talent to its roster of partners, it has turned to a publication known for its clout within the indie music community. Pitchfork, which runs a YouTube channel called Pitchfork TV, has joined the Collective DS MCN.

Pitchfork’s YouTube channel, which once received funding as part of YouTube’s Original Channels Initiative, has amassed 378,000 subscribers and nearly 142 million views. In addition to music videos from indie bands, Pitchfork’s channel also showcases short documentaries and star-studded webseries like Over/Under.

Collective DS will work with Pitchfork to manage and optimize the publication’s YouTube hub. The two companies will co-sell advertising for the channel.

“CDS was born out of music and we are thrilled to add Pitchfork to our network to extend our reach in the independent music space,” said Dana Shayegan, Vice President of Music at CDS, in a release. “Pitchfork is popular across a wide range of music genres and we look forward to boosting their reach and connecting brands more closely with their loyal audience.”

In addition to its video presence, Pitchfork also maintains its well-known online publication, which attracts more than 5 million unique visitors each month.

Screengrab via Pitchfork/YouTube 


'Furious 8' is happening—and it already has a release date

$
0
0

Gentlemen, mark your calendars: In what is perhaps the week's least surprising news, Fast and Furious 8 is happening—and it already has a release date.

The next film in the Fast and Furious franchise will be doing what it does best—sticking with the formula that works. That means driving really fast and blowing things up, sure, but it also means releasing Furious 8 in the spring.

Scheduling Furious 8 for an April 2017 release has apparently required Universal to juggle its entire slate of upcoming blockbusters. The studio also announced major delays for numerous films, including Pacific Rim 2Warcraft, and the Mummy.

Still, the payoff for Universal is clearly worth it. Every time a new installment of the Furious franchise comes out, pundits are newly surprised at its tremendous staying power, despite the fact that the franchise has for years been milking its diverse cast and outsider status to appeal to fans all over the world. 

But as Furious 7 continues to rake in the box office love—still reigning at no. 1, this week the film topped $300 million domestic and $1.1 billion worldwide—the only real surprise is why it's taken the critics so long to recognize the franchise for the cultural icon it is.

Star Vin Diesel, with plenty of loving tributes to departed costar Paul Walker, made the announcement onstage at Universal's segment Thursday during this week's CinemaCon. So far CinemaCon has brought plenty of Hollywood bombshells; earlier this week at the industry convention, Disney announced plans to release 24 movies in 24 months

Universal had plenty of other surprises up its sleeves at the con, but not all of them are as fun as the F8 announcement. Fans of Guillermo del Toro's cult hit Pacific Rim can start planning the apocalypse; the previously announced sequel is getting a delayed release date, pushed back from its originally announced date of April to August of 2017. 

The sci-fi thriller starring Idris Elba and Rinko Kikuchi was a visual feast praised for its innovative takes on the kaiju and mecha genres, as well as for its diversity. Still, it failed to make a splash with mainstream U.S. audiences and instead landed huge with worldwide audiences, particularly in Asia. 

The good news for the franchise, however, is that del Toro is hands-on and optimistic about the sequel. Plus, the delay means Pacific Rim 2 won't be going head to head with Furious 8 for marketing resources from the studio. 

Meanwhile, Fifty Shades fans got a double win for their fandom, with Universal announcing release dates for both sequels in the bestselling erotic trilogy.

However, neither the original director nor screenwriter for the first film will be returning for the sequels after clashing with author E.L. James on the set of the first. James has reportedly anointed her own husband to write the sequels, thereby giving herself even more creative control over the film adaptations of her controversial books.

And speaking of fierce battles, the long-awaited movie Warcraftis also getting pushed back. The movie adaptation of the popular MMORPG will be delayed three months until June 10, 2016.

Finally, Universal will also be delaying its much-anticipated reboot of The Mummy for nearly a full year—kicking it back from June 2016 to March 24, 2017.  

That's a month before Furious 8 puts us all right back in theaters, eager for our biannual car porn. 

As for Universal, it will undoubtedly be unwrapping its Furious gifts for a long time to come.

Photo via themeplus/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Dave Coulier's cheesy 'Full House' rap is a real treasure

$
0
0

Fans are excited about the Full House reboot, but an older video that recently resurfaced reminds us just what we’ve asked for.

This rap from Dave Coulier—Uncle Joey himself—has everything: catchphrases, terrible haircuts, how much money the Olsen twins have, and the question of Jesse, Joey, and Danny’s sexuality. Coulier performed the song, Rachel Peters animated it, and he put it on YouTube back in 2013. It only got around 7,000 views in that time, at least until news of the reboot came to light.

Ready to feel old? The show started nearly 30 years ago, and the hair and outfits alone are enough to bring that to the forefront. It won’t change your mind about the reboot, but it manages to give you the best and worst parts of the show—and keep you looking forward to or dreading Fuller House.

H/T AV Club | Photo via Eric Molina/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The rejected 'Bob's Burgers' pilot looked a little different

$
0
0

If you're a Bob's Burgers fan, you probably have a favorite character or episode or inside joke. The show's popularity has grown pretty organically, but it didn't always look like it does now. 

This 2012 YouTube clip shows the pilot that was sent to Fox, and the first thing that stands out is that the character of Tina was originally a boy named Daniel (perhaps named after actor Dan Mintz). Good thing they changed it up because the eldest Belcher child has become a feminist hero and we're all better off for it. 

H/T Digg | Screengrab via LordCanzite/YouTube 

Let this 'Uptown Funk' parody convince you to adopt a dog

$
0
0

These days it feels like you can't go five minutes without hearing Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson's hit track "Uptown Funk." But no matter how tired you are of the song, this adoptable-puppy parody will cheer you up—and it might even inspire you to become a new pet parent.

These adorable dogs are getting their funky due thanks to the Oakland, Calif., SPCA. The video features a variety of canines with attitude and reimagined lyrics like "Long coat, short coat, living it up in the Kennel" and "'Cause time is right to adopt/spay or neuter your pup!"

The dogs get funky with several SPCA employees throughout the video, snapping Instagram selfies and strutting around the East Bay SPCA campus. Hopefully the group will cover some more pop—excuse us, "pup"—songs in the future.

Screengrab via East Bay SPCA/YouTube

Why Vine star DeStorm Power is focusing on Facebook video

$
0
0

BY SAM GUTELLE

As Facebook increases its focus on video, a man who has already established himself across the social Web is once again building up his audience, and online video content creators would be wise to take notice. DeStorm Power, who emerged as a star on YouTube before shifting his focus to sites like Vine and Instagram, is now paying close attention to Facebook, where he has rolled up more than 790,000 likes.

As DeStorm told Tubefilter, the connection between Facebook’s decision to invest more resources into video and his own rise on the site is no coincidence. “When I saw that Facebook was really focusing on their video, I wanted to take advantage of that,” he said. At the time, his Facebook audience totaled “a few hundred thousand fans.” Since then, he has posted a plethora of images and videos on his page. In addition to re-posting his Vines, Instagrams, and YouTube videos, he also shares relevant content from other sites.

As a result, DeStorm now gets between 15,000 and 20,000 new likes each week and in the past month alone has racked up more than 10.6 million video views across just his latest 15 uploads for an average of 706,000 views per video. 

It may seem unnecessary for DeStorm to build an audience on Facebook when he already has so many fans on YouTube (where he has 1.7 million subscribers) and Vine (where he has over 5 million followers). As he tells it, Facebook gives him access to an entirely new base of fans who would not have seen his videos on other platforms. “Facebook, being the largest audience of all, would be a good stepping stone for me to get fans who didn’t know my videos on YouTube or Vine,” he said. “Facebook is more traditionally family, like your parents or your cousins.”

As he looks to wrangle that new audience, DeStorm needs to figure out what sort of videos best strike Facebook’s fancy. He told Tubefilter how many of the music videos he releases on YouTube aren’t right for Vine, and the punchy comedy videos he releases on Vine don’t fit with the YouTube audience. “When I put a certain song on Vine, they love it,” he explained, “but I’ll put in on YouTube and they’ll hate it.”

What, then, is the right piece of content for Facebook? DeStorm is still figuring that out, and in order to hit the sweet spot, he is experimenting with all sorts of posts. “I’ll do both [comedy and music]. I used to do fitness, which I’m getting back into,” he explained. “Facebook is an audience that doesn’t have a certain niche. YouTube is the place where people follow you and subscribe to you because you’re creative. Facebook is a place where everyone just is. It doesn’t matter what you’re doing at the time, you just do it.”

While this philosophy has led DeStorm to a diverse selection of Facebook content, he is not afraid to hone in. “If something starts working better,” he said, “I’ll focus on that.” His filters are not just limited to content types; he also tries different video lengths and posting schedules in order to figure out exactly how Facebook users like to consume their content.

DeStorm’s successes on Facebook are not surprising, since he is known as one of the online video industry’s most versatile content creators. After first building his audience on YouTube, he began making videos on Vine in 2013, and he has since decreased his YouTube activity, much to the chagrin of his subscribers on that platform.

DeStorm’s focus on Vine has been all about the numbers. “I’ve been on YouTube since 2006 and I have close to 2 million subscribers. On Vine, in a year and a half, I have five million there.” It’s those fans that drove DeStorm to Vine, and they’re now driving him to Facebook as well. “I have to go where the people are,” he explained. “If you put your heart into creating a piece of material, you want the most people to see it. If my fans are my fans, they’ll go where I am. It’s about the person, not the platform.”

As he jumps from platform to platform, DeStorm may lose some fans, but he’s not worried about that attrition. “I’m never afraid to change platforms,” he said, “because I know if someone goes, someone else will come.”

That, in a nutshell, is the sole reason for his Facebook push. It’s where the people are, and as DeStorm’s tide rises on Facebook, it will lift his boats on YouTube, Vine, Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter. “Facebook is a very powerful tool to get videos out,” he noted. “Facebook video is definitely a place where people can kill the game.” As he moves forward, DeStorm will continue to play that game, and he plans to “touch more and more people,” no matter which social media platforms they frequent. “That’s how it is,” he concludes. “The more people the better.”

Screengrab via DeStorm Power/YouTube 

Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images