[Dormant, move to !television@lemm.ee] Shows and TV

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The Star Wars revolution returns to Disney+ April 22, with a release strategy that's not quite a binge—but comes awfully close.

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by neme@lemm.ee to c/showsandmovies@lemm.ee
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Robert Pattinson will not be in "Batman: The Brave and the Bold," a second season of "The Penguin" is a question mark and more DC Studios updates.

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DC bosses James Gunn and Peter Safran confirmed an August 2025 release date for 'Peacemaker' Season 2 and said a 'Waller' spinoff is still in works.

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cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/33096492

TV series version of the classic Victor Hugo novel.

Class, war, class war, crime, punishment, rehabilitation, merry, cruelty, revenge, order, revolution, racism, religion, love, death, meaning of life, this story covers it all.

This is not a musical.

Available for free on arte.tv in English, French, German, might require VPN to France or Germany.

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cross-posted from: https://leminal.space/post/16079763

I'm going to start off by saying I would recommend watching The Gorge as blind as you can. The trailer doesn't spoil much but it does reveal the framework and direction of the story. If you like the 'vibe' or setting of Annihilation though you may like it.

If you don't mind a bit of a reveal this is what I mean by the last part:

spoilerBoth movies are about a quarantined area where mysteries lurk.

It's near-future sc-fi but leans a bit more into horror and action than Annihilation.


Here's what I liked and disliked about the movie (real spoilers):

spoilerI went into The Gorge after only seeing the movie poster so I thought it was going to be some kind of Cold War-style forbidden love movie. I was glad to see it evolve into something else.

What I liked the most was the setting and premise. A heavily defended remote and isolated area full of mutated mysterious creatures and plants where attacks are infrequent but when they happen they're in World War Z style is something I find neat. I feel like I see elements of this regularly in video games but less so in movies.

Once they were inside the gorge I would have liked to have seen the mutations as a bit more grand or awe inspiring like they appeared in Annihilation. Maybe a bit less humanoid. That might be a bit hard though considering how dark and foggy it was and how they immediately were trying to get out rather than explore.


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Lee Child created the character of Jack Reacher in the pages of bestselling novels and now oversees the Reacher TV series, which is back now.

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/24555803

we need to look only to Amazon’s most recent attempt at an international espionage franchise for a depressing sneak preview of what might lie ahead. We refer to Prime Video’s $300 million (and counting) 2023 folly Citadel – a towering inferno of iffy action courtesy of Marvel’s Russo Brothers, which is far worse than even Bond’s sorriest moments (okay, maybe not as bad as Pierce Brosnan’s invisible Jag in Die Another Day but definitely in the same time zone).

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Watching Citadel, it’s tempting to conclude that it is an artefact from an alternate universe where James Bond is a bit rubbish. With Bodyguard’s Richard Madden playing the lead spy and Lesley Manville as the Blofeld-esque mega-villain (undercover as a UK Ambassador), it has a thick veneer of Britishness. It’s chock-full of globe-trotting, with the fun pinging between US, London, Paris and Italy (though the bulk of the filming was in Slovenia and Birmingham).

Plus, there are oodles of gadgets, including futuristic memory-wiping devices that would have Q puce with envy. And just like James “Make Mine a Land Rover” Bond, it’s stuffed with product placement: you can even press “pause” to purchase products flogged by the series (if you want to buy the suit worn by Madden, just go ahead and call up your Amazon account).

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To be fair, on paper at least Citadel didn’t sound terrible (not that it sounded particularly compelling either). Amazon certainly felt it had a sure-fire smash on its hands. It didn’t even take the time to establish that there was an audience for yet another spy series to go alongside Bond, Jason Bourne, Mission: Impossible, Archer, Slow Horses, The Night Manager, etc. Instead, it greenlit Citadel and multiple spin-offs for “local markets”– including India, Italy and Mexico.

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Unfortunately the Russos were too busy to take a hands-on role in Citadel (among other undertakings, they were making ditchwater dull $200 million action movie The Gray Man for Netflix). So they passed it to writers Josh Appelbaum and André Nemec (who had worked with Hollywood’s own mystery box man, JJ Abrams, on Alias), with Game of Thrones veteran Brian Kirk directing five of the seven episodes of the first season.

Which is where the trouble started. Amazon is said to have had “reservations” about early footage presented by Appelbaum and Nemec. One source of contention was an ambitious – and expensive – “ski and hand-gliding sequence” with which the pilot was to open.

With Applebaum and Nemec in a stand-off with Amazon, the Russos returned and agreed to kill the set-piece (which was to have been followed by a five-year time jump). They were just getting started: Appelbaum departed, and Kirk and producer Sarah Bradshaw followed soon afterwards. Roll on multiple reshoots, which pushed the budget to a mind-boggling $300 million (twice what it costs the Broccolis to make Die Another Day).

Having taken over, the Russos decided to rebuild Citadel from the ground up. They brought in cinematographer Thomas Sigel for additional footage and David Weil – writer of the Al Pacino Nazi drama Hunters – to rework the scripts. Meanwhile, costs continued to balloon.

But where that money went was unclear when Citadel – clocking in at a mere six episodes – finally reached the screen (season two is due in 2025). It looked shoddy, and after an admittedly memorable opening shoot-out featuring Madden and Chopra on a train, there wasn’t enough action. The plot in which Madden’s Mason Kane loses his memory was meanwhile stonkingly derivative – to the point where his on-screen wife jokingly refers to him as “Jason Bourne”.

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Cheap-looking, unoriginal and bland, Citadel impressed no one. “A pricey Bond audition tape,” said the Telegraph – focusing on Madden’s performance. “A choppy, generic blockbuster-by-numbers with a nine-figure budget you’d never detect from the chintzy CGI.” agreed Variety.

The public was even less forgiving. “A very mediocre show that feels written by AI… Predictable, messy, you do not care about the characters in the slightest,” wrote one viewer. “Flat, uninspired and just plain boring.”

Undeterred, Amazon ploughed on with its global spin-offs – though without the Russos, who have gone back to Marvel, where they are working on the inevitable new Avengers movies. The first, Citadel: Diana, was set in the Italian Alps and produced for Prime by Rome-headquartered ITV subsidiary Cattleya. It debuted last April to deafening indifference.

That was also the response to Citadel: Honey Bunny – an Indian prequel which followed the early romance of the parents of Chopra’s character. It topped the Amazon viewing charts in India but, much like George Lazenby in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, otherwise came and went without a trace.

Vanishing without a trace is not a fate a 21st-century James Bond is likely to suffer. But the failure of Citadel is nonetheless a depressing sneak preview of what may lie ahead for Ian Fleming’s super-spook. Cheesy and hamstrung by too much executive meddling, Citadel took a sure-fire formula – spies hop around the globe shooting people – and missed the target by a mile.

Apply the same treatment to Bond, and cinema’s favourite spy might well suffer a fate worse than the one Goldfinger had in mind when he strapped Sean Connery to that table and whipped out his laser. A cack-handed Prime Video might well leave Bond morally wounded, and anyone who suffered through Citadel will fear the worst.

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I still don't know what I think of it after recently finishing it, but it was...Interesting.

It takes on the usual UFO narrative of someone being abducted and returned but not being able to entirely recall what happened. However it then jumps ahead to their adulthood and how that experience is having a continued impact on their relationships.

personal interpretation asideThen it spins into reuniting with a childhood friend who as the show goes on I like to think was really their unrealized girlfriend, so the show almost reads as lesbian paranormal investigators.

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Season one we have no idea what’s going on but the beginning of season two we know too much for there to be much mystery. Yeah we don’t know Helly’s motives and what they’re working on but neither of those are as interesting as the first season’s total confusion.

Examples:

Random farm scene

Knowing helly knows

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I know, I know, but at least it's animated and not....live action

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Be among the first to see the opening minutes of The Wheel of Time Season 3 before it arrives March 13 on Prime Video. This video will be live for one week until February 26 at 11:59 p.m. PT.

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The mythology and adventure of Avatar: The Last Airbender will continue with Avatar: Seven Havens, a new 26-episode, 2D-animated series at Nickelodeon.

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