Boom! Studios’ anticipated Mighty Morphin Power Rangers series will debut this January with issue #0, and Batman Eternal and Nightwing writer Kyle Higgins penning the script.

When Boom! announced they were writing Power Rangers I anxiously scoured for any information regarding these exact details. I wanted to know who would be taking care of my beloved Rangers (because Boom! sure as hell wouldn’t ask me) and I wanted to know when exactly I should be spending my money. San Diego Comic-Con came and went — where I lucked out and bought all six blind bagged exclusive one-shots written by the wonderful Mairghread Scott — and I gave up trying to learn more. It’s a good thing I gave up, then! That’s a great lesson for life.

Issue #0 will include Scott’s Comic-Con short with art by Daniel Bayliss. It’s unknown who will draw the main series, but I do hope it’s Bayliss. I liked his coloring and representation of the Power Rangers.

Until January, gawk at the amazing covers by Goñi Montes, and Entertainment Weekly has the exclusive look at his White Ranger cover.

power-rangers-white

Excited about New York Comic-Con? So are we! And so is Warner Bros., apparently. With a full slate of fall shows, Warner Bros. and DC are coming to New York Comic-Con in a big way.

DC’s Legends of TomorrowSupergirl, and Gotham are joining Person of Interest, and Blindspot in a WB blitz at this New York Comic-Con. The usual fare is here, including Q&As, pilot screenings, and stars like Brandon Routh, Amy Acker, Arthur Davill, Ben McKenzie, Robin Lord Taylor, Caity Lotz, Jamie Alexander, and more.

But the curious thing are those who aren’t going to be there. Melissa Benoist, “Supergirl” herself isn’t a part of the announced guests, and neither will anyone from ArrowThe Flash, and iZombie. A little weird.

Warner Bros. takes the Comic-Con stage on Sunday, Oct. 11 from 1:30pm until 5:30pm on Empire Stage 1-E. You know. The big one.

And hey, if you’re coming to New York Comic-Con, let myself and Bigyanks know! We’ll be there too! Hit us up on Twitter (@ericthedragon) (@bigyanks). We’ll take selfies and crap.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MubNoWQiSc

The CW has just released its first extended look at the upcoming season of Arrow, and, as expected, it looks awesome.

Ever since The Flash premiered last year, I’ve been a little down on Arrow. It wasn’t capturing that same comic book vibe that I enjoy, and just felt really  heavy on the drama. This trailer is giving me hope that its headed in the same direction and will bring a bit more of a lighthearted feel to the table.. Funny Felicity is the best Felicity!

I’m also digging all the new updated costumes, though Diggle’s helmet could have looked less X-men-ish.

The trailer showcases all the new faces joining this season of ‘Arrow’. You have Neal McDonough (Damian Dahrk), Echo Kellum (Mr. Terrific), Parker Young, Jeri Ryan, Matt Ryan (reprising his role as Constantine), Alexander Calvert (Anarky) and Elysia Rotaru.

Excited? Take a look at the trailer below.

‘Arrow’ Returns October 7, 2015

Briefly: iZombie is (finally) almost back on The CW, and the network has (finally) debuted the first show but sweet trailer for the upcoming episodes.

The footage looks just as light-hearted and fun as everything we saw in season one, and I cannot wait to see what’s in store for Liv and company next.

In the series, “A med student-turned-zombie takes a job in the coroner’s office to gain access to the brains she must reluctantly eat to maintain her humanity, but with each brain she consumes, she inherits the corpse’s memories. With the help of her medical examiner boss and a police detective, she solves homicide cases in order to quiet the disturbing voices in her head.”

Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know what you think. iZombie returns on October 6th!

https://youtu.be/i-2-7uRvMyM

After being heavily hinted at toward the end of last season, we now have our look at Diggle’s new costume.

arrow diggle

Aside from wanting to block out Professor Xavier’s telepathy, Diggle’s costume looks like it has some light armor and bears some resemblance to DC’s Guardian:

guardiandiggle

It is reported that we’ll in fact see Diggle’s new costume in the season four premiere. Executive producer Andrew Kriesberg had this to say:

“You’ll see him take on a leadership role on Team Arrow in Oliver’s absence, but Damien Darhk is going to prove to be much more than he can handle on his own, and that’s when Oliver is brought back to help.”

We also know that the big baddie for this season will be Damien Darhk, who is leading H.I.V.E. What’s even more interesting is that Darhk is said to be behind the murder of Diggle’s brother. Season four can’t come soon enough!

Here’s an interesting bit of news:

Tony Todd, of Candyman fame, has been cast as the voice for Professor Zoom in The Flash‘s second season. Showrunners have also confirmed that Zoom will in fact show up in the second episode of the season, Flash of Two Worlds. It would also appear as if Todd’s voice will be used for the remainder of the season, regardless of who is cast as Zoom for later episodes of the season.

tonytodd

For those avid DC fans out there, Todd’s name should sound familiar as he has lent his voicing talents to both Young Justice and Batman The Brave and the Bold. Since there’s no casting to represent Zoom in his physical form, we can expect that his face be obscured in some way.

Let the speculation begin!

Briefly: With just a couple of months to go until its premiere, CBS today debuted a brand new, action-packed trailer for its upcoming Supergirl series.

I have to say that I’m really excited to check out Supergirl. Sadly, I missed the pilot screening back at SDCC, and haven’t watched the leaked pilot just yet (we’ll see if I can hold out), but the premise of a fun, not super dark and gloomy superhero series is beyond intriguing to me.

From the looks of this latest trailer, the series looks light-hearted as hell, and we definitely need more of that on television today.

Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know what you think! Supergirl premieres on October 26th!

You read that right. After months of rumors, we are rest assured Matt Ryan will reprise his role as Constantine in the next season of Arrow. That certainly adds another layer of excitement, especially for those who were fans of the ill-fated series on NBC.

https://twitter.com/amellywood/status/631210584327892996

Before we get too excited, it looks like Ryan will only reprise his role in one episode next season. I’m sure we can all speculate that Constantine will have something to do with the Lazarus pit from last season. Check out what Matt Ryan had to say about the news below:

What would be more exciting is if Constantine himself had a hand in bringing Caity Lotz’s Black Canary back from the dead just in time for Legends of Tomorrow. We’ll have to wait and see!

Arrow premiers October 7th!

A new trailer for Supergirl has just been released, and it’s making me feel a bit better about the upcoming series. That first trailer left a lot to be desired since it played out more of a rom-com than anything else. This time around we get a lot more super action and decent visual effects for a CBS show. There was also a quick tease regarding supervillians that ‘Supergirl” could be potentially facing off against.

My gripe with Supergirl at this point is that it’s on CBS, which I feel may water down the show and might make it cheesy-looking. Hopefully Supergirl can get the same type of treatment that The Flash and Arrow are getting over at The CW and keep it closely connected to its comic counterpart.

Supergirl premieres on October 26.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxW_BOjaa5I

Actor Keiynan Lonsdale becomes the newest addition to The Flash family and is set to play Wally West. You should know, Wally West is set to be a series regular and will not appear in just an episode or two. As we all know, Wally is a nephew to Iris West. However, since we haven’t seen or heard of any siblings belonging to Iris, we can suspect the relationship to change a little. It’ll be interesting to find out how they go about this and even more interesting to see if Flash and Kid Flash take on Professor Zoom.

wallywest2

You can watch the The Flash‘s San Diego Comic-Con sizzle reel below. Season two is set to premiere October 6 at 8 pm!

 

We finally have the actor who will portray the immortal villain. As fans know, Savage will be the main villain the ‘Legends’ will face while skipping through time. What’s new is Savage is set to appear in Arrow/Flash crossever episodes BEFORE appearing in the ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ run during Arrow‘s and Flash‘s midseason break.

Casper Crump

Fans should be excited to see just how the ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ is set up within the first few episodes of Arrow and The Flash. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MubNoWQiSc

 

The DCTV list of heroes keeps growing! Falk Hentschel has been cast as Hawkman and will appear primarily in Legends of Tomorrow. According to the official announcement, Hawkman will also appear in crossover episodes of The Flash and Arrow. This is a key piece of info as it is reported that Hawkman will appear in crossover episodes BEFORE Legends of Tomorrow.

FalkHentschel_hawkman

It’s possible we’ll get an origin of sorts during the crossover event. More importantly, I hope we eventually get an interaction between Hawkman and Vibe like this one:

hawkman_Vibe

 

Briefly: Episode two of Supergirl‘s first season is now in production, and following the series’ first poster from just a few days back, CBS has debuted a new featurette that digs into the episode’s opening scene.

I’m really excited to check out Supergirl. I missed the screening at SDCC, and haven’t watched the leaked pilot, but the premise of a fun, not super dark and gloomy superhero series is beyond intriguing to me.

Take a look at the featurette below, and let us know what you think! Supergirl premieres on October 26th!

https://youtu.be/GKtqNsc65j8

Supergirl is an action-adventure drama based on the DC Comics character Kara Zor-El, Superman’s (Kal-El) cousin who, after 12 years of keeping her powers a secret on Earth, decides to finally embrace her superhuman abilities and be the hero she was always meant to be. Twelve-year-old Kara escaped the doomed planet Krypton with her parents’ help at the same time as the infant Kal-El. Protected and raised on Earth by her foster family, the Danvers, Kara grew up in the shadow of her foster sister, Alex, and learned to conceal the phenomenal powers she shares with her famous cousin in order to keep her identity a secret. Years later at 24, Kara lives in National City assisting media mogul and fierce taskmaster Cat Grant. She works alongside her friend and IT technician Winn Schott and famous photographer James Olsen, who Grant just hired away from the Daily Planet to serve as her new art director. However, Kara’s days of keeping her talents a secret are over when Hank Henshaw, head of a super-secret agency where her sister also works, enlists her to help them protect the citizens of National City from sinister threats. Though Kara will need to find a way to manage her newfound empowerment with her very human relationships, her heart soars as she takes to the skies as Supergirl to fight crime.

Coming off a stellar year, Universal has announced some details regarding the next installment in the ‘Jurassic’ franchise. Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard are set to reprise their roles while Colin Trevorrow and Derek Connolly, the duo who rewrote ‘Jurassic World’, are set to write the sequel.

jurassic1

Colin Trevorrow, who directed ‘Jurassic World’ will produce alongside Steven Spielberg and Frank Marshall. For those of you wondering, the sequel to ‘Jurassic World’ will join Godzilla 2, Black Panther, The Flash, Avengers: Infinity War Part I, Aquaman, Captain Marvel, and the stand alone Han Solo Star Wars film. Sounds like a good year!

CBS just released their first official poster for the upcoming Supergirl series. Melissa Benoist sure looks…super!

Supergirl Poster

Supergirl is an action-adventure drama based on the DC Comics character Kara Zor-El, Superman’s (Kal-El) cousin who, after 12 years of keeping her powers a secret on Earth, decides to finally embrace her superhuman abilities and be the hero she was always meant to be. Twelve-year-old Kara escaped the doomed planet Krypton with her parents’ help at the same time as the infant Kal-El. Protected and raised on Earth by her foster family, the Danvers, Kara grew up in the shadow of her foster sister, Alex, and learned to conceal the phenomenal powers she shares with her famous cousin in order to keep her identity a secret. Years later at 24, Kara lives in National City assisting media mogul and fierce taskmaster Cat Grant. She works alongside her friend and IT technician Winn Schott and famous photographer James Olsen, who Grant just hired away from the Daily Planet to serve as her new art director. However, Kara’s days of keeping her talents a secret are over when Hank Henshaw, head of a super-secret agency where her sister also works, enlists her to help them protect the citizens of National City from sinister threats. Though Kara will need to find a way to manage her newfound empowerment with her very human relationships, her heart soars as she takes to the skies as Supergirl to fight crime.

Supergirl premieres October 26th

Looks like Gotham PD has a new Chief running the show! Emmy award winner Michael Chiklis joins the cast of Gotham for season 2 as Captain Nathaniel Barnes.

TVLine broke the story this morning. From the Gotham show producers, it sounds as if the rough and tumble Vic Mackey from The Shield will be joining the show.

He lands on the GCPD like a tornado, ripping out the dead wood of Gotham’s police force. He is a law and order zealot; unafraid of making enemies – on either side of the law. For Gordon (Ben McKenzie), Barnes is a hero and a mentor, someone with whom he can share the burden of heroism. Captain Barnes proves himself to be a strong ally to Gordon… but one day he will make an equally powerful enemy.

Take note that this character appears to have been created purely for the show, as I (and most of the collective internet) cannot find ANY references to Nathaniel Barnes in any regards to Batman. This is going to be a huge positive for the writers of the show. An original character that they can weave into the narrative is going to bolster the already rich library of characters.

Season 2 of Gotham premieres September 21st.

If the worlds of pop culture were real, then that time giant kaiju leveled Hong Kong in Pacific Rim or the Crazy 88 massacre in Kill Bill would be significant, cultural watershed moments in the national psyche. Imagine the documentaries! Well, someone did.

Enter: Real Fake History. Founded on the premise that pop culture really happened, Real Fake History lovingly apes the Ken Burns-style documentary and examines fake history as if they were, well, real.

As with all Ken Burns-esque documentaries — however satirical — , the narrator is a major component, and the show’s producers did no wrong casting the legendary Philip Morris.

The son of Greg Morris from Mission: Impossible, Phil Morris has starred in Seinfeld as attorney Jackie Chiles and Smallville as J’onn, the Martian Manhunter. But he has also had a career in voice acting, with his deep, velvet sound providing the chords for shows like Green Lantern: The Animated SeriesDead Space: Downfall, and The Secret Saturdays.

On the Saturday of the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con, I had just finished watching Phil and a slew of other prolific cartoon voice actors slay a packed crowd attending the “Cartoon Voices 1” panel. They performed an abridged The Wizard of Oz to the delight of everyone — I especially lost it when Eric Bauza used his Puss in Boots voice for Dorothy’s uncle — but Phil was a standout as the Lion and Oz himself.

One thing you need to know about Philip: He’s a dyed-in-the-wool nerd. He loves Comic-Con, and has relished his roles like J’ohnn in shows like Smallville. He’s seen geek culture change, evolve, and proliferate throughout the years; he can’t believe how big it’s become either.

After the panel, I sat down with Philip to talk about what we can expect from Real Fake History, his time as a voice actor, and the complicated, important intersections of race in geek culture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNOBHZ7FYUE

How different is it playing a documentary narrator in Real Fake History versus your other voice over roles?

Phil: It’s really not that different. It was just honoring the structure of it because it’s a bit of a mockumentary. It’s based on the whole Ken Burns documentary style and I’m a huge Ken Burns fan, huge. I love it all, America, Baseball, Jazz, Civil War.

You’ve seen the jazz one?

Phil: I’ve seen almost all of them, The Roosevelt’s, I love it all. National Parks, one of my favorite. I’m huge on that. I’m a big narrator fan. My Dad, Greg Morris, was a huge narrator. He did the first Mercedes Benz commercials and Chrysler commercials, so that was the voice you heard. He was also in the original Mission Impossible as Barney Collier, so voice over and narration has been part of my life since I can remember. I’ve worked with Keith David and I’m friends with Keith David and since he’s one of the major narrators of all the Ken Burns stuff, I’m honoring him as well with all this.

What can you tell me about Real Fake History?

Phil: Real Fake History takes the conceit that comics, TV shows, movies, that universe, whatever it is we’re talking about, Walking Dead, Kill Bill, whatever it is, that it actually happened. In that reality, we have bystanders, eyewitness accounts, which is really bizarre, and then I narrate with incredible integrity. The happenings on Endor, or with The Bride in Kill Bill and the Crazy 88’s.

It’s very exciting.

Phil: Oh, but it’s very real, you know what I mean? Every so often we make a little left turn and we do a little bit of a wink, but not a steady diet of it because it would kill it. You’ve got to see it. It’s very, very clever. Very clever stuff.

That’s a tight line to walk because it is hilarious that we’re going to talk seriously about giant robots tearing up Hong Kong. How difficult is it to tread that line?

Phil: I don’t know if it was difficult, but it was challenging. I think the challenge was in not letting the joke out before you set the hook. Do you know what I mean? That’s the key to this show is you’ve got to set that hook, you’ve got to make people believe, “What, is this real? Is this? Oh, no. Okay.” Then they get the joke and they go along with it, but you’ve got to set that hook. Setting the hook is in the integrity with which they bring it out. It’s really, really clever.

What’s been your favorite episode?

Phil: I think it might be the Kill Bill one. It’s one of my favorite movies, number one. The Crazy 88’s is one of my favorite, that whole scene, that whole katana scene, one of my favorite scenes, number two. The way that we address it in Real Fake History, as though one of the surviving Crazy 88’s is giving an account of this, it’s bananas ridiculous.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64RyMzXe4fg

On Kill Bill, you say it’s one of your favorite movies, I understand you also are actually a practicing martial artist. You study wing chun.

Phil: Wing chun kung fu.

Can you tell me very briefly how you got started in that? I think that is really fascinating to me.

Phil: Thank you. Well my Dad, Greg Morris, from the original Mission Impossible, when they first started that show, they were told to go take a self defense class because they were one of the first TV shows to use martial arts moves in the show. They wanted them to know what they were. They went and studied with a man named Bruce Tegner on Sunset Boulevard. I was six, I went and trained with them. I was into it. I was really skinny and I got hurt a lot. It was great, but it wasn’t necessarily for a six year old at that time. Even though I was introduced to it then, it didn’t stick until much later and I started studying with Bong Soo Han, who was a Hapkido master and he choreographed the Billy Jack movies, just fantastic, passed away a few years ago.

I stayed with him, got my green belt, or my blue belt, or whatever it was. I bounced out of that, girls, comic books, or sports, or something else. Later, I was a huge Bruce Lee fan early on, as we all were, the kids my age. I’d always wanted to study wing chun because I’d heard the wing chun was his mother art, which he then extrapolated out to ge kong do and created that. I’d never found a wing chun studio until one day I’m in LA and it’s raining and I see on Venice Boulevard a wing chun studio, I pull in. This Asian guy comes downstairs and that ended up being my masters, his name is Hawkins Cheung, I’ve been with him 30 years. I’m in two hall of fames, I teach every Sunday morning in Burbank at 8:00, and wing chun is part of my soul, part of my spirit.

We just came from the voice acting panel, I told you on the way here, it was hysterical. You’re both a screen and voice actor. They’re different disciplines, but there are similarities. What do you find enriching about voice acting that you can’t do in screen and vise versa?

Phil: In voice acting, I can be more characters than I can look like in front of the camera. My voice, depending on what they are looking for from me, I can be a kid, I can be a dog, I can be an Asian bus driver, I can be a Jamaican DJ. I can be so many things with my voice that I can’t be physically because my physicality is limited. There is that. What I like about voice acting too are the people. The people that I meet, as you saw on the panel, are incredibly talented. Their references go everywhere. They have to because then they’re called on when the voice director wants them to do something to reach into that catalog and pull it out.

They have a wealth of knowledge, a wealth of interest, a wealth of passions that move them and they’re able then to convert that into a vocal ease. On camera is different. People are more bound by what they look like obviously. There’s more ego I think involved in the on camera because it is a full representation of who you are. Whereas voice acting, it’s a representation of the artist and your voice, but mainly the artist’s rendition.

When I’m doing Jackie Chiles or I’m doing a Disney show or any show, that’ me. People see me. They relate to me directly, there’s no indirectness to it, it’s very direct. I rather like it more. I rather like that walking and talking three dimensional field of face acting as opposed to vocal acting more. People have asked me what I like more, I think I like being in front of the camera more. I don’t know quite why.

You talked about this on the panel, which really struck me: minorities in Hollywood. It’s is a very powerful subject to me as well. Your father was one of the pioneering black performers in his era.

Yes.

You’ve also played super heroes, that’s a hot topic lately. They call it race bending. Michael B. Jordan is playing Johnny Storm and people lit a fire, so to speak about that.

Phil: No pun intended! [laughs]

Nope, not intended. But what is your opinion on someone who has also played super heroes and is also a performer of color?

Phil: We have enough renditions of the traditional super heroes throughout the ages. You know what I mean? Where did they come from? They came from somebody’s imagination, somebody’s creativity. That’s all this is. It’s another branch of creativity and expression that is pure. The politicization of this does it a disservice. It hampers the creator into thinking I can only make Johnny Storm a white, blond haired, blue eyed guy because that’s how Stanley and Jack Kirby initially created this character. Okay, that’s what those creators thought about it.

Now we have other creators that have come along in the generation since who go, “Man, this is my take on this particular character.” Why are you going to hamper the creativity of these other creators who have a different take on it because we’re so culturally tied to certain things. It does us a disservice as a people, as a species that we’re not able to open our minds to accept. People ask me all the time, what character would you want to play?

That was going to be my next question.

Phil: Traditionally, I’m always going Black Panther … blah, blah, why, because they’re black? Yes, that’s my limitation. In coming to Comic-Con today, I literally thought about who I’d want to play, I’d want to play Captain America. I think we need a new Captain America.

I think so too.

Phil: With a new ego’s that reflects today’s morality, today’s dilemmas. Back when Captain America was created by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon … it was to answer the desperate of the war. Hitler, Togo, Mussolini, and Stalin. He was our representation of what America could do to stop the Axis powers. He came out of that time, he was a hero for that age. We need a new hero for our age. One that represents this pan of racial community that America has become. Until we do that, until we demystify these stereotypes and we knock down these cultural barriers, we should always have cultural identity and awareness and respect and honor, but not barriers.

That it keeps us from understanding and honoring other cultures. From travelling into those other areas to inform me more about who I am. Dude, you’re going to get me on a soap box here, but that’s how I feel about this. That’s why I think this Michael B. Jordan thing’s fantastic. Fantastic, bring it man. Bring more. Bring me a black dare devil, you know what I mean? I’m serious.

On the subject of super heroes now, you’re clearly very passionate about nerd culture, geek culture. You must of seen this culture proliferate. Could you have ever predicted that was where we were going to be?

Phil: No way, no way, and anybody who says they could’ve, they’re lying. Stan Lee couldn’t see this, you know what I mean? Carmen Fantina couldn’t see it. These guys and girls that spawn this industry are so fantastic, but there’s just no way you could of seen that technology would catch up to filmmaking so that you could represent a hero on screen seamlessly without us seeing the wires and the trampolines and all that stuff that they had to use before.

Now even the casual fan can be fully immersed and taken away in a way … cinematically that we could never do before. That has all changed. Bringing a comic book from the newsstand to the big screen is a lot easier. Bringing it to the small screen is even easier. Where as before you could only go to the big screen because of budgets and the film constraints. Now all of that stuff is fairly nominal to spend money on those effects. You can bring it to the small screen like we did in Smallville, it’s a great effect, they’re doing in Arrow like they do in The Flash. You see these shows on television becoming very successful because the technology is able to match the image and the concepts.

About Smallville because people have fond memories of that, what’s your fondest memory of working on Smallville as the Martian Manhunter?

Phil: My fondest memory honestly is meeting Allison Mack for the first time. Allison Mack was so kind to me my very first day. So supportive to me. She was like the greeter, unofficial, but she was the first person I met. If anyone knows Allison Mack, you’ll raise your hand, you know what I’m talking about is a true. She is one of the sweetest, smartest women, talented woman I’ve ever met. To meet her first was probably a great blessing because she really welcomed me and she kind of gave me the lay of the land, [because I] hadn’t met Tom yet.

Because I am a fan, I was more anxious doing this show than any other probably because I am a fan. I needed to measure up to my own fandom, but I knew there was a great fan base that was going to look at me and go, “Man, is this our John Jones or is this guy just a scumblebum. That to me, meeting Allison on that first day and having her be so gracious, so welcoming, set the tone for the whole experience I had up in Vancouver doing Smallville.

You’ve had a very prolific career from voice acting to screen acting. What’s been the one most rewarding thing about it when you look back? Not that you’re over it yet.

Phil: The fact that I get to do it. That sounds trite maybe, but there’s a lot of talented people in the world and the fact that I came from my father was no guarantee that I was going to have any talent, number one. Or that doors would open, number two. My father being who he was did not guarantee any of that. He didn’t help in any way. They spend money on you, you’ve got to perform for them. Not your father, not your mother, not your aunt, not your uncle. That’s why I say being in this business and continuing to work is the blessing.

I’m diverse. I like comedy, I like drama, I like Internet stuff, I like big screen, I like small screen. If it’s good, I’m probably there. If it’s a good solid crew that’s working, I’m probably going to be there. I find that’s a blessing. The more I work, the more I find that I’m blessed because I find so many people get off the train, they quit, it discourages them. They can’t make enough money. I have not had that problem and I look at that as a great blessing.

Last words about Real Fake History, what we can look forward to in this upcoming season?

Phil: Watch them all. They’re all funny and comment, comment, comment. Like them. Don’t like them. Do whatever it is you feel. I can’t tell you how to feel. I just know they’re really, really funny and I like them a lot.

Real Fake History can be found on YouTube by Machinima. Their newest episode, “The Battle of Castle Black,” can be found below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heK04CCJzVI

Last month, Machinima and DC/Warner Bros. unleashed the exclusive web series Justice League: Gods & Monsters Chronicles. Featuring the Justice League like you’ve never seen them before, the web series is tied to the upcoming Justice League: Gods & Monsters, coming to Blu-ray and On Demand on July 28. The three-part season has already been renewed for a second season next summer.

About a month before its online premiere, I sat down with DC head honcho Bruce Timm in New York City and talked with the man responsible for a solid portion of our childhoods on the exclusive series and what superheroes mean to our generation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNP88Go8C9w

The first thing I want to touch on before we talk Gods & Monsters, Machinima touted its unique millennial audience. Machinima captured my demographic, but you found this kind of success really early on with Batman: The Animated Series, Superman, Justice League. We grew up on that. That was calculated, wasn’t it? To get us from the cradle to the grave?

Bruce: I wish I could say I was that smart.

No?

Bruce: It was just lucky that whenever we did those shows, I just wanted to do a version of those characters that would make me happy. That would please my own inner 12-year-old, and just hoping that other people would still find the same thing about the cool that I did.

At the same time, I didn’t want to hold back on the storytelling aspects of it. I didn’t want to make it a show that only kids would enjoy. That it would be adult in a way that would be not overt, but that so if the parents were actually watching the show with her kids, that they can get hooked on it too.

It just turned out to be just a happy accident that all these years later, it kind of grabbed ahold of people’s imaginations, and here we are.

Let’s talk about the new project. It’s very exciting, obviously you’re taking some of the most iconic heroes and putting a new coat of paint on them in terms of depth and character. It’s not that we haven’t seen an evil Superman before, but what do you hope to do different in this new series? For Wonder Woman and Batman and for everybody else? What is really the goal of the series?

Bruce: I don’t want to say that the traditional version of those characters are worn out or tired, because it’s absolutely not true. I’m sure I’m going to be doing other movies and TV shows with the traditional version of this characters at some point as well. There’s tons of mileage in those guys yet, but at the same time there are certain restrictions that each character has built into them. Just as an example, for the most part I’m a traditionalist myself, and I do understand that you don’t want to push Superman too far over the edge and then suddenly he’s not Superman anymore. At the same time, everybody has their own line in the sand.

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When we did the first DTV Superman: Doomsday, it was a big part of the original comic that Superman killed Doomsday. They killed each other. Part of that was they beat the crap out of each other. If you’ve ever seen that comic, Superman’s like raw and bloody during it. When we were doing that movie version of it, between the time the comic came out and this time we did the movie, DC official policy was that Superman’s skin does not break. He cannot bleed. I was like, seriously? It’s one of the most famous Superman comics of all time, and we’re going to publicize the crap that we’re doing out of this … Publicize the crap out of the fact that we are doing this animated version of it, and you’re saying he can’t bleed? It’s ridiculous.

It was ridiculous.

Bruce: I literally had to get on the phone with the president of DC Comics and try to talk him out of it, and he’s just like, no. Sorry. You have to find some other way to kill him. The logo of the show is the big, bloody S, and Superman can’t bleed? For instance, things like I used to drive me crazy.

The great thing about this is that since these characters never existed before, even though their names did and parts of their origin stories or parts of their background, I can basically make whatever rules I want about these characters which is great. I get on an e-mail chain with DC Comics now, and the shoe’s on the other foot. They’re doing a spinoff comic book based on these versions of the characters, and they run the ideas pass me. Bruce, do you think this would be okay if Superman did this? I was like, let me think about it.

You are relishing that, aren’t you?

Bruce: I try not to be a dick about it, but at the same time, it is interesting to be the final say of what these characters get to do. To me, it’s just very freeing. Say with Superman, if Lois Lane shows up or Jimmy Olson or Lex Luthor either they react differently with Superman than the traditional Superman, or the characters themselves are completely different. In the Gods & Monsters movie, Lois is in the movie, and she and Superman can’t stand each other.

Wow.

Bruce: Luthor’s in it, and I don’t want to … I can’t talk too much about him, because the take on him that we came up with this pretty interesting and different and unusual. Again, we didn’t want to do just Lex Luthor again, we wanted to come up with and reinvent everybody. Kind of keep the core idea of who that character is, but give him a different back story. Give him a different, basically, an alternate timeline. He made different choices in his life then the real one did.

We’ll get back to characters in a second, but what I’m really intrigued about, actually, is the platform. You’re debuting on Machinima.

Bruce: Right.

I would assume that really frees up a lot of what you can and can’t do versus traditional television.

Bruce: Definitely.

What can we look forward to? How different will this show be from other series that were used to?

Bruce: The biggest difference besides the fact that I don’t have to send him through Broadcast Standards and Practices, so I don’t have to worry about making it appropriate for all ages. Technically, we are going under the assumption that it’s going to be around a PG-13. Between PG-13 and R.

Of course.

Bruce: That’s freeing to a degree in terms of content. Weirdly enough, just from a practical standpoint, the thing that’s most exciting to me is about the idea that each episode is 7 minutes long instead of 22 minutes long, and it’s not like each episode ends with a to be continued. Each episode is going to be a solid contained 7 minutes of story. That’s really interesting. It’s completely new for me, and it’s really exciting because it’s a challenge. I know how to tell a story in 20 minutes. I have to figure out now how to tell a story in 7 minutes, and what does that mean, and how do you do that so it’s not just 7 minutes of fighting? It’s 7 minutes of plot and drama and humor and everything else.

What was the learning curve for that going from years of 22 minutes to now, in these seven or so minutes?

Bruce: We’re still in it. I’m still in that learning curve. We’re figuring it out. I think the first three that we’ve done so far, I think are actually a really good example of the kinds of stuff we’ll be doing, because each of the three shorts is completely different.

One of them is, not a comedy, but it’s a little bit lighter in tone. It’s a little bit more of like an action buddy cop movie. One of them is more of a straightforward horror story, and the third one is kind of more of an epic tragedy. It was really interesting that we can do all the different kinds of diverse kinds of stories the normally do on a regular series, but just in condensed form. Some of the shorts will be a little bit heavier on action, and some of them will be more about mood. Some of them would be more about character, but each one is going to be a satisfying, self contained, 7 minute chunk.

I can assume why you’re going that direction, but can I ask why you’re choosing that direction as opposed to the traditional?

Bruce: That’s what Machinima asked us to do. They said we would like to be the length. We said, okay. We’ll figure out how to do that.

Just targeting those guys who are on the subway?

Bruce: That’s the idea, I guess, is the whole YouTube video idea that it’s not micro-content, but kind of macro-content.

 I can’t talk up enough about how much Batman: The Animated Series and Justice League meant to a lot of kids my age. What do you hope fans to take away from these new iterations?

Bruce: Hopefully they’ll be intrigued by these new versions of them, and hopefully even though they can be quote unquote unlikable at times, hopefully they’ll still learn to like and hopefully, maybe never quite admire them, but even that’s a weird thing to me. Like I said, I sometimes think about that. Some of my favorite heroes are dicks. I think James Bond is a dick.

Of course he is.

Bruce: Indiana Jones. He’s a dick, you know, but he’s our dick. He’s our asshole. There’s something about them that still likable, still appealing even though they’re people you probably wouldn’t really want to know in real life.

That’s, again, something I wanted to bring to these characters is that … Batman has traditionally always been kind of a dick.

Haha! Yes!

Bruce: Just to kind of, like I said, play with different flavors of them.

You’ve had a very storied career. Again, I grew up watching your work and the work of DC Animation. Just looking back on your career, does it astound you how much you’ve accomplished and how much you and your teams have accomplished? Does it shock you at all how much influence you have had on generations?

Bruce: It does shock. It’s gratifying, and it’s … Fortunately with the very first show I produced, it was a big, big hit so that helped a lot. Every show since then has had varying degrees of success. It was nice to know even way back even before there really was much internet presence that the show seemed to be popular, and people really loved it and whatever, but it does kind of surprise me now when people your age or whatever come up to me at conventions,”I used to come home from grade school every day and watch Batman: The Animated Series.”

I did.

Bruce: I’m just like, that doesn’t make feel old at all.

I’m sorry!

Bruce: No. It’s all right. It is odd, but it’s good to know, though. It’s cool.

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What can you tell me about what was the initial nucleus of the idea of Gods & Monsters? Again, we’ve seen evil Superman, we’ve seen evil Batman before, but what about those two specifically?

Bruce: It was two different things that converged at the same time. It was a couple of years ago when they first brought out The New 52, and people were kind of freaking out that it was going to be like this big reboot, and it turned out to be actually a pretty soft reboot. Most of the stuff was cosmetic changes, costume changes, and what not.

At the same time, it got me thinking, I remember when they brought back Flash and Green Lantern in the late ’50s for their Silver Age incarnations. They basically kept the name and the gimmick, and they threw everything else out. They changed their costume, they changed the way their powers work, they changed the alter egos. That would be really ballsy if they did that with The New 52. I was a little disappointed that the reboot was as salt as it was, but at the same time I understood it from a commercial standpoint.

That got me thinking, if I did that with Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, basically all the characters on DC Universe. If I did that radical of a revamp of them as they did with Flash and Green Lantern in the Silver Age, what would that be like? What would that mean? That just kind of got my wheels spinning, and this is where I ended up.

I know you’re not directly involved in any of the movies, like Batman v. Superman, but what do you think about the culture proliferating and becoming so massive. All these movies become events now.

Bruce: It’s weird. It’s weird to me. When I first got here in New York a couple of days ago, I checked into my hotel, and I walkout of the hotel for a cigarette, and right across the street from me is the Regal Theater, and it’s like big letters. Avengers. It’s like, wow. When I was a kid I couldn’t even imagine that I would be seeing an Avengers movie on a big screen. I went and saw at 7:00 AM because I had to. Yes. A freaking Ant-Man movie. They’re making an Ant-Man movie.

Right.

Bruce: I was like, what?

On DC’s side we’re getting Aquaman, we’re getting all the guys.

Bruce: Suicide Squad. I know, it’s crazy. It’s cool. It’s really cool. It’s stuff that I never even dreamed about, because I thought this is never going to happen. Who knows.

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There’s one question I really did want to ask you as with the godfathers of DC animation. Whenever there are pictures of civil unrest around the globe, and you see people wearing superhero T-shirts.

Bruce: That’s funny.

What do you think about people gravitating towards these characters in ways that go beyond the comic book page?

Bruce: That’s too deep for me, dude.

Really deep? I’m sorry.

Bruce: It’s okay. It’s just that I’m too shallow.

No problem.

Bruce: That’s an interesting though. I hadn’t noticed that before.

Eric: I guess next time you see an AP photo, just check it out. Going back to Gods & Monsters, what’s the most exciting thing, again, about this project as a whole? You’re targeting the Machinima audience, you’re going with Machinima. You could’ve gone anywhere else, but now you’re here. What gets you amped about the project as a whole?

Bruce: For one thing, even when we were doing Justice League, as much as I love Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, Flash, the Green Lantern, I really like the weirder, more obscure characters. Characters like The Question, Warlord, and wannabes to whoever. To me, that’s the stuff that is like, I just think that stuff is really fun to play around with. Here I get to create a whole new universe that’s full of characters I can mash up and mess around with. It’s the same kind of thing that made Justice League Unlimited fun for me. Having this huge toy box to play in.

It’s like a kid playing with his toys.

Bruce: Totally.

Just about some of those auxiliary characters, you showed us a weird ass Green Lantern that even I’ve never seen before.

Bruce: Right.

Eric: What are those meetings like? Is there a a lot of back-and-forth between?

Bruce: That was just something I just thought of on my own. I just thought of, if we’re going to do Green Lanterns, A, they’re space based. Yes. They’re technically aliens. That guy’s probably actually one of the more normal looking Green Lanterns because he’s at least a biped. We’ve seen a lot of alien Green Lanterns in the comics and stuff anyways, but at the same time, I wanted to make them so alien that they’re a little scary. They’re a little bit unrelatable for human beings. I didn’t want them to just be human beings in a funny suit like Star Trek aliens with bumpy heads and shit. Yes. That’s kind of where we’re going there. What does it mean to be a genuinely alien Green Lantern? Somebody who doesn’t think like a human? Doesn’t think anything at all in earthly terms.

https://instagram.com/p/2R-P8WAN1a/?taken-by=ericthedragon

Who were some of your animation idols growing up and influences? You’ve influenced a whole generation. I’m curious about who got you to pick up a pencil.

Bruce: Big ones were probably an awesome Disney animator named Marc Davis who’s one of my all time heroes. Classic Warner Bros. Looney Tunes director, Bob Clampett, was like God to me. Alex Toth who designed all those wonderful Hanna-Barbera superhero cartoons in the ’60s was a huge influence. That’s the big few I can think of.

Any last words you can say about Gods & Monsters?

Bruce: It’s awesome. Watch it.

Justice League: Gods & Monsters comes out July 28th.

Briefly: It’s finally here!

Preceding the release of the Bruce Timm and Alan Burnett produced Justice League: Gods and Monsters on July 28th, Machinima, Blue Ribbon Content, and DC Entertainment have teamed up for Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles. The series turns the DC Universe upside-down. In this dark, alternate world, telling the good guys from the bad guys is never easy: Superman is not the son of Jor-El, he’s the son of General Zod; Wonder Woman is not from peaceful Themyscira, but rather the warring nation of Ares; and Batman is more vampire-bat than man…and he’s not Bruce Wayne. It is unclear if our greatest heroes are here to protect us…or to rule us.

Sounds freaking awesome, right? Well you can watch the first episode right here, right now. Episode two will follow on Wednesday, June 10, and the third and final episode of the first season on Friday, June 12. Then, we’ll see a second season next year!

Take a look at the first episode below, and let us know what you think! Are you looking forward to Justice League: Gods and Monsters next month?

https://youtu.be/tpu6yPAFHrs

When The CW head Mark Pedowitz waved off rumors about Constantine on his network with a really bizarre comment about the NBA or something, I considered the show was finished. No one is dumb enough to build buzz for a hot property on their network with a confusing metaphor. I went on my mourning period before I enjoyed the rest of this current TV golden age. I think this was around the time Daredevil premiered.

But some held on hope. Sadly, those who did can now exert their energy elsewhere: Constantine is totally, 100% finished. No Netflix. No CW. No whatever thing Big Lots has. Executive producer Daniel Cerone confirmed that much today in a genuinely moving, heartfelt letter:

His letter is reproduced below. From Daniel Cerone:

I promised I’d share news when I had it — sadly, that news is not good. The cast and writers of Constantine are being released from their contracts. The studio tried to find a new home for the show, for which we’re forever grateful, but those efforts didn’t pan out. I’m sorry, I wasn’t provided any information on the attempts to sell the show elsewhere. All I can report is that the show is over.

 

Many ingredients went into this TV series. From the dedicated cast that breathed these characters to life, led by Matt Ryan as the comic-made-flesh embodiment of John Constantine, to the exceptionality talented crew that put unreal images on screen, to the original Hellblazer writers and artists who gifted us a universe.
As a general principle, writers don’t choose a writing career to achieve stardom. Whatever demons or insecurities drove them to find freedom of expression through written words generally keeps writers comfortably obscure behind their words. Nor do people choose writing as a means to financial freedom. I’d venture to guess that most who set out to write professionally never receive a paycheck for their hopeful scribbles or key strokes.

 

In fact, nobody I know ever chose a writing career — it chose them. You write because that’s what you do. Like breathing, it just happens and you have to do it and you just hope that someday somebody out there notices what you’re trying to say.

 

If that’s the dream of writers, than [sic] the writers of Constantine lived the dream, because we’re leaving behind wild and passionate fans who believe in and were moved by what we tried to do. To leave such a significant, dedicated and active fan base on the table — that’s the real sadness. You all deserve many years of the series we set out to make, and we’re disappointed that we couldn’t deliver that to you. The good news is that Constantine will live on for years in many more forms. But our time as caretakers has ended.

 

Thanks for letting us in.

 

Daniel Cerone

What hurts more than the confirmation of the series’ end, is how right Cerone is. First, about writing: This job kind of sucks. Whether it’s journalism or fiction and entertainment writing, it kind of sucks. The benefits are great: you meet amazing people, you travel, and it’s absolutely rewarding whenever people tell you they read your stuff. The whole reason to write is for people to read it, so when people actually do it’s wonderful. And when they tell you, you feel like you’re qualified for a Nobel Prize. Never mind that all you’ve really done is write a funny joke about the Hulk’s schlong or something.

But writers aren’t sexy. Not in the way athletes, models, or rockstars are. Writers aren’t granted VIP access to clubs. Writers aren’t given free swag. Books signed by incredibly significant writers who have passed on are easier to buy than something Kanye West scribbled on with a Sharpie. We can hate this broken celebrity culture all we want, but we need to accept it if we want to maintain sanity. (Not that any writer is sane anyway.)

Secondly, Cerone is right: Constantine may not have more episodes, but it still exists. Maybe at some point NBC or the studio can release the show on home media and fans can enjoy it whenever they want. Firefly had nearly the same amount of episodes but that show has never felt like it’s gone away. While Constantine may never get Hellblazer: The Movie three years from now, they can still enjoy what was made, appreciate it, and move on to whenever the next reinterpretation of this character happens. Because this show seriously demonstrated that a non-superhero series can work, it just didn’t work the way anyone hoped.

I have faith we haven’t seen the last of John Constantine and his world. Maybe now just isn’t the right time.

James Wan has been given Aquaman and Robotech. Oh boy.

Could James Wan actually change what we think about big genre movies? Maybe, maybe not. But he might change how we think about Aquaman and giant robots in pop culture.

Before Mad Max introduced the world to wild stunts on cars and badass women, Furious 7 showed the world wild stunts on cars and badass women. James Wan’s direction of the film elevated what would have been another typical Hollywood movie into a master class in precise, action filmmaking. It was a boy genius being given a fully-equipped lab to go nuts.

This is what makes James Wan an excellent choice to helm these projects. For starters, I’m already stoked about Aquaman because the casting directors made the smartest move in the history of comic book casting: Jason Mamoa. Besides being an actual savage, Mamoa is a proud Pacific Islander. What other cultures are so attached to the ocean than they? This is why people made fun of Aquaman: He looked like a rich preppy guy from Connecticut that had one trip to the Caribbean and suddenly thinks he’s cultured. Tapping into the Greek roots of Atlantis just couldn’t work in the modern eye.

But Wan had nothing to do with that. It’s just one reason to pay attention to Aquaman, because let’s acknowledge it: It’s the toughest superhero movie Warner Bros. has to make. Aquaman has had the worst PR team while somehow a psychopath in a bat costume is world-renowned. But under Wan’s eye, Aquaman might single-handedly change the paradigm.

Just try to imagine what an ocean dweller who could summon sharks and whales could look like if it was directed like this:

I’m glad Warner Bros. acknowledges this, and they’ve made two of the smartest decisions they could ever make. While the Justice League movie is awkwardly coming together, at least there’s Aquaman to look forward to.

Then there’s Robotech.

There’s the obvious out of the way: It’s vehicular warfare. Recruiting a director who just sold the world on cars going boom is a no-brainer.

But remember, this isn’t just any director of the Fast series. It’s Wan. This is the guy who masterfully showed off a car jumping in between Abu Dhabi. If Wan can bring that sensibility into a scale as big as Robotech, it could actually change what we think about giant robot movies. I’m sick of people always bringing up Transformers as you are — it’s because of that narrative that people domestically didn’t really dig the modern masterpiece Pacific Rim.

Not to ride Wan’s dick too much, but I’m a legitimate fan of his vision and his helming over Aquaman and Robotech could be actual paradigm shifters in pop culture. We may no longer scoff at Aquaman or think giant robots are dumb movies.

We might actually think they’re pretty cool.

As I sat down with my coffee and the trade of Grayson Vol. 1: Agents of Spyral I planned to read a couple issues and then go onto something else. That wasn’t quite what happened. I read the first issue then decided I would read the second, then the third… next thing I knew I was through all seven of them.

Dick Grayson, who is no longer Robin, Nightwing or even believed to be living anymore is recruited to become an agent for the shady organization called Spyral. However, it is clear by the end of the first issue that he is a double agent for Batman. The first issue also provides a great summary of Grayson’s history that both old and new fans of the character will appreciate. It serves to immediately connect readers with Grayson. If you aren’t one of the many fans who already love him, after reading a few issues of this you probably will be as Seeley and King do a great job of creating a character that is easy to admire and cheer for. Grayson is fun, positive and possesses a great sense of humor. However there are still plenty of moments where we see him struggling with decisions that he is forced to make on the job.

The book itself could be described in much the same way as Grayson; it’s fun and never takes itself too seriously. It is an easy book to read but still provides deep moral questions and concepts to study and discuss if you wanted to. With each issue the series seems to pick up steam. Seeley and King always seems to leave just enough unanswered questions in each issue to make you want to jump into the next one.

Janin’s provides great art throughout each issue. From the beginning he does an awesome job showing off Grayson’s acrobatic ability and finesse. During the books more powerful moments his art and ability to capture the character’s emotion on the page makes the moments all the more powerful. From the headquarters of Spyral to many different outdoors and cityscapes, the settings and the backgrounds are always gorgeous.

The only complaint I’d have about this trade is that it doesn’t end on much of a cliffhanger. Each issue left me wanting more except for the last one but maybe I was just getting tired of reading?

If you’re looking for something new to read be sure to checkout Grayson Vol. 1: Agents of Spyral when it hits shelves June 9th or pick up a few single issues now!

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This week I attended Atlantic City Boardwalk Con to do some interviews for The Saint Mort Show, and to help my friends at Ashen Phoenix with their booth. Whenever attending a first time show, you never really know just what you’re about to partake in, but I can honestly say that this was the most fun I’ve had attending a convention in a long time.

The show was easy to navigate, even with a great turnout. I was hugged by Jason Mewes after talking to him about sobriety, got to interview the writer/director of Animaniacs (podcast coming this weekend), watched DMC rap ‘It’s Tricky’ from not more than 15 feet from me, and I took a picture of Xavier Woods not realizing it was him until much much later (more on this below).

At the con I befriend Marvin Cruz of Hero Hotties Photography, I’d like to thank Marvin for providing me with hese pictures so that I wasn’t posting cell phone photos.

There was definitely a lot of great cosplay at the convention, and these were some of the standouts!

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Okay so Marvin didn’t take this last photo. It was pulled from Xavier Woods’ Instagram, but it comes with a story. In wrestling there has been a faction called New Day that people HATED. About 2-3 months ago I began telling people that I genuinely think they were about to turn a corner and become must watch TV. Everyone made fun of me. Now they’re still getting booed … but because they’re heels. They’re hilarious and people have seemed to embrace them more.

So at the booth a guy dressed as the black ranger came over to get a photograph, and I thought he looked familiar but I couldn’t place a name to the face. He wanted a picture with one of the models dressed as Kraven (who was his friends favorite Spider-Man villain). We took the photo and about an hour later another fan came by the booth and noticed my Dolph Ziggler shirt and said “Did you see Xavier Woods was cos-playing as the Black Ranger?”

I checked Instagram and lo and behold… I failed at a chance to tell Xavier Woods how much I love the New Day gimmick (for evidence look no further than this weeks episode of the Saint Mort Show podcast).

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http://youtu.be/4MubNoWQiSc

The CW has released a trailer for their The Flash/Arrow spinoff, Legends of Tomorrow.

The trailer introduces (and reintroduces) a long list of characters: Hawkgirl (Ciara Renee), White Canary (Caity Lotz), the Atom (Brandon Routh), Captain Cold (Wentworth Miller), Heat Wave (Dominic Purcell), and Professor Martin Stein (one-half of Firestorm)! Arthur Darvill, of Doctor Who fame, stars as the time-traveling Rip Hunter. Arrow and the Flash make an appearance as well.

The trailer confirms that the villain in the show will be none other than the immortal Vandal Savage.

Here’s the show’s official synopsis:

When heroes alone are not enough… the world needs legends. Having seen the future, one he will desperately try to prevent from happening, time-traveling rogue Rip Hunter is tasked with assembling a disparate group of both heroes and villains to confront an unstoppable threat — one in which not only is the planet at stake, but all of time itself. Can this ragtag team defeat an immortal threat unlike anything they have ever known? DC’S LEGENDS OF TOMORROW stars Victor Garber (“The Flash,” “Alias”); Brandon Routh (“Arrow,” “Superman Returns”); Arthur Darvill (“Doctor Who”); Caity Lotz (“Arrow”); Ciarra Renee (“Pippin”); Franz Drameh (“Edge of Tomorrow”); with Dominic Purcell (“The Flash,” “Prison Break”); and Wentworth Miller (“The Flash,” “Prison Break”). Based on the characters from DC Comics, DC’S LEGENDS OF TOMORROW is from Bonanza Productions Inc. in association with Berlanti Productions and Warner Bros. Television, with executive producers Greg Berlanti (“Arrow,” “The Flash,” upcoming “Pan”), Marc Guggenheim (“Arrow,” “Eli Stone,” “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters”), Andrew Kreisberg (“Arrow,” “The Flash,” “Eli Stone,” “Warehouse 13”) and Sarah Schechter (“Arrow,” “The Flash,” upcoming “Pan”).

The first season of Legends of Tomorrow will be 13 episodes long and is set to debut as a part of The CW’s midseason lineup.

Is this being added to your ever growing list of “must watch” television? Let us know in the comments below!

I’m a big fan of DC’s Digital Firsts lineup of comics. Instead of having to wait a month to grab a new issue of some of my favourite books, I get a bite-sized chunk of each on my iPad each and every week. The way that the publisher staggers the content (new books in different series each day of the week) is also awesome; I have a beyond-busy schedule, but I can likely spare a few minutes for reading each day.

One of my favourite titles in the Digital Firsts line (aside from the always great Injustice: Gods Among Us) is Vertigo’s Fables: The Wolf Among Us. Last year’s Telltale Games title The Wolf Among Us actually introduced me to the world of Fables (somehow I missed out until that point) and I’ve been hooked ever since. The comic version of Fables: The Wolf Among Us acts as an official adaptation and expansion of the events that we saw in season one of the fabulous game (which is available on everything, so you should definitely play it).

As much as I love the Digital Firsts line, I also love collecting physical comics. DC seems to understand this pretty well, as they thankfully do publish hard copies of their Digital Firsts titles once enough digital issues have been released. This Wednesday (5/13), the publisher will release Fables: The Wolf Among Us #5 in comic book stores everywhere, and I couldn’t be more excited to pick up my copy.

We’ve got a batch of preview pages for the upcoming issue, so definitely take a gander at those below, and be sure to let us know what you hope to see in season two of the game, and next in the comic!

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“The bodies pile up and the case takes a turn for the personal, as it looks like Bigby’s crime-solving partner just ended up on the wrong side of a toe tag. Plus, flash back to 17th-century Salem, Massachusetts, to see how Bigby became the man he is today!”

I grew up in high school watching Machinima. Not just actual short movies made from game movies — the genre known as “machinima” — but the actual brand. I spent entire summer afternoons watching Red vs. Blue like any respectable teenager growing up in the mid-aughts, and Arby ‘n the Chief which was nothing more than a dude playing with Halo figures and making them talk with automated voices. I didn’t have a lot of sex in high school, clearly.

With the massive growth in streaming games and free-to-play MMO tournaments and gamer/geek culture as a whole, I shouldn’t be shocked at how much of a viable brand Machinima has actually become. Yet, I totally am.

Yesterday I attended their upfronts in midtown Manhattan. The booming music, the attractive part-time models serving finger foods, the open bar and the attendance of men and women who looked like they leaped off the pages of GQ and Details legitimately astounded me. It was a complete 180 from what I imagined the collective brand to actually be when I spent those lazy, adolescent days of mine on YouTube. I thought Machinima was just a really professional group of guys operating in a basement, with someone’s mom cooking spaghetti in the kitchen above. I couldn’t be more wrong.

Machinima is still barely second, maybe even third or fourth fiddle to the bigger online networks like Netflix or Hulu, but they have a targeted audience that neither of those major players have: the younger, gamer-centric millenial. While Netflix and Hulu attract a wider range demographic, Machinima are zeroed in on the gaming 16-25 year olds. There’s actually a small overlap with Generation Z, who are just now getting their first jobs at Dairy Queens everywhere.

Such major growth over the last ten years, combined with the current, Twitch-zeitgeist ripe for conquering via shorter, snappier content that is easier to consume than even Netflix (you can’t exactly watch House of Cards riding on a bus, but you can watch Super Power Beat Down), Machinima’s newest slate of orginal and returning programming will most certainly make stuffy, older industry leaders take notice.

The full press release is below, and I go a little in-depth with my impressions.

LOS ANGELES, CA, May 4, 2015 – Machinima’s debut at the Digital Content Newfronts was nothing short of “heroic.” The first global many2many programming service focused on fandom and gamer culture, Machinima unveiled a programming slate designed to elevate and celebrate a global community of gamer, comic and hero fans through the most innovative content on the Internet. Partnerships with Blue Ribbon Content and DC Entertainment,Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Clive Barker, Roberto Orci and Bunim/Murray Productions, along with some of Machinima’s leading creator talent, showcase Machinima’s commitment to developing content across all genres, formats and platforms.

 

“Fandom and gaming engenders so much passion and engagement; it’s a cultural shift uniquely connecting with the most valuable millennials,” said Chad Gutstein, Machinima’s CEO.  “It’s this deep connection to our audience that has made Machinima the ninth largest video entertainment platform in the United States, and the second most watched programmer on YouTube.  With our new slate, we are reminding our fans and our clients of one very important fact: Machinima is back!”

 

Machinima’s programming slate includes:

 

Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles Season 2

 

From visionary producer and animator Bruce Timm (Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series), Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles turns the DC Universe upside-down. In this dark, alternate world, telling the good guys from the bad guys is never easy: Superman is not the son of Jor-El, he’s the son of General Zod; Wonder Woman is not from peaceful Themyscira, but rather the warring nation of Ares; and Batman is more vampire-bat than man…and he’s not Bruce Wayne. It is unclear if our greatest heroes are here to protect us…or to rule us. With Season 1 set to launch in June, Machinima, Blue Ribbon Content and DC Entertainment have already begun development on Season 2, a 10-episode follow-up to the initial limited series.

This is probably the one project I’m most excited about. It’s a genuine Bruce Timm series that takes Wonder Woman, Batman and Superman in entirely new directions. Speaking to Timm (interview coming soon), he told me that the online distribution means they don’t have to abide by any broadcast standards and practices, and that Timm had more final say over these characters than even DC. Stay tuned for our interview later this week.

DC’s Hero Project

 

Machinima, Blue Ribbon Content, and DC Entertainment are setting out to discover the next great creator for the world of DC Comics.  Eight contestants compete in elimination challenges to develop a live-action short video based on their own interpretations of characters from DC Comics’ Starman comic book series. Well-known guest judges and celebrity special guests will join bestselling writer and DC Entertainment Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns and a panel of esteemed judges to oversee the entire competition.

They chose the semi-obscure Starman. With the proliferation of fan film projects hitting the web, it’s nice to DC actually embracing fan-creation culture and actually giving the OK for people to make expensive fanfiction.

#4Hero

 

A modern adaptation of DC Comics’ cult-favorite classic “Dial H For Hero”, #4Hero is a live-action, VFX-heavy action-comedy about a young woman named Nellie Tribble who is quietly desperate to make her mark on the world, but wholly unprepared to do so. Nellie stumbles upon a life-altering smartphone app that allows her to instantly become a Super Hero for a short amount of time. The problem is her super powers are dictated by whatever is trending on social media at that moment, and they are always only semi-useful.

Dial H For Hero is indeed a classic amongst a certain group of comic fans, but this one is so of the time I’m afraid at how dated it could actually become. The preview video referenced Katy Perry’s sharks from the Super Bowl, as an example.

Clive Barker’s Creepy Pasta

 

For the first time, horror legend Clive Barker is stepping away from the creatures of his own imagination and entering into the world of Internet horror fan fiction, affectionately known as Creepy Pasta.  Starting with viral urban legends (e.g. Jeff the Killer, Slender Man and Ben Drowned), Clive Barker’s Creepy Pasta is an original series of live-action, blood-curdling short films.  These new tales will be curated and adapted by Barker from submissions obtained through the creepypasta community, and produced by Machinima to scare you to your core.

The second thing I’m most excited about, and if it weren’t for Bruce Timm this would probably be my number one. I’ve always been fascinated with folklore, even in the age of the internet such stories survive and thrive in ways even sages around the campfire couldn’t imagine. They definitely highlighted Slenderman but he wasn’t the only story. I question the legalities of this, but no one really questions the legality of the Jersey Devil or Bloody Mary either. The logo looked a little cheap, but it also had the DIY aesthetic that these stories were bred from anyway, so not a big deal. Can’t wait.

RoboCop

 

“Dead or alive, you’re coming with me.” OCP’s Security Concepts Division’s RoboCop program is back in an all-new, short-form limited web series, based on Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s 1987 classic action film. RoboCop returns to Delta City where viewers ride along with the now standard-issue RoboCop officers as they respond to calls from dispatch. Tapping into current themes of the surveillance state, the series is shot from the first person point of view of the RoboCop officers’ heads up display, along with security cameras, dash-cams, and drones.

 Literally COPS but with RoboCop officers.

Happy Wheels

 

“Choose your inadequately prepared racer, and ignore severe consequences in your desperate search for victory!”

 

                                                                        – Happy Wheels

 

Machinima will bring audiences an all-new original animated series based on Jim Bonacci’s hit online game Happy Wheels and produced by BMP Digital, the digital division of Bunim/Murray Productions (‘The Real World’, ‘Keeping Up With The Kardashians’). This must-see 10-episode short form series, which will feature fan-favorites such as Wheelchair Guy, Irresponsible Dad and Lawnmower Man, will expand upon the game that has more than 8 million players a month and showcase its notorious dark humor and penchant for blood and gore. Additionally, with over 3.1 billion video views amassed, BMP Digital is looking to leverage the voiceover talents of YouTube influencers such as Toby Turner (15.2M YouTube Subscribers, Cartoon Network’s The High Fructose Adventures of Annoying Orange) and others who have made this game so iconic.

This is where Machinima began to lose me, despite being their target demo. The promo video was funny enough, but I didn’t play Happy Wheels and it’s supposed to be a dark satire cartoon. They didn’t show too much beyond actual game footage, so I’m still kind of confused as to what the final product will look like.

Jerome ASF’s The Baka Chronicles

 

Adding to the gaming fervor, Machinima’s iconic Minecrafter Jerome ASF (3.6M YouTube Subscribers), will be teaming with N00b Adventure creator Jim Schwerfeger for an all-new series – The Baka Chronicles. Featuring Jerome ASF’s most beloved character, Baka, the series follows two unlikely server admins who problem-solve the hilarious antics of griefers, trolls, and kids who wreak havoc across their favorite multiplayer Minecraft server. Little do our heroes realize this job is a massive headache.

Out of all the projects announced by Machinima, this one is actually machinima. Can’t say I’m too interested, and the title reeks of weeaboo (which is the point, I guess). It’s a Minecraft series in the same sense that Red vs. Blue was a Halo show. There is an untapped market for kids and Minecraft, and while The Baka Chronicles could skew older, they’re missing out on a lucrative 9-12 year-old demo on broadcast.

Also, the presentation made it clear that their audience totally gets it. These upfronts are attended by much older, wealthy executives who totally don’t understand young gamers who are much like their own nieces and nephews. During a brief preview of an episode, one character literally stopped to jump in front of the character and (in a goofy, dumb bear voice) told the brand execs that while you don’t understand these jokes, our fans do. “So give us your money,” he told them, and everyone laughed semi-uncomfortably.

 High School 51

 

Created and produced by Roberto Orci (Transformers, Amazing Spider-Man 2, Star Trek, Sleepy Hollow, Lost, Fringe) and Legion of Creatives, and starring Orlando Jones (Sleepy Hollow, Tainted Love, Drumline, MADtv), High School 51 is as out of this world as the name implies.

 

Hidden away in the heart of Area 51, Dream Lake High School is filled with mind-blowing technology, top-secret government programs and a student body that is cool, quirky, attractive, and…well, alien.  No one from the outside has ever been allowed into the school and no human has ever attended…until now.

 

For 16-year old Alex Valencia, the first and only human ever to attend Dream Lake, high school is going to be tough. Fitting in will be one thing but his biggest challenge just might be saving the human race!

I spoke to Orlando Jones about this series so be prepared for the interview later this week. I can’t get too excited at the name Roberto Orci (during the announcement, Power Rangers was curiously mentioned amongst Orci’s credits) but the brief preview we saw looked intriguing and fun enough. It’s evocative of Roswell and Smallville, but for a very current audience that’s fully tapping in to the mainstream geek culture in ways that Roswell only accidentally attracted.

It’s definitely an Orci product though, as that man can’t get enough of government conspiracies.

 Returning Series

 

Additionally, Machinima is announcing the return of some of its most popular shows including AFK, Chasing The Cup, Realm, Battlefield FriendsSanity Not Included, Deck Wars, and ETC.

Stay tuned for the interviews with Bruce Timm and Orlando Jones later this week.

 

On the weekend that Marvel Studios seems poised to take over with the massively successful Avengers: Age of Ultron, one surefire way to steal some thunder as their biggest competitor is to show what you’ve got cooking. Suicide Squad director David Ayer just served up a nice, hot appetizer, so dig in. (By the way, I’m kind of hungry, can anyone make me something?)

David Ayer tweeted the first official cast photo, seen below.

If you’re darting your eyes looking for Jared Leto as The Joker, you can lean back in your chair. He’s not in it. While this is from Suicide Squad, it’s a photo of the assembled Task Force X, and rumors of Joker playing more of a villain than anti-hero protagonist seem to be true.

But if you want to know who makes up Task Force X, here’s the breakdown:

Adam Beach (Slipknot), Jai Courtney (Captain Boomerang), Cara Delevinge (Enchantress), Karen Fukuhara (Katana), Joel Kinnaman (Rick Flagg), Margot Robbie (Harley Quinn), Will Smith (Deadshot), Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje (Killer Croc), and Jay Hernandez (Diablo).

Out the gate, I can say one thing: I like it! If any of the upcoming DC movies has me the most excited it’s Suicide Squad, and this first look hasn’t disappointed me. Yeah, it’s erring on the comically gritty tone that DC seems to be aiming for that I’ve had quite enough of, but this is nice. I’m picking up what they’re putting down (or, uploading online).

One of the most crucial elements to nail down for Suicide Squad is Harley Quinn, a tall order as she’s been a longtime fan favorite that hasn’t had her day in the cinematic sun. Margot Robbie looks amazing so far, so consider expectations for Suicide Squad raised. It’s certainly a 180 from how I felt about Jared Leto’s Juggalo-on-meth Joker.

That’s not all though. Here’s a clearer look at Will Smith as Deadshot in full costume that Ayer tweeted shortly after.

Excited? You’ve still got over a year to go, so just relax. Suicide Squad is set for August 5, 2016.

Batman is rich. Even though he owns all the major consoles, he has a murdered-out PC because he is PC Master Race.

That’s what I’m assuming Dark Knight Returns III: The Master Race will be about. I’d totally read a graphic novel about Batman playing Telltale Games’s Game of Thrones and trolling console subreddits.

The legendary Frank Miller will return to DC Comics to grit-up modern comics once again when he concludes his seminal work with its final installment, Dark Knight Returns III: The Master Race. Get your quality, colorful Batgirl out of here! Comics are dark!

Details are scarce, but the news was announced, amongst other platforms, on Frank Miller’s previously inactive Twitter account. Because that’s what you announce the final installment to the landmark series that have influenced the maturation of the graphic novel medium: on a platform with a baby blue bird as its logo.

From Comic Book Resources:

The series will run for eight issues, with installments scheduled to be released twice a month starting in late fall 2015.

 

“For the past six months, I’ve been working with Frank Miller to bring the next chapter in the ‘Dark Knight’ to light,” he said. It’s been humbling. I’ve learned a lot, and I call him sensei. It’s a really, really big project.”

 

Miller confirmed the news himself via Twitter … releasing promotional art from the story and stating, “I hope that by now my silence is deafening.” In the official press release, DC Comics billed the story as “the epic conclusion of the celebrated ‘The Dark Knight Returns’ saga.”

 

“Batman remains my favorite comic book hero and a sequel to Dark Knight is going to be daunting,” Miller said in a statement. “But we’ll do our best.”

I’m not going to bother filling you in on how much The Dark Knight Returns meant to comic book fans, but I can tell you that this can go really well or really, really terribly. Frank Miller is/was a phenomenal artist and storyteller, but there’s something about his attitudes that are distinctly late ’80s/early ’90s that hasn’t — ironic to say, matured — well.

While The Dark Knight Returns is frequently cited amongst the best comics have had to offer, The Dark Knight Strikes Again was universally reviled. This was roughly the same era of Frank Miller’s career where he became something of a self-parody of himself, where he penned the greatest and most awful lines written in the English language that spawned endless jokes and memes everywhere.

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Let’s not trash art before it’s even finished, but I simply can’t bring myself to be enthused about this. Frank Miller hasn’t demonstrated growth past his prime, relying on an aesthetic that hasn’t aged well. Although The Dark Knight Strikes Again was well almost fifteen years ago, it still seems Frank Miller hasn’t gotten past 1991.

But what about you? Are you excited? Let us know.

 

It’s difficult being a Constantine fan. Cancellation is like an impending death sentence, a swinging pendulum swinging too close to comfort. Not all hope is lost, but how much did we lose?

After the emotional rollercoaster from a short while ago, now it looks like there’s still a fighting chance. On NBC starting tomorrow, Friday (April 24), all thirteen episodes of the entire series first season will be available to stream for free — unless you count watching two minutes of State Farm ads and Undateable spots a form of existential payment — and for a limited time.

https://twitter.com/KitMoxie/status/591303399653699584

Meanwhile, as you watch the Hellblazer do his thing, the executive producers will be going up to bat to swing for the fences as they pitch* the second season to NBC bigwigs.

I’m not sure how much these streaming numbers actually count, but this gesture speak volumes. Now it’s time to take advantage. We want more Constantine gosh darn it, so stream it! You don’t even need to actually watch it, just open it up and hit play then go back to your Excel sheets at work like you should be doing. And forward it to your friends who haven’t seen the show yet. The more the merrier!

You heard the man.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fYYWMtj1Ag

*I didn’t mean to use so many contradictory baseball metaphors.