‘Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker’ is finally here… and we’ve got a lot to say about it! In this SPOILER FILLED episode, Ian Kerner returns to pick through the ins and outs of J.J. Abrams’ finale to the Skywalker saga that started 42 years ago! Where does Episode 9 pick up and where do we find Rey, Finn and Poe? How does the film react to the events of ‘The Last Jedi’? Does the work as a satisfying wrap up to the entire saga? What works and what doesn’t? Do we find out who Rey’s parents are? Is Palpatine really back? Is there any redemption for Kylo Ren? Where can the Star Wars galaxy go from here? It’s all in front of you so enjoy and may the Force be with you!

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Following the box office and critical powerhouse that was The Force Awakens, fans and enthusiasts were shocked to learn that director J.J. Abrams wouldn’t be returning to oversee the next chapter of the Star Wars saga. Instead, Disney put its full faith behind Looper and Brick helmer Rian Johnson. But where would Johnson’s vision take this delicate collection of old and new characters? Early indications and trailer footage suggested a darker tone would exist throughout The Last Jedi, and only time would tell if this was the correct path for the franchise. Well now, that time has finally arrived.

Rey (Daisy Ridley) has taken her newfound abilities to a desolate island to learn the ways of the Force from Jedi Master Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill). But as her understanding of the Force grows, so does Skywalker’s skepticism in her intentions as he becomes fearful of her uncontrollable strength. Meanwhile, Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) and the First Order look to put an end to the Resistance once and for all.

From start to finish, The Last Jedi becomes plagued by an artificial cheapness in both story structure and delivery. This isn’t to say that the film is a complete miss, because that’s by no means accurate, Rian Johnson’s effort is rather a misguided continuation of the re-branded universe that J.J. Abrams worked diligently to build. Where The Force Awakens goes overboard in its reliance on familiarity, both in terms of the story’s likeness to A New Hope and its return to key figures from the original trilogy, The Last Jedi desperately ventures in a polar-opposite direction by offering numerous thematic statements that this trilogy intends to have its own voice. Consequently, this branching-out approach from Rian Johnson comes with a wide range of successes and failures. Rey, Finn and Poe prove to be a strongly-developed trio of characters who are well-equipped to carry the saga into Episode IX. However, an absolute mishandling of Luke Skywalker’s character, which even drew public criticism from Mark Hamill leading up to the film’s release, is just the beginning of The Last Jedi‘s careless ideas. Everything from the revelation of Rey’s parents to shameful amounts of inorganic slapstick comedy sprinkled throughout, and lest we forget cinema’s most unimaginative and prolonged “chase sequence” ever, The Last Jedi‘s most shining qualities are sadly clouded by many blatant and unforgivable blunders from its writer and director. Therefore, we must turn our hopes back to J.J. Abrams for a stronger and more appropriate conclusion when he returns for Episode IX.

Grade: 3/5

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With a month left before release, Paramount Pictures has released the final trailer for the third entry in the rebooted Star Trek franchise. Along with new footage, the trailer features a new song by Rihanna entitled ‘Sledgehammer’.

Fans were critical of  the first trailer for Star Trek Beyond due to the use of ‘Sabotage‘ by the Beastie Boys. Some felt the music felt out of place, and it will be interesting to see what the response will be with this trailer. Besides the new music, we do get treated to an extended look at the attack on the Enterprise as well as a great final shot (which we won’t spoil here).

Geekscapists, what say you? Is the marketing campaign for Star Trek Beyond effective? If it were up to you, what music would you feature in a Star Trek trailer? Sound off in the comments below.

Star Trek Beyond is out in theaters Friday, July 22.

 

Obviously, spoilers for Star Wars: The Force Awakens are below.

A few weeks ago I was scouring Target looking for any available Captain Phasma figures in my area. I like collecting 6″ figures and wanted to add what I thought would be the best thing about The Force Awakens to my shelf. Gwendoline Christie is a delight both on screen and off (based on my impressions, I do not know her personally), so I was excited that she would be, in all things, Star Wars.

When The Force Awakens started and Captain Phasma walked on screen I smiled ear-to-ear. That smile quickly faded. For all its high marks, The Force Awakens fumbled Captain Phasma so badly it’s almost embarrassing.

Make no mistake: Star Wars: The Force Awakens is as wonderful as you’d hoped. A bit slavish to the original trilogy perhaps, but I’m thankful to finally see a good, possibly great Star Wars movie (I’ll need multiple viewings) in my lifetime. It will really make you wonder what kind of wasted effort the whole prequel trilogy was, if that wasn’t already obvious. I hope Force Awakens shuts up the grating prequel apologists.

But Force Awakens isn’t without its own missteps, and by far the most glaring is Captain Phasma. There was hope she’d succeed the legacy of Boba Fett, the badass gunslinger antagonist, the “Dragon” who has no other motivation than to get the job done. But she does end up succeeding Boba Fett’s legacy in the worst ways, that is being a total chump.

When Force Awakens begins she’s as ruthless and robotic as anyone wanted, functioning as a scary authoritarian against Finn (then still named FN-2187). Instructing him to see his rifle’s data whether or not he fired on the villagers is an Orwellian nightmare. We’re off to a good start!

But the rug is quickly pulled underneath. The next time we see Phasma beyond standing there for set dressing, it’s when Finn, Han, and Chewie have infiltrated the Starkiller base and hold Phasma hostage. Finn has some bottled-up tension towards her — it’s played for a laugh, and to my delight colors Finn’s character more — but it never had proper set-up. From what we saw, it was only that one time right after the opening village massacre. It makes me wonder what J.J. Abrams cut out that would have maybe really allowed Phasma to be the big scary threat she deserves.

But in the final version of Force Awakens, she isn’t. With a rifle to her head, she begrudgingly lowers the shields to allow the Resistance to enter the planet’s atmosphere. The camera turns their attention away from her for a few seconds, so when she defiantly stands up I thought she had managed to alert the First Order — she’s at a goddamn computer! — but she doesn’t. The shield lowers like Han and Finn want and she basically has a line like Dr. Claw from Inspector Gadget: Next time, Finn, next time! She goes out like a lame-o, with Han slyly suggesting they chuck her out a “trash compactor.” Cue audience laughing, my eyes rolling.

It happens off screen. We never see Phasma again for the rest of the movie.

Despite its imagination, Star Wars has long had a remarkably narrow representation of gender and ethnic diversities. Yes, there are aliens, but there are real people in our real world who deserve to be inspired by the images on screen. I never felt like Luke Skywalker no matter how many times I watched Star Wars. Even if he was written like cardboard, I was still attached to Adam the Black Ranger from Power Rangers, because he looked like me. I don’t look like Luke.

When it comes to women, Star Wars has been embarrassingly devoid, almost to the point where I wonder how anyone in that universe is born. Name five prominent women — name them, off your head, no Wikipedia — from the other six movies. You can’t, right? And that’s what makes Force Awakens almost like fresh air. I can’t sing the praises of Daisy Ridley’s Rey nearly enough. Beyond the stellar performance of Ridley (who is without a doubt the breakout star of Force Awakens), Rey is extremely capable and complex. This isn’t “Girl power!” feminism, though I’ll be happy when little girls watching Star Wars say she’s their hero. Rey is legit character, a modern textbook example aspiring screenwriters should study.

And there’s more than just her! Carrie Fischer is back as Leia, who has become a grizzled general. There’s Maz Kanata as a comforting guide, and played by Lupita Nyong’o who is stunning in her role despite being a cartoon. There’s another really cool side character, an X-Wing pilot played by Christina Chong. We don’t really get to know her and most of the heroic action is taken up by Oscar Isaac’s Poe, but her close-ups in the pilot seats give enough of a look that she might be someone’s favorite.

And there should have been Captain Phasma, but she’s so lame. I can actually think of a great scene that would have been perfect for her: Right around the second act before Leia and C-3PO arrive, the First Order attacks and Finn holds Luke’s lightsaber. He uses it for the first time against a random Stormtrooper with a really, really fucking awesome weapon that looks like a giant tonfa. Finn and this Stormtrooper go at it in one of the first fist-pumping moments in the entire movie. While I wouldn’t want Phasma to have lost the fight like the Stormtrooper did, it would have been damn near perfect for hers and Finn’s arc. Yeah, it came before the Starkiller base stuff, but still. That scene begs for Phasma to show off what she could do.

The silver lining (no pun intended — get it, she’s in chrome armor?) is that Phasma is still alive. If they actually chucked her into a garbage chute (ugh), it’s barely crippling so she’ll get out, unlike Fett and the sand butthole. I hope she really comes to her own in Star Wars VIII, but that movie is some 500+ days away. And I’m tired of waiting for Star Wars to give me the good stuff.

On the upside: I get to save like $30 on eBay buying a Captain Phasma figure.

Side note: Boba Fett was an interesting demonstration of using telling, not showing that was effective. His introduction had Darth Vader, the baddest motherfucker in the galaxy, finger lecture Fett with “No disintegrations.” One line establishes how much of a loose cannon Fett was, and that one line filled the imagination for decades. Phasma does not have that moment one bit, which further makes her appearance in The Force Awakens a bummer.

I don’t have to tell you what today is. By now everyone is fully aware that tonight marks the first public showings of J.J. Abrams’ beyond anticipated release, The Force Awakens. And while everything seems to be perfect for Disney’s recently acquired sci-fi universe, critical adoration has been robust and public hype is astronomical, one question still hovers around the film. Is The Force Awakens a legitimate Best Picture contender for the Oscars? In order to fully wrap our heads around this fair, albeit unpredictable, question, we must consider many criteria both past and present.

Let me be frank, no science fiction film has ever won a Best Picture statue from the Academy Awards. That means J.J. Abrams and company are pitted against some serious odds. Now, that doesn’t mean the latest adaptation of George Lucas’ groundbreaking creation can’t weasel its way into the final dance. In fact, if The Force Awakens is as triumphant and comparable to the original trilogy as many critics have suggested, then perhaps it has a real chance at a Best Picture nomination and, dare I say, more.

hope

After the 1977 release of Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, the epic feature went on to capture a robust 10 nominations from the Academy, 6 of which it won. Although Lucas’ film cleaned up in the technical categories, as well as John Williams’ symbolic score, A New Hope also earned recognition for Best Picture, Director, Screenplay and Supporting Actor. Those are some major accolades and, even more noteworthy, a level of respect unmatched by any other sci-fi film to date (although James Cameron’s Avatar came awfully close with 9 nominations and 3 wins).

It’s also important to recognize that A New Hope wasn’t the only Oscar darling from the franchise’s original trio of installments. Although each of their subsequent nominations either pertained to technical aspects of the film or John Williams’ score, The Empire Strikes Back was victorious with one of its three nominations and Return of the Jedi went home empty handed in all of its four inclusions. Therefore, a look at history would suggest that if The Force Awakens is as good as the general critical consensus claims, then J.J. Abrams’ work could very well stand as a viable Oscar contender.

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After catching up on the history of Star Wars, now it’s essential to place the franchise’s latest effort in the context of this year’s Oscar race. Following Disney’s lavish red carpet premiere on Monday that spared no expense, it was reported by Deadline’s Pete Hammond that, not only will Disney make a viable Oscar push for its long-awaited release, but The Force Awakens is also screening for Academy members at their prestigious Goldwyn Theatre not once, but twice! Typically, the voting body attempts to illustrate complete transparency and fairness by simply giving all other films one chance to screen for members. This will be the standard protocol for other weekend Oscar hopefuls scheduled to screen, such as The Revenant and Anomalisa, however this extra opportunity could prove to be very advantageous for The Force Awakens‘ Oscar prospects.

It’s no secret that the Academy Awards grasps for ratings at their annual event, and a reunion with the Star Wars saga would clearly draw a massive number of fanboys to their program. Furthermore, 2015 has been a decent cinematic year but no film has separated itself from the pack as a formidable Best Picture frontrunner. With The Force Awakens opening this weekend, we’ll all see if it’s as good as advertised. And if it is, then perhaps the stars have aligned for history to be made at February’s Academy Awards.

 

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Briefly: If you weren’t already excited for next week’s Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation (did you even see Ghost Protocol?), this newly-released featurette will probably change your mind.

It’s short, clocking in at just over 1 minute, but it showcases just how incredible the stunts in the film can be.

You know that scene from the trailer that has Ethan hanging off the side of a plane during takeoff? That was actually Tom Cruise, on the side of an actually taking off airplane.

Pretty freaking incredible. Take a look at the featurette below, and let us know what you think! Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation hits theatres on July 31!

IMF agent Ethan Hunt is tracked down by The Syndicate, a highly trained organization of rogue assassins that kill on order. With the help of his colleagues, he plans to bring The Syndicate down by any means necessary.

Briefly: What a way to kick off May 4th.

Vanity Fair‘s Annie Leibovitz has just debuted a series of exclusive photos of the cast of Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Among the images are our first looks at Adam Driver‘s evil Kylo Ren, and Lupita Nyong’o’s motion-tracking gear for her character, Maz Kanata.

Chewie himself, Peter Mayhew has also taken to Twitter to reveal the identity of Game of Thrones‘ star Gwendolyn Christie’s character. She’ll be portraying Captian Phasma in the film. You know, that bad-ass chrome Stormtrooper we saw way back when.

You can take a look at the images below. Be sure to let us know what you think in the comments below, and don’t forget to re-watch the phenomenal trailer from a few weeks back.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens hits theatres on December 18th.

SWCast

SWDriver

SWLupita

SWAliens

I know I don’t even need to ask if you’re excited. This looks so freaking good.

Briefly: Yesterday marked our first look at this Summer’s probably-going-to-be-awesome Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation, and today a much longer trailer for the film debuted online.

It looks totally ridiculous, and seriously awesome.

In the film, “IMF agent Ethan Hunt is tracked down by The Syndicate, a highly trained organization of rogue assassins that kill on order. With the help of his colleagues, he plans to bring The Syndicate down by any means necessary.”

The film stars Tom Cruise (of course), Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Alec Baldwin, and more, and will hit theatres on July 31st. Take a look at the new trailer below, and be sure to let us know what you think!

Looks like the latest trend in marketing is the “Trailer for a Trailer”, as we can plainly see in this teaser for Mission Impossible 5: Rogue Nation.

IMF agent Ethan Hunt is tracked down by The Syndicate, a highly trained organization of rogue assassins that kill on order. With the help of his colleagues, he plans to bring The Syndicate down by any means necessary.

You can peep the full length trailer, TOMORROW! You can get your eyes on the film Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation July 31st!

Briefly: While we’re all twiddling our thumbs until December 18th, Disney is certainly not standing still. The studio today officially revealed and dated the first Star Wars spinoff, and also announced the release date for Episode VIII.

Bob Iger announced the news at today’s Disney shareholders meeting. Here’s what was revealed, straight from StarWars.com:

Rogue One is the title for the first film in a unique series of big-screen adventures that explores the characters and events beyond the core Star Wars saga. Rogue One will be directed by Gareth Edwards (MonstersGodzilla) and written by Oscar nominee Chris Weitz (CinderellaAbout a BoyAntz). The first actress cast is Felicity Jones, who garnered an Academy Award nomination and critical acclaim for her performance in The Theory of Everything. The idea for the story of Rogue One came from John Knoll, an Academy Award-winning visual effects supervisor and chief creative officer at Industrial Light & Magic. He will executive produce along with Simon Emanuel (The Dark Knight RisesFast & Furious 6) and Jason McGatlin (TintinWar of the Worlds). Kathleen Kennedy and Tony To (Band of BrothersThe Pacific) are on board to produce and John Swartz (Star Wars: The Force Awakens) will co-produce. The film starts shooting this summer in London and is due for release on December 16, 2016.

 

In addition, Iger confirmed that Rian Johnson will write and direct Star Wars: Episode VIII. The film, which continues the saga after the events of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, is set for release on May 26, 2017 — forty years and a day after the release of Star Wars: A New Hope in 1977. Johnson is widely considered one of cinema’s most gifted young filmmakers, having directed the modern sci-fi classic, Looper, as well as Brick and The Brothers Bloom. He was also behind the camera for three episodes of the critically-acclaimed TV series Breaking Bad, including “Ozymandias,” which series creator Vince Gilligan named as the best installment of the show. Kathleen Kennedy and Ram Bergman, producer of LooperDon JonBrick, and The Brothers Bloom, are on board to produce.

I have to say that I’m beyond excited for both of these films. I was a big fan of last year’s Godzilla, and can’t wait to see what Gareth Edwards can do when he’s taken to space (and who doesn’t love Felicity Jones). On the flipside, both Brick and Looper from Rian Johnson are films I’ve watched a multitude of times, and as many issues as Looper had, it was still quite the incredible, thought provoking production. I’m really looking forward to seeing what he can do with a (probably much) bigger budget, and a vastly larger universe.

So, in case you forgot, Rogue One is coming on December 16th, 2016, while Episode VIII will drop on May 26, 2017. That’s a lot of Star Wars.

Photo: StarWars.com
Photo: StarWars.com

I thought Scarlett Johansson kicking more ass was enough cool news of the day. Now, according to Twitchfilm, more asses shall be kicked! This time by actual ass-kickers Iko Uwais, Yayan Ruhian, and Cecep Arif Rahman. You don’t know those names but you know their ass-kicking well, because they kicked tons of ass in Gareth Evans’ The Raid and The Raid 2. This is so kick-ass!

From Twitchfilm:

It would appear that the force is set to awaken in Indonesia.

 

Though there has been no comment whatsoever from any of the performers or their representation, Twitch has learned that a key trio of performers from Gareth Evans’ The Raid and The Raid 2 – leading man Iko Uwais, Mad Dog / Prakoso actor Yayan Ruhian and The Raid 2 finale fighter Cecep Arif Rahman, credited simply as The Assassin – will all appear in JJ Abrams’ upcoming Star Wars: Episode 7 – The Force Awakens.

I can’t contain my excitement for this. There is one redeeming part of The Phantom Menace and in my opinion it was Ray Park as Darth Maul introducing proper martial arts to this huge universe. Now it seems everyone will actually be kung-fu fighting (OK, silat, but let me have my aged pop culture references).

Just imagine this fight for a second, okay? Hardcore, brutal penchak silat mixed with sci-fi mysticism. The way they handle the kris and kujang are a gory spectacle, but now picture it with force pushing, lightning bolts, big-ass giant force leaps, and LIGHTSABERS with PENCHAK SILAT.

Holy shit, you guys.

But aside from the martial arts? There was a big, noisy hoopla over John Boyega as a black Storm Trooper or whatever nonsense some dumb people came up with. Considering that in all six previous Star Wars films there were just two black people in a predominant role, I thought it was totally amazing the first thing we see of Star Wars was Boyega’s sweaty mug. And then people had to say a bunch of dumb things. (But I absolutely loved how Boyega responded.) But now, it seems the ever-expanding cast of this much-hyped movie is truly reflecting our diverse world. For all the Asian influences Star Wars modeled itself from, there was a severe lack of any Asian faces, even in this galaxy far, far away. Imagine how slightly different our cultural perceptions would be if Seven Samurai star Toshiro Mifune had accepted the role of Obi-Wan like George Lucas had wanted.

It is currently unknown what roles Uwais, Ruhian, and Rahman will be playing, and from the looks of it they probably won’t even be speaking roles at all. Based on their skills and how they were announced, I imagine they’ll be playing raiders or assassins of some sort, they will have the spotlight for a big martial arts set piece and vanish afterwards. They weren’t introduced in the initial casting announcements, and principal photography is already finished. I reiterate I’m only speculating, for all we know Iko Uwais is playing Luke Skywalker’s son! (Haha, JK, but seriously could you imagine?) Their roles may be small but in the realm of our pop culture headspace? Their roles are going to be huge.

I’m seriously about to pop in The Raid and The Raid 2 again because that’s how stoked I am about this news.

Following the official (and officially awesome) teaser trailer from a few weeks back, Disney has just revealed the names of some of the characters we’ll be seeing in next years Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

And they did it in the style of the classic Star Wars Topps trading cards. This is so freaking cool.

Here we go:

Finn

Kylo-Ren

Millennium-Falcon

Poe-Dameron

Rey

Stormtroopers

X-Wings

BB-8

Pretty damn cool, huh? Abrams revealed the images to EW earlier today, and also noted that the numbering on the cards is important. Get speculating!

The day we’ve all been waiting for is finally here! No! Not Black Friday! I’m talking about the arrival of the new Star Wars teaser trailer that we DON’T have to go to the theaters to enjoy (but we still probably should ‘cuz big screen and all)!

This trailer doesn’t give us much, but we do get to see some amazing new tweaks to the Star Wars universe, including a cool ball droid, a tri-saber, the new look Stormtroopers and shots of newcomers John Boyega and Daisy Ridley in action.

Many of us have been skeptical since the Prequels, keeping our growing excitement at bay, but when that John Williams score kicks in and you see the Millennium Falcon take on some tie fighters you can’t help but get those old familiar chills from your childhood!

Too bad those of us in the US have to wait until December 18, 2015 to see the rest!

Star Wars: Episode VII is no longer Star Wars: Episode VII! J.J. Abram’s film’s is now Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens, Disney and Lucasfilm just announced!

It was also announced that principal photography has been completed after beginning in May of this year.

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Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens is set to hit theaters Dec. 18, 2015.

The characters (and actors!) of Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), Han Solo (Harrison Ford), Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew) and Princess Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher) will return while new actors include Andy Serkis, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac and Max von Sydow.

Almost Human continues its strong premiere season with its fourth installment, “The Bends.” The titular item is a new drug made from seaweed (and causes a weird green-y algae growth on its overdose victims) that would be wildly popular if it could be processed with a high enough level of purity (shades of Breaking Bad here, without the, you know, cancer and stuff).

Rudy Lom (Mackenzie Crook) goes undercover in this week's Almost Human episode, "The Bends." Courtesy of Fox.
Rudy Lom (Mackenzie Crook) goes undercover in this week’s Almost Human episode, “The Bends.”
Courtesy of Fox.

Lom, Rudy Lom

The episode starts with our intrepid lab geek, Rudy Lom, in some sort of about-to-get-violent situation. It seems as if Rudy is undercover and his cover his blown—he releases a steam vent (handy how those are always around, just at elbow height, in these situations) and runs. His pursuers shoot, one getting him in the arm.

We then get the ’24 Hours Earlier’ super-title (we understand the use of the flash-forward, and it wasn’t done badly here, but it seems to be getting a tad overused in television these days. Just our personal opinion.) and go to Kennex and Dorian, eating lunch (dinner?) at a sushi place. Well, Kennex is eating, Dorian is clearly in a hurry to get someplace (where is never established). After declaring he can’t leave until he has eaten everything on his plate, per Japanese culture, Dorian has the chef serve Kennex some sort of clear-ish, wriggling, still very much alive slug thing (having lived in Japan for two years, we can clearly state that that is NOT something usually served in a Japanese restaurant). Tricked by his own words, Kennex eats it.

Ah, male bonding.

Cut to someone we’ve never seen before, with a nifty phone-in-palm device (why doesn’t EVERYONE have these?? Is it new tech? Is it super expensive? He’s the only one we’ve seen with this!) talking to his wife, who clearly doesn’t know he’s in a obviously-where-crimes-happen alley. After lying through his teeth about where he is, Frank Cooper—we find out that’s his name—meets up clearly-not-good-guys. We quickly discover that he’s there to introduce a new cook to THE drug pin of this city, The Bishop. Apparently there’s 600 liters of raw product just waiting for the next Walter White (sorry, we got our shows mixed for a second); the next cook-extraordinaire to brew up the drug.

But things go wrong when the Bishop finds a subcutaneous wire (another piece of cool tech) on Cooper, and bam, bam, both Cooper and his cook buddy are dead.

We didn't have a picture of the newly deceased friend, but here's Kennex, looking resolved and sad that his friend is dead. Courtesy of Fox.
We didn’t have a picture of the newly deceased friend, but here’s Kennex, looking resolved and sad that his friend is dead.
Courtesy of Fox.

Because All Dirty Cops Keep Incriminating Evidence In Their Trunks, Uh-Doy

The next morning, Kennex and Dorian are called to the crime scene—a dead cop (clearly Cooper), whose car’s trunk his full of illegal drugs, clearly making Cooper out to be a dead, dirty cop. But wait, no, Kennex was buddies with Cooper (of course he was!) and he knows in his gut Cooper wasn’t dirty. Also, Kennex points out, if Cooper was dirty, why wear a wire?

Of course, all those drugs in the trunk  and multiple dead bodies at what is clearly a drug deal gone wrong is enough for Detective Paul (whose sole purpose so far is to be the one guy who doesn’t like Kennex…), who declares Cooper guilty and then pretty much disappears for the next fifteen minutes of air time.

Oh, we also get some new info on the drug, the Bends. It’s highly toxic, and the Bishop is poised to take over the streets with it (a la The Wire; again, we’re not saying this show is breaking new ground, only that its execution is a lot of fun to watch). This is mostly info-dumped by Detective Stahl (Minka Kelly), who seems to be regulated to that quite a bit. Not that she doesn’t do it well, but we wish we’d see a few more women doing some kicking-ass and taking names.

This is Stahl's "I am going to read out loud what the computer is telling me because I have one job in this precinct and I'm going to do it" face.
This is Stahl’s “I am going to read out loud what the computer is telling me because I have one job in this precinct and I’m going to do it” face.

The Case of the Dirty-Or-Just-Mildly-Dusty Cop

Kennex meets with the widow (was it just us or was there some ‘my-best-friend’s-wife-is-the-woman-I-loved subtext going on with Kennex? We never do find out why he and Cooper aren’t friends anymore…). Of course the widow proclaims her husband’s innocence.

Maldonado meets with Captain Barros, Cooper’s commanding officer, who doesn’t want to believe Cooper was dirty either, but admits that Cooper wasn’t assigned to any official undercover work; Barros does say that Cooper was the type of cop to work something on his own. Nonwithstanding, since Cooper’s financials show suspicious activities, Maldonado is going to have to investigate.

The widow tells Kennex that Cooper went up to their cabin the day he died, so that’s where Kennex and Dorian head. It’s already been torn apart, but thanks to the helpful clue from the widow that Cooper was working on the fireplace, Kennex finds the receiver for Cooper’s wire. Unfortunately it doesn’t prove anything in terms of Cooper’s innocence but it does prove that The Bishop was there, which apparently is a big deal since no one knows what Bishop looks like.

Cue the ‘let’s find a new cook and go undercover and get Bishop plan.’ Except they need a cook…and that’s when they bring in Rudy. Who apparently is a bio-tech, cybernetic, computer programming…chemist. Don’t think on that one too much. A geek is a geek, right? Clearly we all have expert levels of knowledge in all fields related to geekdom. There’s probably a Venn diagram somewhere.

Rudy jumps at the chance to go undercover (a great subtle touch, when Kennex is pitching the idea to Rudy, is when Rudy sees his reflection in a tux, a la James Bond, in the metal surface of his instruments). He even has a fedora ready and waiting.

Rudy Lom (again, sorry). But come on, he is rocking that fedora. Courtesy of Fox.
Rudy Lom (again, sorry). But come on, he is rocking that fedora.
Courtesy of Fox.

Time for the “Live Your Cover” Speech

While Detective Paul (who is apparently the undercover expert) drills Rudy, Kennex and Dorian go find a bad guy that can set up a meet with The Bishop.

They find someone relatively easily (Patrick Gallagher of Glee), who agrees to set up the meet after a little kind-of-sort-of blackmail from Kennex.

Rudy holds up under Det. Paul’s grilling, though the fedora gets nixed (though we liked it, Mackenzie Crook can rock a fedora) and the operation is a go—except for one thing. Rudy drinks a nasty liquid (which makes him fart, ha ha bathroom humor) but also turns his whole body into a GPS-locater. It’s in beta, he says, and it’s top-secret.

So, off Rudy goes to his meet, followed by two cockroach-cameras (a lovely bit of tech), where he meets the Bishop and almost blows the whole thing; Dorian has to go in to provide support (but the cover is still intact). Bad guys convinced of Rudy’s nefarious-ness, they agree to take him to the ‘real lab’–but first he has to drink some gross-milky looking liquid—and when he does, his GPS signal cuts off.

The bad guys then take Rudy to the ‘real lab’ after revealing that guy we think is the The Bishop isn’t, in fact, The Bishop. It’s a solid reveal that played out well.

Dorian and the bad guys robot (with head, at this point). Courtesy of Fox.
Dorian and the bad guys robot (with head, at this point).
Courtesy of Fox.

You Dirty Double Crossing Double-Crosser!

Back at the base, Kennex rolls out as soon as Rudy’s signal disappears—but even though no one exited the building, Rudy’s is nowhere to be found; because bad guys, apparently, use sewers. The bad guys and Not-Bishop bring Rudy to a lab and demand he cooks—and he does, creating a product that’s 94% pure.

Meanwhile, back with Kennex, they figure out that the only way the bad guys could have known to have Rudy drink the GPS-signal block juice was if one of the bad guys was a cop. Maldonado puts two and two together, and figures out that Barros is The Bishop.

Sure enough, Rudy (now in a super-secret lab) meets Barros, who asks Rudy how he cooked such a pure form of the drug.

Maldonado called Barros to ‘update’ him, and manages to track the phone to get a location. Kennex and Dorian speed to him.

While Rudy explains how the cooking process is more of an art than a science, the goons are alerted to something-not-right and now we’re back to where we were at the beginning of the episode. Rudy escapes, gets shot in the arm—

And Kennex and Dorian get there. Two henchman are instantly disposed of, then Kennex goes after Barros while Dorian goes at it with Barros’ android, which was a great fight that ends with the bad robot’s (see what we did there?) head getting ripped off his body, spine still attached. Awesome.

Kennex, Lom and Dorian safe and sound after their adventures. Courtesy of Fox.
Kennex, Lom and Dorian safe and sound after their adventures.
Courtesy of Fox.

All Wells That Ends Up at a Cop Bar

Kennex gets Barros, clears Cooper’s name, and he, Dorian and Rudy go out to celebrate—to Kennex’s cop bar, much to his dismay.

Another really good episode. Seriously, if you’re not watching this, you should be. The ratings aren’t great (though the numbers went up this week) and Fox isn’t known for its generosity with freshman shows and middle-ish ratings. So watch it! Tell your friends to watch it! While not perfect (Dorian is supposed to be ‘troubled’ but he seems the saner of the two, for example) it’s still better than most of what’s on TV, and certainly the world and its characters are intriguing enough—and the episodes are doing an excellent job expanding and building the world—that this show could be one with a lot of mileage in it.

Almost Human airs on Fox on Mondays at 8 p.m.

You can catch up on all the episodes so far on Hulu or Fox.com.

Almost Human is rapidly becoming our favorite new show of the 2013 season. Is it groundbreaking? Not really—but what it does it does well, including playing on tropes and concepts that are familiar without making them seem cliché or—worse—lazy.

With episode three, “Are You Receiving?” we get a standard hostage situation (the show continues it’s good-hearted, um, emulation of themes and motifs by pretty much recreating Die Hard in 2048) but the this show is not so much about the what is happening as it is about who it’s happening too, and Karl Urban and Michael Ealy—not to mention the show’s robust ensemble cast which includes veterans Lili Taylor and Mackenzie Crook (Pirates of the Caribbean)—have an endearing chemistry and are well on their way to forging a great TV partnership.

They Give Great Car Conversation

Almost Human's futuristic cityscape. Courtesy of Fox.
Almost Human’s futuristic cityscape. Courtesy of Fox.

The episode starts with Kennex (Urban) going about his morning ablations—including the addition of rubbing some olive oil on his prosthetic leg (a nice nod to episode two), which does, as Dorian (Ealy) had promised, stop the squeaking.

Urban is really captivating as Kennex, giving the gruff-cop-everyman-with-a-heart-of-gold his own personal touch, and he and Ealy have already settled into an appealing back and forth dialogue that feels organic and natural; well written repartee and the chemistry of the two leads lend this show a great deal of its charm.

We go to a large, modern-y business building where a security guard brings a package up to the 25th floor. He flirts with one of the girls—there’s business about a keyed lock versus a bio lock that we thought was going to pay off later but doesn’t—and then he goes back to his desk in the lobby, where he is, sadly, shot by the bad guys. The bad guys then shoot a janitor (bad day to be a minimum wage employee at whatever building this is) and plant a bomb-looking device in the basement. Apparently Fox isn’t too concerned about that whole 8 p.m. time slot, because blood sprayed and everything.

We also learn that the bad guy likes to ask people what their name is before he kills them. You know, because without our manners where would we be?

Back to Kennex, who is being mildly lectured by Dorian about his tardiness in picking up Dorian.

Sidenote: So, apparently, Dorian has an apartment of his own somewhere not in the Police precinct. Which is fine, we just assumed he would just go back to the…lab/basement place or whatever and, you know, hibernate for the night. If he does have an apartment, that was fast. Or maybe there’s a like a robo-hostel for all the cybernetic cops? Now that’s an idea for show!

The two partners engage in some mild ribbing about the use of olive oil and coffee temperature—entertaining, as both actors have solid comedic timing and there is a sense that they genuinely like each other—when a call comes in about a gunshot victim at—you guessed it—our super classy office building.

Kennex (Karl Urban) and Dorian (Michael Ealy) arrive at the scene of the crime Courtesy of Fox.
Kennex (Karl Urban) and Dorian (Michael Ealy) arrive at the scene of the crime
Courtesy of Fox.

They Just Walked Right In and Shot Him

Kennex and Dorian get to the building and Dorian is able to pull a sketchy image of our bad guys going up to the 25th floor from the shattered security system—which means they’re still in the building. As the bad guys have disabled the elevators, Kennex and Dorian start up the stairs.

The bad guys, meanwhile, have rounded up the employees on the 25th floor—including a young-ish girl who was huddled under a desk. Main Bad Guy (Damon Herriman) has a mildly existential monologue about the importance of honesty before hauling her out with the rest of the hostages and telling Bald Henchman to “start now,” resulting in the triggering of the bomb they had set earlier. Kennex and Dorian run out to see a gaping hole where the lobby used to be.

So there’s nothing like an explosion in the business district to get the attention of law enforcement; while Kennex and Dorian still heading up, Stahl (Minka Kelly) and Maldonado (Lili Taylor) connect in through some weird open-air speaker phone that oddly knows when to turn the mute on and off.

Maldonado tells Kennex to not ascend and to stay and assist with the evacuation, leading Kennex to the old fake-static-to-drop-call trick, which leads to one of our top three lines of the night:

Dorian: Did you just hang up on Captain Maldonado?

Kennex: It was a boring conversation, anyway.

Ha. Funny. Well-delivered, both self-aware and situationally appropriate. And an excellent encapsulation in two lines of what makes this show work: yes, it is unashamedly stealing, but it knows it, and you know it, and it’s done well, with just enough tongue-in-check self-awareness mixed with a kind of geeked-out respect.

The guys keep going up, and Maldonado, on the advice of Kennex, jams all communication signals—including Kennex and Ealy’s phones/wifi/whatever it is, leading the Main Bad Guy to pronounce how predictable the police are.

Sidenote: this is where, we admit, we clued into the it’s-not-really-about-the-hostage-it’s-about-the-money ‘twist,’ mostly because that’s almost exactly what both the Die Hard 1 and 3 baddies say at roughly the same point in those movies. So.

Capt. Maldonado (Lili Taylor) talks to her officers via super smart speaker phone. Courtesy of Fox.
Capt. Maldonado (Lili Taylor) talks to her officers via super smart speaker phone. Courtesy of Fox.

Don’t Overthink the Phone Thing

With all of the phone calls not being able to get out, Dorian ends up getting any calls placed in the building bounced to him. After a amusing interchange with a Portuguese woman (where Dorian speaks flawless Portuguese as a woman), they get a call from a women trapped with the gunman (Dorian, answering the call as Kennex, adds a nice bit of humor just as the show get serious).

The caller—Paige—is hiding in a closet with a view of the hostage situation. As she’s talking to Kennex, the bad guys grab a random hostage—Lou–and execute him, throwing his body out of the window, where it lands feet from the mobile police command center. Turning him over, Detective Paul (Michael Irby), he of the I-don’t-like-you-Kennex attitude of last week, finds a note attached to the front of the body demanding: “No Cops, Stay Out.”

Maldonado initiates hostage protocol. And sends a drone with a phone (which somehow works? Why didn’t Kennex have a phone like that??) and gets Lead Bad Guy’s demands (airlift for escape and a fission igniter).

Using facial recognition, Maldonado identifies Lead Bad Guy as Lucas Vincent, a lieutenant in the Holy Reclamation Army (never a good combination of words).

Lucas gives Maldonado a 43 minute deadline or a hostage dies.

Kennex (another top three line) asks Dorian if a fission igniter is as bad as he thinks it is…and it is. It’s a detonator for a mega-ton explosive device (though why they would have a mega ton explosive and not the detonator, we don’t know).

Paige, meanwhile, is pretty close to breaking down. We find out the young-ish girl hiding under the desk earlier is Jenna, her sister, and that Jenna was only there to have lunch with Paige.

Kennex, trying to calm Paige down, tells a story of a near-death experience he had with his father when they were ice-fishing. It works mostly because Urban excels at that gravelly, hero-of-the-day tone. With Paige calmer, and having gleaned some crucial information from her, Kennex and Dorian continue up the stairs.

It's just this guy I shot. No biggie. Courtesy of FOx.
It’s just this guy I shot. No biggie.
Courtesy of FOx.

Just The Igniter, Ma’am

Back at police headquarters, Maldonado can’t get a fission igniter (apparently approval for that is a much higher paygrade), so Rudy Lom (Mackenzie Crook) offers to make a fake one that could pass an initial scan. Maldonado approves it.

Stahl decants a load of exposition; Holy Reclamation Army is an anti-Western religious group known for taking hostages in order to further their political gains, with no qualms at taking life.

Back with Kennex and Dorian, their leisurely trip up the stairs is interrupted with gunfire—two bad guys have spotted them up above. The firefight moves into a deserted office floor, where Dorian takes out one bad guy and the other one, injured, flees.

Kennex comes up to Dorian and discovers Dorian has been injured—a glancing blow to the head. Dorian, who is glitching a little, still manages to discover that their bad guy—originally id’d as Michael Demerais—has a facemaker (it does what it sounds like)—and once disabled, the bad guy is revealed to be Gregor Stone, not a member of the Holy Reclamation Army, just a petty criminal.

He also finds a small red plastic disc with the word “start” on it; but then it becomes obvious that the gunshot has injured Dorian more than he let on—he won’t be able to walk within five minutes.

Dorian wonders why the gang is going through the trouble of faking identities instead of just wearing masks while Kennex has to try to repair Dorian using an old q-tip (ew) and lying through his teeth about the cleanliness of his tools, leading to our third top three lines of the night, Kennex in regards to the bundle of wires/tendons revealed in Dorian’s injury and being unable to find the “magenta one,” tells Dorian “there’s 50 shades of purple in there.” Ha. In fact the whole trying-to-fix-Dorian-scene was classic.

Back at the precinct, Lom is trying to finish the fission igniter while a newer robot watches. He only has four minutes…

Kennex, who has accidently knock Dorian unconscious, talks to Paige in another effort to calm her down. While connecting wires with (used) chewing gum, we learn Kennex’s middle name is Reginald (his father was an Elton John fan, apparently).

ALMOST HUMAN:  Det. John Kennex (Karl Urban, R) assists Dorian (Michael Ealy, L). Cr: Liane Hentscher/FOX
ALMOST HUMAN: Det. John Kennex (Karl Urban, R) assists Dorian (Michael Ealy, L).
Cr: Liane Hentscher/FOX

Phone’s Haven’t Gotten Any Smaller, but the Guns Got Huge

The injured bad guy makes it up the 25th floor to tell Lucas there’s two guys in the building. Lucas tries to bluff with Maldonado to see if they’re cops but she (nicely) calls his bluff and he ends up not knowing—but he still sends three guys to the stairwells with really big guns.

Paige decides she can’t hide out in the closet while her sister is one of the hostages, so she sneaks out when the Bald Henchman’s back was turned and joins the hostages (against Kennex’s advice). She keeps her head though, and manages to plant her phone (with its open line) so that Kennex can hear what happens in the room. She does tell Kennex before she gets off the phone that the bad guys keep going to the window in the corner for some reason.

Lom, the unsung hero of the day, gets the igniter finished and Det. Paul sends it up. Kennex and Dorian, knowing the stairs aren’t safe, are stymied on how to get to the 25th floor.

Lucas gets the igniter and tells Bald Henchman to send ‘the message to the other crew.’  He also says they won’t be taking the igniter—leading Dorian to realize the hostage situation is a decoy.

Kennex and Dorian figure out that the other crew is outside the building, and the red discs are being used as a reflective/point-to-point communication—and the only thing of value nearby is the palladium depot. Where the other crew is, stealing lots and lots of palladium.

Kennex than gets to say “it’s a heist,” a la John McClane in, well, all the Die Hards. Points to Urban for saying it believably and without any McClane mannerisms.

He totally doesn't look anything like John McClane, though.
He totally doesn’t look anything like John McClane, though.

So, It’s Kind of Like Die Hard. Only with Robots.

The bad guys plant a bomb with the hostages (a light bomb), and Kennex realizes the bad guys are going to kill all the hostages. There’s no way for Kennex to get up the floor in time, but Dorian can—by climbing up the elevator cables. They know it’s a suicide mission, but there’s no other option. Dorian goes up the elevator shaft before Kennex can stop him.

Dorian then gets to be pretty bad ass, punching through the air ducts (ah, where would we would be without air ducts??) and taking out four bad guys before Lucas takes Dorian down.

Lucas goes through his ‘what’s your name?’ spiel and, then, just before Lucas can pull the trigger, Kennex—wearing the Facemaker disguising him as one of the gang—comes in and finishes off the rest of the baddies. He grabs the negotiating phone and tells Maldonado to drop the comm jam—the other bad guys were using it to jam the alarm at the palladium depot.

They do so, and the alarm goes off, trapping crew 2 in the vault.

Dorian disables the light bomb, and yay, day saved.

Paige and Jenna meet Kennex face to face and mutual admiration ensues.

"There's like 50 shades of purple in there, man!" Courtesy of Fox.
“There’s like 50 shades of purple in there, man!”
Courtesy of Fox.

He’s not Injured, He’s My Partner

Dorian and Kennex go back to the station, where they are greeted with applause—a far cry from the last week’s sullen muttering—and Kennex, having completed the I-don’t-like-my-partner phase and firmly moving into the he’s-weird-but-he’s-mine odd couple phase, bypasses Lom’s lecture about fixing Dorian with chewing gum and takes Dorian out for noodles. Aw. They’re buddies now!

On the way to the noodle shop, Dorian admits that when the gun was pointed at his head, he discovered he did not want to die.

That’s intriguing. It’s hard to write a world with robots or any type of AI and not have to grapple with the sentient beings versus human technology moral dilemma, and the writers seem to laying the groundwork for this.

The episode ends with Dorian singing (reasonable well) along with Benny and the Jets. And calling Kennex ‘Reginald.’

All in all, a really good episode. Like all great TV, the experience was more than just a sum up of what happened.

Come back next week for more on our favorite odd couple!

Almost Human airs on Fox on Mondays at 8 p.m.

The images are nothing new to us; the world is clearly pulled from the great sci-fi futures of our past; in the opening scenes we see Asimov, Orwell, Philip K Dick, Arthur Clark, William Gibson. We see Blade Runner, Demolition Man, Robocop, Alien and Cameron’s dark tech-noir worlds.

Almost Human promo picture. Courtesy of Fox.
Almost Human promo picture. Courtesy of Fox.

Almost Human does not reinvent the near-future dystopia, with its slums of neon and Chinese ideograms, black markets for tech and drugs not invented yet; nor does it offer a new version of luxury, all glinting silver and glass. It is not a brave new world, perhaps, but it’s certainly a fast-paced, well-developed, well-acted and for the most part well-written world, and if you join J.H. Wyman and J.J. Abrams in their new project—part sci-fi adventure, part buddy-cop comedy, part humanist philosophy essay–you will not be disappointed.

Karl Urban as Det. Kennex and Michael Ealy as Dorian in Fox's Almost Human.
Karl Urban as Det. Kennex and Michael Ealy as Dorian in Fox’s Almost Human.

The pilot and episode two aired in a one-two punch this week, on Sunday and Monday, in an effort by Fox to capitalize on both the after-football audience and the pre-Sleepy Hollow viewers. The move seems to have worked, with the Almost Human pilot pulling in 9.1 million viewers and a 3.1 rating (not the strongest debut this Fall, both Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D and Sleepy Hollow premiered to larger numbers, but still a solid debut); the numbers slipped a little on Monday (episode two: Skins) to a 6.8 million viewership, which was still a 10% bump from the numbers Bones pulled in in the same time slot.

All in all, viewers would do well to tune back in to the show; the pilot, while entertaining, was not as strong as the second episode and things only look to get better from here.

Almost Human follows John Kennex (Karl Urban, Star Trek, Judge Dredd), an LAPD Detective in the year 2048. All detectives are now required to have an android as a partner, but Kennex don’t need no stinking robots, especially since he blames them for the death of his human partner two years prior in a bust gone wrong.

Super sci-fi techno world.
Super sci-fi techno world.

Of course our snarky Kennex has secrets—including visits to a black market doctor to access memories lost to him from his injuries during the ambush—and the other Detectives aren’t entirely thrilled he’s back, except for his Captain (the lovely Lili Taylor, Mystic Pizza, Six Feet Under, The Conjuring)  and Detective Stahl, the computer guru (Minka Kelly, Friday Night Lights, Parenthood).

After throwing his first android partner out of the car (while moving at high speeds), Kennex gets assigned a DRN (or Dorian) model, one that had been discontinued due to its emotional programming making it unstable. Dorian (Michael Ealy, Sleeper Cell, For Colored Girls, Common Law) has the ability for empathy and deductive reasoning, something the new models do not, and through the course of the first episode (with a fairly basic get-the-bad-guy-foil-the-dastardly=plan plot) the two—both outcasts—form a bond.

Not to lie, these two are also an attraction...
Not to lie, these two are also an attraction…

The attraction of this show is not (or at least not yet) the story. The plots are basic procedural whodunits, well written and paced but nothing surprisingly evocative…yet. However, the interaction between Urban and Ealy is engaging and enjoyable—the two already of a steady repartee with genuine chemistry. J.J. Abrams and Wyman have solid experience in making a procedural more than just about the crimes being solved, and Almost Human looks like it could mature into the Fringe successor we’re all waiting for.

What do you think, dear reader? Will you be tuning in next week for more?

Check back next week for our recap! And follow our twitter for live tweeting during the episode!

Geekscape Score: 4/5

Almost Human airs on Fox on Mondays at 8 p.m.

Episodes can be viewed here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ykwxg534yAw

Thats right folks. We have a hard, DAY specific release date for the upcoming 7th film in the saga. That date, announced today is

DECEMBER 18th, 2015!

The official press release is as follows:

With pre-production in full-swing, a confirmed release date of December 18, 2015, has been set for Lucasfilm’s highly anticipated Star Wars: Episode VII.

 

“We’re very excited to share the official 2015 release date for Star Wars: Episode VII, where it will not only anchor the popular holiday filmgoing season but also ensure our extraordinary filmmaking team has the time needed to deliver a sensational picture,” said Alan Horn, chairman of The Walt Disney Studios.

 

Star Wars: Episode VII will be directed by J.J. Abrams (Super 8Mission: Impossible IIIStar Trek) and is being scripted by Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan (Raiders of the Lost ArkThe Empire Strikes BackReturn of the Jedi). Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. Abrams, and Bryan Burk are producing, with Tommy Harper (Mission: Impossible – Ghost ProtocolJack RyanStar Trek Into Darkness) and Jason McGatlin (Tintin,War of the Worlds) serving as executive producers. John Williams is returning to score Star Wars: Episode VII.

 

Shooting is scheduled to begin spring 2014 at Pinewood Studios.

You can color me excited!

Briefly: It’s been rumoured for some time, but now it’s official: J.J. Abrams will not direct the third instalment in the new Star Trek series.

During a Collider interview promoting the Star Trek Into Darkness Blu-Ray release, Abrams let the news drop:

It’s a little bittersweet.  But, I will say that I’m going to be producing the movie.  Whomever it is that directs the film will be someone we all know is going to keep the cast and crew in good hands.  I feel very lucky to have been part of it, and it definitely feels like the right time to let someone come in and do their own thing.  I certainly don’t want someone to come in and try to do what I would have done.  We want to hire someone who’s gonna come in and bring their own sensibility.  I’m very excited to see what comes next, despite feeling jealous of whomever that person is.

So that’s that. I’m sure that some of you will be severely disappointed about the news, while others will be absolutely over the moon (I’m definitely in the former camp). In any case, now that Abrams is out of the picture, who would you like to see step into the director’s chair? On that note, how did you feel about Star Trek Into Darkness?

2013 Winter TCA Tour - Day 3

I don’t think that this has been officially released (meaning that you’re about to watch a low-res, poor quality video), but the first trailer for J.J. Abrams (LOST, Star Trek) and Alfonso Caurón’s (Gravity, Children of Men) NBC pilot Believe has made its way online.

I’m a big fan of both their work, so you better believe that I’ll be watching Believe when it hits NBC. Alfonso Caurón’s Children of Men remains one of the most impressive films that I’ve ever seen, and his upcoming Gravity looks absolutely terrifying. I was also a big fan of LOST, and of course I enjoyed Abrams take on Star Trek. I can’t imagine what we’re in store for with the two working together on this project.

Take a look at the trailer for Believe below (we’ll update with a higher quality version when one is available), and let us know if you’ll be watching the show! The series will premiere midseason on NBC!

Levitation, telekinesis, the ability to control nature, even predict the future… since she was two years old, Bo has had gifts she could neither fully understand nor control. Raised by a small group known as the “True Believers,” the orphaned girl has been safeguarded from harmful outsiders who would use her forces for personal gain. But now that she is 10, her powers have become stronger,

Did you know that they were doing special screenings of J.J. Abrams Star Trek Into Darkness on May15th at 8pm? Well, if seeing the movie before everyone else wasn’t incentive enough, those in attendance will also be receiving a special limited edition print from Paramount, Bad Robot and Gallery 1988.

The origins are simple: reward the most avid IMAX fans with limited edition, collectible prints for select films. IMAX, together with our studio partners, engages some of the most celebrated artists to create unique art that is exclusively for IMAX moviegoers. We will be offering these prints at the earliest IMAX showings to reward those who see it first!

We’re excited and honored to collaborate with Paramount Pictures, Bad Robot and Gallery 1988 to unveil the first edition in the series: a special Star Trek Into Darkness print from artist Mark Englert. Fans attending the 8pm IMAX show on Wednesday, May 15th at participating locations will receive this original print.

trek-imax

When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Star Trek Into Darkness hits theaters May 17, 2013

Source: ComingSoon

 

We’re getting closer to the film’s release date and Paramount Pictures have released another brand new clip from J.J. Abram Star Trek Into Darkness. This new clip titled “I Allow It” features a little chat between Kirk and “John Harrison”.

In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes Star Trek Into Darkness. When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Star Trek Into Darkness hit theaters May 17, 2013

Moviefone has debuted the second full clip from J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek Into Darkness. In this second clip for the film we see Kirk, Spock, Uhura and the crew narrowly escape from a pursuing enemy ship hot on their tails. Check it out below.

In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes Star Trek Into Darkness. When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Star Trek Into Darkness hits theaters May 15, 2013

Source: Moviefone

The first clip from J.J. Abrams Star Trek Into Darkness, which was previously seen in the IMAX preview for the film shown in theaters last December, has made its way online. In the clip we see the crew of the Enterprise attempt to rescue Spock from the interior of an active volcano.

In the wake of a shocking act of terror from within their own organization, the crew of The Enterprise is called back home to Earth. In defiance of regulations and with a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads his crew on a manhunt to capture an unstoppable force of destruction and bring those responsible to justice.

As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Star Trek Into Darkness hits theaters May 15, 2013

Source: AOL

Marketing for Star Trek Into Darkness is now in full force. Following a new poster just two days ago (and a batch of high-res images yesterday), Paramount has released a cool new motion poster for the film. Calling itself a ‘Cinemosaic’, the image is composed of a cool grid of other clips from the film.

Check out the Star Trek Into Darkness cinemosaic below, and let us know what you think! Star Trek Into Darkness flies into theatres on May 17th.

In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes ‘Star Trek Into Darkness.’ When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

 

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Paramount today released a huge batch of images from the wildly anticipated Star Trek Into Darkness. A mixture of stills and behind-the-scenes images, these are sure to excite anyone looking forward to the film.

Check out the images below (click for higher resolution), and let us know what you think! Star Trek Into Darkness opens on May 17th!

star-trek-into-darkness-eve-pegg-urban-pine

star-trek-into-darkness-zoe-saldana2

star-trek-into-darkness-zachary-quinto-volcano

star-trek-into-darkness-zachary-quinto-chris-pine1

star-trek-into-darkness-zachary-quinto1

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In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes ‘Star Trek Into Darkness.’ When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

 

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

2013 is just flying by, isn’t it? It seems like just yesterday that we were celebrating the new year and throwing out our Christmas trees, and now we’re just a month away from some of the biggest movie releases of the year, including Iron Man 3 and Star Trek Into Darkness.

Marketing is in full swing for both films. Yesterday, an intense new clip for Iron Man 3 was released, and today, Paramount unveiled a new poster for Star Trek Into Darkness. This one features Benedict Cumberbatch walking away from a burning city. As expected, it looks pretty badass.

Check out the new poster below, and let us know what you think!

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In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes ‘Star Trek Into Darkness.’ When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

 

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Following the release of the first official poster for the Gavin Hood directed adaptation of the critically acclaimed bestselling sci-fi novel Ender’s Game, the release date of the trailer for the film has also been revealed. The film’s producer Roberto Orci revealed via Twitter:

 


 

With Star Trek Into Darkness hitting theaters on Friday May 17th, there’s a good chance that we may actually see the trailer premiere online earlier in the week.

Paramount has unveiled a brand new international trailer for J.J. Abrams Star Trek Into Darkness featuring plenty of new footage. The trailer also gives us our first look at Peter Weller in the upcoming film.

 

 

Also to go alongside the new trailer for the film, a brand new poster has also been released that you can check out below.

 

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In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes ‘Star Trek Into Darkness.’ When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis.

 

With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

 

Star Trek Into Darkness beams into theaters May 16th, 2013.