Kelley Jones has had a storied career in comics, known for his immediately recognizable take on Batman—those long ears!—and for his penchant for horror.
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Kelley Jones has had a storied career in comics, known for his immediately recognizable take on Batman—those long ears!—and for his penchant for horror.
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There’s a lot you can accomplish with good friends at your side. Spend time together at your favorite hangout? Check. Fix big mistakes as a team? Check.
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While it remains to be seen whether we get a new episode after next week, the next episode of The Flash is shaping up to be quite the big one as the white hot speedster Godspeed returns to cause all kinds of trouble for Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) and his team.
However, while he initially goes to Pied Piper (Andy Mientus) for help, it looks like the changes to the multiverse may land him in an unexpected pickle with his former enemy-turned friend-turned enemy again. Meanwhile, Iris (Candice Patton) begins to plan her escape from the increasingly dangerous Mirrorverse.
“Pay the Piper” – (8:00-9:00 p.m. ET) (TV-PG, LV) (HDTV)
GODSPEED AND PIED PIPER RETURN – When Godspeed returns, Barry (Grant Gustin) turns to Hartley Rathaway (guest star Andy Mientus) for help. However, things get tense quickly after Barry realizes one of the changes from Crisis is that The Flash and Pied Piper are now enemies. Meanwhile, Iris (Candice Patton) tries to escape the Mirrorverse. Amanda Tapping directed the episode written by Jess Carson (#618). Original airdate 5/5/2020.
Matching wits with The Thinker, who by season’s end had harnessed the powers of all twelve bus metas he created, stretched Team Flash to their limits, but with the help of some new allies, Barry Allen (aka The Flash) and company were able to put a stop to the Enlightenment and save Central City once again. However, with the arrival of Barry and Iris’ speedster daughter, Nora, who arrived from the future admitting to having made a “big mistake,” things are anything but status quo. Will parenthood be the challenge that finally slows The Flash down?
The Flash features:
Grant Gustin as Barry Allen/The Flash
Candice Patton as Iris West-Allen
Danielle Panabaker as Caitlin Snow/Killer Frost
Carlos Valdes as Cisco Ramon/Vibe
Hartley Sawyer as Ralph Dibny/Elongated Man
Danielle Nicolet as Cecille Horton
Efrat Dor as Eva McCulloch
Tom Cavanagh as Dr. Harrison Wells
Jesse L. Martin as Detective Joe West
Kayla Compton as Allegra Garcia
Brandon McKnight as Chester P. Runk
Sendhil Ramamurthy as Dr. Ramsey Rosso/Bloodwork
The Flash returns with an all-new episode on May 5
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While being interviewed about playing Catwoman in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises a few years back, Anne Hathaway mentioned that she actually thought she was reading for a different character when she first met the director about a potential part in the film.
Though she didn’t specify at the time, her comments seemed to suggest that it might be Harley Quinn, and the actress has now confirmed as much while telling an amusing anecdote about switching character mid-meeting once she realized her mistake.
“I came in and I had this lovely Vivian Westwood kind of beautiful but mad-tailoring top with stripes going everywhere,” Hathaway told The BBC. “And I wore these flat Joker-ey looking shoes. And I was trying to give Chris these crazy little smiles.” She continued, “About an hour into the meeting he said, ‘Well, I’m sure I don’t have to tell you this, but it’s Catwoman.’ And I was like, ‘Shifting into a different gear. Now ok, we’re slinky. We’re slinky. And I hate my shirt. I love my shirt, but I hate it right now. We’re slinky.’”
Hathaway doesn’t reveal what led her to believe she was up for Harley, but she obviously made a good impression despite the mix-up because she went on to play Selina Kyle to great acclaim.
Of course, Margot Robbie eventually wound up taking on the role of HQ in Suicide Squad, but one can’t help but wonder what Hathaway’s take on the unhinged antihero would look like.
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Michael Rosenbaum is best known for playing the evil Lex Luthor in Smallville, and he debuted in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2017’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2. Playing original Guardian Martinex, a post-credits scene laid the groundwork for a return in the upcoming sequel, but the actor has admitted to ComicBook.com that he had to turn down a similar cameo in The Suicide Squad.
“It was close,” Rosenbaum revealed. “Let’s just say I supposed to be in it, but I had neck surgery and I couldn’t do a role. I couldn’t do the roll because it was too physical at that time, and I couldn’t jeopardize my neck, but there was, there was the role.” Unfortunately, the actor didn’t reveal which member of Task Force X he was eyed for, but is grateful James Gunn considered him.
“I won’t say the role, but there was the role. James is always so gracious and kind and reached out and so I think when the time’s right, look it’s nice when your friends think of you, it’s nice when your friends have a part.”
This isn’t the first time in recent memory we’ve learned that Rosenbaum turned down a big role, as he also refused to return as Superman’s most despicable foe in Crisis on Infinite Earths. That wasn’t due to an injury, however, and was instead blamed on producers offering him a tiny amount of money and no sort of insight into what they wanted him to do in the television crossover.
With no plans for him to appear in The Suicide Squad, Rosenbaum will hopefully be given the opportunity to reunite with Gunn for Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3!
Click HERE for more The Suicide Squad news from CBM!
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Thor: Love and Thunder was supposed to be released next November, but with the COVID-19 pandemic bringing Hollywood to a standstill, it was recently pushed back to 2022. Last week, it shifted again, but is now coming our way a week sooner than expected on February 11th, 2022.
Earlier today, we brought you comments from writer and director Taika Waititi in which he explained why the delay has been beneficial to his creative process. Now, Chris Hemsworth (who has been doing the rounds to promote his new Netflix movie Extraction) has shed some light on what the original plan for the Thor: Ragnarok follow-up was before everything changed.
“[I was] supposed to shoot Thor in a few months, and that’s sort of been put on hold,” he confirmed during a recent interview with ExtraTV. “But that was gonna be in Australia. So I was gonna be in Oz for a while. Now it’s nice just to be home with the kids.”
Thor: Ragnarok was also shot in Australia, so this isn’t overly surprising. It likely means that much of the movie will again be shot on soundstages, but given the fantastical nature of the God of Thunder’s adventures, that was to be expected (it’s not a franchise likely to use many real-life locations).
With any luck, life will soon return to normal and we’ll get to see more from Thor: Love and Thunder once work resumes as planned. We’ll keep you guys updated on that front, but for now, we’ll just have to wait that little bit longer to see Jane Foster become the MCU’s Mighty Thor…
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“Always two there are. No more, no less. A master and an apprentice.”
That’s what Yoda said during Qui-Gon Jinn’s funeral in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, establishing that there can only be two Sith at any one time. Over the years, the waters have been muddied thanks to Darth Maul’s survival, not to mention factions like the Sith Inquisitors and the Knights of Ren.
Disney has tried to explain their existence by revealing that they’re just Dark Side Force users, but things could be about to change thanks to an unexpected reveal in the junior novelisation for Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (unearthed by our friends over at Screen Rant).
As Rey learns while reading an ancient text, the Jedi misinterpreted the Rule of Two; there aren’t just two Sith at any one time, but there are two who rule over the rest.
“The Prime is one, but the Jedi are many,” the exerpt reads. “The Sith were Many but often emerge Ruled by Two. The Seeds of the Jedi have been Sown throughout the Galaxy, on Ossus, Jedha, Xenxiar, and Others. The Sith have no Seeds, since what they Bury does not Grow. They are the Despoilers of Worlds, and have Laid to Waste once Fertile Habitats such as Korriban, Ziost, Ixigul, Asog, and Others.”
This is a smart retcon, and one that explains why there were technically other Sith while the Galaxy was being ruled over by Emperor Palpatine (master) and Darth Vader (apprentice).
What do you guys make of this latest change to the Star Wars Universe?
Click on the “Next” button below to find out the biggest
mistakes Disney have made since taking charge of Star Wars!

It’s become clear that Lucasfilm never really had a game plan for the sequel trilogy and while George Lucas would frequently make things up as he went along, not having an ending in place and relying on three different filmmakers to attempt to craft one cohesive story was never going to work.
However, the fact that J.J. Abrams not only failed to bring Luke, Leia, and Han back together again for one more scene but killed the latter off so early on is downright unforgivable.
It was completely the right decision to move the spotlight to a new trio of heroes rather than, well, an elderly group of adventurers, but it’s hard not to feel robbed that we were never given the opportunity to explore their lives together. To make matters worse, the impact of Han’s death on Luke was barely even touched on in The Last Jedi, and this is one mistake that can now never be undone.

Talking of Luke, it’s not hard to see why Mark Hamill was so disappointed and disillusioned by how the character’s story arc was handled across this trilogy.
With seconds of screentime in The Force Awakens and then the reveal in The Last Jedi that he had gone into hiding after Ben Solo was turned to the Dark Side (rather than, you know, trying to stop Supreme Leader Snoke and the First Order), Luke was depicted as a failure and a far cry from the hero fans had imagined the Jedi Knight becoming in the years following Return of the Jedi.
There is a lot about this that admittedly worked, but a brief Force Ghost appearance in The Rise of Skywalker wasn’t enough to undo the damage that had been dealt to him in the years prior.

Rogue One was a fun ride and Solo is much better than a lot of people give it credit for. But did we really need to learn about the Rebels who stole the Death Star plans or find out that an Imperial officer named the iconic space-smuggler Han “Solo”?
Given the massive creative issues these spinoffs faced behind the scenes (Rogue One went through major third act reshoots, while Solo had a change of directors during production), it’s clear that Lucasfilm struggled to tell these stories and this likely comes as a result of Disney wanting yearly Star Wars movies in theaters.
Unfortunately, the reaction to Solo led to a lot of great sounding spinoffs being scrapped, and the studio seemingly deciding not to further explore this period outside of Disney+. That’s not the right move; instead, they just needed to make better decisions when it came to which stories actually needed to be told.

Nowhere was this particular complaint more relevant than with The Rise of Skywalker. Rian Johnson made a lot of ballsy and divisive decisions in The Last Jedi, some of which worked, while others did not. However, to essentially undo those in a bid to make fans happy with the Skywalker Saga finale backfired on Lucasfilm in a big way.
Everything from Emperor Palpatine’s return to Rose Tico receiving pretty much no screentime felt forced and a way of making the angry, middle-aged fans who spend thousands of dollars a year on merchandise happy.
The focus should have instead been on taking what Johnson did and building on it in order to create a satisfying and cohesive ending that didn’t feel like a completely different movie tacked onto the two that preceded it. Lucasfilm tried to make everyone happy and instead delivered a film which didn’t really work for anyone (hence why it’s the worst-reviewed Star Wars movie to date).

Look, we’re not asking for everything to be spelled out to us, but why would The Force Awakens introduce so many huge mysteries only to never actually explain them in any way? It’s true that the original trilogy didn’t reveal the Emperor’s backstory, but there wasn’t really much need for that and the expectations of moviegoers have changed a lot since he first appeared.
Supreme Leader Snoke has been dismissed as a creation of Palpatine’s but we’ve had no explanation about how that actually worked. The same goes for the iconic villain’s return from the dead, not to mention the origins of the Knights of Ren, a group teased in The Force Awakens, forgotten about in The Last Jedi, and then given seconds of meaningless screentime in The Rise of Skywalker.
In fact, many of these unanswered questions have been addressed in comic books and tie-in novels rather than the movies themselves, a pretty lousy form of storytelling when you think about it.

If Rogue One and Solo proved anything, it’s that Star Wars can work without the endless battle between the Jedi and Sith. However, fans still want to see that lightsaber action, hence why we’ve now learned that Order 66 didn’t really wipe out the Jedi Order. In fact, there were plenty of them left scattered across the Galaxy based on what we’ve seen in the comics, video games, and TV shows.
Not only does this make Luke and Obi-Wan Kenobi significantly less special than we thought, but it dilutes the Force and the importance of the Skywalker family on the battle between the Light and Dark sides of the Force.
We have been introduced to a lot of great characters, and the idea that Darth Vader hunted down the remaining Jedi is one that works, but even the concept of the Sith Inquisitors and Knights of Ren lessens the impact of the Sith and what we thought was the supposedly important “Rule of Two.”

Look, it’s not hard to understand why Lucasfilm decided to do away with the Expanded Universe as the new movies being beholden to decades of novels, video games, and comics would have made no more sense than Marvel Studios attempting to set a future Marvel movie in the same world as the comic books and hoping that non-hardcore fans would be able to follow what’s happening!
While a clean slate was the right move for the new movies, to leave so much of what made Star Wars great from the EU off the table feels like a major mistake on Lucasfilm’s part.
Everything from Darth Revan to Mara Jade and Starkiller being forgotten about feels like a missed opportunity, and when Lucasfilm has attempted to deliver new takes on these concepts and characters, it hasn’t really worked! Again, a little more planning would have helped with this issue as there really are parts of the EU which deserved to live on.

We’ve mentioned things like Supreme Leader Snoke and the Knights of Ren, but a lack of pay-offs really has been plaguing this era of Star Wars stories from the very start.
Darth Maul’s return in Solo has seemingly been forgotten about; Finn spent the entirety of The Rise of Skywalker debating whether to tell Rey that he suddenly has Force powers without us ever getting to see that conversation; the return of Darth Vader’s helmet meant nothing as it was just the Emperor pretending to be him when Kylo Ren communicated with his “grandfather.”
These are just a few examples, but far too many storylines have been set up without any sort of proper resolution and that’s made it hard to get invested in this era of storytelling.

Merchandise has always been a huge part of the Star Wars franchise, but never has that been more apparent than during the period Lucasfilm has been owned by Disney.
C-3PO was given a red arm in The Force Awakens because that would mean people would actually want to buy new toys featuring the iconic droid (the change, meanwhile, was only addressed in a random comic book). Because Kylo Ren’s helmet is a top seller, it was reforged in The Rise of Skywalker even though it’s destruction was a key character moment for the villain in The Last Jedi.
Oh, and do try not to forget those red Sith Troopers in the latest instalment of the trilogy! Disney likes to sell toys, and that means we’ve seen a lot of pointless changes like these.

The story of the Skywalker family spanned nine films but, ultimately, it seems that none of them really managed to bring balance to the Force. Darth Vader killed his Master but a bunch of unnamed Sith loyalists ended up bringing him back from the dead. Luke gave up and hid on an island and Leia just died after reaching out to her son (a sad necessity due to Carrie Fisher’s real-life demise).
The Skywalkers went out with a whimper rather than a bang, and while it was great to see Ben Solo find redemption, having Rey Palpatine declare herself “Rey Skywalker” was all sorts of cringe.
It’s hard to escape the feeling that, really, the Skywalkers are now just a footnote in the history books of this Galaxy and not as important as we were once led to believe. After everything Anakin went through, he didn’t even make a cameo appearance here, and if we do see another Skywalker on screen in the future…well, they’ll probably be a descendent of Emperor Palpatine…
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If you’ve been binging Batman: The Animated Series while staying at home, you may have wondered what it might be like to step into the sc
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