TENET: John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, & Elizabeth Debicki Look Intriuging As Hell In New Stills

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With the three stars behind Warner Bros.’ Tenet , John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, and Elizabeth Debicki, covering the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly, the trade has shared seven new photos from the highly anticipated Christopher Nolan-directed blockbuster.

While the cover story is light on major revelations, EW does exclusively reveal that Washington’s character in the film will be an operative known only as “Protagonist,” which is certainly an intriguing tease and essentially lines up with a lot of the marketing we’ve seen thus far.

Initially slated for a July 17th release, the film was recently moved to July 31st to allow more time for theaters to reopen, but with the coronavirus pandemic still ongoing, it remains to be seen whether the Nolan epic will even be able to make its new date as the studio is already said to be eyeing a potential second move.

The cast is headlined by John David Washington (BlacKkKlansmanBallers), who is joined by Robert Pattinson (The BatmanHarry Potter and the Goblet of Fire), Elizabeth Debicki (Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2), Dimple Kapadia (Dil Chahta Hai; Dil Aashna Hai), Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Avengers: Age of UltronKick-Ass), Clémence Poésy (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows; In Bruges), Himesh Patel (YesterdayAvenue 5), Michael Caine (The Dark Knight; The Prestige), and Kenneth Branagh (Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsMurder on the Orient Express).

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John David Washington is the new Protagonist in Christopher Nolan’s original sci-fi action spectacle “Tenet.”

Armed with only one word—Tenet—and fighting for the survival of the entire world, the Protagonist journeys through a twilight world of international espionage on a mission that will unfold in something beyond real time.

Not time travel. Inversion.

The international cast of “Tenet” also includes Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, Dimple Kapadia, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Clémence Poésy, with Michael Caine and Kenneth Branagh.

Nolan wrote and directed the film, utilizing a mixture of IMAX® and 70mm film to bring the story to the screen. “Tenet” is produced by Emma Thomas and Nolan. Thomas Hayslip served as executive producer.

Nolan’s behind-the-scenes creative team included director of photography Hoyte van Hoytema, production designer Nathan Crowley, editor Jennifer Lame, costume designer Jeffrey Kurland, visual effects supervisor Andrew Jackson, and special effects supervisor Scott Fisher. The score is composed by Ludwig Göransson.

“Tenet” was filmed on location across seven countries.

Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Syncopy Production, a Film by Christopher Nolan, “Tenet.” Warner Bros. Pictures is distributing “Tenet” worldwide and has slated the film for a July 17, 2020 release.



Tenet hits theaters July 31

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MARVEL’S JESSICA JONES: PLAYING WITH FIRE EXCLUSIVE Interview With Writer Lauren Beukes

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2020 has been a very busy and successful year for Marvel and Serial Box. Since the two began their joint effort of releasing audio-books based on the characters and stories from Marvel comics, there have already been three franchise launches.

Things kicked off with Thor: Metal Gods, which we initially reported on earlier this year. Marvel quickly followed that up with their second 2020 Serial Box outing, Black Widow: Bad Blood, which we shared multiple reports on, including our interview with narrator Sarah Natochenny, better known as the voice of Ash Ketchum in Pokemon over the past fifteen years.

The third and most recent release has been Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire. We had the amazing opportunity to speak with a few of the writers who contributed to the series, and last week we shared our chat with Elsa Sjunneson, the creative that was brought on to authenticate the character of Daredevil.

Now, we turn our attention to Lauren Beukes, another writer responsible for Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire. We chatted with her about the character and learned a bit about story as well. Check out what she had to say for yourself below!

Joe: As an author who is well known for writing best-selling novels, how did you initially become involved with Marvel’s audio-comic project, Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire?

Lauren Beukes: I was approached by one of the editors and it sounded hella fun. I love collaborating on projects, whether that’s comics, like our Vertigo original horror, Survivors’ Club, co-created and co-written with my best friend, Dale Halvorsen and artist Ryan Kelly, or animation, running the writers room on the Adventures of Pax Afrika, for example with writers Sarah Lotz and Sam Wilson. Other people’s brains are amazing and when you combine forces with the right team, you make the story richer, more inventive, more surprising.

Joe: Were you familiar with the character of Jessica Jones before becoming involved with this project or did you have to do lengthy research and look to your peers for assistance?

Lauren Beukes: I’d read the original Bendis comics back in the day and I’m a fan of the TV show. We did have some super comic nerds in our writers’ room which helped a lot and of course our Serial Box and Marvel editors who could deep dive on backstory or lesser-known characters for us.

Joe: I understand that this series is connected with the comics version of Jessica rather than the Netflix adaptation. Does Jessica get a visit from her infamous enemy Kilgrave (The Purple Man)?

Lauren Beukes: It’s certainly in her background trauma, which plays a major role in what happens here. But I can’t say more without revealing spoilers.

Joe: In your own words can you share a bit about the story of Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire?

Lauren Beukes: All of us have had traumatic experiences of varying degrees of our own and appreciate the importance of therapy, so we wanted to have Jess seeking out meaningful help, trying to be better. On her therapist’s advice to be kinder to herself, she takes on what looks like an easy case of a missing 20-year-old boy with minor superpowers of his own, working in entertainment at the Hellfire Club, but of course, it’s more than it seems and Jess being Jess, she can’t let it go.

Joe: Is there anything else you would like to share with our readers?

Lauren Beukes: I have a new novel out 28 July, Afterland, set in a post-pandemic world where 99% of the male population have died and Cole is on the run with her 12-year-old son, Miles, from all the people who want to treat him as a valuable commodity.

What do you guys think? Leave your two cents in the comments, and be sure to check out the preview for Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire below!


 

Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Playing with Fire is a 16-episode story you can read OR listen to on your phone and on the web.

In the series launching on Serial Box, Jessica Jones has made an art of ignoring her particular brand of super-powered trauma. But these days, she’s giving the whole “self-care” thing a try. Seeing a therapist, finding healthier coping mechanisms (read: no business-hours drinking), working toward not wanting to punch things all the time. Maybe even taking the occasional case that won’t eat her alive.

A simple missing persons case seems like just the ticket. But when a boy’s body turns up in what looks like a cut-and-dried OD, Jessica can’t let it go and dives headlong into an obsessive search for answers.


Marvel’s Jessica Jones: Playing With Fire episodes #1-5 are currently available with the full 16-episode season costing $9.99. Find it on Google Play

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SNIPER: ASSASSIN’S END EXCLUSIVE Interview With Director And Marvel Comics Artist Kaare Andrews

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Chad Michael Collins and Tom Berenger are back in action in a franchise that has lasted nearly three decades: Sony’s Sniper. Kaare Andrews (Cabin Fever: Patient Zero, Spider-Man: Doctor Octopus) directs the newest installment, taking on the challenge of following up seven prequel films.

Andrews not only directs film and television, but he’s also a big name in the comic book industry. He was the very first recipient of the Shuster Award for Outstanding Artist back in 2005, leading the charge for talents such as Pia Guerra (Y: The Last Man), Fiona Staples (Saga), and Stuart Immonen (Ultimate Spider-Man).

We got the awesome opportunity to chat with Andrews and picked his brain about the new movie. Take a look at what the director had to say about Sniper: Assassin’s End below!

Joe: I’d like to start off by asking you to tell me about Sniper: Assassin’s End in your own words.

Kaare Andrews: The long answer is that when I was a teenager I watched Sniper in 1993 with my friend in his basement. And 27 years later I find myself directing the newest Sniper and it’s strange to have a franchise last that long. There’s like a handful of titles that have lasted thirty years, like Star Wars and Rambo, maybe. I’m a big fan of the genre and I think it is so cool to have a franchise last this long.

Joe: I understand this is the eighth installment in the Sniper series. Which of the prequels did you look to the most for inspiration when directing Assassin’s End?

Kaare Andrews: Well, I watched them all and I tried to see what worked and what didn’t work but I looked to the first Sniper film as my point of reference both for visual vocabulary but also for ideas and aesthetics and character. So I deliberately tried to echo some of the signature elements of that first film, such as a sniper emerging from the ground and bullets flying through the air.

It was fun to come up with our own ways of honoring some of that visual vocabulary, and what I try to do is identify it and expand on it and grow it in a new way. It’s the same way I approach comic books. Like if I’m writing Iron Fist or Spider-Man, I always try to go back to those original stories and try to understand those original concepts and re-honor them. So I’m never interested in re-inventing things, but I’m always interested in re-engaging the core concepts of what made that thing great.

Some of the other Sniper films get very big as far as scale and war goes, but this one is kind of a small story that is character-based circling around a father and a son, so I approached it that way.

Sniper: Assassin's End poster by Kyle Lambert (Stranger Things season 2)

Joe: What was it like to work alongside Chad Michael Collins and Tom Berenger?

Kaare Andrews: Berenger plays his same characters and Chad Michael Collins plays the son that was established a few films back. When you meet Berenger’s character in our film, he’s an older guy living in the woods than who we saw in the first film. And I found it so cool to be a part of a franchise that has lasted this long.

Joe: Did you approach the actors who have been in previous Sniper films differently than the way you directed the rest of the cast due to their familiarity with the material?

Kaare Andrews: I try not to treat actors any different from each other. Tom Berenger and Chad Michael Collins definitely have a bit of a leadership role on set because it’s their franchise and they’ve been doing these films for so long. So you have to honor that but also I try to treat people equally, and everyone was great to work with and up to the challenge. We got very physical in shooting, and there were guns and explosions and everyone was up to the task. We had a really great little ensemble and a nice cadre of actors.

Joe: Which of your previous works helped prepare you the most for this project?

Kaare Andrews: That’s an interesting question. Well, I’ve always been a fan of martial arts. I trained a little bit myself, and I’ve always loved to choreograph and reverse-engineer fights. I’m a fan of martial arts and action movies and MMA and Japanese pop culture and there’s a bit of a nod to that in this film as well.

The film has a lot of overlapping different genres that kind of overlap to create one movie, and I found that interesting that I was the director because naturally I have this weird career overlap and the film itself also reflected this strange cultural overlap.

Joe: Is there anything else you would like to share with our readers?

Kaare Andrews: Take a look at this movie. I think it’s a bit different than you would expect. It’s a genre that is underserved right now, but it is a bit of an overlap of cultural references.

It honors the original franchise but in a new way. It’s not really a military movie as much as it is a film about a father and son and it is no accident that it’s being released around Father’s Day. It’s an interesting installment for a franchise that has lasted thirty years.

Sniper: Assassin’s End is now available. Meanwhile, the Ultimate Sniper Collection is at Wal-Mart, which is a collection of all eight films together for the first time ever.

Check out the trailer and synopsis below and be sure to share your thoughts on Andrews’ comments in the usual spot.


 

Special Ops sniper Brandon Beckett (Chad Michael Collins, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare) is set up as the primary suspect for the murder of a foreign dignitary on the eve of signing a high-profile trade agreement with the United States. Narrowly escaping death, Beckett realizes that there may be a dark operative working within the government, and partners with the only person whom he can trust: his father, legendary sniper Sgt. Thomas Beckett (Golden Globe®-winner Tom Berenger).
Both Becketts are on the run from the CIA, Russian mercenaries and Lady Death, a Yakuza-trained assassin (Japanese actress and singer Sayaka Akimoto in her Hollywood film debut) with sniper skills that rival both legendary sharpshooters.


Sniper: Assassin’s End is now available on Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital.

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X-MEN: FIRST CLASS Star Kevin Bacon Shares Reaction To GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY References

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Guardians of the Galaxy included a lot of great Pop Culture references, but Star-Lord’s love of both Kevin Bacon and Footloose (which he deems the greatest movie ever made) really resonated with fans. There’s been an expectation that the actor will actually end up making a cameo appearance in the Marvel Cinematic Universe at some point, especially after working with James Gunn on Super. 

Time will tell whether that’s something we see in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (surely Peter Quill tracked down Bacon while he was back on Earth in Avengers: Endgame?), but during a recent interview with ComicBook.com, the X-Men: First Class star shared his thoughts on those references.

“Well, I mean, there was the mention in Guardians which I thought was pretty amazing,” he explained. “I didn’t really know anything about it and then I went and sat in the movie theater and somebody just said to me, ‘Have you seen that movie yet?’ I said, ‘No, I’m going but I haven’t seen it yet.’ I’m sitting in the movie theater and I’m thinking, ‘Wow, that’s some shout out!'”

Those mentions in Guardians of the Galaxy and Avengers: Infinity War have certainly helped cement Bacon as one of those iconic actors, and while he’s flown under the radar in many ways these past few years, another big blockbuster role feels like it could be around the corner for him (just look at the resurgence of Keanu Reeves following the release of John Wick). 

Regardless, Bacon will always have a fan in Star-Lord, and that’s not pretty damn awesome…

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