Thursday, June 30, 2022

Guardians of the Galaxy #13-18

Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #13





A NEW AGE OF SPACE STARTS HERE! They were soldiers, misfits, mercenaries, thieves and a family. They were heroes… but times have changed. The galaxy no longer needs heroes. It needs super heroes! Now, when the call goes forth - whether it's from a stranded team of planetary explorers or Emperor Hulkling and his Kree/Skrull Alliance - the Guardians of the Galaxy answer! The New Age of Space brings a new artist! New headquarters! New costumes! New teammates! And an all-new enemy you'll have to see to believe! Get on board, true believer - it's going to be the ride of your life!



Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #14




A WHOLE GALAXY OF TROUBLE! As half the team defends the Kree/Skrull Throneworld against a deadlier threat than they've ever faced before...the other half investigates a terrifying sacrificial cult on a mysterious planet...with the power to plunge the universe into war. Plus: A new space hero…joins…the team…


Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #15





GUARDIANS VS. S.W.O.R.D.! In the wake of the Snarkwar and reeling from revelations of their own, the Guardians come face-to-face with the S.W.O.R.D. station crew......including their Quiet Council liaison-Magneto! And he's not known for friendly chats...It's the Human Rocket versus the Master of Magnetism-and it's winner take all!


Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #16




THE LAST ANNIHILATION STARTS HERE! The entire galaxy is under attack, the likes of which haven’t been seen since Annihilus first waged war. Now, five different planets are simultaneously under threat from a mysterious foe. This is what the new Guardians were built to do. But will it be too much? This summer... the war to end all wars begins. And not everyone’s going to come home.


Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #17





THE LAST ANNIHILATION RAGES ON! The Guardians are scattered to save five different planets - but it's already too late for Chitauri Prime. Why those five? What are the true plans of the mysterious enemy targeting our universe? Only DOCTOR DOOM knows...but with the entire Chitauri species out for his blood, he might not survive to stop them!


Guardians of the Galaxy (2020) #18





THE LAST ANNIHILATION CONCLUDES! The Guardians and their allies are being overrun on all fronts by the Mindless Armies of Dormammu. There’s only one hope for the galaxy as we know it. ROCKET RACCOON has a plan. All he needs to know is Dormammu’s weak spot. Dormammu doesn’t have a weak spot. Uh-oh.

Obi-Wan Kenobi S1 Ep 1


Obi-Wan Kenobi S1 Ep 1


from We Are The Mighty: https://www.wearethemighty.com/articles/star-wars-obi-wan-kenobi-episode-1-recap/

Shannon Corbeil
June 03, 2022 

The highly anticipated return of Ewan McGregor’s Obi-Wan Kenobi gave us just enough prequel nostalgia and original trilogy foreshadowing to make for a great little Star Wars treat. Set ten years after the events of Revenge of the Sith, the story begins where A New Hope did: on Tatooine. But “Ben” isn’t the only Force-user on the planet…

It’s important to remember that not only did Obi-Wan fail his padawan and friend Anakin, but the entire Jedi Order failed — and fell at the hands of Emperor Palpatine and Order 66. What few Jedi survived are scattered across the galaxy and hunted by the Empire’s Inquisitors — who arrive on Tatooine to investigate rumors of a Jedi.

When the man in question, Nari, comes to Obi-Wan for help, it is Ben who he meets — and Ben is living with his traumas and his lightsabers buried in a box beneath the desert sands. His focus is on his own day to day doldrums and keeping a watch over Luke from afar — but not far enough for Uncle Owen’s taste. Obi-Wan refuses to help, and later sees Nari strung up dead by the Inquisitors. In meeting them, we learn that one in particular, Third Sister, also known as Reva (played by Moses Ingram), has an additional vendetta — she wants to find Kenobi to please Darth Vader. She had also been a Jedi Knight before turning to the Dark Side and serving the Empire, so it’s possible she has personal history with Obi-Wan.



In a delightful surprise, the series leaves Obi-Wan and Luke on Tatooine and follows instead the other Skywalker twin. Princess Leia Organa, played by the lively Vivien Lyra Blair, is kidnapped by pirates working for Reva, who intends to draw Kenobi out of hiding. The young Leia is clever, headstrong, insightful, and untamed — a perfect and believable mix of her parents.

Her mother and father (with Jimmy Smits reprising his role as Bail Organa) call upon Obi-Wan to help them find her. After initially resisting, and claiming he’s not the man he was before, finally he decides to follow the princess’ trail to a new type of hive of scum and villainy — the planet of Daiyu.

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Stranger Things S4 Ep 1: The Hellfire Club

Stranger Things S4 Ep 1: The Hellfire Club




from Showsnob: https://showsnob.com/2022/05/31/stranger-things-season-4-episode-1-recap/

by Colin Gaughan

As the gang is finishing all their tasks before a week of spring break, new threats show their ugly faces in the first episode of Stranger Things season 4.

After what feels like a lifetime, Stranger Things season 4 kicks off with a man receiving the newspaper, solving a crossword puzzle in under a minute, and then getting dressed. It ends up being revealed that this is Martin Brenner, the man in charge of Hawkins Laboratory.

The date is September 8th, 1979 (four years before Will was taken into the upside-down). At the lab, all of the children who were being tested (like Eleven) are showcasing their powers in the rec room.


Brenner chooses a young boy who has a 010 on his arm and takes him to do more lessons. Here, the bad doctor tests Ten to the point where the child’s emotions are becoming unstable.

He is able to see that several people in the facility are now dead. In the middle of the lesson, the sirens start going off as chaos ensues in the hallways.

Brenner investigates to find death and blood surrounding the hallways and rooms with a prepubescent Eleven standing alone.
Stranger Things season 4 episode 1: Eleven writes to Mike

Eleven writes a letter to Mike explaining how things are going in California. Joyce has a job working from home as a saleswoman, Jonathan has become a stoner with his friend Argyle, and Will has picked up painting but does not show anyone his artwork.

Eleven remarks that Will has been acting a bit strange lately, but she thinks that’s because he has a crush on someone. She talks about how she is making friends when in reality she is being bullied by her Californian peers.

Dustin is still with Suzie from summer camp. Since she is a whiz with computers, she penitently hacks into Hawkin’s school records to change Dustin’s language grade from a D- to an A-.


At the basketball rally, Robin is in the band, Lucas is on the basketball team, while Dustin, Mike, and Max watch in the stands. The basketball team captain gives a speech about using the town tragedy to motivate his team to win the semi-finals of their tournament game.

They win which means the next game is tonight. Since Mike and Dustin have a D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) campaign that same evening, they are upset by this news since Lucas has to be there to close out their latest campaign with their friend Eddie.

Lucas pleads with them to change the night of the campaign and attend his game. In California, Eleven who goes by the name Jane, gives her presentation about her hero, Jim Hopper, that gets laughed at by her classmates.

Will tries to help out his friend and tells her that the presentation was not that bad but El reminds him “friends don’t lie” and walks away.
Stranger Things season 4 episode 1: Max notices something off

While walking to her appointment with the school counselor, Max notices the head cheerleader, Chrissy, is upset leaving the office. During her own talk, the counselor talks about Max’s poor grades and upsetting family life after the death of her brother Billy.

Max is clearly reserved and lying to her counselor because of her ongoing trauma from the events of the mall. After her meeting, Lucas invites Max to his game, but this only sets her off some more.

Max’s defenses are stronger than the Iron Curtain and she returns the ticket to her ex-boyfriend. She then finds Chrissy throwing up in the bathroom.

She offers to check in on her, but Chrissy tells her to go away. After Max leaves, Chrissy has visions of her mom abusing her, only to find out it was all in her head.

At lunch, Mike and Dustin try to convince their dungeon master Eddie Munson to postpone the campaign since Lucas will not be around. The rest of the group is appalled as Eddie goes on a monologue about how Mike and Dustin need to find some new folks to play with them just like he did with them a couple of years ago.

Back at home, Joyce receives a mysterious package with a bunch of Russian stamps on it. She opens it up to find a porcelain doll inside.

When she calls Murray Bauman to get his wider knowledge on the subject, they discover a crack on the doll. Murray believes there could be a dangerous weapon inside the porcelain Russian doll.

Jonathan is stressed during woodshop, so his friend Argyle talks to him. This parallels with Nancy working as the editor of the Hawkins school newspaper, who is also very stressed.

They both explain to their friends the numerous reasons why they are unable to see each other but why they still love each other very much. Both lovers are saying hollow statements but state that their relationship is perfect, even though they are not seeing each other.
Stranger Things season 4 episode 1: Mike and Dustin need a replacement

Mike and Dustin struggle to find a new member for their D&D campaign when suddenly Dustin has the brilliant idea to talk to some middle schoolers. Here, they find Erica ready and willing to play.

Chrissy walks into the woods behind the high school, still having menacing and scary visions. In these woods, however, she finds Eddie there waiting to sell her some weed.

The two chat, laugh and bond after spending years on opposite sides of the clique spectrum, proving how they have more in common than their friends and appearances. In the end, though, Chrissy asks for something stronger than weed.

Eleven is still struggling with school, both academically and socially as she is continually bullied by Angela, the same girl who gave her a hard time in class. El is fed up and tries using her powers on the cruel bullies.

But her powers are still not working since the mall and losing Hopper. While breaking the porcelain Russian doll, Joyce finds a letter inside.

In this letter, all that can be easily made out is “Hop is alive” which is all the single mother needs to hear to be filled with relief among many other emotions.


That night, the basketball game and the D&D quest are paralleled as they both build-up to a crescendo-inducing huddle on the court and at the table. On the first attempts, both the team captain and Dustin miss their shots.

But when it’s Erica’s turn to roll along with her brother Lucas getting the rebound, they both win for their respective teams.
Stranger Things season 4 episode 1: The monster reveals itself

In the parking lot, Lucas sees his friends and sister celebrating their victory. He’s clearly feeling left out since he chose basketball over his friends.

Max is home feeding her dog outside when she notices Chrissy going into Eddie’s home. In the home, Chrissy is looking for “special K” which Eddie goes searching for since he misplaced it.

As she waits, her visions come back, and she hallucinates her family in a very horrific manner. She becomes locked in her own mind and cannot escape.

When Eddie returns to give her the drugs he finds the cheerleader with glossy eyes, unresponsive, but standing upright. An evil voice is chasing after Chrissy in her visions before a humanoid and slimy monster approaches her and tells her that her suffering can now end.

The monster puts his gruesome hand over Chrissy’s face leading to her to float to the ceiling of Eddie’s home. He watches in horror as she is crunched to death by the unseen monster.

Detective Comics #1006-1011

DETECTIVE COMICS #1006





Detective Jim Corrigan has been shot on the streets of Gotham City—and the Spectre must reach out to Batman to help him find the secret assassin!

DETECTIVE COMICS #1007






“The Spectre: Dead on Arrival” finale! In all of Gotham City, there’s only one life Batman would be willing to risk to save Jim Corrigan and the Spectre: his own!

DETECTIVE COMICS #1008






The Joker returns to Gotham City! The Joker is through working with the Legion of Doom, and he wants to get back to his roots: giving Batman absolute hell! The Clown Prince of Crime comes back with a bang—and he’s not about to take prisoners! As if that weren’t enough, Lex Luthor delivers the cure for Mr. Freeze’s beloved wife, Nora, freeing her from cryo-stasis at last! But something else is very, very wrong with Nora...

DETECTIVE COMICS #1009






“Take Your Shot” begins! Deadshot has returned to Gotham City following a long stint with the Suicide Squad, and Batman fears that without the oversight of AmandaWaller, Floyd Lawton will go back to his old ways. Meanwhile, after taking Lex Luthor’s offer, Mr. Freeze begins taking action to get exactly what he wants and killing anyone who stands in his way.

DETECTIVE COMICS #1010






In part two of “Take Your Shot,” Batman confronts Deadshot only to learn he’s come to Gotham City to enlist the skills of the World’s Greatest Detective! Can the two of them work together—or will their opposing ideologies get the best of them?

DETECTIVE COMICS #1011






In order to carry out his contract and get what he’s owed, Deadshot must kill Lucius Fox. Batman isn’t about to let that happen, but without the use of lethal force, does he stand a chance against Deadshot? Plus, Mr. Freeze sets the last piece of his “Year of the Villain” master plan in motion!




Tuesday, June 28, 2022

The Offer S1 Ep 4: The Right Shade of Yellow

What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

The Offer S1 Ep 4:
The Right Shade of Yellow




from Ready Steady Cut: https://readysteadycut.com/2022/05/05/the-offer-season-1-episode-4-recap-the-right-shade-of-yellow/

The first three episodes of The Offer had a lot going on. First, Albert made quite a few moves, from getting Head of Paramount Matthew Goode to make him a producer to getting the mafia to let him make The Godfather. Then, at the end of episode three, we saw the introduction to “Crazy” Joe Gallo, who got paroled and looks to throw a wrench in Joe Colombo’s plans. So will The Godfather finally start production? Let’s dive in.

Love Story is debuting to massive success for Paramount. Albert and Francoise come back from the film’s premiere and have a HUGE argument. Francoise says they shouldn’t have been there and nobody cared that Albert was there. The duo has a huge back and forth with a bunch of insults. Who didn’t see this coming?

Next, Robert arrives at a diner with cheers for the hit of Love Story, where he meets with Albert for lunch. Robert lets him know not to bring his bad vibes to his premiere. Albert lets him know that Brando is in on the film, but Robert says he isn’t worth the hassle. Albert brings up Pacino again and Robert shuts him down AGAIN.


They call me burned out Brando – Marlon Brando

Bettye lets Albert know that Robert didn’t say no about Brando and they all head to meet with him. The meeting goes about as you would expect. Brando is an interesting character as he informs them he wants the role to p**s off Sinatra. Brando transforms as the Don in front of their eyes and Francis freaks out. I will be interested to find out what people think of Justin Chambers as Marlon Brando and how accurate this portrayal is.

Sinatra calls out Joe Colombo to this reporter about how he needs to shut down The Godfather. Next, we move to Francoise and Albert in couples counseling. She is frustrated with the fact that he won’t open up. Albert struggles with expressing his emotions but lays down that he doesn’t want to produce with her anymore. He wants to be able to produce the film on his own. She appreciates his honesty and says okay.

Colombo’s team shows up to give Gallo some money and he lets them know he doesn’t want his charity. I love this scene as Gallo seems to be the real deal and truly goes to come in between Colombo and the family. Finally, we see Johnny Russo, a former boyfriend of Bettye’s friend, arrive and hand in a film tape of him auditioning for Albert to cast him in The Godfather. They get a call from the owner of the location saying they are backing out of their deal. Albert is starting to wonder if anything will go well in this film. Everything seems to be trending in the wrong direction.

Colombo sees the paper where Sinatra blasts him and isn’t happy. Colombo knew what he was doing with Gallo, hoping he would do something stupid to take him out. I loved this little banter here, showed that Colombo isn’t as dumb as they have made him out to be.

As Francis flies to New York to confront Charles to show him auditions, we have a great setup. As we see this happen, Robert is sitting down with Albert to watch the tape as the phone rings. It’s Charles and Robert is NOT happy. Charles LOVES the Brando tape and wants him in as Don in The Godfather. They get the approval needed, but Robert gives a stern warning never to go behind his back again.

The councilman is announcing that he is holding everyone accountable who helps make The Godfather. Charles is not thrilled and Barry is trying to break down why they need to take over the film. Next, we see Robert sitting down with Brando for lunch and asking him to play nice while filming. Brando isn’t thrilled with Robert’s suggestions.

Brando’s agent calls to tell them he wants 100 grand a week with a five-week minimum. Albert fights back, lets them know they will cast someone else, and hangs up. Francis freaks out, but Albert knows that Brando needs this more than anything. His agent calls back and informs him that they will take the deal.

As everyone arrives in New York, Sonny, someone Albert hired to help with the film, comes to let him know that he needs to be careful with Colombo. He lets him know that Joe Gallo is out of jail and that he will go after Colombo and possibly his film. Finally, we intertwine the mafia’s dealings with Albert and the making of the film. Francoise shows up in New York to let him know she is going to Paris. She wants to be with him, all of him, but he can’t give that to her. I am never happy to see a pair break up, BUT THANK GOD SHE IS GONE.

Within this moment, the show reminds us that this project has more meaning to Albert than a girlfriend that got away or even being threatened daily by the mafia and the network. Some excellent writing has finally elevated this show to the level I was hoping it would go.

The ending of “The Right Shade of Yellow”

Brando has signed on and Albert wants to celebrate, but Joe Colombo has arrived to talk to Albert before he can. Colombo puts a pin on Albert, and as he does, Albert lets him know that he will help him with Sinatra by cutting down on the role he thinks is about him in the movie. Next, Charles meets with Albert to let him know that they want to add another producer. Again, Albert reiterates that he is the sole producer and he won’t be adding anyone to the table. 
Damn fine scene from Miles Teller here.

We’ve got a movie, everyone, and it is time to celebrate. Just kidding, the mafia henchmen show up to pick up Albert to take him to Colombo. We found out earlier that the house owner backed out of the deal and wouldn’t let them use it. Albert arrives to see Colombo and they walk into the house and the owner is tied up. He freaks out (internally). Albert now understands that he may have made a deal with the devil.

As he returned the dinner, only Bettye was there to welcome him back. Albert breaks down what just happened. I want to stop right here for a minute and remind you that this man would never tell Francoise anything, but with Bettye, he is an open book. Bettye lets him know that Charles is expecting her at the racetracks the next day and Albert needs to show up and make a move. He wants Charles to back Francis in casting Al Pacino as Michael, again going behind Robert’s back, and Charles agrees.

Robert is preparing for the Emmys and gets the call that Pacino is in the role of Michael. Robert is PISSED and said that James Caan would be Sonny since that happened, which Francis is not happy has happened. After they get off the phone, Albert lets Francis know that he has gone to bat for him twice now and needs to help him out with this one.

They go to meet with Pacino to let him know they are casting him as Michael and he tells them he took a deal with MGM for another movie. Pacino leaves, and Albert is not happy at all. He discusses everything going down with his casting and how the film is imploding with Andrea. The moment leads to her breaking down Albert’s love of the film and only the people that GET that love are the ones that will understand why he is going the extra mile (this leads to them sleeping together). Albert leaves her and takes a casual walk down the street, and as he lights a cigarette, he sees his reflection in a storefront and the credits roll.

Monday, June 27, 2022

Westworld S4 Ep 1: The Auguries

Westworld S4 Ep 1: The Auguries




from EW: https://ew.com/tv/recaps/westworld-season-4-episode-1/

By Ashley Boucher
June 26, 2022 at 10:01 PM EDT


Anyone else been stuck in a time loop since March 2020? No, not because of the pandemic, but because that was the last time a new season of Westworld graced our TV screens. I can't tell if I've been questioning my reality since then because of quarantine and all the COVID-19-related trauma we've all been subject to over the last two years, or because of this confusing show that just keeps getting more confusing.

Well, it's time for eight more weeks of head-scratching, and I'll be right there with you to (try to???) make sense of it all. Let's dive into the season 4 premiere, shall we?

"The Auguries" starts out with William (Ed Harris) angling to buy up some land that no one is quite sure why he'd want to buy. He and a businessman start throwing around words like "fungible," and my eyes immediately glaze over. Soon William explains what he's after: Eight years ago, a certain someone stole something of his that he wants back. But he doesn't want it disturbed, so he's ready to buy the whole damn plot. When the businessman tells him it's not for sale, he delivers this hell of a one-liner: "This is America, everything's for sale."

The guy refuses, despite William's threats, and returns home to find a horde of buzzing flies in his walk-in closet. I think I've seen this film before, and I don't think he's gonna like the ending. He wakes up in a daze, walks to the office, and stabs his colleagues to death — seemingly not of his own volition. He then meets William and hands over the world's thinnest iPad, which presumably includes what William was after. He asks if his work is done, William says yes, he can rest now, and the guy walks away as he slits his own throat. WOWZA. That was only the first 10 minutes.

After the credits roll, we see Evan Rachel Wood waking up in bed — eerily similar to when we first met her back in season 1 as sweet ol' Dolores. But she's not Dolores; she's Christina, who Wood recently described to EW as "a loner nerdy kind of writer that's just trying to make it in the big city." After she gets ready for the day, her roommate (Ariana DeBose) asks for help deciding which shoes to wear to some event they have later — white or black? When Christina says either pair would look great, her roomie insists: "Pick a side, Chrissy." She fleetingly points to the white pair. (That seems like foreshadowing, or a callback, or both.)

We find out that Christina — who apparently doesn't do anything but work and sit around at home — works for a video game company called Olympiad Entertainment, where she writes storylines for background characters. But she's in trouble because all her story pitches are too sweet. Where's the sex and violence, her boss asks. Perhaps she went through too much of that in another life. She's also getting spam calls from an unknown male voice begging her to stop playing her "game" with him. It's ruining his life. It's unclear if Christina knows what he's talking about.

Cut to Maeve (Thandiwe Newton) meditating (?) in a snow-covered cabin in the woods. She's having flashbacks — her daughter, Caleb (Aaron Paul) bleeding out, general destruction — and ends up not only busting her radio, but blowing the whole mountain town's power. For f---'s sake, indeed.

Speaking of Caleb, there he is, at the top of a building, workin' away. We learn that all the robots who shared his construction job have been reduced to scrap metal. His co-worker is skeptical that the riots resulted in any actual change, and as he perches high atop the building, it seems maybe Caleb is starting to agree. (My legs turn to jelly just watching him sit that high up.) We also learn he has a wife and a 7-year-old daughter whose No. 1 hobby is shooting cans in the yard. Caleb seems to be dealing with some PTSD — whether it's from his military days or the events of season 3 is unclear. As he's tucking his daughter in for the night, he hears a noise outside and immediately runs for his gun… which disturbs his wife, who worries that he's rubbing off on their daughter, Frankie, who she caught keeping a toy gun under her pillow.

Turns out Maeve's little power outage caused a commotion, and a band of bad guys show up at her door. But she's badass as ever, and gruesomely kills them all — though I have to say I was not prepared to watch a severed head get tossed in the sink. It's pretty gross, but she hooks herself up to the leader's memory after cutting his head open. Who does she see in there? William. He must've sent the thugs?

Later, Christina meets that unknown caller. His name is Peter, and he intercepts her in front of her apartment as she's walking home from a blind date. Peter insists that Christina his ruining several peoples' lives, his included. "Why are you doing this to us?" he asks, before pulling a knife on her. He misses her throat but slices her forearm before a mysterious man pulls him off her and disappears into the night. Christina wakes up the next morning — in that familiar loop — to another call from Peter. He seems to believe that the stories she writes for her video games are coming true in real life — because he is a character in one of those games. He asks her to remember how she wrote his ending… and just as she realizes what's happening, looks up to see him jump off a building. "Is this up to me, or did you write this too?" were his last words.

It turns out Caleb was right to reach for his gun earlier. Frankie wanders outside to retrieve Bear Bear, her stuffie she accidentally dropped out the window, and meets a very creepy man who asks to talk to her dad. As Caleb walks out to take out the trash, he realizes what's going on and dives to protect Frankie just as the man shoots. But before the intruder can harm them, a sword is shoved right through him, courtesy of Maeve. "Hello, darling," she greets Caleb. She explains that William sent those men after them. Caleb tearily tells his wife he has to leave to keep them safe. So we at least know how Caleb and Maeve are starting off the season — they're heading to California to intercept William's men as they hunt their next victim.

We end with Christina on her balcony thinking out a new pitch, one with a happy ending. But no one wants to hear that kind of story, she reminds herself, as an orchestral Lana Del Rey song plays. As she steps back inside, the camera pans to the dark sidewalk, where a shadowy figure steps into the light. A shadowy figure that looks just like that mystery man who saved her from Peter's knife. I think we can all guess who this is… Yep, it's Teddy! Or at least, James Marsden. Who knows who he's playing in this new season 4 game.

Sunday, June 26, 2022

Yellowstone S1 Ep 6: The Remembering

What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

Yellowstone S1 Ep 6: The Remembering





from Showbiz Junkies: https://www.showbizjunkies.com/tv/yellowstone-season-1-episode-6-recap/

By Rebecca Murray
-August 1, 2018


Season one episode six of Paramount Network’s Yellowstone begins with a quiet, peaceful scene between Kayce (Luke Grimes) and the horse he gifted his father. The ranch is still at rest as Kayce rides out on the horse toward the forest and hills.

When they stop for a drink at a stream, the horse senses danger and runs, leaving Kayce to face a massive, hungry bear. Kayce, unarmed, makes himself as large and loud as possible. He whispers a quick sorry to his son, believing he’s about to be killed. He then screams at the bear just as a shot rings out, chasing the creature away.

It turns out Rip (Cole Hauser) has followed Kayce and was able to thwart the attack. Kayce isn’t about to thank his rescuer, and the bad blood between the two is evident. A fistfight breaks out and Kayce receives more blows than he delivers. Rip rides away, taunting Kayce that he doesn’t know what real work is.

At the Yellowstone ranch, John Dutton (Kevin Costner) greets Monica (Kelsey Asbille) and Tate (Brecken Merrill), handing Monica a cup of coffee. He’s obviously attempting to do what he can to get Monica on his side. John’s determined to have Kayce and his family remain at the ranch. Monica wonders why his cowboys allow themselves to be branded, and John explains it’s a way for the men who’ve been in trouble to signify they deserve a second chance. She wonders if that’s why Kayce was branded.

Tate interrupts their talk and John sends him off to grab a huge donut. Monica won’t let the subject go, and she believes she deserves to know what’s happened to John and Kayce’s father-son relationship. John admits it was because he told Kayce to not marry Monica and instead make her have an abortion. Kayce refused and John physically branded his own son.

Monica, upset, thanks him for his honesty.

Over at the big house, Tate’s staring at a plate of donuts trying to decide which is the biggest. John helps him spot the biggest one, assuring Tate he can do whatever he wants at the ranch. John stares at Tate, lost in thought as the young boy eats.

Meanwhile, Thomas Rainwater (Gil Birmingham) and his team are looking over land for sale. He’s trying to find a plot that borders John’s Yellowstone ranch. He’s informed there’s no power on the lots he’s interested in. Plus, John rerouted the water to ruin Dan Jenkins’ development plans, so there’s no water source available.

It will cost about $15-20 million to get water there, but Thomas doesn’t care. He wants to buy up all the lots available.

Elsewhere, after the traumatic bonding moment from episode five in which Beth (Kelly Reilly) threatened to kill herself while Jamie (Wes Bentley) drove her home from a bar, the siblings head into a meeting together. The atmosphere between the two is only slightly less toxic than usual.

Jamie and Beth meet with Governor Lynelle Perry (Wendy Moniz) to go over their political plans. They want Jamie to run as an Independent, but Jamie’s not sure that’s smart. Perry says he’ll run unopposed and he’ll be the swing vote, which works out perfectly for everyone.

Beth is her usual sarcastic, ruthless self during the meeting, and Lynelle sends everyone out of the room for a little one-on-one time. Although Lynelle does a good job of putting Beth in her place, Beth doesn’t stay down long. Beth threatens to ruin the Governor’s career if she ever sleeps with her father again.

The Governor’s next one-on-one is with Jamie. She asks about John’s cancer, and Jamie’s taken completely by surprise. He’s unaware his father’s sick and the Governor reveals she learned the news from cattlemen, including one whose son is a neurologist. Jamie breaks off the meeting and rushes from the room.

Back out in the field, Rip is with the horses when Kayce catches up with him. Rip reminds him he made a choice to leave the ranch and should stand by that. Rip admits he’s tired of burying Kayce’s secrets.

After Rip rides off, Kayce picks up the folder he left behind. It’s the one that contains the autopsy report on Monica’s brother.

The Governor knows Beth can’t be controlled and thinks John is making bad decisions. She doesn’t want to consider Beth for any office, and the current Attorney General warns her that trying to replace John as the Livestock Commissioner will only create a new batch of enemies. Plus, she’ll lose voters. She’s not convinced, and they brainstorm over who to support rather than John Dutton.

Tate tells his mom he really wants to move to the ranch, saying their own home “sucks balls.” Monica’s taken aback, and he assures her he learned it at school. He tries to get out of going to school by warning her he’ll probably learn a new cuss word there today.

As they pull up to school they can hear chants of “fight, fight, fight.” Monica tells Tate to stay on the sidewalk as she attempts to break it up. She steps into the circle and tries to drag one of the boys away when she’s punched in the head. Everyone scatters as she falls to the ground, unconscious, blood pouring from her head.

Kayce receives a call about Monica and heads to the school with his dad. In the truck, Kayce refuses to talk about the fact this happened at the school Monica refused to leave when offered a chance to teach a college course.

Monica’s wound is being wrapped up by the school nurse when Kayce arrives. (It looked life-threatening so it’s shocking to see she hasn’t been taken away by ambulance.) The nurse warns Kayce to watch for any signs Monica’s condition is worsening, but Monica is awake and able to talk normally.

Kayce sent his dad away without letting him check in on Monica, and when John returns to the ranch Jamie and Beth are waiting outside to confront him. He keeps them waiting while he stays in his truck making a call. John finally gets out and Jamie and Beth jump on him about cancer. John claims he had a tumor removed and doesn’t have cancer.

Beth is pissed, telling him this isn’t a secret he can keep. John gives Jamie the task of quashing the gossip and takes Beth inside where he claims she embarrassed him in front of Lynelle. They have it out and Beth pushes her dad’s buttons by saying Lynelle doesn’t live up to the standards set by her mother. John explodes and says, “You need to man up. You understand? You need to man up and be a part of the solution or go back to f**king Utah!”

John also warns her never to mention her mother to him again. “You forfeited that right a long time ago,” growls John.

Dan Jenkins (Danny Huston) meets with someone who can help him make his John Dutton problem go away. He explains John has influence over almost everyone that matters, and she suggests they look for someone to run against John for the Livestock Commissioner post. They need to find someone young and ambitious. She knows they’ll need to take John down with a thousand little cuts. She also knows they need to find someone else to be the public face of this fight since he’s a billionaire from California.

Thomas Rainwater and his right-hand man have been sitting nearby, eavesdropping. Thomas joins the conversation and suggests they use his face in this battle against John Dutton. Thomas explains he’s on their side and can’t beat John alone. Thomas claims he can give Dan a power source for his subdivision by obtaining a $60 million loan. He then surprises Dan by saying the loan will actually be for a casino.

Thomas needs 40 acres for the casino and 75 acres for a hotel and parking. He wants Dan’s land and he’s willing to give him the option of deciding where the casino goes and design approval. Thomas will finance the construction, build the roads, and the utilities. Dan seems pleased by the offer, but his fixer wants him to wait until she does some digging. However, Dan doesn’t think that’s necessary and shakes on the deal.

(The enemy of my enemy is my friend.)

Kayce, Tate, and Monica return to their home, and Monica appears to be holding up well. She wonders if they’re doing the right thing about not living at Yellowstone, and Kayce thinks they are. Their chat is interrupted by a drone flying over their land. They have no idea who sent it, but Tate believes it’s a treasure hunter looking for his dinosaur.

Kayce launches rocks at the drone which is scaring the horses. Finally, someone shoots it out of the sky as Kayce notices a car in the distance. He hops in his truck and chases after it, cutting the driver off. When Kayce gets out to talk to the driver, he races off.

John meets with his friend Karl for a late afternoon of fishing. They talk about their kids and getting old, and how John believes his kids will eventually put him in a nursing home and leave him there. As they’re fishing, two women row up in a boat. One woman seems to be staring John Dutton down as they go by.

Monica steps outside but she’s not walking very well. She falls to the ground and Kayce begins performing CPR. He begs her not to leave them, telling her he needs her.

Friday, June 24, 2022

The Morning Show S2 Ep 5: Ghosts

What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

The Morning Show S2 Ep 5: Ghosts




from NPR: https://www.npr.org/2021/10/15/1045627592/the-morning-show-recap-season-2-episode-5-what-happens-in-vegas#:~:text=Press-,'The%20Morning%20Show'%20recap%2C%20Season%202%2C%20Episode%205,wears%20cozy%20clothes%20in%20quarantine.

Cory, latecomer to the crusade for decency

Cory starts this episode fighting on the phone with Fred, demanding that he stop trying to plant stories that smear Hannah. Fred is a man with little to lose, so he demands in response that Cory get the case settled already, threatening to reveal that Cory was part of negotiating Fred's departure and paying him off and claiming that "the woke mob" won't like it if they find out.

Terminology

A side note: Do people actually refer to "the woke mob" in casual conversation? I mean, people who use that term in non-casual conversation? I feel like it's something you would only say on Twitter or on cable news, but I have no idea.

In a flashback, we see that Fred engineered his own departure, really, telling Cory to take the reins in his place and send him off scot-free, which he compares to Ford pardoning Nixon. ("In this situation, I am the Richard Nixon guy" is apparently something Fred thinks is a good thing.) Fred says he will reveal all if Cory doesn't get the case settled.

Of course, last week we were told that Bradley forced Fred's firing and Cory's hiring as CEO, and it's not clear when in this sequence that would have happened, but I have long stopped expecting consistency. And when Fred says that he will stop sparing Cory if Cory doesn't protect him, I'm just not sure what he's talking about. It would have been the board who paid off Fred, not Fred's replacement.

Cory apparently considers Bradley his morality consultant, so he goes to see her and says, "This wrongful death suit, it is heavy." Good one, Camus. "It's easy to forget that she was a real person," he continues. I mean, it shouldn't be that easy?

Let's nitpick the timeline!

The entirety of the sequence here gets so enormously confusing. Bradley said that she demanded Cory's reinstatement and Fred's firing, but now Fred says that he's going to reveal that Cory was the one who paid him off. If Cory got offered that job in the first place, it was presumably of a piece with getting rid of Fred. Why would Fred be able to successfully threaten to reveal that Cory was behind his payout? It would have been the board who got Fred into the contract they then had to wiggle out of. I apologize for expecting too much from the logistics of this, but it makes less sense by the week.

Kyle, Cory's assistant, apparently has a friend who spotted Bradley and Laura together, and later, Kyle tells Cory that the hot goss is that they're dating. Cory is like NUH-UH THEY ARE NOT, because it seems he's in love with Bradley. He flashes back to the Bad Times when she still had dark hair, when she told him she was going to go to the Board and threaten not to come back from her suspension (?) unless they rehired him (what?). And it looks like Bradley and Cory were going to make out, but it's not clear here whether they ever did, because he stops thinking about it right before they either do or don't, I guess.

Cory pays a visit to Hannah's father, played by the great David Paymer. Cory tells him (actually yells at him and lectures him) that he should just take the money in the settlement, because there's going to be a smear campaign against Hannah if he doesn't. Somehow, Mr. Schoenfeld fails to see this as a gesture of kindness.

When Cory can't get Mr. Schoenfeld to back down, he talks to one of his besuited goons, who reminds him that the only thing that will keep an outlet from publishing a salacious story (like Fred's Hannah stories) is offering them another salacious story. If only Cory had one! He texts Bradley, who is mid-pajama-hang with Laura, and he figures out that she's in Laura's room. He gets Bradley to agree, without knowing what he's talking about, that anything Cory can do to bury the stories about Hannah would be the right thing to do.

Vegas, baby, Vegas

The other big story is the Vegas debate, where Alex is scheduled to moderate and Bradley will lead the coverage before and after, and honestly, doesn't this network have any other news figures (besides Eric, who's also moderating)? No reporters? No anybody?

On the private plane to the debate, Laura is there, too — it turns out she was able to book an interview with Mayor Pete so that she could tag along. Alex is having back problems, and she's complaining about that, and complaining about Laura, and complaining about everything. She demands an Advil, and Chip mutters "get it yourself" (correct, you are an adult, and he is a producer, and if you want a personal assistant you can hire one), and she's like "WHAT?" and he corrects himself to "It's coming," and honestly, she is terrible.

Once they land, Alex and Chip realize that Maggie — of "what's in Maggie's book?" — is also there in Vegas. She's there for the debate, although Alex, of course, assumes Maggie is there to torment her personally, because Alex wakes up every morning, sees the sun, and thinks, "Oh, look, it's me, the body around which all things revolve."

As previously mentioned, in Laura's room, Bradley and Laura have what looks like a slumber party, where Laura reveals that she suspects Alex outed her to the show where she was working back in the day, and that Alex froze her out in her worst moments. So it's no wonder Laura doesn't much trust Alex and doesn't think Bradley should trust her either.

WHAT'S IN THE BOOOOOOK?

Alex is freaking out because Maggie is going on TV with Audra (Mindy Kaling) to promote her book about TMS, which is now basically just The Book. Alex runs to Chip and says that he really needs to get her a copy of The Book, and she accuses him of having a "s****y attitude" because he doesn't think he can get a copy of an unreleased and highly secret book just because she says so. She immediately apologizes, but seriously, Alex: Just stop being a trashcan. Entirely. Start asking yourself, "Would a trashcan do this?" and if the answer is yes, do something else.

But after they're in Vegas, Alex continues to be obsessed with The Book and with protecting her reputation from people finding out things about her that are true. Chip acknowledges that he spoke to Maggie off the record, but he insists that he tried to protect Alex, not harm her.

None of this satisfies Alex, who goes to Maggie's room late at night (presumptuous!) and demands to know what's in The Book (unacceptable!). She goes through Maggie's stuff (see above: trashcan!) until she finds a book cover, which reveals that The Book is called The Wrong Side Of The Bed. Maggie tells her that since it's truthful, there's nothing in it about Alex that Alex doesn't already know. Maggie eventually realizes that Alex's real concern is that The Book says Alex slept with Mitch, which Alex fears will bind her to him in people's minds forever. Alex just keeps on lying that the idea that she slept with Mitch is false and libelous and has to be taken out. Maggie is not impressed. Do not come for Marcia Gay Harden, people.

Before you know it, we see that Bradley has taken Alex's place moderating the debate, because Alex has begged off due to illness.

Karma is a Mitch

Paola is working on her documentary, and Mitch — who is 100 percent a nice, gentle Sweater Guy now — is helping her. She asks why he's quarantining with her instead of alone, and he says, "I like your company." He also says they will not be sleeping together, if that's what she's thinking, and I guess the idea that Mitch is overcorrecting and avoiding intimacy is supposed to be sad, and it absolutely isn't. He calls himself "pretty damaged," which ... I guess, but maybe "pretty damaging" would be more accurate.

Paola says the fact that he's damaged makes her feel "at home." Later, she talks him into letting her interview him for the documentary. And when she does, he is in Reflective Mitch mode. "I didn't want to be this person; I didn't want to hurt anyone," he says. (Carell is selling the heck out of this with every bit of solemnity he's got, but this abrupt self-awareness that seems to have been conferred on him by Hannah's death alone is just a story that can't be saved.)

Mitch tells Paola about how he bullied Hannah right before she died. And he says mournfully that this, unlike all the other things he did, can't be written off as ignorance. Hey, guess what, dude! None of the rest of it can be "written off as ignorance" either! A guy in Mitch's situation not knowing he shouldn't pressure women who worked for him to sleep with him in 2017 was active ignorance at best; it was a refusal to know. "This was the result of cultivated ignorance" and "this can be written off as ignorance" are two different things.

Miscellany

Yanko is still trying to work his way out of the "spirit animal" thing, which is going to involve him sitting down with members of the Seminole Tribe. Yanko keeps returning to his "I'm not a racist, I'm Cuban, Stella is using racism as a weapon against me" defense, and he says he's not participating in this stunt, and Mia looks tired. I feel you, Mia.

Stella experiences some viciously racist street harassment, and ... I understand why the show chose to include it. But at least in the short run, instead of really digging into the ways it affects Stella, they make it part of Yanko's story of being cancelled over a single comment. Specifically, it becomes about how he steps up to defend Stella from racists and winds up in a fight that's caught on video. See, Yanko is good!

I'm not sure who decided this should be an "oh no, cancel culture" season, but I'll tell you: It's not pretty.

Thursday, June 23, 2022

Peaky Blinders S6 Ep 2: Black Shirt

What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

Peaky Blinders S6 Ep 2: Black Shirt




from Decider.com: https://decider.com/2022/06/11/peaky-blinders-season-6-episode-2/#:~:text=Tommy%20breaks%20his%20balls%20about,one%20of%20Mosley's%20fascist%20rallies.

By Benjamin H. Smith @bhsmithnyc Jun 11, 2022 at 12:05pm

Reunions are a good way to reconnect after too much time apart. They’re also a chance to settle old scores and for the Peaky Blinders, there’s plenty of old scores to go around. If there’s one thing we’ve learned about gang leader Tommy Shelby, though, he likes his revenge served cold. Two episodes into the sixth and final season of Peaky Blinders and it’s time for Tommy to revisit a rogue’s gallery of adversaries from his past.

Last episode began with the devastating revelation that the I.R.A. had killed Shelby matriarch Aunt Polly and ended with Tommy’s daughter Ruby afflicted with Gypsy ghost fever. Tommy returns to find her on the mend but takes her to the doctor just to make sure. Ruby gets a clean bill of health, which means she’s totally gonna die.

Back home, Tommy has a seizure and has flashbacks of the first man he killed back in World War I. Later, he addresses his constituents in South Birmingham where he’s a Member of Parliment for the Labour Party. Afterwards, he meets up with I.R.A. angel of death Laura McKee, A.K.A. Captain Swing, who tells him “You have a reputation for moral turpitude.” “Moral turpitude…it’s a good name for a racehorse,” Tommy responds, which wins the award for best line of the episode.

It turns out that not only are the I.R.A. ensconced in the Shelbys’ opium business, McKee is a fascist sympathizer. Both impulses find common cause in Jack Nelson, Irish-American businessman and gangster, who we meet later in the episode and also apparently loves the fash. This puts Tommy on a collision course with Season 5 nemesis Sir Oswald Mosley of the British Union of Fascists as well.

Tommy later explains to his sister Ada that he intends to infiltrate the fascists so he can undermine them, and hey, if he can make some money in the process, all the better. We know he’s already pals with Winston Churchill and apparently has a line to Franklin D. Roosevelt as well. “Fuck…opium and Presidents,” says Ada, which is the episode’s second best one-liner.

Side note: there’s so many references to Tommy’s newfound sobriety, it’s just a matter of time before he hits the bottle again.

From there its off to Camden Town where Tommy catches up with frenemy. Alfie Solomons, played with relish by Tom Hardy. The two have a checkered past with Solomons betraying Tommy so many times he eventually had to shoot him in the face to make him honest. Tommy breaks his balls about Nelson killing one of Alfie’s uncles and offers opium and revenge. Alfie seems interested, which means there’s still a 70% chance he’ll stab Tommy in the back in the end.

Having started shoring up his end game, Tommy makes his way to one of Mosley’s fascist rallies. Far be it from me to pity dead fascist scum, but Sam Claflin’s portrayal of the real-life British politician is so unlikable you almost feel bad. It’s also one of the show’s great performances, with Claflin leaning into every line with a snide smugness that makes you thirst for his end.

Following the death of his wife, Mosley has shacked up with Diana Mitford, a historical figure who would one day become his wife. As Mosley makes his entrance, Diana makes googly eyes at Tommy, who’s there with his wife Lizzie. In other words, they’re gonna shag in a couple episodes.


The Shelbys hobnob with the future Mr. & Mrs. Nazi Britain of 1936, and Tommy gets the green light to meet with Jack Nelson to discuss the fine points of the international opium trade and introduce him to Britain’s next top fascists. To review, Nelson is the uncle of Gina Gray, American wife of Tommy’s cousin Michael Gray. A political mover and shaker as well as a South Boston crime boss, Nelson is roughly based on Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., father of U.S. presidents and senators, who was also an alleged bootlegger and anti-Semite who ran afoul of President Roosevelt during World War II.

Interesting side note: Nelson is played by James Frecheville, who portrayed the same character in the original Australian movie version of Animal Kingdom as Finn Cole, who plays Michael, plays in the American television series.

When we finally meet Nelson, he’s far less impressive than past villains, though he’s got all season to improve. You get the sense the script writers peppered his dialogue with lots of words that would sound good with a Boston accent, and Frecheville does a decent job, though leans a little too close to New York at times.

Over small talk Tommy tells Nelson the first man he killed was “a Prussian boy with green eyes.” Later, Ruby’s fever returns and she says she’s hearing voices, “It’s the green man. He says he’s coming for me and he’s coming from Daddy as well.” At his office in Parliament, Tommy imagines he’s being attacked by the ghost from his past before rushing home to take Ruby to the only people who can help her; his Gypsy kin.

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Moon Knight S1 Ep 4: The Tomb



What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

Moon Knight S1 Ep 4: The Tomb



from Den of Geek: https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/moon-knight-episode-4-ending-explained/
episode 4!

By Joe George|April 20, 2022

Hmm, we thought we had it all figured out! We thought Moon Knight had settled into its groove as a globe-trotting adventure series in the vein of Indiana Jones or The Mummy. Sure, the show certainly had more mysteries to unravel, including Marc’s connection to Layla’s father and the third personality vexing him and Steven. And we expected that the show might jump from the Cairo setting of episodes three and four, in the same way it jumped from the London of episodes one and two, but we didn’t think the next location would be a mental hospital.

Thirty-five minutes into Moon Knight episode four “The Tomb,” Arthur Harrow shoots Marc and watches him sink into a golden pool of water. When Marc awakes, he finds himself in a clean, white mental hospital. In an unbroken one-shot, the camera floats through the space, revealing many of the side characters we’ve seen to be either orderlies and patients, including Layla. Even worse, Arthur Harrow appears to be operating the hospital, diagnosing Marc as suffering a mental breakdown.

For viewers of the show, the change seems to come out of nowhere. But readers of the comics will recognize the shift as a direct adaptation of one of the best Moon Knight runs, issues #1-14 of the 2016 series by writer Jeff Lemire and artist Greg Smallwood. “Personally, our biggest inspiration was the Lemire and Smallwood run,” directors Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson tell Den of Geek. “Within the pages, you turn the page and you start to see them reflect on each other in a Watchman-esque way.”


With that in mind, the Lemire and Smallwood run can provide some answers to what is surely the most confusing MCU episode since WandaVision.


Is This Real?

Yes. Sort of. One of Lemire and Smallwood’s most important contributions to Moon Knight canon is reframing his mental illness. When most creative teams would address Marc’s mental state, they would describe it as broken, as if there was a coherent whole that Marc needed to achieve. But in Lemire and Smallwood’s run, Marc discovers that his different way of approaching the world was itself a gift, a type of special ability. As he learned to work with his mental state, Marc discovered he could deal with issues in ways that others could not.

What we may be watching, then, is Marc fighting back against Harrow by looking at reality in a different way. By doing so, he’s fighting Harrow on Harrow’s terms. Like most cult leaders, Harrow maintains control over his followers by dictating reality to them. Marc may be throwing that all out the window, which will throw Harrow off his game.

Ok, but Is Khonshu Real?

Well, that’s the other possibility. At the end of episode three, the gods punish Khonshu by burying him in stone, effectively cutting Marc and Steven off from their source of power. The show has also suggested that Khonshu’s influence may be responsible for the divisions in Marc’s psyche – after all, they are recent enough that his wife Layla didn’t know about them.

However, if the show adheres to the Lemire and Smallwood run, then something quite different is happening. Like many comic book iterations, that series portrays Khonshu as far more meddling than benevolent. The series hints at that, with Marc’s clear resentment toward the god, but nothing has suggested that Khonshu is reshaping reality to manipulate Marc. Lemire and Smallwood depict the mental hospital escape as a way for Marc to undermine Khonshu and establish his own freedom.

Is That Why Marc Created Steven Grant?

Steven Grant may be less a side-effect of Marc’s illness and more of a strategy to escape Khonshu. To transition from Egypt to the mental hospital, directors Benson and Moorhead cut to a grainy VHS of a 90s movie about adventurer Steven Grant. The hero speaks in a (more accurate) British accent and goes boldly forward into the unknown.

It’s easy to imagine that Marc watched the Steven Grant film as a child, which gave him the inspiration to later become an adventurer (and later a mercenary). It’s also possible that he conjured his version of Steven Grant himself, without Khonshu’s influence, to preserve a part of his own identity.

Who Is the Third Identity? Jake Lockley?

That, we don’t know yet. But we likely saw that identity in this episode, trapped inside the sarcophagus. As discussed in the most recent Marvel Standom episode, Marc has two alternate personalities in the comics: Steven Grant, and Jake Lockley, a New York cabbie who patrols the streets looking for trouble. Jake tends to be a bit more rough and tumble than the other two identities.

However, given the fact that the comic book Steven Grant is closer to rich and suave Bruce Wayne than he is to the timid museum shop worker we see on the series, we shouldn’t assume that MCU Lockley will have much in common with his comic book counterpart.

What Part Does Layla Play in All This?

Even more so than Steven, Layla deviates from her comic book antecedent. Her origin resembles that of Marc’s on-off love interest Marlene, but that character has none of Layla’s dynamism or agency.

Perhaps we shouldn’t read too much into the fact that Layla and others are in the mental hospital as well. It’s likely not that the adventurous versions we’ve seen in other episodes are fake and the hospital versions are real, rather that Marc is “remixing” reality to resist Harrow and (possibly) Khonshu. If that’s the case, Crawley is the far more important hospital resident.

Wait, Who the Hell Is Crawley?

In most of the episodes, we’ve seen Crawley as the gold statue man who Marc talks to. In the hospital, we see him leading a bingo game in which no one is particularly interested.

In the comics, however, Crawley is one of the most important members of Moon Knight’s supporting cast. An unhoused person and sort of street philosopher, Crawley generally interacts with Jake Lockley. On visits to Gina’s Diner, Crawley provides info to Lockley, and sometimes needs rescuing by Moon Knight.

Crawley also appears in the mental hospital in the Lemire and Smallwood run, in which he serves as something of a guide for Marc. Like Marc, Crawley exists on the margins of society, which gives him special insight on the rest of the world. As such, he’s able to help Marc break from the influence of Khonshu and embrace his own powers.

So, Everything is Fine in the Mental Hospital?

Well, probably not. In the Lemire and Smallwood comics, the hospital is operated by Doctor Emmet, a Nurse Ratched type who may or may not be someone that we’ve heard a lot about, but not yet seen: the goddess Ammit. In the same way that Harrow appears in the hospital as a doctor trying to convince Marc that everything is in his head, Doctor Emmet tells comic book Marc that he made up Moon Knight as a child.

So as much as the mental hospital may be Marc’s way of reshaping reality to battle Harrow, it may also be a construction of Ammit working through Harrow. Director Mohamed Diab references the influence of the Lemire and Smallwood comics on the show when he says, “We are seeing [the story] through someone who has DID, and the whole story could be in his head, you never know.”

In other words, as much as we can answer some questions inspired by the episode, the real answer may be, “We don’t know for sure.” And that can be very exciting.

We Gonna Talk About Taweret, the Hippo Lady?

Yes, the hippo who greets/terrifies Marc and Steven at the end of the episode is Taweret, Egyptian goddess of childbirth. She was briefly mentioned in “The Goldfish Problem,” but we know little about her purpose in this story because she’s absent not only from the Lemire and Smallwood comics, but also from the entire Marvel Universe (given some of Marvel’s iffy portrayals of pregnancy, that might be a good thing).

We do know that British actress Antonia Salib voices Taweret, in her first major role. We also know from Egyptian mythology that Tawaret is, like Khonshu, primarily a protector. She takes the form of a hippo for that creature’s protective qualities, as she seeks to defend pregnant women and newborns from anything that threatens them. Perhaps here, themes of birth and rebirth will be more oblique than that, especially surrounding Marc and his fractured psyche, but hopefully answers will be coming in Moon Knight’s final two episodes.

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

The Witcher S2 Ep 3: What Is Lost



What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE

The Witcher S2 Ep 3: What Is Lost


From Nerds and Beyond: https://www.nerdsandbeyond.com/2021/12/19/the-witcher-recap-season-2-episode-3-what-is-lost/

By Hannah
December 19, 2021

Sometimes what is lost doesn’t need to be found, which is a lesson the heroes of this story must learn. We see a softer side of Geralt as he begins his training with Ciri but also wants to ensure she’s taking care of herself. Eskel is laid to rest as Ciri takes strides to impress the Witchers. Yennefer of Vengerberg proves she can still watch the world burn without magic at her hand.

A Witcher’s Goodbye

A considerable amount of time has passed since Geralt and Vesemir had to kill Eskel, who had turned into a leshy mutant. In this time, Geralt and Ciri have continued their training, while Vesemir has continued to dissect Leshkel in search of an answer — how could this have happened? Geralt calls for the investigation to end so Eskel can be laid to rest. Eskel’s body is taken to a cave — where in true School of the Wolf fashion, his body is left to be eaten by wolves. What a funeral.

Nobody Puts Ciri In The Corner

Lambert, doing what Lambert does best, teases Ciri as she trains with a stuffed dummy. Still struggling with the idea of perfectionism, Ciri insists on being trained properly. Happy to oblige, Lambert takes Ciri to an obstacle course suited for the best of the Witchers. The course is dangerous and riddled with deadly pendulums, sharp spinning wheels, wobbly platforms … and it’s all in the snow. Not backing down, Ciri takes the course repeatedly until she is able to make it through … until falling at the very last jump. Geralt, realizing he needs to push her harder in this turning point in their relationship, notes that she did not stick her landing.

Ciri’s Power Explored

This is the first episode where we see Geralt begin to understand the power that Ciri has inside her. He uses Ciri, guiding her to listen to that “pulling” feeling she feels, to guide the pair to the leshy that killed Eskel. Geralt doesn’t have to battle the one-handed leshy for long though as a new monster is introduced — a myriapod. Disgustingly complete with wolf skull, ram horns, a centipede body, and entirely too many claws and eyes, the myriapod literally slicing the leshy in half. Ciri remains cool and collected as she runs from the myriapod, luring it to its eventual death at Geralt’s blade. Another monster of the week down.

Back at Aretuza

Filled with emotion, Tissaia is moments away from declaring that Yennefer is dead … until Yennefer interrupts. Due to some sort of magic barrier in his mind, Tissaia still hasn’t made progress in her interrogation/torture of Cahir. With Vilgefortz at her side, Tissaia is attempting to overthrow Stregebor, who has decided Yennefer is a traitor and as such is torturing her for information. Luckily, Tissaia interrupts the torture and declares that Stregebor will answer for what he’s done. Stregebor demands Yennefer behead Cahir to prove her loyalty.

Istredd proves he still cares for Yennefer by contradicting Stregebor, who is telling the story of a sorceress named Falka who wielded fire magic, leading to the magic being forbidden. Stregebor compares Yennefer to Falka and says if given the chance, Yennefer would burn Aretuza to the ground and destroy the world. He also claims Falka burned off his hands, showing the stumps where his hands were burned off. We also briefly catch back up with Triss, who now has bright red hair and scars on her body from Yennefer’s use of the fire magic at Sodden Hill. Triss isn’t around long before being sent off on a “special mission.”
Yennefer Watches The World Burn Pt. 2

The Northern Kings are beginning to distrust the Brotherhood, as is indicated by Foltest’s snide off-hand comment. This makes sense because following the Witcher timeline from the books, the sorceress will soon be removed from the court after being deemed too powerful and untrustworthy. Istredd has somewhat deflected to Nilfgaard with the desire to help the elves and uncover secrets, despite the fact that both Nilfgaard and the elves are enemies of the Brotherhood now.

Yennefer, proving that she doesn’t need chaos to be powerful and making the statement that she cannot be controlled, refuses to kill Cahir. Instead, she sets the site of execution ablaze in more traditional ways (toppling over various burning objects) and escapes on horseback with Cahir, Velen in their sights.

Monday, June 20, 2022

The Boys S3 Ep 1: Payback

from EW: https://ew.com/tv/recaps/the-boys-season-3-episodes-1-3/

By Alex RaimanJune 03, 2022 at 08:00 AM EDT



The Boys S3 Ep 1: Payback


It's been a year and a half since the explosive finale of The Boys season 2, and they haven't missed a beat, kicking off season 3 with a premiere that's as shocking as it is… well, really, above all else… it's pretty damn shocking.

Things are looking particularly bright for Hughie (Jack Quaid), and boy does he deserve it. We see him working the red carpet arm-in-arm with Starlight (Erin Moriarty), having gone public with their relationship. We see him working his swanky new job at the Federal Bureau of Superhuman Affairs (FBSA) as the right hand to the bureau's director, Congresswoman Victoria Neumann (Claudia Doumit). It's nice to see Hughie happy and… not covered in blood for once.

But in the world of The Boys, good things don't last. As you might remember, the final moments of season 2 revealed none other than the seemingly squeaky clean Neumann as the mysterious superhero that'd been popping heads around town. Poor Hughie's about to have his bubble burst, along with some very important body parts if he's not careful.

While Hughie's busy floating on cloud nine, not everyone's having such a good time in this premiere. Stuck in a particularly rough spot is everyone's favorite superhero (until you get to know him): Homelander (Antony Starr).

With Homelander's poll numbers dropping by double digits in response to the reveal of his ex-girlfriend Stormfront's (Aya Cash) Nazi ties, Vaught CEO Stan Edgar (Giancarlo Esposito) decides to shake things up by promoting Starlight to co-captain of the Seven. With a little convincing from Edgar, Starlight accepts the job, but Homelander's none too pleased with this arrangement.

But it's not just Homelander's professional life that's in shambles. His ex-lover Stormfront is on death's door, resigned to a hospital bed, missing half her limbs and half her face… though that doesn't stop Homelander from taking a moment to get… intimate… with what's left of her. Stinging Homelander the most is the fact that he's lost track of his son Ryan (Cameron Crovetti), who Billy Butcher (Karl Urban) and CIA agent Grace Mallory (Laila Robins) have stashed in a secure safe house.

While Homelander's agonizing over his sinking poll numbers and his lost opportunity at fatherhood, Butcher's coming to terms with his own role as a father to Ryan. It's quite heartwarming to watch Butcher play Connect-4 with his pseudo-adopted-son, and it's a much needed moment of humanization considering all the horrible things we've seen Butcher do.

But Butcher's not just visiting Ryan for some daddy/son time. He's got business to take care of. After failing to arrest a superhero named Termite (in what's perhaps the most hilariously outlandish sequence thus far in all of The Boys, and that's saying something), Queen Maeve (Dominique McElligott) steps in with a potentially game-changing piece of intel:

Before the Seven held court on the 99th floor of Vaught Tower, it was a group of superheroes named Payback who kept America safe… at least until their leader, Soldier Boy (Jensen Ackles) was killed in action. How exactly was Soldier Boy killed? Well, that's what Butcher will need to uncover if he wants a chance at killing Homelander and finally avenging his late wife.

Back at the FBSA, a guy named Tony (Kyle Mac) visits the office asking for Neumann, insisting her real name isn't Victoria, but Nadia. Suspicious, Hughie follows him through the streets as Tony's confronted by Neumann in a secluded back alley. Neumann confirms the two were once friends, but things quickly get out of hand and, to keep Tony quiet, Neumann a.k.a. Nadia blows him to smithereens — spattering blood all over Hughie's new suit. Because what would an episode of The Boys be without Hughie drenched in someone else's blood?

So… Homelander's losing his mind. Hughie's fetching oat lattes for a mass murderer. Butcher's trapping evil superheroes in bags of cocaine. Damn I've missed this show.

Other Observations:

I find it hard to imagine the writing staff ever being able to top the shock value of the absolutely bonkers sequence with Termite. But hey, that's what I said when Butcher used a super-powered infant as a murder weapon in season 1, so….

As excited as I am for the rest of season 3, the thing I'm really itching to see is Vaught's newest blockbuster: The Dawn of the Seven. Let's just hope they don't dump it on Vaught +. But with a cast like that, I'm betting on day-and-date at the very least.

Also, when is The Deep's memoir Deeper hitting the shelves?

Homelander fat-shaming A-Train for indulging in a milkshake from Shake Shack was cruel and unusually funny. And also… left me craving Shake Shack.

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Outlander S6 Ep 7: Sticks and Stones


from EW: https://ew.com/tv/recaps/outlander-season-6-episode-7/

By Lincee Ray
April 24, 2022 



Outlander S6 Ep 7: Sticks and Stones

What did you miss? For a review of the last episode, click HERE


Things aren't looking good for Outlander's Claire (Caitriona Balfe) on the Ridge. To paraphrase Tom Christie, when you're up to your elbows covered in blood, hovering over the dead body of the woman who is allegedly carrying your husband's baby, people will presume things.

Tom (Mark Lewis Jones) and Allan (Alexander Vlahos) are beside themselves. Jamie (Sam Heughan) steps in when they claim they can't bury Malva in a holy cemetery because of her sinful nature. Malva will be laid to rest properly. He and Claire will see to it, and Roger will perform the funeral ceremony.

As Jamie lays the bloody corpse on Claire's operating table, we hear the whispers of Claire's demons buzzing around in her head. Devil. Witch. Murderer. The shadows coil around Claire's hands as she shakily threads her needle to sew up Malva's slit throat. The surgeon turns to alcohol instead of ether when the darkness is too much. Once Jamie joins Claire's afternoon whiskey, it's clear his feathers are a bit ruffled, too.

The bad news is that no one can find any evidence of foul play. This means all fingers point to Claire as the culprit. As soon as the fisherfolk show up, demanding to see the body and inquiring if Claire forgave Malva before she killed her, Claire sinks deeper into the darkness. Lionel Brown's figure shows up everywhere, haunting her night and day.

Who had the means, motive, and opportunity to kill Malva? As Lionel continues to taunt her subconscious, Claire eventually realizes that she might have done something unthinkable. Claire likens it to that feeling that you can't shake. It's as if she left the stove on (or a candle burning in this timeline) and forgot to turn it off. Something is wrong.

Thank goodness she confesses to Jamie that she nipped some ether to "have a little lie down," and he seemed genuinely concerned that she was putting herself to sleep. Claire admits that she half remembers Malva banging on the door to get in. Then she remembers being awake and threatening the girl.

Jamie is convinced Claire's mind is playing tricks on her and encourages her to get some rest. But unfortunately, a figure of Lionel in the corner of her room inhibits her from sleeping the old-fashioned way. Plus, we now have Lizzie (Caitlin O'Ryan) and the Beardsley twins to worry about.

Talk about a scandalous story line! These crazy kids have entered into a thruple and have no qualms about it. The one little problem is the fact that Lizzie is pregnant, and she has no idea if it's Kezzie or Josiah's baby. Ian is the one to discover the secret, and he immediately tells his uncle. Jamie's solution is that Lizzie will marry one of the brothers, or both will die. Easy peasy.

When Claire speaks to Lizzie, she says she wasn't forced into anything. Lizzie loves them both because they are one soul. So what seems to be the problem?

Really Lizzie? Someone on the Ridge is murdering young unwed pregnant girls. I'd say that's a big problem! Also, if the fisherfolk found out, they could stone you to death. You need a plan, my friend.

Meanwhile, Roger (Richard Rankin) has totally embraced his role as honorary minister and confides to Jamie that he may want this to be a full-time gig. Roger has a real problem with the "thou shalt not kill" part of the Old Testament, and he's not going to find it any easier once war comes. However, he is more than willing to defend those in need. Does that make him a coward?

Jamie is more than willing to stand by Roger's decision to be ordained as a minister. And he would be thrilled if Roger stayed on the Ridge to help Brianna and Claire and the elderly. War is always coming. Go where you are needed.

Right now, they are both needed at the chapel. Not even 10 people show up for Malva's funeral. And when it's time to lift the coffin, there aren't enough men to carry her to the graveyard. Allan barks for Jamie to stay seated when he offers an extensive, broad pair of shoulders. Ian takes up the last corner, and they begin to descend the steps outside. Claire notices the tiny baby's coffin and moves to pick it up. Allan spews disgraces. He believes both Malva and the baby are dead because of Claire.

The Beardsley boys have finally shown up in the barn. Jamie grabs two straws and instructs them each to take one. The shortest straw wins Lizzie — and Kezzie is the lucky winner. Next, Jamie performs a two-sentence handfast ceremony. They're married now. The end. Then he swears that no one speaks a word to anyone before instructing Josiah to the Ridge the next day and to not return until after the baby is born.

Speaking of babies, Brianna (Sophie Skelton) isn't so sure she's ready for Roger to sacrifice his time as a minister to the Ridge. She's been down this road before with her mother, who often left at a moment's notice to care for other people in the middle of the night. Roger reminds her that he is a husband and father first. He won't sacrifice his family.

Brianna concedes. Roger can be ordained as long as she doesn't have to convert. She's a Catholic woman all the way. Roger laughs, claiming anyone who has a problem with Brianna can go to hell. Might I suggest he workshop that last little bit before he's officially a minister?

I think my favorite part of the episode is when Lizzie and Josiah ask Roger to marry them. He performs a handfast like Jamie did with Kezzie. I wouldn't call this a loophole. It's like they think they're living in 2022 or something.

The next day, a brooding Lizzie whines to Claire that it's unfair for Josiah to have to leave. Claire reminds her that she should have told them sooner about her relationship with the boys. Lizzie says that she did try to tell Claire — on the day Malva died — but she wouldn't answer the door. At this point, Claire realizes that she didn't kill Malva. Lizzie would have seen or heard her!

Claire has a newfound freedom. She rushes to her surgery room and puts the ether away. She's not crazy!

Annnnd, that's when Lionel shows up again. Will this ghost ever leave Claire alone? He drones on and on about how it doesn't matter that Claire didn't kill Malva. Claire's done enough damage without Malva's name in her journal of sins.

Jamie enters the room and notices Claire's demeanor. He listens intently as she babbles on about being crazy and seeing dead people. She swings dark and she doesn't like it. Even though she knows she didn't kill Malva, look at all the other things she's done! Everything is a mess because she was desperate to be with Jamie. She changed the timeline. It's all her fault.

Jamie reminds Claire that he wouldn't have it any other way. Without the stones, Brianna would not have been born. Roger has a wife and son, and one on the way. Fergus is married with kids. Their entire world crumbles without Claire. And if she can't make the voices stop, he will help her conquer them. They will face this together.

Claire weeps in Jamie's arms. She's thankful he is willing to tackle the demons and darkness. He tries to comfort her. No one has charged her with a crime.

Cue a group of angry men galloping up on horses in front of the Ridge. The Safety Brigade is back, and they have a warrant for Claire's arrest. Unfortunately, it seems everyone in the region thinks Claire killed Malva Christie. And I'm not sure an ether nap is going to help her escape this nightmare.