We have just one thing to say for this week’s Hawaii Five-0: Welcome Home Adam. The loss of Chin and Kono has been a heavy weight to Five-0, no matter how much they try to downplay it onscreen. The new recruits are great, but it just isn’t the same. Someone needed to come home, and it had to be a member of the Ohana that was really missed. And so, Adam Noshimuri has returned to rebuild his life (again). This may be the most difficult time he has had to do this, but like before, he just needs purpose. What
Hawaii Five-0 Review: Welcome Home Adam...
Hawaii Five-0 Review: Welcome Home Adam...
- 11/18/2017
- by Araceli Aviles
- TVovermind.com
Louisa Mellor Mar 20, 2017
There was more carnage, venting CO2 and frustration in the latest great episode of Robot Wars...
This review contains spoilers.
See related Supergirl season 2: trailer for Kevin Smith's next episode The Flash: surprising characters pop up in new trailer Arrow season 5: trailer for episode 17, Kapiushon
Tell me where else on television you’re going to hear somebody say, “I’ve certainly got a lot of experience controlling sticks with my thumbs”? That’s why you have to love Robot Wars; there’s nothing else quite like it (unless you count BattleBots, which is quite like it but is also American and therefore twice as noisy with half the charm).
Congratulations this week go to winners Concussion, who did Dorset proud by taking their battle-untested bot all the way to victory in the final. They saw off veteran competitor Thor through a fog of vented CO2 and hasty repairs,...
There was more carnage, venting CO2 and frustration in the latest great episode of Robot Wars...
This review contains spoilers.
See related Supergirl season 2: trailer for Kevin Smith's next episode The Flash: surprising characters pop up in new trailer Arrow season 5: trailer for episode 17, Kapiushon
Tell me where else on television you’re going to hear somebody say, “I’ve certainly got a lot of experience controlling sticks with my thumbs”? That’s why you have to love Robot Wars; there’s nothing else quite like it (unless you count BattleBots, which is quite like it but is also American and therefore twice as noisy with half the charm).
Congratulations this week go to winners Concussion, who did Dorset proud by taking their battle-untested bot all the way to victory in the final. They saw off veteran competitor Thor through a fog of vented CO2 and hasty repairs,...
- 3/17/2017
- Den of Geek
Unlike the World Series’s down to the wire, nail-biting madness, this week’s Arrow was much more subdued. In fact a lot of business was taken care of to propel the season past its standard allotment for what we can describe as “new season settling”. The new recruits are settling in, the veterans are re-integrating into the new normal, and the season’s Big Baddie is teaching the Little Baddie a lesson. There’s just one puzzlement in an otherwise clean episode. The biggest question of “Human Target” isn’t where Team Arrow newbie Wild Dog is, or what Little Baddie Church is planning.
Arrow Review: The Collision of Past and Present...
Arrow Review: The Collision of Past and Present...
- 11/3/2016
- by Araceli Aviles
- TVovermind.com
Believe it or not, we’re about to receive our fourth animated movie headlined by a certain masked hero this year when Batman: Return of the Caped Crusaders arrives this fall. The difference, of course, being that this one continues the proud legacy of the television series from the 1960’s, which happens to be celebrating its 50th anniversary.
Although it has been known for some time that Adam West, Burt Ward, and Julie Newmar are reprising their iconic roles of Batman, Robin, and Catwoman, respectively, it has remained a mystery as to who would round out the rest of the cast – until now, that is.
See Full Gallery Here
Due to many members of the TV series’ original cast no longer being with us, the filmmakers had to find the right talent to lend their pipes to the other characters residing in Gotham City. The new recruits include: Steven Weber...
Although it has been known for some time that Adam West, Burt Ward, and Julie Newmar are reprising their iconic roles of Batman, Robin, and Catwoman, respectively, it has remained a mystery as to who would round out the rest of the cast – until now, that is.
See Full Gallery Here
Due to many members of the TV series’ original cast no longer being with us, the filmmakers had to find the right talent to lend their pipes to the other characters residing in Gotham City. The new recruits include: Steven Weber...
- 10/4/2016
- by Eric Joseph
- We Got This Covered
We are just one week away from the debut of Arrow Season 5 and The CW has now lifted the lid on a whole lot more of what we can expect from the new season.
As expected, Team Arrow is about to change in a big way with the added threat of Prometheus.
The new threat to Star City leaves a trail of bodies behind, so the team decide the best course of action is to get some new recruits.
Oliver is a strong individual, but he's no match for the new villain that's making things in the city more deadlier than ever.
The new recruits will be put through some intense training.
They won't make it on Team Arrow with looks alone.
They need to be able to get themselves out of tough situations and that's why Oliver and Diggle are at the helm of the operation.
In flashbacks, we...
As expected, Team Arrow is about to change in a big way with the added threat of Prometheus.
The new threat to Star City leaves a trail of bodies behind, so the team decide the best course of action is to get some new recruits.
Oliver is a strong individual, but he's no match for the new villain that's making things in the city more deadlier than ever.
The new recruits will be put through some intense training.
They won't make it on Team Arrow with looks alone.
They need to be able to get themselves out of tough situations and that's why Oliver and Diggle are at the helm of the operation.
In flashbacks, we...
- 9/28/2016
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
It starts like some kind of violent ballet: A semicircle of shirtless young men scream at something on the ground offscreen, in slow motion and without a sound, veins popping out of their necks like roided-out riverbeds. We can't see the object of their animalistic aggression, but that's not the point. Drunk on testosterone and plain old drunk, the hulking boys are not predators huddled over a zebra carcass; they're fraternity gentlemen. Welcome to Pledge Week.
The alternately chilling and poetic interlude that opens Goat, director Andrew Neel's scandalizing...
The alternately chilling and poetic interlude that opens Goat, director Andrew Neel's scandalizing...
- 9/22/2016
- Rollingstone.com
Fasten your seatbelts and brace yourselves for another wild ride when Kevin Hart (Get Hard, The Wedding Ringer) and Ice Cube (22 Jump Street, Barbershop) return in the hilarious, action-packed comedy, Ride Along 2, coming to Digital HD on April 12, 2016, and Blu-ray™, DVD and On Demand on April 26, 2016, from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. The Blu-ray™, DVD and Digital HD feature even more of the duo’s hysterical banter and explosive fun with deleted scenes, gag reel, never-before-seen bonus material, including a hilarious new recruitment video “Ride Along With Us” and “The Ride Diaries” with Kevin Hartand Ice Cube!
Ride Along 2 reunites the partners and brothers-in-law-to-be as they take on new crime in Miami. The absurdity quickly unfolds while tough cop and all-around cool guy James (Ice Cube) works to solve a major case with the mouthy wannabe Ben (Kevin Hart). In the riotous sequel to the action-comedy hit that first...
Ride Along 2 reunites the partners and brothers-in-law-to-be as they take on new crime in Miami. The absurdity quickly unfolds while tough cop and all-around cool guy James (Ice Cube) works to solve a major case with the mouthy wannabe Ben (Kevin Hart). In the riotous sequel to the action-comedy hit that first...
- 4/28/2016
- by Movie Geeks
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Over the past few years, a number of Japanese manga/anime properties were supposed to be adapted to the big screen, but none have seen the light of day (Death Note, Akira, and Ghost in the Shell). Thankfully the same can’t be said for Higuchi Shinji’s live action adaptation Attack on Titan, which will be released in Japan this summer, and hopefully will also screen at various genre festivals world-wide. Attack on Titan began as a manga in 2009 and has since crossed over to anime and video games, becoming a commercial success, and receiving critical acclaim for its atmosphere and story. A handful of character posters as well as the first full-length trailer has been released. While the trailer doesn’t have sub-titles, it does pack in some pretty amazing set-pieces with the titular villains in action. Watch the trailer below.
Here’s the synopsis:
The sudden arrival of the Titans–mysterious,...
Here’s the synopsis:
The sudden arrival of the Titans–mysterious,...
- 4/27/2015
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
When Gareth Edwards’ original Monsters came out in 2010, it was a welcome breath of fresh air for the sci-fi genre – an atypically thoughtful and atmospheric drama about two humans falling in love and learning to wonder at the otherworldly beauty of a strange new world being born around them. Shot on a shoestring budget with visual effects Edwards created in his bedroom, it was a marvelous, unexpected film that left you thinking.
That’s what makes it all the more soul-crushing to report that Monsters: Dark Continent, though impressively directed by Tom Green (Edwards moved onto the big-budget Godzilla, the awfulness of which I’ll condemn until my dying breath), bears resemblance to its predecessor in name alone. In terms of narrative, genre, tone and structure, it’s both drastically different and woefully inferior, to such a degree that it’s actually hobbled by bearing the Monsters brand.
Picking up...
That’s what makes it all the more soul-crushing to report that Monsters: Dark Continent, though impressively directed by Tom Green (Edwards moved onto the big-budget Godzilla, the awfulness of which I’ll condemn until my dying breath), bears resemblance to its predecessor in name alone. In terms of narrative, genre, tone and structure, it’s both drastically different and woefully inferior, to such a degree that it’s actually hobbled by bearing the Monsters brand.
Picking up...
- 4/2/2015
- by Isaac Feldberg
- We Got This Covered
Netflix's Wet Hot American Summer series is turning into quite the celeb-packed event. Deadline reports that a slew of guest-starring and recurring characters will pop up in the form of Lake Bell, Josh Charles (as a rival camper), Rob Huebel (a rival professor), Jayma Mays, Randall Park (a librarian in love with Shannon), Paul Scheer (a journalist), Richard Schiff, John Slattery, and Michaela Watkins (a brash New Yorker). The new recruits join the already-large amount of original cast members for the eight-episode series, to be directed by David Wain and written by Wain and Michael Showalter. While the 2001 movie was set on the last day of a fake Jewish summer camp, the Netflix installments reportedly take place on the first day of camp. No other details about the series are available, but rest assured, summer is coming.
- 1/14/2015
- by Sean Fitz-Gerald
- Vulture
“They say you have to lose everything before you can really find yourself.” These haunting words from Rachel’s dad fit perfectly with Glee‘s final season premiere, as Friday’s return redefined what it means to hit rock bottom.
Picking up several months after last season’s oddly hopeful finale, the two-hour premiere introduced several major setbacks for Ms. Berry: Not only is her career in the toilet — That’s So Rachel managed to offend every single special interest group, including Nambla — but her dads are also getting a divorce. Still, rather than power through the obstacles in her path,...
Picking up several months after last season’s oddly hopeful finale, the two-hour premiere introduced several major setbacks for Ms. Berry: Not only is her career in the toilet — That’s So Rachel managed to offend every single special interest group, including Nambla — but her dads are also getting a divorce. Still, rather than power through the obstacles in her path,...
- 1/10/2015
- TVLine.com
"The Office" star Rainn Wilson is lending to his voice talents to a new documentary, "The New Recruits," from the creators of the award-winning doc "The Linguists." But the new company Wilson will be narrating for is nothing like Dunder Mifflin.
"The New Recruits" follows a group of business students who think of a new way to end global poverty: charge poor people for basic services. The students hit Kenya, Pakistan, and India to charge people for toilet service and drip irrigation in a movement touted "the alternative to charity."
"We are elated to have Rainn lend his comic sensibility and universally recognizable voice to 'The New Recruits'," said Jeremy Newberger, who along with Seth Kramer and Daniel A. Miller, is one of the three directors of the film. "Viewers will relish engaging 'The New Recruits' with Rainn as storyteller."
"I'm thrilled to be doing narration...
"The New Recruits" follows a group of business students who think of a new way to end global poverty: charge poor people for basic services. The students hit Kenya, Pakistan, and India to charge people for toilet service and drip irrigation in a movement touted "the alternative to charity."
"We are elated to have Rainn lend his comic sensibility and universally recognizable voice to 'The New Recruits'," said Jeremy Newberger, who along with Seth Kramer and Daniel A. Miller, is one of the three directors of the film. "Viewers will relish engaging 'The New Recruits' with Rainn as storyteller."
"I'm thrilled to be doing narration...
- 11/5/2009
- icelebz.com
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