Tiger-Bunny2

Live Action Tiger & Bunny Movie In Development

Tiger-Bunny2

 

An English-language, live-action Tiger & Bunny movie, based on the popular anime is in development by All Nippon Entertainment Works (ANEW), Imagine Entertainment and Bandai Namco Pictures Pictures.

The announcement was made as New York Comic Con. “Stern Bild [the setting for the anime] was modelled after Manhattan, so we are happy to announce this here today,” said Masaaki Nozaki of Bandai Namco Pictures.

Tiger & Bunny is a buddy superhero story that takes place in the near-futuristic city Stern Bild, where professional superheroes known as “NEXT” fight crime and save lives. When the old school veteran, Kotetsu T Kaburagi, aka “Wild Tiger”, is forced to collaborate with the fearless but cocky rookie partner Barnaby Brooks Jr, aka “Bunny”, the two polar opposite characters must learn to work as a team to fight evil, protect the city and save each other.

The live-action Tiger & Bunny film will be produced by Brian Grazer and Ron Howard for Imagine Entertainment, ANEW’s Sandy Climan and Annmarie Bailey, and Masayuki Ozaki on behalf of Bandai Namco Pictures, a subsidiary of Sunrise. Ozaki produced the original Japanese Tiger & Bunny under the Sunrise banner, one of Japan’s leading anime studios.

“Uniquely compelling elements”

Ron Howard (A Beautiful Mind, The Da Vinci Code) released the following statement: “We could not be more excited about producing Tiger & Bunny with Bandai Namco Pictures and ANEW. When ANEW brought us the project, we fell in love with the concept immediately. It was fresh, a huge success in Japan, and we had never seen a great buddy story bring together so many uniquely compelling elements. Barnaby and Tiger are immensely dynamic characters, with a psychologically complex relationship with one another, and it will be an honour to bring them to the global audience of film lovers,” said Ron Howard.

“In Mr Ozaki and the creators of Tiger & Bunny we have found kindred spirits in the world of storytelling. Our collaboration with them will make this project richer and stronger as we grow the Tiger & Bunny franchise worldwide,” added Brian Grazer.

“We secretly hoped to bring Tiger & Bunny to Hollywood one day as a live-action project since the early stages of conceptualising the original series,” said Ozaki. “What impressed us most when ANEW approached us was not only the deal terms, but the deep respect and love they showed for our original work. During the deal talks, our chief focus was to ensure continuing involvement by the original creators to maintain quality, and flexibility which would allow the original work to continue. We pushed those points strongly because we couldn’t turn our back to our fans.”


 

 

 

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Christopher Fowler Interview: The Sand Men In a Dream World Gone Sour

the_sand_men_christopher_fowlerWith a prolific novel-writer career that stretches over a quarter of century now, Christopher Fowler is best known for his immensely fun Bryant and May detective novels. The story of London’s Peculiar Crime Unit, set up to investigate “cases that could cause national scandal or public unrest”, the books are a whistle-stop tour of classic detective story genres and tropes.

That wit, huge knowledge and playful approach is present throughout Fowler’s work. He changes gear and tone with grace, intelligence and an exuberant love of his subject matter. That brings us to The Sand Men, his latest novel, published this week by Solaris (you can buy it here).

Set in a luxury resort in Dubai, it follows a family of three from the UK as they try and settle in. Roy, the husband, has been hired to fix ongoing problems at the Dream World beach complex. His wife, Lea, finds herself all but imprisoned in a never-ending cycle of luxury and social obligation and both embrace the ex-pat community in the area as a lifeline. Until one of them is killed…

I spoke to Christopher about the book, the influences on it and how a text changes as it’s written.

Tell us a little about the book.

“I visited an ex-pat ‘dream ranch’ in Dubai because I have a relative who lives on one, and the more I found out about life there the stranger it got. So all of the odd stories in the book are absolutely true. Basically, it’s the story of a family that moves to Dubai to work on a futuristic resort, only to find themselves in a vipers’ nest of covert sex and violence. There are two mysteries, the main one of which is resolved and the smaller one, which the reader must make up their own mind about.”

How would you classify the book?

“My writing often falls between genres. I’d say this was part-SF, part-thriller.”

There’s a really Ballardian feel to the novel in places, especially the exploration of small, associative groups of Brits under mounting social pressure. What attracted you to that idea as an author?

“I thought that the only way we could look into this odd closed-off type of community –which is almost becoming the norm around the world now – was by being an outsider looking in and making discoveries. Of course those discoveries may be entirely true or subject to hysterical overreaction on the part of those coming in!”

The novel tackles a lot of massive issues absolutely head on, including the class system, the worst elements of expatriate culture and the different weights of respect given to the male and female viewpoints. What was most challenging to write? And what was most rewarding?

“Honestly, it was exhausting. I knew exactly what I wanted to do and how I should go about it, but the journey took me through another more apocalyptic route, until I decided that no, it’s easy to simply blame a big faceless corporation; let’s see what happens if I approach it with more subtlety and say, hey, how responsible are we for creating this situation?

“It’s not a crime novel with a neat ending. I like that as you close the book you start to think, ‘Wait a minute…?’ The hardest part was creating a likeable but possibly misguided central character. The easiest parts were the descriptions of the place, because I went there several times to finish my research and it’s all there in searing heat and lurid colours, laid out before you. The most rewarding bit was when a reader finished an advance copy and said; ‘I’ve lived there and I understand the kind of hell your heroine went through.’”

Why Dubai? 

“It’s where the future lives, where modernity is all-important but you can never quite rid yourself of the past. If you work hard and keep your nose clean you’ll be rewarded. The Arabic way of thinking is surprisingly close to the American way. And in its own way, it breeds rebellion.”

How did the book evolve as you were writing it?

“For a while part of me simply wanted to destroy the resort called Dream World where one of the characters works. That happened in an early draft. Then a New York publisher read the draft and said, ‘No, you can afford to make it more ambiguous.’ Also it was important to me not to demonise the indigenous Arab population because they’re walking a complicated line and asking themselves, ‘What do we do when the oil runs out?’ They can’t go backwards. Equally, those coming in can’t understand them or conform to this strict new world. One of the book’s central questions is whether the conspiracy is real. I placed a big clue in the new title of the book. The original title was Dream World.”

What’s next for you?

“On 5 November its back to crime with the launch of Bryant & May: London’s Glory, then next year two new novels.”

Thanks for taking the time to chat with Buzz, Christopher.

The Sand Men is available now, published by Solaris. You can find Christopher online at www.christopherfowler.co.uk and on twitter at twitter.com/Peculiar.

Interview by: Alasdair Stuart


The_strain_s02e07_the_born_main

The Strain S02E07 “The Born” REVIEW

The Strain S02E07 “The Born” REVIEW

The_strain_s02e07_the_born_main

stars 3

Airing in the UK on Watch, Wednesdays, 10pm

Writer: Chuck Hogan
Director: Howard Deutch

 

Essential Plot Points:

  • Setrakian meets Quinlan for the first time when the Master-hunting strigoi/human half-breed spectacularly rescues the professor and Fet from a bunch of feelers.
  • All three have tracked the Master to his warehouse lair – Quinlan is less than impressed, though, when Fet’s dynamite fetish ruins his chance to kill the Master.
  • Setrakian’s research reveals that Quinlan has been around since Roman times when his nickname was “The Born”.
  • Dutch is reunited with old girlfriend Nikki. Fet goes into a sulk.
  • Coco seduces Palmer.
  • Eph returns from Washington and drinks New York dry before announcing he’s going to kill Palmer.
  • Zach is slightly less irritating than usual and his permaconfused look actually coincides with a scene in which he’s supposed to be confused.

The_strain_s02e07_the_born_quinlan

Review:

Finally Quinlan shows why Vaun was killed off to make way for him to enter the series. It’s a shame this episode wasn’t his debut because a) it’s a lot more impressive than cutting a wire fence and hitching a lift, and b) all his scenes from the past two episodes could have been replaced by one or two lines here with absolutely zero negative impact on the ongoing story.

So here we have Quinlan being cool in ancient Rome, using dirt for suntan lotion and wowing the crowds in the arena with some throat skewering. We have Quinlan being cool in 19th century riding a horse in a voluminous cape. We have Quinlan being cool in 21st century New York slicing up feelers and doing that patented, badass gun-in-each-hand shtick. And we have Quinlan looking like he’s throwing all his toys out of his pram when Setrakian buggers up his plan to kill the Master. Which isn’t so cool.

Let’s be honest – as respected an actor as Spooks’ Rupert Penry-Jones is, he’s struggling to give Quinlan the same cheeky charisma that Stephen McHattie gave Vaun. When he’s given kick-ass things to do, Quinlan is fine; when he’s just chatting, he’s a tad flat. Not terrible. Perfectly acceptable. Does the job. Just… Vaun had more personality, if not as much backstory. But if we get a bit less jaw jaw and a bit more gore gore from Quinlan in future then all’s good.

Speaking of that showdown with the Master, though… what was going on there? The Master clearly had no fear of Quinlan so what would have happened if Setrakian and Fet hadn’t blown the place up? Did the Master have a plan? Or was he just confident he could take Quinlan down in a fight? Surely Quinlan  – after centuries of cat and mouse – would have suspected some kind of trap or trick with the Master so happy to present himself for an open attack? The whole situation felt incredibly artificial. And that includes Setrakian’s request for Fet to dynamite the warehouse, a plan so full of potential pitfalls and opportunities for the Master to escape that it makes no sense at all.

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Eph is so pissed he’s forgetten where his mouth is (cue Airplane gag)

Elsewhere, Eph spent the episode pissed, but, believe it or not, entertainingly pissed. His reaction to Nikki is a peach (“The track star!”); his philosophy on alcohol is worthy of the ancient Greeks (“The bar tender made me promise that I’d sip this…  booze is supposed to make you feel good not taste good”); and his reaction when Fet leaves the hide-out in a huff is wonderfully childish (“It’s not me he’s running away from,” he tells Dutch). Could Eph be the Fun Bobby of The Strain? Not that his final line of the episode is a laughing matter: “I’m going to kill Eldritch Palmer.” Damn, that might mean he’ll have to sober up if he wants to shoot straight.

Talking of Palmer, at the risk of sounding ageist: Coco and Eldritch? Eeewwww! It’s not so much the age gap as the fact he’s just downright creepy. Jonathan Hyde wonderfully captures the sense of how awkward a man of advance years who has never had a relationship might be around a beautiful young woman, but that hardly makes him much more of a catch. Are we supposed to assume Coco is primarily after his inheritance?

Overall, “The Born” is an improvement over recent weeks because it returns to what the show does well in a big way. Sadly there’s also a big dollop of what the show doesn’t do well; relationship drama. The Strain has a real problem when a main character is in love with someone that the other characters seem to hold in the same contempt as the audience. Let’s hope Nikki does another runner as soon as possible.

The Good:

The_strain_s02e07_the_born_yuck
Eph’s not the only one who’s totally legless this week
  • Quinlan killing the feelers: wonderfully gratuitous, over-the-top action that finally shows what he can do. The bit where he steps on the entrails of a feeler that he’s just sliced in two to prevent the top half crawling away is The Strain at its gory best.
  • All the pithy little comments about Nikki doing a runner (“She hurt herself running away” ).
  • The opening teaser showing Quinlan’s Roman past is excellently shot. The arena fight puts anything seen in Atlantis to shame.
  • Fet’s expression when Dutch invites Nikki to come back to their hideout (in fact, Fet’s surly attitude throughout is fun, though you wouldn’t want a friend that moody in your own life).

The_strain_s02e07_the_born_expression

The Bad:

  • The idea that Ducth would fall back into Nikki’s arms is utterly unbelievable. No wonder Fet’s in a sulk. Nikki is such a non-character that Dutch is lessened by her through mere association.
  • The Albania flashback is dull and blandly shot.
  • The showdown with the Master is static and unexciting.
  • Setrakian asking Fet to dynamite the warehouse is a bizarre plan to say the least.

And The Random:

  • When the Master taunts Quinlan, “I’ll make you scream out in agony as I did your mother,” you have to wonder, is the Master Quinlan’s dad? (We checked and the answer is in the original novels but in deference to how spoilerphobic you might be we’ll let you Google that yourself if you want to).
  • It’s notable that Palmer says, “Complacency is the enemy of empires. Just ask the Romans,” in an episode that features a Roman flashback. Did the Strigoi have a part in downfall of the Roman Empire?
  • How come Nikki stayed in hiding so long after Fet and Dutch barged into her apartment? Didn’t she recognise Dutch’s voice?
  • The lamp in Nikki’s apartment is an attention black hole – it sucks your eyes inexorably towards it whenever it’s on screen. We think it may be an Iron Chicken egg.

The_strain_s02e07_the_born_lamp

Read our previous reviews of The Strain


 

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Once Upon A Time S05E02 "The Price" REVIEW

Once Upon A Time S05E02 “The Price” REVIEW

once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_arthur
Arthur’s lost

stars 2.5

Airing in the UK on Netflix

Writers: Andrew Chambliss & Dana Horgan
Director: Romeo Tirone

 

Essential Plot Points:

  • King Arthur throws a ball
  • Regina must save Robin from a Fury
  • Citizens of Camelot appear in Storybrooke
  • Regina begins to doubt herself
  • Dark Emma has Excalibur
once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_merlin_tree
The Merlin tree

Review:

If there were ever an episode which could be summed up as “40 minutes of killing time” it would be this one. So much nothing happens. Every plot point is set up only to be given absolutely no consequences or impact on the story; other than maybe two developments you could skip this entire episode and be able to pick up next week just fine.

The worst part is it’s not even bad, because that would give us some to write about. The episode is just okay, a masterpiece of middling adequacy. Sure, you can’t expect every episode to be great but this is only the second episode of a new season –step it up guys.

Back in flashback land (still not impressed they’re reverting to this technique again) the Storybrooke gang arrive in Camelot to be greeted by King Arthur and his wife, Guinevere. Everyone is excited to meet the Saviour but when Emma goes to introduce herself Regina decides to claim she’s the Saviour. She later explains that Emma cannot use her powers so it’s best for her to keep a low profile.

With Charming and Hood eager to start the quest to find Merlin, Arthur explains that all of Camelot knows exactly where Merlin is. The great and powerful wizard, built up to be the greatest practitioner of magic in this series is… stuck inside a tree. Which, to be fair, is actually part of Arthurian mythology so we’ll give them that one. According to Merlin’s prophecy the Saviour will rescue him from the tree. So it’s straight to work right? Nope, time for a ball!

once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_dwarf_tree
Bonsai

 

Meanwhile, in the present, the Dwarfs test the boundaries of Storybrooke to see if the curse stops people leaving (again… again). Consequently, one of them is turned into a tree. So the same old.

But wait! Emma is the Dark One and has evil powers, so time to see some villainous mischief, surely? Except she doesn’t do anything with her new powers. She just stands around talking. She does psyche out Regina a little, though, making her doubt herself. Terrifying!

King Arthur and the denizens of Camelot have shown up in Storybrooke, another general annoyance for the main cast. Last week we complained that King Arthur came across as a rather bland character; this hasn’t changed in the slightest.

Some excitement does occur when Robin is taken away by a Fury. A Fury cannot be defeated by magic; the only way to save Robin is to bargain for his life by offering up another.

At Camelot, the ball is in full swing and it’s the fanciest ball since, well, the last one they had. However, there is a great little montage when Henry introduces himself to the princess and shares his iPod with her; the anachronistic ’80s synth pop actually suits the lavish ballroom dancing really well, and it’s a sweet scene. This soon ends when Percival tells Regina the story about when he grew up and witnessed her burning down his village. Unsurprisingly a bit miffed at this he bears a grudge and ends up attempting to murder Regina. But Robin jumps in the way and Percival is killed by Charming. Considering we’ve never met Percival before and we know Robin survives (he’s in the “six weeks later” scenes) this leave no emotional impact. 

Robin is lying on the table dying, Regina can’t save him and Emma is warned if she uses her magic there will be a price to pay, thus connecting the two stories.

Back in the present, Regina offers her life to the Fury to save Robin. This leads to an odd scene reminiscent of Guardians Of The Galaxy in which a bunch of Storybrookers hold hands with Regina to share out the cost the price. It’s a nice moment until you realised they’ve just given up about a fifth of their lives each, which is, at a guess, 5-10 years of their life gone. Considering three of them have children, I’d call that a loss.

In the final scene we see that Emma has Excalibur as well as the dagger. The Darkness informs her that she can use the sword to remove any links she has to love ones; fortunately for now she cannot remove the sword.

 

once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_dresses

The Good:

  • The costumes were pretty.
  • Regina’s reluctant to dance was amusing.
  • The musical moments featuring “Only You” by Yazoo were fun and the song fitted in beautifully.
once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_boring_swan
Stop talking! Do something evil!



The Bad:

  • Dark Emma has been quite disappointing thus far
  • King Arthur is still a bore
  • Nothing of much importance happens
  • Only about five minutes of the episode progressed the ongoing story in any form.
  • How many times does Robin need saving? We get it! Regina is a strong character and gender roles can be reversed.

once_upon_a_time_s05e02_the_price_ferryman

The Random:

  • The title card features a tree… in the woods. More specifically it’s the Merlin tree. 
  • Furies come from Greek mythology. When the Fury is about to take Robin’s soul we see the Ferryman. Also from Greek mythology, the Ferryman transports the souls of the dead to the underworld. Both the Furies and the Ferryman (aka, Charon) appear in Disney’s Hercules (1997).
  • Dopey is wearing a Geronimo Jackson shirt, who were a fictional band on the television series Lost.
  • The rose in the jar makes a return – many viewers will probably recognise it from Disney’s Beauty And The Beast which, of course, is where Belle hails from.

Reviewed by Sam Halford

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Read our other Once Upon A Time Season Five reviews


 

 

Dragon_Ball_Z_Resurrection_F

Loadsa Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection 'F' Clips As Its Release Expands

Dragon_Ball_Z_Resurrection_F

Due to the phenomenal fan support and demand for tickets, Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’ will now be showing in a whopping 90 plus cinemas across Empire, Showcase, Vue, Picturehouse, Odeon and a host of independent venues. The film will be one of the biggest anime releases in UK cinemas, ever. For tickets, head to www.dragonballzuk.com. There’s a list of venues at the foot of this article.

And just in case you needed any further encouragement, Manga UK has given us a whole bunch of clips to share with you. This must be about half the movie! Check out the Buzz review of Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’ – click here.

  • Venues List:
    Odeon: Belfast, Birmingham Broadway Plaza, Bournemouth, Brighton, Colchester, Edinburgh Fort Kinnaird, Greenwich, Kingston, Leeds Bradford, Liverpool One, Manchester Printworks, Manchester Trafford, Newcastle, Milton Keynes, Southampton, Streatham, Surrey Quays, Taunton, Uxbridge, Wimbledon
  • Vue: Basingstoke, Bury, Cambridge, Carlisle, Cheshire Oaks, Croydon Grants, Edinburgh Onni, Finchley Road London, Hull, Inverness, Islington, Lancaster, Northampton, Norwich, Oxford, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Purley Way, Sheffield, Stirling, Swansea, Watford, London Westfield, York
  • Showcase: Bluewater, Bristol, Bristol CDL, Cardiff, Coatbridge, Coventry, Derby, Dudley, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, Manchester, Newham, Nottingham, Paisley, Peterborough, Reading, Teeside, Walsall
  • Empire: Basildon, Birmingham, Clydebank, London Leicester Square, Newcastle, Poole, Sunderland, Swindon, Wigan
  • Picturehouse: Cameo, Central, Hackney, Ritzy
  • Independents: Barn Dartington, DCA Dundee, Derby Quad, Genesis Mile End, Grovesnor Glasgow, Lighthouse Dublin, London Prince Charles, Movies@Dundrum Dublin, Movies@Gorey, Movies@Swords Dublin, Odyssey Belfast, Phoenix Leicester, Playhouse Perth, Queens Theatre Belfast, SGC Dungarvan

 

Video: Agents Of SHIELD Actor Combats Hydra’s Image Problem

Now that Grant Ward is in charge of the new Hydra on Marvel’s Agents Of SHIELD, it seems that the actor who plays him, Brett Dalton, has a few ideas on how the evil organisation should change its image. So he calls Marvel Entertainment boss Joe Quesada to let him know…

Marvel’s Agents Of Shield season three will air in the UK on Channel 4… eventually. (Yup, still no news on a start date… and we want to start raving about it in reviews!)

 


 

• Agents Of SHIELD Clip: Daisy Explains The Secret Warriors
• Ward Auditions For Top Gear In Agents Of SHIELD Season 3 Clip
• Trailer For Marvel’s Agents Of SHIELD Season 3 Premiere

 

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_end_of_la

Fear The Walking Dead S01E06 “The Good Man” REVIEW

Fear The Walking Dead S01E06 “The Good Man” REVIEW

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_end_of_la

stars 4

Airing in the UK on AMC
Writers: Robert Kirkman & Dave Erickson
Director: Stefan Schwartz

Essential Plot Points:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_travis_new_world

  • With the military pulling out, Travis and Madison’s original plan is back on. Get out, go east. But first, they need to rescue their people. Daniel reports back, saying he’s found the stadium full of walkers and is ready to unleash them.
  • Andy pleads with Daniel to let him live, explaining that he can get them into the facility and tell them where their loved ones are being held. Daniel wavers on this and finally, Andy agrees to tell Travis, explaining that Daniel has no reason to keep him alive and begging to be cut loose.
  • Daniel releases the walkers and leads them to the compound, causing all hell to break loose. On the way there, Travis, being Travis, lets Andy go. Daniel, being Daniel, isn’t happy. Regardless, they lead the others into the facility to locate Nick and Griselda. Chris and Alicia are left to guard the car. It goes exactly as well as you’d expect. A pair of soldiers take the car, threaten the kids and threaten to take Alicia by force. Chris tries to defend his sister and is knocked out.
  • Inside, Strand, who is dressed suspiciously like someone noticed and corrected last week’s pimp cosplay, makes his move. Or rather, does so after Nick hands back the key he stole from Strand. The two run into Melvin, the guard who Strand bribed last episode. Badly injured, Melvin begs them to kill him. Strand assures him he’s on the way and relieves him of the cufflinks he bribed the soldier with and his gun. The watch he lets the dying man keep.
  • Daniel’s “break an egg with 2,000 angry dead people” approach causes problems for everyone. The evacuation Exner ordered is cancelled when the dead storm the fences and she tells her staff to flee using ground transports. Liza pleads with her but Exner insists she leave. Liza has the opportunity to board the last truck out of Not Quite Dead But Any Time Now City, but opts to go back in and look for her family.
  • She finds them, just as they find Strand and Nick who are trapped behind a keylocked door with a horde approaching. Nick begs his mother to go but, at the last second, Liza arrives, swipes the key card and lets them through. Followed by the Walkers.
  • The fight spills into a kitchen where very nearly everyone gets a chance to kill a Walker or two. Then they run into Exner who’s had to euthanise all her patients. Liza begs her to come with them but Madison tells her to leave the Doctor behind. As they go, Exner raises the bolt gun one last time.
  • Finally, they make it back to the car park. The car isn’t there. Chris and Alicia are, both apparently unharmed. The soldiers were more concerned with getting out alive than fighting or assaulting anyone.
  • Andy, on the other hand, is absolutely up for a fight. He arrives, pulls a gun on Daniel and in a mystifyingly shot moment, decides to shoot Ofelia instead. Travis snaps, tackles him and beats him half to death.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_mass_graves

  • They leave, discovering the mass graves of Walkers along the way taking the LA river drainage canal to Strand’s house on the coast. There, he encourages them to eat and rest while he packs. Nick, who heard Strand mention “Abigail” in the cell asks where she is. Strand shows him: a yacht moored off the coast.
  • Liza hugs Chris and heads out to the beach. Madison, sensing she’s upset, follows her. Liza reveals she was bitten in the fight and begs Madison to kill her, and not have Travis do it. Madison refuses and Liza points out she asked her to do the same thing a few days ago. Travis arrives and Liza tearfully explains what’s happened. Travis hugs her and, slowly, asks for the gun.
  • Chris and Alicia hear a gunshot and run down to the beach. They find Liza’s dead body. Nearby, Travis kneels in the surf and breaks down, sobbing with grief as Madison holds him. Behind them is a city on fire, in front of them, the ocean…

Review:

Last week I asked whether the show that had just inflicted “Cobalt” on the world could put together a coherent season finale. Turns out it could. Mostly.

So, the good first, or more specifically, the “Good Man”. This is the episode where Big Trav finally steps into the spotlight. Everything he’s experienced over the last five episodes brings him to this point and Cliff Curtis, as ever, relishes being given meaty stuff to do. He gets plenty of it too, including a decent, contemptuous showdown with Daniel, the incident with Andy and the closing scene with Liza.

The first is offhand, as he shoves the smaller, older man against the truck to get him out of the way. This is Travis as Papa Bear, a man who will do anything to protect his family. That’s the driving force behind everything he does in this episode, from going into the military base to saving Liza by killing her. None of it’s easy, all of it will only ever get harder, but it’s the only course of action he has. Travis isn’t Fear The Walking Dead’s Rick; that’s very clearly Madison. However, he is this show’s Hershel, an endlessly good man who will do anything to protect the people that matter to him.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_andy

That’s why he beats Andy half to death in a genuinely nasty scene. It’s not just that Andy is clearly unbalanced and dangerous but that he’s opened fire on Travis’s extended family. He’s finally in the headspace Madison’s been in from the second episode: survive, protect, end anything or anyone that threatens the people who matter to him. That’s why the final shots of him kneeling on the beach are so powerful. The ocean represents the boundless new world Travis is thrown into, both post-apocalypse and post murder. The fact that Madison is by his side is both a symbolic uniting of their often disparate approaches and the anchor he desperately needs. The good man is at sea in stormy waters but he’s not adrift, and that’s immensely powerful, interesting stuff to base a second season on.

As, to my rank amazement, is Strand. After last week’s disastrous parade of cliché, it’s difficult not to look at him as undergoing an emergency course correct. Here he’s immaculately dressed, far less amoral and infinitely more focused. His scenes with Nick sparkle with a nicely unpleasant Dodger/Fagin energy and his backstory is clearly rich and nuanced, rather like he’s starting to look himself. The moment where he packs a photo that’s clearly very dear to him, whom we don’t see, promises much with him for season two. And, thank God, none of it’s as repellent as many of his lines were last week.


Watch Fear The Walking Dead: Flight 462 episode one


This week’s other MVP is, remarkably, Liza. Elizabeth Rodriguez has been one of the cast members the scripts have served least well but here she’s on top form. Her final scenes in particular, especially with Kim Dickens and Cliff Curtis, are brilliant and packed with emotion. Liza’s a good woman, someone who wants to help and is faced with the worst possible way to do that. The fact her final words are information about what’s killing her just cements her position as one of the show’s most underused, and biggest, assets. She’ll be missed.

It’s not all reclaimed wine and roses – or in this case, water and emergency rations – though. The script, when it’s on point, is great. When it isn’t, it’s awful. Strand’s, “I must remain in constant motion,” line feels like it’s wandered in from a different show as, on occasion, does he. Likewise Chris and Alicia remain completely useless throughout the episode. I can see what they’re going for; that these two are the last innocents left in the group. However, they kill the pacing the show’s fought for every time they’re on screen and need a purpose, badly, in season two. Otherwise Chris in particular may be following his mum to Fear The Walking Dead Valhalla.

Worst of all, though, are the two action beats the episode doesn’t so much fumble as hurl violently and incompetently to the ground. The moment when Andy shoots Ofelia is directed in an intensely odd way. It looks, from the eye line of the characters that Daniel is ordering the soldier to shoot his daughter which Andy then does. I’ve watched it three times and it doesn’t make any more sense now than it did the first time. If it’s actually Daniel begging for his life over his daughter’s then it’s a honking and bad character turn. If it isn’t, it’s bad direction.

The other moment is just straight up gratuitous. We see a soldier get bitten as the compound falls. He realises he’s dead and runs into a set of helicopter blades, mincing his own head. As a moment that shows how bad things have got, it works. As long as you don’t think of him reaching for a gun, or begging a friend to kill him or any one of a dozen beats that would communicate the same thing without the pointless gore.

But, amazingly, these are minor quibbles. The episode is pacy, action-packed, pays off nearly every plot in the season and most of all relishes the chance to cut loose. This is a show that’s run in place, very badly at times, for at least four of its six episodes. Now, at last, it’s off and moving and looks set to go some interesting places. That by itself would be quite an achievement, but on the way, it’s finally made me care for these characters. That’s amazing and promises much for season two. Roll on life on the ocean wave. Let’s all go meet Abigail.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_abigail

The Good:

  • Travis’s story arc. It’s been very easy to mock it for the last month in particular but now we’ve got some payoff that’s changed. He’s a painfully good man who is going to be broken again and again by the choices he’s going to have to make. Or, the show could pull a massive left turn and have his endless ethical choices pay off. Either way, he, with Madison as his Shane or Rick should make for an electrifying central dynamic to season two.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_strand

  • Strand, amazingly. Colman Domingo was great with terrible material last week. This week he’s amazing with good material. That last scene with Nick, and the constant sense that Strand isn’t surprised this has happened, is fascinating. Plus now he’s not a moustache-twirling stereotype he’s a welcome and interesting addition to the mix. And who is or was Abigail? And who’s in the picture?
  • The scene with the walker horde, Nick, Strand and everyone else on the other side of the door should be a watermark for future episodes. That’s legitimately the first time I’ve seen this show work; family dynamic combined with imminent danger, action and top-notch direction to create a sweaty palmed moment of hideous tension. Just amazingly good. Especially Strand’s increasingly frantic refusal to die and Nick’s peaceful, sweet, “Go!” to his mum. That’s what this show should have been weeks ago. Now, at last, it’s here.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_exner

  • Exner. Sandrine Holt did so much with so little this season. Part of you hopes she isn’t dead because the quiet, awful pragmatism of, “we talking blood or bond?” is a great fit for this show. The rest of you, given how perfect her final scene is, hopes she’s done.
  • Madison methodically grabbing what medical supplies they could from the infirmary, unconcerned about the dead bodies around her. That and her nice moment of bonding with Strand suggests she’s going to do just fine.
  • Strand and Nick’s running styles tell you everything you need to know about them. Strand’s elegant, measured and precise. Nick is a wild-armed, sprinting ball of energy. If this show doesn’t work out for them, they’ve got my vote for the main cast of True Detective season three.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_travis_liza

  • Liza using some of her final moments to give the others information on the disease that’s ended the world is heartbreaking: “I’ve seen it, I’ve seen what it does. The bites don’t turn you but the infection’s not treatable. The infection kills you like anything else.”
  • It also neatly positions the walkers as a horrific consequence of the disease, something the lead show doesn’t concern itself with. I would love it if we got some answers about the cause of the outbreak in season two. And what about mysterious hoodie enthusiast from a few episodes ago? WHAT DOES HE KNOW?!

 

The Bad:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_Daniel

  • Daniel. From fascinating patriarch to torturer and walker shepherd in four episodes. Lots to fix in season two.
  • Daniel’s ludicrous, not to mention awful plan. Somehow he walks briskly ahead of the horde of surprisingly fresh walkers for the mile or so it takes to get to the gates and then has no issue murdering dozens of people. Hopefully there’ll be consequences in season two.
  • I can see what the show’s aiming for with Nick comparing the zombie apocalypse to being an intensely sociopathic drug addict hyper privileged white teenager. I can also see how epically it misses the mark.
  • Strand’s, “I must remain in constant motion.” Really, Lex Luther? Well that’s not annoying or obtuse at all. Thanks for the update. Also are you sure you’re in the right show? Because sometimes the writers certainly aren’t.
  • Chris and Alicia are now very much the “Robin, the Boy Victims” of the show. They desperately, desperately need something to do. And it’s not a romance plot. Ever.
  • The weirdly judged action beats. The more I look at it the more the Andy scene is just a mess. It really does look like Daniel tells him to shoot his daughter, and Andy does it. I desperately hope there isn’t payoff to this in season two.
  • Helicopter Soldier. You can tell the show’s super excited to be finally cutting loose but euthanasia by rotor blade is the sort of beat that would make an ’80s schlockfest zombie movie go, “Whoah now! You sure about that?”

 

And The Random:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_neighbours

  • There are multiple shot of the week candidates because while Stefan Schwartz fumbles the ball a couple of times he’s really spot on everywhere else. The shot of the neighbouring family, unaware of what’s coming, is great. Likewise the tracking shot down Daniel’s walker horde is really smart and solves the problem of just where the stadium is in relation to the safe zone. Every single shot of ruined LA is great too.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_heights

  • But this nails them all. Madison, on her way out of her house forever, stopping and looking at the marks of her children’s growth and the life she’s leaving. Subtle, simple and very moving.
  • This episode’s Apocalypse Jukebox is stuffed to the nines. It opens with “It Comes Back to Haunt Us” by Timber Timbre. Then “World Undone” by Calexico plays over the drive to Casa Strand. And finally “Kettering” by The Antlers, also prominently featured in the brilliant Sense8, plays over the end credits.

And that’s season one of Fear The Walking Dead and the, at times, dreadful life choices of its characters. Despite that, this is a really strong season finale that sets up an interesting second season. Before that though, Rick and the Alexandria Power Hour returns! See you next week for grime, southern angst and dead folks!

Review by: Alasdair Stuart

Read our other Fear The Walking Dead reviews


 

 

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_end_of_la

Fear The Walking Dead S01E06 "The Good Man" REVIEW

Fear The Walking Dead S01E06 “The Good Man” REVIEW

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_end_of_la

stars 4

Airing in the UK on AMC
Writers: Robert Kirkman & Dave Erickson
Director: Stefan Schwartz

Essential Plot Points:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_travis_new_world

  • With the military pulling out, Travis and Madison’s original plan is back on. Get out, go east. But first, they need to rescue their people. Daniel reports back, saying he’s found the stadium full of walkers and is ready to unleash them.
  • Andy pleads with Daniel to let him live, explaining that he can get them into the facility and tell them where their loved ones are being held. Daniel wavers on this and finally, Andy agrees to tell Travis, explaining that Daniel has no reason to keep him alive and begging to be cut loose.
  • Daniel releases the walkers and leads them to the compound, causing all hell to break loose. On the way there, Travis, being Travis, lets Andy go. Daniel, being Daniel, isn’t happy. Regardless, they lead the others into the facility to locate Nick and Griselda. Chris and Alicia are left to guard the car. It goes exactly as well as you’d expect. A pair of soldiers take the car, threaten the kids and threaten to take Alicia by force. Chris tries to defend his sister and is knocked out.
  • Inside, Strand, who is dressed suspiciously like someone noticed and corrected last week’s pimp cosplay, makes his move. Or rather, does so after Nick hands back the key he stole from Strand. The two run into Melvin, the guard who Strand bribed last episode. Badly injured, Melvin begs them to kill him. Strand assures him he’s on the way and relieves him of the cufflinks he bribed the soldier with and his gun. The watch he lets the dying man keep.
  • Daniel’s “break an egg with 2,000 angry dead people” approach causes problems for everyone. The evacuation Exner ordered is cancelled when the dead storm the fences and she tells her staff to flee using ground transports. Liza pleads with her but Exner insists she leave. Liza has the opportunity to board the last truck out of Not Quite Dead But Any Time Now City, but opts to go back in and look for her family.
  • She finds them, just as they find Strand and Nick who are trapped behind a keylocked door with a horde approaching. Nick begs his mother to go but, at the last second, Liza arrives, swipes the key card and lets them through. Followed by the Walkers.
  • The fight spills into a kitchen where very nearly everyone gets a chance to kill a Walker or two. Then they run into Exner who’s had to euthanise all her patients. Liza begs her to come with them but Madison tells her to leave the Doctor behind. As they go, Exner raises the bolt gun one last time.
  • Finally, they make it back to the car park. The car isn’t there. Chris and Alicia are, both apparently unharmed. The soldiers were more concerned with getting out alive than fighting or assaulting anyone.
  • Andy, on the other hand, is absolutely up for a fight. He arrives, pulls a gun on Daniel and in a mystifyingly shot moment, decides to shoot Ofelia instead. Travis snaps, tackles him and beats him half to death.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_mass_graves

  • They leave, discovering the mass graves of Walkers along the way taking the LA river drainage canal to Strand’s house on the coast. There, he encourages them to eat and rest while he packs. Nick, who heard Strand mention “Abigail” in the cell asks where she is. Strand shows him: a yacht moored off the coast.
  • Liza hugs Chris and heads out to the beach. Madison, sensing she’s upset, follows her. Liza reveals she was bitten in the fight and begs Madison to kill her, and not have Travis do it. Madison refuses and Liza points out she asked her to do the same thing a few days ago. Travis arrives and Liza tearfully explains what’s happened. Travis hugs her and, slowly, asks for the gun.
  • Chris and Alicia hear a gunshot and run down to the beach. They find Liza’s dead body. Nearby, Travis kneels in the surf and breaks down, sobbing with grief as Madison holds him. Behind them is a city on fire, in front of them, the ocean…

Review:

Last week I asked whether the show that had just inflicted “Cobalt” on the world could put together a coherent season finale. Turns out it could. Mostly.

So, the good first, or more specifically, the “Good Man”. This is the episode where Big Trav finally steps into the spotlight. Everything he’s experienced over the last five episodes brings him to this point and Cliff Curtis, as ever, relishes being given meaty stuff to do. He gets plenty of it too, including a decent, contemptuous showdown with Daniel, the incident with Andy and the closing scene with Liza.

The first is offhand, as he shoves the smaller, older man against the truck to get him out of the way. This is Travis as Papa Bear, a man who will do anything to protect his family. That’s the driving force behind everything he does in this episode, from going into the military base to saving Liza by killing her. None of it’s easy, all of it will only ever get harder, but it’s the only course of action he has. Travis isn’t Fear The Walking Dead’s Rick; that’s very clearly Madison. However, he is this show’s Hershel, an endlessly good man who will do anything to protect the people that matter to him.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_andy

That’s why he beats Andy half to death in a genuinely nasty scene. It’s not just that Andy is clearly unbalanced and dangerous but that he’s opened fire on Travis’s extended family. He’s finally in the headspace Madison’s been in from the second episode: survive, protect, end anything or anyone that threatens the people who matter to him. That’s why the final shots of him kneeling on the beach are so powerful. The ocean represents the boundless new world Travis is thrown into, both post-apocalypse and post murder. The fact that Madison is by his side is both a symbolic uniting of their often disparate approaches and the anchor he desperately needs. The good man is at sea in stormy waters but he’s not adrift, and that’s immensely powerful, interesting stuff to base a second season on.

As, to my rank amazement, is Strand. After last week’s disastrous parade of cliché, it’s difficult not to look at him as undergoing an emergency course correct. Here he’s immaculately dressed, far less amoral and infinitely more focused. His scenes with Nick sparkle with a nicely unpleasant Dodger/Fagin energy and his backstory is clearly rich and nuanced, rather like he’s starting to look himself. The moment where he packs a photo that’s clearly very dear to him, whom we don’t see, promises much with him for season two. And, thank God, none of it’s as repellent as many of his lines were last week.


Watch Fear The Walking Dead: Flight 462 episode one


This week’s other MVP is, remarkably, Liza. Elizabeth Rodriguez has been one of the cast members the scripts have served least well but here she’s on top form. Her final scenes in particular, especially with Kim Dickens and Cliff Curtis, are brilliant and packed with emotion. Liza’s a good woman, someone who wants to help and is faced with the worst possible way to do that. The fact her final words are information about what’s killing her just cements her position as one of the show’s most underused, and biggest, assets. She’ll be missed.

It’s not all reclaimed wine and roses – or in this case, water and emergency rations – though. The script, when it’s on point, is great. When it isn’t, it’s awful. Strand’s, “I must remain in constant motion,” line feels like it’s wandered in from a different show as, on occasion, does he. Likewise Chris and Alicia remain completely useless throughout the episode. I can see what they’re going for; that these two are the last innocents left in the group. However, they kill the pacing the show’s fought for every time they’re on screen and need a purpose, badly, in season two. Otherwise Chris in particular may be following his mum to Fear The Walking Dead Valhalla.

Worst of all, though, are the two action beats the episode doesn’t so much fumble as hurl violently and incompetently to the ground. The moment when Andy shoots Ofelia is directed in an intensely odd way. It looks, from the eye line of the characters that Daniel is ordering the soldier to shoot his daughter which Andy then does. I’ve watched it three times and it doesn’t make any more sense now than it did the first time. If it’s actually Daniel begging for his life over his daughter’s then it’s a honking and bad character turn. If it isn’t, it’s bad direction.

The other moment is just straight up gratuitous. We see a soldier get bitten as the compound falls. He realises he’s dead and runs into a set of helicopter blades, mincing his own head. As a moment that shows how bad things have got, it works. As long as you don’t think of him reaching for a gun, or begging a friend to kill him or any one of a dozen beats that would communicate the same thing without the pointless gore.

But, amazingly, these are minor quibbles. The episode is pacy, action-packed, pays off nearly every plot in the season and most of all relishes the chance to cut loose. This is a show that’s run in place, very badly at times, for at least four of its six episodes. Now, at last, it’s off and moving and looks set to go some interesting places. That by itself would be quite an achievement, but on the way, it’s finally made me care for these characters. That’s amazing and promises much for season two. Roll on life on the ocean wave. Let’s all go meet Abigail.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_abigail

The Good:

  • Travis’s story arc. It’s been very easy to mock it for the last month in particular but now we’ve got some payoff that’s changed. He’s a painfully good man who is going to be broken again and again by the choices he’s going to have to make. Or, the show could pull a massive left turn and have his endless ethical choices pay off. Either way, he, with Madison as his Shane or Rick should make for an electrifying central dynamic to season two.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_strand

  • Strand, amazingly. Colman Domingo was great with terrible material last week. This week he’s amazing with good material. That last scene with Nick, and the constant sense that Strand isn’t surprised this has happened, is fascinating. Plus now he’s not a moustache-twirling stereotype he’s a welcome and interesting addition to the mix. And who is or was Abigail? And who’s in the picture?
  • The scene with the walker horde, Nick, Strand and everyone else on the other side of the door should be a watermark for future episodes. That’s legitimately the first time I’ve seen this show work; family dynamic combined with imminent danger, action and top-notch direction to create a sweaty palmed moment of hideous tension. Just amazingly good. Especially Strand’s increasingly frantic refusal to die and Nick’s peaceful, sweet, “Go!” to his mum. That’s what this show should have been weeks ago. Now, at last, it’s here.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_exner

  • Exner. Sandrine Holt did so much with so little this season. Part of you hopes she isn’t dead because the quiet, awful pragmatism of, “we talking blood or bond?” is a great fit for this show. The rest of you, given how perfect her final scene is, hopes she’s done.
  • Madison methodically grabbing what medical supplies they could from the infirmary, unconcerned about the dead bodies around her. That and her nice moment of bonding with Strand suggests she’s going to do just fine.
  • Strand and Nick’s running styles tell you everything you need to know about them. Strand’s elegant, measured and precise. Nick is a wild-armed, sprinting ball of energy. If this show doesn’t work out for them, they’ve got my vote for the main cast of True Detective season three.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_travis_liza

  • Liza using some of her final moments to give the others information on the disease that’s ended the world is heartbreaking: “I’ve seen it, I’ve seen what it does. The bites don’t turn you but the infection’s not treatable. The infection kills you like anything else.”
  • It also neatly positions the walkers as a horrific consequence of the disease, something the lead show doesn’t concern itself with. I would love it if we got some answers about the cause of the outbreak in season two. And what about mysterious hoodie enthusiast from a few episodes ago? WHAT DOES HE KNOW?!

 

The Bad:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_Daniel

  • Daniel. From fascinating patriarch to torturer and walker shepherd in four episodes. Lots to fix in season two.
  • Daniel’s ludicrous, not to mention awful plan. Somehow he walks briskly ahead of the horde of surprisingly fresh walkers for the mile or so it takes to get to the gates and then has no issue murdering dozens of people. Hopefully there’ll be consequences in season two.
  • I can see what the show’s aiming for with Nick comparing the zombie apocalypse to being an intensely sociopathic drug addict hyper privileged white teenager. I can also see how epically it misses the mark.
  • Strand’s, “I must remain in constant motion.” Really, Lex Luther? Well that’s not annoying or obtuse at all. Thanks for the update. Also are you sure you’re in the right show? Because sometimes the writers certainly aren’t.
  • Chris and Alicia are now very much the “Robin, the Boy Victims” of the show. They desperately, desperately need something to do. And it’s not a romance plot. Ever.
  • The weirdly judged action beats. The more I look at it the more the Andy scene is just a mess. It really does look like Daniel tells him to shoot his daughter, and Andy does it. I desperately hope there isn’t payoff to this in season two.
  • Helicopter Soldier. You can tell the show’s super excited to be finally cutting loose but euthanasia by rotor blade is the sort of beat that would make an ’80s schlockfest zombie movie go, “Whoah now! You sure about that?”

 

And The Random:

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_neighbours

  • There are multiple shot of the week candidates because while Stefan Schwartz fumbles the ball a couple of times he’s really spot on everywhere else. The shot of the neighbouring family, unaware of what’s coming, is great. Likewise the tracking shot down Daniel’s walker horde is really smart and solves the problem of just where the stadium is in relation to the safe zone. Every single shot of ruined LA is great too.

fear_the_walking_dead_s01e06_heights

  • But this nails them all. Madison, on her way out of her house forever, stopping and looking at the marks of her children’s growth and the life she’s leaving. Subtle, simple and very moving.
  • This episode’s Apocalypse Jukebox is stuffed to the nines. It opens with “It Comes Back to Haunt Us” by Timber Timbre. Then “World Undone” by Calexico plays over the drive to Casa Strand. And finally “Kettering” by The Antlers, also prominently featured in the brilliant Sense8, plays over the end credits.

And that’s season one of Fear The Walking Dead and the, at times, dreadful life choices of its characters. Despite that, this is a really strong season finale that sets up an interesting second season. Before that though, Rick and the Alexandria Power Hour returns! See you next week for grime, southern angst and dead folks!

Review by: Alasdair Stuart

Read our other Fear The Walking Dead reviews


 

 

old-man-logan

Guardians Of The Gallery: Harry Potter, Flash, Arrow, Spider-Gwen & More

Some of the best, funniest and weirdest pics & vids that’ve been doing the rounds on the ’net this week




 

••• We don’t know which multiverse these guys come from, but we love ’em. A cute spin on characters from The Flash and Arrow by Bosslogic.

A photo posted by Bosslogic (@bosslogix) on

A photo posted by Bosslogic (@bosslogix) on

A photo posted by Bosslogic (@bosslogix) on

A photo posted by Bosslogic (@bosslogix) on


 

••• Fed up with the lack of female-led superhero movies? Then this brilliant portmanteau video, made up from bits of Easy A, Birdman, The Amazing Spider-Man and specially shot footage, brings to life Marvel’s current Spider-Gwen title. Genius


 

••• The next Wolverine film is rumoured to be based on the Old Man Logan storyline from the comics – set in the future with an aged Wolverine. But what might Hugh Jackman look like in that role? ComicBook.com commissioned Bosslogic (hang on… that sounds familiar?) to envision it.

old-man-logan


 

••• Artist Matt Rhodes has been busily designing characters for an animated Dune movie, if anybody at Disney is interested? The aesthetic is based on the films of Tarsem Singh (The Fall, The Cell, Immortals) and you can find more detailed descriptions on Blastr.

Dune_3

Dune_1

Dune_2


 

 

••• Just in case you’re the only genre fan on the internet who didn’t see Tyler Stout’s awesome Avengers: Age Of Ultron poster, commissioned by Marvel to mark the Blu-ray release of the film, here it your. Yours for… oh hang on, they all sold out quicker than Glastonbury tickets.

Stout-AVENGERS2


 

 

••• Even if you love the film this latest “Honest Trailer” for Avengers: Age Of Ultron will have you nodding in agreement on more than one occasion. “We broke Joss Whedon!” indeed.


 

••• Ready for Halloween? This US supermarket is with this amazing Jack Skellington display made from Cola multipacks. [via Geeks Are Sexy]

jack


 

 

••• Entertainment Weekly has revealed four images from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Philosopher’s Stone: The Illustrated Edition which is published on Tuesday with art by Jim Kay. You can buy it here

Illustrated-Harry-Potter-01

Illustrated-Harry-Potter-02

Illustrated-Harry-Potter-03

Illustrated-Harry-Potter-04


 

header

Kinetic Vibe To Bring B1A4 To Europe For First European Tour

header

Firstly, sorry for delivering the news a little late, and missing all the fun. Our very good friends over at Kinetic Vibe recently announced that they would be bringing the K-pop boy group B1A4 to Europe.

Although Kinetic Vibe had already secured Helsinki and Madrid for stops on the European tour, a third destination was yet to be decided. To keep things fun and to include fans worldwide, they gave Banas (that’s what B1A4’s fans are called) the chance to pick between Berlin and Milan as the third and final destination. Fan voted passionately as they took part in one huge SNS event, and the overall winner was Berlin.

Previously Kinetic Vibe had hinted that something big was coming to Europe with quirky daily updates leading up to the big unveiling, including a set of Emoji posters that represented each member of the group, or their “Goodnight, Sweet Dreams” poster which tied in with B1A4’s song “Goodnight.

snsnsns

Although some of the UK fans will be disappointed that B1A4 will not be playing in London this time round, do not fret: B1A4 will come back and visit more European countries in the future, especially if this tour goes well. Having been to their recent concert in Seoul and seen them on previous concerts, tours and events organised by the Kinetic vibe team, I can vouch that these performances are going to be events no B1A4 fan will want to miss out on.

At the moment the information is as follows:

Helsinki, Finland
Date: Wednesday, 9 December 2015
Place: The Circus
Time: 7:00PM
General Ticket: www.Ticketmaster.com
Upgrade Ticket: www.Kineticvibe.net

Berlin, Germany
Date: Friday, 11 December 2015
Place: TBA
Time: TBA
Tickets: TBA

Madrid, Spain
Date: Sunday, 13 December 2015
Place: Palacio Vistalegre (Sala San Miguel)
Time: 7:00pm
Tickets: www.Kineticvibe.net

Keep your eyes open for my upcoming review of B1A4’s “Adventure 2015” open air concert in Seoul, South Korea, as well as updates on any special events, and news about B1A4’s upcoming European tour. In the meantime, be sure to pop along to Kinetic Vibe’s new website, Facebook and Twitter and show them some support, and be sure to watch the video below of B1A4’s latest song “Sweet Girl”.