Showing posts with label DCU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DCU. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Rest in Peace to Val Kilmer! Hollywood ICON passes away...


WOW SO Sad to just hear that acting ICON Val Kilmer died of pneumonia on Tuesday in Los Angeles, his daughter Mercedes told media. She said her dad had been diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 but later recovered. The brooding, versatile actor who played fan favorite Iceman in “Top Gun,” donned a voluminous cape as Batman in “Batman Forever” and portrayed Jim Morrison in “The Doors,” is now gone. He was 65.

“I have behaved poorly. I have behaved bravely. I have behaved bizarrely to some. I deny none of this and have no regrets because I have lost and found parts of myself that I never knew existed,” he says toward the end of “Val,” the 2021 documentary on his career. “And I am blessed.” Kilmer, the youngest actor ever accepted to the prestigious Juilliard School at the time he attended, experienced the ups and downs of fame more dramatically than most. His break came in 1984’s spy spoof “Top Secret!” followed by the comedy “Real Genius” in 1985. Kilmer would later show his comedy chops again in films including “MacGruber” and “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.” His movie career hit its zenith in the early 1990's as he made a name for himself as a dashing leading man, starring alongside Kurt Russell and Bill Paxton in 1993’s “Tombstone,” as Elvis’ ghost in “True Romance” and as a bank-robbing demolition expert in Michael Mann’s 1995 film “Heat” with Al Pacino and Robert De Niro.



“While working with Val on ‘Heat’ I always marvelled at the range, the brilliant variability within the powerful current of Val’s possessing and expressing character,” director Michael Mann said in a statement Tuesday night. Actor Josh Brolin, a friend of Kilmer, was among others paying tribute. “You were a smart, challenging, brave, uber-creative firecracker,” Brolin wrote on Instagram. “There’s not a lot left of those.” Kilmer who took part in the Method branch of Suzuki arts training threw himself into parts. When he played Doc Holliday in “Tombstone,” he filled his bed with ice for the final scene to mimic the feeling of dying from tuberculosis. To play Morrison, he wore leather pants all the time, asked castmates and crew to only refer to him as Jim Morrison and blasted The Doors for a year. That intensity also gave Kilmer a reputation that he was difficult to work with, something he grudgingly agreed with later in life, but always defending himself by emphasizing art over commerce.

“In an unflinching attempt to empower directors, actors and other collaborators to honor the truth and essence of each project, an attempt to breathe Suzukian life into a myriad of Hollywood moments, I had been deemed difficult and alienated the head of every major studio,” he wrote in his memoir, “I’m Your Huckleberry.” One of his more iconic roles hotshot pilot Tom “Iceman” Kazansky opposite Tom Cruise almost didn’t happen. Kilmer was courted by director Tony Scott for “Top Gun” but initially balked. “I didn’t want the part. I didn’t care about the film. The story didn’t interest me,” he wrote in his memoir. He agreed after being promised that his role would improve from the initial script. He would reprise the role in the film’s 2022 sequel, “Top Gun: Maverick.”



One career nadir was playing Batman in Joel Schumacher’s goofy, garish “Batman Forever” with Nicole Kidman and opposite Chris O’Donnell‘s Robin before George Clooney took up the mantle for 1997’s “Batman & Robin” and after Michael Keaton played the Dark Knight in 1989’s “Batman” and 1992’s “Batman Returns.” Janet Maslin in The New York Times said Kilmer was “hamstrung by the straight-man aspects of the role,” while Roger Ebert deadpanned that he was a “completely acceptable” substitute for Keaton. Kilmer, who was one and done as Batman, blamed much of his performance on the suit. “When you’re in it, you can barely move and people have to help you stand up and sit down,” Kilmer said in “Val,” in lines spoken by his son Jack, who voiced the part of his father in the film because of his inability to speak. “You also can’t hear anything and after a while people stop talking to you, it’s very isolating. It was a struggle for me to get a performance past the suit, and it was frustrating until I realized that my role in the film was just to show up and stand where I was told to.”

His next projects were the film version of the 1960's TV series “The Saint” fussily putting on wigs, accents and glasses and “The Island of Dr. Moreau” with Marlon Brando, which became one of the decade’s most infamously cursed productions. David Gregory’s 2014 documentary “Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr. Moreau,” described a cursed set that included a hurricane, Kilmer bullying director Richard Stanley, the firing of Stanley via fax (who sneaked back on set as an extra with a mask on) and extensive rewrites by Kilmer and Brando. The older actor told the younger at one point: “‘It’s a job now, Val. A lark. We’ll get through it.’ I was as sad as I’ve ever been on a set,” Kilmer wrote in his memoir.



In 1996, Entertainment Weekly ran a cover story about Kilmer titled ″The Man Hollywood Loves to Hate.″ The directors Schumacher and John Frankenheimer, who finished “The Island of Dr. Moreau,” said he was difficult. Frankenheimer said there were two things he would never do: ″Climb Mount Everest and work with Val Kilmer again.″ Other artists came to his defense, like D. J. Caruso, who directed Kilmer in ″The Salton Sea″ and said the actor simply liked to talk out scenes and enjoyed having a director’s attention. ″Val needs to immerse himself in a character. I think what happened with directors like Frankenheimer and Schumacher is that Val would ask a lot of questions, and a guy like Schumacher would say, ‘You’re Batman! Just go do it,’″ Caruso told The New York Times in 2002.

After “The Island of Dr. Moreau,” the movies were smaller, like David Mamet human-trafficking thriller “Spartan"; ″Joe the King″ in 1999, in which he played a paunchy, abusive alcoholic; and playing the doomed ’70's porn star John Holmes in 2003’s “Wonderland.” He also threw himself into his one-man stage show “Citizen Twain,” in which he played Mark Twain. “I enjoy the depth and soul the piece has that Twain had for his fellow man and America,” he told Variety in 2018. “And the comedy that’s always so close to the surface, and how valuable his genius is for us today.” Kilmer spent his formative years in the Chatsworth neighborhood of Los Angeles. He attended Chatsworth High School alongside future Oscar winner Kevin Spacey and future Emmy winner Mare Winningham. At 17, he was the youngest drama student ever admitted at the Juilliard School in 1981. Shortly after he left for Juilliard, his younger brother, 15-year-old Wesley, suffered an epileptic seizure in the family’s Jacuzzi and died on the way to the hospital. Wesley was an aspiring filmmaker when he died.

″I miss him and miss his things. I have his art up. I like to think about what he would have created. I’m still inspired by him,″ Kilmer told the Times. While still at Juilliard, Kilmer co-wrote and appeared in the play “How It All Began” and later turned down a role in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Outsiders” for the Broadway play, “Slab Boys,” alongside Kevin Bacon and Sean Penn. Kilmer published two books of poetry (including “My Edens After Burns”) and was nominated for a Grammy in 2012 for spoken word album for “The Mark of Zorro.” He was also a visual artist and a lifelong Christian Scientist. He dated Cher, married and divorced actor Joanne Whalley. He is survived by their two children, Mercedes and Jack. “I have no regrets,” Kilmer told the AP in 2021. “I’ve witness and experienced miracles.”

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Will Reeve in Superman 2025 cameo


Well folks it's been posted online that ‘Superman’ by 
James Gunn is set to Feature Christopher Reeve’s Son in a heartfelt Tribute touching nod to Superman’s cinematic legacy, that Christopher Reeve is a major part of as we know he played Superman in the original 4 movies starting in 1978. Now Will Reeve his son is set to make a cameo appearance in the James Gunn’s highly anticipated “Superman” film reboot. The news, reported first by Variety, has sparked excitement among fans and industry insiders alike. 

This after days following the fallout from the pictures of new Superman David Corenswet in what looked like a baggy dirty suit only to be followed by a
 bunch of set photo releases which was spoken about on video by many YouTubers myself included.







Will Reeve, currently working as a journalist and correspondent for ABC News, was spotted on the set of the upcoming superhero blockbuster. He is slated to play a television reporter, a role that not only pays homage to his father’s portrayal of the Man of Steel but also mirrors his own real-life career.

Christopher Reeve, who passed away in 2004, is universally recognized for his portrayal of Superman in Richard Donner’s 1978 classic and its sequels. His performance set the standard for superhero portrayals and remains beloved by fans worldwide. I said for a long time when looking at the life of Chris and his son Will growing up after Chris passed how much he looked not just like his dad but he has the look of Superman from the modern era down from head, face, and body structure... The Son of Superman who now is an actual 
journalist himself. This is a no brainer but we don't have him in the role sadly but since there is a "multiverse" in DCU like MARVEL. Who knows right? Maybe this cameo can set up his own Superman movies? lol There is always hope.

The new “Superman” film, set to be the first theatrical release in the James Gunn Re-imagined or Rebooted DC Universe. Or the "DCU(DC Universewhich again replaced the old "DCEU" (DC Extended Universe) which a lot of people thought Zack Snyder should have been in charge off as an alternate universe look into these characters as his movies were in place already. He's not doing anymore in that universe and that DCEU is now done.

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

James Gunn Is Canceling His Superman Movie, For now!


Well folks looks like the return or new birth or whatever Superman: Legacy is said to be will have to wait as filmaker and new head in charger of what has become the worst ran property of comic book movies in the entire entertainment industry James Gunn is going to be a busy body with his agenda switching to picket lines and not wrtiting the movie he said he would. A Lot of the fans want him gone all together from DC/WB but this is due to the writers strike.



While James Gunn has not said anything publically about his next move, or the WGA strike in general, industry insiders are confident the co-head of DC Studios and WGA member will be siding with the picketers. “So James Gunn’s writing Superman: Legacy. So, he won’t be able to continue,” says Jeff Sneider, host of The Hot Mic podcast. Sneider went on to admit that it’s possible Gunn has already finished the script but that even in that scenario, James won’t “cross the picket line even as an executive.”



Sneider expanded upon that sentiment stating that James Gunn will be handing his day-to-day work at DC Studios over to his partner Peter Safran, at least until the WGA and Hollywood can work out a deal. What that means for the recently revealed slate of DC projects titled Chapter One: Gods and Monsters is really anyone’s guess, but it certainly won’t have a positive effect on the new DCU. Most of the upcoming projects James Gunn has announced, including Superman: Legacy, are assumed to be in early development, meaning they’re most likely still in the writing phase, which is bad news for Warner Bros.



The strike is thought to be the result of the WGA’s beef with Netflix and other streaming services. Streamers keep raising prices, but none of that extra dough has found its way into the writer’s pockets. In response, The Writer’s Guild demanded more pay for the increased workloads they’re currently shouldering to keep up with the constant demand for new content.



The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers denied the Guild’s demands, hence the strike. It’s not surprising Gunn would side with the writers since that’s where his career began. Before James Gunn was co-running DC Studios and developing high-profile projects like Superman: Legacy, he was a writer for hire, penning the screenplays for the two live-action Scooby-Doo films and Zack Snyder’s 2004 Dawn of the Dead remake, among several others.



James Gunn’s Superman: Legacy was previously expected to be released on July 11, 2025 but thanks to Gunn’s loyalty to his fellow WGA members will most likely be delayed. The film is thought to be inspired by Grant Morrison’s fan-favorite series All-Star Superman and won’t be as comedic in tone as the bulk of Gunn’s other work.



Morrison’s series was a celebration of all things Superman set outside the main DC continuity and focused on a dying Man of Steel as he spends his remaining days performing one last round of heroic feats.

Superman: Legacy would no doubt change the part about Supes dying as James Gunn intends for the film to be the crown jewel in a new ongoing DC cinematic universe. What Gunn would presumably take from All-Star Superman would be the series distillation of Superman into his core essence: a nice guy with the powers of a god and the morals of a midwestern farmboy who just wants to make the world a better place.


Let's see how long the writer’s strike will last, and James Gunn gets back to work on Superman: Legacy but like I said this won't make a lot of fans happy. Mostly those of the Snyderverse which has been shutdown by James Gunn. The entire strike can be over quick or laster months, and even years.

Now this won't stop the studios from creating material for you to take a look at as a lot of scripts which are in development hell might get a second look now, and perhaps a GEM might be found on something already written. Now I'm not sure if this would be allowed or not but if the script is already done on some other project we could again be in for some brand new stories.

Maybe not in the DC/WB but who knows whatelse could come of this... Me I personally don't care for James Gunn and will be boycotting his take over of Superman, and all his DC work. Don't care for him personally, and his last movie not just bombed horribly it was a DC movie. The Suicide Squad. This folks was just a silly and stupid movie that only one a few jokes which actually landed and for as much as I dislike Jon Cena he atleast was well cast as Peacemaker, and he was about the only ok thing in the movie.

Well the "Polka-Dot Man" and "The Weasel" were amusing... So  um yeah that's where we're at with James Gunn and his reboot of Superman. But really folks after "Tom Welling, Brandon Routh, Henry Cavill, and Tyler Hoechlin" the real question is do we need another face to the role? I mean why add another actor when you have 4 already known for the part. This is why I personally don't want James to move forward besides my dislike of him, and his directing.

Again sure his 2 Guardians of the Galaxy movies made money and were good in there own right. As that franchise is ending with Vol. 3 coming soon I was hoping James Gunn would just go away and leave coming book movies alone. But no he's determined to ruin all the DCU before he's done. But for now the man and his MILLIONS in $$$ will be picketing for more money.

Monday, February 13, 2023

OMG Michael Keaton as BATMAN just broke the internet!


OK So this trailer looks incredible! With as much trouble as young Mr Ezra Miller here has been it's no wonder that Michael Keaton has returned to play Batman again and my god does he look fantastic... I literally almost peed myself when he said the line "I'm BATMAN" I think even if they ditch Miller here for sequels this movie is going to be big because Keaton looks better than he ever had before! This is beyond epic looking in trailer alone so I do hope that the hype is worth it. Oh I posted the video and some of the stuff posted about it here but check out their main link below so you can view all the details about this film.



 For the Fastest Man Alive, The Flash has taken an awful long time getting to theaters.

The Flash’s solo film, starring Ezra Miller as DC’s speedy superhero, was initially announced with a release date of March 23, 2018. But its ultimate director, Andy Muschietti, wasn’t even hired until the summer of 2019; at that point the movie was given a release date of July 1, 2022.

Spoiler alert: That didn’t happen. July eventually became November and then November became June of 2023.

Perhaps that was for the best, though, as Miller spent much of 2022 generating headlines due to numerous run-ins with police. (Miller recently pled guilty in a burglary case in Vermont; they announced last August that they had begun treatment for “mental health issues.”) Plus, DC Studios had undergone a complete makeover in the last year, with the company bringing in James Gunn and Peter Safran to work as co-CEOs of the company and to launch a whole new universe of interconnected movies and shows.

That’s left it a little unclear just how The Flash fits in to all of this. Is it the farewell to the old universe, the introduction of the new one, or both? We still don’t really know, but the brand new Super Bowl trailer for the film does show Michael Keaton back as Batman he even says his iconic line. 

The trailer also reveals a good deal of the plot; Barry Allen travels through time and alters reality so that General Zod (Michael Shannon, back from Man of Steel) is still alive, and there are no metahumans to stop him. So he has to team up with Keaton’s Batman and a new Supergirl (to fix things.)

Read More: Michael Keaton’s Batman Returns in ‘The Flash’ Trailer | 

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Ezra Miller brings shame to The Flash! Again


The fan outcry to recast Ezra Miller with The CW’s Grant Gustin in the movie The Flash is growing, and it’s got nothing to do with his on film performance but by his real life acts in public, and the public now want a new actor isn’t shocking really but the issue here is the movie “The Flash” is that it has wrapped production (it finished filming back in October of 2021), so while there isn’t that much they could do. Or is there? Well about Miller’s presence in it at this point, they could easily announce a change for the future of the DCEU and the casting. Still, Warner Bros. has been relatively hush-hush thus far about the situation as a whole..

Barry Allen is a beloved character, and fans have been waiting for him to have his standalone movie. Now, that is tainted by Miller’s actions in Hawaii and their continued actions there despite already having been arrested once. Yes the easy decision, is to cast Grant Gustin in the larger universe, given how beloved his portrayal of Barry Allen is.

It’s what everyone online seems to be yelling and want. This would mean that DC Comics’ movies don’t lose too many fans in the process (and would add in fans from the show, as well).What has been happening, though, is everyone online making jokes while also hurting the non-binary community at the same time. Back in 2020, Miller spoke with GQ about their pronouns, and it was widely covered online.

So, talking about Miller’s misdeeds doesn’t also mean you have to misgender them. Many online have been using “he/him” pronouns while talking about them, when it has been widely known and put into publication that Miller’s pronouns are “they/them.”

The future for Miller and his career isn’t going to be a fun press tour for a movie that fans have been waiting for. If anything, it wouldn’t be surprising if Warner Bros. delayed the release of The Flash again, even though we still have a year before its release date (in June of 2023).

What needs to happen, though is Warner Bros. has to have a serious conversation about what they want to put out into the world, because Miller does not need to continue being the face of Barry Allen with how they have been acting in Hawaii. Time to move on, and dump this loser who doesn’t even know who he is, and mis uses his fame to hurt others, and is just throwing shame to a loved character.