Audioboom’s newest podcast, Dark Air with Terry Carnation, has officially launched! Titled “The Returnening,” the first episode introduces Terry Carnation (Rainn Wilson), who’s just returned to the radio after a mental breakdown. But his first night back greets him with a call that may be from beyond the grave.
Karan Soni (Jeet), Al Madrigal (Al), Yvette Nicole Brown (Dr. Lizzie), Aaron Lee (Dr. Kesden), and Jennifer Lee (Veronica) star alongside Wilson. Matt Jones, Jinous Khadivian, and Sam Neill appear as guest callers.
Dark Air with Terry Carnation with a fictional, darkly comedic podcast that explores the life of late-night talk-radio host Terry Carnation both on and off the air. The show features outrageous callers and explores topics such as the Illuminati, UFOs, the paranormal, and more. The podcast is created by Rainn Wilson and Aaron Lee and produced by Thom Harp and Chris Kelly. Lee, Wilson, Harp, Danielle Koenig, and Mark Loughlin serve as writers.
Check out some of the promotional images for the podcast below! Listen to the first episode here and wherever you listen to podcasts.
In last week’s episode of The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, Sam and Bucky finally reunited (and the snark was alive and well). They discovered that the Flag-Smashers have eight Super Soldiers somehow and also had the displeasure of meeting the new Captain America John Walker and his sidekick Lemar Hoskins aka Battlestar. They later paid a visit to a Black Super Soldier named Isaiah Bradley, who Sam was incredulous that he had never heard of. With the shield out of their reach and dangerous Super Soldiers on the loose, the duo decided to turn to their last resort: Zemo.
The episode opens with an ad from the Global Repatriation Council, an organization in charge of helping those who returned after the Blip. The comforting mood of the commercial contrasts with the armed GRC police van that pulls up outside of the building where Karli and the Flag-Smashers had temporarily taken refuge in Germany. Walker and Hoskins storm the building in search of them. Walker’s temper was hinted at in the previous episode, and it bubbles over to the surface when he aggressively uses his Captain America title to attempt to get information on the Flag-Smashers (to no avail). As they’re leaving, Hoskins notes how Karli has created loyalty to her cause because she’s giving displaced people shelter and medicine — looks like the GRC isn’t helping everyone.
Meanwhile, Bucky and Sam have arrived at the prison in Berlin that Zemo is being held at. Thinking Sam’s status as an Avenger might strike a raw nerve with Zemo, Bucky opts to speak to the man alone.
Longing … rusted … seventeen …
Zemo begins to recite the Winter Soldier’s trigger words as he stands and walks out from the shadows in his cell. Bucky tells him that those days are over, but Zemo remarks that “something is still in there” as he appraises him. Bucky cuts to chase fairly quickly as he informs Zemo that someone recreated the Super Soldier serum, which piques the man’s interest.
Later, Sam is baffled that Bucky wants to break Zemo out of jail as he reminds him of all the wrong that the man has done (and the fact that the Wakandans most definitely haven’t forgotten about King T’Chaka). Bucky begins to walk Sam through a “hypothetical” situation detailing just how they would free Zemo, which serves as a voiceover with those exact events playing out at the prison. After creating absolute chaos, Zemo disguises himself as a guard and makes his great escape … right to the room that Sam and Bucky are waiting in. Sam is initially furious, but Bucky is quick to remind him that he backed Steve when he refused to sign the Sokovia Accords. He broke the law and he stuck his neck out to rescue Bucky. Now he’s asking him to do it again.
Zemo takes them to a garage, which is full of an impressive collection of his family’s vehicles. He explains that he has no intention of letting his work to eradicate the Winter Soldier program and the Super Soldier serum go unfinished, and they’ll have to climb the ladder to get the information they need. The first stop? A woman named Selby. Sam is thrown off by Zemo’s private jet, and the other man explains that he’s a Baron. His family was royalty before the Avengers destroyed Sokovia.
On the jet, Bucky is furious to find that Zemo has swiped his notebook with his list of victims of the Winter Soldier that he needs to make amends with. And in a heartbreaking turn of events, we learn from Sam that not only does the tiny notebook resemble the one that Steve used when he came out of the ice … it is Steve’s. (Please excuse me while I cry.) Zemo discusses the danger of American Super Soldiers, because people put them on pedestals and then “cities fly, innocent people die.” He then informs them that their destination is Madripoor — an island nation in the Indonesian archipelago. It was a pirate sanctuary back in the 1800s, and it has kept its lawless ways.
Marvel Studios
At a GRC Resettlement Camp in Latvia, Karli cries at a dying woman’s side. Meanwhile, Bucky, Zemo, and Sam have arrived in Madripoor. While Bucky has to jump back into character as the brainwashed Winter Soldier so as not to rouse suspicion, Sam’s unfortunate disguise is that of Conrad Mack aka the Smiling Tiger (though he can’t deny that the resemblance is uncanny). They make their way through the seediness that is Lowtown to a bar, and people immediately begin whispering about the Winter Soldier’s arrival. As Zemo requests to speak with Selby, tensions rise and a man comes to tell them that they’re not welcome. Zemo casually tells him that he has no business with the Power Broker, who functions as judge, jury, and executioner over Madripoor.
A fight breaks out and Zemo “orders” Bucky to attack, so the Super Soldier puts on a Winter Soldier-esque show as requested. They then head into a back room to see Selby, who’s immediately suspicious of the fact that the so-called Smiling Tiger is taller than she expected. Zemo offers to give Selby the Winter Soldier in exchange for information about the Super Soldier serum. She tells them that the serum is in Madripoor thanks to Dr. Wilfred Nagel; the Power Broker had him working on the serum, but things didn’t go as planned. Suddenly, Sam’s phone begins to ring, and Selby orders him to answer it on speaker. He fumbles through a conversation with Sarah, and he’s almost successful until he says his name.
Selby orders her guards to kill them, and suddenly a sniper takes her out. Zemo tells them to follow his lead because they have a real problem now — within seconds there’s already a viral bounty on their heads across Madripoor. They take off, and just when it appears that they may be cornered, someone once again takes out their enemies. So who’s their guardian angel? It’s Sharon Carter. Bucky and Sam are confused as to why Sharon is in Madripoor, and she reminds them that she’s the one that stole Steve’s shield and Sam’s wings. And tragically, she didn’t have the Avengers to back her up, so she’s now living off the grid in Madripoor.
Sharon takes the three of them to her place in Hightown, a swanky home funded by her gallery of stolen artwork that she sells. Sam asks Sharon if she wants to come home, but she retorts that she’ll be locked up if she returns to the US. They make a deal, if Sharon helps them find Dr. Wilfred Nagel, they’ll get her name cleared. Sharon’s buyers are full of connections, so she quickly obtains the information they need at her party that evening. They find Nagel working out of a lab hidden in a container yard, which they head out to the next day.
As they begin to question Nagel, a hoard of bounty hunters begins to prowl the area outside. Sharon, able to hold her own and then some, takes them out one by one as she urges Sam, Bucky, and Zemo to hurry up. As Bucky holds a gun to his head, Nagel explains that he was brought into Hydra’s Winter Soldier program to pick up their work after the five “failed” test subjects in Siberia. The CIA recruited him after Hydra fell, and they gave him blood samples from an American test subject with the serum — Isaiah Bradley. And thus he accomplished something that no other scientist since Erskine was able to do, and he even did it without the need for machines and jacked up bodies. Nagel made an optimized version of the serum. He turned to dust during the Blip and the CIA abandoned the program, which is why his work remained unknown. Upon his return, the Power Broker began to fund his work.
Sam asks Nagel how many vials he made in total, and he confirms that there are 20, all of which were stolen by Karli. Though he doesn’t know where she is now, he tells them that Karli had called him recently and asked if he could help someone named Donya Madani, a woman dying from tuberculosis. Bucky asks if there’s any serum in the lab, and Nagel tells him that there’s not. As Sharon makes her way into the room, Zemo shoots and kills Nagel. One of the bounty hunters outside fires a missile at the lab, and they’re forced to evacuate because the unstable room is on the verge of exploding.
Finally donning his iconic mask from the comics, Baron Zemo causes another explosion, takes out the rest of the bounty hunters, and rolls up with a supercharged getaway vehicle shortly after. Bucky takes the passenger seat, and sorry Sam, but he’s not moving his seat up. Sharon parts ways with them, reminding Sam of the pardon he promised her.
Julie Vrabelová/Marvel Studios
Karli and Dovich are scoping out the GRC supply depot in Lithuania. Dovich urges her to take some time to mourn, but they have work to do. The two reflect on how they ended up where they are now, Super Soldiers fighting to take care of the kids suffering in the resettlement camps. And because Nagel was killed in Madripoor, they now have the last of the serum, which gives them the upper hand against the Power Broker.
Marvel Studios
Walker and Hoskins are following Sam and Bucky’s trail at the prison that Zemo escaped from. Meanwhile, Sam and Bucky lament over what Sharon and Isaiah have been through, and Sam expresses anger over how many people have been hurt for the shield. He says that he should have destroyed it instead of putting it in a museum. Bucky, however, reminds him that the shield represents a lot of things to a lot of people, himself included. And before Sam can go and destroy the shield, Bucky will take it from Walker himself.
The Flag-Smashers break into the GRC facility to steal supplies for the camps, and they set off a bomb to destroy the building as they’re leaving. Elsewhere, Sam, Bucky, and Zemo arrive in Riga, Latvia, the city where Madani died. As they arrive at the place that Zemo is taking them to, Bucky tells them that he’s taking a walk. He follows a trail picking up small beeping balls, and he’s not surprised at all when he’s met by the formidable Ayo from Wakanda in an alleyway.
“I’m here for Zemo.”
Catch the next episode of The Falcon and The Winter Soldier exclusively on Disney+ Friday, April 9.
Lionsgate has released the trailer for its latest true crime thriller Above Suspicion. Directed by Phillip Noyce and written by Chris Gerolmo, the film follows a young woman named Susan Smith (Emilia Clarke) that is desperate to escape a world full of crime and drugs. Enter Mark Putnam (Jack Huston), an FBI agent who recruits her for a high profile case to be his informant. As their relationship explores greater depths, danger follows their every move and the consequences are deadly.
Above Suspicion also stars Sophie Lowe, Austin Hébert, Karl Glusman, Chris Mulkey, Omar Miller, Kevin Dunn, Thora Birch, and Johnny Knoxville.
Check out the poster and trailer below.
Lionsgate
Above Suspicion will be available in select theaters and On Demand May 14 and Blu-ray and DVD May 18.
Warning: Moderate spoilers ahead. You’ve been warned.
Every Breath You Take is a psychological thriller that follows psychiatrist Philip Clark (Casey Affleck), whose career is jeopardized when a patient of his involved in a controversial case study takes her own life following a tragedy in his own personal life. When he invites his patient’s surviving brother James (Sam Claflin) into his home to meet his wife, Grace (Michelle Monaghan), and daughter, Lucy (India Eisley), his life and family are suddenly thrown into turmoil, and Dr. Clark becomes fixated on finding and taking down the mysterious force that is tearing his family apart.
Despite the promising cast and seemingly intriguing plotline, this film was missing a certain je nais se quois. The film didn’t do enough to make itself stand out in the genre; I could’ve been watching any other psychological thriller. That’s not to say that the movie itself was bad. There were plenty of things that were done well. Without further ado, let’s dive a little deeper into the ins and outs of Every Breath You Take.
What Was Done Well
THE ACTING
Vertical Entertainment
The actors did a great job of fleshing out the personalities of their characters in the wake of traumas that are only briefly described. Affleck’s performance initially comes off as bland, but as the story develops, you realize the aloofness is part of his character’s response to the loss of his son and trying to repress his trauma. As the film progresses, you can see his tight handle on controlling his emotions begin to slip away. India Eisley’s performance feels like a blast to the past of her days on The Secret Life of the American Teenager as Ashley Juergens. Despite the years that have passed, Eisley still flawlessly implements the mannerisms and the subtle acting choices that cast her as the perfect angsty teen.
Michelle Monaghan does a good job at showing the glimpses of an empty shell that remains in the wake of the loss of her son while still trying to push through her pain and reconnect her family. The scenes where she lets out torrents of emotions, like recounting the accident, are very well done. Sam Claflin does an excellent job of switching between personas of the charming and helpful grief-stricken brother and the psychopathic menace that he actually turns out to be. There’s something about the unhinged glint in his eyes that you can see from time to time combined with his odd behavior when he’s in his sister’s house throughout the film that warns you his character will turn out to be very dangerous.
THE CAMERA WORK
Vertical Entertainment
Full warning, I am in no way knowledgeable about any technical terms in film. Despite this, the camerawork was something that really jumped out.
Filmed in Vancouver, Every Breath You Take presents some, well… breathtaking views, especially where the nature scenes are showcased. Throughout the movie, you’ll definitely find yourself in awe of the sheer beauty found interspersed throughout the film in the form of quiet nature scenes which contrast with the turmoil occurring in the Clarks’ lives. Additionally, the design of the Clarks’ home adds a very pleasing aesthetic touch that both emphasizes their standard of living and the acute loss that is showcased throughout the empty halls. The color scheme also seems to contribute a unique feel to the film that amplifies the feelings that are rolling off of the characters in the narrative. The film presents saturated shots, at times combined with slightly muted lighting, lending the perfect atmosphere to the scenes that are being showcased.
KEEPING MOTIVATIONS A SECRET
Vertical Entertainment
In psychological thrillers, there’s always a motivation behind the motivation. That is to say, the charming newcomer is never who they seem to be. This obviously rang true for “James,” what with the multiple red flags in his behavior that were prevalent throughout the movie. However, James’ true motivations proved to be a mystery to me until the very end at the reveal — and I consider myself to be pretty intuitive when it comes to sussing out twists and turns in a narrative. There was much foreshadowing that something wasn’t quite right about Claflin’s character, but the reveal made a bridge to what truly seemed to be a throwaway connection from the beginning of the movie, something that I, personally, wasn’t prepared for.
What Could’ve Used Some Improvement
Vertical Entertainment
The main issue to be found in this film is that the plot just doesn’t feel unique. Not unlike Hallmark movies, things can tend to start feeling formulaic if writers don’t do something to make a psychological thriller stand apart from other films, and Every Breath You Take simply didn’t deliver on that front. Unlike Hallmark movies, which don’t pretend to be more than predictably laid out feel-good films, Every Breath You Take didn’t seem to be striving for that feel of an “oldie but goodie,” something that made the plot feel, well, “meh” for the lack of a better word.
You could see the events unfolding in a progression that just felt like it was straight out of any other film from the genre. Again, that’s not to say that it was boring — it was intriguing enough to keep your attention, but not enough to have you truly invested. The film simply didn’t distinguish itself enough in my eyes. At the end of the day, the movie resolved its main arc and left the viewer feeling like everything was tied up in a neat little bow, allowing the viewers and characters alike to move on after everything wrapped up.
While Every Breath You Take may have not exactly had us gasping in surprise, it was overall not a bad watch. If you were settling in on the couch for a long marathon of psychological thrillers, this could definitely be one that rolled across your screen. Whether or not it would be the headliner in the theater, however, is another story.
It’s the midseason finale of Riverdale and the stakes are even higher and more insane! As Betty deals with Glen’s obsessions with her family’s history, she and Alice prepare for Juniper and Dagwood’s birthday but they get some unexpected and dangerous visitors. Meanwhile, Veronica tries to get Chad to file for divorce and Parent-Teacher Night at Riverdale High is put on pause, thanks to a plan put in place by Hiram. The ending leaves one character missing.
Keep reading to find out what happened in the midseason finale of Riverdale, “Chapter Eighty-Six: The Pincushion Man.”
The CW
Betty and Glen are getting ready for the day after their night together. Glen suggests that since he’s in town for a little bit, he should get to know the family a little better. With Polly missing, Betty’s mom is the only family she has, and the twins. Changing the subject, Betty asks what Glen’s strategy is now and he says the Lonely Highway is 200 miles long. How many rest stops, stretches of beaches, and marshlands are along it? Glen admits he has 10 agents on the Lonely Highway, searching every lot, field and ditch. Betty wonders if she should be canvassing it as well but Glen says he needs her expertise on something she’s familiar with, something he’s surprised she hasn’t brought up yet — her father. Some of the remains date back to when he was still alive and actively killing people. Betty mentions there have been murders since he died. They should be looking for someone in their 50s, or older. Glen’s theory is that there are an assortment of killers. What if her dad was one of many? He asks Betty if her dad underwent assessment at the Sherwood Asylum and she says yes. Glen suggests they start by reviewing the tapes.
Hiram is upset that Reggie betrayed him at the football game. Reggie tells him it won’t happen again, Hiram has his loyalty. That’s nice, but that football game sparked some light into the former town of Riverdale. Hiram says they can feel its broken spirit rebuilding. Riverdale High, which should be rubble, is hosting a Parent-Teacher Night. Reggie asks what he can do to redeem himself and Hiram asks if he knows what palladium is. It’s more valuable and rare than gold. Hiram’s been digging for it behind his prison walls but the palladium is tapped and it’s next to nothing. Now they need to move to the vein under the Blossom Maple Groves. Luckily, Hiram has an idea to take care of the prison and bring about Riverdale’s ruination. He’ll handle the prison. He just needs Reggie to get him those Groves.
The CW
While going through the tapes at the FBI office, Betty tells Glen she has something. She plays a tape that has Hal talking about his relationship with Alice and that it wasn’t working out. So he started connecting with women on Nedslist. Betty stops the tape and tells Glen that’s how women working the Lonely Highway, too.
After receiving photos from Chad of her and Archie, Veronica tells Archie that she needs to go to New York to see him. She confesses that they were on a date at Marsha’s Vineyard and they got into a fight. She wished that Chad would’ve died that night their helicopter crashed and she woke up at the hospital. Veronica wished that he was dead and then she stayed with him out of guilt. Now she has to face him, if only to get closure. Then she’ll be on the first train the next morning. Once all of this is behind them, they’ll be free to be together.
While having dinner, Betty tells Glen that Juniper and Dagwood pushed a classmate down the stairs and he has a concussion and a broken shoulder. They had no remorse over it. She’s worried that they’re bad seeds. Glen says he’d like to meet them, especially after what she just told him. Betty wonders what gives? First her mom, now the twins? Glen brings out a dissertation, “Family of darkness. Varying displays of the serial killer gene in the Cooper family tree.” Glen tells Betty the Coopers are the perfect example of nature versus nurture. She and Charles both have the genes. He’s a serial killer, she isn’t. Her father didn’t have the genes but he was a murderer, why? Betty tells Glen people are dying on the Lonely Highway and he’s working on a term paper? Is this why he came to Riverdale? Glen says he came for both reasons. Betty says she quits but Glen says she wouldn’t do that. She needs him to find her sister. Besides, aren’t they having a good time? Betty slaps him. “Does that answer your question?”
The CW
In his office, Hiram watches a clock count down to zero and soon, there’s an explosion at his prison and all the inmates escape. Meanwhile, Reggie sets the Groves on fire and he drives away.
Parent-Teacher Night at Riverdale High is interrupted when the lights go off. Archie tells everyone not to worry, it’s probably just a circuit breaker. He leaves to check it out. However, when he does, he’s ambushed by multiple inmates and he starts fighting them. Kevin and the parents, meanwhile, are being held up by two inmates. They hear noises out in the hallway where Archie is fighting other inmates and one of them leaves to check it out. Kevin tries to take down the other inmate but he takes control and aims a gun at Kevin. Archie comes up behind the inmate, holding a knife to his neck and he tells him to drop it. He does and Archie knocks him out. Kevin says his dad just texted him that there’s been a breakout at Hiram Lodge’s prison. Archie tells them they need to move out but Archie’s visiting General tells him there’s 11 civilians in there. They need to stay put. Then they barricade and secure all entrances and access points. Kevin holds down the fort while Archie and his General take care of securing.
Betty and Alice prepare dinner for the twins’ birthday and the doorbell rings. Betty asks Alice if she was expecting anyone and Alice says no. But she may have forgotten to invite the Blossoms. Juniper comes back after answering the door, holding her Uncle Charles’ hand and Chic soon comes in behind him. “Hey, Betty. You missed me?” Alice later admits to Betty that she may have visited Charles in prison a few times over the years and Betty just looks over at the newly escaped inmates with Juniper and Dagwood. She whispers to her mother that they have guns and Alice says she sees that. She tells Betty they’re not going to hurt them, so they should just get through whatever this is.
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Sitting down to a family meal, Betty asks Charles why he’s there. “Destiny.” He says there was an explosion at the prison and while all the other prisoners ran for the hills, they went there. “To celebrate with our family.” Charles says he and Chic would like to get married, with their family present. How if they don’t even have a minister? Alice answers that Charles had her get ordained online so they could get married in prison. Charles says this is so much better, though. Home sweet home.
The wedding between Charles and Chic has commenced and Alice pronounces them husband and husband. There’s a knock at the door and Juniper answers it. It’s Glen, holding flowers and a present. Betty wonders what he’s doing there. Charles and Glen recognize each other as the two went to the Academy together. Is that why he’s writing a dissertation about them? Alice and Charles are surprised and Betty tells them about it. Since his old rival from the Academy is so interested in learning what makes a serial killer tick, Charles suggests they should all play a game.
Just as Archie securely locks some doors, Uncle Frank comes up and begs to come in. Archie lets him in and Uncle Frank says he’s happy that he told him about Parents Night. He tells Archie that he overheard that some of his inmates are getting paid to trash the town, especially the school. “Only Hiram Lodge would be crazy enough to do that.” Now he’s made them the targets, which means they need to get out. Inmates show up outside, trying to get in. Archie says he went to the school, he knows the town. They can slip out through a tunnel behind the boiler and then he can get everyone to the Sheriff’s station safely. Kevin, standing with the parents, tells Archie it sounds like a plan.
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With Glen tied down to a chair, Charles holds a gun to his head and Chic points a gun towards Betty and Alice as Juniper and Dagwood are sitting on the couch, still wearing their party hats. Charles says this game is called Pincushion Man, where the youngest member of the family takes a pin and sticks it in the Pincushion Man. Tonight, that man is Glen and if memory serves, Charles says Juniper is the youngest member of their family by three minutes. Chic gives Juniper a “pin,” that is just a knife, telling her all she has to do is stick it in the Pincushion Man, nice and deep. Betty pleads with Charles and tells him she’s only nine years old. This will scar her for the rest of her life. Both of them are lost causes, there’s no hope for them. But there’s still hope for the twins. Charles tells Betty she’s right, Juniper doesn’t need to lose her innocence tonight, but it means Betty will take her turn. One round of Pincushion Man, then they’ll get back to the wedding and then they’ll be gone in the dark. Betty agrees and Alice tells Juniper and Dagwood to get upstairs.
Glen begs Betty but she doesn’t have a choice. She tells him to trust her and she stabs him. However, she pulls the knife out and throws it at Chic and Charles aims his gun. Alice takes him down and tries to get the gun away from him. Betty shoots Charles and goes over to Glen to untie him as Alice sobs over Charles.
In New York after their night together, Veronica’s upset that Chad lied to her about signing the divorce papers. Chad admits that he was involved in an investment scheme, it was a sure way to get them out of debt. He made some bad investments, and ended up investing in her new jewelry store. If they divorce, Chad can testify against her in court. No one will believe that the She-Wolf of Wall Street never knew about the dirty dealings going on in her own business. He’ll make it all back, he just needs time and a little help from her. Later, Archie gets a call from Veronica. She tells him that she has to stay in New York. She had some business things to sort out, but she’ll explain everything when she comes back. Just for a few days.
The CW
Reggie tells Hiram that Thornhill didn’t burn because of that freak windstorm, but a lot of the Groves did and Cheryl will be begging for them to buy it. Hiram says with the way his inmates left Riverdale High, it won’t reopen for weeks, if ever. “Today’s a good day.”
Betty gets off the phone with Glen and tells Alice he’s okay. Just a flesh wound like she intended and Charles is still in the ICU, but it seems like he’s going to make it. There is something else, though. The FBI has decided to relocate the Lonely Highway case upstate, closer to their northern office. But she’s not going to stop looking for Polly. As Glen so helpfully reminded her, she does have an instinct for these things, she will get justice. That night, Betty drives away from Pop’s in a truck.
As Jughead is in the bunker trying to write while in a psychedelic state, he sees a bright white light just outside. Tabitha later checks in on him but all she sees is blood on the floor, on his new pages, and the handcuffs he was in, but no Jughead to be found.
The CW
Season 5 of Riverdale returns on Wednesday, July 7 on The CW!
Even more photos have been released for the upcoming second episode “A Few Good Women” (description available here), this time featuring new cast addition Jason Behr. If you haven’t already, make sure to check them out below.
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Additionally, some stills of Alex and Kelly have been uploaded. In respect to the newest cast addition, for now, the description is calling Behr’s character nothing but “Man.” We’ll have to tune in next week to see just what is going on in these photos.
Supergirl airs on Tuesday nights at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT on The CW.
The next season of the massively successful Netflix series Bridgerton is on its way, and in the meantime, the show has added two new cast members to its ranks. Joining the cast in season 2 is Charithra Chandran and Rupert Young, as reported by Deadline. They join the previously announced Simone Ashley.
Chandran will play Edwina Sharma, the younger sister to Kate (played by Ashley) who first catches Anthony Bridgerton’s eye. Young will play the newest member of the Ton, Jack. He is connected to one of the most notable families, as well as mystery. Jack will be an entirely new character for the series and does not appear in the original book series.
Season 2 of Bridgerton will follow the second book in Julia Quinn’s series, The Viscount Who Loved Me. It will focus on the eldest Bridgerton sibling, Anthony, as he sets out to find himself a viscountess.
Warner Bros. Home Entertainment has shared a new clip from Justice Society: World War II, its newest feature-length animated film.
In the clip, the Justice Society of America must enact a plan quickly in order to safeguard a small village from Nazi forces. Wonder Woman (voiced by Stana Katic) tells them all to spread out to help get Steve (Chris Diamantopoulos) to the extraction point safely.
Also included in the clip is the rest of the JSA team comprised of Hourman (Matthew Mercer), Black Canary (Elysia Rotaru), Hawkman (Omid Abtahi), Jay Garrick (Armen Taylor), and Barry Allen/The Flash (Matt Bomer).
Justice Society: World War II arrives on Digital starting April 27 and on 4K Combo Pack and Blu-ray on May 11.
Radio Company’s second album Vol. 2 has been long awaited by fans across the globe. After the dynamic duo announced on social media with a great teaser video that the album would be released on May 7, fans have been more ecstatic than ever for the slew of new songs to come out.
Jensen Ackles and Steve Carlson have heard our prayers for more content ahead of the release; Radio Company has dropped one of the songs from the album, titled “City Grown Willow.” If you haven’t already, check it out below.
Directed by Steve Carlson, the song is paired with a music video which showcases Jensen in the mountains of Colorado and Steve with a guitar solo. The song combines a folksy quality with the strains of an electric guitar, giving a lilting tune that exudes an overall aura of calm, longing, and love, especially with the refrain “let the man from the mountains run away with your heart.”
This fantastic new track does not disappoint! We can’t wait to see what else Radio Company has in store. As always, stay tuned for more updates!
Uh oh, Harold Cooper is in danger in this week’s The Blacklist episode. Last week as fans saw, Red’s “friend in the East” (who we’re assuming is Sikorsky of the Sikorsky Archive), instructed Rakitin, or Andrew Patterson, to eliminate Harold Cooper.
Thanks to Entertainment Tonight, we start to see that plan come to life in the sneak peek below. Cooper is meeting in a parking garage, supposedly meeting with a congressman, but they have other plans. Red is then seen looking desperate, as he asks his “friend in the East” to call it off, but he states that it’s too late. Cooper is then seen being ambushed and knocked out.
We can’t stand to see Cooper hurt or in danger, but we hope he gets home safe and sound!
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