Tag: charlie-cox

  • 5 Things You Need to Know Before Watching Marvel’s ‘Luke Cage’

    Netflix is about to debut the third pillar of its Marvel lineup, “Luke Cage.”

    This new series will build on the foundation established by shows like “Daredevil” and “Jessica Jones” and showcase the most bad-ass hero in the Marvel Universe.

    Not familiar with Luke Cage? Don’t worry, we’re breaking down everything you need to know about the new series to dive right in, regardless of whether you’ve watched the other Netflix marvel shows.

    1. It’s a Follow-up to “Jessica Jones”
    One thing that sets this series apart from “Daredevil” and “Jessica Jones” is that its lead hero is already established before the first episode.

    Mike Colter played a recurring role as Luke Cage in the first season of “Jessica Jones.” This series will pick up several months after that one ended, with Luke returning to Harlem and beginning to use his superhuman strength and durability. Look for this season to delve deeper into Luke’s past, even as he battles a new and dangerous threat to the citizens of Harlem.

    2. The Harlem Setting Is Key
    Unlike “Daredevil” and “Jessica Jones,” which both took place in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen, Luke Cage” will take place in Harlem. That’s not a minor detail; Harlem is crucial to Luke’s origin story, and it’s a place that allows him to carve out his own little corner of the live-action Marvel Universe.

    The Harlem setting is also important because it allows the show to feature a predominantly African-American cast. With all the deserved calls for increased diversity in superhero movies and TV shows, “Luke Cage” will serve as an important step forward for fans.

    3. A Hero Is Only as Good as His Villain
    Between Kingpin and Kilgrave, Netflix’s Marvel shows have set a very high standard when it comes to villainy. All signs indicate that “Cage” will continue that trend.

    This series’ main villain is Cornell “Cottonmouth” Stokes (Mahershala Ali, above), a crime lord and nightclub owner with ties to Luke’s past. He’ll be joined by Mariah Dillard (Alfre Woodard), a local politician (and Stokes’ cousin) who is torn between family loyalty and her desire to improve Harlem. Whether or not she is as bad as her cousin remains to be seen.
    This is actually Woodard’s second appearance in the MCU this year. She also played the grieving mother who accosted Tony Stark in “Captain America: Civil War.” The two characters aren’t connected.

    4. This Isn’t Your Typical Marvel Show
    “Cage” will also stand apart from the crowd, thanks to a very hip-hop-influenced sense of style. That includes the performances, with Mahershala Ali revealing that he modeled his character after the late rapper Biggie Smalls. The phrase “neo-blaxploitation” has been used to describe the tone of the series.

    The hip-hop approach definitely extends to the music, as well. “Black Dynamite” composer Adrian Younge and A Tribe Called Quest member Ali Shaheed Muhammad teamed up to compose the score. This may be the first MCU project since “Guardians of the Galaxy” that really compels viewers to rush out and buy the soundtrack album.

    5. Several Familiar Faces Will Return
    Netflix’s interconnected Marvel Universe is growing more complex with each new season that debuts, and “Luke Cage” will continue to build and expand upon what’s come before. Look for several familiar faces to return in these 13 episodes, including the intrepid nurse Claire Temple (Rosario Dawson), mob enforcer Turk Barrett (Rob Morgan), and even Luke’s late wife, Reva (Parisa Fitz-Henley).

    While Netflix is slowly building towards the team-based series “The Defenders,” we don’t know if we’ll see characters like Daredevil or Jessica (Krysten Ritter) in this season. We’re keeping our fingers crossed for some cameo appearances, and maybe even a nod to Luke’s future partner, Iron Fist (Finn Jones).
    However, do expect one Marvel hero to play a major role this season. Luke will be joined by Misty Knight (Simone Missick, above), an NYPD detective who may or may not have superhuman powers and who shares Luke’s desire to clean up Harlem at any cost.

    Early reviews are already describing Missick at the show’s breakout star.

    “Luke Cage” punches into your queue Friday.
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  • Charlie Cox Thinks ‘Daredevil’ Is ‘Quite the Player’

    "Daredevil" Season 2 Premiere The street-level superhero “Daredevil” saw plenty of action in the debut season of Marvel’s streaming series on Netflix. And now in Season Two, he’s going to get a different kind of “action,” with the introduction of not one, but two intense romances. Actor Charlie Cox admits he was stoked to discover a side of Matt Murdock comics fans have known for years: that the blind attorney-turned-enhanced-senses-superhero has cut a pretty serious romantic swath through the Marvel Universe.

    Things get hot, heavy, and, in one case, hard-hitting on the series with two of Daredevil’s more notorious and diametrically opposed paramours — his sweet but secretive office assistant Karen Page and his wild, perhaps sociopathic college sweetheart Elektra, who in the comics ultimately becomes a deadly ninja assassin. Cox tells Moviefone about the “Daredevil” love triangle (with hopes, he admits, that Scarlett Johansson might also stop by), as well as his thoughts on being a Man Without Fear, both onscreen and off.

    Moviefone: One thing that’s very fresh in Season Two is how much Matt Murdock’s romantic dramas play into it. What did it mean to you to explore his romantic life?

    Charlie Cox: It was really great to kind of play with Matt’s vulnerability from that point of view. It’s a side to him that we haven’t seen — not really, anyway. It’s a very complex dynamic. The relationship between Matt and Karen, and Matt and Elektra, is very, very confusing because Matt is, in many ways, able to be completely himself with both of those characters — but different aspects of himself.

    I think when Matt’s with Karen, she brings out this side of him which is kind and honest and believes in justice and law and order — and is calm and thoughtful and pensive and sensitive. All those sides to him, I think, is the Matt that really, really, deep down is longing to kind of come out.

    Similarly with Elektra, she knows about Daredevil. She understands Matt in a way that Karen could never at this point. But at the same time, Elektra appeals to a side of Matt that he doesn’t truly believe in. She kind of encourages the dark side of him. She crosses boundaries that Matt feels very uncomfortable with. It’s very confusing for him, and it poses a really, really difficult situation.

    The sparks that you strike with Elodie Yung in those scenes between Matt and Elektra are pretty spectacular. Tell me about finding that rhythm with your new costar.

    First of all, Elodie — she walked on to the set and she just completely embodied that character, you know what I mean? It was like she’d been there from day one. She’s a great actor. It’s a very bold character, and it’s potentially a very hard character to play. It’s very easy to make that kind of character into a caricature and lose all the nuance. She just embodied it with all the courage and muster that this show needs.

    Those scenes with her are a huge amount of fun. They’re thrilling to do because I think a lot of guys have had a relationship in their life with an Elektra of sorts, if you know what I mean. We’ve all been smitten with someone that represents that kind of unhinged danger, who doesn’t really give a f–k about anything and seems to love you passionately. And then at the same time, in a heartbeat, is able to walk away and never see you again.

    As you dug into the character’s history from the comics, were you surprised at how rich a sex life Matt Murdock had enjoyed throughout the years?

    I know! He’s quite a player, huh?

    More so than Bruce Wayne or Tony Stark, I think.

    Yeah. God willing, if we get to do another season, maybe we can have the Black Widow show up!

    Tell me how this job has changed your life.

    I mean, that is a ten-fold question. It’s changed my life in a very practical sense, in that I’m living in New York. I have a job that, for now, seems relatively consistent, which — as an actor — is like the most incredible feeling you’ve ever had in your life. The idea that I’ve finished work in December and even if I can’t get hired for love nor money in the next few months, I know that we’re going to do “The Defenders” at some point.

    I guess if I think about your question in a more profound sense, I like to think and hope that this character has kind of influenced how I live my life a little bit. When I was first preparing for the role, one of the things that I was concerned about was that Daredevil is known as the Man Without Fear. I was a little bit worried about that because I think that, if you’re playing a character on television for multiple episodes, for a long time, playing someone who is incapable of feeling fear is a little bit — it could potentially be quite challenging and dangerous because there’s the chance that it’s not very interesting to watch.

    So what I decided to do with Matt is rather than make him the Man Without Fear because he doesn’t feel fear, I thought, “‘Well, what if the Man Without Fear is a label that people give to Daredevil because they see what he does and they think, ‘Wow, he must be fearless.’” In actual fact, what if Matt Murdock is deeply afraid? What if he’s as afraid as everyone else is, but the difference is that he has great courage? He has great bravery. And despite his fear, he makes a decision on a daily basis to show up and do what he believes is right. I remember thinking, “That’s probably more interesting, particularly if we do this show for three or four years.”

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  • Charlie Cox Facts: 11 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About the ‘Daredevil’ Star

    %Slideshow-373144% Marvel’s Daredevil,” so it may come as a surprise that he’s been acting since the early 2000s. Before you binge the new season, learn more about the star.

    From his start across the pond to the big thing he missed about Daredevil, here are 11 things you might not know about Charlie Cox.
    "Daredevil" Season 2 Premiere
    [Source: EW, IMDB, TV Guide, GayTimes]

  • The Punisher Unleashes Hell in ‘Daredevil’ Season 2 Trailer

    DaredevilDoes the villain make the hero — or does the hero make the villain?

    That’s the central question in the trailer for the second season of “Daredevil,” which introduces us to a new big bad in the form of the Punisher (Jon Bernthal). He’s ultra-violent, ruthless, and unlike Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox), willing to kill.

    “I hit ’em and they stay down,” the Punisher snarls. He thinks Daredevil is “a half measure” and it’s up to him to enact vengeance in the city.
    And as Karen (Deborah Ann Woll) notes, perhaps Daredevil is as much to blame for the Punisher’s misdeed as the vigilante rival himself. “Maybe we created him,” she says.

    Things look like they are going to get very bloody and very vicious, fast. And life gets even more complicated by the appearance of someone named Elektra!

    “Daredevil” season 2 streams March 18 on Netflix.

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  • The 15 Greatest Live-Action Superheroes in TV History

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    When the new “Daredevil” series debuts on Netflix on April 10, blind hero Matt Murdock will be enterting relatively uncharted territory. After all, at the multiplex, you can’t hurl a hunk of Kryptonite without hitting a superhero movie, but on TV, live-action comic book heroes have been scarce. Maybe that’s because the small screen does what few supervillains can do: make superheroes look… well, small.

    In the Saturday morning cartoons, at least, superheroes always look pretty much like they do in the comic books. But the live-action version is often just a guy or gal in tights, suspended on wires. For most of its history, TV had neither the money, nor the effects prowess, nor the prestige to cast top-notch thespians as superheroes, much less to make them look convincingly like people with superpowers having earth-shaking adventures. As a result, most live-action TV superheroes, even the ones you loved as a kid, look more than a little campy now.

    But all that has changed in recent years. Both Marvel and DC have taken their TV superhero franchises very seriously, with each creating a coherent universe full of big-budget, skillfully-acted primetime TV dramas that appeal to comic-book geeks and casual fans alike. It helps that Marvel’s “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” and “Agent Carter” tie into the enormously popular Marvel Cinematic Universe (the series of inter-related theatrical movies dominated by the “Avengers” characters), but DC’s shows (“Arrow,” “The Flash,” “Gotham”) may be just as good, if not better.

    “Daredevil,” starring Charlie Cox (“Boardwalk Empire”) as the Marvel hero with four heightened senses, takes the Marvel-DC rivalry to the next level. Not only must the show succeed among Netflix binge-viewers, but it also must introduce a new set of interlocking Marvel series that will debut over the next several months on the streaming platform. Not only that, but Cox must also banish the specter of Ben Affleck’s big-screen “Daredevil” flop from a decade ago. Can Cox’s Daredevil take his place among the small, elite group of favorite live-action TV superheroes? Read the following ranked list, and see where you think “Daredevil” belongs.

  • Best of Late Night TV: Vin Diesel Talks ‘Furious 7,’ Helen Mirren Sucks Helium, ‘Celebrity Cell Phone Profile’ (VIDEO)

    If you’re like us and value your sleep, you probably nodded off into your Ambien dreamland before the party started on post-prime time TV. Don’t worry; we’ve got you covered. Here’s the best of what happened last night on late night.

    Claire Danes, David Beckham, and Bob Odendirk were all on “The Late Late Show with James Corden” Monday night. Claire talked about how she can be a bossy dancer when she’s drunk. David talked about how his son Brooklyn has a job at a small French coffee shop in London; he also shared the story of Brooklyn’s first date on Valentine’s Day when the kid was 14, and Victoria made David stay in the restaurant and watch them. Bob talked about “Better Call Saul” and how he can now make a perfect Cinnabon. (Prove it – send one this way!) The trio also played Celebrity Cell Phone Profile – before the show, one of the guests surrendered their cell phone and they used it for clues so James could determined who owned the phone. Fun game, if a bit too long. Still, Corden and Beckham have a cute bromance going. Vin Diesel was on “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” talking about Van Halen (they were also on JKL), the first concert he ever went to, dancing for the Beastie Boys, visiting China, meeting Mark Zuckerberg, and “Furious 7.” They showed a clip from “Furious 7” with Vin and the now late Paul Walker. Helen Mirren was on “The Tonight Show,” sucking helium and sharing an embarrassing story. Helen is now in a Broadway play and she commutes on the subway. She talked about manspreading (haha) and one of the worst things she’s ever done. She’s so ashamed. She was with some friends and they were running to catch the train to get to the theater. She stopped the door and her hand was stuck in the door. A nice guy pried open the door for them. Then the subway police arrived and asked who stopped the train. Helen didn’t speak up, but the guy who kept the door open did speak up and he had to leave the train. She’s so sorry and wishes she could find him. Helen also chatted with Jimmy while sucking helium – he had her accept a faux award in that voice. She should apologize to subway guy in her helium voice, that would make him smile. But seriously, hearing her say “spotted dick” in that voice might give you the giggles. Neil Patrick Harris was on “Late Show with David Letterman” for the 17th time, and he said he knows this might be his last time on the show. The first time he was on Dave’s show was 25 years ago. He even repeated his electric mic magic move. NPH also talked about his new live variety show, which needs a name. “Daredevil” star Charlie Cox was also on Dave’s show and he had some food poisoning issues, so he tried not to get sick. Nathan Lane was on “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” talking about Taylor Swift and his heartbreak about Zayn leaving One Direction. “Seth, you think you know a boy band, you give them your heart and something like this shakes you to the core. And then the next thing you know, they’re cutting solo albums and joining Isis, turning into Joey Fatone. It’s one of life’s cruelest lessons.” Kristen Schaal of “The Last Man on Earth” was on Seth’s show and talked about a gassy love scene with Will Forte. Speaking of Will Forte, he was on “Conan” and also talked about the show, his character, his … manhood, and when he shaved a love arrow.

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  • Justice Is Blind in New Trailer for Netflix’s ‘Daredevil’

    DaredevilThe line between good and evil is a blur in Daredevil.”

    The streaming service released the first official trailer for the Marvel-based series. “Boardwalk Empire” star Charlie Cox plays the titular crime-fighter, who is a blind lawyer named Matt Murdock by day. But in a city overrun with crime, ruled with an iron fist by Kingpin (Vincent D’Onofrio), Murdock knows that, “Sometimes, we have to do things outside of the law.”

    And so, Daredevil is born. He might not be able to see, but he can still fight for what’s right.

    “Daredevil” debuts April 10 on Netflix.

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  • Check Out the Official Teaser for Marvel’s ‘Daredevil’ Netflix Series (VIDEO)

    CHARLIE COX as MATT MURDOCK in the Netflix Original Series “Marvel’s Daredevil” Photo: Barry Wetcher© 2014 Netflix, Inc. All rights reserved.The first teaser for “Marvel’s Daredevil” Netflix series is here, and it’s a tasty look at what’s sure to be a hit among comic book fans, action lovers, and Netflix bingers alike. Charlie Cox does double duty as Matt Murdock, your normal everyday lawyer, and Daredevil, the blind superhero fighting crime and kicking butt in NYC’s Hell’s Kitchen.

    This video gives us a closer look at both sides of the superhero, both the daytime dude who knows what he’s doing isn’t quite right, and the nighttime superhero who’s hell bent on righting wrongs, no matter how bloody things get. There’s also a peek at Deborah Ann Woll as Karen Page, Murdock’s secretary who has her own set of ethical quandaries to deal with. And, hey, doesn’t that look like Vincent D’Onofrio in his role of big bad Wilson Fisk?

    “Daredevil” will premiere on April 10, and it will stream in 4K resolution. All 13 episodes will drop at 12:01 a.m. PST, so clear your schedule and gather your snacks.

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  • ‘Daredevil’ Teaser: A (Quick) First Look at Netflix and Marvel’s New Series (VIDEO)

    Daredevil, Netflix
    It’s not the official teaser — that’s dropping tomorrow, February 4 — but Marvel and Netflix couldn’t help but offer a short glimpse at the trailer for “Daredevil,” the streaming service’s first foray into a four-series partnership with the comic powerhouse.

    The clip is a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it look at our hero, Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox), a blind man who moonlights as the titular superhero. We see Daredevil, in a makeshift costume, slink down a darkened hallway before busting down a door and barging through.

    “I’m just trying to make my city a better place,” he says in voiceover.

    We’ll have to wait until tomorrow to find out additional details about the series, but this sneak peek should get fans excited to see more.

    “Daredevil” premieres on Netflix on April 10.

    Photo credit: YouTube

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