Tag: loki

  • Tom Hiddleston’s Loki Among MCU Characters Getting Own TV Series on Disney Streaming Service: Report

    Tom Hiddleston’s Loki Among MCU Characters Getting Own TV Series on Disney Streaming Service: Report

    Loki
    Marvel Studios

    You want more Loki, including more Tom Hiddleston? You got it. Or you may get it, if Variety‘s report pans out.

    Variety is a pretty trusted source, so “Avengers” fans should feel free to get their hopes up fairly high.

    According to Variety, Disney’s upcoming streaming service “is in early development on an ambitious plan for a number of limited series centered on popular characters from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. These series will likely include shows centered on Loki and the Scarlet Witch, along with other beloved superheroes who have yet to appear in their own standalone movies.”

    Variety added that the original MCU stars — including Tom Hiddleston as Loki, and Elizabeth Olsen as Scarlet Witch — are expected to play the characters in the Disney streaming shows. Each show is expected to have six to eight episodes, the site added, and Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige is expected to have a hands-on role in each show’s development.

    Sounds pretty awesome from here.

    Avengers: Infinity War, Scarlet Witch, Elizabeth Olsen
    Marvel Studios

    It’s not clear if, say, Loki’s series would be a prequel set before “Avengers: Infinity War” or if fans should REALLY get their hopes up and it’s set after the events of “Infinity War” and maybe also “Avengers 4.”

    Insiders emphasized to Variety that “Avengers” characters/stars that have gotten their own movies will not get their own series. This will focus on “characters who have served as second tier characters in the MCU.”

    It may also be a sign that these characters will not get their own standalone movies. But what about a character like Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan)? Would he get his own series on the Disney streaming service, or will Marvel Studios give him his own standalone series at some point in one of the next MCU phases?

    At any rate, this Disney streamer just keeps sounding better — and yet worse to our wallets. Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, HBO, etc. Can we get a streaming tax break? There’s no word yet on when the Marvel series would start production or premiere. The Disney streamer itself doesn’t even have an official launch date, other than 2019. But last we heard, Netflix will stop getting Disney/Marvel family shows starting with “Captain Marvel.”

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  • From Mythic to Red-Hot: How ‘American Gods’ Became the Show of the Moment

    AMERICAN GODSThe new Starz’s new series “American Gods,” adapted from the bestselling novel by fantasy author Hannibal”).

    “I think our first indication of that was when we were watching dailies from a scene that featured Orlando Jones, and his introduction as the African trickster god, Mr. Nancy,” says Fuller. “It’s relative in a Black Lives Matter sort of way — he was in a slave hold with 30-40 slaves played by black actors. And after his first take, they all gave him a standing ovation. That was the first time we thought, ‘Oh, this is more than just the fun show that we wanted to see.’ There are themes in the book that really speak to people deeply.”

    “It was mind-blowing,” says actress Yetide Badaki, who plays a Bilquis, a contemporary incarnation of the Biblical Queen of Sheba who lives in the modern world as a carnivorously worship-seeking prostitute, of the increasing prescience of the subject matter.Yetide Badaki in AMERICAN GODS“I woke up thinking, Who had the crystal ball all this time?” laughs Bedaki. “I guess Neil sees into the future. I’m absolutely stunned at how something that was written in 2001 and was filmed last year has become so incredibly topical. Every episode now I’m seeing through a new lens. It’s possible that as artists we were tapping into the psyche, and feeling something that was on the horizon, because I think viewers are going to be absolutely fascinated by how relevant all of this is at this time.”

    “I would be very happy if it wasn’t this relevant,” admits Gaiman. “I’d be perfectly happy if it were not quite as timely. The headlines that say things like, ‘Is “American Gods” the most political show of 2017?’ ‘Is “American Gods” the most important show of 2017?’ They are wonderful. I would trade them for a slightly stabler world right now, and feeling like I understood what was going on.”

    Gaiman admits that the very notion for the novel was unique in the way that it first struck him, lingering in a way that typically unformed creative sparks don’t. “It’s weird, because most books you don’t [remember when the idea first came to you],” says Gaiman. “They slowly congeal, and then suddenly you look down and this is a book.

    “In this case, I was really tired, I was in Reykjavik, in Iceland,” the author recalls. “I had not slept for about two days, due to it being the eternal summer. I looked down at a tabletop diorama of the voyages of Leif Erikson going from Iceland, to Greenland, to Newfoundland, which they call Vinland. I looked at it and I thought, I wonder if they took their gods with them?

    “Then there was a beat, and then I thought, I wonder if they took their gods away when they went home. And suddenly I had a book. It was just like, ‘This is a book.’ A couple of days later, as soon as I had some down time, I wrote an essay and sent it to my agent and to my editor, and said, ‘This is the idea, this is the story. By the way, I’m calling it “American Gods” right now. That’s the working title, but I’m sure I will come up with something better.’ And I never did.”Orlando Jones as Mr. Nancy in AMERICAN GODSFor many of the actors in the series, the mythic nature of the material and the iconic gods that populate it provided an initial allure. Jones says that his role, Mr. Nancy, derived from the African deity Anansi, “has been a character my great grandparents and grandparents have been reading to me since before I knew what Neil Gaiman was. In that sense, I guess it’s always been a part of my life.”

    “As it relates to mythology in general,” adds Jones, “the prototypes are the prototypes, the gods are the gods. They shift from region to region, but by and large, they kind of remain the same. I think what’s interesting about this exploration is the themes and metaphors that you find are at play with a book written before there was an iPhone that finds itself so relevant technologically. And also just in terms of how humankind seems to be moving. Those things make this incredibly special.”Ian McShane, Ricky Whittle, Corbin Bernsen in AMERICAN GODSOthers, like Corbin Bernsen, who plays Vulcan, the Roman god of fire and, adapting contemporaneously, guns — a character created especially for the series — were attracted by what “American Gods” had to say about instantly relatable topics like generational change.

    “The idea of what’s going on, the old gods coming out and dealing with the new gods, that I very much am invested in on a daily basis,” says Bernsen. “Trying to, like all people, figure out where the hell we are in our lives. I think this is really timely, if it can be reduced to somewhat metaphoric of where we are right now … Going down the rabbit hole of the mythology is one thing, but going down the rabbit hole of humanity? I’m somewhere around mid-Earth right now.”

    “We shot our scenes primarily in a working penitentiary in Oklahoma, in the middle of that state,” says Jonathan Tucker, who plays Low-Key Lyesmith, an incarnation of Loki, the Norse god of mischief. “It added an extraordinary amount of authenticity to our work there. And also, it felt very right that a show about America, about the themes of Middle America, of what we brought to this country as immigrants, what we worshipped when we came here, what we’ve left behind, all the new things that have been brought to the shores of this country by the immigrants that make up this beautiful nation.”

    “It felt very right that we were in Oklahoma,” Tucker adds, “that we were in this area that is not Hollywood, that’s not a backlot, it’s not a studio, we’re not in Toronto — this was real, man. That was just something you can’t quantify.”Bruce Langley as Technical Boy and Gillian Anderson as Media in AMERICAN GODSUltimately for Gaiman, with all the increasing urgency and zeitgeist appeal that the show has accumulated, it was the simple pleasure of seeing characters he conceived and lines of dialogue he wrote come to life on the soundstage that resonated the most. “In Episode 2, watching Gillian Anderson playing Media, the new god of all of you [journalists and bloggers], having taken on the form of ‘The Lucy Show,’ and talking on a big screen to Shadow Moon, was just absolutely unbelievable for me,” he says.

    “It’s not just as good as I imagined,” he adds. “It’s better than I imagined. You treasure those moments as an author.”

    “American Gods” premieres Sunday, April 30th on Starz.

  • Tom Hiddleston Teases Loki’s Role in ‘Thor: Ragnarok,’ Chris Hemsworth’s Hilarious Performance

    loki, thor, thor 3, thor: ragnarok, ragnarok, tom hiddleston, chris hemsworthTom Hiddleston has always brought a certain humor and charm to his mischievous villain Loki in the “Thor” and “Avengers” movies, and that won’t change in the upcoming threequel, “Thor: Ragnarok.” But this time around, Thor himself, Chris Hemsworth, is also getting in on the goofy fun.

    In an interview with Fandango, Hiddleston teased what Loki will be up to in “Ragnarok,” which picks up with the character after the events of 2013’s “Thor: The Dark World.” Though he wouldn’t say much specific, based on the actor’s description, Loki and Thor’s reunion certainly sounds like it will be entertaining.

    “At the end of ‘The Dark World,’ Loki is on the throne,” Hiddleston explained. “At the beginning of ‘Ragnarok,’ Thor has a few questions and Loki is endearingly enigmatic about providing answers.”

    “Endearingly enigmatic” sounds like exactly the right combination for Loki. As for the God of Thunder, Hiddleston says he’ll start to pick up some of his half-brother’s humorous habits, with Hemsworth finally getting to flex his comedic muscle in the superhero series. According to Hiddleston, Hemsworth bonded with director Taika Waititi, and the pair “brought out the best in each other and started making stuff up.” That all led to Thor cutting loose on the big screen.

    “I can confidently say this will be the funniest depiction of the character of Thor that you’ve ever seen,” Hiddleston told Fandango. “I personally have known for almost 10 years that Chris Hemsworth is hilarious. I think this go-round will be his chance.”

    Anyone who saw Hemsworth steal the show as the dim bulb receptionist Kevin in last summer’s “Ghostbusters” can attest to the actor’s hilarity. We can’t wait to see how he infuses that into Thor.

    “Thor: Ragnarok” is due in theaters on November 3.

    [via: Fandango]

  • See Tom Hiddleston Back as Loki on the ‘Thor: Ragnarok’ Set

    Comic-Con International 2016 - Warner Bros. PresentationTom Hiddleston has taken a break from speculating about his James Bond chances and canoodling with Taylor Swift to reprise his role as Loki in the latest “Thor” flick, and to celebrate, the actor has also joined Instagram.

    In a move that’s sure to please his new girlfriend, Hiddleston has officially signed up for the social media site, and celebrated in the best way possible: Posting an in-character selfie from the “Thor: Ragnarok” set.

    He’s back!

    A photo posted by Tom Hiddleston (@twhiddleston) on


    “He’s back!” the actor captioned his very first Instagram post, featuring him rocking Loki’s long locks, raising the “rock on” symbol, and twisting his face into a goofy smirk. In other words, he looks like classic Loki.

    The mischievous god of fire will have some company this time around in the form of two other larger-than-life villains: Hela, played by Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, and Grandmaster, played by Jeff Goldblum. Marvel fans should prepare themselves for some serious Acting with a capital A where these three are concerned.

    And fans should perhaps also prepare to say goodbye to Loki, since Hiddleston has hinted before that “Ragnarok” could be his last outing as the character. Audiences will just have to wait for the flick to hit screens to learn his ultimate fate.

    “Thor: Ragnarok” is due in theaters on November 3, 2017.

    [via: Tom Hiddleston]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

  • Taylor Swift and Tom Hiddleston Dating Rumor Sends Internet Racing for Bad Puns

    "Marvel's The Avengers" ..Loki (Tom Hiddleston)..Ph: Zade Rosenthal  ..� 2011 MVLFFLLC.  TM & � 2011 Marvel.  All Rights Reserved.It didn’t take Taylor Swift long to Shake It Off with Calvin Harris.

    He should’ve known she was trouble when she walked in.

    She had a Blank Space and gave it to Tom Hiddleston, and now Taylor and Calvin have Bad Blood.

    Taylor has not been Loki about her new relationship, with photographs showing her kissing the “Avengers” actor and possibly hooking up with him before she was even done with the last guy.

    Because Everything Has Changed, and maybe that’s Mean, but it’s time for her to Begin Again with a new Love Story, and dating Loki is all of our Wildest Dreams, right?

    64th Annual BMI Pop Awards - ShowTMZ claims Calvin Harris feels “betrayed,” and deleted not just his make-nice tweet from after he and Taylor broke up, but all of his Taylor photos. She has also removed him from her Instagram.

    Q102's iHeartRadio Jingle Ball 2015

    WORLD EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift and Tom Hiddleston’s romance sensationally revealed https://t.co/xc2yGvUPFj pic.twitter.com/gTCfDZsjfV

    — The Sun (@TheSun) June 15, 2016


    Whenever Taylor Swift ends a relationship it leads to breakup jokes, but the addition of Tom Hiddleston, most recently seen as a potential next Bond, has shaken and stirred fans to a greater extent than usual.

    Hopefully Calvin Harris isn’t so mad that he pulls a “puny god” move on Tom Hiddleston, but … you know … it was kind of awesome the first time.

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  • Tom Hiddleston May Be Done With Loki After ‘Thor: Ragnarok’

    Nothing is ever set in stone in the Marvel Cinematic Universe until the cameras start rolling, but this latest bit of news may be upsetting for Loki fans: According to Tom Hiddleston, “Thor: Ragnarok” may feature the last onscreen appearance of the villain.

    Hiddleston hinted that his days as the meddlesome god were numbered in an interview with The Daily Beast, in which he discussed a bunch of upcoming projects. According to the actor, the third installment in the “Thor” franchise may be its last — and will feature Loki’s final bow, too.

    “‘Thor 3’ will be cool because I’ve not done it for four years,” Hiddleston told the site of starting production on the threequel, which begins shooting in June. “I love working with Chris [Hemsworth]. This will be my last time out of the gate.”

    That seems like a pretty definitive declaration, though of course, the actor later qualified those remarks. When asked if that meant that he would not pop up in “Avengers: Infinity War,” Hiddleston admitted that even current members of the MCU are not privy to all the intel about upcoming projects.

    “I don’t know! Honestly, I don’t know,” he told the Beast. “They haven’t got their ducks in a row yet. They make it up as they go along.”

    Here’s hoping the Marvel head honchos can find a way to make up a part for Hiddleston, too.

    In the meantime, catch Loki while you can when “Thor: Ragnarok” opens on November 3, 2017.

    [via: The Daily Beast]

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  • The 15 Greatest Marvel Movie Villains Ever, Ranked

    %Slideshow-362341%From alien gods burdened with glorious purpose to metal-bending mutants, Marvel has racked up quite the rogue’s gallery.

    Even before Iron Man and the rest of the Avengers started assembling, movies based on Marvel characters have been entertaining us with the best kick-punching Hollywood money can buy — pitting the X-Men and Spider-Man against a variety of fan-favorites.

    In honor of Loki’s, er, Tom Hiddleston‘s birthday, here is a ranking of the 15 greatest baddies to ever appear in a movie based on a Marvel property.

  • Chris Hemsworth Had No Idea ‘What the Hell Was Going on’ in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’

    Chris Hemsworth at the "Avengers: Age Of Ultron" - European Premiere - Red Carpet ArrivalsWhen we were on the set of “Avengers: Age of Ultron” last summer, we watched Chris Hemsworth shoot a scene set in Avengers Tower, where he has a chat with The Vision, the new, purplish robo-god introduced in the third act of the highly anticipated sequel. The Vision (played by Paul Bettany) looked cool and imposing, every square inch of his skin covered in prosthetics, but Hemsworth? Well, Hemsworth was Thor. In between takes he chatted with his stunt double, a burly man who throws the hammer when the megawatt star is unable, and it became clear, after a few minutes, that Hemsworth was bigger than his stunt double. Truly, he is an Asgardian king.

    And in “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” you get to remember why you liked Thor so much in the first place, after the dreary sequel “Thor: The Dark World.” Thor is funny again, with Hemsworth’s comic timing once again calibrated to perfection, and he also has his own mysterious mini-arc, brought about by the Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) showing him a potential vision of the future. It’s all great stuff for Hemsworth to play with. Now if only he could fit through human-sized doorways.

    We got to chat with the Avenger about what it was like being funny again, why Loki wasn’t in this movie, what went wrong on “Blackhat” and what he thought of his particular Doritos flavor.

    Moviefone: In this movie, Thor gets to be funny again! Was that something you were excited about returning to?

    Chris Hemsworth: Yes, definitely. It was something that I had wanted to do. It was the first thing I said to Joss. We had fallen into a bit of a dark thing in the second one, and it was a little too earnest. But that was also the story and that’s fine, I’m proud of that. But this time I wanted to do something different. It’s more relatable in this one; there’s humor and he’s grounded. I’m glad you seemed to think so because I haven’t seen the film and I’m glad it made the final cut.

    Was there anything else you lobbied for Joss to include?

    The humor was the thing, but also just being relevant — not just being there for the sake of it. There’s so much going on and so many characters being introduced that your insecurity goes into overdrive and you go, “Well, wait, am I even going to be in this film?” So I was just making sure that I was still a part of the Marvel team.

    You get to have a lot of screen time with The Vision, which is very cool. What was it like to see Bettany in one of these movies in physical form?

    He’s one of my favorite actors, and for that character to be so memorable as just a voice in the previous films says something about his talent. Until he turned up and read those lines and embodied that character, I didn’t even know what the story was about. And then he brought it to life on such a scale, the whole thing was amazing; we just fall in step and follow suit. That was certainly the case for me as Thor.

    There’s a crazy scene where you go into some kind of mystical pool. Do you know what I’m talking about?

    Yeah yeah yeah.

    In the movie, in the final cut, it seems like you go back to Asgard or have a vision quest. But Loki isn’t there. Did you shoot something with Tom Hiddleston?

    Ohhhh, I’m not sure if I’m allowed to answer that. I haven’t seen the movie. Ask me again after I’ve seen the movie. [Laughs] It was all about nightmares, wasn’t it? That’s what she stirred up, and the setting was, I guess, irrelevant on the larger scale but quite relevant to us as individuals. It being set in Asgard or some similar kind of place was quite poignant for those characters, and Thor’s vision obviously takes place in Asgard. And I think he’s tapping into a larger threat; there’s the immediate problem on earth but Thor is sensing the universe colliding, so to speak, which ties into the next bunch of Marvel films. So it was nice to be clued into that.

    Did they tell you that it was going to pay off later? How much do they let you in on?

    A little bit, but ultimately they’re the creators of it all, and we just turn up. But you know it’s always evolving. Even this film, the original script was quite different than what ended up on screen. So who knows.

    Can you talk about those differences?

    Well, I just mean how we’re all involved in it and what our relationship is to it. I mean, a lot of my stuff, to be honest, we were putting off because it wasn’t shot until the second half of the shoot. So I was on set as a placeholder and, through the process, me and Joss were workshopping ideas and leading towards what would happen towards the end of the film. We wedged it into the end of the schedule. I don’t remember it in any great detail, I just remember constantly trying to figure out what the hell was going on. Maybe it wasn’t changing; I was just trying to understand it.

    You obviously have some very lovely action figures but this time around you’re also on a Doritos bag.

    [Laughs] Okay.

    Your flavor is Spicy Nacho.

    Uhhhhhhh…

    What about Thor says “Spicy Nacho” to you?

    [Laughs] I don’t even know. I didn’t even know that was the case until you told me. Let me tell you now — thank you for telling me that, I better now get a lifetime supply of Doritos.

    Just your flavor, not anybody else’s flavor.

    Yeah, I don’t want that other crap.

    I was a big fan of “Blackhat,” which came out earlier this year. But it wasn’t really widely accepted. Do you have any theories about what happened there?

    [Laughs] Look, for me to be able to work with Michael Mann, who has made some of the greatest films out there, from “Last of the Mohicans” to “Heat,” two of my favorite films, it was such an amazing opportunity to work with him. If we could figure out the formula to why things work and how they’re received, great; we’d all be incredibly successful. But it’s a roll of the dice every time and you just do the best you can. They either land or they miss, and that’s kind of it, but you can’t think of the end result as much. I try and think, Am I going to learn something from this process or have an experience that’s memorable or work with someone whom I admire? And that was the case.
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