Tag: luke-cage

  • Krysten Ritter Joins ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Season 2

    Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones in 'Marvel's Jessica Jones'. Photo: Netflix.
    Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones in ‘Marvel’s Jessica Jones’. Photo: Netflix.

    Preview:

    • Krysten Ritter will appear in ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Season 2.
    • She’s bringing Jessica Jones back to screens.
    • Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onofrio star in the show.

    Looks like the Defenders are getting back together. Well, some of them at least.

    As part of its presentation at the big Disney Upfront this week (where the company touted its upcoming and returning shows in the hopes of luring advertising dollars), Marvel brought Krysten Ritter on stage to announce that she will appear as Jessica Jones in the second season of Disney+ series ‘Daredevil: Born Again.’

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    This is what Ritter said about returning to the role:

    “It’s so great to be back, returning to Jessica after three seasons and ‘The Defenders’ and now joining the MCU. I’m so excited to bring back this iconic character, and without giving too much away, there is much more in store for Jessica Jones. This is going to be an incredible season!”

    Ritter’s gritty, funny portrayal of the character was widely acclaimed, and she was a definite standout among the Netflix/Marvel heroes.

    There had been talk that other Netflix characters might be making the leap, following Charlie Cox’s Matt Murdock/Daredevil and his arch nemesis The Kingpin, AKA Wilson Fisk, as played by Vincent D’Onofrio.

    Hopes remain high that Mike Colter, who played Luke Cage, a hulking hero with great strength and impenetrable skin, might also show up. And that’s it for the Defenders line up. There definitely was not anybody else we’d want to see.

    Related Article: ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Seeks to Return to the Character’s Netflix TV Glory Days

    Who is Jessica Jones?

    Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones in 'Marvel's Jessica Jones'. Photo: Netflix.
    Krysten Ritter as Jessica Jones in ‘Marvel’s Jessica Jones’. Photo: Netflix.

    One of the key characters during the Netflix/Marvel TV run, with her standalone series launching in 2015 and lasting for three seasons. She also appeared in the ‘Defenders’ team-up miniseries  in 2017.

    Jessica was created by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Michael Gaydos and first appeared in ‘Alias #1’ (November 2001) as part of Marvel’s Max, an imprint for more mature content.

    She gains super strength and the ability to fly (to some degree, it’s more like giant leaps) and relative invulnerability but the accident also kills her family (or so she thinks).

    In the show, much as in the comic, she’s an extremely troubled young woman, an alcoholic who funds her life through working as a private investigator.

    In Season 1, she must deal with Kilgrave (David Tennant), a cunning and sadistic mind manipulator who forced her to kill someone while under his power and effectively ended her brief heroic career.

    What’s the story of ‘Daredevil: Born Again’?

    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television's 'Daredevil: Born Again', exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television’s ‘Daredevil: Born Again’, exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    A continuation of the ‘Daredevil’ series that aired on Netflix from 2015 to 2018, ‘Born Again’ picks up with our hero Matt Murdock (Cox), a blind lawyer with heightened abilities, amid a continued fight for justice through his bustling law firm.

    At the same time, former mob boss Wilson Fisk (D’Onofrio) pursues his own political endeavors in New York. When their past identities begin to emerge, both men find themselves on an inevitable collision course.

    Season 2 will pick up after the cliffhanger of the first, in which crime lord Fisk violently consolidated power, leading Matt to go underground and begin reaching out to allies to resist Fisk and his anti-vigilante task force. Jones will be part of that group of allies.

    ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ –The Executive Speaks

    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television's 'Daredevil: Born Again', exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Giovanni Rufino. © 2024 Marvel.
    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television’s ‘Daredevil: Born Again’, exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Giovanni Rufino. © 2024 Marvel.

    Marvel’s head of television and animation Brad Winderbaum enthused to the Hollywood Reporter about the success of the show:

    “People were watching it as a season four, not at as a first season. It’s given us the confidence of making the show annually into the future.”

    Just don’t got expecting this to open any floodgate for other characters, according to the executive:

    “It’s about not rushing and telling the best story. Yes, it’s exciting to think about characters interacting, but it’s about the reasons why. At times we’ve done that very well, at times we’ve rushed. The story has to lead the path.”

    What else did Marvel talk up?

    Ironheart/Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) in Marvel Television's 'Ironheart'. Photo by Jalen Marlowe. © 2024 MARVEL. All Rights Reserved.
    Ironheart/Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) in Marvel Television’s ‘Ironheart’. Photo by Jalen Marlowe. © 2024 MARVEL. All Rights Reserved.

    In addition to the Jessica Jones/Daredevil announcement, the company brought footage of ‘Ironheart,’ the series following driven young inventive genius Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) who we met on screen in ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’

    The show follows Riri’s further adventures as she works on her technological creations (including her version of the Iron Man suit) and encounters some dangerous villains.

    ‘Ironheart’ launches on Disney+ on June 24th, and you can see the trailer below.

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    Then there is ‘Wonder Man,’ about a superpowered actor and stunt man (played by Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) who auditions to be in a superhero movie.

    This meta-sounding series also features Ben Kingsley’s Trevor Slattery, last seen in ‘Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.’

    ‘Wonder Man’ is scheduled to arrive on Disney+ in December.

    When will ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ return to our screens?

    While Marvel hasn’t fully confirmed the release date, we do know via showrunner Dario Scardapane that the new season will be on Disney+ in March 2026.

    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television's 'Daredevil: Born Again', exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Giovanni Rufino. © 2024 Marvel.
    Daredevil/Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) in Marvel Television’s ‘Daredevil: Born Again’, exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Giovanni Rufino. © 2024 Marvel.

    Movies and TV Shows Featuring Characters in ‘Daredevil: Born Again:’

    Buy Krysten Ritter Movies and TV shows on Amazon

  • ‘One Piece’ Interview: Director Marc Jobst

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    Premiering on Netflix beginning August 31st is the new live-action adaption of the popular manga series ‘One Piece.’ It is based on the highly popular anime and manga, created by Eiichiro Oda. Director Marc Jobst (‘Daredevil’, ‘The Witcher’) helmed the first two episodes and also served as Executive Producer on the series.

    What Is The Plot Of ‘One Piece’?

    Monkey D. Luffy longs for a life of freedom for as long as he can remember. He is in search of the legendary treasure known as the One Piece and sets out to find a crew to help him on his ultimate quest – to become King of the Pirates. Along the way, Luffy and his crew must outrun the relentless Marines and formidable rivals.

    Emily Rudd as Nami, Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy, Mackenyu Arata as Roronoa Zoro in season 1 of 'One Piece.'
    (L to R) Emily Rudd as Nami, Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy, Mackenyu Arata as Roronoa Zoro in season 1 of ‘One Piece.’ Cr. Casey Crafford/Netflix © 2023.

    Who Is In the Cast of ‘One Piece’?

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Marc Jobst about the live-action adaptation of the popular anime, what drew him to the project, his love of character-driven stories, and his work on Netflix’s Marvel projects.

    'One Piece' director Marc Jobst.
    ‘One Piece’ director Marc Jobst. Photo courtesy of Netflix.

    You can read the full interview below or watch our interview by clicking on the video player above.

    Moviefone: When you were first brought onto the project, did you feel the need to immediately dive into watching the anime because there’s such extensive lore attached to ‘One Piece’?

    Marc Jobst: I really wanted to read and get to the source of this extraordinary story, partly because I absolutely loved Matt (Owens) and Steve (Maeda)’s scripts. I just felt like they were so characterful, and they were so epic, and full of adventure, action-packed, and crazy, and wild, and people chopping up into bits, and all this wonderful crazy stuff. But partly also because what they did in those scripts, and this is what I started with because they sent me the scripts first off, what I loved so much about them, with all those big landscapes and world-building of it all, I loved the fact that there were still these really beautiful little intimate moments between characters, and that’s what drew me into this. I’ve done quite a lot of world-building shows, and they don’t always have from the big to the intimate. Those intimate scenes were also insightful, I felt, about human nature and kindness, actually. So that’s what made me really want to go to the manga and start to read. There is a point at which as a director, you don’t want to become too overburdened. Because I knew Matt Owens, and I’d worked with Matt Owens before, and I knew that he knew everything there was to know, he was a pillar that I could lean on in order to really make sure that I wasn’t veering from the lore in anything that I was proposing to do. I found this when I was doing the Marvel Studios work, sometimes as a director, you just need to see what you see on the page and come to it with a freshness. After all, we were trying to create a show that was fresh, that was additional to the manga and the anime, not in place of.

    Vincent Regan as Vice-Admiral Garp in season 1 of 'One Piece.'
    Vincent Regan as Vice-Admiral Garp in season 1 of ‘One Piece.’ Cr. Casey Crafford/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Aside from being the executive producer, you directed the first two episodes. Can you talk about the process of crafting those initial episodes?

    MJ: Yeah, and I’m a character and story man. When I’m sent a script, I’m only really interested in what happens. Who are the characters, what’s their story, what do they want, and what’s their journey? Do I feel like their journey involves some relatable story that as an audience, you can connect with? So when I read those first scripts, that was my first thing, never mind about the crazy world, and the phenomenal characters that exist within it, that’s all lovely. But really if it doesn’t feel to me like we are really exploring character, it’s maybe not my bag of chips. This absolutely did, and that’s what drew me in. So when you ask how do you approach that with the actors, Oda has written phenomenal backstories to these characters. They’re really deep, they’re really profound, they’re really troubled in some respects, first of all. Second of all, they have clear wants. Luffy wants to be king of the pirates, Zoro wants to be the best swordsman in the world, Nami wants to be able to draw a map of the entire universe. All those wants are really clear. So you have a character with a backstory that they bring to life and that they want to achieve something. So what’s the obstacle, and how do they overcome that obstacle, and how do they bring friendships and relationships that enable them to overcome those obstacles? So when I started working with these actors, first of all, the casting process was significant because, obviously, we wanted to travel the world to find the right actors for this. We absolutely knew we wanted the right people, and we wouldn’t stop until we got them. So having done that, and having found these extraordinary people who have heart, primarily they have heart, and they have a beautiful big generous spirit. Number one is what we wanted to cast. Number two, I needed actors who could be physical, who could do a lot of the stunt work themselves, who were excited by doing that, because of the way that I like to shoot action and the way that I wanted the ‘One Piece’ action to look and to feel different from other show’s action. So having done that, then we had four, five weeks of rehearsal together in Cape Town. Bear in mind, these are young actors, so they haven’t all spent a lifetime in front of the camera, or a lifetime acting even. So we went through all the stages that you do when you work with actors, and I’ve spent a life in theater and film. So all that experience I could bring to the floor. We played silly games, and we ate, and we laughed a lot, and we humiliated ourselves in front of each other. We went and did a bit of community work to give something back to the communities in South Africa, and that was a bonding experience for us as a family. So that by the time we got onto the set, we trusted each other. My job then is to create a space in all the technology that goes around a film set, that when they walked onto the floor, that space is for them and for them only, and everybody else serves the actor. That’s just the way that I work as a director. Everything serves the actor because, look, you can have the best sets and visual effects, and sound effects, and special effects, and whizz, bangs, and whistles in the world, but if you don’t believe the person that’s in front of you, you don’t fall in love with a set, you fall in love with a person. So that’s where I wanted to work.

    Mackenyu Arata as Roronoa Zoro in season 1 of 'One Piece.'
    Mackenyu Arata as Roronoa Zoro in season 1 of ‘One Piece.’ Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2023.

    MF: You worked on several IPs that have a lot of action. For ‘One Piece,’ these are characters with special abilities, but they’re not quite typical like your normal comic book characters. Can you talk about crafting the fight scenes and the action scenes, and using these special abilities because they’re quite different?

    MJ: Action can get really tedious, and action can get really tiring to watch. Actually, ultimately, it can really affect your enjoyment of a story if it’s not done well and if it’s not done with a purpose. I learned that on ‘Daredevil’, shooting ‘Daredevil’. I was having dinner with some friends in New York when we were prepping the shoot, and this lady said to me, “Oh, I love Daredevil. He’s fantastic. I just fast forward all the action sequences.” You think, “Oh my God, if you’re just fast-forwarding the action sequence, which we spend days preparing, and rehearsing, and talking about, we’re not doing something right.” So to me, action is sometimes a bit like a song in a musical. If you can just take it out and the story still works, it’s not quite working. So action has to, in some form or other, affect character or influence story, number one. So that’s something that I took into ‘The Witcher’ as well. The big sword fight there, I really was very keen that I wanted that first section to be a single shot sword fight to tell the story that this is a badass guy who knows how to wield a sword. By the way, Henry Cavill knows how to wield a sword. That would allow me then, in the second part, to cut the fight up so that I could really control the main event, which was Geralt and Renfri. Then I could stop it and I could get the eye-to-eye contact, and I could get that sense of are they going to kiss or are they going to kill? So if you take that then into ‘One Piece’, what is the tone of the action in ‘One Piece?’ Well, first of all, it’s much more playful, and it’s important to get that playfulness right. Partly you’ve got this guy with rubber arms, and so if you take it too seriously, suddenly you’re going to get this moment of crazy visual effects, which is going to come out of nowhere, and you’re going to think, “Well, that doesn’t quite fit.” So you have to find a tone that fits that. Then second of all, fundamentally, Marvel and ‘Witcher’ were all about the hits, it was all about the punch. So you would make sure that you got this hit and this punch, and so that you could see what was happening, and the sweat coming off the forehead, and the blood coming out of the mouth, and it’s visceral. In ‘One Piece’, to me, it was all about the journey to get to the hit. It was all about the choreography, it was all about the dance. It’s much more ‘Crouching Tiger’ and ‘Kung Fu Hustle’, than it is those gritty, hard Marvel shows, if you see what I mean. So that set the tone for the fight sequences. Then of course, because of the way that I wanted to honor some of the framing of the manga, we developed these special lenses that were made for the show. They’re super wide, but they’re also extremely close focus. So it means that we could do these long sweeping camera shots that didn’t rely constantly on cutting, which is the bit that gets you tired. Added to that, in order to achieve those long sweeping shots, you can’t do that on the day, that’s got to be rehearsed with camera. So the studio, and Netflix, and I, and Steve, and Matt discussed that it would be far better to have a single camera operator purely dedicated, 100% of the time to rehearse with a stunt team. So they’re in the Dojo the whole time, and they learn the choreography of the fight with the camera, and they can also influence the choreography. So they can say, “Look, if you just hold that moment up a beat, I can get my camera around here so we don’t have to do a cut to land the hit.” That was very important to what I hope people enjoy about the action in ‘One Piece’.

    Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in season 1 of 'One Piece.'
    Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in season 1 of ‘One Piece.’ Cr. Casey Crafford/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Can you talk more about the special lenses you developed for the series and why you like using wide shots for fight sequences?

    MJ: The thing about these lenses, the thing about the close focus and the wide is that, this is a travel show. There is no precinct, they don’t end up always coming back to one place. They do come back to the Going Merry, but the Merry’s really only there to take them somewhere else. So location, world-building, have got to be in the DNA of everything that we do. Then you can choose if you want to go really close for those intimate scenes to do that. But all the rest of it felt like to me, we wanted to have location with us all the time because that’s part of what the DNA of the show is. So to have had these lenses that enabled us to work on eight-millimeter, 14-millimeter, 21-millimeter lenses, not only would give the show a completely unique look but was also true to what the manga is.

    Henry Cavill as Geralt of Rivia in Netflix's 'The Witcher.'
    Henry Cavill as Geralt of Rivia in Netflix’s ‘The Witcher.’ Photo: Jay Maidment.

    MF: You’ve worked on so many TV shows. We just mentioned ‘Daredevil’ and  ‘The Witcher,’  as well as ‘The Punisher,’ ‘Luke Cage,’ and ‘Hannibal.’ All of these are huge IPs with big fan bases. So what is your approach to projects like that, and is there something that draws you to this genre?

    MJ: No, not really. I love story, and I love character, and it goes back to what we said earlier on. If I get a script and I’m drawn in to the arc of the character, if I am fascinated by the world and what it explores, then I’m in. I don’t ever consider myself a genre director. In fact, I’m mostly known for very intense human dramas, particularly in the UK and Europe. Things like ‘Tin Star,’ and ‘Hannibal,’ and ‘Criminal Justice,’ which was then made into ‘The Night Of.’ Those dramas are the things that I started my career in. Then I think it’s just because I approach action shows and genre shows with all those simple questions that you start off when you are learning your craft as a director, which is what’s the story? What do they want? Where do they come from, and who are they? Once you’ve got those elements together, you’re off. Whether it’s a genre show, a superhero show, a fantasy show, or a very intense human kitchen sink drama show, it’s the same thing. What do these people want? It’s one of the things that I work with most on set, what’s the story? What are we really trying to tell you? I know what the journey is, but what’s it about? What is it really about? What’s ‘One Piece’ really about? It’s about believing in your dreams, it’s about believing in yourself, it’s about friendship, being loyal to your friends, and it’s about standing up for what you believe. Great values. We know that. So that becomes the true North with which we set up this whole show. My job as a director is to hold the tiller of our boat, and make sure that we go off in that direction and set sail and reach our end destination. That’s my job. There are plenty of winds that blow around to try and knock the ship off course, all the time, because this is a huge production. But that’s my job. To remind people all the time, and then to say to the actors, “What do you want? What do you want from this scene? What do you want from the story, ultimately? What do you want in your life?” Those are the things that begin to help you to create characters which are three-dimensional, that come from a two-dimensional world.

    Related Article: Charlie Cox on How The MCU’s ‘Daredevil’ Series Will Differ From Netflix

    Charlie Cox as Daredevil in Marvel Studios' 'She-Hulk: Attorney At Law,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Charlie Cox as Daredevil in Marvel Studios’ ‘She-Hulk: Attorney At Law,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. © 2022 Marvel.

    MF: As you know, Marvel is bringing ‘Daredevil’ back to Disney+ with ‘Daredevil: Born Again,’ which will feature both Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onofrio reprising their roles from the Netflix series. What piece of advice would you give to the creators of the new show?

    MJ:  I feel like if you create too straight a line, it doesn’t feel authentic and real. That’s the great trick of ‘Daredevil’, and that’s the great trick of adapting the Marvel Comics into live action, is don’t take a straight line because human beings aren’t a straight line. If we’re trying to dimensionalize characters as in ‘One Piece’, as in ‘Daredevil’, and as in all these adaptations from 2D into 3D, if you try to take a straight line, it becomes fake. One of the great skills that I think ‘Daredevil’ had, actually, they all had in their own ways, but let’s talk about ‘Daredevil’ because that’s the one that is soonest off the starting blocks, is you have Charlie Cox embodying a real human being in that. Charlie Cox is interested in doing that. Of course, we set it into a superhero world, but if you are going to humanize, if you’re going to dimensionalize, you have to follow that through. It’s a bit like in ‘One Piece’, when a few people have talked to me about, “Oh, it feels much more explicit and bloody than the manga.” I say, “Well, if you’re going to dimensionalize your character, and you’re going to go into proper fights, if you don’t have any of that, you’re not staying true to your intention. That will come across.” So with those superhero shows and with shows like ‘Daredevil’, it’s making sure that you are truthful to the human experience, which is not ever a straight line.

    Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in season 1 of 'One Piece.'
    Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy in season 1 of ‘One Piece.’ Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Finally, with ‘One Piece’ having already premiered on Netflix, is there another story from anime or manga that has piqued your interest and that you would like to eventually tell?

    MJ: Well, to be honest, it’s been so pretty full on with getting ‘One Piece’ to the starting line, I haven’t really had very much headspace to be open to others. Because mangas and animes are worlds, and you dive into it. I don’t devour manga, I don’t devour anime. I devour story, and I devour character. So I’m just hoping, let’s just see how this goes, let’s just see whether we can make it to the starting line of another series, which would be so incredible. I hope if that happens, I could be involved again. But none of us are holding our breath because you just don’t know in this business. We’ve done the best that we can. We’ve put our heart and soul into it. Everybody, the entire huge 800,000 people on this job have worked so hard on it. Of course, in the end, the proof is in the viewing.

    'One Piece' director Marc Jobst.
    ‘One Piece’ director Marc Jobst. Photo courtesy of Netflix.

    Director’s Statement: Marc would like to state that he supports both SAG and WGA in their pursuit of reaching a fair and equitable resolution to the respective strikes. In talking about his work – past and present – he does so with unequivocal support for the highly skilled crews that make up the different unions (SAG and WGA included) and believes all should be valued and recompensed for the contributions they make in bringing these series and films to life.

    Movies Similar to ‘One Piece:’

    Buy Marc Jobst TV Shows On Amazon

  • ‘Luke Cage’ Canceled, But Fans Think a Spinoff With ‘Iron Fist’ Is Coming

    ‘Luke Cage’ Canceled, But Fans Think a Spinoff With ‘Iron Fist’ Is Coming

      Luke Cage, Iron Fist, Heroes for HireNetflix

    Anyone for some “Heroes for Hire”?

    Netflix canceled “Marvel’s Luke Cage” Friday night, in a move similar to the one the previous week for “Marvel’s Iron Fist.”

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, “the cancellation was due to creative differences and the inability to agree to terms for a third season of the show.”

    “Luke Cage” showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker shared a message for fans:

    Mike Colter played Luke Cage, and shared his own message:

    https://twitter.com/realmikecolter/status/1054220817603551232

    But it’s the message from Finn Jones — who plays Iron Fist on that other recently canceled Netflix/Marvel series — that really got fans’ hopes up for a new series:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BpI5we0F7sw/

    Many fans think that’s a tease for an Iron Fist/Luke Cage team-up, which happened in Marvel Comics with the “Heroes for Hire” series. The two lads teamed up for a private investigation operation.

    So now fans wonder if the upcoming Disney streaming service — expected to launch late 2019 — will bring back both heroes for that series. When “Iron Fist” was canceled, we were among the many to suspect the Disney streamer would bring it back. Now that Luke Cage is leaving Netflix too, that suspicion is even stronger.

    https://twitter.com/akaspidey/status/1053479741322416128

    https://twitter.com/Tom_Draws/status/1053636892149866499

    https://twitter.com/UberKryptonian/status/1053472865025171456

    There definitely seems to be interest out there. So if Disney was just considering the idea, the fan responses should help sway them forward. We’ll see what they do, if anything, once that streaming service is up and running in late 2019.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • Get Your First Look at Misty Knight’s Bionic Arm on ‘Luke Cage’

    Misty KnightMisty Knight (Marvel’s Luke Cage.”

    The character, who [SPOILER] lost an arm in a battle with villain Bakuto (Ramón Rodríguez) in Marvel’s “The Defenders,” is getting a bionic arm, just like in the comics.

    EW has an exclusive photo of Knight ready for action with her new prosthetic arm, side by side with Cage (Mike Colter).

    Missick shared the photo on Twitter calling her “Misty Knight 2.0” and the hashtags #MistySoLit and #BionicBae.

    In the comics, Tony Stark designs her new arm, which was lost in a bombing. It offers her not only superhuman strength, but impressive new powers including generating energy blasts and gravity fields, but the ability to control robots. Sweet.

    Marvel’s “Luke Cage” returns in 2018 on Netflix.

  • ‘The Defenders’ Star Mike Colter on Luke Cage’s Exes, Cast Chemistry

    'Marvel's The Defenders' New York PremiereNow that Luke Cage is out of prison, he’s proving he can work and play well with others — namely, the other four superheroic leads of the Netflix-Marvel series now united in “Marvel’s The Defenders.” And actor Mike Colter’s happy to be a team player, too: after a years-long build-up, he’s taking his place in the ensemble and adding Cage’s bulletproof muscle to the group.

    While Cage initially has no direct connection to the villainous ninja death cult The Hand which the heroes band together from their various New York City boroughs to battle, the backdrop is still particularly provocative for him: Luke suddenly finds his past and current paramours — Jessica Jones, Misty Knight, and Claire Temple, respectively — regularly crossing paths. And, as Colter tells Moviefone, while those awkward ex encounters may not be as violent as the ninja battles, they still leave a mark.

    Moviefone: With all the build up to “The Defenders” and all the anticipation, what was it like when you finally got in the room with everybody to shoot some scenes, and what were the surprises that you didn’t anticipate about the whole thing?

    Mike Colter: From the outside, it always seems like actors, when they’re on a screen together, aren’t familiar with one another. So it’s like a weird thing: for everybody else, it seems like it’s brand new, but for us, we palled around because we’ve seen each other at junkets, we’ve seen each other at press, we’ve done press together.

    Finn [Jones] I’d met a few times, but briefly because he’s coming from the UK, or he was actually not around. I’ve known Krysten [Ritter] for a while now. I’ve come into contact with Charlie [Cox]. We’ve crossed paths quite a few times. It wasn’t as if we were completely unfamiliar with each other, and I think it just felt normal. It didn’t feel like it was unusual in the least, really. But we are characters so I think on screen, it felt like it was for the first time.

    What did you enjoy about the way the characters’ dynamics played out once they started butting up against each other? Was there some fun friction and chemistry that you saw in the new guys you were playing with, like Finn and Charlie?

    I think the best part about it is that we basically have, whether we want to admit it or not, there are four alphas — I wouldn’t say alpha male, but alpha personalities. Even Krysten’s character, everybody has their own thing. Nobody’s eager to be friends. So it’s not an alpha male thing, but it is an alpha ego thing, and I think everybody has their own agenda, and no one’s eager to be friends.

    No one’s looking for a team up. No one’s looking for a buddy or a sidekick. So they’re kind of reluctant to do their thing, but I think that’s the best part about it, trying to ease into the situation where we’re going to fight together one way or the other, and trying to see how that’s going to play itself out.

    In terms of revisiting Luke, what were the fun new sides of him that you were able to explore? What was a new challenge that they threw at you?

    I think Luke is now at a stage where he’s not running from the law anymore. He’s aware that there are things out there that he can’t do as a “man of the people,” as the hero of Harlem, or whatever he wants to kind of call himself. But ultimately, he sort of has freedom now to explore.

    It changes his personality, I think. He’s more open. He’s more jovial. He’s more relaxed. He doesn’t feel like he has to hide things. He’s not an open book, but he does have a lot less to hide now. Everyone knows his power. Everyone knows what his real name is. Probably everybody knows what his old name was. They know that he was in prison. They know that he had a wife. There’s really not that many secrets now.

    So now he’s just enjoying himself and trying to figure out how to function in this world openly as a hero that people are aware of. It’s just a different kind of thing. It’s fun because now you get to see Luke function with a more human side. Him dealing with his own powers out in the public and openly.

    Luke has a colorful romantic history, and some of these women are in the same room together with him here. That must have been fun to figure out how to play the sort of romantic tensions that are in his life right now.

    Yeah, I think for most of the audience, I think people are always eager to see how this is going to play out. But I’ll give Marvel and the writers and Netflix and everybody all credit: I’d say maybe 20 years ago if we were doing this, there would be scenes where girls are dressed a little skimpy, and it’d be a little weird. I think they’re pulling back on this whole thing of, well, he slept with multiple girls, and now these girls are going to have a little catfight over him. It’s not that. They’re all adults here. Things happen.

    Needless to say, the history is there, but I think for the audience, it adds a different color to it, adds a level to the interaction between everyone. Every time they see Misty talking to Claire, they’re thinking about that. There’s that added thing. Every time they see Misty come into contact with Jessica Jones for the first time, it’s like, “Oh, what’s going to happen here?” Or Jessica coming into contact with Claire.

    All this underneath it all, the audience is sort of intrigued to see and to wonder, “Is there something there? Is there something that’s going to come up?” Just makes it more interesting. But I don’t think we’re going to stoop to like, girls have to fight about Luke openly, because ultimately, they’re all adults. They make decisions and things happen. That’s just kind of how it is.

    As good as the writers, directors and producers are, and as deeply they do know all these characters, did you feel a little bit like you were Luke’s custodian, in making sure that he always came off the way that you and Cheo [Hodari Coker] have envisioned him?

    Yeah, that, too, but also this being another direction: when he gets out of prison, he does change his path a bit. It’s a new chapter in his life. So this is something that [showrunner] Marco [Ramirez] was going to be a steward in writing and starting to get him on his journey in that direction. Cheo was involved, I think, Melissa [Rosenberg] — all the writers sort of chimed in, I think, to give their opinions about drafts to make sure that it felt right.

    And yes, for sure, I definitely played the custodian of Luke because I wanted to make sure that if something didn’t feel right or if something didn’t make sense, we didn’t spin him in the wrong way. Dialogue, any little thing that sort of didn’t rub right, I felt like I could come to Marco and he would be open to suggestion.

    I think that they things we didn’t want to touch on now and be left to our own show, they left those things alone. There was this thing about making sure every character, made sure everybody knew what they were doing, and if it didn’t feel right, we could talk to Marco, and he was pretty open about helping us.

    Did you and Finn spend a little extra time making sure that the heroes for hire had a dynamic that a lot of fans familiar with the long “Power Man & Iron Fist” partnership are looking forward to seeing, so that it would play just the right way? Did you give a little extra time to the Luke and Danny relationship?

    I don’t think we had to. I think either you have this ability or you don’t. I think as far as working in this business, you have a chemistry that you have in life. Sometimes those things don’t actually line up. You can be with someone you can’t stand, honestly, and that doesn’t mean that it won’t come off on screen well.

    There are so many ways to look at it, even when you have a love affair on screen, you have a romantic relationship on screen, you have a friendship, and it doesn’t mean you actually have it in life. It’s just sometimes things work in a weird way. I think for us, we banter a bit. We have a great rapport. We sort of are alike, but very different, and I think that’s from visualization. We’re very different, same way Jessica and I are different. So our personalities aren’t that far apart, but there’s a lot of things we have in common, and a lot of things that we’re completely off on.

    But we embrace those. The differences sort of make it humorous sometimes. The differences between our characters and between us as people sort of helps to play out this relationship, and we embrace that, because that’s the humor of sort of opposites trying to fit together, trying to work together, and trying to become a “dynamic duo” of sorts. We’re not alike, but that’s part of what makes it work.

    Now that you’ve had this swing again at Luke, and you’ll going to carry what happened to him in “Defenders” over to another season of “Luke Cage,” what’s got you excited about perpetuating the character, staying in him and moving him forward from here?

    The most exciting part about moving him forward from here is trying to figure out really how to actually live a life now. He’s lived a life in secrecy, on the run. Now it’s about living a life with this “impediment.” Because being a superhero as they say, being a person with abilities, it’s not necessarily a good thing. It is an impediment. It does sort of keep you from doing things the way you would like to do them, and there’s a lot of expectation, a lot of responsibility. You have to figure out what you’re going to do for a living — there’s a lot of pressure to figure out what’s the next move for him.

    So what I want to explore, and what’s going to be really interesting for the second season, is seeing how he handles these newfound freedoms. What does it open up for him? How does his life change from now on moving forward? And what is it like to sort of be a person that when you walk down the street, everybody knows who he is?

    It’s a different level. We started to touch on it maybe halfway through the season, of last first season, but there was a lot of other things going on. We’re going to see some other exploration for the character. It’s really great what we’re doing so far, and I’m really happy about the writing. I can’t wait to continue to shoot some more and see where we are by the end of the season, but I’m really happy about the direction so far.

  • Charlie Cox Loves the Easter Eggs in ‘Marvel’s The Defenders’

    'Marvel's The Defenders' New York PremiereYou don’t need Daredevil’s radar senses to pick up on the excitement building around the long-anticipated arrival of “Marvel’s Defenders,” and now that the street-level super-team is about to make its debut, Charlie Cox says that, at least for him, the wait was worth it.

    In the new series, which, like its big-screen counterpart “Luke Cage (Jessica Jones (Iron Fist (Finn Jones) to save New York from the mystical ninja death cult The Hand, led by the enigmatic Alexandra (Sigourney Weaver) and her newly resurrected assassin, Murdock’s deadly paramour Elektra (Elodie Yung).

    With two seasons of stories already under Daredevil’s belt, the Man Without Fear has a crucial part to play in the team-up, and as Cox reveals to Moviefone, the actor was more than a little invested in making sure the series lived up to the hype.

    Moviefone: The anticipation has been building among the fans as each new show rolled out, but how about for you? Were you feeling an extra little jolt when you started work on this, finally getting the chance to work with the three other leads of the Netflix-Marvel shows?

    Charlie Cox: Yeah. It’s a funny thing, really, because I knew that this was coming when I signed the contract. In 2014, when I was signed on to do “Daredevil,” I knew that they were planning on making the show, so it’s been in the back of my mind for quite a while now — me more than any of the others, I think, because I was cast first.

    So it’s been really exciting, and as the other shows have been made, and I’ve enjoyed watching them all so much, and getting to know the other guys — but really just from passing them in corridors, in the studio and stuff like that, and never really actually spending any real time together — and then all being thrown together to this show, it was just lovely, and such a fun bunch of people.

    Even the ones of us who didn’t grow up on comic books, we’ve kind of become fans now, because we’re so invested in these characters. And so, in a way, “Defenders” was particularly enjoyable, because we got to enjoy all the real geeky fan moments and the Easter eggs.

    When it came to sharing scenes with Mike and Finn and Krysten, tell me about the kinds of chemistry you found you had with each of those actors in your characters. And what was the fun of that bumping against each other?

    I mean, a lot of the relationships were kind of decided for us by the writers, you know what I mean? So it was clear early on that Danny and Matt would have a kind of [sibling relationship]. Matt’s kind of an older brother to Danny, and kind of takes him under his wing a little bit, and tries to mentor him. Not that he needs it per se, but maybe he’s a little more hot-headed, and can be a little more irrational than Matt.

    Jessica’s kind of like everyone’s older sister, and Matt and Jessica have a lot of really fun scenes together. That dynamic is interesting, because they don’t initially like each other very much, and I think they actually learned to kind of respect and admire one another, even against their will, kind of thing. And then Luke’s simple, because he’s just cool, you know no one messes with him. No one’s going to mess with him, so he just kind of sits back, and just is cool.

    “The Defenders” really does advance the Daredevil/Matt Murdock story in particular, more than the other leads, as far as what we’ve been following on the “Daredevil” series. What did it mean to you to kind of know that this story, even though it was an ensemble piece, was going to affect Daredevil’s storyline and his life in such a significant way?

    You know, I don’t think that was intentional. I actually just think that the reason for that is twofold: one, Matt’s already had two seasons of his character’s show, so there’s already been another 13 hours of investment into his character, so we know more about him. We’ve learned more. We’ve seen him in more kind of situations. I think that does mean that when you watch “The Defenders,” you bring more baggage to it than maybe other characters would.

    But also, because of the way the stories came together, this story is personal for Matt. Initially, it’s not personal for Jessica and Luke. They don’t know who The Hand is. They’ve never come across an organization like that. And so Matt and Danny have to kind of explain that to them and bring them in and help them kind of get their heads around what we’re dealing with. But for Matt and Danny, the story’s personal, so from a character point of view, I think that that can be sometimes a little bit more engaging.

    And audiences have been waiting to see what the next chapter in Matt’s relationship with Elektra was going to turn out to be, based on what they know from the classic comic book story arc. Tell me about finding such a clever way to integrate that classic storyline into this “Defenders” run.

    Yeah, that’s an interesting one. I don’t really know — I think it divides people a little bit. I think there’s some people who really enjoy what they’ve seen, and there are others who feel like the elements of Elektra that we love the most aren’t as apparent — at least initially aren’t as apparent — in the series.

    What I liked about it from a character point of view is that Matt is usually relatively sensible and to some degree able to not let his emotions get so hold of him that he makes bad decisions, but in this case, because of everything that happened with Elektra, because of the feelings that he has towards her, because of the guilt that he feels based on what happened to her, he allows himself to believe that she might really be back from the dead, as it were. And that false belief sends him down a path that almost endangers himself and the others.

    We get to explore that relationship a little bit more, but it’s slightly different now, because the boundaries have changed drastically, what with her being undead.

    Daredevil has historically been one of the most conflicted superheroes, and we still see that that conflict is playing out in this series. For you, what’s interesting and challenging about bringing that aspect of Matt and Daredevil to life?

    Look, I think I got so lucky with Matt Murdoch, especially if you’re going to play a character on TV rather than a film, where you’ve got a couple of hours to play a character. On a TV show, you arguably will go on for season after season. I’ve already done thirtysomething hours of this guy. So you really need something, you need some interesting dynamics within the character in order to keep making him compelling, and of course, with Matt, there’s so many.

    Just the obvious ones being that he’s religious. He believes in God. He’s a Catholic, but at the same time, he plays God to some extent. And so I think he believes in the laws of the universe and God’s law, and yet he’ll go out at night and beat the sh*t out of people, because he deems their actions to be sinful. Similarly, he’s a lawyer, and that is also in conflict with his nighttime activities as a masked vigilante. He believes in the law. He believes in order. He believes in the justice system, and yet he takes the law into his own hands.

    And so, what these shows do pretty well, I think, is that we get to see that in action. We get to see Matt go out and be a vigilante. We get to see him be a lawyer. We get to see him in church with the priest, but then we also get to see him at home alone, and sitting with those feelings, and feeling the loneliness and the shame of that inner conflict, and that for me is what makes him a compelling character.

    All of the Marvel-Netflix shows have fun playing with the superhero costume elements — how deeply you want to lean in to that, how soon you’re going to lean in to that — and you get to have some more fun in “Defenders” by playing a Daredevil without some of the traditional suit stuff that we’ve now come to see. Is that more fun for you than playing it in the suit, or do you sometimes want the suit to make you feel like Daredevil?

    That’s a really good question — I don’t know! I really love how the suit came about in the “Daredevil” seasons. The storyline that led towards the suit, for me, justified it, and I need that. If I engage in a superhero TV show or film or whatever, that’s the one hurdle that I need to get over in order to really love it. I don’t like it when the character puts on a suit just because they want to feel cool or something like that.

    It needs to make logical sense to me, and I thought they did it really well in Season 1, whereby it happened after 12 hours of footage, and it came about for two reasons. One, because protection was needed. He needed a material that was going to protect his body better, because he was being so beat up.

    But also because his friend, the priest, had mentioned this alter ego being something like a symbol, something that was consistent and something that wasn’t trying to hide in the shadows, but was actually very visible — and therefore, would help hopefully kind of encourage petty criminals to beware of their behavior kind of thing.

    Going into “Defenders,” I don’t think you can have Matt just show up in a Daredevil suit straight away. There’s almost too many jokes to be made — I think you’d have to do an entire episode where Jessica Jones and Luke Cage make funny jokes about it, you know? So they had to find a way of tying it in so that it emerged organically, with a few jokes, obviously, but it has to come at a time where it makes sense. And I feel they handled that really well, yeah.

    This show was modeled in the vein of the way that the Marvel movies led to “The Avengers,” but that was always a step-by-step process, whereas you guys knew straightaway this was going to happen. Tell me about the feeling now that you accomplished that big goal. What kind of satisfaction have you walked away knowing that you got there and were all able to, all four of you, get together and pull this off?

    I mean, we’ll see when it comes out! We’ll see what the fan reaction is, but it feels like a cool accomplishment to have done these four shows, and made this kind of team-up version of it. It feels like it’s a nice cherry on top. Kind of a full circle situation.

    I get nervous, because I really hope the fans appreciate it. I hope they like it. I know how important these characters are to people, and so it’s tremendous fun that we have making the show, but it’s also really important that the fans feel like we did the characters justice.

    I feel like we did a great job. We did our best. We tried to make a really fun, interesting, different show that was different from the individual shows, so now we just cross our fingers and hope for the best.

  • Official Trailer for ‘Marvel’s The Defenders’ Is a Massive Hit

    Guys, the war for New York is here. So get your sh*t together. Netflix just dropped a seriously badass official trailer for “Marvel’s The Defenders,” bringing together Marvel/Netflix heroes Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist. This is the epic teamwork the franchise has been building toward, after releasing individual series for each character.

    The trailer does not disappoint — from Nirvana’s “Come As You Are,” to the solid one-liners, to this amazing hallway fight:

    They even have their own amusing dinner scene toward the end. (If only it were shawarma in honor of “The Avengers.”)

    Check it out:So far, fans seem to approve, with #TheDefenders trending on Twitter, and the reactions looking … almost completely positive? Is that even possible? Did we just jinx it?

    Here’s the synopsis:

    “Marvel’s The Defenders follows Daredevil (Charlie Cox), Jessica Jones (Krysten Ritter), Luke Cage (Mike Colter) and Iron Fist (Finn Jones). A quartet of singular heroes with one common goal – to save New York City. This is the story of four solitary figures, burdened with their own personal challenges, who realize they just might be stronger when teamed together.”

    This Netflix original series will stream globally on August 18.

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  • Rosario Dawson’s Claire Temple Won’t Be in Netflix’s ‘The Punisher’

    Rosario Dawson isn’t taking a shift on Netflix’s “The Punisher.”

    The actress has appeared as nurse Claire Temple in all of the streaming service’s Marvel series so far, first on “Daredevil” and through this summer’s “The Defenders.” But she won’t be making a cameo on “The Punisher,” which stars Jon Bernthal as the lethal Frank Castle.

    “At the end of the day, it’s really hard to get all of those casts together. For ‘The Defenders,’ it was difficult to get everybody together. People are busy!” she told Collider. “I really wanted to do a cameo on ‘The Punisher,’ but it doesn’t always work that way.”

    Claire had substantive roles in “Daredevil” and “Luke Cage,” but just minor cameos in “Jessica Jones” and “Iron Fist.”

    Perhaps this is a way of separating “The Punisher” as a spinoff, rather than a sibling to the other Marvel series. Frank Castle isn’t appearing in “The Defenders,” and Frank and Claire never met in “Daredevil.” The only related character joining Frank (so far) is Deborah Ann Woll’s Karen.

    “The Defenders” begins streaming August 18, while “The Punisher” is likely to premiere sometime later this year.

  • Ouch: ‘Marvel’s Iron Fist’ Is Taking Serious Punches From Critics

    It’s just weird to see critics trashing anything with the word “Marvel” attached to it. Usually Marvel is up there with Pixar as an automatic “A.” But not “Marvel’s Iron Fist.”

    Unlike the previous three Netflix series in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, “Iron Fist” is being flattened. “Daredevil” currently has an 87 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. “Jessica Jones” is at 93 percent. “Luke Cage” is at 96 percent. “Iron Fist” is joining them as the fourth Netflix/Marvel show leading up to “The Defenders” crossover miniseries … and it’s currently at 14 percent. (Its Metascore is currently at 33.)

    There’s still a week before the series debuts on March 17, so it’s possible a heap of positive critiques will follow. And some fans may feel the opposite of critics, liking this show in a way they did not for previous Marvel titles. But still. This is a bad, and surprising, sign.

    And the critics who didn’t like it, really didn’t like it. Entertainment Weekly gave “Iron Fist” a “D,” destroying it in this opening paragraph:

    “Marvel’s Iron Fist isn’t just the wimpiest punch ever thrown by the world’s mightiest superhero factory. The new Netflix binge swings and misses so bad that it spins itself around and slaps itself silly with a weirdly flaccid hand. But even that might be generous. ‘Swing and a miss’ implies effort. Iron Fist — devoid of vision, lacking in executional chops — barely even tries. It assumes its own marvelousness and proceeds tediously from there, offering few satisfactions for any possible audience. The media was only given six of the season’s 13 episodes for review, but I was snoozing after two and ready to check out after three. This is yellow belt drama that deserves to flunk out of the TV dojo.”

    Daaaaaaamn. They’re not alone, though. Uproxx wrote, “It’s easily the worst of the Netflix Marvel shows and an unfortunate illustration of the perils of miscasting.” Variety complained, “It takes forever for anything to happen on Iron Fist, and as it stumbles along, the uninspired production design, unexceptional cinematography, and painful dialogue fail to distract the viewer from the overall lack of depth, detail, or momentum.”

    There are some defenders, though. In a “fresh” review, Collider wrote, “Iron Fist isn’t terrible, and some of it is actually very good, but it should be so much better.” Empire wrote, “Iron Fist works some fantastical flavour into the MCU’s down-to-earth Defenders nook, but it needs more proper kung-fu flair than showrunner Buck allows.”

    There’s still time for “Iron Fist” to pull a critical comeback, and the reviews may not matter anyway, since 92 percent of RT users said they want to watch the series. Fans have their own opinions, and these harsh critiques may just set low expectations, leaving viewers pleasantly surprised.

    “Marvel’s Iron Fist” arrives Friday, March 17 on Netflix.

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  • ‘Luke Cage’ Renewed for Season 2 on Netflix

    After Luke Cage,” too: The streaming service has renewed the Marvel series for a second season.

    The news was announced on the show’s social media accounts on Sunday, with a short video focusing on Pop’s Barber Shop (a key setting in season one), and a neon sign in the window that says “Season 2: Coming soon.” The announcement also included Pop’s motto, “Always forward,” an important mantra for the titular hero (played by Mike Colter) throughout the show’s inaugural season.

    It should come as no surprise that Netflix would want to stay in the “Luke Cage” business, considering the show’s critical acclaim and warm reception from fans. The series was so in-demand during its debut weekend back in October that it temporarily crashed the streaming service.

    The renewal also means that there will be more adventures in the Marvel deal that the comics powerhouse struck with Netflix, which will culminate in the “Defenders” team-up series featuring characters from “Daredevil,” “Jessica Jones,” “Luke Cage,” and “Iron Fist.” The latter series is set to debut sometime in early 2017.

    No word yet on when fans can expect season two of “Luke Cage.” Stay tuned.

    [via: Luke Cage/Twitter]