Tag: luke-cage

  • ‘Luke Cage’ Is So Popular that It Crashed Netflix This Weekend

    Marvel has another television sensation on its hands: Its latest Netflix series, “Luke Cage,” debuted this weekend, and was apparently so popular that it temporarily crashed the streaming service.

    According to Deadline, Netflix was down for several hours on Saturday afternoon, one day after the premiere of “Luke Cage.” While Netflix declined to comment on whether or not the Marvel hero was responsible for the outage (it famously does not release viewing statistics), many fans speculated that “Cage” was the cause, and the show’s official Twitter account — as well those of fellow Marvel property “Jessica Jones,” “Cage” showrunner Cheo Coker, and even Netflix itself — had some fun with that notion while anxious viewers waited for service to be restored.


    “Did y’all break NETFLIX?” Coker asked his followers.

    “Not all heroes wear capes. Engineers to the rescue,” the Netflix US account joked after the issue was fixed. “We’re back.”

    Deadline reports that the outage seems to have most affected users in the United States and the United Kingdom. In most cases, service was restored by Saturday evening.

    “Luke Cage” stars Mike Colter as the titular hero, and the rest of the cast includes Simone Missick, Theo Rossi, Alfre Woodard, Rosario Dawson, and Mahershala Ali. Check it out now while you still have a Netflix connection.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Marvel’s Luke Cage’ Star Mike Colter on Fight Scenes vs. Sex Scenes and Avoiding the Hype

    Mike Colter as Luke CageMarvel’s Luke Cage,” he’s about to become huge.

    Colter’s already made the character — a framed ex-con who was given Captain America-level powers in a prison experiment turned sometimes-for-pay superhero, first published by Marvel Comics in 1972 — his own with his appearance on the last street-level superhero series in the Marvel Studios/Netflix lineup, “Jessica Jones.” Providing both a powerful, formidable physical presence ad well as a chemistry-perfect paramour for Krysten Ritter‘s cynical, superpowered P.I., the 6’3″ 40-year-old actor also landed the necessary emotional heft, creating a Cage burdened with the baggage of his past but also a romantic at heart, ready to tilt passionately at the windmills in his path.

    Now that Cage is headlining his own series, with all 13 episodes debuting Sept. 30 on the streaming service, Colter steps even further into the spotlight: “Luke Cage” may be the most stylish and complex of Marvel’s television ventures to date, and it deeply embraces the character’s heritage as one of comics’ first leading black superheroes — not only does the show set the action in a very realistically drawn Harlem, it offers up some playful, knowing nods to the blacksploitation tropes built into the comic book character’s DNA.

    And the actor is more than ready for his close-up, as he revealed while joining Moviefone and a small coterie of press to discuss his star turn.

    As an actor, is it harder to own an established character like this and make it your own? You’re playing a pretty well-defined role developed over decades in the comics. Is it harder to make it yours? To look at it and say, “Yeah, I’m bringing something personal to this”?

    Mike Colter: Luckily this character — even though it was well-known and I think pop culture had a very good, clear idea of who they thought he was — he’s never been brought to life on screen. So there was no predecessor. I didn’t have to like figure out how am I going to make it different than such-and-such who already played him ten years earlier. I had a blank slate, and so did [showrunner] Cheo [Hodari Coker] and the writing and stuff.

    So I felt like we were kind of creating him from scratch. We were doing this for the first time, and you couldn’t compare us to anybody else because there’s no one else’s that had done it before. There wasn’t a bad movie that had done it and going, “let’s see if we can make this better.” There wasn’t another series that had been done 20 years earlier and they wanted to reboot it. We just said, ‘This is a character that we’re going to make fresh, we’re going to make him new, we’re going to make him relevant today, and applicable to what we’re doing today in this culture.”

    Did you feel any pressure at all coming front and center in this show after a supporting turn in “Jessica Jones”?

    No, I’m very good at deflecting. People say stuff about shows and expectations, and in life I’m not a cup-that’s-half-empty kind of guy, like people I can think of, but I’m always trying to balance things out. I think for me, going into “Jessica,” some people might go, “Oh, I’m going to have my own show — I can’t wait to have my own show. I want to get this ‘Jessica Jones’ part so I can have my own show,” which makes it more focused on Luke Cage. I think you have to be an equal follower. If you have follow, you can lead.

    So playing a supporting cast in “Jessica,” I was able to explore parts of Luke Cage that were not necessarily explored in the “Luke Cage” series because he was played to support someone that he felt very passionate about, someone who he thought he had a spark with, and still feels he could have a spark with. But the problem is, obviously, they have so many secrets, and it’s so layered and so complex, yet they seem like compatible souls.

    So when I look at Luke Cage taking on [his own] series, basically all I say to myself, “I’m just coming to work pretty much every day now, as opposed to maybe three days out of five”. The workload increases, the character’s the same. We’re going to Harlem. We’re probably shooting more days uptown, and the sets have changed a bit. There’s some other characters that are coming in. We have the same crew, the same cinematographer, the same a lot of things. So I look at things that way, that way it’s a lot easier for me.

    Playing Luke Cage, you’ve gotten matched up with some amazing actresses — Krysten Ritter as Jessica, Simone Missick as Misty Knight, Rosario Dawson as Claire Temple — and get to find different chemistries with each one. Tell me about that process.

    It’s interesting, because I’ve been doing it long enough where I’ve seen it done in a certain way where it can work and not work, and it’s nothing to do with … listen, sometimes they give you chemistry reads. In our case, me and Krysten had a chemistry read. So I didn’t meet our Misty Knight earlier — I didn’t test with her. I didn’t screen test or anything with Rosario because she was established already.

    You just hope that when you meet the person that you have some rapport, because, ultimately, you’ve got to kind of fall for each other kind of fast, in a movie/TV kind of way. We’re all actors and we have to find a way to connect. So sometimes you have to turn on the charm a little more and act a little more. Sometimes it’s pretty natural. It just depends. But luckily, I have three people that — or more — I’m not going to say, either way, I’ve come across the women and they’re kind of easy to work with, and that’s been a gift. So I don’t have to try too hard to make the connection.

    Do you like playing that romantic leading man element of him, that Shaft / James Bond kind of quality?

    You know, if someone had told me that I was going to be a romantic lead at any point, I would have thought it was too cliché. I like to think of myself as a character actor. But in this case, what you’re looking at is basically an effortless and sort of seamless, organic development of a character who is looking for companionship, who has lost his main companion, who was also his best friend. Reva is a person he was married to, she was taken from him. That was also his best friend, as most relationships are, so now he has no one to confide in, so he’s also looking for someone to talk to.

    And so, with Jessica, he thought he had that. Not a lot of talking, but he was getting there. There were some moments they shared some stuff. And then, again, something happens with Misty that may or may not be going anywhere. You just don’t know. I look at him as a bit of a hopeless romantic. I mean, that’s not what you would think of it immediately, but definitely, when he does think he has something, he goes in pretty hard.

    Is it more complicated to do a love scene than it is to do a fight scene?

    Complicated? Logistically speaking, it’s probably more complicated to do a fight scene, but the sex scenes do add a bit more difficulty because you have to do them over and over and over. And then, you’ve got a lot of crew in there — it’s a bit awkward sometimes.

    It just depends who the person is. If you’ve done it before, it helps a little bit. But it’s never casual. You do the best you can, you crack a few jokes, or not, depending on the day, depending on how the person is feeling. You kind of try and be professional about it, and get to it and make it look good. If you make it look good and you do it right, then you won’t have to do it so many times.

    Harlem plays such a pivotal role in the series — what did you enjoy about how deeply embedded it is as Luke’s world?

    It was kind of like going home again. I lived in Harlem for like five years when I was in New York — actually, literally across the street, a couple blocks away from where we shot Pop’s Barber Shop outside on Lenox Avenue.

    And Harlem has changed so much in the last 10 years. I feel like the Harlem that we’re projecting in the series is more like the Harlem that I lived in 10 years ago. It’s not quite as gentrified. It’s gentrified, but there’s no Whole Foods there. There’s certain things, there’s certain elements. It still has a little more edge.

    Obviously, the club Harlem Paradise is fictitious, but it kind of harkens back to the era of The Apollo and the Cotton Club. We wanted to have some of that nostalgia, some of that feel of the unique culture that Harlem gives you, because people like Miles [Davis] and people like Louis Armstrong and some of the great athletes, everybody gravitated towards that area of town because this is where they felt they could express themselves, they could feel at home.

    So I don’t think we wanted to get rid of that. Harlem was important in doing so. Every time we went to Harlem, we felt the love. We felt the love from the community, and let’s be honest, Harlem’s sidewalks and boulevards are so large, it’s the perfect place to shoot. You want those great hero shots coming down the street. You want your hero to have room to walk. You go to Manhattan streets, there’s not much room to walk. Luke doesn’t come down the street like, “Excuse me, excuse me.” No, he has his own path: “Get out of the way, get out of the way.”

    What do you like about playing the powered-up aspect of him?

    I think the main thing is that, less is more sometimes. When you know he has the power and you established that, you don’t want to see it used all the time — because remember, first of all, in the beginning, he doesn’t want people to know he has the powers, so there’s only like one or two people who knows about his abilities

    And then there’s also the fact that he doesn’t want to be looked at as a freak. He’s not walking around doing carnival tricks and stuff like that. He wants to be just a normal guy and stuff like that. He doesn’t want people to shoot him. If you shoot him, then, obviously, he gets a hole in his clothing, and also people look at him and go, did you see that? He doesn’t want the attention. So he’s trying to avoid these little moments where he has to explain his powers.

    Would you want to have his powers?

    Yeah, it’s not bad! You have these powers, you look normal. Your skin’s unbreakable and you can run for a long period of time and you can lift up heavy things — I mean, that’s not bad. I could open a moving company or something like that. It’d be easy. I’d be by myself, low overhead, bring a truck, I’d pick everything up and put it in the truck and unload it. One guy. Do it in a couple hours. Pretty good hustle.

  • 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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  • A Bulletproof Hero Emerges in Netflix’s New ‘Luke Cage’ Trailer

    Celebrity Sightings in New York City - February 26, 2016Netflix will soon add another superhero series to its catalog, and the latest trailer for “Luke Cage” shows off just how action-packed the upcoming Marvel show will be.

    The new preview introduces both hero — Luke Cage (played by Mike Colter) — and villain — Cornell “Cottonmouth” Stokes (Mahershala Ali). It’s clear that Cottonmouth is ambitious and ruthless, but Cage has a lot going for him as well. He is literally bulletproof, and as you’d imagine, that is helpful when you go to war with a bad buy. (It also means that you go through a lot of T-shirts and sweatshirts, though.)

    While Cage’s abilities make him seem like an obvious hero, he doesn’t become one overnight. The trailer shows him grappling with the decision, and it’s hard to blame him; after all, taking on a life of crime-fighting isn’t for the faint of heart.

    Watch the trailer below and marvel at the badass-ness of Cage.
    “Luke Cage” premieres on Netflix on Sept. 30.

  • New on Netflix: September 2016

    new on netflix september 2016

    Just one more month and you can binge on “Marvel’s Luke Cage” — the Netflix original, starring Mike Colter as the bullet-proof superhero, premieres on September 30. September also brings Season 2 of Netflix originals “Narcos” and Season 5 of “Longmire.”

    Among the movies being added in September are “Zootopia” (yay!), all of the “Jaws” movies, and ’80s hits “Footloose” and “Top Gun.”

    Among the TV series being added: Season 6 of “The Walking Dead” and “Portlandia.”

    Here’s the complete list of what’s new on Netflix in September 2016:

    Available September 1
    “The Amityville Horror” (2005)
    “Babel” (2006)
    “Bayou Maharajah: The Tragic Genius of James Booker” (2013)
    “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey” (1991)
    “Bratz: The Movie” (2007)
    “Burn, Burn, Burn” (2015)
    “Cats & Dogs” (2001)
    “Crashing”: Season 1
    “Defiance” (2008)
    “Easy Fortune Happy Life” (2009)
    “Europe’s Last Great Wilderness” (2015)
    “The Fierce Wife” (2010)
    “Footloose” (1984)
    “Full Out” (2015)
    “Game Winning Hit”: Season 1
    “Heartland”: Season 7
    “Hellevator”: Season 1
    “Hoot” (2006)
    “Hope Floats” (1998)
    “I Am the Ambassador”: Season 1 ­
    “Indochina’s Wild Heart” (2015)
    “The IT Crowd”: Series 5
    “Jaws” (1975)
    “Jaws 2” (1978)
    “Jaws 3” (1983)
    “Jaws: The Revenge” (1987)
    “Joyful Noise” (2012)
    “Keepers of the Game” (2016)
    “Last Holiday” (2006)
    “Lucky Days”: Season 1
    “Man on Wire” (2008)
    “Milk Money” (1994)
    “Practical Magic” (1998)
    “Road Trip” (2000)
    “Sam Kinison: Breaking the Rules” (2000)
    “Saving Private Ryan” (1998)
    “Scary Movie 2” (2001)
    “Shameless (U.S.)”: Season 5-­6
    “Stomp the Yard” (2007)
    “Sweeney Todd” (2007)
    “Top Gun” (1986)
    “True Grit” (1969)
    “U­-571” (2000)
    “The Wicker Man” (2006)
    “Wild Madagascar” (2015)
    “The Womanizer”: Season 1
    “The Year of Happiness and Love”: Season 1

    Available September 2
    “Baby Daddy”: Season 5
    “Chef’s Table: France” ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Kazoops!”: Season 1 ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Kulipari: An Army of Frogs ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Narcos”: Season 2 ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Young & Hungry”: Season 4

    Available September 6
    “Crash” (2004)
    “The Finest Hours” (2016)
    “Hard Target 2” (2016)
    “Honey 3” (2016)
    “R.L. Stine’s Mostly Ghostly: One Night in Doom House” (2016)

    Available September 7
    “The Blacklist”: Season 3
    “Galavant”: Seasons 1­2

    Available September 10
    “Supergirl”: Season 1
    Available September 13
    Extremis” (2016) ­ (Netflix Original)
    Hawaii Five-­0″: Season 6 London Has Fallen” (2015)

    Available September 14
    “Goldie & Bear”: Season 1

    Available September 15
    “Sample This” (2012)
    “The Walking Dead”: Season 6

    Available September 16
    “Cedric The Entertainer: Live from the Ville ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Raiders!: The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made” (2015)
    “The White Helmets” (2016) ­ (Netflix Original)

    Available September 17
    “3 Days to Kill” (2014)
    “Luther”: Season 4
    “Penny Dreadful”: Season 3

    Available September 19
    “Call the Midwife”: Series 5
    “Gotham”: Season 2

    Available September 20
    “Colliding Dreams” (2016)
    “New Girl”: Season 5
    “Zootopia” (2016)

    Available September 22
    “Bones”: Season 11
    “Easy”: Season 1 ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Wallander”: Series 4

    Available September 23
    “Audrie & Daisy” (2016) ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Iliza Shlesinger: Confirmed Kills ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Last Man Standing”: Season 5
    “Longmire”: Season 5 ­ (Netflix Original)
    “VeggieTales in the House”: Season 4 ­ (Netflix Original)

    Available September 24
    “Portlandia”: Season 6
    “River” (2016)

    Available September 25
    “Family Guy”: Season 14
    “Margaret Cho: PsyCHO” (2015)

    Available September 28
    “The Fosters”: Season 4 (Part A)
    “The Imitation Game” (2014)

    Available September 30
    “Amanda Knox” (2016) ­ (Netflix Original)
    “Marvel’s Luke Cage”: Season 1 ­ (Netflix Original)

  • Marvel’s ‘Luke Cage’ to Premiere September 30 on Netflix

    luke cage“Daredevil” returns to Netflix for a second season next week, and another Marvel superhero won’t be too far behind.

    “Luke Cage,” starring Mike Colter as the unbreakable hero, will premiere September 30. Colter revealed the news in a video at the New York City premiere of “Daredevil.”


    Luke Cage was first introduced on “Jessica Jones” last fall, and the new show will be set a few months after the events of that series. Here’s the official synopsis: “After a sabotaged experiment leaves him with super strength and unbreakable skin. Luke Cage becomes a fugitive trying to rebuild his life in modern day Harlem, New York City. But he is soon pulled out of the shadows and must fight a battle for the heart of his city – forcing him to confront a past he had tried to bury.”

    Mahershala Ali will play big bad Cornell “Cottonmouth” Stokes, a nightclub owner, while Alfre Woodard stars as local politician Mariah Dillard.

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  • ‘Game of Thrones’ Star Finn Jones Cast as Marvel’s Iron Fist

    "Game Of Thrones" Season 4 New York Premiere - ArrivalsFinn Jones is going from knight to superhero.

    “Daredevil,” “Jessica Jones,” and the upcoming “Luke Cage.” Marvel is planning to team up all four characters in a superhero-league show called “The Defenders.”

    In the comics, Iron Fist is a wealthy kid named Danny Rand who acquires martial arts skills when he travels to the mystical Asian city of K’un-Lun. He eventually returns to New York City to fight crime, because, duh, that’s what superheroes do.

    As EW notes, some fans wanted Marvel to cast an Asian actor in the role, even the character in the comics is white. Others thought it would be stereotypical to feature an Asian as Iron Fist, simply because he engages in martial arts.

    It’s highly probable that Iron Fist be introduced during the run of “Luke Cage,” just as the latter character was introduced in “Jessica Jones.” And in the comics, Iron Fist and Luke Cage sometimes worked together as a crimefighting duo.

    “Luke Cage” is still in production, and will likely stream late this year. “Daredevil” season 2 premieres March 18.

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  • Krysten Ritter Goes Dark in the Full ‘Jessica Jones’ Trailer

    MARVEL'S JESSICA JONESAfter a handful of teasers, Jessica Jones,” and it looks even darker than we had previously imagined.

    The clip opens with Jessica (Krysten Ritter) discussing her second life as a detective after she gives up her superhero abilities.

    “A big part of the job is looking for the worst in people,” she explains. “Turns out I excel at that.”

    The reason for that, as we learn through flashbacks, is that Jessica was once under the mind control spell of the villainous Kilgrave (David Tennant), a man whose evil, twisted ways seemingly know no bounds. Though the horrors he inflicted on Jessica (and made her inflict on others) are only suggested, it’s clear that he’s creepy as hell — and still a danger to our heroine.

    “The way I see it, being a hero just puts a target on your back,” says Jessica’s new friend, Luke Cage (Mike Colter), a fellow former superhero who’s posing simply as a bartender for now.

    “Been there, done that,” Jessica replies, implying that she’s officially done with her past, too.

    But as Kilgrave looms, it’s clear that Jessica will indeed need to “play the hero” (a vicious taunt from our villain) once more. Just how much destruction he’ll leave in his wake before she rediscovers the superheroine within has yet to be seen.

    “Marvel’s Jessica Jones” debuts on Netflix on November 20.

    Photo credit: MYLES ARONOWITZ/NETFLIX

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  • Rosario Dawson, Theo Rossi Join Marvel’s ‘Luke Cage’


    After the success of “Daredevil,” Marvel is gearing up for the release of its other Netflix series, including “Luke Cage,” which just announced some big casting news.

    “Sons of Anarchy” alum Theo Rossi has joined the series as Shades (a.k.a. Alvarez), an antagonist of the titular hero and well-known criminal who’s described as “relentless and menacing, smooth and manipulative, street smart and controlling,” per The Hollywood Reporter.

    In addition to Rossi, Rosario Dawson, who played Claire Temple on “Daredevil,” will reprise that role for “Cage.” THR notes that Claire serves as a love interest for Cage in the comics, though she’s already filling that role for the titular character on “Daredevil,” so it remains to be seen if that will also be the plan with this new series.

    Rossi and Dawson join actor Mike Colter, who plays Cage, described as “a wrongly accused man who obtains superstrength after a sabotaged experiment and escapes prison to become a superhero for hire.”

    No release date for the series has been set. Stay tuned.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

    Photo credit: Getty Images for the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival

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