Tag: May Calamawy

  • Movie Review: ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’

    A scene from New Line Cinema, Atomic Monster and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    A scene from New Line Cinema, Atomic Monster and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on April 17 is ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy,’ written and directed by Lee Cronin and starring Jack Reynor, Laia Costa, May Calamawy, Natalie Grace, Shylo Molina, Billie Roy, and Verónica Falcón.

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    Initial Thoughts

    Natalie Grace as Katie in New Line Cinema, Atomic Monster and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Natalie Grace as Katie in New Line Cinema, Atomic Monster and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    Let’s get some things straight right away: Brendan Fraser is not in ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy.’ Tom Cruise is not in ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy.’ And, oddly enough, there really isn’t a mummy in ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy.’ Although this movie, produced by James Wan‘s Atomic Monster banner and Blumhouse Films, eschews the action-adventure strains of the Fraser and Cruise variations, its return to the IP’s horror roots is still missing the classic image of a hulking, bandaged corpse slowly shambling after its victims.

    In its place is a plot loosely linked to the Egyptian monster of yore, as well as a bunch of scenes and ideas either pulled from or inspired by other horror movies, ranging from the classic ‘The Exorcist’ to the more recent ‘Bring Her Back’ to Cronin’s own ‘Evil Dead Rise.’ But even though the film is nasty, viciously bloody, and wildly bonkers in its third act, a sloppy, strung-together script all but buries ‘The Mummy.’

    Story and Direction

    (Second from left) Director/Writer Lee Cronin and Natalie Grace on the set of New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo by Patrick Redmond. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    (Second from left) Director/Writer Lee Cronin and Natalie Grace on the set of New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo by Patrick Redmond. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    TV reporter Charlie Cannon (Jack Reynor) and his doctor wife Larissa (Lola Costa), along with their young son Sebastian and daughter Katie, are living in Cairo, Egypt, while Charlie is on assignment there. But then Katie vanishes after being lured to the edge of their backyard by a mysterious woman (Hayat Kamille) – a woman glimpsed in the film’s prologue when something stirs in a sarcophagus on her family’s property.

    Eight years later, the Cannons have long since returned to the U.S. and live in Albuquerque, where Charlie is a local news producer. Little daughter Maud (Billie Roy) has since been born as well, but no trace of Katie has ever been uncovered. Then the Cannons get a call from Cairo: Katie has been found, alive, wrapped in bandages in that same sarcophagus from the opening, after the plane it’s being transported on crashes.

    But as the Cannons soon discover, Katie barely resembles the sweet little girl who disappeared nearly a decade ago. Her skin, nails, and hair desiccated, her body gnarled and contorted, and Katie herself incapable of speech, her survival hardly seems like a miracle. And in fact it’s not: before long, Katie begins behaving in bizarre, dangerous ways, as a malignant presence exerts its influence on the Cannons and threatens to destroy the family.

    (L to R) Director/Writer Lee Cronin and Omar El-Saeidi on the set of New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo by Patrick Redmond. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director/Writer Lee Cronin and Omar El-Saeidi on the set of New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo by Patrick Redmond. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘The Mummy’ is one of those movies in which the audience quickly gets so far ahead of the characters that the whole narrative rapidly turns increasingly ludicrous. From the start, it’s clear that something is horribly wrong with Katie; the doctors who let her go home should have their licenses revoked, and she has no business being home so soon. Yet as grotesque as she is, it takes a long time for the Cannons to wake up.

    After one particularly brutal outburst of violence, Charlie suggests that it might be time to send Katie elsewhere for round-the-clock professional care. ‘Do you think I’m incapable of caring for my daughter?’ asks Larissa, almost comically unreasonable in light of current events. The whole middle act is a rinse-repeat of Katie doing something violent or gross, with the family simply waiting for the next incident.

    Charlie finally investigates the circumstances of Katie’s disappearance with the help of an Egyptian detective (May Calamawy) who was initially on the case in Cairo. Meanwhile, things get progressively worse at the Cannons’ place, leading to a gruesome scene involving coyotes and an in-house wake that turns into a display of vomiting, blood, guts, and the lapping of embalming fluid – and still Katie remains at home.

    (L to R) Natalie Grace as Katie and Veronica Falcon as Carmen in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. Photo: Patrick Redmond. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release.
    (L to R) Natalie Grace as Katie and Veronica Falcon as Carmen in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. Photo: Patrick Redmond. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release.

    There is some truly shocking gore in ‘The Mummy,’ and in fact the film is a kissing cousin aesthetically and visually to ‘Evil Dead Rise.’ Cronin is nothing if not mean-spirited when it comes to doling out the onscreen pain, and between that and a few creepy sequences in the house (which, we must note, is at least the third domicile we’ve seen on film this year with full passageways in its walls – what’s with the builders in these movies?), ‘The Mummy’ does have some schlock horror value.

    Terrific sound design and a series of unnerving split diopter shots give it an added boost as well. But in the end, ‘The Mummy’ is too sloppily structured as a story for us to care about this family and its fate, and it also turns out – expository lore aside – to not really be a mummy movie at all, but another, all too familiar type of horror movie.

    Cast and Performances

    Natalie Grace as Katie Cannon in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Natalie Grace as Katie Cannon in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    Jack Reynor is serviceable if rather bland as Charlie, the actor capable of either wide-eyed alarm or heavy-lidded shock. His everyman demeanor helps but his character, like the others, is too thinly sketched in to feel real. Reynor and Laia Costa as Larissa have zero chemistry as a married couple, while Verónica Falcón provides some comic relief as the family’s Abuelita.

    We did like May Calamawy’s haunted detective, but the best performance is by Natalie Grace as the older Katie. Laden with unsettling prosthetics, making death-rattle sounds in her throat and throwing her body around like a graduate of the Regan MacNeil school for possessed children, Grace is creepily effective and actually hard to look at for long.

    Final Thoughts

    May Calamawy as detective Dalia Zaki in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. Photo Credit: Photo by Patrick Redmond. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release.
    May Calamawy as detective Dalia Zaki in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. Photo Credit: Photo by Patrick Redmond. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release.

    Look, there have been loads of mummy movies, and many of the older ones are rather dull quickies in which a stuntman (or Lon Chaney Jr. or Christopher Lee) shuffles around in dirt-caked wrappings and makeup. The more recent attempts channel an Indiana Jones vibe, so it’s nice to see the property done as a proper horror movie again, and credit to Cronin for at least trying to give it a new spin to some degree.

    But it’s still not the scary mummy movie we’ve been hoping for, and in fact it’s another kind of horror film entirely once the bandages fall away – which is ironic, because early viewers apparently think it’s going to be a new Brendan Fraser entry. Yet despite its visual flourishes and admittedly effective jolts of blood and guts, ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ doesn’t pay enough attention to its story or characters to make its overlong, two-hour-and-15-minute runtime feel like anything but an eternity.

    ‘The Mummy’ receives a score of 55 out of 100.

    Veronica Falcon as Carmen in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s 'Lee Cronin's The Mummy'. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Veronica Falcon as Carmen in New Line Cinema’s, Atomic Monster’s and Blumhouse’s ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’. A Warner Bros. Pictures Release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’?

    The young daughter of a journalist disappears into the desert without a trace – but eight years later, the broken family is shocked when she is returned to them, as what should be a joyful reunion turns into a living nightmare.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’?

    • Jack Reynor as Charlie Cannon
    • Laia Costa as Larissa Santiago-Cannon
    • May Calamawy as Detective Dalia Zaki
    • Natalie Grace as Katie Cannon
    • Emily Mitchell as young Katie
    • Verónica Falcón as Carmen Santiago
    • May Elghety as Layla Khalil
    • Shylo Molina as Sebastián Cannon
    • Billie Roy as Maud Cannon
    • Hayat Kamille as the Magician
    'Lee Cronin's The Mummy' opens in theaters on April 17th.
    ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ opens in theaters on April 17th.

    List of Mummy Movies

    Buy Tickets: ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Mummy Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Moon Knight’ Episode 6 Recap

    Oscar Isaac and Ethan Hawke
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight and Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Last week’s episode ended with us in paradise, welcome to the season finale of ‘Moon Knight’.

    We open on Marc being dragged out of the pool by Arthur’s men, who place the scarab on his chest and leave. Only for it to be picked up by Layla. Arthur is stopped, and we witness Ammit’s power. Layla goes to kill him, only to be held back by Tawaret taking over her body to tell her she needs to break Khonshu’s statue to bring Marc back.

    Harrow breaks into the vault of the gods, getting into a fight with the other avatars and defeating them. He breaks the statue, releasing Ammit back into the world. The goddess asks who brought her back and mentions that Arthur’s scales “lack balance.” Layla also finds and destroys Khonshu’s prison, releasing him. She refuses to become his avatar, only agreeing to help if they can work together.

    We cut to Marc in the afterlife being told his scales are balanced. Tawaret explains to him that his afterlife is everything he wanted. Sensing it isn’t right, he tells the goddess they need to get Steven back. Marc runs the other direction and paradise instantly fades. Marc finds Steven buried in the sands, and finally admits he saved him. Apologizing that he couldn’t protect him, all as Marc slowly turns to stone.

    The golden door opens and the two of them come back. Tawaret helps Marc and Steven get back to the world of the living while Khonshu and Ammit fight in the Vault. Khonshu senses them returning and inhabits Marc’s body again. He now must talk to both Steven and Marc, and they strike up a deal. They will be his avatar, but once Ammit is gone, they will be freed.

    Khonshu (voiced by F. Murray Abraham)
    Khonshu (voiced by F. Murray Abraham) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Layla learns how to trap Ammit, but she needs more avatars. Without even words, it’s revealed she’s accepted Tawaret’s offer for help. Arthur makes it to the top of the great pyramid, now working as Ammit’s avatar, eating the souls of the unworthy.

    Marc & Steven make it in time, and their fight with Arthur shows how the two of them both have control over the Moon Knight power. Layla appears just as Arthur is about to get the upper hand, looking nearly as powerful as they are, and is the Marvel Cinematic Universe version of the Scarlet Scarab.

    Layla saves a car full of people from Arthur and is asked if she’s an Egyptian superhero. In a very moving, but quick scene, she hastily replies, “Yes.” Arthur gets the better of Marc, same as Ammit with Khonshu. It seems Marc’s about to lose before he blacks out, waking up to Arthur nearly dead beneath him. Once again, it wasn’t him or Steven who did it!

    They take Arthur back and return Ammit to his body as a prison. Khonshu tries to get Marc to kill the body and Layla tells him to stop. He sides with Layla, telling the moon god to release them.

    Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector and Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector and Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Steven is shown back in the white room with the doctor. He asks the doctor if he believes gods are real, to which he responds, “No.” Marc returns to tell him “What if we disagree?” The doctor walks away bleeding, and Marc and Steven team-up  to escape their personal afterlife. Marc wakes up back in Steven’s apartment, with two of everything, including goldfish. And that’s the end!

    Now before we touch on anything else in the episode, let’s discuss that end-credit scene.

    We’re shown Arthur is now in a mental hospital, really, this isn’t a dream. He’s shown being led away by a man in black, and is taken out to a white car, passing the bodies of killed nurses. He gets thrown into the car and is shown Khonshu in a very fancy suit. He explains that Marc truly thought he left, and that the god needs an avatar strong enough to do his work and not be afraid to get their hands dirty. But that isn’t Marc or Steven.

    The god Knocks on the windows, and we’re introduce to Jake Lockley, another alter of Marc’s and the cause of the blackouts. He aims a gun at Arthur, and fires, presumably killing him, and drives off. So ‘Moon Knight’ finally gives us Jake Lockley, but only in the post-credit’s scene. And that, this whole time, it is implied Jake was Khonshu’s avatar. Almost like Marc and Steven were borrowing the powers for themselves.

    This version of Lockley is a bit different; we’re obviously shown him more brutal, almost gleefully killing Arthur at the end. In the comics, Lockley was a taxi driver, basically Moon Knight’s ears to the ground. He would gather info on targets, but he was never seen as a killer. So, it’s very interesting where they’re taking the character in the future!

    Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector
    Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Now, for my verdict. How did Marvel do with ‘Moon Knight’? Well, in my opinion, there was way more highs than there were lows. While the show was plagued with Marvel’s telltale CGI fights and spectacles, especially in this last episode, there was plenty of heart and emotion.

    A lot of that praise can be placed on Oscar Isaac for absolutely killing it as Marc, Steven and now Jake. He gave a crazy different performance for each character and seeing him switch between two personalities near the end of this last episode blew me away. I would easily put him up there with the likes of Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Hemsworth as fantastic Marvel character casting.

    Ethan Hawke plays a very interesting villain, but he weirdly starts off incredibly scary in my opinion but then eventually…is less menacing? At least, he doesn’t stay as threatening as the show puts him up to be, which can be chocked up to Moon Knight himself being way deadlier. I guess I just wanted more of Harrow as a villain. On the outside, he’s a creepy cult leader that is reminiscent of real life evil, but as the show progresses, I just didn’t feel that at the end of the series.

    But, even with all the flaws ‘Moon Knight’ had, it’s still one of my favorite series set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I cannot wait to see where the hero goes in the future, and if Layla will ever return in her superhero form.

    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight
    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.
  • ‘Moon Knight’ Episode 4 Recap

    Oscar Isaac and May Calamawy
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant and May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Hope you’re all ready for more action, because episode 4 of ‘Moon Knight’ is here!

    We open on one of the avatars carrying Khonshu’s statue to a pedestal that holds many other gods, like a prison. We see Layla trying to wake up Marc while also being shot at. Arthur’s men are looking for survivors, only to be stopped by Layla who distracts them and sets the truck off and destroys it. It’s revealed Steven is alive, and they head to the tomb.

    On the way, Layla tells Steven they need Marc. He explains that the two of them made a pact; when Khonshu was gone, Steven got the body. An argument breaks out between Steven and Layla and they move to foot, finding the cult (who are already inside) the tomb.

    As they ransack the camp, Marc and Steven have more of a conversation. They talk about how Marc can’t really go away and have one more argument before splitting up. Steven meets up with Layla and finally explains why Marc was so nervous, how Khonshu wanted her for his avatar, and how Marc wanted to protect her.

    She explains she doesn’t need protection and Steven kisses her (once again, odd) and the two zip down, but not before Marc punches Steven in the face. Layla brings up her father again and the two descend into the cave.

    Oscar Isaac and May Calamawy walking through dessert
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant and May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    They descend further only to find bullets in the sand. Something is out there. Steven discovers the tomb is a maze and finds where the inner tomb is, and that the Pharaoh was Ammit’s avatar. They find an alter for human sacrifice, covered in blood and viscera. Steven goes to the ceiling to find an exit and they are stopped by gunfire.

    It’s revealed the creature being shot at was a literal mummy, disemboweling people in the old ways. ‘Moon Knight’, in the span of a week, has gone from superhero action to flat out horror.

    The monster spots Steven, who separates from Layla, the latter crossing a deadly cavern. Another mummy tries to grab her, and she barely escapes, and a literal horror movie fight ensues. Layla throws it off the cliff and barely climbs back up.

    Across the way, she spots Arthur. Steven finds the tomb, excited out of his mind only for Marc to confront him about kissing his wife and telling her the truth. Steven cuts him off, going through the tomb and realizing they might have found Alexander the Great.

    The Heka Priest in 'Moon Knight.'
    The Heka Priest in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    “Why must men like you have to be so condescending.” Layla insults Arthur before the man tries to get in her head, talking about her Father and the fact he believed that the gods were real.

    We cut to Steven and Marc opening the tomb to try and find the artifact. He believes since Alexander was the mouth of Ammit, there’s only one place where it could be. Arthur continues to test Layla, claiming Marc was the one who killed her father.

    Marc finds the statue of Ammit, and Layla finds him. It seems like Arthur has gotten in her head, and she forces Marc to tell her what happened. He’s adamant that he didn’t kill her father but admits he was there. Layla asks how he died, and Marc says his partner killed everyone at the site.

    This isn’t good enough for Layla, and he reveals his partner also shot him, which led to Khonshu. This is how Layla and Marc met. Arthur’s men invade the room. Marc kills the cult members, only for Arthur to shoot Marc square in the chest twice. Killing him.

    Okay, things are getting weird. We’re shown what looks like a late 80s/early 90s ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark‘ type movie featuring a character named Steven Grant! A white room is revealed, it’s an insane asylum and we see a woman drawing a bird with Khonshu’s head, as well as Marc, looking totally out of it.

    May Calamawy and Oscar Isaac in a tomb
    (L-R): May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly and Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    The woman is Layla, and she offers to help him, though it’s “not really her.” Could this be a weird afterlife maybe? Marc tries to get up and falls, revealing a little Moon Knight action figure by his side.

    It cuts to Steven talking to who we can assume is a therapist, and it’s Arthur! (Looking shockingly like Ethan Hawke’s character in ‘The Black Phone’.) Explaining how Marc is indeed unwell and needs their help.

    The room looks familiar. Pillars of an old tomb, organ jars, God statues. It’s like a personal hell. Marc escapes and fights off the people trying to sedate him. It’s clear something isn’t right.

    Marc runs and locks himself in a room with a coffin that has someone locked in it screaming, only for it to be Steven. The two reunite and hug. Marc asks him what he remembers, and the two realize they haven’t gone crazy.

    They pass another coffin, staring at it, and suspiciously walk by. The door is open to a large, anthropologic Hippo who greets them … warmly and kindly? The episode then ends.

    Oscar Isaac and Ethan Hawke in a tomb
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant and Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    So, a lot just happened. First, let’s cover the two name drops in the episode. In the comics, Marc’s partner is Raul Bushman. It’s right to assume that was the man who killed Layla’s father and set everything with Khonshu into motion. Layla’s father on the other hand, in the show, is the equivalent of Peter Alraune, who is Marlene’s father in the comics (Marc’s girlfriend).

    Now for the two major characters we have hinted at in the final scenes. We have a good idea who’s in that third coffin, and it’s most likely Jake Lockley. Another one of Marc’s alters, Jake is a cab driver and a more “boots on the ground” type of guy. We’ve already seen hints of him in episode 3, and it would be weird for the show to only include Steven and not Jake.

    Finally, the Hippo goddess at the end. Her name is Taweret, and in Egyptian myth she was a benevolent god of protection, specifically in fertility and childbirth. But outside of that, she was always the goddess who protected souls as they took the ferry to the afterlife. Which confirms to us where Marc and Steven could be…

    Episode 4 was an insane trip, and we’ll see where that it takes us in the last two episodes of the series! See you all next week!

    'Moon Knight' premieres March 30th on Disney+.
    ‘Moon Knight’ premieres March 30th on Disney+.
  • ‘Moon Knight’ Episode 3 Recap

    May Calamawy and Oscar Isaac
    (L-R): May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly and Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Moon Knight’ episode 3 opens with Layla getting herself a fake ID. We’re told she hasn’t been back to Egypt in a while, and that her father was involved in a dig site. It’s implied that Layla is not safe on her trip.

    Cut to Arthur Harrow scouring the Egyptian desert and finding Ammit’s tomb. He knows Marc is there, but it doesn’t matter to him. Marc is seen chasing after someone, an informant who knows about the dig site, only for him to get murdered by two of Harrow’s men.

    A fight ensues, and before Marc can kill them – Steven stops “him.” But then Moon Knight continues to fight and brutally murders the other men. It is hinted at that neither Marc nor Steven are controlling the hero at the time, leaving the possibility of a third alter.

    Khonshu blocks out the sun, the god claiming it’s a “sign none of them could ignore.” He tells Steven the avatars are gathering, and that the last time he was seen by the gods, he was banished. A gate opens up, and Marc is allowed into the gathering.

    Oscar Isaac and Ethan Hawke
    (L-R): Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant and Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Gabor Kotschy. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    He’s welcomed by another avatar, and their bodies are slowly taken over by the other Egyptian gods, and Khonshu calls them to judge Harrow. He’s summoned, and Harrow instantly begins to lie, claiming the moon god was the one to find Ammit’s tomb.

    Harrow begins to use Marc’s disorder against him. Claiming he doesn’t know his own name, and knowing about his other alters. The gods asked to speak to Marc, and while he doesn’t deny being ‘unwell,’ he still tries to get them to see his point of view, but due to Khonshu’s reputation, the other gods excuse him and go off.

    But a woman, who was the avatar of a goddess, explains one person knew about Ammit’s tomb, but their own sarcophagus was sold on the black market. Marc instantly goes to find it, only to be intercepted by Layla and begrudgingly excepts her help.

    Layla tells him that she’s aware of where the body is, and a touching scene occurs, where we get more backstory on Marc. It was only recently that he had begun losing “control” of Steven and allowing him to take over, with no further details given.

    May Calamawy and Gaspard Ulliel
    (L-R): May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly and Gaspard Ulliel as Anton Mogart in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Marc and Layla go to meet the black-market dealer, Anton (Gaspard Ulliel), who has the sarcophagus. While he claims to be a collector, it’s obvious that he is one sketchy guy. They find the coffin, while Marc and Steven talk about ‘unlocking’ the sarcophagus. They get into a fight, Steven begging to take over but Marc keeping him at bay.

    Steven begins to explain to Marc the puzzle, only for the arms dealer to stop him. Harrow then shows up and tries to get Anton to take his side. He starts to convince everyone to turn against one another, including Layla on Marc because of her father’s death and the fact that he has been lying to her about it.

    Then all hell breaks loose. Khonshu yells at Marc to summon the suit, and Harrow destroys the sarcophagus. We then get what is probably the coolest fight scene in the show so far. Specter in the full suit kicking ass, while also having Steven at the same time trying to stop the violence.

    Of course, he breaks through, changing to Steven. It’s a matter of seconds before he’s literally impaled and yelling for Marc to take over. He gets held down, Layla’s hurt, and that causes Marc to go berserk and kill everyone.

    Oscar Isaac in 'Moon Knight.'
    Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    The two of them escape, and Layla begins to question Marc about what Harrow brought up. He promises Layla that what he said wasn’t true. But Marc doesn’t deny the fact that she truly doesn’t know him as they drive into the desert.

    Marc and Layla attempt to put together the pieces from the coffin. She tells him they need Steven’s help. But Khonshu claims the alter won’t give Marc the body back. He grumbles about it but walks away, letting Steven take over.

    He explains how ancient Egyptians used both sun and the stars to navigate the desert. Steven finishes the destroyed piece, and explains why the stars won’t help them, but Khonshu says he knows where the stars were the night of the burial. “I remember every night.” He drawls and explains he can turn back the stars to that night. But that it would come at a cost.

    Steven and Khonshu begin to turn back the sky like a clock. It’s a gorgeous sequence, and quiet honestly, one of my personal favorites in this cinematic universe thus far. The two of them change the constellations back to where they were in the past.

    Khonshu (voiced by F. Murray Abraham) in 'Moon Knight.'
    Khonshu (voiced by F. Murray Abraham) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Khonshu is imprisoned by the other gods for obviously breaking multiple rules he wasn’t supposed to. The god and his power fade away, trapped in a stone. Marc will now most likely die, as Khonshu was keeping him alive.

    We’re shown Harrow led to the gods chamber by one of the avatars. Harrow speaks with the statue, explaining how he was glad that Khonshu let him go when he did. He claims he owes everything to the god, and the episode ends.

    So, we learned a couple of important things from this episode. The first one is that the other gods do exist. We meet them for the first time, even if we only see them as their avatars. There is no confirmation that the gods are actually gods (and not weird celestials like they are in the comics), but we finally know they do exist in this world and it’s not just Khonshu. What this could mean for the future isn’t know, but this confirms that it’s not just the Greek gods that rule in place of heroes and celestials.

    One scene from the episode that should be important is Khonshu changing the sky. It’s showed prominently in the show that everyone saw the sky changing. Not just Layla and Steven. What am I getting at with this? Well, ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ releases on May 5th, and the last episode of ‘Moon Knight’ releases on May 4th … so are we going to see Doctor Strange in ‘Moon Knight?’

    Benedict Cumberbatch in 'Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness' from Marvel Studios.
    Benedict Cumberbatch in ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ from Marvel Studios.

    Next to Wanda Maximoff & the Sorcerer Supreme, Marc Specter is the next main magic user in the MCU. While not fully magical himself, he fits the bill. Strange would see the stars changing and want answers, and it would be a great way to connect the Disney+ series to the timeline (even if Oscar Isaac has been on record saying the show is “disconnected” from the movies.)

    Another major Easter egg that showed up in this episode was the name drop of Madripoor. While it’s been mentioned before, it was first shown in ‘The Falcon & the Winter Soldier’ and later in ‘Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings’. Madripoor is basically the MCU’s version of the black market. That’s where the cage match in ‘Shang-Chi’ took place, and where Sharon Carter calls herself the Power Broker. It would make sense Layla & Anton would make deals on artifacts in Madripoor.

    Once again, Marvel gives us another great episode. With a mixture of both character drama and action, we can only guess where the next few take us.

    See you next week!

    May Calamawy and Oscar Isaac
    (L-R): May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly and Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.
  • ‘Moon Knight’ Episode 2 Recap

    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight
    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight, exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Episode 2 of Disney+’s Marvel series ‘Moon Knight’ delivers more Marc Spector, Steven Grant, Arthur Harrow, and finally introduces us to our new show-exclusive character, Layla. In this episode, we learn how the Moon Knight power works, and get more connections to the source material.

    The episode begins with Steven waking up and instantly going to the museum in hopes of catching Arthur after the frantic fight he had the night before with one of his jackals. But when he shows up at the museum, the camera show nothing but Marc Spector walking out. And Steven knows that isn’t him in control of his own body.

    We finally see Layla in the flesh, and she informs Steven (whom she still believes to be Marc) that they are married, that she misses their time together and that they are supposed to get a divorce. Steven and Layla share a nice little connection between poetry and myth, only for the police, who are members of Harrow’s cult, to show up at Steven’s door and kidnap him.

    The audience is given a tense scene between Steven and Arthur, all with Khonshu breathing down Steven’s neck commanding him to brutally murder Arthur. Harrow seemingly knows more about the god than Steven does, and reveals he too worked for him at one point. While this is not proven to be true as of yet, it shows that the god is not afraid to change his vessel as often as he wishes.

    Arthur is still looking for that scarab, and Steven is following Marc’s wishes and telling Harrow that he doesn’t have it. Up until Layla appears, claiming she has it and freeing Steven. The two escape, with Steven having another terrifying jackal on his heels. With Marc pounding in his brain and Steven terrified, he attempts to summon the suit … well, a suit.

    Oscar Isaac as Mr. Knight
    Oscar Isaac as Mr. Knight in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    We finally have the reveal of Mr. Knight, hilariously coined by Marc as “a psychotic Colonel Sanders.” Steven himself has some sort of control over the power! Though it’s clear to see that Khonshu only gave the powers to Marc, not any other of his alters.

    The episode closes with Arthur getting the scarab (revealed to be a sort of tracking device to Amitt’s tomb), Khonshu threatening Marc that if he doesn’t stop Arthur, he’ll take Layla as his next vessel, and Marc himself awakening in Egypt, facing the great pyramids of Giza.

    The biggest revelation of this episode is the fact we now know Steven is an alter-ego of Marc. While the show’s first episode played this off as a mystery, with Steven being revealed first, episode 2 confirms the comic connection. Though we still don’t have a confirmation on Marc’s other personality, that of Jake Lockley. Which would indeed be weird if Marvel chose not to include it.

    While it’s clear the show is taking more liberties from its source material, the biggest change in this episode is Layla, most likely based off Marc’s girlfriend in the comics, Marlene Alraune (more on her in a bit.) Which is surprising for a show that has so far stuck to the source material rather well. Especially for something so out of left field for Marvel and Disney.

    Ethan Hawke, May Calamawy, and Oscar Isaac
    (L-R): Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow, May Calamawy as Layla El-Faouly, and Oscar Isaac as Marc Spector/Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Like the last episode before it, episode 2 is filled with some cleverly hidden Easter eggs. One of them being another comic book hidden in a QR code. While this could be a fantastic way for people to get into the comics, it’s fascinating the Marvel team is hiding them instead of putting them in the open. Though, if they continue to do it for future episodes, it could be a great way to get more people into the story.

    The other Easter egg (if it could be called that) in the episode is Layla herself. As mentioned before, she’s more than likely based off of the character of Marlene Alraune, Marc Specter’s on and off again girlfriend in the comics. While it’s interesting for Marvel to just transfer her character over, she also wasn’t exactly the most interesting character in the comics. So, their choice to make someone completely brand new with close to the same backstory totally works.

    One thing that should be mentioned is where ‘Moon Knight’ fits in the Marvel Cinematic timeline. It was revealed just recently on Disney’s official timeline; ‘Moon Knight’ takes place directly after ‘Hawkeye’ and ‘Eternals’. How this will affect the show is yet to be seen, but we shouldn’t be surprised if both the Blip is mentioned, or the giant Celestial that is still currently in the sea.

    Episode 2 of ‘Moon Knight’ was another fun ride, with some cool fights and great moments. It’s refreshing to see a show so dark and unafraid to hide from the weirder side of the Marvel universe, even more so than something like the ‘Eternals’.

    Hopefully the next few episodes hold up that weirdness and give us more brutal fights.

    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight
    Oscar Isaac as Moon Knight in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.
  • TV Review: ‘Moon Knight’

    Oscar Isaac as Mr. Knight
    Oscar Isaac as Mr. Knight in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    Premiering on Disney+ beginning March 30th is the new Marvel Studios series ‘Moon Knight,’ which is based on the popular comic book character of the same name. Oscar Isaac (‘Dune’) stars as Marc Spector, a mercenary with dissociative identity disorder who is granted the powers of an Egyptian moon god, making him a superhero. The result is a series that feels more like a movie and is one of the best origin story projects Marvel Studios has ever produced.

    The series begins by introducing us to Steven Grant (Oscar Isaac), a meek gift shop clerk who happens to work at a museum in the Egyptian history wing. Grant has strange visions of an Egyptian god, loses track of large amounts of time, and wakes up unaware of why he is chained to his own bed. Grant soon discovers that he actually shares a body with mercenary Marc Spector (also Isaacs), who has dissociative identity disorder and was chosen by the Egyptian god Khonshu (voiced by F. Murray Abraham) to be the hero Moon Knight.

    Grant also meets Spector’s wife, Layla El-Faouly (May Calamawy) and discovers that a cult led by Arthur Harrow (Ethan Hawke) are pursuing them to retrieve a valuable artifact that they have in their possession. With the artifact, Harrow will have ultimate power and now Marc and Steven must work together as Moon Knight (or Steven’s alter ego – Mr. Knight) if they want to stop the cult leader from taking over the world.

    As much as I love Marvel, one of the issues I’ve had with the Disney+ shows are that even at six to eight episodes, they always feel like they are one or two episodes too long. But as I have screened four out of six of the ‘Moon Knight’ episodes, I can tell you that the series is tight, and at least in the first four episodes, there is no filler. Moon Knight’s story is complicated, and the series benefits from the fact that it has six hours to tell his origin, without feeling rushed or truncated. But it also doesn’t waste its time and everything that happens seems necessary and important to telling the character’s story.

    Oscar Isaac as Steven Grant
    Oscar Isaac as Steven Grant in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Csaba Aknay. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    In some ways this is the least Marvel project Marvel Studios has produced, certainly on Disney+, but also still feels very much like it takes place in the MCU. The prior Marvel shows were all heavily dipped in MCU folklore with references to S.H.I.E.L.D. or The Blip, for example, and appearances from characters that belong to other Marvel franchises. But while ‘Moon Knight’ doesn’t have any direct MCU references or cameos (at least not in the first four episodes), it still feels very much like a Marvel movie and very much exists in the same universe as ‘Doctor Strange‘ and ‘Shang-Chi.’

    It’s hard enough to introduce one new character to an audience, but with superhero projects you essentially have two characters to introduce, the hero and their alter-ego. With this series, they have the difficulty of introducing not just Marc Spector and Moon Knight, but also Steven Grant and Mr. Knight, with all four characters portrayed by the same actor, Oscar Isaac.

    In the comics, Spector is the main character and the focus is usually on him, when it’s not on Moon Knight. But the series made the wise choice to focus the series, at least initially, on Steven Grant. Like the audience (at least those not familiar with the source material), Steven has no idea what is going on in his life, and as the audience we get to learn about Marc, Layla, Arthur Harrow, and Khonshu, at the same time Steven does. It was a risky choice, but ultimately works and serves the series well.

    The supporting cast is very good, especially Oscar winner F. Murray Abraham who voices Khonshu. May Calamawy creates a strong and really fun character in Marc’s wife, Layla. She has great chemistry with Isaac (no matter which character he is playing), and the character takes some odd twists and turns in the later episodes.

    Ethan Hawke 'Moon Knight'
    Ethan Hawke as Arthur Harrow in Marvel Studios’ ‘Moon Knight.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    But a hero is only as strong as the villain he has to battle, and Ethan Hawke creates a very strong villain in Arthur Harrow. In fact, calling him a villain is not even fair as the character would tell you he’s the hero of his own story, and Hawke walks that line well. Channeling inspiration from cult leader David Koresh, as well as psychiatrist Carl Jung and even the Dalai Lama, Hawke plays the role in a sympathetic yet commanding way.

    But the series’ success really hinges on finding an actor that can realistically portray all the aspects of the lead character, and Oscar Isaac fills that role exceedingly well. Isaac really creates two separate characters with Steven and Marc, and he is so good that at times you really believe they are two different people and you forget that the same actor is playing both roles. The series handles the character’s DID quite well, and Isaac’s performance is extremely believable and sympathetic.

    I would also argue that Oscar Isaac is the biggest movie star Marvel has cast in one of their projects since Robert Downey Jr. in ‘Iron Man.’ Mostly Marvel casts talented actors and makes them stars like in the case of Chris Hemsworth, Chris Pratt, or Chadwick Boseman and even Brie Larson, Paul Rudd and Benedict Cumberbatch’s careers benefited greatly from being in Marvel projects. After the ‘Star Wars’ sequels, ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’ and ‘Dune,’ and with an appearance in ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (Part One)’ coming later this year, Isaac brings all his movie star charm and talent to the series.

    In the end, at least for the first four episodes, ‘Moon Knight’ is an extremely tight, dark, and very enjoyable superhero series that is just as good as any Marvel movie without getting bogged down by the MCU mythology.

    ‘Moon Knight’ (first four episodes) receives 4.5 out of 5 stars

    'Moon Knight' poster courtesy of Disney+
    ‘Moon Knight’ premieres on Disney+ beginning March 30th.