Tag: michael-waldron

  • ‘Loki’ TV Creator Michael Waldron Writing ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’

    Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • ‘Loki’s Michael Waldron will write the script for Marvel’s ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’.
    • He previously wrote ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ for the studio.
    • Destin Daniel Cretton recently dropped out of directing ‘The Kang Dynasty’.

    Michael Waldron is quickly becoming a go-to writer for Marvel. Which isn’t too surprising, since he launched and ran (alongside director Kate Herron) the first season of ‘Loki’, which became one of the most successful Marvel/Disney+ series to hit small screens.

    For his latest assignment, he’s going to write the script for the company’s ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’ (assuming it keeps that title; more on that below).

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    What else has Michael Waldron worked on?

    Rachel McAdams as Dr. Christine Palmer, Benedict Cumberbatch as Dr. Stephen Strange, and Xochitl Gomez as America Chavez
    (L-R): Rachel McAdams as Dr. Christine Palmer, Benedict Cumberbatch as Dr. Stephen Strange, and Xochitl Gomez as America Chavez in Marvel Studios’ ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2022. All Rights Reserved.

    While Waldron mostly stepped away from ‘Loki’s second season to focus on other projects, he’s also worked on other Marvel projects.

    He stepped in to re-write the script for ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’, working alongside director Sam Raimi to develop the movie when previous filmmaker Scott Derrickson stepped aside because of creative differences with Marvel.

    That, in turn led to the company hiring Waldron to write ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’, which is following ‘The Kang Dynasty’.

    In addition to his MCU duties, he’s also set up a wealth of other projects (all being kept quiet for now) via a big deal between Marvel/20th Television and his production company, Anomaly Pictures.

    Related Article: ‘Shang-Chi’ Director Destin Daniel Cretton Reportedly no Longer Aboard ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’

    What has happened with ‘The Kang Dynasty’ so far?

    Marvel Studios' 'Avengers: The Kang Dynasty.'
    Marvel Studios’ ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty.’

    At San Diego Comic-Con in 2022, Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige announced a swath of new Marvel movies and shows, outlining much of Phases 5 and 6 for his company.

    With ‘Loki’s first season dropping the first breadcrumbs about the multiverse-spanning villain Kang (played by Jonathan Majors in the show and ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’), the plan was to build him up as the next big bad to follow Thanos.

    That whole connected storyline was to have concluded in ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’ in 2025 and ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ in 2026.

    It wasn’t long after that that Destin Daniel Cretton was announced as director for ‘The Kang Dynasty’ as part of his big overall Disney/Marvel deal in the wake of ‘Shang-Chi’ doing well.

    Now, though, after some release date shifts for both ‘The Kang Dynasty’ (to 2026) and’ Secret Wars’ (moving to 2027), Cretton has stepped away from the director’s chair for the former movie.

    Cretton will focus on other projects in the pipeline, including an in-the-works ‘Wonder Man’ TV series for Marvel and Disney+ and a potential ‘Shang-Chi’ sequel.

    Will Kang Be Dropped?

    Jonathan Majors as Kang The Conqueror in Marvel Studios' 'Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.'
    Jonathan Majors as Kang The Conqueror in Marvel Studios’ ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.’ Photo by Jay Maidment. © 2022 Marvel.

    Marvel has been wrangling over how to deal with the Jonathan Majors situation. With the actor involved in a thorny legal issue, he’s not exactly someone the company’s parent Disney is looking to be in business with.

    Jeff Loveness, who had been on board to write ‘Kang Dynasty’ was reportedly let go from the company at some point before Cretton left the movie.

    Thanks to the multiverse idea, there is scope for the studio to pivot away from him, while there are plenty of other villains who could conceivably threaten the group of heroes. And with Waldron aboard, it appears that Kevin Feige and co. are looking for consistency between the two giant movies that wrap up Phase 6.

    When Will ‘Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’ and ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ Be in Theaters?

    Currently ‘The Kang Dynasty’ is set for release on May 1, 2026, with ‘Secret Wars’ due on May 7, 2027.

    Marvel Studios' 'Avengers: Secret Wars.'
    Marvel Studios’ ‘Avengers: Secret Wars.’

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  • ‘Loki’ Season 1 Recap

    Loki (Tom Hiddleston) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Loki (Tom Hiddleston) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2020. All Rights Reserved.

    Fans of Tom Hiddleston, Owen Wilson, Sophia Di Martino, the rest of the ‘Loki’ gang (and multiverses in general), get ready to be happy. Because the Marvel Disney+ series about the character is back in just a few days’ time.

    Yet Season 1 screened back in 2021, so what if you’ve forgotten some of the pertinent details and need a refresher? Never fear, we are here to help. Like the Time Variance Agency, we will make sure you are on the right track (and we won’t prune you out of existence, either).

    ‘Loki’ Season 1 Explained

    Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and Mobius (Owen Wilson) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and Mobius (Owen Wilson) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Created and run by Michael Waldron (who would end up spending more time in parallel dimensions when he was hired to re-write Marvel movie sequel ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’, ‘Loki’ picks up the story of Tom Hiddleston’s title character back at a time when he was very much more a villain than the heroic character he has become in the likes of ‘Avengers: Infinity War’.

    You’ll recall that Loki spotted a chance to escape custody at the end of ‘The Avengers’ when heroes such as Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) and Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) travel back in time looking for the Tesseract. Instead of them getting it then, Loki grabs it and uses it to transport himself away.

    But he is picked up by agents of the Time Variance Authority, where he has been deemed a dangerous “variant”, a chaotic version of himself that disrupts the timeline that the authority –– or so it claims –– is working to protect. A bureaucratic, retro-futuristic organization that exists outside of time and space, it gives Loki a choice: face being erased from existence due to being a or help fix the timeline and stop a greater threat.

    Loki ends up in his own crime thriller, traveling through time hunting a female version of himself named Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino).

    Who is Sylvie in ‘Loki’?

    Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Sylvie, as mentioned, is a female Loki Variant. Targeted for “pruning” (AKA removing from the timeline), she’s been fighting back across time and space, looking to discover the truth behind the TVA.

    She’s causing chaos to attract the organization’s attention and ends up crossing paths with our Loki.

    The two actually start to fall for each other, realizing their innate connection. But after figuring they could hide in apocalypses (as Sylvie has been doing), their burgeoning relationship is interrupted when they are brought before He Who Remains (but more on him later) and ends up killing him, shoving Loki into a portal.

    She will be back for Season 2, so we’ll find out what happens between the two Lokis. Let’s be honest: “it’s complicated” barely begins to encompass this one.

    What’s behind the TVA?

    Miss Minutes (voiced by Tara Strong) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Miss Minutes (voiced by Tara Strong) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    One of the first faces that any arriving prisoner sees is Miss Minutes, an animated clock who cheerily greets people. Voiced by Tara Strong, this mascot provides information –– but she’s also got a hidden agenda.

    The authority is overseen by the “Timekeepers”, mysterious creatures represented by statues in a hidden chamber that some at the TVA see as godlike. As it turns out, that’s a giant lie crafted by He Who Remains (again, more later).

    The Timekeepers are androids created to control the TVA and its employees, who, it is revealed, were not specially created to work there, but were in fact all variants themselves, with their memories wiped.

    What other characters are in ‘Loki’?

    Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku) and Mobius (Owen Wilson) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku) and Mobius (Owen Wilson) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other memorable characters include…

    Mobius M. Mobius (Owen Wilson): An agent of the TVA who specializes in the investigations of particularly dangerous time criminals. He befriends Loki, and the two work the Sylvie case. But once he learns about his variant nature, he helps Loki and Sylvie battle his former employers.

    Ravonna Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw): A former TVA Hunter known as A-23, who rose from the ranks to become a respected judge; she oversees the Loki variant investigation. An ambitious, fervent believer in the TVA’s mission, she’s forced to face hard truths about the organization. And when they are revealed, she vanishes into a portal in search of free will.

    Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku): A high ranking Hunter of the TVA determined to stop the variant that has been killing Minutemen troops. She’s among those who believe the Timekeepers are gods.

    Hunter C-20 (Sasha Lane): A TVA Hunter kidnapped and enchanted by Sylvie to reveal the location of the Timekeepers.

    Judge Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki' exclusively on Disney+.
    Judge Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Who are the other Loki Variants?

    Boastful Loki (DeObia Oparei), Kid Loki (Jack Veal), Alligator Loki and Classic Loki (Richard E. Grant) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Boastful Loki (DeObia Oparei), Kid Loki (Jack Veal), Alligator Loki and Classic Loki (Richard E. Grant) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    At one point, Loki is “pruned” and banished to an apocalyptic, ruined New York, and meets a host of other variants of himself, including Classic Loki (Richard E. Grant) who wears a comic-accurate costume and has more extensive illusionary powers than Hiddleston’s version.

    There are various others, including Kid Loki (Jack Veal), Boastful Loki (DeObia Oparei) and, of course, Alligator Loki (himself), who we can all agree is the best Loki.

    Related Article: Tom Hiddleston’s Trickster God is Unstuck in Time For the ‘Loki’ Season 2 Trailer

    Who is He Who Remains?

    He Who Remains (Jonathan Majors) in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' exclusively on Disney+.
    He Who Remains (Jonathan Majors) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    In the final episode, we meet the true architect of the TVA and the chaotic state of the Multiverse into which Loki has plunged.

    He Who Remains (played by Jonathan Majors), is a variant of a comic book character called Kang the Conqueror.

    He’s manipulating the timeline for his own ends and has been in combat with his “brothers” the various other versions of Kang.

    Jonathan Majors as Kang The Conqueror in Marvel Studios' 'Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.'
    Jonathan Majors as Kang The Conqueror in Marvel Studios’ ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.’ Photo by Jay Maidment. © 2022 Marvel.

    Sylvie kills him, pushing the multiverse of timelines into even more madness, but that’s not the last we see of the character.

    Kang, one of the other variants (also played by Majors), is the villain in ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania‘, and versions of him are being set up as the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Big Bad for its next couple of phases.

    That is being complicated for Marvel by the allegations surrounding Majors’ personal life, but he is back for Season 2, playing Victor Timely, yet another Kang variant. He has been somewhat downplayed in the promos for the new season, but we’ll see how much he appears in the show itself.

    Is there a trailer for ‘Loki’ Season 2?

    Tom Hiddleston as Loki, Ke Huy Quan as O.B. and Owen Wilson as Mobius in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' Season 2, exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Tom Hiddleston as Loki, Ke Huy Quan as O.B. and Owen Wilson as Mobius in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ Season 2, exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gareth Gatrell. © 2023 MARVEL.

    You can see the trailer for ‘Loki’ Season 2 below.

    When does ‘Loki’ Season 2 come out?

    Ke Huy Quan as O.B., Wunmi Mosaku as Hunter B-15, Tom Hiddleston as Loki, and Owen Wilson as Mobius in Marvel Studios' 'Loki,' Season 2, exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Ke Huy Quan as O.B., Wunmi Mosaku as Hunter B-15, Tom Hiddleston as Loki, and Owen Wilson as Mobius in Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki,’ Season 2, exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gareth Gatrell. © 2023 MARVEL.

    ‘Loki’ will launch with its first episode (of a planned six) on October 6th. Will the producers announce a third season at the end of the second? Only time will tell…

    Marvel Studios' 'Loki' Season 2.
    Marvel Studios’ ‘Loki’ Season 2.

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  • New Trailer for ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’

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    The first trailer for ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’ was heavy on the emotion, a beautiful, stylish tribute to the fact that the filmmakers have had to deal with the loss of star Chadwick Boseman.

    For the new look at the movie, though, we get a little more story and a lot more action.

    Following on from T’Challa (Boseman) introducing the wider world to a much more advanced and powerful Wakanda than anyone outside understood, there are naturally those who are motivated to exploit it.

    And, as Wakanda reels from the death of its king (that aspect is still shrouded in mystery), there is another looming threat on the horizon. As Wakanda revealed itself, that also caused problems for the nearby, undersea kingdom of Talokan, ruled by the powerful Namor (Tenoch Huerta).

    A mutant with wings on his feet and superior abilities, he’s none too happy with the new world order, and Talokan makes its feelings felt.

    A scene from Marvel Studios' 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.'
    A scene from Marvel Studios’ ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2022 Marvel.

    Which means that Queen Ramonda (Angela Bassett), Shuri (Letitia Wright), M’Baku (Winston Duke), Okoye (Danai Gurira), War Dog Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o) and the Dora Milaje (including Florence Kasumba’s Ayo) are now fighting a conflict on two fronts – keeping the world at bay and dealing with Talokan’s forces.

    Fortunately, they do have some help: Martin Freeman is back as Everett Ross, while the movie will introduce Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), a young genius who has effectively engineered her own version of Stark technology, becoming the hero known as Ironheart.

    Oh, and we get our best look at whoever is taking over the mantle of the Black Panther – and from the suit, it’s pretty clear that it’s a woman. Whether than means Shuri (who is tellingly front and center on the poster), Nakia, Okoye or someone else remains to be seen at this point.

    Co-writer/director Ryan Coogler has a lot to accomplish here – follow up one of Marvel’s biggest standalone hits, a zeitgeist success that meant an awful lot to many people. And he’s got to do it without the charismatic lead.

    Still, there is plenty of performing power to be found in the cast – and with the addition of Huerta and Thorne, even more has been added.

    Tenoch Huerta as Namor in Marvel Studios' 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.'
    Tenoch Huerta as Namor in Marvel Studios’ ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2022 Marvel.

    Given the undersea nature of Talokan, comparisons with ‘Avatar: The Way of Water’ (which will be released a little over a month after the superhero film), are inevitable. Yet there’s plenty more going on here

    ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’ itself faces big challenges, but given how well the first movie turned out, we’re confident it’ll rise to meet them.

    Tickets are now on sale for the movie, which will be in theaters on November 11th.

    In other Marvel news, there is word on who will – according to Deadline, at least – be writing ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’. Michael Waldron, who ran the first season of ‘Loki’, and scripted ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’, has the job for the second of the two big ‘Avengers’ movies that will close out Phase Six.

    Avengers: The Kang Dynasty’ will be out on May 2, 2025, with Jeff Loveness writing and Destin Daniel Cretton directing. ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ will follow on November 7th the same year.

    Danai Gurira as Okoye in Marvel Studios' 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.'
    Danai Gurira as Okoye in Marvel Studios’ ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2022 Marvel.
    Letitia Wright as Shuri in Marvel Studios' 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.'
    Letitia Wright as Shuri in Marvel Studios’ ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’ Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2022 Marvel.
    'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.'
    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. © 2022 Marvel.
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  • The stars and writers of ‘Heels’ talk about their new series

    The stars and writers of ‘Heels’ talk about their new series

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    The new Starz dramatic series ‘Heels’ features Stephen Amell as a professional wrestler that’s known as a “Heel,” which means he’s the type of professional wrestler that fans love to hate. Amell and his co-stars and the show’s writers recently sat down with us to talk about their new series.

    First, Stephen Amell and Alexander Ludwig talk about their characters.

    Moviefone: Nice to see you guys. Steven, I read that you are an avid wrestling fan. Can you describe the difference between pro wrestling and these independent wrestling leagues?

    Stephen Amell: They’re all the same. Same size ring, same size everything. It’s just that the guys up in the WWE might be wrestling at Allegiant Stadium later this month in front of 70,000 people, and we’re putting our bodies on the line in front of anywhere between 50 and 700 people, but it’s the exact same. It’s the proving ground. It’s where almost all professional wrestlers, and especially the ones that you see now on TV, they’ve all wrestled at a Duffy Dome somewhere along the way. Everyone has a Duffy Dome story, so it’s no different. It’s just kind of like the minor leagues.

    MF: You know, I knew nothing about these independent leagues, and I knew nothing about a lot of these terms. So, Alexander, can you explain what a heel and a face is in wrestling?

    Alexander Ludwig: Yeah. So, a face would be your hero in the ring, somebody that you cheer on, and you expect to win a lot of, you know, that’s your protagonist and your heel would be your villain. The one that everybody loves to hate.

    Amell: Yeah. The heel’s more important. Okay?

    Ludwig: Absolutely.

    Amell: They only love the good guys as much as they hate the bad.

    MF: And Jack is a heel.

    Amell: He’s the heel.

    MF: He’s the heel. He actually, what is the DWL mean to Jack? And I mean, actually also to Ace, but Jack, what is he, he is tasked with a huge job in keeping the DWL going, and why is it so important to him?

    Amell: Well, his father started it. I mean, everything to do with the Duffy Dome, everything to do with the DWL and what it means to the community of Duffy, to the people there. It’s not a lot going on in Duffy, there’s some mediocre karaoke and there’s a water tower and there’s wrestling every weekend. So, it means a lot to him. It’s a part of the community, but also, he loves his dad and both he and Ace love their dad, and it’s what he built. And I’m sure that the first time that they saw it, they were little kids, who were wide-eyed and just that these wrestlers were probably larger than life to them. So, keeping it going and expanding it and making it something more dynamic is, it’s really important to Jack, and eventually it becomes very important to Ace as well.

    MF: Well, Alexander describe Ace to me because he’s a really complicated guy.

    Ludwig: That’s why I loved him so much. Ace is, he’s the baby face in the ring. He’s the hero. He’s the one who’s the rock star. He’s expected to get out and make it big, but inside of himself and outside of the ring, he’s a complete mess. He’s traumatized by his father’s death, trying to find his place in the world. And that’s so much what I love about this story in general is it shifts. Who can’t relate to that, even if you don’t know anything about wrestling? What’s so great about this, and speaking as somebody who didn’t know a lot about wrestling, when I read these scripts, I couldn’t put it down because these characters, you’re bound to see yourself in one of them, if not all of them and who can’t relate to working your ass off to put food on the table or wanting more out of life? And Ace is simply that. He’s an explosive personality and very self-destructive, and he was a dream role for me.

    MF: I agree with you, because I am not a huge wrestling fan, but I was able to watch the first four episodes, and I can’t wait to see the rest of the story now.

    Ludwig: So, I love hearing that so much because it’s exactly the experience I had.

    MF: Stephen, Jack is also struggling. He’s struggling to balance the Dome and his family, and he’s also, maybe some people don’t even realize that there’s a story. There’s a script for each wrestling match, and he’s trying to keep a story going.

    Amell: Well, he’s trying to be everything to everyone, and he’s trying to keep everything under his thumb. Wrestling doesn’t have to be that scripted. The outcomes are predetermined, but the best promoters or the best organizers or the best people that run a wrestling league or federation let their talent do their thing. They let those wrestlers tell the story. So, he’s very rigid with his scripts because he’s still figuring out how to be ahead of the DWL because it was his dad for so long. He’s been thrust into this position, so he’s gripping a little too tight and you see that in his face. He would do well to relax a little bit.


    Mary McCormack & Chris Bauer compare their familiarity with the independent leagues.

    Moviefone: How familiar were you Mary with independent wrestling leagues before this?

    Mary McCormack: Not very familiar with independent wrestling leagues or any wrestling league really. I mean, I didn’t, my brother was a fan when we were little, so sometimes it would be on and I would see some of it and he would pretend to be different wrestlers, but not very familiar. So it was a lot to learn and a fascinating sort of look into a world I didn’t know a lot about, but Chris was a much bigger fan.

    MF: So, Chris, you’re a fan of pro wrestling as well as independent wrestling leagues?

    Chris Bauer: Yeah. In fact, I think I’ve certainly spent a lot more time in independent matches than I have in pro. I mean, I still consider it pro wrestling. I mean, Pro Wrestling Guerrilla, it’s in the title “Ring Of Honor”. And I got to know a lot of wrestlers at that level who are now entertaining millions at a bigger scale. And I always had enormous, right out of the gate, enormous respect for their commitment, their skill, their heart. And then outside of the ring, don’t tell anybody, so many of these people, men and women alike were just so warm and open and accessible. It reminded me of the early days in the eighties when I was in high school and I got into punk rock and you can go see your favorite band and there were four feet away and they were pretty cool to talk to you afterwards. That’s what I like about the indie wrestling. Well, same thing.

    MF: So knowing so much about that world, how easy was it for you to fall into Wild Bill?

    Bauer: Not that easy, because what if I didn’t do it well? , I had so much respect for the reality of this world that I really, really, really wanted to make sure I dotted my I’s and crossed my T’s to honor it. And I did a lot of work to change my body. I did a lot of research and I really wasn’t sure until the first time I opened my mouth as the character. And it turns out that the writing was good enough and the prep was good enough, that the character came to life and then basically dragged my ass through the series after that. Thank God.

    MF: He’s certainly a vivid character. And for you not knowing much about wrestling and these leagues, what type of preparation for Willie, because she’s Willie, your character is very involved in the DWL.

    McCormack: Yeah, she was very involved. I mean, I think most of the stuff I relate to with Willie is sort of managing in a world that’s filled with men, which I, you know, certainly most women have had to do in their careers. I think in film sets, we do it a lot more. And I certainly did it a lot more, you know, years ago when it was almost all men. I definitely relate to that. I relate to loving I mean, for me, it’s very similar to loving the theater and being obsessed with that and being only able to see yourself in one world. And I think Willie is tunnel vision is like that about wrestling. I think for her valet was, you know, she could be a valet, so she was a valet. Now she can do this. So she does this. She’s just not leaving the Bill no matter what. And so I think I try to think about that obsession, that obsessive quality in her, then there’s the whole other side of her, which I think is really interesting.

    Michael Waldron and Mike O’Malley have done such a good job at painting, a sort of complex character in that her family life is definitely seems she loves them, but it’s sort of secondary. And I don’t know if she sort of stumbled into it or it happened by accident. I’m just looking forward to sort of exploring more of that too. It’s been more [crosstalk] explored later in the first season.

    MF: What is the relationship between Willie and Wild Bill?

    McCormack: Well, she was his valet and they were also together romantically. So I mean, they were in love, I think probably he was her main love, her big love and broke her heart when he didn’t take her.

    Bauer: Yeah. That’s what I was going to say. That Willie was Wild Bill’s everything and that didn’t last, but they came up together. I mean, to me, what’s exciting about it, especially as Mary had been saying, you know, we’re show folk where people who live, we exist to entertain you, both somewhat in real life, but also as these characters. And these two came together in the midst of that vocabulary as well. So, in my imagination, there’s nothing like a romantic alliance that is also energized by a similar aesthetic and how many conversations they had about that sucks. That’s great. And agreeing on that. And then when life happens and things change, you know, we go different directions, but I don’t think either of the characters ever let go of what that original sense of connection and purpose was.

    McCormack: I agree.

    Bauer: And you feel that, you feel that now.


    James Harrison and Allen Maldonado share how their pro football backgrounds compare to their wrestling in the show.

    Moviefone: James, how familiar were you with the independent wrestling leagues?

    James Harrison: To be totally honest with you I wasn’t too familiar with independent wrestling leagues. I was more, from being a kid watching WWE, well WWF then, so I wasn’t too familiar with it. I can’t say that I was.

    MF: Allen, can you describe your character Rooster and how he fits into the league?

    Maldonado: Man, I am the child prodigy of the kind of wrestling that kind of is still in the independent leagues after all these years, even though he is an incredible talent. So he’s dealing with that kind of frustration of not getting his just do just yet. So you kind of see him navigate in this independent league as best as he can while trying to really find a spot for him to shine within the league. So it’s a kind of seesaw of emotions with Rooster.

    MF: And how about Apocalypse, James?

    Harrison: Apocalypse is, he’s a been there, done that. He’s been with league for a long time. I think he’s more understanding because they were understanding with him through this process of rehab, recovery and so on and so forth. So he’s more a level-headed guy that tries to talk to Rooster and get him to understand that it’s not something that they’re doing against you it’s for the better and the benefit of the DWL and what they believe is best for the league.

    MF: How much of the actual wrestling are you doing? Are there stunt people or are you doing that a lot yourself?

    Harrison: I am doing 100% of my own wrestling. No one did any stunts for me and everything that you see is I.

    MF: Well I know you played in the NFL, so did that help? And then what other preparation did you do to do these wrestling scenes?


    Harrison:
    So for me being a former athlete, it made it a lot easier to actually get a grasp of what it is they were trying to do and put it into play and be able to do it safely because the guys that we learned from, they’re excellent with giving us details and teaching us how to do these stunts and how to wrestle and do it safely. So being a former athlete, it was a lot easier for me to transition to that, especially when it came to actually taking the bumps and bruises.

    So you actually have to hit that mat, and hitting that mat does not feel good. I mean, it gives very little. It is a hard surface and the closer you get to the edges, the more it hurts. So you have to be ready to take the bumps and bruises, especially when you’re getting clotheslined two, three times by somebody that got say 22-inch arms, and you only weigh like 160 pounds. You know what I’m saying?

    Maldonado: Also being a former athlete, you know what I’m saying? Because me and James, we won two Super Bowls together, and being able to transfer all of those years in the league and the NFL over to wrestling was pretty much easy.

    Harrison: He likes to embellish a lot.

    MF: Okay, so being tackled as a football player and slamming helmets and being smashed onto the green, the grass, is that a lot different than the mat, the wrestling mat?

    Maldonado: It’s similar. James will attest to that, but that mat, it has no give. There was a take where I get clotheslined by James at, what, I think he was at 235 at that time, and they had to do it like seven times and I made sure Pete, our director, I said, “If we got to do this an eighth, Pete, you’re going to get up in here and get this clothesline. I got clotheslined seven times. We got it. We got it.”

    But no, the wrestling part was fun. That was living out your childhood dream. The eight-year-old jumping off of the couches. So being able to do the stunts, now I probably did about, I say 90% of my stunts. I didn’t do all of them. They were doing some crazy stuff in there, but I did some crazy stuff too.


    Kelli Berglund & Alison Ruff talk about playing women in the wrestling world.

    Moviefone: Kelli, how familiar were you with independent wrestling leagues?

    Kelli Berglund: I knew nothing about independent wrestling leagues going into this show. I knew nothing about wrestling, period. So it really was a total learning journey for me, which was really exciting because as an actor, what you want is to dive into something deep and immerse yourself in the knowledge of something new potentially. And that’s exactly what I did. And I learned so much, I’m still learning so much about wrestling, but I have a huge newfound respect for the people that do this.

    MF: So you probably also do not know what a valet is?

    Berglund: No.

    MF: Me neither. So can you tell, can you just let all of us out here who don’t know what that is, what is the valet ?

    Berglund: A valet by definition is a wrestler’s manager, but I like to consider a valet kind of like a cheerleader as well. So, in terms of being Ace’s valet, she’ll run out into the ring with him and get the crowd going because Ace is a face. So therefore we want the crowd to love him and cheer for him. Whereas if he was a heel, I would run out and insult the crowd and, and want them to hate him and hate us. So I stand outside the ring and cheer him on and want him to do his best. But I also think valet have a pretty extensive knowledge of wrestling as well, because she will give him advice as to what she thinks would be the best moves for him or what would play really well. So, it’s not just arm candy that runs out in the ring with him. There is a bit of wrestling knowledge that comes with it.

    MF: And Alison, Stacy knows a lot about wrestling because she’s married to Jack. How does Stacy feel about independent wrestling and how it affects her family?

    Alison Luff: I think going into her marriage, she knew that she is marrying into a family that is immersed in wrestling that runs this league. I don’t think she necessarily saw her life. I don’t necessarily think that she saw her life like this and saw her being so involved. Do you know when they first got together, they got together in college. This was when Jack’s father was still running the league. And I think that we watched her start to navigate just how much their family is involved. And I enjoyed that aspect. I enjoyed watching her balance, the hardcore being involved in wrestling and holding her husband accountable for also giving that same attention to her family and her marriage.

    MF: What is that dynamic between Stacy and Jack? I mean, I loved the financial aspect because it’s so true.

    Luff: Yes. I mean, I call Stacey, the queen of accountability, they’re best friends. I think they have a very strong marriage. They’re still very, very much in love, but they’re also about 10 years into their marriage. They’ve got an eight year old son. They’re not a newlywed couple anymore. And I like to watch that dynamic versus the dynamic of ACE and Kelli or sorry, ACE and Crystal. But like any good marriage, they hold each other accountable for their actions and they challenge one another and they want to see their partner thrive. She wants to see her partner thrive, Jack thrive and what he does in his wrestling, because that’s what makes him happy. But she’s still as the mother and the wife is going to prioritize their home and make sure that he’s doing so as well.

    MF: Kelli, let’s talk about women in wrestling because valets are usually always women. And then also your character Crystal, she actually wants to wrestle, but nobody pays any attention to that.

    Berglund: Yes. So, as we see the serious progress, I think we get to learn a little bit more about Crystal and what big dreams she has and definitely more of her athletic abilities that should be showcased, but hopefully get way more showcased later on.

    MF: Why is it that women are just not, they’re kind of neglected? I mean they’re relegated to be the valet, but they can be in the ring.

    Berglund: No, I think it gets a little muddy because I’m not only Ace’s valet, but also his girlfriend, a fleeing in a sense. So I think because Jack wants to keep him so focused on his career and being a good wrestler and playing to the crowd and having them love him that the opportunity almost is a threat to Ace. If I was to also wrestle and because he’s a very emotional guy, I mean, the men in the show definitely act out on their emotions. And I think the women are the ones that are a lot more level-headed in their decision-making. So I think it would totally throw him off. And unfortunately that’s at the expense of Crystal and that’s why she’s putting this place at the start. Let’s keep him happy. She’ll be the cute valet. That’ll be great. But like I said before, she sees herself way beyond this. And it’s just a matter of the opportunity presenting itself and proving it to Jack, including it to all these people that she could absolutely be right there with them.


    Michael Waldron and Mike O’Malley talk about their work behind the camera.

    Moviefone: Michael, I know you probably best for like fantasy and adventure type series. So where did the idea for sports drama come from?

    Michael Waldron: Well, I mean, oddly enough, I think Heels probably has more in common with those fantasy series and stuff than you might think, because yes, wrestling is an athletic endeavor, but it’s also one that involves fantasy. It’s an artistic endeavor. It’s a story. It’s characters telling a story in the ring. And so I was really dry… I love wrestling, and that was kind of… I think that there’s a lot of similarities between pro wrestling and superhero comics, and superhero movies. The very sort of binary nature of good versus evil, these mythical figures going toe to toe. I was very drawn in this show in just what happens sort of behind the curtain of this world and just exploring that. Who are the people telling these stories? Because that’s what they are. They’re really amazing stories and wrestling is an incredible artistic endeavor, as well as an athletic.

    MF: Mike, you have many different jobs on this show, so let’s start with show runner. What are your responsibilities as show runner and how do you collaborate with Michael in that position?

    Mike O’Malley: Well, the first job as show runner is don’t mess up the great script. That’s basically the job. Michael has done the hardest thing that there is to do in our business, which is come up with an original idea, original setting, original characters. And that’s what I got stoked about when I read these scripts, I was like, “Oh man, if we cast this right, we can do this.” And it’s really just hiring the best people, it’s… Showrunner, I understand why the term exists and I’m happy to call myself one, but it’s kind of a conductor. You hire amazing people who do their jobs incredibly well, and you get a little bit of this, little bit of that, little more of this, little more of that, and just making sure that there’s a cohesiveness, I think, to what it is that you’re trying to do.

    And so the challenge there is hiring great people and continuing to motivate them and bringing the best out of them. It’s like a head coach of a football team, I think. The great part is that you get to be the coach and you get to call some plays. The part of it that’s tough is that sometimes people don’t necessarily like the play that you’re calling and how are you going to manage that? But that’s the job.

    MF: Speaking about casting, you’re also an actor in this series. Tell me about Charles Gully and the FWD.

    O’Malley: Well, Charlie Gully is a great character that Michael created that evolved a little bit to the limits of my acting ability. He is a rival promoter to the DWL, who takes it quite personally when Jack makes an offhand comment criticizing his business and how he takes that personally is he decides he’s going to get back at Jack through doing whatever he can do to undermine the DWL, the Duffy Wrestling League. That character is a fun character to play when you give someone motivation where someone feels as if they have been slighted or felt that they’ve been disrespected, how they write that wrong. Whenever you have a character who’s trying to right a wrong that he feels is a really unfairly put upon him, it gives you an incredible strong objective of play, and that was fun.

    ‘Heels’ premieres on Starz on August 15.

  • Tom Hiddleston & Gugu Mbatha-Raw on their new series ‘Loki’

    Tom Hiddleston & Gugu Mbatha-Raw on their new series ‘Loki’

    In this exclusive interview with Made in Hollywood, the stars of ‘Loki’ give some hints about the new series.

    Tom Hiddleston shares where Loki is at the beginning of the story, and why he was interested in coming back to the character. His co-star Gugu Mbatha-Raw describes the Time Variance Authority, and Wunmi Mosaku joins her to share how they felt about being on their first Marvel set.

    On the production side, head writer Michael Waldron talks about writing for Hiddleston’s portrayal of Loki, and director Kate Herron shares her rather unique strategy to get Marvel Studios to hire her on to the production.

    ‘Loki’ is now playing on Disney+.

  • ‘Loki’ Series Lands ‘Rick and Morty’ Writer As Showrunner

    ‘Loki’ Series Lands ‘Rick and Morty’ Writer As Showrunner

    Marvel

    He may not have “ultimate power,” but “Rick and Morty” writer Michael Waldron will be calling the shots on Marvel’s upcoming “Loki” series.

    Tom Hiddleston will be reprising his role as the god of mischief in the show, which will be one of the first original series for Disney’s new streaming service, Disney+.

    Waldon will write the pilot, act as show creator, and executive produce the series.

    The series will reportedly follow Loki as he shapeshifts through human history and influences historical events. (So it will be his fault, probably that the Titanic sank. Or was it those guys in “Time Bandits?” Which is also supposedly being turned into a TV series.)

    Besides writing and producing “Rick and Morty,” Waldron is developing “Florida Man” with Steven Soderbergh for Paramount TV.

    Waldron also wrote “The Worst Guy of All Time (And the Girl Who Came to Kill Him),” a sci-fi rom-com feature spec script that earned him a spot on the 2018 Black List.

    By the way, we can also expect Marvel series focusing on Vision and Scarlet Witch and one about Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Will the actors who’ve played them in the Marvel films reprise these roles? We’ll see.

    [Via The Hollywood Reporter]