Tag: paul-bettany

  • Emily Hampshire Joins Marvel’s ‘Vision’ Series as E.D.I.T.H.

    (Left) Emily Hampshire in Caitlin Cronenberg's 'Humane.' Courtesy of Steve Wilkie. An IFC Films & Shudder Release. (Right) Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    (Left) Emily Hampshire in Caitlin Cronenberg’s ‘Humane.’ Courtesy of Steve Wilkie. An IFC Films & Shudder Release. (Right) Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • Emily Hampshire is joining the ‘WandaVision’ spin-off focused on Vision.
    • She’ll play the AI tech system E.D.I.T.H. as seen in ‘Spider-Man: Far From Home.’
    • Paul Bettany returns to star as Vision.

    The cast continues to grow for Marvel’s second spin-off from successful original MCU Disney+ offering ‘WandaVision.’ Though the title has officially yet to be confirmed, we do know that it’ll be focused on Paul Bettany’s Vision following the events of the show.

    And now, via Deadline (though actually confirming a report from regular Twitter scooper Daniel Richtman), word arrives that ‘Schitt’s Creek’s Emily Hampshire will be part of the ensemble.

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    According to both sources, Hampshire is aboard to play E.D.I.T.H., the sophisticated artificial intelligence (the name is an acronym for Even Dead, I’m The Hero), Tony Stark’s (Robert Downey Jr.) augmented reality security and defense system.

    In the MCU, E.D.I.T.H. was originally created by Stark and bequeathed to Peter Parker (Tom Holland) following Stark’s death and seen in ‘Spider-Man: Far From Home.’ It provides access to Stark Industries’ global satellite network along with an arsenal of missiles and drones.

    It remains to be seen how E.D.I.T.H. shows up in the series –– in the Spidey movie, the system was voiced by Dawn Michelle King, who served as first assistant editor and presumably was only going to serve as the initial version of the role, but was good enough that director Jon Watts kept her performance.

    Hampshire’s casting, though, suggests we’re likely to see a humanoid version of the tech.

    Related Article: Marvel’s Disney+ ‘Vision’ Series Adding Actor T’Nia Miller as Jocasta

    What’s the story of the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    There are no concrete plot details about the new show yet, but back when it was first mooted, there was talk of the “White” Vision looking to reclaim his memories, in a continuation of his storyline.

    After Vision died at the hands of Thanos in 2018’s ‘Avengers: Infinity War,’ he returned twice over in 2021’s ‘WandaVision,’ first as a spectral creation by his beloved, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), through magic powered by grief; then as a rebuilt, nuts-and-bolts android with a ghost white appearance and zero memory of his past life.

    When the two Visions battled in the ‘WandaVision’ finale, Wanda’s Vision restored the “ghost” Vision’s memories, then Wanda allowed her Vision to fade from existence. The new show will take place after those events, as ghost Vision presumably explores his new purpose in life.

    Who is making the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlike last year’s ‘Agatha All Along’, (one of Marvel’s bigger successes in 2024) the new show is being handled by someone other than ‘WandaVision’ creator Jac Schaeffer.

    Marvel has hired Terry Matalas, who has worked on shows such as ’12 Monkeys’, ‘Terra Nova’, but rose to acclaim thanks to his efforts overseeing ‘Star Trek: Picard’ Season 3, which definitely pleased fans more than earlier seasons, to run the new ‘Vision’ series.

    His work on ‘Picard’ certainly caught the attention of avowed ‘Trek’ fan Kevin Feige, and so Matalas now has the job. The only people who might be upset are those eagerly awaiting the much-talked-about ‘Star Trek: Legacy’ show seemingly set up by the finale of ‘Picard’.

    Who else is in the ‘Vision’ series?

    James Spader as voice of Ultron in 'Avengers: Age of Ultron'. Photo: Marvel Studios.
    James Spader as voice of Ultron in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’. Photo: Marvel Studios.

    So far, we’ve learned that James Spader, who played the rampaging AI who caused so much trouble for the Avengers in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ and effectively created the original version of Vision, will once more be back in performance capture gear to play the speechifying villain.

    Known for playing stern authoritarian types and generally grouchy personalities (witness his superbly sarcastic –– but ultimately heroic –– Captain Liam Shaw in ‘Picard’), Todd Stashwick will be an assassin who is on the trail of the android and the technology he possesses.

    Faran Tahir will reprise the role of the villainous Raza, leader of the terrorist organization the Ten Rings who tried to kill Tony Stark in ‘Iron Man.’ Though quite how his connection to the Rings organization works in the wake of ‘Shang-Chi’ remains to be seen.

    Then we have Ruaridh Mollica, who will play a character named Tucker.

    And, most recently, ‘Foundation’s T’Nia Miller was added as Jocasta, described as cunning and vengeful, with a grudge against Ultron. In the comics, she is a robot Ultron builds to be his bride who eventually sides with the Avengers. We’d have to imagine that Matalas and his writers have some other ideas for her storyline in the show.

    Where else have we seen Emily Hampshire?

    (L to R) Sirena Gulamgaus, Emily Hampshire, and Enrico Colantoni in Caitlin Cronenberg's 'Humane.' Courtesy of Robin Cymbaly. An IFC Films & Shudder Release.
    (L to R) Sirena Gulamgaus, Emily Hampshire, and Enrico Colantoni in Caitlin Cronenberg’s ‘Humane.’ Courtesy of Robin Cymbaly. An IFC Films & Shudder Release.

    Hampshire played Stevie Budd for the entire run of ‘Schitt’s Creek,’ scoring plenty of acclaim, including several Canadian acting awards.

    But perhaps more pertinently for this series, she was also a key component of the cast for Matalas’ ‘12 Monkeys.’

    Other credits include movies such as ‘The Death & Life of John F. Donovan,’ ‘The End of Sex,’ ‘Self Reliance,’ ‘Humane’ and the upcoming crime comedy ‘Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice,’ which is currently in post-production awaiting a release date.

    When will the ‘Vision’ series land on our screens?

    Disney/Marvel is aiming to have the show arrive on Disney+ in 2026, with filming underway in the UK.

    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies and TV Shows Featuring Vision:

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  • ‘Vision’: T’Nia Miller Will Be Playing Jocasta

    T’Nia Miller in 'Foundation', now streaming on Apple TV+. Photo: Apple TV+.
    T’Nia Miller in ‘Foundation’, now streaming on Apple TV+. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Preview:

    • T’Nia Miller has joined the Marvel/Disney+ series ‘Vision.’
    • Paul Bettany is reprising his role from ‘WandaVision’ and the MCU movies.
    • Terry Matalas is running the show.

    While we still don’t know exactly whether Marvel’s second follow-up to ‘WandaVision’ (following ‘Agatha All Along’) is called ‘Vision Quest’ or simply ‘Vision,’ a better idea of the cast is beginning to come together.

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    Via scooper Daniel Richtman, word arrives that British actor T’Nia Miller is the latest addition to the new series, and she’ll be bringing to life a character named Jocasta, who is reportedly cunning and powerful, driven by revenge.

    She’s apparently a main character, and Miller joins Paul Bettany, who plays Vision on the Disney+ series.

    Related Article: James Spader’s Marauding Ultron Will be Back in Marvel’s Vision-focused series

    What’s the story of the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    There are no concrete plot details about the new show yet, but back when it was first mooted, there was talk of the “White” Vision looking to reclaim his memories, in a continuation of his storyline.

    After Vision died at the hands of Thanos in 2018’s ‘Avengers: Infinity War,’ he returned twice over in 2021’s ‘WandaVision,’ first as a spectral creation by his beloved, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), through magic powered by grief; then as a rebuilt, nuts-and-bolts android with a ghost white appearance and zero memory of his past life.

    When the two Visions battled in the ‘WandaVision’ finale, Wanda’s Vision restored the “ghost” Vision’s memories, then Wanda allowed her Vision to fade from existence. The new show will take place after those events, as ghost Vision presumably explores his new purpose in life.

    Who is making the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlike last year’s ‘Agatha All Along’, (one of Marvel’s bigger successes in 2024) the new show is being handled by someone other than ‘WandaVision’ creator Jac Schaeffer.

    Marvel has hired Terry Matalas, who has worked on shows such as ’12 Monkeys’, ‘Terra Nova’, but rose to acclaim thanks to his efforts overseeing ‘Star Trek: Picard’ Season 3, which definitely pleased fans more than earlier seasons, to run the new ‘Vision’ series.

    His work on ‘Picard’ certainly caught the attention of avowed ‘Trek’ fan Kevin Feige, and so Matalas now has the job. The only people who might be upset are those eagerly awaiting the much-talked-about ‘Star Trek: Legacy’ show seemingly set up by the finale of ‘Picard’.

    Who else is in the ‘Vision’ series?

    James Spader as voice of Ultron in 'Avengers: Age of Ultron'. Photo: Marvel Studios.
    James Spader as voice of Ultron in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’. Photo: Marvel Studios.

    So far, we’ve learned that James Spader, who played the rampaging AI who caused so much trouble for the Avengers in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ and effectively created the original version of Vision, will once more be back in performance capture gear to play the speechifying villain.

    Known for playing stern authoritarian types and generally grouchy personalities (witness his superbly sarcastic –– but ultimately heroic –– Captain Liam Shaw in ‘Picard’), Todd Stashwick will be an assassin who is on the trail of the android and the technology he possesses.

    Faran Tahir will reprise the role of the villainous Raza, leader of the terrorist organization the Ten Rings who tried to kill Tony Stark in ‘Iron Man.’ Though quite how his connection to the Rings organization works in the wake of ‘Shang-Chi’ remains to be seen.

    Then we have Ruaridh Mollica, who will play a character named Tucker.

    Marvel Comics character Jocasta. Photo: Marvel.com.
    Marvel Comics character Jocasta. Photo: Marvel.com.

    And in case you need bringing up to speed on how Jocasta will fit into the story, in the comic books, she is a robot Ultron builds to be his bride who eventually sides with the Avengers. We’d have to imagine that Matalas and his writers have some other ideas for her storyline in the show.

    Still, the idea of the character as someone with a grudge to bear against Ultron and the power to carry it out certainly has appeal.

    Where else have we seen T’Nia Miller?

    (L to R) Laura Birn and T’Nia Miller in 'Foundation,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Laura Birn and T’Nia Miller in ‘Foundation,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Miller has appeared in movies including ‘Obey’ and ‘Dark Corners,’ but might be better known for her work on small screens.

    She’s popped up in shows such as ‘Doctor Who,’ ‘Sex Education,’ ‘The Peripheral,’ ‘The Diplomat,’ ‘Gangs of London,’ ‘Foundation,’ and two of Mike Flanagan’s Netflix horror series, ‘The Haunting of Bly Manner’ and ‘The Fall of the House of Usher.’

    When will the ‘Vision’ series land on our screens?

    Disney/Marvel is aiming to have the show arrive on Disney+ in 2026, with filming underway in the UK.

    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies and TV Shows Featuring Vision:

    Buy MCU Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Here’

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Opening in theaters November 1st is ‘Here,’ directed by Robert Zemeckis and starring Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Paul Bettany, Kelly Reilly, Michelle Dockery, Gwilym Lee, Ophelia Lovibond, and David Fynn.

    Related Article: Tom Hanks Features in First Pictures of Robert Zemeckis’ ‘Here’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Robert Zemeckis has made some genuinely great films, including the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy, ‘Contact,’ and ‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit,’ and the mark of much of his career has been his endless fascination with pushing the boundaries of filmmaking and visual effects forward with new technologies and techniques. But for much of the past two decades, he has focused on the latter seemingly at the expense of the former, turning out a variety of films that may offer up new and sometimes dazzling effects while skimping on good stories and well-developed characters.

    Such is the case with ‘Here,’ Zemeckis’ formally experimental new film in which he positions his camera, so to speak, slightly above and to the right of a single piece of land in Pennsylvania. The film then documents events that have happened on that spot, from millions of years ago when it was a dinosaur-inhabited swamp wiped out by an asteroid, to the romance between two First Nations lovers, to the series of families who inhabit a modest house over the course of the last century. Most of the focus, however, centers on one family and their rather banal history, with Zemeckis’ distant camera and constant changing of the scene failing to allow even the most perfunctory connection to these characters. The result is a shallow, trite film that also doesn’t do its lead actors any favors with the distracting digital de-aging foisted upon them.

    Story and Direction

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Here’ is based on a 2014 graphic novel by Richard McGuire, which he expanded from a six-page comic strip he first wrote and drew in 1989. In both the strip and the graphic novel, McGuire drew panels within panels, showing the space in different periods of time and connecting events from one panel to another whether they took place in the past, the present, or the future. Working from a screenplay he co-wrote with Eric Roth, Zemeckis attempts the same thing on film: as one scene plays out, a panel opens in a section of the screen and either expands or dissolves into the next scene, with the eras in time overlapping.

    The problem is that Zemeckis and Roth do very little to make connections between the different eras, and with the exception of the period during which the house (which is built in 1907) is owned by the Young family, not enough time is spent in any of the eras to give us meaningful insight into how these different periods correspond or how life plays out in similar ways even in varied circumstances. After a while the continually opening frames just become annoying because they signify little.

    That the most time is spent with the Young family is the second major problem with ‘Here.’ After a brief prologue in which the aged Richard (Hanks) and Margaret (Wright) enter the now-empty house, we flash back to when Richard’s dad Al (Bettany) and his new wife Rose (Reilly) first purchased it after World War II for the princely sum of $3,400. Beset by PTSD, Al drinks too much but nevertheless dutifully goes off to work for an insurance company, while Rose stays home and tends to their kids. They squabble, the frugal (almost penny-pinching) Al loses his job, they need to take out a second mortgage at one point, and their three kids grow up, including Richard, who is actually quite talented as an artist and harbors dreams of becoming one professionally. “Get a job where you wear a suit,” Al barks at him, giving us a preview of what’s ahead.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sure enough, Richard gets his sweetheart Margaret pregnant at 18, and he’s forced to abandon his dreams and go into the insurance business as well. We find out later on that Margaret also gave up on a whole slew of ambitions, including owning their own house: Richard is even more thrifty than his dad, always coming up with reasons to keep their family under his parents’ roof instead of making a home of their own. And that’s how it goes for the Youngs, whose repressed dreams, secret yearnings, family get-togethers and fights, and ultimate destinies offer nothing we haven’t seen before in numerous family dramas, and doesn’t even absorb us in any way because our view hangs in one place above the living room like a security camera we might as well be checking on our phone.

    The rest of the stories – minus the earliest dinosaur days and subsequent ice age – get even shorter shrift. The best is that of Leo (David Fynn) and Stella (Ophelia Lovibond), a free-spirited, bohemian couple in the 1920s who hit the big time when Leo invents the La-Z-Boy recliner (spoiler alert: it’s not true). The story of the First Nations couple goes nowhere (and seems tokenistic), nor does the tale of a woman (Dockery) who is worried sick that her early adopter aviator husband will die in a crash. A peek into the era of the Revolutionary War, when Benjamin Franklin lived a few hundred feet from where the Young house is eventually built, is simply pointless (the big connection? Richard and his brother wear Ben Franklin costumes at a family Halloween party).

    The sole story that takes place after the Young family sells the house, about the well-off Black couple who purchase it, settles on the father (Nicholas Pinnock) and mother (Nikki Amuka-Bird) instructing their teenage son (Cache Vanderpuye) on how to behave if he’s ever pulled over by a cop as its big moment. Instead of adding depth to their lives or how the neighborhood around them is changing, Zemeckis and Roth settle for simple button-pushing before paneling back to the whitebread, flavorless Youngs.

    In the end, none of it really sticks. The Youngs are too stereotypical to come across as real, and nobody else gets enough time to breathe. The single-shot framing becomes a box from which the story and the people in it cannot escape.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Much has been made of the fact that the teaming of Zemeckis, Roth, Wright, and Hanks constitutes a reunion of the principal creatives of 1994’s ‘Forrest Gump,’ perhaps accentuating the director’s sentimentality over the passage of time. But trying to turn back time for his stars by de-aging them is not the best way to address this. While de-aging has come a long way – even in just the past few years – it’s still a weird, jarring sensation to see Tom Hanks and Robin Wright with smoother versions of their faces plastered on their heads, especially when their voices and physical movements are of the moment.

    Wright probably fares best here, even given her stereotypical character and some of the grating dialogue that comes out of her mouth, while Tom Hanks continues his recent stretch of stilted performances and never relaxes into the role of the unmotivated Richard. Paul Bettany’s Al is supposed to be hard of hearing as a result of his WWII injuries, but the usually reliable Bettany ends up shouting most of his lines theatrically – as if projecting to the back row – whenever he speaks. The bottom line, however, is that it’s a shame to see capable actors like Bettany and Kelly Reilly do their best to animate these stock, post-war suburban disappointments.

    Zemeckis doesn’t do them any favors either with his fixed gaze, which forces the actors to move closer to the camera when it’s time to deliver important bits of story or foreshadowing (speaking of which, the latter is incredibly heavy-handed: one character makes sure to let us know three times that they’ve forgotten something before – surprise! – they end up with Alzheimer’s). This all just heightens the artificiality of the whole setup – bringing the actors closer to the lens ironically adds more distance to what we’re watching.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    We’ll always respect Robert Zemeckis for giving us some of our favorite films of all time – we stand by our assertion that ‘Contact’ is one of the finest sci-fi films of its time, while ‘Back to the Future’ is just about a perfect film (and the trilogy as a whole comes damn close to that hat-trick as well). And even when we don’t admire the films much – ‘Beowulf,’ ‘Death Becomes Her,’ or a truly dreadful outing like ‘Welcome to Marwen’ – we appreciate his curiosity about how far the medium can go and how it can continue to deliver sights that audiences have never seen.

    But he’s paid a price for that quest along the way – sacrificing stories and characters with depth and nuanced emotional honesty for stunts that try fruitlessly to replace both — and ‘Here’ is the latest casualty of that journey.

    ‘Here’ receives 4 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Here’?

    A single area of land and the dwellings built on it is the scene for literally millennia of events, from the extinction of the dinosaurs to the COVID pandemic, with much of the focus on one mid-20th century family who live there for decades.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Here’?

    • Tom Hanks as Richard Young
    • Robin Wright as Margaret Young
    • Paul Bettany as Al Young
    • Kelly Reilly as Rose Young
    • Michelle Dockery as Mrs. Harter
    • Gwilym Lee as John Harter
    • Ophelia Lovibond as Stella Beekman
    • David Fynn as Leo Beekman
    'Here' director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director's Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    ‘Here’ director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director’s Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

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  • Todd Stashwick join Marvel’s ‘Vision’ Series

    Todd Stashwick as Captain Liam Shaw in 'Star Trek: Picard' on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Trae Patton/Paramount+. ©2021 Viacom, International Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Todd Stashwick as Captain Liam Shaw in ‘Star Trek: Picard’ on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Trae Patton/Paramount+. ©2021 Viacom, International Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • Todd Stashwick is joining the cast of Marvel’s ‘Vision’ series.
    • It marks a reunion for him with ‘Picard’ showrunner Terry Matalas.
    • Paul Bettany returns as the title character.

    Looks like Terry Matalas, the showrunner for Marvel’s next spin-off from ‘WandaVision,’ is looking to work once more with one of his veteran actors.

    Todd Stashwick, who was first cast by Matalas in the ‘12 Monkeys’ TV series, recently reunited with the writer/producer for ‘Star Trek: Picard’.

    And now he’s landed a key role in the still-to-be-officially-titled series built around Paul Bettany’s Vision character, which we recently learned will also feature the return of James Spader as villainous AI Ultron.

    It’ll mark the second spinoff, following ‘Agatha All Along,’ which arrives on Disney+ on September 18th.

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    What’s the story of the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    There are no concrete plot details about the new show yet, but back when it was first mooted, there was talk of the “White” Vision looking to reclaim his memories, in a continuation of his storyline.

    After Vision died at the hands of Thanos in 2018’s ‘Avengers: Infinity War,’ he returned twice over in 2021’s ‘WandaVision,’ first as a spectral creation by his beloved, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), through magic powered by grief; then as a rebuilt, nuts-and-bolts android with a ghost white appearance and zero memory of his past life.

    When the two Visions battled in the ‘WandaVision’ finale, Wanda’s Vision restored the “ghost” Vision’s memories, then Wanda allowed her Vision to fade from existence. The new show will take place after those events, as ghost Vision presumably explores his new purpose in life.

    Related Article: James Spader’s Marauding Ultron Will be Back in Marvel’s Vision-focused series

    Who is making the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlike ‘Agatha All Along’ (which will be on Disney+ with its first two episodes on September 18th), the new show is being handled by someone other than ‘WandaVision’ creator Jac Schaeffer.

    Marvel has hired Terry Matalas, who has worked on shows such as ’12 Monkeys’, ‘Terra Nova’, but rose to acclaim thanks to his efforts overseeing ‘Star Trek: Picard’ Season 3, which definitely pleased fans more than earlier seasons, to run the new ‘Vision’ series.

    His work on ‘Picard’ certainly caught the attention of avowed ‘Trek’ fan Kevin Feige, and so Matalas now has the job. The only people who might be upset are those eagerly awaiting the much-talked-about ‘Star Trek: Legacy’ show seemingly set up by the finale of ‘Picard’.

    Who will Stashwick play in the Vision series?

    Todd Stashwick as Captain Liam Shaw in 'Star Trek: Picard' on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Trae Patton/Paramount+. ©2021 Viacom, International Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Todd Stashwick as Captain Liam Shaw in ‘Star Trek: Picard’ on Paramount+. Photo Credit: Trae Patton/Paramount+. ©2021 Viacom, International Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Known for playing stern authoritarian types and generally grouchy personalities (witness his superbly sarcastic –– but ultimately heroic –– Captain Liam Shaw in ‘Picard’), Stashwick here will be an assassin who is on the trail of the android and the technology he possesses.

    When will the ‘Vision’ series land on our screens?

    Disney/Marvel is aiming to have the show arrive on Disney+ in 2026, with shooting penciled in for early next year in the U.K.

    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies and TV Shows Featuring Vision:

    Buy MCU Movies On Amazon

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  • James Spader to Return as Ultron for Marvel’s Vision Series

    James Spader as voice of Ultron in 'Avengers: Age of Ultron'. Photo: Marvel Studios.
    James Spader as voice of Ultron in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’. Photo: Marvel Studios.

    Preview:

    • James Spader will be back in performance capture gear as Ultron.
    • The ‘Age of Ultron’ villain will reappear for Marvel’s series focused on Vision.
    • Paul Bettany returns as the title character.

    If we’re honest, while ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ didn’t quite match up to ‘The Avengers’, there’s no denying that James Spader’s wholehearted and often kooky performance as the rogue artificial intelligence Ultron was certainly an entertaining reason to watch it.

    And despite his seeming destruction at the end of the movie (more on that below), Marvel is looking to bring him back for the new ‘Vision’ series spun-off from ‘WandaVision’ that will see Paul Bettany retuning as the android hero.

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    What’s the story of the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    There are no concrete plot details about the new show yet, but back when it was first mooted, there was talk of the “White” Vision looking to reclaim his memories, in a continuation of his storyline.

    After Vision died at the hands of Thanos in 2018’s ‘Avengers: Infinity War,’ he returned twice over in 2021’s ‘WandaVision,’ first as a spectral creation by his beloved, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), through magic powered by grief; then as a rebuilt, nuts-and-bolts android with a ghost white appearance and zero memory of his past life.

    When the two Visions battled in the ‘WandaVision’ finale, Wanda’s Vision restored the “ghost” Vision’s memories, then Wanda allowed her Vision to fade from existence. The new show will take place after those events, as ghost Vision presumably explores his new purpose in life.

    Who is making the ‘Vision’ series?

    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlike ‘Agatha All Along’ (which will be on Disney+ with its first two episodes on September 18th), the new show is being handled by someone other than ‘WandaVision’ creator Jac Schaeffer.

    Marvel has hired Terry Matalas, who has worked on shows such as ’12 Monkeys’, ‘Terra Nova’, but rose to acclaim thanks to his efforts overseeing ‘Star Trek: Picard’ Season 3, which definitely pleased fans more than earlier seasons, to run the new ‘Vision’ series.

    His work on ‘Picard’ certainly caught the attention of avowed ‘Trek’ fan Kevin Feige, and so Matalas now has the job. The only people who might be upset are those eagerly awaiting the much-talked-about ‘Star Trek: Legacy’ show seemingly set up by the finale of ‘Picard’.

    Related Article: Marvel Officially Orders ‘WandaVision’ Spin-Off Led by Paul Bettany

    How will Ultron factor in?

    James Spader as voice of Ultron in 'Avengers: Age of Ultron'. Photo: Marvel Studios.
    James Spader as voice of Ultron in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’. Photo: Marvel Studios.

    With zero plot getting loose from Marvel’s security field, the exact nature of Ultron’s appearance in the show is unknown for now.

    But they certainly have history.

    Ultron created Vision’s original synthetic body as the permanent home for his AI, but the Avengers intercepted it and instead placed Tony Stark’s AI assistant J.A.R.V.I.S. inside, creating Vision. At the end of ‘Age of Ultron,’ Vision confronts and, seemingly, destroys the final robot that contains Ultron’s consciousness.

    Whether the casting suggests some fragment of Ultron survived in the world or is somehow locked inside of Vision’s mind given their connection, we’ll have to wait and see.

    When will the ‘Vision’ series land on our screens?

    Disney/Marvel is aiming to have the show arrive on Disney+ in 2026.

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies and TV Shows Featuring Vision:

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  • First Images from Robert Zemeckis’ New Movie ‘Here’

    Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview: 

    • The first look at Robert Zemeckis’ new movie, ‘Here’ is online.
    • Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in the time-spanning drama.
    • It’s another experimental project for the ‘Forrest Gump’ team.

    The filmmaking team behind ‘Forrest Gump’ certainly know a thing or three about a story that spans a large amount of time, and one that required considerable effect advances to support its main character’s encounters with historical figures.

    So, as you might presume, their reunion –– and in this case, we mean specifically ‘Gump’ director Robert Zemeckis, stars Tom Hanks and Robin Wright and screenwriter Eric Roth –– also offers an expansive chronological storyline and some experimental techniques.

    The first look at the result, ‘Here’, is now online via Vanity Fair.

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    What’s the story of ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’ finds scriptwriter Roth adapting Richard McGuire’s much-loved graphic novel title.

    First published as a six-page comic strip in 1989, before being turned into a full graphic novel decades later, ‘Here’ is a high-concept story that focuses on one single room, telling the interconnected, overlapping stories of the many people who’ve inhabited that room over thousands of years.

    The film will feature a locked-down camera that never moves, with the action all occurring in one space, and, like the source material, overlapping panels representing changes in design for scene/time zone transitions.

    Hanks stars as baby boomer Richard, who grows up in the same house he ends up raising his own family in during the 1970s and 1980s, with Wright as his wife, Margaret.

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Zemeckis and his effects team are using a mixture of traditional make-up and cutting-edge digital techniques to portray the characters at different ages, and the story expands out further either way through time, showing Richard’s parents (played by Paul Bettany and Kelly Reilly), occupants of the house long before them and even people –– and creatures –– living in the space before the place was built. There will also be a segment set in 2020, following the couple who inhabit the house after Richard and Margaret.

    And though it features the very top end of de-aging effects, Zemeckis soon realized one way to make them work beyond what other filmmakers have tried:

    “It only works because the performances are so good. Both Tom and Robin understood instantly that, ‘Okay, we have to go back and channel what we were like 50 years ago or 40 years ago, and we have to bring that energy, that kind of posture, and even raise our voices higher. That kind of thing.”

    The aim, according to the director, is to show characters with whom the audience can connect.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’s what Zemeckis says about that concept:

    The whole point was to make the story identifiable. We didn’t want people [in the house] to be criminals or spies in highly dramatic situations. There are some people who probably won’t like the fact that the conflicts in the movie are not over the top—that they’re pretty rooted in reality.”

    Who else is in ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The cast also includes Michelle Dockery, David Fynn, Ophelia Lovibond, Nicholas Pinnock, Nikki Amuka-Bird and Anya Marco Harris.

    When will ‘Here’ be in theaters?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sony aims to have ‘Here’ in theaters on November 15th. So if you’re itching to see what Team ‘Gump’ have been up to, you only have a few months to wait now.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

    Buy Robert Zemeckis Movies on Amazon

    You can watch the new trailer for ‘Here’ by clicking on the video player below:

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  • 20th Century Studios Plans ‘Enemy Mine’ Remake

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Preview:

    • ‘Star Trek: Picard’ showrunner Terry Matalas will write an ‘Enemy Mine’ remake.
    • It’ll adapt the 1985 cult sci-fi movie.
    • No director is attached yet.

    Such was the impact of his work on ‘Star Trek: Picard’ (where he joined as a writer in Season 2 and then took Season 3, the last hurrah for the show, to new heights as showrunner) that Terry Matalas is a man very much in demand.

    Just last month, we learned that Matalas had been hired to oversee the new Marvel series spun off from ‘WandaVision’, which will follow the continuing adventures of Paul Bettany’s android character.

    And that’s not all. Now, via The Hollywood Reporter, we know that he’ll also be working for another arm of Disney –– 20th Century Studios, which has put a remake of ‘Enemy Mine’ into development, with Matalas on script duty.

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    What’s the story of ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    With mankind locked in desperate combat against a reptilian alien species, ‘Enemy Mine’ sees Dennis Quaid’s human pilot Davidge and Louis Gossett Jr.’s opposite number Drac crash landing on a desolate planet.

    Both have deep-seated hatred for one another but are forced to overcome their prejudices to survive. Things are taken up a notch when the human pilot must take care of the alien’s baby when the reptilian is no longer able.

    The original movie was based on a novella by the sci-fi author Barry B. Longyear. The novella was originally published in Isaac Asimov’s ‘Science Fiction’ magazine in 1979, winning the Nebula Award that year for best novella. It was followed by two sequels and eventually published as a trilogy titled ‘The Enemy Papers’.

    So if the new take on ‘Enemy Mine’ does well, you can expect Disney, never a company to let a franchise opportunity to go unexplored, to order at least one sequel.

    Related Article: Dennis Quaid Talks ‘The Long Game’ and Working with Jay Hernandez

    Who made the original ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Working from a script by Ed Khmara, German filmmaker Wolfgang Petersen made his English-language debut with the movie, taking it over after 20th Century Fox fired original director Richard Loncraine during production.

    The clash, which necessitated reshooting the film, ballooned the budget, with more woe coming when the movie crash landed at the box office.

    Since then, however, it has been re-evaluated as a cult movie, which goes some way to explain why it has been targeted for a remake. With any luck, the new film will have less of a chaotic production process.

    Who is making the new ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series 'Star Trek: Picard.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series ‘Star Trek: Picard.’ Photo: Trae Paatton/Paramount+ © 2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    So far, Matalas is the only person on the creative side hired to work on the movie, no director or producer is so far attached. 20th Century Studios boss Steve Asbell is overseeing development.

    Since it is at a very early stage in the process, the new ‘Enemy Mine’ does not yet have a release date.

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

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  • Marvel Orders Vision Series Starring Paul Bettany

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • Marvel is moving forward with its ‘Vision’ series.
    • Paul Bettany will return to star.
    • ‘Star Trek: Picard’ S3 showrunner Terry Matalas is in charge.

    Though the company has certainly committed to slowing down its output of both shows and movies, there continues to be forward movement from Marvel when it comes to new creations, or in this case, spin-offs.

    In terms of follow-ups to the successful ‘WandaVision’, we already have the Kathryn Hahn-starring ‘Agatha All Along’ on the way, and now, following initial chatter in 2022, there is official word via Variety on the series focused on Paul Bettany’s synthezoid, Vision.

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    What’s the story of the ‘Vision’ series?

    Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Paul Bettany and Elizabeth Olsen in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    There are no concrete plot details about the new show yet, but back when it was first mooted, there was talk of the “White” Vision looking to reclaim his memories, in a continuation of his storyline.

    After Vision died at the hands of Thanos in 2018’s ‘Avengers: Infinity War,’ he returned twice over in 2021’s ‘WandaVision,’ first as a spectral creation by his beloved, Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), through magic powered by grief; then as a rebuilt, nuts-and-bolts android with a ghost white appearance and zero memory of his past life.

    When the two Visions battled in the ‘WandaVision’ finale, Wanda’s Vision restored the “ghost” Vision’s memories, then Wanda allowed her Vision to fade from existence. The new show will take place after those events, as ghost Vision presumably explores his new purpose in life.

    Related Article: Aubrey Plaza, Joe Locke and More Join ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos’

    Who is making the ‘Vision’ series?

    Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series 'Star Trek: Picard.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series ‘Star Trek: Picard.’ Photo: Trae Paatton/Paramount+ © 2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Unlike ‘Agatha All Along’ (which will be on Disney+ with its first two episodes on September 18th), the new show is being handled by someone other than ‘WandaVision’ creator Jac Schaeffer.

    Marvel has hired Terry Matalas, who has worked on shows such as ’12 Monkeys’, ‘Terra Nova’, but rose to acclaim thanks to his efforts overseeing ‘Star Trek: Picard’ Season 3, which definitely pleased fans more than earlier seasons, to run the new ‘Vision’ series.

    His work on ‘Picard’ certainly caught the attention of avowed ‘Trek’ fan Kevin Feige, and so Matalas now has the job. The only people who might be upset are those eagerly awaiting the much-talked-about ‘Star Trek: Legacy’ show seemingly set up by the finale of ‘Picard’.

    It’s another sign that Marvel is switching tracks in terms of who controls its shows. Having launched its Disney+ shows with a system where head writers worked with directors (the latter of which had more control), it is seemingly changing to a model more like traditional TV where showrunners make the majority of decisions.

    Who else will be in the ‘Vision’s series?

    Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Besides Bettany, who will be back as the main character (no word yet on whether it’ll simply be called ‘Vision’ or the previously mentioned ‘Vision Quest’), there are zero details on the rest of the cast.

    We might see Elizabeth Olsen back, at least in flashback, but that remains to be seen.

    When will the ‘Vision’ series land on our screens?

    Disney/Marvel is aiming to have the show arrive on Disney+ in 2026.

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies and TV Shows Featuring Vision:

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  • Aubrey Plaza Joins ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos’

    Aubrey Plaza in 'Emily the Criminal.'
    Aubrey Plaza in ‘Emily the Criminal.’

    The Marvel Cinematic Universe’s TV arm is expanding to such a degree that now there are spin-offs of spin-offs. ‘WandaVision’, the first official show launched under Kevin Feige’s watch on Disney+ (as opposed to, say the Netflix “Defenders” shows or ‘Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.’) is already spawning its own follow-ups.

    First off the blocks (at least in terms of development) is ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos’, which has been in the works for a while and will see the return of Kathryn Hahn’s troublemaking witch Agatha Harkness, who caused so many problems for Elizabeth Olsen’s Wanda Maximoff. That is, until Wanda (drawing on more of her Scarlet Witch power) condemned Agatha to live as Agnes, the nosy neighbor character that she’d created to infiltrate the fantasy world Wanda had built for herself to hide from the grief of losing Vision (Paul Bettany).

    While ‘WandaVision’ was built around sitcoms that represent Wanda’s happy place, we don’t yet know what sort of show ‘Coven of Chaos’ will be, other than it presumably sees Agatha regaining her personality somehow.

    Kathryn Hahn as Agatha Harkness and Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    (L-R): Kathryn Hahn as Agatha Harkness and Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    We have at least learned about some of the people who will be populating the new series, as Aubrey Plaza, Joe Locke, Ali Ahn and Maria Dizzia are all new recruits for the series.

    This being Marvel, there has of course been no official statement confirming their casting or specifying who they’ll play, though Plaza is reportedly taking a villainous role. It’ll definitely be fun to see Hahn and Plaza interact whatever the latter ends up doing, since while Hahn sometimes appeared on ‘Parks and Recreation’ (where Plaza was one of the leads), they rarely shared scenes.

    Locke, meanwhile, has become a rising star after the first season of Netflix’s ‘Heartstopper’ and while his character is also a mystery, speculation has already begun that he could be an older version of Wanda’s son Billy Maximoff. We will, of course, have to wait and see.

    Kathryn Hahn as Agatha Harkness in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision'
    Kathryn Hahn as Agatha Harkness in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Suzanne Tenner. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    Ahn and Dizzia both appeared on ‘Orange is the New Black’, though Ahn was more recently seen in ‘Raising Dion’ and Dizzia was among the cast for HBO Max based-on-truth drama ‘The Staircase’.

    And they’re just the newcomers to the MCU – Emma Caulfield Ford, who played Dottie in ‘WandaVision’ revealed to Vanity Fair that she’ll be back as Dottie, one of the townsfolk of Westview whose personalities were altered as part of Wanda’s giant spell.

    Jac Shaeffer, who created and served as head writer on ‘WandaVision’ is overseeing the new show also.

    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios' 'Wandavision' exclusively on Disney+.
    Paul Bettany as The Vision in Marvel Studios’ ‘Wandavision’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021. All Rights Reserved.

    And that’s not the only series she’s guiding. At a much more embryonic stage is ‘Vision Quest’, which would see the return of Bettany’s synthetic being following the events of the show.

    The team behind The Hot Mic podcast is reporting that the new series could conceivably draw from comics that saw Vision looking to regain his memories and emotions. At the end of ‘WandaVision’, the version of Vision built by S.W.O.R.D. operatives to battle the one in Wanda’s spell, known as “White Vision,” due to his pale appearance and mind wiped personality, flew off, presumably to start his own search for meaning and personality.

    First, though, Shaeffer will see ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos’ start shooting early next year, with the director(s) still to be announced. ‘WandaVision’ helmer Matt Shakman is, after all, going to be a little busy…

    Marvel Studios' 'Agatha: Coven of Chaos.'
    Marvel Studios’ ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos.’
  • Elizabeth Olsen & Paul Bettany discuss ‘WandaVision’

    Elizabeth Olsen & Paul Bettany discuss ‘WandaVision’

    In this exclusive interview with Made in Hollywood’s Kylie Erica Mar, ‘WandaVision’ stars Paul Bettany, Elizabeth Olson, Katherine Hahn, and Teyonah Harris join director Matt Shakman to talk about the new Disney+ series.

    Olsen shares how she felt about hearing Kevin Feige’s idea for the series, and she and Hahn talk about shooting the first episode in front of a live studio audience. Harris and Olsen talk about the different decades covered in the show, and Bettany and Shakman confirm the reports that ‘WandaVision’ has more VFX shots than ‘Avenger’s Endgame.’

    And finally, Bettany shares how excited he was to work with a particular actor for the final episodes of the series. He wouldn’t say who that was, so if you want to know, you’ll just have to watch the series on Disney+.