Tag: seth-green

  • Ryan Kiera Armstrong Joins New ‘Buffy’ Series

    Ryan Kiera Armstrong stars in ' Star Wars: Skeleton Crew'.
    Ryan Kiera Armstrong stars in ‘ Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’.

    Preview:

    • ‘Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’s Ryan Kiera Armstrong is aboard the new ‘Buffy’ series.
    • Sarah Michelle Gellar is back as the vampire slayer.
    • Chloé Zhao will direct the pilot and produce.

    It might not feature white smoke coming out of a chimney as with the recent Pope’s election, but we have a chosen one within the expanding world of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer.’

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    Deadline reports that Ryan Kiera Armstrong, most recently seen as one of the young leads in ‘Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’ is set to add another pop cultural behemoth to her credits, as she’s scored a lead role alongside returning star Sarah Michelle Gellar in the yet to be titled reboot of ‘Buffy.’

    To be clear, this will be more a next step than a total reinvention of the vampire slayer concept, which has so far proved reliable on screens big and small and in comic book form.

    The new series comes via Hulu, which has a pilot order in place with Gellar as co-star and executive producer.

    ‘Poker Face’ showrunners Nora and Lilla Zuckerman are developing what is being described as “the next chapter in the Buffyverse.” Oscar winner Chloé Zhao, whose movies include ‘Nomadland’ and Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ is set to direct the pilot and serve as a producer.

    Gellar’s Buffy Summers will be a mentor to the new Chosen One played by Armstrong, who like her predecessor will be charged with battling all manner of vampires and other demonic creatures (and endowed with strength and resilience to do so) while also navigating more mundane teenage life issues.

    In keeping with the current trend for announcing casting decisions, Gellar took to Instagram to document her telling Armstrong the news that she’s gotten the role:

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar)

     

    Gellar had this to say about the choice:

    “From the moment I saw Ryan’s audition, I knew there was only one girl that I wanted by my side. To have that kind of emotional intelligence, and talent, at such a young age is truly a gift. The bonus is that her smile lights up even the darkest room.”

    Lilla and Nora Zuckerman used some Buffy terminology to praise their new lead:

    “We are so overjoyed to have found this generation’s slayer in Ryan Kiera Armstrong, she absolutely blew us away –– there is no question in our mind that she is the chosen one.”

    Related Article: Sarah Michelle Gellar Aboard ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Sequel Pilot

    What was the story of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’?

    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    ‘Buffy’ is a concept that has already shown an ability to evolve.
    It originated as a film starring Kristy Swanson in the title role. Joss Whedon wrote the film with Fran Kuzui directing and was released in 1992.

    Five years later, the series version, created by Whedon and now starring Gellar, debuted on The WB.

    It aired on The WB for its first five seasons before airing its final two seasons on UPN.

    The cast also included Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter, Anthony Stewart Head, David Boreanaz, Seth Green, and James Marsters among others. Boreanaz would then head up the spinoff series ‘Angel’ at The WB for five seasons.

    The original series’ executive producers included Gail Berman of the Jackal Group and Fran Kuzui & Kaz Kuzui via Suite B, who will all get a credit on the new pilot.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    And fun fact: also executive producing the pilot is Dolly Parton, whose company Sandollar was producer on the original.

    Whedon, who oversaw the show’s seven-season run, will not return to work on any new version. In 2021, the writer/producer, who also crafted the first two ‘Avengers’ movies and TV series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ for Marvel, was accused of creating a toxic work environment on both ‘Buffy’ and ‘Angel’ by nearly a dozen people associated with the show, particularly Carpenter.

    Fellow cast members such as Amber Benson and Michelle Trachtenberg backed up her allegations.

    Berman, and the Kuzuis previously teamed up with 20th TV in 2018 for a potential ‘Buffy’ reboot written by ‘Midnight, Texas’ creator Monica Owusu-Breen, on which Whedon was an executive producer. That project, whose lead was envisioned as a Black woman, didn’t move forward.

    The biggest dangling question any sequel series would need to answer is the clever notion introduced by the series’ final season, in that Buffy’s death (she got better) in a previous season triggered a raft of new potential Slayers.

    And now we have an answer to whether we’ll see one in the new show: a big yes, since Armstrong will take on that role.

    What has Sarah Michelle Gellar previously said about returning for a new ‘Buffy’ series?

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Gellar has been in two minds about the idea of reprising Buffy Summers.

    In 2023, she poured cold water on taking on a new ‘Buffy’ series, telling UK magazine SFX:

    “I am very proud of the show that we created and it doesn’t need to be done. We wrapped that up. I am all for them continuing the story because there’s the story of female empowerment. I love the way the show was left: ‘Every girl who has the power can have the power.’ It’s set up perfectly for someone else to have the power. But like I said, the metaphors of ‘Buffy’ were the horrors of adolescence. I think I look young, but I am not an adolescent.”

    Yet last year, she appeared on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ where she was open to it:

    “I always used to say no because it’s in its bubble and it’s so perfect. But watching ‘And Just Like That…’ (the ‘Sex and the City’ sequel series) and seeing ‘Dexter: Original Sin,’ and realizing there are ways to do it, definitely does get your mind thinking, ‘Well, maybe.’”

    Less maybe, these days, more fully aboard.

    When will the new ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ series hit screens?

    Hulu has yet to say when this might premiere and, indeed, with that pilot order, it’s still more of a case of if the show passes muster.

    Still, given that attractive, grabby recognizable title and the original star attached, we’d guess this one has a good chance.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Movies and TV On Amazon

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  • ‘Buffy’ Sequel Series Pilot Ordered at Hulu

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Preview:

    • Sarah Michelle Gellar is attached to a ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ sequel pilot.
    • Nora Zuckerman and Lila Zuckerman are aboard to write, showrun, and executive produce.
    • Chloé Zhao will direct the pilot and produce.

    As the opening narration of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ used to intone, “In every generation there is a chosen one. She alone will stand against the vampires, the demons, and the forces of darkness. She is the Slayer.”

    If Hulu’s plans work out, we might just get to meet this generation’s Slayer –– with a little help from the previous one.

    Yes, in a world where every old show and movie is now potential fodder for a sequel, reboot or remake, ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ is one that has been talked about a few times before.

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    Now, according to The Hollywood Reporter, it might actually come to fruition, as word arrives that streaming service Hulu is exploring the concept of a ‘Buffy’ streaming series.

    With Disney’s 20th Television backing the idea, ‘Poker Face’ showrunners Nora and Lilla Zuckerman are developing what is being described as “the next chapter in the Buffyverse.”

    Chloé Zhao poses backstage with the Oscars® for Directing and Best Picture the during the live ABC Telecast of The 93rd Oscars® at Union Station in Los Angeles, CA on Sunday, April 25, 2021. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Chloé Zhao poses backstage with the Oscars® for Directing and Best Picture the during the live ABC Telecast of The 93rd Oscars® at Union Station in Los Angeles, CA on Sunday, April 25, 2021. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Oscar winner Chloé Zhao, whose movies include ‘Nomadland’ and Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ is set to direct the pilot and serve as a producer.

    But perhaps more exciting for ‘Buffy’ fans is news that the original Buffy Summers herself, Sarah Michelle Gellar, is attached to recur on the show, albeit more as a mentor figure to the new focus, a fresh-faced Slayer who will be tasked with tackling vampires and other supernatural creatures.

    Related Article: What Gets Hinted At In ‘Eternals,’ And How Will The MCU Be Affected?

    What was the story of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’?

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    ‘Buffy’ is a concept that has already shown an ability to evolve.
    It originated as a film starring Kristy Swanson in the title role. Joss Whedon wrote the film with Fran Kuzui directing and was released in 1992.

    Five years later, the series version, created by Whedon and now starring Gellar, debuted on The WB.

    It aired on The WB for its first five seasons before airing its final two seasons on UPN.

    The cast also included Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter, Anthony Stewart Head, David Boreanaz, Seth Green, and James Marsters among others. Boreanaz would then head up the spinoff series ‘Angel’ at The WB for five seasons.

    The original series’ executive producers included Gail Berman of the Jackal Group and Fran Kuzui & Kaz Kuzui via Suite B, who will all get a credit on the new pilot.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    And fun fact: also executive producing the pilot is Dolly Parton, whose company Sandollar was producer on the original.

    Whedon, who oversaw the show’s seven-season run, will not return to work on any new version. In 2021, the writer/producer, who also crafted the first two ‘Avengers’ movies and TV series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ for Marvel, was accused of creating a toxic work environment on both ‘Buffy’ and ‘Angel’ by nearly a dozen people associated with the show, particularly Carpenter.

    Fellow cast members such as Amber Benson and Michelle Trachtenberg backed up her allegations.

    Berman, and the Kuzuis previously teamed up with 20th TV in 2018 for a potential ‘Buffy’ reboot written by ‘Midnight, Texas’ creator Monica Owusu-Breen, on which Whedon was an executive producer. That project, whose lead was envisioned as a Black woman, didn’t move forward.

    The biggest dangling question any sequel series would need to answer is the clever notion introduced by the series’ final season, in that Buffy’s death (she got better) in a previous season triggered a raft of new potential Slayers. Is there just going to be one in the new series? We’ll have to wait and see.

    What has Sarah Michelle Gellar previously said about returning for a new ‘Buffy’ series?

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Gellar has been in two minds about the idea of reprising Buffy Summers.

    In 2023, she poured cold water on taking on a new ‘Buffy’ series, telling UK magazine SFX:

    “I am very proud of the show that we created and it doesn’t need to be done. We wrapped that up. I am all for them continuing the story because there’s the story of female empowerment. I love the way the show was left: ‘Every girl who has the power can have the power.’ It’s set up perfectly for someone else to have the power. But like I said, the metaphors of ‘Buffy’ were the horrors of adolescence. I think I look young, but I am not an adolescent.”

    Yet last year, she appeared on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ where she was open to it:

    “I always used to say no because it’s in its bubble and it’s so perfect. But watching ‘And Just Like That…’ (the ‘Sex and the City’ sequel series) and seeing ‘Dexter: Original Sin,’ and realizing there are ways to do it, definitely does get your mind thinking, ‘Well, maybe.’”

    It seems the new concept has shifted her from “maybe” to all in…

    When will the new ‘Buffy’ series be on screens?

    Hulu has yet to make any official announcement –– and indeed, hasn’t confirmed any of the details, so we’ll have to wait and see whether this even makes it into production, let alone learn a launch date for the eventual show on the streaming service.

    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Movies On Amazon

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  • TV Review: ‘What If…?’ Season 3

    The Watcher (voiced by Jeffrey Wright) in Marvel Animation Television's 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    The Watcher (voiced by Jeffrey Wright) in Marvel Animation Television’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    Landing on Disney+ daily across eight days from December 22nd, the second season of Marvel’s Disney+ animated series ‘What If…?’ wraps up the show’s run –– at least for now –– with another set of episodes where several build to a grand, multiverse-hopping finale.

    Disney’s Marvel arm has seen something of a renewal this year, between the success of ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ (even if that film poked plenty of fun at how tired the idea of the multiverse seems these days) and ‘Agatha All Along.’ And now here comes the welcome return of ‘What If…?’ which again blends more stand-alone stories with some clever easter eggs (and in one case, an actual egg) that knit together to spin a bigger tale around Jeffrey Wright’s powerful The Watcher. Who, it turns out, will have to answer for meddling in the affairs of different universes.

    Does ‘What If…?’ Season 3 still provide multiversal fun?

    A scene from Marvel Animation’s 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    A scene from Marvel Animation’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    In keeping with the previous two seasons, the new run of ‘What If…?’ offers a blend of intriguing possibilities and an overarching spine that only starts to reveal itself towards the end of this final eight episodes. Those who have seen the previous seasons won’t be surprised at what it is building to, though it’s mostly satisfying.

    But the pleasure in this show is usually more in the individual episodes, which here run the gamut between the hilarious (one focused on Howard the Duck and his unlikely, but somehow perfect relationship) and the heartbreaking (an epic, dystopian story of what happens with a ‘Black Panther’-associated character following the near destruction of Earth by Tiamut the celestial). Indeed, there is better use of several elements of the ‘Eternals’ than in the movie itself.

    Another welcome element, near prescient, given the runaway success of her solo show, is the presence of Kathryn Hahn’s Agatha Harkness.

    And that’s probably about all we can say on that front, given the extensive embargoes in place on this!

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Byrdie (voiced by Natasha Lyonne), Captain Carter/Peggy Carter (voiced by Hayley Atwell), and Kahhori (voiced by Devery Jacobs) in Marvel Animation Television's 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Byrdie (voiced by Natasha Lyonne), Captain Carter/Peggy Carter (voiced by Hayley Atwell), and Kahhori (voiced by Devery Jacobs) in Marvel Animation Television’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    The regular writing team of Matthew Chauncey, Ryan Little and A.C. Bradley are back for the season, and the scripts run the usual gamut of superb to solid. While there isn’t perhaps the knockout winner of, say, last year’s festive episode, there remains a good balance of character interaction and fascinating peeks into unusual corners of the MCU while also blending in some more comics-faithful moments for fans of the printed pages.

    Bryan Andrews and Stephan Franck return to direct the episodes and the look of the show continues to evolve in subtle ways. Most of the characters will be instantly recognizable, while others, such as Obadiah Stane (voiced here by Kiff VandenHeuvel rather than Jeff Bridges) might take a moment.

    Performances

    Storm (voiced by Alison Sealy-Smith) in Marvel Animation Television's 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    Storm (voiced by Alison Sealy-Smith) in Marvel Animation Television’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    As with the past seasons, the new batch of episodes has a blend of original MCU performers (the likes of Mark Ruffalo, Anthony Mackie, Laurence Fishburne, Samuel L. Jackson, Kat Dennings, David Harbour and Hayley Atwell) rubbing shoulders –– or perhaps that should be vocal chords –– with replacements (multi-voice talent Ross Marquand the MVP here).

    There are the occasionally jarring replacements, but on the whole, it’s a satisfying set of voices. Seth Green is great as usual as Howard the Duck, playing perfectly off the energy of Kat Dennings as Darcy. And kudos to Wright who, when given more to do as the Watcher than simply observe and narrate.

    Oh, and you won’t tire of hearing Jackson emote the phrase “Mr. and Mrs.… The Duck.”

    It’s also fun to hear the likes of Jason Isaacs –– something of a genre titan thanks to ‘Harry Potter,’ ‘Star Trek,’ ‘Star Wars’ and the DC animated appearances he’s put in –– as a powerful cosmic entity whose voice fairly drips with withering sarcasm.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Kate Bishop (voiced by Hailee Steinfeld) and Shang-Chi (voiced by Simu Liu) in Marvel Animation Television's 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Kate Bishop (voiced by Hailee Steinfeld) and Shang-Chi (voiced by Simu Liu) in Marvel Animation Television’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    Though it may not quite hit the highs of last year’s festive season run, Season 3 of ‘What If…?’ certainly has enough pleasures to keep fans happy. And though the big finale feels a little predictable at times, it is definitely enough to leave you wishing the company would commission future seasons, especially given how effective the creative team has been in making compelling narratives fit in sub-30-minute episodes.

    ‘What If…?’ Season 3 receives 8 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘What If…?’ Season 3?

    “What If…?” returns in Season 3 for its culminating adventure through the multiverse.

    Watch as classic characters make unexpected choices that will mutate their worlds into spectacular alternate versions of the MCU. The Watcher (Jeffrey Wright) will guide viewers as the series traverses new genres, bigger spectacles, and incredible new characters.

    Who is in the cast of  ‘What If…?’ Season 3?

    Marvel Animation's 'What If...?' Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.
    Marvel Animation’s ‘What If…?’ Season 3. Photo courtesy of Marvel Animation. © 2024 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

    Marvel TV Shows on Disney+:

    Buy MCU Movies On Amazon

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  • 22 Things You Never Knew About ‘Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery’

    Has it really been two decades since the release of “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery“? Yeah, baby! (Sorry not sorry).

    Released 20 years ago this week, on May 2, 1997, the modest and often obscure spoof of 1960s British spy movies launched a blockbuster franchise, countless catchphrases (and your friends’ terrible impersonations), and perhaps the most beloved character in Mike Myers’ gallery of goofballs.

    So hop in our time machine and travel back 20 years to learn the defrosted spy’s top secrets.
    1. Ming Tea, the psychedelic band that appears between scenes of the movie, seems like an afterthought, but it was actually the birthplace of the Austin Powers character. Myers started the band in the mid-’90s, along with alt-rocker Matthew Sweet and Bangles frontwoman Susanna Hoffs. The musicians would perform together in Los Angeles under swinging-’60s-style pseudonyms. Austin Powers was the name Myers came up with as the band’s lead singer, Sweet played bass as “Sid Belvedere,” and rhythm guitarist Hoffs was “Gillian Shagwell.”

    2. The band’s name came from a fictional beverage company in an obscure Italian thriller (1965’s “The 10th Victim“) starring original Bond Girl Ursula Andress. Ultimately, Hoffs’ husband, Jay Roach, would direct all three “Austin Powers” movies.
    3. Other inspirations were the British humor favored by Myers’ father, who had emigrated to Canada from England, and the Burt Bacharach song “The Look of Love” (a tune associated with the 1967 Bond spoof “Casino Royale“), which Myers heard one day on a car radio. It made him wonder what had happened to all the 1960s swingers, which prompted him to flirt with then-wife Robin Ruzan in a now-familiar English voice, where he would spout now-familiar archaic catchphrases. Ruzan urged him to write the routine down, and in three weeks, Myers had a screenplay.

    4. There are countless references to James Bond films throughout the “Powers” saga, but also references to many now-forgotten Bond knock-offs of the 1960s, from Dean Martin’s Matt Helm franchise to James Coburn‘s “Flint” movies to Michael Caine’s Harry Palmer films (the source of Austin’s chunky horn-rims).
    5. Originally, Myers didn’t want to play both hero and villain. He hoped to cast Jim Carrey as Dr. Evil, but while Carrey was interested, he was unavailable because he was making “Liar, Liar.”

    6. Myers’ Dr. Evil is clearly modeled to look like Blofeld from the Bond films, but his voice and gestures — even the pinky-to-the-mouth movement — were reportedly mimicry of Myers’ old “Saturday Night Live” boss, Lorne Michaels. Myers’ “Wayne’s World” co-star Dana Carvey reportedly grumbled that Myers’ Michaels impression was actually his imitation of Carvey’s own Michaels impression.
    7. Similarly, Myers spoofed Blofeld’s fluffy Persian cat as the hairless Mr. Bigglesworth. The pet was played by a feline named Ted Nude-Gent. (Insert “Cat Scratch Fever” joke here.)

    8. Yet another “SNL” comic, Colin Quinn, was offered the role of Scott Evil, but he turned it down. The role of Dr. Evil’s resentful son went instead to Seth Green.
    9. Another “SNL”-er, Will Ferrell, launched his movie career in “Austin Powers” as the unkillable henchman Mustafa.

    10. “Austin Powers” marked the first time that Elizabeth Hurley, then best known as Hugh Grant‘s model girlfriend, proved she could carry the lead role in a movie. She found acting opposite Myers difficult for two reasons. First, his antics kept her on the verge of cracking up and breaking character, which is why Vanessa so seldom makes eye contact with Austin. Second, as she recalled in 1999, “I’m ludicrously tactile, and Mike isn’t at all. But because I was so obsessed with Austin, I used to torment Mike by squeezing, stroking, and petting him at every opportunity.” She added, “When I see Mike now, I still launch massive physical attacks on him, which send him fleeing for cover.”
    11. One of the fembots is played by Cindy Margolis, the pinup who claimed, in the early years of the Web, to be the most downloaded woman on the Internet.

    12. Hockey fan Myers named two of the characters, General Borschevsky (Elya Baskin) and Commander Gilmour (Charles Napier), after two of his favorite Toronto Maple Leafs players.
    13. Myers claimed that up to 40 percent of the dialogue in the film was Improvised — most famously, the “Shhh” conversation between Dr. Evil and Scott.

    14. Myers thinks latex bald caps don’t look authentic enough on the big screen, so he shaved his head to play Dr. Evil. That meant shooting all his Austin scenes first, then going back and shooting all of Dr. Evil’s scenes. It was a process that became even more complicated in the sequels, when Myers was playing three or four characters at once.
    15. As in “Wayne’s World,” product placement is the source of many jokes throughout the film. Roach has said he prominently featured AOL in the film so that he could get a year’s subscription to the online service. There was also supposed to be a scene where Austin tries desperately to show his ’90s trendiness by drinking a Zima. But when Zima’s parent company, Coors, realized that the scene was making fun of their beverage, they yanked permission, and Austin found himself nursing a Tab diet cola instead.

    16. “Soul Bossa Nova,” the movie’s chirpy instrumental theme, was a song Quincy Jones wrote and recorded back in 1962. It had also served as the theme song to the Canadian game show “Definition,” which Myers had enjoyed as a kid. So its use here was a nostalgic in-joke for his fellow Canucks.
    17. The American cut of the film runs a brisk 94 minutes, but international audiences got to enjoy several additional scenes. Among them: an extended fight scene between Austin and Random Task; two scenes featuring Christian Slater as a hypnotized henchman; cryogenics gags involving the defrosting of Gary Coleman, Evel Knievel, and Vanilla Ice; and scenes where the families of various slain henchmen are informed of their tragic and violent deaths. (Among the next of kin: “Moonraker” Bond Girl Lois Chiles and Rob Lowe, who would play the younger version of Robert Wagner’s Number Two in the sequels.)

    18. The film cost a reported $16.5 million, which seems like an incredible bargain given the film’s visual inventiveness. It earned back $53.9 million in North America, making the film a modest hit in theaters, though its popularity really took off on home video. Two years later, “Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me” would earn about $1 million more during its opening weekend than “International Man of Mystery” earned throughout its entire theatrical run.
    19. The PG-13 movie was close to scoring an “R” rating thanks to the film’s funny “nude blocking” scene between Austin and Vanessa. Director Jay Roach, in THR’s recent oral history about the film, said: “The nudity blocking was something the MPAA wanted to be sure we didn’t go too far with: the cheeky phallic references, like Elizabeth biting the sausage and holding the melons up. But they were all pretty innocent body-shape jokes. The only thing they asked us to do in the final cut, which was kind of surprising to me, was they thought there was too much butt-cheek on Mike when he got thawed out, so I went for a slightly more profile version.”

    20. In 1999, HBO made a deal for a 13-episode “Austin Powers” cartoon series that never came to be. But there would be a third installment in theaters, 2002’s hugely popular “Austin Powers in Goldmember.” Altogether, the franchise earned $676 million in theaters worldwide.
    21. A lot of that money went into the pocket of an actress who didn’t actually appear in any of the films. That was Demi Moore, who served as a producer on all three of them.

    22. Will there ever be a fourth “Powers” picture? There have been several reports over the past 15 years that another installment is in development. But in 2016, Roach indicated that there’s no movie in the works, though he said, “Mike Myers and I talk about it every time we get together. I would say it’s in a latent phase right now, but someday if we find the right idea…, for sure. Mike gave me the break of a lifetime in letting me direct [‘Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery’], so I’m always good to go.”

  • Bryan Cranston Loves His ‘SuperMansion’ Superhero — and Would Play Walter White Again

    The 23rd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards - Red CarpetSure, you’re following all of the Marvel- and DC-related comic book superhero shows, but if you’re not watching “SuperMansion’s” League of Freedom, you might be missing the funniest — and maybe even the most poignant — take on the cape and costume crowd.

    As the stop-motion-animated series returns to Crackle for a second season of misadventures from the over-the-hill, dysfunctional crimefighting team, co-creators Robot Chicken”) joined leading voice actor and executive producer Bryan Cranston for a press roundtable tackling an array of predictably silly surprisingly deep subjects.

    What do you bring of yourself to this character?

    Bryan Cranston: I don’t need boner pills! Let’s get that out there! You know, it’s similar to doing live-action, in the sense that when an actor takes on a character, it’s a marriage of words and ideas to what the actor’s sensibility is, and you find where that is. There are times when I’m directed to punch certain things, and I go, “Oh, yeah, I see! He’s more upset at this point.”

    And then, there are times when I bring in my own personality and they go, “Oh, that’s good! Let’s go on that track!” I’ll do certain things or make certain sounds that the guys will respond to and go, “Oh, that’s good!” Early on, as we were feeling through the character, I think it was Zeb that said, “I don’t know, it just feels better when he’s really angry. He’s just really upset.” And then I have to figure out why.

    It’s because he’s losing his sense of relevance. He feels it slipping away, so he’s desperately clutching onto these things. That made it easier for me.

    It doesn’t matter if it’s animated or live-action, you’re still developing a character, you want to be consistent with that character and you’re contributing to the storylines. It’s as engaging as live-action development.

    Did you have to learn a lot about the superhero culture, tropes and references for this?

    Cranston: I’ve never been a comic book guy, so I look at it just from the justification of the character’s emotional sense. What does he want? What does he feel? Who does he want to be around? What is he losing? Who is he afraid of? That always mixes in fine. The more you humanize superhero characters, the more they’re relatable. The more they have a vulnerable point, whether it’s emotionally or their superpower, or whatever, we relate the superpower or the loss of a superpower to their emotions. It’s just fun to walk through that.

    Zeb Wells: And it was important to us that you didn’t have to know a bunch of comic book superhero references to find the jokes funny. We wanted the characters to be funny in their interactions and have very human conflicts, and have that be the basis of the comedy.

    Matt Senreich: You have these insane superpowers, but that’s irrelevant. It’s about humanizing them and grounding them in a way that we can all relate to.

    Matt and Zeb, what made you think of Bryan for this role?

    Senreich: We were afraid to ask him. We wrote the part, and in the script, it says, “A Bryan Cranston type.” We had our buddy, Seth Green, play the part for the temp animatic, and we realized that voice wasn’t good. He just turned to us and lectured us on how we’re very chicken and we should just reach out to Bryan.

    To Bryan’s credit, we sent him the role and within 24 or 48 hours, we got a call back. It was beyond flattering. He was like, “I don’t want to just play this part. I want to make this show with you.” It just took off from there.

    Cranston: For me, if it didn’t have an interesting story to it, I wouldn’t be sitting here. But the idea of a household full of superheroes who are perhaps past their prime and trying to hold on to what’s left of their dignity and abilities appeals to me. And having sequences where the superheroes go shopping and do household chores was a really good idea.

    What did the success of the first season give you permission to do with Season 2?

    Wells: It was seeing how well exploring the humanity of the characters ended up working. With the second season, we could push the drama a little bit and trust that the characters we’d created and that the actors helped us create would make those situations funny.

    So if you look at Season 2 on paper, some of the episodes would sound more dramatic and that the stakes are a lot higher, but they’re all just as funny because we still have this band of idiots. We were really able to take the brakes off and do high-stakes superhero adventures. It’s really fun.

    Senreich: We saw how pairing certain characters together worked or didn’t work, in certain ways, and what conflict built from their politics and their boyfriend-girlfriend relationships.

    Does animation give you an advantage in discussing controversial topics that live-action does not?

    Senreich: Yeah, I think you can get away with a lot more animation than you can in live-action. I come from the comic book and action figure world, where violence is funny in animation. When you go back to Tom and Jerry, it plays a lot better. If you see those things in real life, you’re going to be taken aback. It allows you to over-dramatize certain relationships to get to that point you want to make.

    It just allows for you to push the envelope a little bit more, but it’s dangerous to go too far. It’s about always knowing where that limit is. There are certain topics that are too far, so it’s about where is it too far and how do you make it funny while at the same time not, and also teaching a lesson while going through a situation like that. It’s a tightrope that you walk, and as long as you’re aware of it, you’re allowed to do a little more with it.

    Matt and Zeb, how long have you guys worked together?

    Wells: Off and on, for 10 years now. We’ve known each other longer.

    Senreich: I found Zeb when I was working at a magazine called Wizard, back in the day. He entered a VHS video competition. I was probably 25, at the time, and Zeb was 20. He won that competition, and I just stayed in touch with him ’cause I thought he was a talented fella. And then, when Robot Chicken started up, I brought him on to write with us, and that was since Season 3. We’ve just been goofing around, ever since. It’s been a nice romantic interlude.

    Cranston: Matt is really one of the bosses — and he brought on Zeb to take over this show, and even though the guy who brought on the guy doesn’t agree with everything, he gave the power over to Zeb to say, “You know what? You’re running the show. You’re the showrunner, so go and do what you think is best.” That’s pretty remarkable.

    Wells: We try to run it like a relationship, where it depends on how passionate either one of us is about something. If it’s keeping Matt up at night and I just think it’s a slightly bad decision, I’ll just let him have it. And that goes both ways. The real problem is when we’re both equally passionate. Then, I don’t know how we solve it. Whoever is more stubborn wins.

    Senreich: When you know someone for as long as we’ve known each other, it doesn’t feel like there’s ever a wrong way to play it out. I do believe in the people that I work with. I’m friends with these people, and I know that’s a dangerous thing and people say not to do it, but I like going to work and smiling every day. I don’t want to work with people I don’t like.

    Titanium Rex is searching for relevance as he gets older. You, ironically, have become more relevant later in life, Bryan.

    Cranston: Try telling that to my wife! Art business is a little different. It’s a little different. And I’ll say for men, too. It’s different for men. There’s more opportunities for men. There really is. So I’m certainly the recipient of that good fortune, and I’m appreciative of it. Had it never happened, I’d still be a working actor and be fine, and not know what you miss.

    I don’t think life or this business owes me anything, so you reap what you sow. If you work hard, you have a better chance of producing something that you’re proud of. If you don’t, you won’t. And it’s really simple. Ask Warren Buffett: “All right, Warren, what’s your secret?” He goes, “Well, just make more right decisions than wrong ones.” I swear to God that’s what he says. You go, “That’s it?” He goes, “Yep, that’s it.” Wow. Make more right decisions than wrong ones.

    And it’s like, yeah, I think all of us try to do that every day. And that’s no different. This is what we try to do at work. We think this is the strongest choice. We’re not positive. We think, OK. Then it comes to us, and we’re reading it, giving notes, or reading it in the booth doing it. Then some suggestions, and they’ll take two or three different ways of doing something.

    Wells: Or if we were unsure about something … Sometimes an actor saying, “This doesn’t feel right to me either.” That’s happened with Bryan, it’s happened with Yvette [Nicole Brown]. Then you’re like, “OK, I had that in the back of my head that that might be wrong. If you think it’s wrong as well, then let’s sit down and change it.” And you have to be open to that. You have to be open to the happy accidents and discovering that stuff, where it doesn’t feel as alive, and you’re missing out on great stuff.

    Bryan, your “Breaking Bad” co-stars Aaron Paul and Betsy Brandt told me recently that if there’s any downside at all to be a part of that series it’s the high level of work that you got to do, making it hard to decide what to do next. Do you feel that way when you thought about what the projects were going to be?

    Cranston: It’s a nice, difficult position to be in. Yeah, the bar was raised with the quality of writing on that show, and you want to see if you can match that anywhere you go, and I do. I want to make sure that what I do has specific purpose, and not just throwing a dart at something to keep busy.

    This is an example of just that: that good storytelling doesn’t have to be in the form of the classics. It doesn’t have to be revered by everybody. In fact, to me, the best storytelling is not universally loved by every single person. And to me, I think you water down the efficacy of the work itself.

    Is there any chance we’re going to see Walter White on “Better Call Saul”?

    Cranston: I don’t know. You could. I actually think it’d be fun. I have not been approached by it. I know that Vince [Gilligan] wouldn’t do anything that would damage the overall brand that he’s worked so hard to develop on a stunt-cast kind of thing. Then I think, “Well, what if it’s just a brush-by? If it’s just two guys in a market. Are those ripe? I don’t know.” We don’t even register that we knew each other three years before we see each other again. That’s life.

    It’s actually very honest. It happens. So the bottom line is, I would do it in a second. If Vince wanted me to be on the show, I’d be on the show.

    What’s been the unique pleasure of doing this show, distinct from the “Robot Chicken” experience?

    Senreich: For me, “Robot Chicken” is a sketch comedy show. It’s “SNL” using action figures. It’s always been that, and we always laugh, because if you look at the staff of “Robot Chicken,” my first sold scripts were dramas with Geoff Johns as my writing partner. Zeb comes from the comic book world and was working in comic books for a while. We have two playwrights. It’s like, very odd selection of people who have worked with “Robot Chicken.”

    But this lets you tell a story where you actually can sit down, and it puts us back to our roots where we’re like, “OK, we can actually find characters, we can go into their history, we can deal with their relationships,” and that’s something that we’ve always loved to do.

    Wells: For me, there’s an animatic for a later episode, and it’s a scene between Jillian [Bell] and Bryan. And we were watching an animatic, and I got choked up watching it. It’s like, “That’s not supposed to happen in the Stoopid Buddy Stoodios, watching an animatic for one of our shows!”

    Cranston: That happens to you when you watch animated porn, too.

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