Tag: Streaming TV

  • ‘God of War’ TV Adaptation May Happen

    God of War in woods
    Playstation’s ‘God of War.’

    As if it didn’t have enough giant fantasy and action adaptations either on the works or up on the service already, Prime Video is considering another. The latest target is PlayStation flagship title ‘God of War’.

    According to Deadline, Prime Video is in negotiations to turn the mythology-based action/adventure game series into a TV show.

    While neither Amazon Studios nor Sony would comment on the news, the trade site’s sources are saying that ‘The Expanse’ showrunners Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby are involved alongside ‘The Wheel of Time’ overseer Rafe Judkins. Which means the lead teams of two big Prime Video titles – ‘The Expanse’ recently wrapped up its run, while ‘The Wheel of Time’ just started – would be involved in yet another large scale project.

    Originally created by David Jaffe and launched by Santa Monica Studio in 2005 for the PlayStation 2, the first ‘God of War’ game was critically lauded and has since spawned 10 titles on different platforms. The concept was rebooted in 2018 with (in true current reboot trend) a game called ‘God of War’, which has a sequel in development.

    Based in ancient mythology, the games’ story follows the titular protagonist, Kratos, a Spartan warrior and later the God of War, who was tricked into killing his family by his former master, the original Greek god of war Ares. This sets off a series of events that leads to wars with the mythological pantheons.

    God of war scene
    Playstation’s ‘God of War.’

    The Greek mythology era of the series sees Kratos follow a path of vengeance due to the machinations of the Olympian gods, while the Norse mythology era (as begun with the 2018 title), introduces his son Atreus as a secondary protagonist, and shows an older Kratos on a path of redemption, which inadvertently brings the two into conflict with the Norse gods.

    If it does move forward, it would mark just the latest video game title to make the leap to a new medium, as ‘Twisted Metal’ is in early development at streaming service Peacock with Anthony Mackie starring, and HBO is in production on ‘The Last Of Us’, with ‘Chernobyl’s Craig Mazin in charge and Pedro Pascal starring in the post-apocalyptic story. Then there’s ‘Halo’, which found a home at Paramount+ and Netflix’s ‘Resident Evil’.

    On the big screen, a ‘Sonic the Hedgehogsequel runs into theaters on April 8, with ‘Borderlands’, ‘Gears of War’, ‘Rabbids’ and sequels to ‘Tomb Raider’ and ‘Mortal Kombat’ all at different stages. The idea of a “video game curse” for movies certainly seems like a distant memory at this point, even if the hit ratio still isn’t particularly high.

    A TV series at a deep-pocketed outlet like Prime Video certainly feels like the best outlet for a sprawling story of gods and monsters like ‘Gods of War’.

    Prime Video, meanwhile, already has the fantastical likes of ‘Carnival Row’, the aforementioned ‘Wheel of Time’ and let’s not forget its massive, ambitious, and hugely expensive ‘Lord of the Rings’ adaptation ‘The Rings of Power’, which is kicking off its first season on the service this coming September.

    father and child
    Playstation’s ‘God of War.’
  • ‘The Batman’ TV Spinoff Shifts from Cops to Arkham

    Robert Pattinson as Batman in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure 'The Batman,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Robert Pattinson as Batman in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure ‘The Batman,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    As ‘The Batman’ continues to do decent numbers at the box office ($134 million domestically, and more than $258 million worldwide) attention is naturally still on this latest live-action incarnation of the Caped Crusader, which stars Robert Pattinson as Bruce Wayne.

    And that attention includes the planned TV spin-offs that were announced even before the movie itself came out. Now, according to director Matt Reeves, at least one of the shows is evolving into something new.

    Originally planned to focus on corruption at the heart of the Gotham Police Department, the show initially had ‘Boardwalk Empire’ boss Terrence Winter as head writer and showrunner. The narrative focus would have been on Batman’s first year as a vigilante (though without really featuring the character in any major fashion) as his presence starts to send waves through the city’s criminal underworld. And the main character was planned as a crooked cop, which made it sound a little like ‘The Shield’.

    Yet after some creative differences, Winter left the series, to be replaced by ‘Giri/Haji’ writer Joe Barton in January. Back then it was still described as featuring the police. Now, though there, is a big change afoot, at least according to Reeves.

    Talking on the Happy/Sad/Confused podcast, the director/producer explained the change. “One thing that we’re not doing that I was gonna do… So, there’s the Gotham police show, which, that one actually is put on hold. We’re not really doing that,” he told host Josh Horowitz.

    (L to R) Robert Pattinson and director Matt Reeves on the set in Warner Bros. Pictures' 'The Batman.' Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics.
    (L to R) Robert Pattinson and director Matt Reeves on the set in Warner Bros. Pictures’ ‘The Batman,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    So, what form might it take now? Reeves shared that in a separate interview, this one with The Cyber Nerds YouTube channel. “That story has kinda evolved,” explained Reeves. “We’ve actually now [moved] more into the realm of exactly what would happen in the world of Arkham as it relates coming off of our movie, and some of the characters … almost leaning into the idea of … it’s like a horror movie or a haunted house that is Arkham.”

    “The idea, again the way that Gotham is a character in the movie, I really want Arkham to exist as a character,” he continues. “You go into this environment and encounter these characters in a way that feels really fresh. And so, in our work on Gotham, that story started to evolve, and it started feeling like, ‘Wait, we should really lean into this.’ And then that’s kinda where that’s gone.”

    There has also been talk that Reeves and the HBO Max team were also wanting to shift the focus to a recognizable character instead of a completely original one. Who that might be is anyone’s guess, though Arkham is usually full of Batman’s opponents.

    The changing series is just one of the spin-offs in the works – the other is focused on The Penguin’s rise to power. The criminal character played Colin Farrell in ‘The Batman’ will be at the center of a series that has been compared to ‘Scarface’ in tone. If you’ve seen the movie, you know the character isn’t quite in as powerful a position as he is in other versions of the Batman story, so there’s plenty of material to mine here.

    Farrell is reportedly attached to reprise the character, and will be an executive producer on the show, which comes from Reeves and producing partner Dylan Clark. ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ veteran Lauren LeFranc is in board to run the show itself assuming it makes it out of development.

    (L to R) director Matt Reeves and actor Robert Pattinson on the set of 'The Batman'
    (L to R) director Matt Reeves and actor Robert Pattinson on the set in Warner Bros. Pictures’ ‘The Batman,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    NqJcSIbUMBHMScUOltKJU
  • Andrew Garfield’s ‘Under the Banner of Heaven’ Trailer

    Andrew Garfield arrives on the red carpet for the 89th Oscars on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Valerie Macon/AFP/Getty Images).
    Andrew Garfield arrives on the red carpet for the 89th Oscars on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. Photo by Valerie Macon/AFP/Getty Images.

    Back in the news courtesy of a certain Spider-meme recreation, Andrew Garfield remains one of the busiest people working in movies and TV. Case in point? The trailer for new FX series ‘Under the Banner of Heaven’, which will find him digging into a true-crime tale.

    The series, created and run by ‘Milk’ Oscar winner Dustin Lance Black, adapts Jon Krakauer’s novel, which itself was the result of an investigation into a reclusive, regressive, and restrictive Mormon community where a dreadful killing had occurred.

    Garfield here plays Detective Pyre a Mormon law enforcer whose faith is tested as he investigates a brutal murder that seems to be connected to an esteemed Utah family’s spiral into LDS fundamentalism and their distrust in the government.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qLacLTnifI

    Pyre is committed to his Church and family but begins to question some of the Church’s teachings through his contact with a suspected murderer and the family of Brenda (Daisy Edgar-Jones), who was brutally slain.

    Sam Worthington, Denise Gough, Wyatt Russell, Billy Howle, Gil Birmingham, Adelaide Clemens, Rory Culkin, Seth Numrich, Chloe Pirrie, Sandra Seacat, and Christopher Heyerdahl are also in the cast for the series, which will stream on Hulu later this year.

    It’s far from Garfield’s first encounter with religious extremism – in Martin Scorsese’s ‘Silence’, he plays Father Rodrigues, a priest who goes looking for his mentor in 17th century Japan after the man goes missing. He’s also recently been seen as disgraced evangelist Jim Bakker in ‘The Eyes of Tammy Faye’, alongside Jessica Chastain.

    Kate McKinnon attends the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images).
    Kate McKinnon attends the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images.

    On a completely different televisual front, we have ‘Joe Vs. Carol’, which offers a new perspective on the outrageous true story chronicled in Netflix’s pandemic-era sensation ‘Tiger King’.

    The documentary series chronicled the deeply interconnected community of big cat conservationists and collectors in America, and the private zoos and animal sanctuaries they have set up for the care and public display of these animals.

    Its focus was primarily Joe “Exotic” Schreibvogel, an extravagant big cat collector, gun fan and ardent self-promoter who was in a feud with animal rights crusader Carol Baskin.

    Now, spun not so much from the Netflix series as from the podcast 2019 Wondery podcast ‘Joe Exotic: Tiger King;’ (which pre-dated the Netflix show) is ‘Joe Vs. Carol’, which stars John Cameron Mitchell as Exotic and Kate McKinnon as Baskin.

    Here, the eye is more on Baskin, a big cat enthusiast, who learns that fellow exotic animal lover Joe “Exotic” Schreibvogel is breeding and using his big cats for profit. She sets out to shut down his venture, inciting a quickly escalating rivalry. But Carole has a checkered past of her own and when the claws come out, Joe will stop at nothing to expose what he sees as her hypocrisy.

    It’s a blend of fact and comedy, produced by McKinnon and written by Etan Frankel, with Kyle MacLachlan, Brian Van Holt, Sam Keeley, Nat Wolff, Marlo Kelly, William Fichtner, Dean Winters, and David Wenham rounding out the cast.

    ‘Joe Vs. Carol’ will launch on Peacock on March 3.

    9wCCVWLaremum8yXT66fX3
  • New Posters for ‘The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’

    Amazon Prime's ‘The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’
    Amazon Prime’s ‘The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’

    Everything about Prime Video’s planned ‘Lord of the Rings’ TV adaptation, ‘The Rings of Power’ has been huge so far, from the $250 million the company spent to buy the rights from the Tolkien estate to the reported $456 million that it has lavished on the first season alone. It makes sense, then, that the initial drop of character posters would be suitably epic, with more than 20 arriving at once.

    In keeping with the veil of secrecy that the company has draped across the show so far, the posters don’t specify which characters are on each, though sharp-eyed fans are already hunting for clues.

    The cast is also a sprawling affair, with the ensemble including Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Robert Aramayo, Owain Arthur, Maxim Baldry, Nazanin Boniadi, Morfydd Clark, Ismael Cruz Córdova, Charles Edwards, Trystan Gravelle, Sir Lenny Henry, Ema Horvath, Markella Kavenagh, Joseph Mawle, Tyroe Muhafidin, Sophia Nomvete, Lloyd Owen, Megan Richards, Dylan Smith, Charlie Vickers, Leon Wadham, Benjamin Walker, Daniel Weyman, and Sara Zwangobani.

    So far, all we really know in terms of characters is that Clark is playing a younger version of Galadriel (as brought to life by Cate Blanchett in Peter Jackson’s two movie trilogies).

    And all we’ve seen of the show is one picture and the impressive opening sequence, which, it was later revealed, was created entirely practically.

    This new adaptation of Tolkien’s sprawling fantasy novels comes courtesy of J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay, who have writing credits on movies including ‘Star Trek Beyond’. ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’s JA Bayona is involved as an executive producer and director along with fellow director Charlotte Brändström.

    The Rings of Power, according to the showrunners, unites all the major stories of Middle-earth’s Second Age: the forging of the rings, the rise of the Dark Lord Sauron, the epic tale of Númenor, and the Last Alliance of Elves and Men. “Until now, audiences have only seen onscreen the story of the One Ring — but before there was one, there were many… and we’re excited to share the epic story of them all.”

    The “Second Age” refers to a long period in the history of Middle Earth that ends with the defeat of Sauron and precedes Tolkien’s book and Jackson’s ‘Lord of the Rings’ movie trilogy, which take place during the Third Age. The titular Rings of Power were forged in this era and 19 of them were given to elves, dwarves, and humans to incentivize them to support Sauron’s reign. The One Ring, which figures so heavily into the plot of the original trilogy is the most powerful of the 20 (it’s what Frodo and the gang travelled all that way to destroy, after all). The official description mentions an evil even greater than Sauron, which probably points Morgoth, a god-like creature who tried to rule Middle-earth – and that had Sauron serving as his general.

    And Prime Video clearly has confidence in the series – though you can imagine it’s also looking for more return on its massive investment – as Season 2 has already been commissioned and will shoot in the UK. (Season 1 shot in New Zealand, which seems fitting given that’s where the movies filmed).

    ‘The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’ will launch on Prime Video on Friday, September 2 this year, with new episodes dropping weekly.

    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
    Courtesy of Prime Video
  • ‘Raising Dion’ Season 2 Interviews

    Jason Ritter Promoting Netflix's 'Raising Dion' Season 2
    Jason Ritter Promoting Netflix’s ‘Raising Dion’ Season 2

    Premiering on Netflix beginning February 1st is season two of the popular series ‘Raising Dion,’ which is based on the comic book of the same name by author Dennis Liu. The series stars Alisha Wainwright (‘Palmer’), Ja’Siah Young (‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit), Jazmyn Simon (‘Baggage Claim’), Jason Ritter (’Frozen II’), Rome Flynn (’Dear White People’), Marc Menchaca (‘Ozark’), and Michael B. Jordan (‘Black Panther’), who also serves as the show’s executive producer.

    The series follows the story of Nicole (Wainwright), a widowed single mother raising her son, Dion (Young). However, things get complicated when Dion begins to manifest superpowers. To protect her son, Nicole only tells his secret to Pat (Ritter), her late husband’s best friend. Now, Nicole must help Dion control his special abilities in order to keep him safe, while also dealing with the threat from the evil Crooked Man.

    OEQkiFg9

    Moviefone recently had a chance to speak with Alisha Wainwright, Rome Flynn and Jason Ritter about their work on the second season of Netflix’s ‘Raising Dion.’ You can read the full interview with Jason Ritter below, or watch all of our interviews in the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about where we left Pat at the end of season one?

    Jason Ritter: Pat turned into the giant, evil, Crooked Man at the end. It was revealed that he had been the Crooked Man the entire time. At first, we see him turn into the Crooked Man, and then he is defeated by Dion, his mother and her friends. They all come together, and we just see the dissipation of all this smoke.

    Then at the very end of that season, we see one piece of smoke go to Brayden and follow him around, and that’s where we ended. We pick back up two years later, after Brayden’s been with this Crooked energy for all two years.

    MF: So, we assume Pat is no longer the Crooked Man, is that correct?

    JR: We hope so. Pat certainly does. Yeah. You know, it’s tough, because while he was feeding this Crooked energy, trying to survive and do all these things, he did lie to everybody. He wasn’t going around saying, “Hey, this thing is happening to me. Someone help me out.” He’s trying to figure it out all on his own, and he really did a lot of bad things.

    So even though he’s coming back and saying, “You can trust me now,” anybody who has lied to anybody for a long period of time knows that you can’t just flip a switch and say, “Okay, now I’m telling you the truth. Let’s just start with you believing me now.” It takes a long time, so he’s at that stage in his redemption journey, which is at the very bottom.

    I think that’s one of the fun things about Pat, is it’s sort of hard to pin him down, even how I feel about him sometimes. I can see where some of his pettiness comes in. He’s definitely a certain way when he is talking to Nicole and some of the people that he’s wounded, and then a different way talking to David, who he finds a bit frustrating. A little bit more of his selfish, angry and petty instincts come out with certain other characters, but he’s trying. He’s got some problems.

    MF: As an actor, how did you go about creating this character?

    JR: He is very complex. A lot of it was in the writing, and then the rest of it is that I took pieces of my own feelings about certain things. Certain ways I felt growing up and some of the ways that I was bullied, and I wasn’t bullied like crazy, but just like a normal amount of bullying.

    I remember I eventually, at a certain point in my life, called it my mad scientist syndrome, where there was an element in high school where I felt like, “I think I’m okay. My friends think I’m okay. Why does the outside world not reflect that?” The mad scientist part was like there was a part of my  head where I was going, “You’ll all see one day!”, or something like that.

    I think that part is what I really used for Pat, this sort of thing without evidence that he has, like he deserves this certain thing that he’s not getting. The truth is, I didn’t deserve anything that I wasn’t getting at that point in my life, but this feeling of like, “I feel like I’ve done enough. I feel like I’m okay enough, so why isn’t the world mirroring how I feel on the inside?” My response to that was to work on myself and try to get better. Pat’s response is maybe the world needs to change and come to him.

    MF: Can you expand on that? What did you do differently in your own life when you thought that “the world was not mirroring how you felt on the inside?”

    JR: I think I really dove headfirst into my little group of friends, and we just tried to make each other laugh all the time. We all thought we were funny, even if other people didn’t. We kind of built each other up and helped each other feel okay, and feel like we had worth as people, at least to each other. I think that eventually gave me a little bit of confidence in who I was, as opposed to, I think what was happening before is I was trying to be someone who I wasn’t, and I think people can sniff that out.

    I think people can go, “You’re trying to make me believe something about you that’s not true.” There’s something that’s comforting to people about people who just are who they are and are just jerks or they’re not or whatever. You go, “At least I know who you are.” Whereas this guy who’s being overly something, they’re like, “What’s your ulterior motive here?” And so, I think eventually, I was just able to let go of trying to control what other people felt about me and just getting more comfortable in who I was.

    (L to R) Alisha Wainwright and Ja’Siah Young in Netflix's 'Raising Dion'
    (L to R) Alisha Wainwright and Ja’Siah Young in Netflix’s ‘Raising Dion’
  • New ‘Halo’ TV Series Trailer

    'Halo' Courtesy of Paramount+
    ‘Halo’ Courtesy of Paramount+

    Video game adaptations still have something of a checkered history, especially on the big screen. But with recent successes such as ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ and ‘Mortal Kombat’, they’re attracting more attention.

    After a failed attempt at a movie, game sensation ‘Halo’ was picked up by Paramount Plus as a high-profile TV series, and the latest trailer for the show dropped during the AFC Conference Championship game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Kansas City Chiefs.

    ‘Halo’ as a series will take place in the universe launched in the original game, which first appeared on the Xbox in 2001. It has since expanded into a variety of other venues, including books, audio series, and more.

    The setting is an epic 26th-century conflict between humanity and an alien threat known as the Covenant, where our best weapon is the augmented soldiers known as the Spartans of Silver Team. Master Chief John-117 (Pablo Schreiber) is the best of the best. With years of active-duty service, he has become one of the most decorated war veterans in the United Nations Space Command and is a loyal soldier – not least because his commanders can control him when needed.

    Yet when Master Chief encounters a mysterious artifact that the Covenant have been seeking, it appears to have an impact on him, and he starts to behave differently.

    Oh, and in case you’re wondering what the Halos of the title are? They’re a network of colossal ring-shaped super-weapons, which would no doubt come in handy in a conflict like this…

    In terms of how the show will fit in with the games, it’s apparently being considered as its own canon. According to producer Kiki Wolfkill, who has worked on a producer on the games and oversees adaptations, it’s for the good of both stories. “We’re referring to this as the Halo Silver Timeline as a way of differentiating it from core canon,” Wolfkill said in a twitter video. “In both protecting core canon and protecting the television story, and by that, I mean being able to give ourselves the chance to evolve both and for both to be what they need to be for their mediums without colliding with each other.”

    There will be one big link, however: Jen Taylor is taking the role of Master Chief’s Smart AI Cortana, reprising the virtual character having voiced it since the original game. The series cast also includes Natascha McElhone, Bokeem Woodbine, Shabana Azmi, Natasha Culzac, Olive Gray, Yerin Ha, Bentley Kalu, Kate Kennedy, Charlie Murphy, and Danny Sapani.

    The series comes from showrunners Steven Kane, Kyle Killen, though Killen left the series and Kane has said he won’t return if a second season happens, so we’re hoping that’s not a bad sign. On the directing front, ‘His Dark Materials’ veteran Otto Bathurst handled the first two episodes, with Jonathan Liebesman, Roel Reiné and Jessica Lowrey handling the others.

    ‘Halo’ will start exclusively on Paramount+ on March 24.

  • ‘Squid Game’ Renewed for Season 2

    'Squid Game' on Netflix
    ‘Squid Game’ on Netflix

    For a series that took its creator nearly a decade to get made in the first place, ‘Squid Game’ has become quite the phenomenon. And Netflix wants to capitalize on its success, officially confirming that season 2 is in the works.

    “The ‘Squid Game’ universe has just begun,” the company’s co-CEO and Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos told shareholders, indicating that the cryptic story of lethal children’s games and the desperate people who play them will return.

    ‘Squid Game’, for anyone who might not be aware, is a Korean thriller series created by movie writer/director Hwang Dong-hyuk, who seeded the show with both emotionally resonant drama and violence, and topical social critique.

    In Season 1, 456 cash-poor contestants are invited by a mysterious organization to compete in a series of children’s games – with deadly consequences – to win a piece of the ₩45.6 billion prize pool (around $38.5 million). We won’t spoil how it all works out, especially since it’s best enjoyed without knowing any of the secrets.

    It has quickly become Netflix’s most-watched show, with the company estimating that subscribers worldwide streamed 1.65 billion hours of the show in the first 28 days of its release. It inspired many Halloween costumes based on the contestants’ numbered green tracksuits and the orange jumpsuit/face mask combination sported by guards on the show.

    Lee Jung-jae in 'Squid Game' on Netflix
    Lee Jung-jae in ‘Squid Game’ on Netflix

    From the sounds of it, Netflix is viewing ‘Squid Game’ the same way it does big successes such as ‘Bridgerton’ and ‘Stranger Things’ – properties it can spin-off into all sorts of other formats. Live events, books, merchandise, mobile games, and more are headed our way.

    Though he’d indicated that he was looking to return to making movies once the show was completed, it appears creator Hwang realizes what an opportunity he has, and how much demand there is for more of the series. “There’s been so much pressure, so much demand and so much love for a second season. So, I almost feel like you leave us no choice!” he told the Associated Press this past fall. “But I will say there will indeed be a second season. It’s in my head right now. I’m in the planning process currently.”

    Hwang has yet to reveal any specific details about what that second season might look like, but we do know that star Lee Jung-jae will return as “Squid Game’s” main character, Seong Gi-hun. The actor recently received a nomination from the 2022 Screen Actors Guild for best actor in a drama series, with co-star Jung Ho-yeon up for best actress in a drama series.

    The actors and their co-stars also made history as the first non-English-language series and Korean series to earn a nomination for cast in a drama, along with stunt ensemble.

    No date has been set for the series to return – Hwang still needs to finish writing and shooting it – but Netflix will surely be hoping it could be ready for either the end of this year or early next, to keep us all obsessing over it.

    'Squid Game' on Netflix
    ‘Squid Game’ on Netflix
  • ‘Star Wars: Ahsoka’ Adds Mary Elizabeth Winstead

    Mary Elizabeth Winstead in Netflix's 'Kate' (2021)
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead in Netflix’s ‘Kate’ (2021)

    Though ‘The Book Of Boba Fett’ might be getting the attention of ‘Star Wars’ fans on TV screens via streaming service Disney+ now, plenty are also anticipating another spin-off from ‘The Mandalorian’, ‘Star Wars: Ahsoka’. The series, which will star Rosario Dawson as the skilled Jedi warrior Ahsoka Tano, is adding Mary Elizabeth Winstead to its cast.

    Ahsoka Tano, for anyone unfamiliar with the character, made her debut in the animated series ‘Star Wars: The Clone Wars’, where she was voiced by Ashley Eckstein. She also appeared in ‘Stars Wars: Rebels’ and then was introduced in live-action form in ‘The Mandalorian’s second season episode ‘Chapter 13: The Jedi,’ played by Dawson. Ahsoka was able to communicate with The Child, long dubbed “Baby Yoda” by fans, before his real name was revealed to be Grogu.

    The actress had lobbied to play the part and the fan reaction was warm, leading to this spin-off series. This being Lucasfilm and Disney, we have no official plot details for the show yet, but it’s rumored that she’ll be hunting down the Imperial character Grand Admiral Thrawn, who has appeared in novels and animated shows. The ‘Ahsoka’ series is set five years after the events of ‘Star Wars: Return of the Jedi’ (1983).

    We do know that Hayden Christensen will be back as Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader, which makes sense as Anakin was one of Ahsoka’s Jedi tutors in ‘Clone Wars’. It seems likely that Christensen will be playing Skywalker in flashback, rather than Vader (as in the upcoming ‘Star Wars: Obi-Wan Kenobi’, starring Ewan McGregor as the iconic Jedi Master).

    Rosario Dawson as Ahsoka in season 2 of 'The Mandalorian' on Disney+
    Rosario Dawson as Ahsoka in season 2 of ‘The Mandalorian’ on Disney+

    Australian actress Natasha Liu Bordizzo is confirmed as playing Sabine Wren. She’s one of the main characters from ‘Rebels’, voiced by Tiya Sircar. The character is a young Mandalorian warrior and graffiti artist, Imperial Academy dropout and a former bounty hunter with expert knowledge of weapons and explosives. The casting increased speculation that we might see a live-action version of fellow ‘Rebels’ character Ezra Bridger.

    Ivanna Sakhno, seen in ‘Pacific Rim: Uprising’ (2018) and ‘The Spy Who Dumped Me’ (2018), is aboard as a mysterious new character. We can expect more casting to follow as the series gets closer to shooting, but there is no confirmed date yet for it to hit Disney+.

    In addition to ‘Birds Of Prey’, Winstead is known for films such as ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ (2010), ‘Smashed’ (2012) and 2007’s ‘Live Free Or Die Hard’. Her role in Ahsoka is currently unknown.

    Star Wars’ TV boss Dave Filoni is overseeing the series, writing this one and executive producing alongside Jon Favreau. Production is set for this spring in California. ‘The Mandalorian’ will launch its third season following the conclusion of ‘Boba Fett’, and other ‘Star Wars’ shows in the works include ‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’, ‘Andor’ and ‘The Acolyte’. The Lucasfilm team also has a show based around Lando Calrissian in development.

    Ahsoka from season 5 of 'Star Wars: The Clone Wars'
    Ahsoka from season 5 of ‘Star Wars: The Clone Wars’