Tag: the-punisher

  • Rosario Dawson Mistakenly Says a New ‘Punisher’ Show is Coming

    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel's 'The Punisher.'
    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel’s ‘The Punisher.’

    Given two recent examples, Marvel must be exploring some technology to stop actors saying much of anything about their movies and TV shows at all. Perhaps they could call it the Tom Holland Technique.

    Still, spoilers about projects that actually exist is one thing, but the company has now had to face performers who have roles in past projects announcing future work that isn’t yet official.

    Take Rosario Dawson, who played Claire Temple – a version of the Marvel character Night Nurse – on ‘Daredevil’ and various other ‘Defenders’ Marvel/Netflix series including ‘Jessica Jones’ and ‘Luke Cage’, took to the stage at Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo this weekend.

    In answer to a question about her potential future in the Marvel Universe (and the possibility of Jon Bernthal coming back) now that the likes of Charlie Cox’s Daredevil are confirmed to return, she let slip that she’d heard that ‘The Punisher’ was coming back.

    And that excited Dawson, since ‘The Punisher’ was one of the few shows she never got the chance to appear on, and she loves Bernthal.

    Sadly for her, and for fans of the characters, it appears she had some bad intel and was indulging in some wishful thinking. Dawson walked back her comments on Twitter this morning:

    While we’re sure Team Marvel has at least discussed the return of Bernthal’s character, we doubt Kevin Feige and co. are all that happy with actors making announcements, especially given how secretive the studio tends to be about its new movies and shows.

    Which brings us to Patton Oswalt, nerd favorite and regular genre actor, who made his MCU debut (after, of course co-writing, producing and voicing a MODOK animated series) as Pip the troll in a post-credit scene for ‘Eternals’ opposite Harry Styles as Eros/Starfox.

    Appearing on ‘The Today Show’ last week, Oswalt told the hosts and audience the following: “They have announced there’s going to be an Eternals sequel. Chloé Zhao is going to direct it. So, hopefully there will be more adventures of Starfox and Pip” (See the full video via Today Show’s TikTok account.)

    Of course, Marvel has made no such announcement as of yet – even in its big Comic-Con presentation, ‘Eternals’ did not feature. It’s not to say Feige and his team aren’t considering more ‘Eternals’ action but given the muted reaction to the movie and its box office results, it hasn’t seemed to be a big priority for the company.

    We doubt Oswalt is in big trouble, though we’re sure someone from Marvel has at least said something to him.

    Right now, on the TV front, the return of Cox’s Matt Murdock and Vincent D’Onofrio’s Kingpin is official, on a show called ‘Daredevil: Born Again’. And the previous shows are available properly on Disney+. As for the future of ‘The Punisher’? We’d be thrilled to see the return of Jon Bernthal as Castle, and only too happy if Rosario Dawson shows up to interact with him.

    As for ‘Eternals’? Let’s wait and see, shall we?

    Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh
    (L to R) Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh in Marvel Studios’ ‘Eternals.’
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  • Thomas Jane Talks ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’

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    Opening in theaters, On Demand and digital beginning June 24th is the new Western ‘Murder at Yellowstone City,’ which was directed by Richard Gray (‘Robert The Bruce’).

    When a prospector is found dead in Yellowstone City, Sheriff Ambrose (Gabriel Byrne) quickly arrests the town’s newcomer and former slave, Cicero (Isaiah Mustafa). The town’s new preacher, Thaddeus Murphy (Thomas Jane) and his wife Alice (Anna Camp) soon discover Cicero is innocent and now must stand up to the Sheriff in order to bring the true murderer to justice.

    In addition, the film also features Nat Wolf (‘The Fault in Our Stars’), Aimee Garcia (‘Lucifer’), Zach McGowan (‘Terminator Salvation‘), Scottie Thompson (‘Star Trek’), Emma Kenney (‘The Conners’), and Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss (‘Jaws’).

    Thomas Jane has appeared in dozens of popular movies including ‘Face/Off,’ ‘Boogie Nights,’ ‘The Thin Red Line,’ ‘Magnolia,’ ‘61*,’ ‘Dreamcatcher,’ ‘The Mist,’ ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,’ and ‘The Predator.’

    But he is probably best known to Marvel fans as Frank Castle in 2004’s ‘The Punisher.’ He currently stars as Ted Conkaffey on the Freevee series, ‘Troppo.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Thomas Jane about his work on ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    Thomas Jane in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.
    Thomas Jane in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Jane, and director Richard Gray.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did you get involved in this project and what was your initial reaction to the screenplay?

    Thomas Jane: Me and my partner Courtney Penn started a production company in 2019 called Renegade. Renegade’s logo is a horse made out of fire. So, it was natural for us to be attracted to Westerns and to have Westerns sent to us. This was the second Western that we did that we shot in 2020. The first was called ‘The Last Son’ and that’s come and gone.

    This one we’re real proud of. It’s a script that came across our desk and we thought “this is a classic Western that does good things with the genre, but doesn’t break the genre or step outside of it, or try to twist it around in some funny way, like bringing aliens in.” Not that there’s anything wrong with that. But this was a classic Western and when they work, they work. They’ve been around for a long time for a reason.

    It’s that tension between the individual, the freedom of the individual and the town, which is society, the rules of society and the morals of society that can be constricting in some ways. Yet you need the society in order to survive. No man is an island, but there’s always an outsider. The outsider comes into the town. The town is either a good town, full of decent people, but ultimately weak and in need of protection, open to the predations of villainous and murderous men.

    Or the town is a strong town, but bad. There’s a corrupt sheriff, there’s some corruption creeping through the veins of the town, keeping people off balance. In both cases, a hero is needed from the outside to come in and at first, he’s shunned and then he’s needed. Then at the end, he has righted some wrongs, stomped out some evil and rides off into the sunset.

    That’s the basic Western. There’re different variations on that theme. There’s the vengeance theme, which we have a little bit. There’s the professional theme, which came around in the 70’s. It was with Lee Marvin‘s ‘The Professionals,’ and ‘The Wild Bunch’ with William Holden. This was a new twist. It really didn’t exist before the late 60’s and 70’s where you had a group of professional gun fighters. It was always a group. It’s a group of pros and they’ve come in and they don’t care. They’re just being paid to do their job. Along the way their own morality is challenged and then they have to step up and write the wrongs because wrongs need righting.

    MF: Director Richard Gray has referred to you as a “Western movie expert.” Do you agree with that statement and how did your work on previous Westerns prepare you to make this movie?

    TJ: On both films we were lucky enough to meet and then work with the Schultz brothers who are a group of horse wranglers that live in the Dakotas and they are expert horsemen. The value of good horsemen to a Western, you can’t put a price on it. It is absolutely necessary in order to get your shots on time, to make your days, to get what you need out of the actor and the horse when they’re working together, it’s vital. So, I’m very happy to have teamed up with the Schultz brothers, plan on doing that again many times.

    My experience with the Western mostly comes from watching them with my dad. The Western is such a father/son relationship and me and my dad on the weekends would sit down and pop in a Western. We had a lot of great times, a lot of great discussions and a lot of interesting insights into what it meant to be a man, and what it meant to be a good man. The role of masculinity in society, how that role is both needed and despised, and how that changes over the years and the decades.

    It’s a purely an American invention, the myth of the American West. It’s like baseball and jazz. These are real American products and it spread all over the world, and now you find Italian Westerns, Japanese Westerns, Bollywood Westerns. So, it speaks to people. It doesn’t really matter where you’re from. It speaks to people who live in a society, the rights and the wrongs and the morality of that. It’s changed over the years.

    The classic Western always had a damsel in distress. She represented the weak society that needed protecting from the bad guys, and the hero would step in and say, “get behind me, woman.” He would take care of business. But then the 60’s came around and that evolved to a woman that was strong enough to be the hero’s equal. They would partner up as a couple and then take on the bad guys. That evolution you didn’t see before the 60’s or 70’s.

    Then the Western died in the eighties. There were no Westerns in the 80’s. ‘Heaven’s Gate’ in 1980 killed it. It was a huge movie and a financial disaster. It’s actually a very good film if you watch the director’s cut. It is really good, and a real tragedy that the movie didn’t do better. But that killed the Western for the 80’s.

    Then they revived again in the 90’s with ‘Dances With Wolves’ and ‘Unforgiven.’ Then you the variations start to creep in like ‘Desperado,’ or ‘The Quick and the Dead,’ where you had a strong female character taking over the role of the hero. Then ‘Posse,’ when you had a black man step up as the hero. So, we started seeing variations. Some of those variations worked better than others. You can bend the genre, but you can’t break it.

    Hopefully people have tuned into that now because it plays a very specific role in the American psyche. If you mess with it too much, then it no longer plays that role and then Westerns die again for another 10 years.

    Isaiah Mustafa and Anna Camp in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.'
    (L to R) Isaiah Mustafa and Anna Camp in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    MF: A lot of clues about your character’s past are given with very little dialogue, but its’ clear from your behavior that he hasn’t always been a preacher. Can you talk about creating his backstory for yourself and how that helped you create the character?

    TJ: I like that you mentioned that we accomplished it with very little dialogue. I’m a big fan of stripping away as much dialogue as you can and leaving only the essentials, letting the audience put the pieces together. That’s how I like to watch movies. I like to watch movies that aren’t spoon fed, that respects my intelligence enough that I will be able to put the pieces together without having somebody give a long speech.

    We accomplished that, me and Richie Gray went through the script and we were able to excise as much material as we possibly could in order to boil it down to its essentials. That allows the audience to fill in the blanks with their own imagination, much like you do when you read a novel. That’s always the goal, so it’s nice to hear you say that.

    MF: Finally, I understand that this is the first Western that Gabriel Byrne has ever made. What was it like for you working with him on this film?

    TJ: As he gets older, he has got a great face for Westerns. I think Westerns are all about faces. Sergio Leone, you look at those movies, you look at the smaller characters and the faces, the grit, the grime and the sweat, but they always had these faces that were hard road. They’ve been ridden hard. You really got that sense that life was tough. It was nasty, brutish, and short, and people were lucky to be alive every day. You could be wiped out any day by the simplest thing. Step on a rattlesnake while you’re digging a grave. So that has always appealed to me.

    Byrne is a classically trained, and a wonderful actor. He’s got a great voice. I love the Irish brogue. I love the fact that Westerns are all about immigrants, and there were a lot of immigrants coming in. So, you got a Swedish accent, or an Irish accent, or a British accent. They were all coming in. I like that aspect of the reality that we bring to it. Gabriel is a pro, he’s a real pro and he was a lot of fun to work with.

    Gabriel Byrne in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.'
    Gabriel Byrne in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’ will be in Theaters, On Demand and Digital on June 24th.

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  • Best Pre-MCU Marvel Movies

    Thomas Jane in 2004's 'The Punisher.'
    Thomas Jane in 2004’s ‘The Punisher.’

    Marvel Studios’ Marvel Cinematic Universe of movies began officially in 2008 with the premiere of ‘Iron Man,’ and the MCU has ruled the box office ever since.

    But, before there was a shared Marvel universe, different studios released self-contained films based on the popular Marvel characters.

    With ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness‘ currently in theaters, which introduces both the ‘X-Men’s Professor X (Patrick Stewart) and a new version of the Fantastic Four’s Reed Richards (John Krasinski), we thought now would be a perfect time to countdown the 10 best pre-MCU movies of all time.

    For this list, we are only including movies based on Marvel characters that were released before the birth of the MCU in 2008, so non-MCU films released after 2008 such as ‘Deadpool,’ ‘Logan,’ ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past,’ ‘The Amazing Spider-Man‘ and ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse‘ will not count.

    Without further ado, let’s begin!


    Ghost Rider (2007)

    In order to save his dying father, young stunt cyclist Johnny Blaze (Nicolas Cage) sells his soul to Mephistopheles (Peter Fonda) and sadly parts from the pure-hearted Roxanne Simpson (Eva Mendes), the love of his life. Years later, Johnny’s path crosses again with Roxanne, now a go-getting reporter, and also with Mephistopheles, who offers to release Johnny’s soul if Johnny becomes the fabled, fiery ‘Ghost Rider’.

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    Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)

    The Fantastic Four (Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, and Michael Chiklis) return to the big screen as a new and all powerful enemy threatens the Earth. The seemingly unstoppable ‘Silver Surfer’ (voice of Laurence Fishburne), but all is not what it seems and there are old and new enemies that pose a greater threat than the intrepid superheroes realize.

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    Daredevil (2003)

    A man blinded in a childhood accident (Ben Affleck) fights crime using his superhumanly-elevated remaining senses.

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    The Punisher (2004)

    When undercover FBI agent Frank Castle’s wife and son are slaughtered, he becomes ‘the Punisher’ (Thomas Jane), a ruthless vigilante willing to go to any length to avenge his family.

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    Blade (1998)

    The Daywalker known as “Blade” (Wesley Snipes), a half-vampire, half-mortal man – becomes the protector of humanity against an underground army of vampires.

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    X-Men (2000)

    Two mutants, Rogue (Anna Paquin) and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), come to a private academy for their kind whose resident superhero team, the X-Men, must oppose a terrorist organization with similar powers.

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    Spider-Man (2002)

    After being bitten by a genetically altered spider at Oscorp, nerdy but endearing high school student Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) is endowed with amazing powers to become the superhero known as Spider-Man.

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    Blade II (2002)

    A rare mutation has occurred within the vampire community – The Reaper. A vampire so consumed with an insatiable bloodlust that they prey on vampires as well as humans, transforming victims who are unlucky enough to survive into Reapers themselves. Blade (Wesley Snipes) is asked by the Vampire Nation for his help in preventing a nightmare plague that would wipe out both humans and vampires.

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    X2 (2003)

    Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart) and his team of genetically gifted superheroes face a rising tide of anti-mutant sentiment led by Col. William Stryker (Brian Cox). Storm (Halle Berry), Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) and Jean Grey (Famke Janssen) must join their usual nemeses—Magneto (Ian McKellen) and Mystique (Rebecca Romijn)—to unhinge Stryker’s scheme to exterminate all mutants.

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    Spider-Man 2 (2004)

    Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) is going through a major identity crisis. Burned out from being Spider-Man, he decides to shelve his superhero alter ego, which leaves the city suffering in the wake of carnage left by the evil Doc Ock (Alfred Molina). In the meantime, Parker still can’t act on his feelings for Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), a girl he’s loved since childhood. A certain anger begins to brew in his best friend Harry Osborn (James Franco) as well…

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  • Netflix Cancels ‘The Punisher’ and ‘Jessica Jones’

    Netflix Cancels ‘The Punisher’ and ‘Jessica Jones’

    Netflix

    Marvel and Netflix have officially parted ways: The streaming service has canceled its remaining two Marvel series, “The Punisher” and “Jessica Jones.”

    Deadline reports that Netflix decided to put those series to rest, ending its marquee partnership with the comics powerhouse. Other Marvel series that were previously canceled by the streaming giant include “Daredevil,” “Luke Cage,” and “Iron Fist.”

    In a statement released to Deadline, Netflix confirmed the most recent cancellations. It also said that the upcoming third season of “Jessica Jones” would still air on the streaming service as planned.

    The statement said:

    “Marvel’s The Punisher will not return for a third season on Netflix,” Netflix confirmed today to Deadline. “Showrunner Steve Lightfoot, the terrific crew, and exceptional cast including star Jon Bernthal, delivered an acclaimed and compelling series for fans, and we are proud to showcase their work on Netflix for years to come,” the streamer added.

    “In addition, in reviewing our Marvel programming, we have decided that the upcoming third season will also be the final season for Marvel’s Jessica Jones,” Netflix also made official this President’s Day. “We are grateful to showrunner Melissa Rosenberg, star Krysten Ritter and the entire cast and crew, for three incredible seasons of this groundbreaking series, which was recognized by the Peabody Awards among many others”.

    “We are grateful to Marvel for five years of our fruitful partnership and thank the passionate fans who have followed these series from the beginning.”

    Marvel released its own statement about the news, striking a bittersweet tone that also teased a possible continuation for some of its characters — perhaps on the upcoming Disney+? The statement said:

    “It had never been done before. Four separate television series, each with different super-talented showrunners, writers, directors, cast and crew, coming out months apart and then …they would meet in a single event series all set in the heart of New York City. We called them The Defenders.

    And together we were thrilled by stories of Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Iron Fist and even the Punisher joined in! They said it couldn’t be done.But Marvel assembled amazing teams to write, produce, direct, edit, and score 13 seasons and 161 one-hour episodes. Take a moment and go online and look at the dazzling list of actors, writers, directors, and musicians who graced us with the very best of their craft.

    We loved each and every minute of it.

    And we did it all for you — the fans — who cheered for us around the world and made all the hard work worth it.

    On behalf of everyone at Marvel Television, we couldn’t be more proud or more grateful to our audience. Our Network partner may have decided they no longer want to continue telling the tales of these great characters… but you know Marvel better than that.

    As Matthew Murdock’s Dad once said, ‘The measure of a man is not how he gets knocked to the mat, it’s how he gets back up.’ To be continued…!”

    Stay tuned to see if any of these series make the switch to Disney’s new service.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘The Punisher’ Season 2: Frank Is ‘Out of Control’ in Brutal New Trailer

    ‘The Punisher’ Season 2: Frank Is ‘Out of Control’ in Brutal New Trailer

    The Punisher Season 2 trailer still
    Netflix/YouTube

    Frank Castle is ready for another showdown.

    Less than a week after the release of the official trailer for “The Punisher” Season 2, Netflix has given us another preview. Like the one before it, the trailer is full of violence. Frank (Jon Bernthal) has more enemies than ever, including a so-called “army” led by his friend-turned-enemy Billy Russo/Jigsaw (Ben Barnes).

    All the violence causes concern, of course. The trailer shows Dinah Madani (Amber Rose Revah) warning Frank in the trailer that he’s “out of control,” while his friend Curtis Hoyle (Jason R. Moore) tells him that “people are going to die.” It all sounds very ominous, especially considering that Billy is back.

    Watch the trailer below, but be warned that it’s bloody.

    It’s possible that Season 2 could be the Steve Lightfoot-created series’ last. The show hasn’t been renewed for a third season yet, and so far, three of Marvel’s series for Netflix — “Daredevil,” “Luke Cage,” and “Iron Fist — have been canceled.

    “The Punisher” Season 2 premieres Jan. 18 on Netflix.

  • ‘The Punisher’ Season 2 Trailer Puts Frank Castle in a Bloody Bullet-Fest

    ‘The Punisher’ Season 2 Trailer Puts Frank Castle in a Bloody Bullet-Fest

    Jon Bernthal in The Punisher
    Netflix

    There will be blood in “The Punisher” Season 2.

    When the Netflix-Marvel drama returns, marine-turned-vigilante Frank (Jon Bernthal) finds his quiet life is blown up when he saves Amy (Giorgia Whigham). Embroiled in the mystery around her and the people chasing after her, Castle also finds his former friend, Ben Russo aka Jigsaw (Ben Barnes), has survived their last encounter and is hell-bent on killing him.

    Bullets are flying everywhere in the trailer, though as Frank says, “I’m not the one who dies, kid. I’m the one who does the killing.”

    But whether Frank lives to see Season 3 is another story. Netflix has been canceling its other Marvel shows, including “Daredevil” (which spawned “The Punisher”) and “Luke Cage.” Only this show and “Jessica Jones” have seasons left to stream and it seems likely that both will also end for good once that happens.

    “The Punisher” Season 2 premieres January 18.

  • ‘Marvel’s The Punisher’ Season 2 Date Announcement Teases Revamped Villain

    ‘Marvel’s The Punisher’ Season 2 Date Announcement Teases Revamped Villain

    The Punisher Season 2 date announcement still
    Netflix/YouTube

    There’s a new face in town.

    With “Marvel’s The Punisher” returning this month, Netflix has finally revealed the Season 2 premiere date. The streamer dropped a date announcement video on Thursday, Jan. 3, teasing the ongoing battle between Frank Castle (Jon Bernthal) and his friend-turned-enemy Billy Russo (Ben Barnes). Although the two faced off in the Season 1 finale and Frank came out ahead, he clearly hasn’t seen the last of Billy — and neither have we.

    The video shows the aftermath of the two men’s battle. Billy removes his bandages and reveals not only his scars but also his new face.

    “This face has everything that I ever did wrong written all over it,” he shouts.

    For all that Billy looks tortured and unstable, Frank is cool and calm.

    “I’m not the one who dies,” he says. “I’m the one who does the killing.”

    Watch the video below.

    “Marvel’s The Punisher” Season 2 premieres Jan. 18 on Netflix.

  • New on Netflix: January 2019

    New on Netflix: January 2019

    Pixar

    The new year brings a third and final season of “A Series of Unfortunate Events” to Netflix and new seasons of “Grace and Frankie” and “Unbreakable Kimmie Schmidt.”

    New series include the docuseries “Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes” and a new “Carmen Sandiego.”

    And enjoy those big-name movies, including “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” “Incredibles 2,” and “Ant-Man and the Wasp.” And hey, all the Indiana Jones movies are back.

    And while everything else Marvel is being canceled, “The Punisher” is back for Season 2, although there’s no specific premiere date yet.

    Here’s everything coming to Netflix streaming in January:

    Available January 1
    “A Series of Unfortunate Events”: Season 3 (Netflix Original)
    “Across the Universe” (2007)
    “Babel” (2006)
    “Black Hawk Down” (2001)
    “City of God” (2002)
    “Comedians of the World” (Netflix Original)
    “Definitely, Maybe” (2008)
    “Godzilla”
    “Happy Feet” (2006)
    “Hell or High Water” (2016)
    “I Know What You Did Last Summer” (1997)
    “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” (2008)
    “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989)
    “Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark” (1981)
    “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” (1984)
    “It Takes Two” (1995)
    “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” (2001)
    “Jersey Boys” (2014)
    “Mona Lisa Smile” (2003)
    “Mr. Bean’s Holiday” (2007)
    “Pan’s Labyrinth” (2006)
    “Pinky Malinky” (Netflix Original)
    “Pulp Fiction” (1994)
    “Swingers” (1996)
    “Tears of the Sun” (2003)
    “The Addams Family” (1991)
    “The Boy in the Striped Pajamas” (2008)
    “The Dark Knight” (2008)
    “The Departed” (2006)
    “The Mummy” (1999)
    “The Mummy Returns” (2001)
    “The Strangers” (2008)
    Tidying Up with Marie Kondo” (Netflix Original)
    “Watchmen” (2009)
    “xXx” (2002)
    “XXX: State of the Union” (2005)

    Available January 2
    “Monty Python and the Holy Grail” (1975)

    Available January 4
    “And Breathe Normally” (Netflix Film)
    “Call My Agent!”: Season 3 (Netflix Original)
    “El Potro: Unstoppable” (Netflix Film)
    “Lionheart” (Netflix Film)

    Available January 9
    “Godzilla The Planet Eater” (Netflix Original)
    “Solo: A Star Wars Story” (2018)

    Available January 10
    “When Heroes Fly” (Netflix Original)

    Available January 11
    “Friends from College”: Season 2 (Netflix Original)
    “ReMastered: Massacre at the Stadium” (Netflix Original)
    “Sex Education” (Netflix Original)
    “Solo” (Netflix Film)
    “The Last Laugh” (Netflix Film)

    Available January 15
    “Revenger” (Netflix Film)
    “Sebastian Maniscalco: Stay Hungry” (Netflix Original)

    Available January 16
    “American Gangster” (2007)

    Available January 17
    “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”

    Available January 18
    “Carmen Sandiego” (Netflix Original)
    “Close” (Netflix Film)
    “Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened” (Netflix Original)
    “Girl” (Netflix Film)
    “Grace and Frankie”: Season 5 (Netflix Original)
    “IO” (Netflix Film)
    “Soni” (Netflix Film)
    “The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes”: Season 2 Part B (Netflix Original)
    “Trigger Warning with Killer Mike” (Netflix Original)
    “Trolls: The Beat Goes On!”: Season 5 (Netflix Original)

    Available January 21
    “Justice” (Netflix Original)

    Available January 24
    “Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes” (Netflix Original)
    “Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation” (2018)

    Available January 25
    “Animas” (Netflix Film)
    “Black Earth Rising” (Netflix Original)
    “Club de Cuervos”: Season 4″ (Netflix Original)
    “Kingdom” (Netflix Original)
    “Medici: The Magnificent” (Netflix Original)
    “Polar” (Netflix Film)
    “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”: Season 4, Part 2 (Netflix Original)

    Available January 27
    “Z Nation”: Season 5

    Available January 29
    “Gabriel ‘Fluffy’ Iglesias: One Show Fits All” (Netflix Original)
    Marvel Studios’ “Ant-Man and the Wasp” (2018)

    Available January 30
    Disney•Pixar’s “The Incredibles 2” (2018)

    Coming Soon
    Marvel’s “The Punisher”: Season 2 (Netflix Original)

  • Every Marvel Movie Before the MCU, Ranked From ‘X-Men’ to ‘Spider-Man’

    Every Marvel Movie Before the MCU, Ranked From ‘X-Men’ to ‘Spider-Man’

  • ‘The Punisher’ Star Jon Bernthal Talks Gun Control & Alt-Right Fans: ‘F*ck Them’

    Marvel's DaredevilBetween “The Walking Dead” and “The Punisher,” Jon Bernthal is often associated with guns.

    “Sometimes when people write about me, it sounds like I’m glorifying the violence,” Bernthal told Esquire in a lengthy new cover story.

    The actor — who previously got candid about Kevin Spacey — opened up on his own gun use and gun control. He also addressed the way “The Punisher” symbol has been adopted by some fans, from war veterans to alt-right white supremacists.

    Bernthal is married with three young kids under seven, and he referenced them when talking about gun safety and the necessity for serious dialogue.

    Here’s that part of the Esquire profile:

    The Punisher is so brutal that its debut was pushed back a month because of the massacre in Las Vegas in October. Not surprisingly, Bernthal is conflicted about the role that will likely define his career. He confessed that he spent days before we first talked thinking about how to address his character’s obsession with guns. The more he thought about it, and the more people he talked to, the more uncertain he became.

    “I’m a gun owner,” Bernthal told me one afternoon in Ojai. “I have a gun in my house to keep my family safe. I’m trained in that gun’s use. I know how to keep it away from my kids, and I know how to use it if I need to.”

    With [one of his rescue pit bulls] Boss at his feet, he went back and forth talking about the cowardice of those who hold absolute positions on either side of the issue. “Should there be a way that a guy with mental issues like the a**hole in Texas can’t get guns? Absolutely. We have to have a dialogue, and that’s not happening.”

    I noted that the Punisher’s symbol, a skull with long fangs, has been spotted on military helmets in Iraq and biker jackets, and was seen on the shoulders of alt-right protesters at the white-supremacy rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

    “I feel honored to play a guy who people putting their life on the line identify with,” Bernthal said.

    And the alt-righters?

    “F*ck them.”

    Read his full profile for a lot more of his thoughts on his career, and dogs, and family, and more. “The Punisher” is now streaming on Netflix.

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