Thứ Hai, 27 tháng 2, 2017

Marvel's Spider-Man' animated series to feature 'Spider Island' and 'Superior Spider-Man' Read more

  • Miles Morales aka the Ultimate Spider-Man uses his 'spider-sense' ability in the 'Ultimate Spider-Man' cartoon series.
Miles Morales aka the Ultimate Spider-Man uses his 'spider-sense' ability in the 'Ultimate Spider-Man' cartoon series. (Photo : YouTube/Disney XD)
The upcoming "Marvel's Spider-Man" animated series will feature Peter Parker as Spider-Man, Miles Morales as the Ultimate Spider-Man and Gwen Stacy as Spider-Gwen. However, it has also been confirmed that at some point the series will explore the "Spider Island" storyline.
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"Another story we have coming up on the Spidey side, we'll get to 'Spider Island' at some point," Marvel Animation Vice President Steve Wacker told CBR. "That was a big Spider-Man story in publishing."
It is pointed out that Wacker did not specifically mentioned the animated series when discussing the "Spider Island" arc. However, the upcoming live-action movie is already tackling a story aabout the Vulture and the animated movie is featuring Miles Morales but not Peter Parker.
This would mean only the animated series would have the opportunity of tackling the storyline sometime in the future. This could take place either in Season 1 or beyond that.
"Spider Island" was a storyline in the comic books that first emerged in 2011. The story revolved around the citizens of New York inheriting powers similar to Peter Parker but had adverse effects, such as many of the people turning into humanoid spiders.
Wacker also indicated that the "Superior Spider-Man" storyline could be adapted as well. He explained it was the last major storyline he did for the comics with comic book writer Dan Slott.
The "Superior Spider-Man" series ran from 2013 to 2014 and focused on Doctor Octopus, Screen Rant reported.. The evil doctor managed to switch bodies with Peter Parker right before Octopus' body died from cancer, ultimately leading to Peter dying as well.
Octopus, in Peter's body, continued to masquerade as a super-hero and had to deal with the remnants of Peter's conscience. The series later ended with the status quo returned to normal.
No specific release date has yet been announced but the show is expected to premiere this July. This will be around the same time the live-action "Spider-Man: Homecoming" film will launch in theaters. The official trailer for the film can be viewed below:


Read more: http://en.yibada.com/articles/190850/20170131/marvels-spider-man-cartoon-superior-spider-man-spider-island-series.htm#ixzz4ZwYyidsy

San Diego Comic Fest ’17: Spotlight on John Semper, Jr. – Talks Spider-Man lore and Marvel Woes

ohn Semper, Jr. holds an ever growing list of credits, ranging from his work as a screenwriter, producer, and story editor. His body of work is mostly invested the in the field of animation, where he is most remembered among cartoon and comic fans alike for his work on the much watched 90’s carton Spider-Man: The Animated Series. His work on this series helped not only the movement of many a plastic toy from store shelves to homes, but perhaps also contribute to the revival of the Marvel brand.
At this year’s San Diego Comic Fest, moderator and Comic Fest Chairman Matt Dunford introduced Mr. Semper. Dunford’s moderation is not without cause, for the Chairman confesses that it was the animated “webslinger” that further helped to pull him into the orbit of the comic book industry.
“That show absolutely blew my mind,” said Dunford. I had been reading Spider-Man comics as an avid fan. I had learned to read from them. As soon as I saw that show, I just entered ‘freak-out mode’. I begged my mom and dad to take me down to Toys-R-Us where I picked up my first Spider-Man action figures.”
Semper for his part began by “clearing” some myths regarding his work. As moderator Dunford began to speak about an opening sequence in the first episode of the show where Spiderman is seen high on the side of a building casually talking to a gargoyle statue named “Bruce” and alluding to the possibility that it was named after “Bruce Wayne” (aka Batman), Semper jumped in; “Bruce the gargoyle… well let me go back. In the industry, people are frequently trying to take your credit… They’ll give you all the money you want, but they’ll argue about the credits. So having people attempt to take my credit off of things, I got into the habit of putting all my friends’ names into everything I did… My friend was a film editor named Bruce Heckler. We had started our carriers together. And Bruce the gargoyle is named after Bruce Heckler.”
Matt Dunford (left) and John Semper, Jr. (right)
The other myth that Semper cleared up was the one regarding what FOX allowed the animated series to get away with. In trade shows and conventions years ago, Semper use to read some of the notes that “Standards and Practices” would leave for the writers and editors, as a laugh he said. Those that don’t know what Standards and Practices is, they are a department that makes sure the network (being the client) will not get into trouble by theF.C.C. by anything that the show may depict. “I think what happened was, so many people out there did not know that we had any censorship at all, and here I was, the first person revealing this. Point-in-fact, every cartoon show on the planet… we were all under the same umbrella in terms of what we could and could not do… This kind of became a part of this ‘Spider-Man’ lore, that we had lots and lots of censorship. Which we never did. We never had more than anyone else.”
As to why we never saw Spider-Man hit a “bad guy” in the face, Semper continued. “It’s twofold; First was I personally didn’t believe in modeling behavior for children that involved people ‘whacking’ each other in the face. That’s just my own personal thing… And then the second thing is with Spider-Man we have webbing, which was much more interesting. So instead of a guy running around and socking people in the face… I just had him do interesting things with his webs.”
Semper got his start as a writer, as he put it, “from the bottom up.”
“My first real job in the industry was as an apprentice fill editor. I was working on a movie calledD.C. Cab… and I was freelance writing for Hanna-Barbera. And we sold so many scripts primarily to ABC and Scooby-Doo… that [ABC] said ‘Well who is this John Semper guy?’… They made me an offer to come over as a staff writer… So then I went over to Hanna-Barbera… Then got taken over to Marvel Productions… There was a guy in the back-corner office who I would go back to and hang out with him, and his name was Stan Lee. Stan was very frustrated at that time because we weren’t doing any Marvel stuff. We were doing a lot of Hasbro. Nothing but Hasbro, and a lot of other silly stuff.”
Unfortunately for Semper, Marvel Productions eventually closed, leaving him and his writing partner in a limbo of sorts. His partner eventually left the industry and Semper found other work. It was when FOX was having a lot of trouble getting their animated show, Spider-Man, on the air that Semper was given the position of producer and head writer.
“At that time, Avi [Arad] owned the rights to the Marvel characters.” As Semper pointed out, this was a spot in the Marvel company’s history where they were financially in trouble. Avi Arad, one of the owners of the then company Toy Biz, purchased the rights to the Marvel characters in an attempt to bank on their deep pre-existing character lines. However, this wouldn’t do well if the kids didn’t know who these characters were. “So Avi just bought the rights to the characters, but what he needed was to get a lot of TV shows on the air so that he could sell the toys to kids… And Spider-Man was one of those characters.”
Amidst the trouble of getting the Spider-Man cartoon up and running, Stan Lee called up Semper and asked him to help. Eventually he came over to Spider-Man and managed to get out a preview episode before Christmas, saving Avi Arad’s toy deal. “He was actually on the verge of losing a whole lot of money if he rolled out a toy line with a character that no child in America knew who the character was.”
Ultimately the plan worked, but in more ways than one. A young audience got their toys, but they also became familiar with Marvel’s webslinger. New possibilities then opened for the comics, where Marvel was able to take the episodes later on and translate them back into the comic form where Spider-Man came from. “A lot of what we did on the show eventually turned around and went into the comics,” said Semper.
Presently, the writer is currently involved in the DC comic Cyborg. Much like Marvel’s predicament with the Spider-Man cartoon, Semper was asked to head the comic as DC felt that the “part human, part machine” character needed to be built up before being introduced in the Justice League movie. Semper had been busy at work with his successfully crowed-funded project, War of the Rocketmen, when he had gotten the comic gig. What Semper thought would be a one issue a month comic turned out to be a two issue per month comic. After six months of working tirelessly, the writer expressed his relief to the crowd present that the comic would soon be tuning it back to a one a month deal, freeing up time to get back to his work on War of the Rocketmen.

Marvel Teases Future Spider-Man Animation Projects

We might see some newer Spider-Man storylines on Disney XD's new cartoon adaptation premiering later this year.
Marvel’s Spider-Man has been teased as a back-to-basics approach for the wall crawler afterUltimate Spider-Man concludes, and concept art has teased new spider characters such Miles Morales and Spider-Gwen.
Bit in a recent interview with CBR promoting the finale of Avengers: Ultron Revolution, Marvel Animation Vice President Steve Wacker revealed that his team is looking to adapt more contemporary comic book stories, including Superior Spider-Man.
“That was the last big story I worked on in the comics side with Dan Slott,” Wacker said. “I’m not quite sure how we get there, but I’d love to see it.”
He also hinted at another recent event that shook up the Spidey mythos in the comics.
“We’ll get to Spider Island at some point. That was a big Spider-Man story in publishing,” Wacker added.
He said he’d like to see newer stories like Annihilation than Kree/Skrull War or Spider Man: No More, perhaps hinting at a future storyline for the Guardians of the Galaxycartoon.
Whether these developments are on the horizon or a ways away is still up in the air, as Marvel’s Spider-Man has yet to premier. Look for more information in the coming months as a release date is locked down.

Oscars 2017: Sunny Pawar Wins Hollywood Hearts; Priyanka Chopra’s Geometric Outfit Creates Buzz; ‘Lion’ Snubbed

Oscars 2017: Sunny Pawar Wins Hollywood Hearts; Priyanka Chopra’s Geometric Outfit Creates Buzz; ‘Lion’ Snubbed



One of the most memorable moments of the night at the 89th Academy Awards was the one shared between host Jimmy Kimmel and Indian actor Sunny Pawar.
Not only was the “Lion” actor a red carpet sensation Feb. 26, posing in a poised manner with the likes of “The Amazing Spider-Man” actor Andrew Garfield, he was a total rock star once inside Dolby Theater in Hollywood, Calif. Dressed in a black-and-white tuxedo with a bow tie and colorful shoes for his first appearance at the Oscars, Pawar was a good sport when Kimmel enlisted his help to recreate the famous “Lion King” scene. When Kimmel asked Pawar if he had watched the film and Pawar replied in the affirmative, the late-night show host went ahead and lifted him in the air much like Simba and Mufasa did in the 1994 animated classic. Needless to say, Hollywood was charmed with his innocent smile and confident demeanor.
Another cute moment that the TV and mobile cameras did not miss was when model Chrissy Teigen dropped to her knees to hug the 8-year-old. She also tweeted a video of her hugging the pint-sized star. And as if that wasn’t enough, she retweeted the video, saying, “Finally,” explaining just how excited she was to meet the little star.
Hollywood actor Samuel Jackson was also one among many fans of Pawar. The 68-year-old actor took to Instagram to share what he thought of Pawar’s performance in “Lion.” He wrote: “This is who should have won Best Actor tonight, Sunny Pawar of Lion! Totally Killed It!”
Though he received pure unadulterated love from Hollywood’s elites at the prestigious award ceremony, his film “Lion,” however, wasn’t so lucky. The tearjerker family drama starring British Indian actor Dev Patel, Pawar and Nicole Kidman, went into the night with six nominations, including ‘Best Picture,’ but came back empty-handed. Many had anticipated the film to secure the ‘Best Supporting Actress’ award for Nicole Kidman and the ‘Best Supporting Actor’ award for Patel. The film, which is adapted from Saroo Brierley’s memoir “A Long Way Home,” and which tells the incredible true story of an adopted Indian boy who searches for his family after he was stranded at a train station as a child, and later adopted by an Australian couple, was also predicted to register a win in the “Best Adapted Screenplay’ category.
Sporting a white tuxedo, Patel, who eventually lost the ‘Best Supporting Actor’ award to “Moonlight’s” Mahershala Ali, attended the ceremony with his mother, who wore a black saree with a golden border.
Talking about the red carpet, Priyanka Chopra has been winning a legion of fans with her fashion style. The Bollywood actress, who is not afraid to take fashion risks, zeroed in on a white gown by Ralph & Russo, which accentuated her curves, for her second appearance at the star-studded event. She complemented the form-fitting geometric gown with Lorraine Schwartz jewels and sleek, side-parted hair with minimal makeup. In our view, though she stood out at the glam event, this wasn’t her best look. But she did look stunning at the Vanity Fair after-Oscar party, which she attended in a black shimmery Michael Kors Collection gown.
IANS adds: Indian actor Om Puri, whose repertoire as an actor reflected a rare realism and was popular for films like “East Is East,” “Gandhi,” “City of Joy” and “Wolf,” was honored in the “In Memoriam” montage at the Academy Awards.
Puri, who died after a heart attack in Mumbai in January earlier this year, got a musical tribute by Grammy and Tony-nominated singer and songwriter Sara Bareilles.
He was included in the annual montage along with Carrie Fisher, Prince, Gene Wilder, Michael Cimino, Patty Duke, Garry Marshall, Anton Yelchin, Mary Tyler Moore, Curtis Hanson and John Hurt.
Bareilles delivered a special performance of the Joni Mitchell song, “Both sides now.” A visibly emotional actress Jennifer Aniston introduced the memoriam segment.
Puri was known for his deep baritone and different acting style, as well as craggy, pockmarked but distinctive face. He had an affinity for socially relevant cinema.

Bill Paxton obituary

Bill Paxton as the intrepid storm chaser, Bill Harding, in Twister, 1996.
 Bill Paxton as the intrepid storm chaser, Bill Harding, in Twister, 1996. Photograph: Allstar/Universal Pictures
Bill Paxton, who has died aged 61 from complications following surgery, was a lively and endearing character actor. Stocky, with a knack for conveying bareknuckle vitality as well as a more considered intelligence and tenderness, he cropped up initially in some of the sparkiest pulp films of the 1980s, including Kathryn Bigelow’s highly original vampire movie Near Dark (1987).
After James Cameron had an unexpected hit with The Terminator (1984), in which Paxton appeared briefly as a blue-haired thug, he took the actor with him on to future projects, casting him as one of a band of rough and ready deep-space marines in Aliens (1986), as a dopey car salesman in True Lies (1994) and as a treasure hunter in the framing story that bookends Titanic (1997). As one of the beleaguered astronauts in Apollo 13 (1995) and the chief tornado-chaser in Twister (1996), Paxton was for a time Hollywood’s favourite down to earth good ol’ boy.
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 Bill Paxton in the TV series Big Love, 2006. Photograph: Hbo/Rex/Shutterstock
Such parts would on their own have been enough for a career. However, Paxton landed several demanding lead roles – two of them in emotionally weighty thrillers, the other in an offbeat television series – which proved not only that he was capable of bringing subtle shadings to trickier material, but also that the industry had been remiss in not putting more of that sort of work his way.
In Carl Franklin’s One False Move (1992), he was Dale “Hurricane” Dixon, a goofy, garrulous Star City sheriff whose fate is inextricably linked to the vicious killers heading his way. For all that film’s suspense, it had a gentle side personified by Paxton, who played with delicacy several pointedly crushing scenes, such as the moment when Dale overhears the visiting LAPD detectives discussing what they really think of him.
Even better was Sam Raimi’s A Simple Plan (1998), in which he played an ordinary Joe who stumbles upon $4m in a small plane crashed in the woods, only for the loot to have a pernicious effect on his life. It was a joy to see the subtleties of anguish, guilt and resentment played out in Paxton’s clenched performance as a man haunted by the suspicion that he has been dealt a rum hand. In the HBO series Big Love (2006-11), he was Bill Henrickson, another character who feels he should be enjoying life far more than he is. As a polygamist in a fundamentalist Mormon community in Utah, he spends most of his time refereeing between his three wives, his parents and the town elders.
Bill Paxton and Jenette Goldstein in Aliens, 1986.
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 Bill Paxton and Jenette Goldstein in Aliens, 1986. Photograph: Allstar/20 Century Fox
Born in Fort Worth, Texas, Bill was the son of Mary Lou (nee Gray), a fashion director, and John Paxton, a lumber salesman who later followed his son into the acting business. (Paxton Sr had roles in six of Raimi’s films, including A Simple Plan and the Spider-Man trilogy.) Bill’s earliest brush with fame arrived when he was eight years old and was hoisted above the crowd outside John F Kennedy’s hotel only a few hours before the president was assassinated; a photograph of the moment is on display in the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, Texas.
As a teenager, Paxton became interested in film-making when he and his friends began shooting Super 8 shorts for which they built their own sets. He moved to Los Angeles and found work in various prop and art departments. He was hired by Cameron, who was then a production designer and second-unit director, on the no-budget horror Galaxy of Terror (1981). Together they created the interiors of spaceships out of everything from Winnebago parts to dishwasher racks.
When Paxton was rejected by film schools in southern California, he moved into acting; he had a walk-on part as a soldier in the Bill Murray hit Stripes (1981) and played a flat-topped bully in the bawdy comedy Weird Science (1985). He had more chance to shine in Aliens as the comically macho Hudson. “Being the hysteric of the group, I was always yelling and screaming,” he recalled. “I was worried the audience would think, ‘Oh God, when is this guy going to get killed?’” In fact, his character was a crowd-pleaser.
Bill Paxton in Titanic, 1997.
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 Bill Paxton in Titanic, 1997. Photograph: Allstar/20TH Century Fox
“He was the most relatable to audiences because he was deathly afraid, as most of us would be. I mean, for every Ripley [the hero, played by Sigourney Weaver]… there are a million Hudsons.”
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Subsequent film work included another horror sequel, Predator 2 (1990), the western Tombstone (1993), the black comedy The Last Supper (1995), the Terms of Endearment sequel The Evening Star (1996) and the enjoyable mountaineering adventure Vertical Limit (2000). But even after receiving acclaim for A Simple Plan, Paxton never really got his due as an actor. “I thought that one might be the role that put it all together for me, that connected the dots,” he lamented in 2002.
He made good on his directing ambitions with Frailty (2001), in which he also starred as a man who entreats his sons to join him in following God’s orders by murdering demons in human form. This disturbing film about religious fanaticism, adroitly handled by Paxton, was sadly overlooked, and he directed only one more, the golfing drama The Greatest Game Ever Played (2005). In recent years, he enjoyed success on television in the historical miniseries Hatfields & McCoys (2012) and the Marvel adventure Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D, while returning to supporting roles in films such as the Tom Cruise action fantasy Edge of Tomorrow and the drama Nightcrawler (all 2014).
Paxton’s first marriage, to Kelly Rowan, ended in divorce. In 1987 he married Louise Newbury: she survives him, along with their children, James, who is also an actor, and Lydia.

JAMIE CHUNG TO PLAY BLINK IN FOX'S X-MEN PILOT

Variety reports Chung will play the mutant Blink, who in the comics has the power of teleportation. Blink's real name is Clarice Fong (in the comics her name is Clarice Ferguson) in the pilot, and she's described as a lively and sarcastic tomboy who has to adjust to her new surroundings and home following a traumatic event. Chung has had prior TV roles in Gotham, Once Upon A Time, and Believe (and of course The Real World).
Jamie Chung (seen here in Believe) will play Blink in FOX's X-Men-connected TV pilot.
Jamie Chung (seen here in Believe) will play Blink in FOX's X-Men-connected TV pilot.
Chung is the second actor to join the cast following Blair Redford (Switched at Birth, Satisfaction), who will play a mutant named Sam. The character is described as "the strong-headed Native American leader of the underground network."
X-Men movie guru Bryan Singer will direct the pilot with Burn Notice creator Matt Nix penning the script and executive-producing alongside Singer. Nix discussed the series last month, confirming it will connect to the movies.
The story will center around two parents who end up joining an underground mutant network after they discover their children have mutant powers. No release date for the show has been set at this time as it has not been greenlit for a series commitment yet.
Blink previously appeared in X-Men: Days of Future Past, where she was played by Chinese actress Fan Bingbing.