Quick, name the biggest property about a telekinetic teen who accidentally/purposefully murders her entire high school at prom with her mind/hormones. Psyche, it's Carrie! Gotcha. Why am I bringing up Stephen King's first book ever and one of Brian De Palma's best films in apropos of nothing? Because it's now set to receive a TV adaptation from the good and reliable folks over at FX.
Bounty hunters have a code. Our titular Mandalorian in the show, named after the warmongering race, no longer mongers war. He instead cares for The Child, aka Baby Yoda, aka Internet Sensation Baby Yoda aka I Want A Baby Yoda Toy.
I've just got to get this out of the way now: the Snyder Cut of Justice League does not "exist," for lack of a better term. It's an unfinished, un-rendered, un-reshot piecemeal media slog that, in whatever nebulous form it does physically exist as, would be nigh unwatchable, not unlike the actual finished product audiences actually got more than two years ago now. However, to keep hype up for a piece of vaporware, the beleaguered director has posted some violent concept art on VERO, complete with misspelling.
Stephen King, horror man extraordinaire, has the Midas touch when it comes to spook-filled romps. The IT adaptations were monstrous successes, his partnership with Mike Flanagan has proven fruitful for the both of them and now, adding to the exemplary TV layout of King's properties will soon be a 'Salem's Lot prequel in the form of Jerusalem's Lot, which is coming to Epix and has Adrien Brody attached as the star.
Two years ago, in 2017, while filming a scene for AMC's very successful, long-running TV show The Walking Dead, based on Robert Kirkman's comic book series of the same name, a stuntman by the name of John Bernecker fell to his death during a stunt gone wrong. Today, his family's lawyer made his closing argument, accusing AMC of being liable for Bernecker's death, saying that it was entirely preventable and asking for $40-$100 million in damages.
Keanu Reeves has been having quite an excellent time in Hollywood lately, hasn't he? He took an entire room's breath away at E3 this summer, murdered a guy with a horse and is poised to be in one of the few (hopefully) good late-period sequels in the form of Bill & Ted Face the Music, set to be released next summer. But what's it even going to be about man? And who's going to join em? Whoa! Well, look no further.
Boy golly gee, since the debut of Resident Evil 3's first official reveal trailer earlier this week, I've been seeing nothing but S.T.A.R.S! I'm surely the first person to make that joke, right? But hey, even if I'm not, I certainly won't be the last, not after Resident Evil 2's new demo now includes an update that alludes to its sister game.
Good news, folks. It looks like a Half Baked sequel is totally happening and, like, totally being made by some comedian named Justin Hires. Because, you know, the universe is super ironic, bro.