Supergirl meets Miss Martian, Superman and more this fall

If you’ve been keeping up with television news recently, chances are you’ve been hearing about all of the buzz surrounding Supergirl. The series, which returns for its second season on Monday, Oct. 10, continues to make headlines as it settles into its new home at The CW.

Melissa Benoist as Supergirl in the promotional poster for The CW.

With many anticipated guest appearances like Superman, played by Teen Wolf star Tyler Hoechlin, and a crossover musical with the Flash, 2016 is shaping up to be the year of Kara Danvers.

According to ComicBook.com, the summer press tour for the Television Critics Association’s CW panel announced that Miss Martian, played by Sharon Leal, will join Martian Manhunter in the series’ sophomore season. There have been no statements made about whether or not she will be a series regular.

Executive producer Andrew Kreisberg also spoke at the Television Critics Association summer press tour at the Supergirl panel and revealed that the mysterious pod that crash-landed on earth belonged to Mon-El, who will be played by Containment’s Chris Wood.

Supergirl joins The CW’s impressive lineup of DC shows, including Arrow, Legends of Tomorrow and The Flash. For those that didn’t keep up with the series in its first season on CBS, don’t fret. Netflix is set to stream the season starting Saturday, Sept. 10.

The CW is also airing two episodes of the show’s first season every Monday night from 8 to 10 p.m. The reruns started on Aug. 1 and will end on Oct. 3, according to an article on International Business Times.

Dust off that red cape, Supergirl fans. With a lineup like this ahead of her, Kara is in for an exciting, entertaining debut season on her new network.

Marvel Reportedly Developing New Warriors Television Show Featuring Squirrel Girl

The rumored half-hour comedy would put the fan-favorite heroine front and center as a member of a teenage superhero team.

After months of (completely baseless) speculation on who might play Squirrel Girl in movie that doesn’t actually exist, Marvel shocked everyone with the rumored development of a New Warriors television series featuring Squirrel Girl.

The New Warriors
The New Warriors

The New Warriors were a teenage superhero team that brought together existing heroes Nova, Firestar, Speedball, Marvel Boy and Namorita under the leadership of newly created hero Night Thrasher. In its most recent incarnation, the team was also the focus of a reality television show as they fought crime.

The roster rotated and changed over the years with a variety of young heroes — with  one notable exception: Squirrel Girl was never a member.

But according to TV Line, Marvel and ABC Studios are creating a comedy about the New Warriors featuring Squirrel Girl as the main character. The half-hour series is reportedly being shopped to cable networks and streaming outlets.

Squirrel Girl has been the name on everyone’s lips as of late, with Anna Kendrick mentioning that she was down to play the unbeatable mutant, followed by Stranger Things Shannon Purser also expressing interest in the role.

If the rumor is true, the show is very early in pre-production and casting decisions are a while off. It’s unlikely that Kendrick could be lured to the small screen, but Purser would be a real possibility. Or maybe we’ll get a new name we haven’t even thought of.

Agent Carter

Saving Agent Carter

It’s looking impossible at the moment, but Agent Carter will return if the producer, the star and the fans have anything to say about it.

It was a sad morning in May when fans of ABC’s Agent Carter learned that the show would not be returning for a third season.

The news came as a shock to many, including Jeph Loeb, the head of Marvel television. On August 8, he told Business Insider that “there were no conversations” between Marvel and ABC, Marvel’s sister company under Disney. They just pulled the plug.

The show, which was hailed by critics, ended its second season on a cliffhanger, so the news of its cancellation was not an easy pill for Carter fans to swallow. Minutes, maybe even seconds, after the announcement was made, a petition was posted on change.org for Netflix to pick up the series.

Sadly, they passed. The big cheese at Netflix, Ted Sarandos, told Entertainment Weekly that Netflix is “looking for truly original brands to own.” With successes like Daredevil and Jessica Jones under its belt and a long line of highly anticipated series on the horizon, they want to stick with what’s making them money: creating their own original Marvel productions.

A deal like this also gets complicated when a network as large as ABC passes on a show’s next season, because its viewership stretches past the United States. Sarandos explained that those international networks, also known as “output partners” would still have the show on air and would “argue it’s covered by their output.”

With these two major factors at play, Sarandos declared that it had been “a business decision more than a creative one.”

This hasn’t discouraged the fans, who have gathered 128,750 signatures on their petition, so far. Though Carter’s ratings were the reason for its downfall, it’s clear that there is a large enough fanbase to garner some attention.

At the August 4th Conviction panel for the Television Critics Association press tour, Hayley Atwell spoke about a revival, saying “I hound [Marvel Studios co-president] Louis D’Esposito on a regular basis saying, ‘Give me a movie.’”

Atwell is no stranger to the Marvel Cinematic and Television Universe, and said “Marvel is still such a big part of my career and I suppose my professional family that I would absolutely not rule out the idea of going back to Peggy at some point.”

It should also be noted that Hulu, which recently announced a series based on Marvel’s Runaways and also picked up The Mindy Project when it was dropped from Fox after its third season, could make a move for this much-loved series.

Don’t hang up your bright red hats just yet, Agent Carter fans. With Hayley Atwell and a hefty petition on your side, there may be hope for Peggy and co. in the near future.

Marvel Announces ‘Runaways’ Television Show on Hulu

Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage to write and showrun.

Marvel Television will be bringing the fan-favorite and ground breaking comic book series, “Runaways,” to popular streaming service, Hulu.

Every teenager thinks their parents are evil. What if you found out they actually were? MARVEL’S RUNAWAYS is the story of six diverse teenagers who can barely stand each other but who must unite against a common foe – their parents.

“We’ve known the Runaways’ story would make great television,” said Jeph Loeb, EP and Head of Marvel Television, “and being lucky enough to have Josh and Stephanie — who have time and again created shows that speak so genuinely to this exact audience — write and produce the series is nothing short of remarkable.”

“I’m a long-time fan of Runaways and couldn’t be more excited to bring Brian and Adrian’s characters to life,” said Schwartz.

Adds Savage, “Josh and I can’t wait to get to work for Marvel and Hulu.”

“Marvel’s Runaways” for Hulu is based on the comic created by the award-winning team of Brian K. Vaughan and Adrian Alphona.

Flash/Supergirl Musical Crossover Announced

Glee alum Melissa Benoist and Grant Gustin headline the musical/superhero mash-up fans have been waiting for.

We’ve known for a while that the move to the CW would give Supergirl more opportunities to cross over with the rest of the DC Television Universe. Now we know details of at least one of the crossovers, and we couldn’t be more excited.

“Yes, there will be a musical crossover. There’s going to be a musical pair of episodes in the back half of the year between Supergirl and Flash,” executive producer Greg Berlanti told reporters at the Television Critics Association’s press tour on Thursday. The musical crossover is in addition to the massive four part crossover early in the season that will link Supergirl, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow and Arrow.

“I’ve probably been leading the charge myself just because my own nexus of loving musicals and loving superheroes,” Berlanti said. “So many times it’s a musical episode off the set, and I think on all the shows, we love to use all of the character talents as much as possible. We’ve toyed with who potentially the villain could kind of be. My sense is we’ll be very careful about how it is they kind of break into song and there will probably be an element of being in some character’s head at the time.”

The two shows feature a plethora of musical talent. Leads Gustin Grant (The Flash) and Melissa Benoist are both alums of Glee. The Flash‘s Jesse L. Martin originated the role of Tom Collins in the Broadway musical Rent. And Jeremy Jordan who plays Winn on Supergirl starred in the Broadway production of Newsies.

The Flash and Supergirl both air on the CW.

Marvel Exploring Misty Knight Solo Series

Luke Cage has not even hit television screens yet, and there is already talk about Simone Missick’s breakout performance as detective Misty Knight.

Misty Knight
Misty Knight

Like Luke Cage himself, Misty Knight is an homage to the blaxploitation films of the 1970s. Knight is a black detective with an enormous afro who protects the mean streets of Harlem. After losing an arm in a bombing incident, she was given a super-powered cybernetic replacement from none other than Tony Stark himself. Knight has been a love interest for both Luke Cage and Danny Rand (Iron Fist) at various times. She is an expert marksman and hand-to-hand combatant.

Simone Missick is slated to play Misty in the upcoming Luke Cage series on Netflix. The character is so beloved by fans that when Messick was introduced at the Luke Cage panel at San Diego Comic Con, she reportedly received louder cheers and applause than Mike Collier who plays Cage himself.

“I was completely surprised, I will say that,” Missick told The Hollywood Reporter. “There was this picture of me on Getty Images — please, no one find it — but I have the biggest, goofiest smile on my face. I was blown away at the audience. I mean, really?! I never imagined it.”

Simone Missick
Simone Missick

Marvel Television head Jeff Loeb raved about her performance in the same interview.

Simone just knocked it so far out of the park that we’re still trying to find the baseball. It’s somewhere out there traversing the globe. So it’s really great. And I can tell you that what she’s doing on Luke Cage, it’s just incredible. The fans are really going to love it. And wait until you see Jessica Henwick as Colleen Wing. She’s amazing.

Colleen Wing will be appearing on Iron Fist, which airs sometimes next year. Wing is a martial artist trained in the way of the samurai and Knight’s best friend. The two together form “The Daughters of the Dragon”

The Daughters of the Dragon
The Daughters of the Dragon

So is Misty Knight preparing to follow in the footsteps of The Punisher, who launched his own series after a scene-stealing performance is Daredevil earlier this year. Not so fast, says Loeb.

We’re very lucky in a sense that our casts are so rich and deep and so diverse. We certainly have plans for all of our characters. A lot of it has to do with exactly how many shows Netflix is actually going to let us make. We’re up to six now. At a certain point, we have to be careful that we’re not becoming the Marvel channel on Netflix.

While there are plenty of fans who would have no problem with that, Netflix has previously announced that that would air no more than two Marvel shows per year. With Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Iron Fist, The Punisher and The Defenders already on the slate, scheduling a Misty Knight spin off could prove challenging just from a logistics point of view.

For her part, Missick has heard the buzz about a spin-off and couldn’t be more excited.

Somebody put it on Twitter that they want to see a Misty Knight series with Shonda Rhimes as one of the writers. I was like, ‘Hell yeah!’ How cool would that be? If you say it, if you put it out there, maybe it will happen. Tweet it, and it will come.

So, we’re putting it out there. C’mon Marvel. Give us a Misty Knight series. Or better yet The Daughters of the Dragon.

Agent Carter

Netflix Explains Why It Didn’t Save Agent Carter

Creatively, Agent Carter had everything going for it — but in the end: business is business.

When ABC pulled the plug on low rated but the critically acclaimed Agent Carter earlier this year, many fans looked to streaming network Netflix to swoop in and pick up the show. Netflix has a history of saving beloved programs from other networks (Arrested Development, The Mindy Project), and they had built their own corner of the Marvel Cinematic Universe with their shows Daredevil and Jessica Jones. The program seemed a natural fit.

But Netflix passed on rescuing the sophomore drama, and no one was quite sure why … until now.

Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos explained why Agent Carter never worked out for the network.

We’re looking for truly original brands to own, and in that Marvel space we already have [Jessica Jones, Daredevil, Luke Cage and Iron Fist] – so that was mostly why.

And even larger reason loomed — economics. Netflix liked to own their shows lock, stock and barrel, but Marvel had already sold distribution rights in dozens of countries around the globe. Sarandos explained:

They also have some output deal complexities. So when you pick it up, being able to pick it up globally is difficult even after it’s canceled. Some of those output partners still had it on the air, so they would argue it’s covered by their output [deals]. Unfortunately, it was a business decision more than a creative one.

So there you have it. “Business” did what Soviet spies, Hydra agents and rampant sexism failed to do: put an end to Peggy Carter. This depressed me a lot, so to cheer myself up, I’m sharing these delightful behind-the-scenes photos from the series that I found floating around the Internet.

San Diego Comic Con Trailers Round Up

One of the best things to come out of every Comic-Con is the trailers. Studios use the collected geek masses to build hype for upcoming superhero, science fiction and fantasy films. The trailers come out all weekend long, but we’ve gathered the best of the best here in one place.

Movies

Wonder Woman

Justice League

Suicide Squad

LEGO Batman

Kong: Skull Island

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

Dr. Strange

Television

Justice League Action

Marvel’s Iron Fist

Marvel’s Luke Cage

Marvel’s The Defenders

Legion

The Flash: Season 3

Sherlock: Season 4

Star Trek: Discovery

 

 

How Angry Male Nerds Are Ruining the Internet

There are three Ghostbusters: the original, the remake, and the “childhood ruining” version that only exists in the minds of misogynistic internet trolls. The second it was announced, a small but vocal contingent of so-called “real fans” has been rooting for the new Ghostbusters to fail, and doing their best to make sure that happens.

For a while, the cloud of testosterone-fueled hatred was amorphous and vague. It had nothing to give it form or measure its power. Then the first trailer came out.

The admittedly mediocre first trailer for Ghostbusters (2016) became the most “downvoted” video in YouTube history, approaching one million dislikes. Contrast that with the 2015 reboot of the Fantastic Four, which deviated horribly from the classic source material, bombed with critics and audiences alike and is widely regarded by even its own director to be a colossal failure. It  has around 20,ooo dislikes.

Two percent of the hate heaped on Ghostbusters.

Walt Hickey, over at statistics site FiveThirtyEight has been tracking the Ghostbusters hate. There are angry people (mainly men) who will angrily tell you all of the reasons that the female-led reboot is awful — sight unseen — while angrily denying that gender has anything to do with it.

But it’s really hard to argue against math. Hickey analysed the demographics of both viewers and “raters” of the movie on the IMDB. His findings?

* This number is actually growing as more reviews from people who actually saw the movie have poured in.

So men are rating the movie very negatively, and nearly five times as many men have rated the film as women. Assuming the film brought in equal number of men and women to theaters — or more likely more women than men — this means that the review sample is way off.

The movie is not succeeding or failing on its own merits. Like the  trailer before it, it appears that a group of men who never actually saw the movie have decided to downvote it into oblivion.

This is not an new phenomenon. It actually builds on Hickey’s earlier IMDB analysis that showed:

Men Are Sabotaging The Online Reviews Of TV Shows Aimed At Women

Once again using IMDB because it actually breaks down reviews by the reviewer’s gender, Hickey analysed shows with more than 10,000 reviews listed. He found that the more popular with women a show was, the more men showed up to trash it with a “one” — the lowest rating possible. The reverse was not true.

FiveThirtyEight Chart

 

So what is happening? We are experiencing a demographic shift in media that follows trends in the United States as a whole. Although we have a long way to go, comics, television, movies and video games have ceased to exclusively cater to the white male demographic. Not every story is designed specifically for their tastes. Not every story is told from their point of view. Just most of them.

We are asking men (and white men in particular) to do what everyone else in society has done for a long time. Follow a story on the screen that is not about someone like you. Put yourself in another person’s shoes.  For a very few, this intrusion of diversity into domains they previously held as their own infuriates.

To paraphrase a quote I can no longer source, “They have confused the loss of absolute privilege with genuine oppression.”

Nothing bad is happening here. We are just entering a world where not every single film, comic or video game is created to pander to the interests of socially awkward white men. That’s actually a better world. They just need to put on their big-boy pants and deal with it the way everyone else has for decades.

To be fair to them, I imagine it must hurt a lot more to have your “childhood ruined” when you never grew up in the first place.