Just Mercy Review

Just Mercy was reviewed out of the Toronto International Film Festival. The film is slated for limited release on December 25, 2019 and will go wide on January 10, 2020.

When defense attorney Bryan Stevenson (Michael B. Jordan) first meets Walter “Johnny D” McMillian (Jamie Foxx), wrongfully convicted for capital murder, a wave of skepticism hits the room. After lamenting about the lawyers that have came and went in his life with no real solution, McMillian leans in, looks Stevenson directly in his eye and asks “what you gonna go different?”

Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton (Short Term 12, Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings), Just Mercy explores that difference between other lawyers in Alabama and Stevenson’s decades-long commitment to justice and fighting Death Row laws. And where the film lacks in unpredictability, it gains in passionate performances.

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Best Smartphones of IFA 2019

IFA 2019 isn’t typically a show for smartphones but there with so many new great models coming out, I felt it was appropriate to round up the best ones announced at the show. Over the last few days I’ve seen the rise of more than a few budget smartphones in response to users shying away from over $1,000 handsets and gotten our hands on some of the most elite mobile devices coming out soon.

Without further ado, these are the best smartphones from IFA 2019:

Asus ROG Phone 2 Ultimate

World Of Warcraft: Classic vs. Battle For Azeroth Graphics Comparison

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Daily Deals: Gears of War 5 for $49, Dell Gaming PCs on Sale, Xbox and Playstation 4 Controller Deals

Welcome to IGN’s Daily Deals, your source for the best deals on the stuff you actually want to buy. You can also follow us at Twitter @igndeals.

We bring you the best deals we’ve found today on video games, hardware, electronics, and a bunch of random stuff too. Updated 7 days a week, 365 days a year.

Out Next Tuesday: 17% Off Gears 5, Now $49.94

gears52Update: Check out our campaign review.

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Hitman 2’s Final 2019 DLC Map ‘Haven Island’ Arrives Later This Month

The final installment in Hitman 2’s 2019 roadmap is bringing players to the tropical south Asian islands of the Maldives, along with a smattering of new and returning contracts that long-time Hitman players will remember.

Hitman 2 developer IO Interactive posted a video detailing September’s roadmap. Here’s a breakdown of everything we can expect this month.

hitman 2 haven island

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The Story Behind IT Chapter Two’s Big Cameo

Spoilers for IT Chapter Two continue below!

Stephen King is no stranger to cameoing in adaptations of his novels, yet it still was a bit of a surprise to see him pop up in IT Chapter Two as the shopkeeper at the Second Hand Rose, where adult Bill (James McAvoy) reunites with his bike Silver. This is a cameo that director Andy Muschietti and screenwriter Gary Dauberman have been dreaming up for a while, though King was initially cautious to say “yes” to the role.

“With Stephen King, my hero — I grew up reading him, so he’s one of my life heroes — and I got to know him. I discovered a very loving and funny guy, and I wanted him in the movie, so I offered him a cameo,” said Muschietti at the IT Chapter Two press conference. “The first thing he said is, ‘Well, you have to consider that I’m a jinx. Every movie that I’m in, it bombs.’ So I said, I guess we should give it a try. I think we’re going to be fine.”

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Parasite Review

This is an advance review out of the Toronto International Film Festival. Parasite opens in limited release in the US on Oct. 11 and in the UK on Feb. 7, 2020.

Bong Joon-ho’s 2013 film Snowpiercer was the futuristic tale of a train transporting the last inhabitants of Earth around an icy globe, the rich living in the lap of luxury at the front, and the poor toiling in squalor at the back. Inequality is clearly an issue close to the writer-director’s heart, as Parasite explores similar territory, but in a contemporary setting and initially in humorous fashion. But as with Memories of Murder, The Host, Mother and Okja, Joon-ho’s film straddles multiple genres, with comedy rubbing shoulders alongside drama, thriller, and eventually horror to tell a story that’s as entertaining as it is socially incendiary.

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