Patty Jenkins, the director of both Wonder Woman and Wonder Woman 1984, has revealed that Warner Bros. made her change the ending of the original film.
IGN’s Joshua Yehl spoke to Jenkins during Wonder Woman 1984’s press tour and asked her if the decision to make this new film’s finale more “personal and intimate” as opposed to the original’s “epic battle with lots of visual effects” was a conscious choice.
“The original end of the first movie was also smaller but the studio made me change it at the last minute,” Jenkins explained. “And so, that’s always been a little bit of a bummer that that’s the one thing people talk about because I agreed, and I told the studio we didn’t have time to do it, but it was what it was and I ended up loving it, but that was not the original ending of the movie.
“This time around, you know what I loved about it? I love that it has both at the end. We had visual effects… a big battle, which I just dug into and had such a blast executing, which I felt so satisfied with. But ultimately the end of the movie is much more pared down. That was really, really fun. No spoilers, there’s all kinds of stuff going on, but, yeah, it was really fun to shape it differently.”
In our Wonder Woman 1984 review, we said it “is a film with a heart full of hope and love; a nostalgic look back to a beloved time that provides escapism from an exceptionally difficult year.”
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Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.
t’s pretty amazing how fast you can fill up a PC, PS5, or Xbox Series X/S hard drive. Video game install sizes can often weigh in at or above 100 GB. Sony and Microsoft’s next-gen consoles have less than 1 TB of usable space, which can fill up quickly. Players may need to invest in external hard drives for their PC or purchase a custom NVMe SSD for their Xbox if they want to keep games installed and updated; PS5 doesn’t currently support storing or playing PS5 games from an external drive.
Some of the largest game installs on this list are popular titles like Rainbow Six Siege, Call Of Duty, and Halo: The Master Chief Collection. This list includes full games with their DLC, expansion, and in some cases high-resolution texture packs installed.
Many of the stories featuring Geralt of Rivia are, at their core, mystery stories with a medieval fantasy twist. The first season of the show operated primarily on a mixed-timelines premise that was confusing at times and definitely didn’t work for everyone, but season 2 seems to be digging into that mystery premise based on a page of the first episode’s script posted by Netflix to Twitter this week.
The story starts with a merchant and his family traveling alone by carriage, finding themselves looking for lodgings in an empty town. The merchant turns his back for a second and then back around to find his wife missing, his daughter covered in blood.
Geralt narrates over it. “You dogged my every footstep. But struck down others I passed on my way. Why?” he begins. “I was meant to end up alone, wasn’t I? So I would finally begin to be afraid?”
It’s a dark place to start for an already dark show, and fans of the books might recognize this as hinting at the short story “A Grain of Truth.” The story is a clever one, so we won’t spoil it here.
This post is just the latest in a string of posts Netflix is hashtagging #Witchmas. The streaming service dropped a first look at the logo for the upcoming Witcher animated series, some set photos from season 2, and a new episode of the Witcher’s Bestiary web series.
The Witcher Season 2 is currently in production. Production has stalled a couple times due to interrupts pandemic-related and otherwise. Netflix has not yet set a premiere date for the show aside from saying its coming in 2021. The pandemic has almost certainly made that date even harder to nail down.
The Witcher, based on the same characters and novels as the game from CD Projekt Red, stars Henry Cavill as the titular Witcher, Geralt of Rivia, with Freya Allan as Ciri and Anya Chalotra as Yennefer. Season 2 is set to add Kim Bodina (Killing Eve) as Geralt’s mentor, Vesemir and Game of Thrones’ Kristofer Hivju as Nivellen, among others.
CD Projekt Red has released another hotfix patch for Cyberpunk 2077–it closely follows on the heels of Patch 1.05, which addressed numerous glitches that occur in the opening hours of the main campaign. This new hotfix, Patch 1.06, doesn’t fix as much, but it addresses the noteworthy save file corruption glitch.
Patch 1.06 fixes the glitch that caused your save file to become corrupted if it exceeded a certain limit–something that could be done if you were holding onto too many items in your inventory. The patch is live across Xbox One, PS4, and PC.
Unfortunately, the patch cannot recover what has been lost. If you’ve already fallen victim to the save file glitch, your save will still be corrupted. Patch 1.06 simply prevents the bug from ever occurring again. You can see the full breakdown of what Patch 1.06 does in the full patch notes, which are listed below.
Cyberpunk 2077 Hotfix 1.06 Patch Notes
Quests
Dum Dum will no longer go missing from Totentanz entrance during Second Conflict.
Console-specific
Improved memory management and stability, resulting in fewer crashes.
PC-specific
Removed the 8 MB save file size limit. Note: this won’t fix save files corrupted before the update.
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Resident Evil Village, stylized to include the roman numeral VIII in the title, is the next game in the main Resident Evil series. It is a direct follow-up to Resident Evil 7, but developer and publisher Capcom has been insistent on using its full title rather than an abbreviation like RE8 in order to stress the importance of the mysterious village at the heart of the game. We got our first look at Resident Evil Village during Sony’s PS5 reveal event in June. While we know some detail about the setting, characters, and how it ties in with the previous game, we don’t have a release date or other crucial information just yet.
Here’s what we know about Resident Evil Village so far. For more on upcoming games, check out our most anticipated games of 2021.
When Does Resident Evil Village Launch?
Resident Evil Village does not have an official release date yet, but we know it’s scheduled to launch sometime in 2021. A recent leak points to a possible April 2021 launch, but until we hear from Capcom officially, we cannot verify this information ourselves.
Will Resident Evil Village Be On PC, PS4, And Xbox One?
Resident Evil Village is coming to PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X|S.
Capcom has given us a few glimpses of Resident Evil Village since its reveal in June 2020. Its announcement trailer from Sony’s PS5 event set a dark, fairytale-like tone for the sequel and revealed the return of Ethan Winters, Mia Winters, and Chris Redfield. It also gave us our first look at the European village setting.
Its second trailer debuted during Tokyo Game Show, which you can see below.
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Resident Evil Villlage Story Trailer | PS5 Showcase
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Will Resident Evil Village Have Multiplayer Or Battle Royale?
Capcom has not confirmed whether or not Resident Evil Village will contain some kind of multiplayer mode, but given Resident Evil Resistance, which launched alongside the Resident Evil 3 remake, we’re not completely discounting the possibility. A recent leak hinted at some kind of Resident Evil-related multiplayer project, possibly a battle royale mode, but we don’t have any official details at his time.
Will Resident Evil Village Have DLC Or Microtransactions?
It’s still early, so we haven’t heard about any Resident Evil Village DLC or expansions yet, and until we know more about the possibility of a multiplayer mode, it’s unlikely Resident Evil Village will include microtransactions of any kind.
How To Preorder Resident Evil Village
Resident Evil Village has not gone up for preorder yet, but we will update as soon as it does, so keep checking back!
2020 was a strange year in film. We saw theaters shutting down, several major titles pushed back, and other films taking a gamble and releasing to streaming services. Despite the craziness, there were still films that stood out and were well worth your time. Here are our picks for the best movies of the year unranked, plus our choice for the #1 movie of 2020.
This year’s top 10 featured an eclectic mix of genres. The list includes comedies like Palm Springs and Bill & Ted Face the Music, lockdown horror flick Host (Shudder), the sci-fi mystery The Vast of Night, the action filled Bad Boys for Life, family friendly movies Onward and Sonic The Hedgehog, the sprawling Netflix Drama Da 5 Bloods, and of course, super hero films like Wonder Woman 1984.
Our top award went to an unexpected bright spot of a film. Watch the video above to find out our movie of the year! To read why we selected these movies for our top 10, check out our gallery on GameSpot.
TV was our desert oasis in 2020, and these were our favorite coconuts.
There were a lot of shows we loved this year, and you can read all about them here. But when we really looked at 2020’s TV landscape, we found there were so many individual standout episodes that really stuck with us, that we just had to give them their own list.
Some of these shows didn’t quite make it onto one of our other lists, like the best sci-fi and horror of the year or the best comedies, but all of these episodes made our 2020 brighter, scarier, or simply more bearable in one way or another.
We have no doubt you’ve seen some of these. Does the name “Jackie Daytona” ring a bell? We’ll never forget what he did for our volleyball team. Do you have a favorite “quarantine episode” of a show produced from home this year? We do.
Keep reading to find out all about those and more individual episodes of television that we loved this year, then check out some of our other best-of-2020 galleries:
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“The View From Halfway Down”
Bojack Horseman Season 6
Bojack has touched on plenty of some tough topics throughout its six season run as Bojack deals with addiction, codependency, being on both ends of abuse, and more. For a show as filled with bright colors and animal puns as Bojack is, it’s one of the darkest, too. No show has quite so genuinely captured the depths of depression the way “The View From Halfway Down” does. The episode ventures into Bojack’s subconscious as he drowns in the pool of his former home. He confronts his victims and victimizers alike as water and ooze drip down from above. It’s a hard watch, but it helps the show’s final season cash in on the many lessons Bojack has endured throughout the show, demonstrating that he is the way he is in part because of his mistakes, but without ever absolving him of that responsibility. – Eric Frederiksen
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“Chapter 15: The Believer”
The Mandalorian Season 2
Disney’s first major foray into streaming content was bursting at the seams by the time the credits rolled on the finale. The once-grounded show has now featured multiple Jedi and name-dropped some major Star Wars personalities. Our favorite episode, though, is the one that re-grounds the show, even if for just an hour. The season’s penultimate episode, “The Believer,” has Mando borrowing one of his old enemies, Migs Mayfield (Bill Burr) from his prison sentence. Together, the two capture a truck hauling explosives. Not only does the episode feature one of the few wheeled vehicles ever seen in Star Wars, it’s almost certainly a tribute to a movie that Star Wars Episode IV crushed at the box office in 1977, Sorcerer. Director Rick Famuyiwa (DOPE) gives us a tense ride into an Imperial base where Mando realizes he’ll have to bend and twist at his boundaries to save Grogu, and gives us a rare look at the way the Empire’s war crimes scar their survivors. It’s here that Bill Burr proves he’s a great actor as well as a comedian. – Eric Frederiksen
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“The One Where We’re Trapped on TV”
Legends of Tomorrow Season 5
Those of us who watch the CW’s Arrowverse shows have a love-hate relationship with most of them. Perhaps the most consistently shiny jewel in the network’s crown is DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, a show that has long since forgotten that it has anything to lose and does its own thing. The latest season had the Legends stuck in the hands of the literal Greek Fates. At their whim, the characters end up trapped inside television shows after the Fates rewrite reality, and the characters have to work through parodies of Friends (Buds), Downton Abbey (Highcastle Abbey), and Star Trek (Star Trip). The show switches between visual styles and tones of each parody, but always makes sure those moments resonate with those particular characters. Sara and Ava end up trapped on Star Trip, in the role of co-leaders. It works both as a parody of the Kirk/Spock relationship that literally spawned the concept of slash fiction, while also forcing these characters to consider what it means to be a leader and to make sacrifices. – Eric Frederiksen
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“Sex Patrol”
Doom Patrol Season 2
Doom Patrol uses silly nightmares to poke fun at the worst excesses of X-Men and superhero soap operas, but never forgets to put its characters first. It’s not afraid to use the most absurd and horrifying concepts to tell its stories.The season’s fourth episode kicks off when the Dannyzens–outcasts who lived on the sentient, genderqueer street named Danny–return to try to bring Danny back from the brink of non-existence. One character’s ecstasy attracts the attention of a periscope-headed sex demon named The Shadowy Mr. Evans, while a Ghostbusters-themed crew called the SeX-Men show up to defeat him. This is all incredibly silly, and the show uses these stories to deal with things like Rita’s sexual trauma, Cliff’s physical inability to feel things, and a thousand reasons why an 11-year-old girl shouldn’t be living with any of these broken people. – Eric Frederiksen
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“Rewind 1921”
Lovecraft Country
The worst thing that one can accuse Lovecraft Country of is being too ambitious. The show has the feel of a creator who’s worried she might not get another shot at this; she has to tell everything she can in a limited amount of space. But in its penultimate episode, “Rewind 1921,” Lovecraft Country gels together. It uses the burning of Black Wall Street as its frame; that was the night that the Freeman family perished during the riots and the Book of Names, which they needed to save Diana’s life, was destroyed. Our heroes travel back in time and meet their ancestors–not early enough to prevent their fiery fate, but early enough to ensure that the next generation will survive. Elsewhere, Tic makes peace with Montrose. Thanks to time loop paradoxes, it was he who saved his uncle’s life, all those decades ago. And it ends with a slow motion walk through fire, as Leti (played by Jurnee Smollett, in an Emmy-worthy performance) walks, invulnerable, down the main street as the planes drop bombs. The loss is palpable. – Kevin Wong
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“The Spite Store”
Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10
We’re ten seasons deep into Curb Your Enthusiasm, and it’s incredible how consistently funny and clever the show remains. Maybe the secret is in its triviality. This show has never pretended to be about more than the most granular, rich people problems that Larry David can conjure up; the insularity is the joke. In its season finale “The Spite Store,” it all blows up beautifully and karmically in Larry’s face. All the stupid, little decisions over course of ten episodes–nailing the tables to the floor, not installing a bathroom, hoarding a massive cache of Purell bottles, adds up to a massive fire that burns Latte Larry’s to the ground. “If I was trying to tell someone how to burn a place down, I would suggest every step you took in your business,” says the fire chief to Larry. “You did so many stupid things, it looks like arson.” Ouch. Spited by his own spite store. – Kevin Wong
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“Butcher, Baker, Candlestick Maker”
The Boys Season 2
This was a tough one to narrow down, because I loved every single episode of The Boys Season 2. But when you look back at the season as a whole, there’s one clear standout: Episode 7, “Butcher, Baker, Candlestick Maker.” The whole hour is strong, with Stormfront and Homelander’s abduction of Ryan, Hughie and Lamplighter’s infiltration of Vought Tower to rescue Starlight, and Butcher’s confrontation with his dad. All these threads carried the theme of families in various states of chaos. But then it all ended with one of the most gruesome and unexpected bloodbaths we’ve ever seen on TV, cementing The Boys as one of our favorite shows ever, and this episode as one of the show’s best. – Mike Rougeau
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“Quarantine”
Mythic Quest
Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, production shut down on many TV shows and movies. And morale across the country was down, so there were plenty of “Quarantine specials” from various shows. Because Mythic Quest is a workplace show, the special revolves around the Mythic Quest team working from home, trying to adjust to this new world. They deal with all the problems we’ve dealt with over the course of 2020: adjusting to working alone–or working from home when you have children–personal hygiene when you don’t have to go into an office, the never ending brigade of video meetings, and most importantly, dealing with being depressed and isolated. It has an incredibly touching moment between Poppy and Ian that every single person could relate to during this year. Mythic Quest’s quarantine episode completely encapsulates the gamut of emotions we all had during this very rough year. Also, it’s the only show with the gusto to end its episode with the best statement of 2020, “F*** you, coronavirus.” – Mat Elfring
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“On the Run”
What We Do in the Shadows
What We Do in the Shadows is consistently one of the funniest shows on TV and nothing quite exemplifies its strengths quite as well as “On the Run,” the debut of the now iconic “Jackie Daytona,” a regular human bartender. Of course, Jackie is actually Laszlo (Matt Berry), who is–you guessed it–on the run from a debt in the form of a vampire played by Mark Hamill. Rather than pay off what he owes, Laszlo opts to high tail it to Pennsylvania (“because it sounds like Transylvania, and we all know that sounds cool”) where he takes over Lucky’s Bar and Grill and blends in to human society with a pair of blue jeans and a toothpick. In a show as consistently hilarious as What We Do in the Shadows, believe us when we say this one was something special. When you’re Jackie Daytona, you can do whatever you want–because you change lives. – Mason Downey
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“The Way It Came”
The Haunting of Bly Manor
The fourth episode of The Haunting of Bly Manor encompasses a very specific fear, and it’s probably not the sort you’d expect–sure, there are ghosts and tragedy to go around, but the crux of the episode, the real spine-chilling moment, comes from the open and honest exploration of Dani Clayton’s closeted sexuality and the root of her trauma. In “The Way It Came,” we learn that Dani broke off an engagement to a childhood best friend on the eve of their wedding, not because she’d fallen in love with someone else, but because she realized that she couldn’t keep pretending to be happy. “It just became something we were doing,” she explains, tearfully, as her fiance tries to put the pieces together. It’s the sort of queer coming out story that gets glossed over in favor of the melodrama and theatricality of more easily packaged angles–ones where people come into understanding their sexualities through some sort of forbidden crush or torrid love affair–but it’s one we desperately need to see more of. – Mason Downey
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“Episode 7”
Devs
Devs is a tricky show to break down episode-by-episode, with its dense and high-concept ideas flowing into one another in a way that really lends itself more to a binge than a weekly watch. However, if pressed to pick a favorite that could stand alone, the penultimate “Episode 7” does the trick in really exploring everything the show does best. The creeping existential dread of the Devs system actually working builds and builds to one of the most haunting moments of the show: Stewart’s recitation of Philip Larkin’s poem, Aubade. “Most things will never happen,” he reads over a montage of the show’s characters experiencing tragedies of their own, “this one will.” – Mason Downey
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“How to Cook the Perfect Risotto”
How to with John Wilson
Executive produced by Nathan Fielder (Nathan for You, Canada business school graduate), How to with John Wilson is HBO’s docuseries following Wilson as he explains how, well, do things, and while the show is hilarious, there is a ton of heart to it. The season finale takes viewers on a journey as Wilson tries to learn how to make the perfect risotto for his loving elderly landlord. However, throughout Wilson’s journey, he tries to quit vaping and meets someone with a truck that pollutes the air. He keeps trying to make this perfect rice dish as he goes through nicotine withdrawal. Then, reality hits as during Wilson’s attempt to make risotto, the coronavirus hits New York City. It’s a grim and shocking reminder of when the world came crashing to a halt. Wilson explores stores that are empty and checkout lines that wrap around the entire building. People don’t know what’s going on, and it is an important documentation of how everything changed in America. – Mat Elfring
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“The Vat of Acid Episode”
Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty had an uneven fourth season, and not just because half of it released in 2019 and half in 2020. But it had some of the show’s best episodes ever as well, and “The Vat of Acid Episode” belongs firmly in that category. What starts as a typical tiff between the titular characters grows into something totally unexpected. Morty goes on a life-changing journey, and the way it ends is both tragic and predictable. To top it off, the pay-off is maybe the hardest-earned in the show’s whole history. Naturally, it all goes back to one small slight against Rick, who will do anything to make a point–and so he does. – Mike Rougeau
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Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company
For many of us, TV was one of 2020’s biggest saving graces. Everything from endless rewatches of our favorite streaming comfort TV shows to the new and exciting debuts we could catch up with week-to-week, having something to watch from the comfort of our homes made quarantine a little less challenging, and thankfully, there was plenty to go around, no matter what genre or vibe you might be into.
The first 9 shows listed here are unranked, and available to watch now–from the existential sci-fi drama of FX on Hulu’s Devs to the go-for-broke sports docu-series that was ESPN’s The Last Dance to the insanity of Amazon Prime Video’s The Boys Season 2. There’s something here for everyone. To find out why we chose them, read our gallery on GameSpot: https://www.gamespot.com/gallery/the-10-best-tv-shows-of-2020/2900-3673/#1
Our award for the best TV show of 2020 went to a comedy that served as the perfect escape from this year. It made us laugh nonstop, it constantly surprised us, and it managed to take a stellar first season and actually improve on it to create a more interesting world. Find out the winner of our top prize in the video above!