Kingdom Hearts III – Official Opening Movie | Hikaru Utada, Skrillex

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Spider-Man: Far From Home Trailer Description

Spider-Man and Mysterio fight together as allies against Hydro-Man in the first trailer for Spider-Man: Far From Home. While the trailer wasn’t released online following Sony’s panel at Brazil Comic Con in Sao Paulo, IGN Brazil was there to watch it and provided this breakdown of what happens in it.

Tom Holland and Jake Gyllenhaal also surprised fans with an appearance at the Far From Home panel. They were not expected to attend, but they showed up to help present the first trailer for the upcoming Sony-Marvel movie. Filming was not allowed in the convention hall and there is no date yet for when the trailer will be released online, so our rundown below will have to hold you over until the trailer drops!

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Bumblebee Review

After years of cinematic scrap heaps, Bumblebee redeems and reinvigorates the Transformers live-action film franchise with some heartfelt fun. It might not be a great movie or a radical reimagination of the familiar concept, but this ‘80s-set prequel does strip away all the clutter and bloat that had piled onto the series over the last decade and refocuses on the bond between young human and ‘bot that it all began with back in 2007.

Much of this refreshing change is due to Travis Knight (Kubo and the Two Strings) stepping in as director after Michael Bay helmed the first five movies. Knight and screenwriter Christina Hodson’s story gives its human protagonist, Charlie (Hailee Steinfeld), more depth and more of an arc than either Shia LaBeouf or Mark Wahlberg’s protagonists received, which creates more of an opportunity for emotional investment. This emphasis on finding the humanity in the story and providing an actual character arc thankfully extends to its Autobot title character as well.

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Bumblebee Review: Totally An ’80s Movie

There’s an inherent goofiness to Transformers that’s impossible to avoid. We’re talking about big robots from space that transform into Volkswagons and Camaros and fighter jets. Bumblebee doesn’t shy away from that–it fully embraces the fun silliness. But that’s not even the best part about this movie–that would be how it actually feels mostly like a 1980s Spielberg adventure movie, with notes of John Hughes sweetening the mix.

Those influences aren’t subtle–the E.T. vibe is real, especially when Hailee Steinfeld’s character, Charlie Watson, first encounters Autobot B127 as a scared alien creature hiding in the corner of her garage. And there are multiple extremely literal Breakfast Club gags, including a throughline of Bumblebee mimicking Judd Nelson by throwing one fist triumphantly into the air, which the movie deploys in the most perfect ways. Bumblebee also has tons of fun with the music of the era–the Transformer starts the movie with a voice, on the distant planet Cybertron, before losing his vocal capabilities in combat. Charlie teaches him to use the radio to communicate, at the same time imparting her love of alternative ’80s jams. Bumblebee doesn’t care for Morrissey’s crooning at first, but dang it if she won’t instill in the robot an appreciation for The Smiths by the end.

Bumblebee begins on Cybertron, where a big, somewhat messy action scene establishes that the Decepticons have rooted out the Autobot rebellion. You really don’t need to know anything about Transformers to appreciate this–I’m sure there are some finer points for fans, but the important bit is that Optimus Prime sends Bumblebee to Earth to keep it safe and wait for the Autobots to regroup. On arrival, Bumblebee lands square on top of John Cena’s Agent Burns, some kind of high-ranking, square-jawed military type who makes it his mission to neutralize the robot-Volkswagon threat. Also, this is apparently a full reboot of the Transformers movies–Bumblebee here arrives on Earth in the ’80s, whereas I’m told Transformers: The Last Knight had him fighting Nazis during WWII (I haven’t seen a Transformers movie since the original, so who knows?).

There’s actually quite a lot of opening action before getting to Steinfeld’s Charlie, whose relationship with Bumblebee is the movie’s actual heart, and what it wisely spends most of its time on. The CGI in the Transformers movies has always seemed impressive, and Bumblebee and the Decepticons who come chasing him seem real enough, their battles punctuated by impactful thuds and scrapes. But this movie’s real trick is making Bumblebee–a large, yellow robot from space–unbelievably cute. After losing his voice and most of his memories, B127 is reduced essentially to the status of a very smart dog. He practically wags his tail at Charlie, although he can apparently understand everything she says. The movie mines a ton of comedy out of recurring bits like Bumblebee understanding the command “hide!” too literally, and trying to crouch behind cover instead of transforming back into a car like she wants him to.

Charlie herself will be intensely relatable to many viewers, whether you’re a parent who grew up in the ’80s or a kid now. She learned how to work on cars from her dad, who’s no longer around. She rebels in relatively harmless ways like walking around listening to The Smiths and wearing too much eyeliner–typical teenager stuff that her mom (Pamela Adlon) and stepdad (Stephen Schneider) patiently tolerate. She has a crappy job at Hot Dog on a Stick and a neighbor kid (Jorge Lendeborg Jr.) with a crush on her, but all she really wants is to get the car she and her dad were working on up and running. As a character, she doesn’t rely too much on tropes, and she’s extremely easy to root for.

Cena’s Agent Burns isn’t quite the villain, which is good, because Cena is too lovable to hate. The WWE Superstar seems to have a blast in this movie hamming it up, throwing exaggerated salutes and barking orders at his subordinates. Cena’s proved more than once that his comedic timing is gold (hello, Blockers), and Bumblebee occasionally puts it to good use, including in one exchange where he correctly points out that they probably shouldn’t trust the Decepticons because–duh–they literally call themselves “Decepticons.”

Speaking of which, the Decepticons Shatter and Dropkick have their own moments of dark humor, which often comes in the form of the latter begging the former to please just let him kill the humans already, or saying things like “I like how they pop!” after vaporizing a random bystander immediately after arriving on Earth. There’s also a very funny bit where Shatter and Dropkick kind of accidentally invent the internet? It’s great.

Bumblebee hits a perfect tone with a great mix of action, humor, and heart. The soundtrack strikes all the right chords, the action is mostly clear and easy to follow even when two massive robots are rapidly grappling and transforming into various forms, and the characters are instantly relatable, without screenwriter Christina Hodson relying too much on cliches. The homages to Spielberg, Hughes, and other ’80s filmmakers may not be subtle, but they are a lot of fun, and Bumblebee pays tribute in smart ways that don’t feel out of place or forced. Bumblebee was only Travis Knight’s second turn in the director’s chair, his first being the also excellent Kubo and the Two Strings; clearly he’s a director to watch going forward, and if Bumblebee is the new bar for Transformers movies, then the series is in for a bright future as well.

The Good The Bad
Good mix of action, humor, and heart Some of the action gets messy
Fun homages to classic ’80s directors like Spielberg and Hughes Rebooting the movies’ continuity might annoy some fans?
Bumblebee is actually cute
Avoids many tropes and cliches
Hailee Steinfeld is a great, relatable lead

Does the Game of Thrones Teaser Offer a Hint About Cersei’s Fate?

HBO has debuted the first teaser trailer for the eighth and final season of Game of Thrones. Unfortunately for spoiler-hungry fans, this teaser doesn’t feature any actual footage from the season, instead providing a bleak look at the fate of Westeros as the forces of ice and fire sweep across the land.

Even without a good look at the surviving heroes and villains of the franchise, this trailer could wind up revealing quite a bit about upcoming events on the series, given that the creative team is pretty meticulous about including clues and foreshadowing in the series. And, since we still have a long wait until Game of Thrones returns in April, we figured we’d kill some time by completely overthinking and overanalyzing the 30-second video. With that in mind, here are all the interesting clues and theories we came up with after seeing this brief teaser – are we way off base, or could we be onto something?

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The Umbrella Academy – Official Teaser Trailer

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