Green Knight Review Round-Up: What Do The Critics Think?

The Green Knight, like Black Widow and Fast and Furious 9 before it, is a film we’ve been waiting on for a long time thanks to multiple pandemic delays. Unlike those films, though, this independent film isn’t showing on every single screen that lights up–you’ll have to work a little harder to find a screen showing it, making it all the more important to know what we’re going into when the film hits theaters this Friday, July 30.

Over on Metacritic, the Green Knight is in the green with a score of 88. Rotten Tomatoes, meanwhile, has the Arthurian fantasy at 94% fresh with 15 reviews from its “top critics.” While these scores will certainly shift as the film comes closer to release this weekend, those are still solid scores.

Below, you’ll see a selection of the many reviews of the Green Knight, including our own.

The Green Knight

  • Directed by: David Lowery
  • Written by: David Lowery (adapted from the original Arthurian tale)
  • Starring: Dev Patel, Alicia Vikander, Joel Edgerton
  • Release Date: August 30

Gamespot – 9/10

“Anyone willing to engage with and participate in The Green Knight will undoubtedly get a lot out of the experience–it is absolutely worth multiple viewings and long discussions with friends from multiple angles. Similarly, failure to actively tune in will likely result in a confusing and frustrating watch. It would be best to measure your expectations, and to go in with an open mind.”

– Mason Downey [Full Review]

Slashfilm – 10/10

“Contrary to the rousing sword-and-shield epics of Arthurian adaptations past, The Green Knight is a slow march to death. And Lowery’s steady and slow-burning direction reflects that: a dreary, grey color palette that looks and feels damp, with only Gawain’s bright yellow cloak piercing through the gloom. But shot mostly in natural light, there’s still a clarity to Lowery’s vision, even as the journey descends into a surreal, magical realist wonderland filled with talking foxes, naked giants, trickster scavengers, or ghostly saints who demand Gawain recover their head.”

– Hoai-Tran Bui [Full Review]

The Chicago Tribune – 3.5/5

“Lowery has an unusual gift for forest-shrouded wonders, as proven by his beguiling live-action Pete’s Dragon for Disney. Serving here as his own editor, the director pays close attention to that extra beat or longer-than-usual take, by which we’re pulled into a world and a rhythm not like most movies. The movie’s more ruminative than exuberant. It’s also fully invested in making its own kind of magic, on its own time.”

– Michael Phillips [Full Review]

Time

“A movie that’s both of its time and splendidly out of step with it, an act of necromancy in a CGI world.”

– Stephanie Zacharek [Full Review]

RogerEbert.com – 4/4

“The fluid cinematography alternates between dreamlike and something deeply connected to Mother Nature. The Green Knight is about many things–and some of the best film writing of this year will unpack its themes in more depth–but a sense of man’s relatively minor role in the grand scope of history and nature is essential, and Palermo beautifully captures the lush greens of the world around Gawain, as if the Knight himself is already everywhere.”

– Brian Tallerico [Full Review]

Aussie Deals: Lockdown Survival Bargains, Up to 90% off Great Games!

We’ve tried to source something for every taste with today’s discounts. PC users can get lost in two of the best RPGs Bethesda ever published. Switch gamers can get their Mario on (or a bit o’ Luigi in the best Ghostbusters game that doesn’t feature Bill Murray). For Xbox fans, we’ve got the soon-to-be-patched Witcher 3. Lastly, PS folk should look into some cheap special editions of Far Cry 5 or Sekiro.

Purchase Cheaply for PC

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From Help Wanted to Headliner: Bill Fagerbakke Still Loves Being Patrick Star

When Bill Fagerbakke first auditioned for the role of Patrick Star in SpongeBob SquarePants over two decades ago, he had no idea what he was getting into.

“There was Stephen Hillenburg, this just unassuming, quiet guy, really obviously very bright, sitting there with the little cassette recorder,” Fagerbakke recalls. “And he showed me pictures of the characters, which were delightful of course, but I didn’t really know what was going on. I didn’t really understand it…I frankly just saw it as just some weird preschool kind of Strawberry Shortcake or something.”

Several months later, Fagerbakke received the pilot episode in the mail: Help Wanted. He sat down to watch. “And I was just overcome with delight.”

“Just the coin dropped, and I finally got it. I saw all this incredible wit, and creativity, and rhythm, and color, and the depth of the culture of it. Man, it was just, it was such a discovery for me..and then at that point, you just think, ‘Well, I hope this thing gets a chance,’ because you never know.”

It is now apparent, of course, that SpongeBob got its chance and more. Over two decades, more than 200 episodes, 13 seasons, a number of movie and video game adaptations, and a pile of awards later, Fagerbakke’s goofy, empty-headed sidekick character is now getting his own spin-off: The Patrick Star Show. Fagerbakke is thrilled.

Remembering Stephen Hillenburg

Fagerbakke says it’s hard to precisely pin down what it is about SpongeBob SquarePants that has captivated audiences for so long. He names a number of people central to its creation and continuation over the years, including his fellow voice actors, Derek Drymon, Aaron Springer, and members of the crew and art teams he doesn’t normally get to work as closely with.

“Their creativity and their talent just knocks you out when you see the script,” he says. “But so many things have to fall in place, because at the end of the day, it is a collaboration between a lot of people. And Stephen cast it, I think, so perfectly. Oh my God, Tom Kenny, it started with Tom. He recognized the importance of that. And he’d cast Tom, that was the first thing he did once he moved into the whole casting process, was he wanted that voice to be right.”

But at the heart of it, Fagerbakke keeps coming back to Hillenburg. From the start, he says Nickelodeon “handled [SpongeBob] really well,” giving Hillenburg the freedom to develop SpongeBob organically, season by season. Hillenburg eventually resigned as showrunner following the third season, though he remained around as an executive producer and continued to offer advice alongside occasional, more direct involvement. He passed away in 2018.

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“What a unique, wonderful person he was,” Fagerbakke says of Hillenburg. “Really brilliant. And obviously, I’m certainly eternally grateful, but he also, in a way, affected our culture, managing to mix his love for the ocean and for the creatures of the ocean with his love for animation. It’s pretty amazing.

“Stephen was able to keep that sense of cleverness and innocence at the same time, which is extraordinarily difficult. But he did it, because of who he is. And the people running the show, the people writing the show, Vincent Waller and Marc Ceccarelli, I think they really honor Steve’s creation. They’re really determined to represent that. And they do a great job.”

Patrick, the star

Fagerbakke tells me that The Patrick Star Show poses an interesting new challenge for his character. Patrick, he says, has always existed and been funny and interesting in his relationship to SpongeBob. And while SpongeBob does appear in The Patrick Star Show, ultimately it’s not about the yellow square dude. It’s about Patrick and his relationships with his family, his friends, and the world of his imagination.

But Fagerbakke says he feels the writing team handled Patrick’s independence splendidly.

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“I was very concerned, just because it was hard for me to imagine how [The Patrick Star Show] would work,” he says. “But God, they created this thing. And it’s just every time I see what’s happened with the Patrick Show, I’m just struck by it as…It strikes me as a writer’s delight, because it has such a freewheeling narrative and changes willy-nilly, and that’s always really great. I think it takes a lot of courage to write like that. You have to trust your audience will go with you as you suddenly take a right turn and go into a different animation style. But it’s wonderful. I’m very proud of it.”

Fagerbakke is full of praise for his fellow actors, too, calling SpongeBob voice actor Tom Kenny a “national treasure” and expressing delight at being able to finally work more closely with Jill Talley, who normally plays Karen (Plankton’s computer wife) in SpongeBob SquarePants. Patrick and Karen rarely interact, but in The Patrick Star Show, Talley voices Patrick’s sister Squidina, meaning the two are constantly able to play off one another.

“She’s fantastic,” he says. “[Squidina] is such a great character. Squidina is just delightful, and she’s the producer of the Patrick show. And they have this great relationship where she was the little sister, but she’s always kind of playing the adult. And then the parents are voiced by Tom Wilson and Cree Summer, both of whom I’ve worked with before in the past, and are really deeply talented people, and Dana Snyder [GrandPat].”

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Though Fagerbakke has obviously finished recording the entirety of The Patrick Star Show’s first season, he hasn’t yet gotten to watch all the episodes the whole way through, so he wasn’t able to pick a favorite episode just yet (though he did call out the recent episode “Lost in Couch” for its different animation style twists and turns as being particularly “fantastic”).

And he does have a favorite relationship to portray in The Patrick Star Show, alongside Patrick’s relationships with SpongeBob and Squidina — and it’s not what you’d expect.

“This is kind of an odd thing, but it’s Patrick and the space, because it’s in his bedroom and he’s got all this weird stuff. So I would anticipate that if we did do more of the Patrick Show, that would be a fun thing to really further develop his relationship with his space. And there’s a time machine, and there’s just a lot of stuff that’s going on in his room that I would like to have more fun with. But, there are untold riches in the brains of every one of those writers, and I just wait with relish to see what comes next.”

The one big downside of Fagerbakke’s work on The Patrick Star Show, he says, was the fact that the entire show was recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic. That situation understandably meant everything had to be created remotely, and he wasn’t able to play off his fellow actors in quite the same way he was used to.

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“I was so bummed,” he says. “Obviously as actors, we’re always hoping something gets picked up, etc, that it gets renewed or whatever. And I got to say, the primary reason I want that to happen with the Patrick Show is I want to be in a room with all these guys, because they’re so good.

“I know a lot of voiceover actors, they can just do it wherever they are, in whatever circumstance. And I do my best in that regard, but there’s something about being in the room with your fellow performers, and you’re telling the story, because everything they do contributes to what you’re doing. It all relates to each other, and it informs me. And we’ve done a little bit of group recording through the Zoom, etc, but it’s weird. You’re in this weird freaking physical relationship with this laptop that’s stacked up on top of a bunch of junk. Because I record on my feet, and I like to use my body a lot.

“And it’s just odd. Wah wah wah, I’m lucky to have the job, sure as shit. But I do look forward to —  excuse my language — I do look forward to returning to the studio with my other actors.”

Patrick, Perfected

Over 200 episodes later, Fagerbakke is still having a blast with the twists and turns the series and spinoffs have taken over the years. But for him, no episode of SpongeBob has yet managed to top Help Wanted in his heart.

“It’s in so many ways, a perfect standalone cartoon. It’s eight minutes long, and it has such a rich feel, an immediately recognizable cast of characters, and relationships, and types. And it features what remains my favorite line in the entire run of the series, which is from Squidward, because he’s anxious that he sees his annoying neighbor applying for a job where he works. And then to his relief, he hears Mr. Krabs clearly sending SpongeBob on a fool’s errand, because he’s not taking the application seriously.”

In the episode Fagerbakke is referring to, Mr. Krabs sends SpongeBob to find “a hydrodynamic spatula with port and starboard attachments and turbo drive,” an item which shouldn’t exist at all. (Of course, in pure cartoon silliness, SpongeBob will eventually find one at the local Barg’N-Mart).

“Squidward is so relieved that clearly Mr. Krabs does not want to hire him. So as soon as SpongeBob runs off, he goes up to Mr. Krabs and goes, [here Fagerbakke jumps into Squidward’s voice for his rendition of the line] ‘A hydro-what? Mr. Krabs, you’re horrible.’

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“It floored me. That line just killed me because it was such an adult sophistication in the humor, but yet it would still fit completely within this world. And then the use of that wonderful Tiny Tim song [Livin’ in the Sunlight, Lovin’ in the Moonlight] as SpongeBob is making Krabby Patties for all the anchovies was just delightful. And again, for me, such an epiphany of realizing what I had stumbled into there.

“You know, in your position as a young animator, you don’t know if you’re going to get another chance, and you don’t know if this thing’s going to get picked up. And [Hillenburg] had been working on these characters for a long time. This had been something he’d been cooking up in his mind for a long time. And boom, then Nickelodeon says, ‘Yeah, we’ll go ahead and produce that pilot.’ And you can tell, every frame of it is perfect, and he put so much of his heart and soul into that. It’s a great testament, I think, to his passion.”

After all these years, Fagerbakke still adores Patrick, a love that shines through at every moment during our interview. I ask if there’s any untrodden ground for Patrick that he’d like to eventually explore with the character, and he jokingly hops into character for a moment to say, “I want to do a musical!” before telling me truthfully, no. He just looks forward to the next episode, whatever it may be.

What does Fagerbakke love so much about Patrick, after all this time?

“I love his raw honesty,” he says. “He’s utterly guileless. He’s pure in his own way. He’s kind of like a modern-day Caliban from the Tempest, Shakespeare’s Tempest, which I actually played a long, long, long, long time ago. He’s very much of the earth. He’s a base creature, and his loyalty and devotion to SpongeBob, and the simplicity of his moment-to-moment whim, it’s really great to play.

“And this is all just nuts. It makes no sense to play a character this long. And I have never, ever gotten tired of it. It entertains me so much. He makes me laugh. And it remains a manner of therapy for me when I go in and I let Patrick take the wheel. And next thing I know, I’m walking out of the studio feeling exhausted, but elated.”

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Rebekah Valentine is a news reporter for IGN. You can find her on Twitter @duckvalentine.

DC Comics Villain Face-Off: Who Is the Best of the Worst?

In celebration of the upcoming release of The Suicide Squad in theaters and on HBO Max on August 6, which of course is focused on a group of villains, we thought it would be the perfect time to look back at the DC Comics that inspired the film and ask the IGN audience who the best DC Comics villain of all time is.

Is The Joker your favorite? How about Bane or King Shark? We’ve selected 152 of the most notorious villains from the pages of DC Comics to “Face-Off” against each other two at a time. Will you choose Darkseid over Doomsday? Or Lex Luthor over Brainiac? The choice is yours…

Click here to start voting in the DC Comics villain Face-Off!

What Is a Face-Off?

Like the name suggests, a Face-Off pits two things against one another and you decide which one is the superior of the two. In this case, you are voting to determine who the best DC Comics villain is. It’s possible to see certain characters multiple times so you can keep voting for your favorites to ensure they get ranked higher than the rest. IGN’s resident team of DC Comics experts pre-selected 152 wonderfully evil villains for you to choose from. These get randomly paired up and each time you pick a winner, it’s tracked.

How Is the Winner Determined?

When voting ends on August 2, we tally up the total number of “wins” and “losses” each DC Comics villain has, and create a ranked list based on your choices that will go live on August 3. The character that won the most matchups will be crowned the “winner,” and in the event of a tied number of “wins,” the villain with the least “losses” will take the top spot. If you continue to keep voting for your favorite character, they’ll have a better chance of ranking high on the list. You can vote as many times as you want until the Face-Off closes.

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How Do I Know When I’ve Clicked Through Everything?

It’s difficult to know when you’ve seen every DC Comics villain included because they are matched randomly and there are so many possible match-ups. Playing until you vote for all your favorite villains or ensuring that certain characters don’t get in the winner’s circle are different options you can take with a Face-Off. By deciding the winner throughout all these match-ups, you’re ensuring that your picks for the best DC Comics villain will have a fighting chance to reach the top of the list.

Which DC Comics Villains Have You Included?

The list of DC Comics villains has been decided by IGN staff, and we’ve tried to include a wide variety of ne’er-do-wells to face-off against each other. Any villain was fair game and, although it may be obvious, these are not the versions of the characters featured in the DC Extended Universe. However, since these iconic characters inspired their big-screen counterparts, we thought it’d be the perfect time to celebrate their origins.

Click here to start voting in the DC Comics Villain Face-Off!

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For more on The Suicide Squad, check out our exclusive trailer breakdown with director James Gunn, a look at who’s who in the latest iteration of this squad, and how the movie’s opening battle aims to be the DCEU’s Saving Private Ryan.

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Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

Pokemon Live-Action Series In Development at Netflix

Netflix is working on a live-action Pokemon series headed up by Lucifer’s Joe Henderson.

According to Variety, Henderson is slated to write and executive produce the live-action adaptation. He is currently the co-showrunner on Netflix’s popular Lucifer series, based on the DC comic. 

Reports say the series is aiming to replicate Detective Pikachu, a 2019 live-action Pokemon movie starring Ryan Reynolds and Justice Smith. It was pretty good, actually. However, Netflix’s series is its own, independent production.

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Henderson, previously known for the show Almost Human, has been serving as Lucifer’s co-showrunner since 2016 and moved with the series when it was picked up by Netflix. It is now one of the more popular revivals Netflix has acquired from a cable network.

Netflix is currently home to several existing Pokemon anime seasons, and the interest to develop a live-action series stems from the anime’s success on the streaming platform. Alongside acquiring more anime originals, Netflix is currently working on adapting several anime into live-action shows including Cowboy Bebop and One Piece.

The Pokemon live-action series is reportedly very early in development, and there are neither plot details nor casting plans in place.

You can read IGN’s review of Detective Pikachu if you’d like our verdict on the last live-action take on the popular Japanese game franchise. Despite the well-received film, star Justice Smith doesn’t believe there is a Detective Pikachu 2 in the near future.

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Matt T.M. Kim is IGN’s News Editor.

Splitgate Is Proving So Popular That It’s Being Delayed

Splitgate’s official release date is being delayed after some 2 million players overwhelmed the open beta servers, forcing the team to work to increase server capacity.

The overload was sparked by the introduction of the beta on console earlier this month, which allowed players on PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One to join in via crossplay. Last week, the Splitgate team revealed via Twitter that it was working to upgrade its server capacity to keep up.

Splitgate was originally expected to launch tomorrow following a period that included a substantial graphical overhaul. Instead, it will launch in August as 1047 Games’ small team of four engineers scrambles to upgrade the number of concurrent players the game can handle.

“Our team has been blown away by the incredible reception the Splitgate community has shown us. With the steep and sudden increase in players trying to access servers, we’re having to sort out a myriad of technical issues that come with this level of insane growth,” 1047 Games CEO Ian Proulx said in a statement. “We’ve worked hard to provide a high-quality game and experience, and our biggest challenge is simply to have enough capacity to serve the entire community.”

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Proulx also announced that the team was able to raise an $10 million in funding necessary to expand the game’s server capacity and stability.

In the meantime, Splitgate’s pre-release beta will continue to be available. 1047 Games will update the pre-release version with some of the planned launch content to hold fans over, including three new maps, customizables, and skins.

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania Has Begun Filming, and Here’s a Horrible Picture to Prove It

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania director Peyton Reed announced the beginning of principal photography with a tweet featuring a familiar face.

Reed shared the exciting news on Twitter on Monday alongside a photo of the hideous bunny that Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang memorably gifted his daughter Cassie in the first film. The ugly but loveable stuffed animal is ominously placed right next to a biohazard container, and the cuddly creature is looking just as terrifying as we remember it.

Cassie’s childhood toy may well be making a return in the threequel, joining Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man, Evangeline Lilly as Hope van Dyne/Wasp, Michael Douglas as Dr. Hank Pym, Michelle Pfeiffer as Janet van Dyne, and Michael Peña as Luis. Kathryn Newton has also joined the cast as Cassie Lang while Jonathan Majors is set to portray Kang the Conqueror.

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Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is scheduled to be released on February 17, 2023, but there’s a lot of MCU to come before that. Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is lined up to be the next Phase 4 movie, releasing in September, with Eternals in November, and Spider-Man: No Way Home in December.

For more on Marvel’s slate of projects and releases, read our breakdown of the biggest and most noteworthy developments happening in the MCU, on Disney+, and in comics.

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Adele Ankers is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.

New to Netflix in August 2021: The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf, 30 Rock, and More

Following the first WitcherCon earlier this month, Netflix will officially release The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf anime in August 2021 – a new story that tells the origin story of Vessemir. August will also see the return of some beloved TV series to Netflix like seasons 1-7 of 30 Rock and seasons 1-5 of Friday Night Lights.

Check out the official trailer for The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf below:

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Speaking of things returning, Inception will make its way back to Netflix in August alongside Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Netflix will also gain some intriguing documentaries in Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed and Pray Away, which focuses on ex-leaders and a survivor of the so-called “conversion therapy” movement.

Grey’s Anatomy and Killing Eve’s Sandra Oh will also star in a new show called The Chair, which follows the first woman of color to become chair at a major university.

Check out the slideshow gallery below for highlights of Netflix’s August offerings following by the full list (U.S. Netflix only):

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August 1

  • 30 Rock: Seasons 1-7
  • Beethoven
  • Beethoven’s 2nd
  • Beowulf
  • Catch Me If You Can
  • Darwin’s Game
  • Deep Blue Sea
  • The Edge of Seventeen
  • Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
  • Five Feet Apart
  • Friday Night Lights: Seasons 1-5
  • Good Luck Chuck
  • The Haunting in Connecticut 2: Ghosts of Georgia
  • Hunter X Hunter (2011): Seasons 5-6
  • Inception
  • The Lincoln Lawyer
  • The Losers
  • The Machinist
  • Magnolia
  • Major Payne
  • My Girl
  • My Girl 2
  • The Net
  • The Original Kings of Comedy
  • Pineapple Express
  • Poms
  • Seabiscuit
  • Space Cowboys
  • Team America: World Police

August 3

  • Pray Away — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Shiny_Flakes: The Teenage Drug Lord — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified — NETFLIX SERIES

August 4

  • Aftermath
  • American Masters: Inventing David Geffen
  • Cocaine Cowboys: The Kings of Miami — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Control Z: Season 2 — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Car Masters: Rust to Riches: Season 3 — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Cooking With Paris — NETFLIX SERIES

August 6

  • Hit & Run — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Navarasa — NETFLIX SERIES
  • The Swarm — NETFLIX FILM
  • Vivo — NETFLIX FILM

August 8

  • Quartet

August 9

  • SHAMAN KING — NETFLIX ANIME

August 10

  • Gabby’s Dollhouse: Season 2 — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • Phil Wang: Philly Philly Wang Wang — NETFLIX COMEDY SPECIAL
  • UNTOLD: Malice at the Palace — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

August 11

  • Bake Squad — NETFLIX SERIES
  • The Kissing Booth 3 — NETFLIX FILM
  • La diosa del asfalto
  • Misha and the Wolves — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

August 12

  • AlRawabi School for Girls — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Lokillo: Nothing’s the Same — NETFLIX COMEDY SPECIAL
  • Monster Hunter: Legends of the Guild — NETFLIX ANIME

August 13

  • Beckett — NETFLIX FILM
  • Brand New Cherry Flavor — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Fast & Furious Spy Racers: Season 5: South Pacific — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • Gone for Good — NETFLIX SERIES
  • The Kingdom — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Valeria: Season 2 — NETFLIX SERIES

August 15

  • Mother Goose Club: Seasons 3-4
  • Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai: Season 1
  • Winx Club: Season 6

August 16

  • Walk of Shame

August 17

  • Go! Go! Cory Carson: Season 5 — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • UNTOLD: Deal with the Devil — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

August 18

  • The Defeated — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Memories of a Murderer: The Nilsen Tapes — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Out of my league — NETFLIX FILM
  • The Secret Diary of an Exchange Student — NETFLIX FILM

August 19

  • Like Crazy

August 20

  • The Chair — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Everything Will Be Fine — NETFLIX SERIES
  • The Loud House Movie — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • Sweet Girl — NETFLIX FILM

August 23

  • The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf — NETFLIX ANIME

August 24

  • Oggy Oggy — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • UNTOLD: Caitlyn Jenner — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

August 25

  • Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Clickbait — NETFLIX SERIES
  • John of God: The Crimes of a Spiritual Healer — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY
  • Motel Makeover — NETFLIX SERIES
  • The November Man
  • The Old Ways
  • Open Your Eyes — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Post Mortem: No One Dies in Skarnes — NETFLIX SERIES
  • Rainbow High: Part 2
  • Really Love
  • The River Runner
  • Tayo the Little Bus: Season 4
  • The Water Man

August 26

  • EDENS ZERO — NETFLIX ANIME
  • Family Reunion: Part 4 — NETFLIX FAMILY

August 27

  • He’s All That — NETFLIX FILM
  • I Heart Arlo — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • Titletown High — NETFLIX SERIES

August 28

  • Bread Barbershop: Season 2
  • Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha — NETFLIX SERIES

August 31

  • Sparking Joy — NETFLIX SERIES
  • UNTOLD: Crime and Penalties – — NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

Date TBA

  • Comedy Premium League — NETFLIX SERIES
  • D.P. — NETFLIX SERIES

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Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

Comic Writer Scott Snyder Joins comiXology Originals With 8 Superstar Artists

Comic book writer Scott Snyder, best known for his DC work on Batman and Justice League as well as indie hits American Vampire and Wytches, is making his comiXology Originals debut in a big way. Snyder’s publishing company Best Jackett Press is teaming with comiXology’s original content line to release eight new comic books, each drawn by a superstar artist–Rafael Albuquerque, Greg Capullo, Francesco Francavilla, Jamal Igle, Jock, Tula Lotay, Francis Manapul, and Dan Panosian. 

“This historic, multi-title deal with comiXology Originals has enabled us to assemble a murderers’ row of artists and together we’re challenging ourselves creatively to work outside of our comfort zones and really lean into the possibilities of making comics,” Scott Snyder said in a press release. “This deal allows me the freedom to explore the kind of storytelling I’ve wanted to try for a long time, while supporting my need to try something that’s not totally comfortable for me.”

The comics will be released starting in October. Each comic will first be available digitally on comiXology and Kindle, then it will be sold in print by Dark Horse Books.

“Massive in scope and creative range, these comics embrace all the things you love about Scott Snyder as a writer, while offering stories that are unexpected and new,” comiXology’s Head of Content Chip Mosher said in the press release. “Teamed with the best artists in the business, these creator-owned comics range from horror and sci-fi to historical fiction, there’s truly something for everyone.”

The eight new titles are as follows:

  • BARNSTORMERS written by Scott Snyder with art by Tula Lotay and colors by Tula Lotay and Dee Cunniffe. “A high flying adventure romance set just after the First World War.”
  • THE BOOK OF EVIL written by Scott Snyder with illustrations by Jock. “A prose story about four young friends growing up in a strange, near future where over 90% of the population are born as psychopaths.”
  • CANARY written by Scott Snyder with art and colors by Dan Panosian. “It’s 1891 and a mine collapses into itself. Find out what the dark substance found 666 feet underground is in this horror Western!”
  • CLEAR written by Scott Snyder with art and colors by Francis Manapul. “A sci-fi mystery thrill-ride into a strange dystopian future, where a neurological internet connection is transforming reality.”
  • DUCK AND COVER written by Scott Snyder with art by Rafael Albuquerque. “A manga-influenced teen adventure set in the strange post-apocalyptic America… of 1955. In conjunction with Albuquerque’s Stout Club Entertainment.”
  • DUDLEY DATSON AND THE FOREVER MACHINE written by Scott Snyder with art by Jamal Igle and Juan Castro and colors by Chris Sotomayor. “Teenager Dudley Datson finds himself the keeper of a device that opens up time and space. But when Dudley finds himself on an earth where dinosaurs rule, can he find his way back?”
  • NIGHT OF THE GHOUL written by Scott Snyder with art and colors by Francesco Francavilla. “A dazzling work of horror, intercutting between the present day narrative and the story of a lost horror film.”
  • WE HAVE DEMONS written by Scott Snyder with art by Greg Capullo and Jonathan Glapion and colors by Dave McCaig. “The conflict between good and evil is about to come to a head when a teenage hero embarks on a journey that unveils a secret society, monsters, and mayhem.”

IGN has your exclusive first look at select art pages from the upcoming titles in the gallery below.

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Veteran comics editor Will Dennis will be overseeing these eight new comics.

“One of the things I’m so excited about is experimenting to find new ways to build and nurture a community of readers,” Snyder said. “We want each release to be an event and we can’t wait for readers to see what we have planned, whether they’re reading via comiXology Unlimited, print, or both.”

The Green Knight Review

The Green Knight hits theaters on July 30.

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Arthurian legends have long been translated into sweeping dramas or sword-and-shield action epics, but there’s never been any adaptation so surreal and strange as David Lowery’s The Green Knight. The writer-director translates the chivalric romance poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight into a fascinating adventure, rejecting the heart-racing thrills expected of this subgenre for pleasures far more cerebral.

Dev Patel puts a riveting new spin on Gawain, who, in his hunger for the glory of knighthood, accepts a Christmas challenge to confront the Green Knight, cutting him down with one intense blow. Dread rises when the Green Knight plucks up his severed head and rides away cackling, promising a grim reunion in one year. Smartly, Lowery’s script spends little time on the intervening year, swiftly establishing that one brave act has not made Gawain a hero. Instead, it focuses on the arduous and unpredictable journey he sets out on, leading the impetuous hero through festering battlefields and fog-slathered forests to cross paths with ambushing thieves, a mournful spirit, howling giants, and a perplexing couple in a curious castle.

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Each location has an eerie beauty. A color palette of golds, greens, and greys contrasts the lush moss of the land against the bright cloak of our hero against the pale landscapes that would gladly gobble him up. The warm tones of Patel’s gold cape defy the cool tones of the Green Knight, whose flesh is made of roughly hewn wood, topped with a beard of rigid roots. This color story reflects the battle and unavoidable connection of life and death. Then, reds burst forth throughout, rebellious and ominous: a pool of freshly spilled blood, a violent wash of light to serve as warning, a graceful red fox, who becomes Gawain’s snarling sidekick. Cinematographer Andrew Droz Palermo, who previously worked with Lowery on A Ghost Story, not only balances these colors with an awe-striking elegance but also creates texture so tangible that it seems you could run your fingers along the screen and feel the chainmail, the tree bark, the fox fur, or Patel’s sweat-slicked torso.

All of this texture proves not only gorgeous, but also crucial, giving us something to grip onto as The Green Knight spins its slippery yarn. Lowery relishes ambiguity. His characters are often impressionistic, relying on gesture more than backstory. The Green Knight follows suit, sketching personalities in brief but mighty moments. An awesome ensemble that includes Alicia Vikander, Sean Harris, Sarita Choudhury, Joel Edgerton, Kate Dickie, Barry Keoghan, and Erin Kellyman oozes lust, love, malice, and agony, turning every sequence into a slick but stirring event. Yet, Patel’s performance alone makes the movie a must-see. With a rugged physicality, chaotic charisma, and soulful eyes that speak volumes, he creates a captivating and complex portrait of a man discovering his faults and worth. Along with a smirking and smoldering Vikander, he also makes this movie much steamier than you might expect from its subgenre.

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Adding to the fogginess of the film’s plot, Lowery doesn’t bother to recap the complicated history of King Arthur and his sister Morgan le Fay. No characters will drop exposition dumps to justify Gawain’s impulsiveness or his passion for knighthood. Instead, their conversations dance into poetry and metaphor, beautiful to behold and often disturbing to consider. Some words might be lost, spoken in hisses, whispers, and growls. Some might be sucked up in a moody score made of haunting flutes, clattering percussions, and wailing choral singing. Still, the context is felt in various ways. All of this leads to a finale that is so ambiguous that it may well prove polarizing. Be warned: Lowery is not looking to deliver an exhilarating action-adventure, studded with surprising stunts, chaste kisses, and clear-cut heroes and villains. What he offers feels less like stepping into a noble fantasy and more like sliding into an enchanting nightmare.