Vought International is continuing its domination over Amazon’s Prime Video streaming service. The second season of the comic book adaptation The Boys is currently airing weekly on Prime, while the series has already been renewed for a third season. What’s more, The Boys even has its own aftershow. Now, the universe of the show is looking to expand even further.
According to a report from Variety, a spin-off of The Boys is in development. It’s set at a college for young supes, which is run by the ominous Vought International–the evil corporation that controls The Seven. A description of the potential spin-off from Variety calls it “an irreverent, R-rated series that explores the lives of hormonal, competitive supes as they put their physical, sexual, and moral boundaries to the test, competing for the best contracts in the best cities. Part college show, part Hunger Games–with all the heart, satire and raunch of The Boys.”
It essentially sounds like a dirty version of the antics at the Xavier school, as young supes learn to control their powers in a way only The Boys could portray.
The pilot is being written by The Boys writer and executive producer Craig Rosenberg, who would also serve as showrunner. The Boys’ executive producers Eric Kripke, Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, and James Weaver will also serve as executive producers, alongside Neal H. Moritz and Pavun Shetty.
There’s no telling when fans of The Boys would actually see this series, should it move beyond development. Still, this makes it clear that Amazon sees plenty of stories left to tell when it comes to The Boys.
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According to Variety, the spinoff is “is set at America’s only college exclusively for young adult superheroes (or “supes”) that is run by Vought International.”
As the trade puts it:
“It is described as an irreverent, R-rated series that explores the lives of hormonal, competitive supes as they put their physical, sexual, and moral boundaries to the test, competing for the best contracts in the best cities. Part college show, part Hunger Games — with all the heart, satire and raunch of ‘The Boys.”
The Boys’ Craig Rosenberg will script the pilot and also serve as the spinoff’s showrunner and executive producer.
The spinoff’s behind-the-scenes personnel will include other veterans of The Boys as executive producers, including series creator Eric Kripke as well as Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, James Weaver, Neal H. Moritz, and Pavun Shetty.
The second season finale of The Boys will debut October 9.
Zack Snyder’s cut of Justice League, formerly known as the Snyder Cut, now called Justice League: The Director’s Cut, has been a point of speculation for fans for years. And now that it is heading towards an official release as a four-part mini series on HBO Max in 2021, the air of mystery around the production has only become more intense.
Earlier this week, it was reported that Snyder planned on shooting additional footage with key cast members in early October. The call sheet notably included Ray Fisher, who is currently embroiled in a public controversy with Warner Bros. over the handling of the original production, specifically the alleged abusive and unprofessional treatment of director Joss Whedon who was called in to finish the film. Along with Fisher were Henry Cavill, Gal Gadot, and Ben Affleck.
Now, however, it would seem Cavill is not intending to shoot more footage for the new cut after all. In an interview with Collider, Cavill said that he is “not shooting anything additional.” And that his part in the film is “all stuff that has already been done.”
Cavill went on to explain: “Obviously I don’t know how things are going to evolve and change and adapt depending on now a different length of movie and whatever may happen in post-production. Whatever lessons may be learned from what is it four years since Justice League came out? Four years’ worth of fan reaction. For me…I’m now just watching the party.”
Justice League: The Director’s Cut is scheduled to air on HBO Max some time in 2021.
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With NBA 2K21, you just know what you’re getting into–a basketball simulation with the presentation chops, star power, and gameplay mechanics to embody the sport on a professional and cultural level. You know you’ll build a custom player to go through a story that leads into a full career and take to the streets and rec center for pick up games. You know you can play a management sim through MyGM or build a playable fantasy team through card packs in MyTeam. And you also know all too well about the scheme of VC that looms over it all, which remains one of the prominent offenders of intrusive microtransactions.
At this point, NBA 2K21 suggests that the franchise is out of surprises. It comes with a robust suite of modes, but despite minor remixing year after year, the annual releases are starting to blend together (if they haven’t already). Mechanics get minor tweaks or additions, but largely remain untouched. So, for those embedded in the 2K cycle, you know what the deal is, but because this year’s game changes things mostly on a surface level, it’s hard to be excited about yet another entry.
Your player in MyCareer starts in high school, goes through college for a short time, then gets drafted.
Don’t get me wrong, as a lifelong basketball fan who embraced the culture as a wee lad and cherishes street ball memories from back home, I’m still a bit in awe of how well the sport has translated into video game form (I said as much in my NBA 2K19 review). And that doesn’t just come from the player likenesses, character creation tools, or the broadcast-style presentation; it’s a matter of the core gameplay, too.
Dribble moves with the right stick offer nearly full control of ball handling. It can feel a bit cluttered having so many actions mapped to slightly different motions on just one stick, as errant inputs can sometimes have you pull a pump-fake instead of the crossover you intended. But if you can master a few key moves, you’ll be at an advantage for opportunities to drive to the basket or mitigate shot contesting. The same goes for making the right moves in the post-game to either get under defenders or get positioning over them. All of these have been staples of NBA 2K for quite some time.
The big new addition in terms of offense is the optional Pro Stick shooting. Prior to 2K21, shooting would either be done by holding down Square, X, or the right stick and timing your release at the height of your jump, indicated by a shot meter overhead. With Pro Stick shooting enabled, you hold the right stick down without having to worry about release timing and instead focus on accurate stick alignment according to the shot meter before your player releases the shot. While it’s much easier to just use square or X for scoring in the paint, Pro Stick is a viable new alternative for jump shots, especially in situations when lag or latency can throw off traditional-style release timing.
Solid moment-to-moment basketball is still a highlight of NBA 2K21.
There aren’t really any standout changes on the defensive side of the ball. Of course, you still need to stay locked in to track your matchup’s movements, know when to press up, move laterally, contest shots, and fight over screens. But the sluggish nature of off-the-ball movement can still be a tiresome thing to struggle with when controls don’t respond the way you intended or you simply run in place, stuck on teammates, and subsequently get punished for a defensive breakdown.
Every action in NBA 2K21 is deliberate and at higher levels of play, the game requires your full attention to succeed. By virtue of this, playing through actual matches–whether it be in MyCareer avenues or through full-team control in the various other modes–can be taxing, but extremely rewarding when you come away with that W.
The most rewarding aspect of NBA 2K is in the MyCareer path, and the same holds true for this year’s game. You create a player, spec them out for a position, and build them further by specializing in certain basketball skills and stats. For example, I built my guy to be a point guard who can thread the needle when dishing assists, but one who can also easily finish with driving layups or mid-range jumpers.
You’re not my dad, Jesse Williams!
Once you’ve settled on your template and stat potentials, you go through a new yet familiar story of being a young, upcoming player leading into the NBA draft. Notable actors like Michael K. Williams, Djimon Hounsou, and Jesse Williams play roles in your cinematic-style story and deliver strong performances. But while some dramatic or pivotal moments draw you in for just a beat, it doesn’t really add up to much or sensibly connect on a narrative front. There’s a cheesy romantic subplot, petty player drama, a thread about your dad who apparently passed away but shows up in flashbacks (he’s played by Jesse Williams and doesn’t look a day older than your player, so that was confusing), and a somewhat shady family friend who can become your agent. Really, it’s fancy set-dressing to usher you into the full roster of MyCareer activities.
Like past iterations, the level of depth that goes into building your player remains the strongest hook–this includes working your way into the starting lineup as an NBA player as you play through seasons, gaining endorsements, getting swagged out in new clothes and shoes, and playing in competitive pickup matches online.
Here, NBA 2K21 flexes one of its bigger changes with The Neighborhood, now centered around a Southern California beachfront. It’s a refreshing change of scenery and a much more pleasant backdrop for this hub world where pick-up 3-on-3s and half-court 2-on-2s take place, and various facilities and shops are propped up. The functional purpose remains the same, but if anything, the new layout makes it harder to get to shops and facilities since they’re placed on the streets opposite of the courts, rather than the outskirts surrounding the courts like in previous iterations.
The Rec is great for organized pick up games when matchmaking works its magic.
Matching up for games in The Neighborhood remains the same–it can be a slog, waiting for players to queue up and the game to cycle through all the pre- and post-game animations. I find the The Rec’s 5-on-5 games much more satisfying with proper matchmaking (given that teams are balanced in skill and positions), and you can take this basketball ethos a step further in the organized Pro-Am league. But enjoyment from these competitive outlets relies on the players you get matched with, and also how much your player has progressed in order to keep up.
This is where virtual currency (VC) comes into play, yet again. It’s no surprise that microtransactions litter every corner of NBA 2K21–and for me, I’ve moved on from being outraged to feeling despondent. The game borders on a pay-to-win model, with progression tracks that are paced in ways to nudge you towards paying for VC rather than earning it. Improving your stats still relies on spending VC, and the costs increase exponentially the further you upgrade a certain ability. There are plenty of nice cosmetics to earn, and it’s admittedly a ton of fun dressing up your player in fresh kicks and the flyest Nike and Adidas apparel, but their steep VC costs suck the life out of the experience.
MyTeam Triple Threat matches get a futuristic Tron-like makeover.
VC permeates the MyTeam mode again, too. This mode acts as a fantasy-esque build-your-own-team endeavor where you earn card packs to unlock players among a roster that spans multiple NBA eras. MyTeam can be captivating for long-time basketball fans such as myself who have Allen Iverson teamed up with Anthony Davis and can take this dream team roster into single-player or multiplayer matches. However, the loot-box nature of earning card packs–which can be obtained by slowly earning MT points through new avenues like challenges, seasonal events, and turning in useless cards, or by buying them with VC–makes the reliance on VC unsurprisingly egregious.
MyGM, which puts you in the shoes of a team’s General Manager, is a mode worth mentioning. You call the shots for everything from roster moves, trades, ticket prices, marketing, and personnel decisions in hopes of building a successful franchise. It’s a sports management simulation dream, but changes here are only skin deep. You’ll go through awkwardly written and animated dialogue scenarios to manage relationships within your organization–like how I chatted to RJ Barrett about how he used to play clarinet in order to boost his morale stats, or became the yes-man of head coach Tom Thibodeau to keep him happy. MyGM’s menus are also flooded in a way that makes it difficult to navigate and get a grip of how to spend your limited time and resources through the season. I’ve really enjoyed this mode in the past with its RPG-like sensibilities, but it’s one that needs a serious revamp.
“Yeah, clarinet.” – New York Knicks small forward RJ Barrett
I can run down every other mode of play or feature in NBA 2K21, but I’d really just be going through the laundry list of things we’ve seen in years past–although I do want to point to the continued inclusion of the WNBA. It’s a great feature for current fans and those who want to familiarize themselves with WNBA teams and players. Where this falls short is that the WNBA is relegated to just season play, and the inclusion of female player creation is only featured in the upcoming next-gen versions of the game.
NBA 2K21 shows that the lone basketball sim we have now has largely stagnated. It’s a full package, for sure, but one that demonstrates little-to-no motivation to meaningfully improve upon itself. That doesn’t take away from the strong foundation that makes NBA 2K a fun and rewarding time. However, when you go through the same grind and the same process with only superficial changes, you just get burnt out faster than years prior. If ball is still life, NBA 2K21 is as good a version as any to pick, although even the greatest ballers need a rest.
Of the many horror subgenres that have proved popular over the years, the haunted house movie is perhaps the most varied, and has never gone out of style. Unlike vampires or zombies, there are no “rules” to the haunted house movie. All you need is a house, and some spooky s*** going on inside it.
Next month sees the release of The Haunting of Bly Manor, the latest Netflix show from director Mike Flanagan. It’s an adaptation of Henry James’s classic 1898 novella The Turn of the Screw, and follows 2018’s The Haunting of Hill House, which adapted Shirley Jackson’s 1959 novel of the same title. Hill House was one of 2018’s most acclaimed shows, and it expanded Jackson’s story without losing any of the mystery and tension that made it so effective to start with. It wasn’t the first adaptation of the novel, but absolutely stands alongside the classic 1963 movie version.
So hopes are high that Bly Manor will deliver a similar mix of emotional drama and expertly-crafted scares. The Turn of the Screw has been adapted a lot more than Hill House–and in fact, we’re already had another version this year, the movie The Turning. But Flanagan has revealed that the show will take elements from other James stories, and it looks set to stand apart from other versions of the novella.
While we wait for Bly Manor to hit Netflix on October 9, there’s time to catch up on some must-see haunted house movies. So we’ve rounded up 16 of the best. Some of these films take inspiration from James’s and Jackson’s hugely influential novels, while others take the genre in very different directions. Some are funny, some scary, and others just plain weird. But they’re all worth a look, and with horror season nearly upon us, now is a great time to start investigating.
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16. Housebound (2014)
Director Gerard Johnstone took inspiration for this spooky New Zealand comedy from both Ghostbusters and The Haunting, and the result is a confident new take on the genre. The film focuses on a troubled teenager named Kylie who is sentenced to house arrest–in a haunted house. The interplay between Morgana O’Reilly, playing Kylie, and Rima Te Wiata as her domineering mother provides the laughs, while Johnstone delivers plenty of atmosphere and spooky scares as the pair are forced to deal with whatever spectral presence is in the house with them.
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15. Burnt Offerings (1976)
Burnt Offerings may have been marketed as an Exorcist copy at the time, but it has a very different tone. It’s slow and avoids many of the noisy clichés of other possession and ghost movies, instead focusing on creeping dread and a weird, dreamlike atmosphere. Acting legend Oliver Reed delivers an intense performance as a man under the grip of something evil in the house he’s renting, while Bette Davis plays an old woman who lives in the attic and might have something to do with it. It takes its time to get there, but the climax absolutely delivers.
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14. I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives In The House (2016)
Director Oz Perkins might be the son of legendary Psycho actor Anthony Perkins, but his three movies to date have seen the filmmaker step easily out of his dad’s shadow. Perkins made this Netflix Original between the disturbing The Blackcoat’s Daughter and the recent eerie fairytale Gretel and Hansel. It’s an old-fashioned gothic chiller in which a nurse comes to a remote house to look after the old, infirm author who lives there. Of course, some weird stuff starts happening. Perkins successfully avoids many of the clichés of the genre and delivers a subtle, atmospheric movie that’ll appeal to fans of classic horror.
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13. Crimson Peak (2015)
The influences on Guillermo Del Toro’s haunted house melodrama might be obvious, but the modern fantasy master still puts his own unique spin on the genre. It’s a stunningly directed film, with incredible set design and cinematography, and the mix of gothic romance and surprisingly gory horror works well. Jessica Chastain, Tom Hiddleston, Mia Wasikowska, and Charlie Hunnam are among the cast getting terrified in a ghost-populated Gothic mansion, but they are secondary to the visuals, atmosphere, and freaky crimson spectres.
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12. House (1977)
There are few movies as weird as Nobuhiko Obayashi’s Japanese cult classic House (aka Hausu). Obayashi based his script on wild ideas provided by his young daughter, and the result was a one-of-a-kind comedy horror film about a schoolgirl named Gorgeous who travels with some friends (Kung Fu, Melody, Mac, Sweet, and Fantasy) to stay in her aunt’s house. The strangeness doesn’t stop with the girls’ names–the whole movie is like a deranged fever dream, with non-existent acting, bizarre set design, and scenes that include futon attacks, a limb-eating piano, watermelons that turn into heads, and a creepy cat with glowing eyes. The movie was actually a hit in Japan, but it took a belated theatrical US release in 2009 to finally bring this deranged masterpiece to the attention of Western viewers.
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11. The Conjuring (2013)
The Conjuring plays out like a horror greatest hits package, but while there might not be anything original going on, and it’s skillfully handled by director James Wan. It blends the haunted house movie with the possession film, in which the spirit of the evil witch Bathsheba torments unlucky homeowners Roger and Carolyn Perron. The film is one of the most successful scary movies of the past decade, inspiring a whole connected horror universe.
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10. Amityville II: The Possession (1981)
1979’s The Amityville Horror was a pretty pedestrian haunted house thriller, but the sequel was something very different. Like pretty much every Amityville sequel that has followed (and there have been a lot), it has very little to do with the first movie, instead just using the title and throwing in all manner of unwholesome fun. In this one, Burt Young–best known for playing Rocky’s loveable pal Paulie–plays an abusive father who is targeted by something evil living in the basement. Before you know it, the whole family is possessed, with incest and shotgun murder providing the prelude to one of the most insane exorcism sequences in cinema.
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9. The Witch in the Window (2018)
Director Andy Mitton’s first movie, We Go On, was one of Shudder’s earliest horror exclusives, and his follow-up also found a natural home on the platform. A father and his son start renovating a countryside home with the intention of flipping it for profit, and learn that the house has a dark past–an old woman died there years earlier but still inhabits its rooms. It’s an atmospheric and spooky movie but also an affecting drama about the struggles of parenthood and a failing marriage. Strong performances and stylish directing make this a superior ghost story, and despite being only 75 minutes long, it packs an emotional punch lacking from many films twice its length.
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8. The Legend of Hell House (1973)
While the basic plot of The Legend of Hell House is extremely similar to the 1963 classic The Haunting (four people stay in a creepy old house to find out if it’s haunted), this British movie remains a highly effective slice of horror in its own right. Unseen spirits psychologically manipulate the unlucky visitors, including Planet of the Apes star Roddy McDowall, while weird, unexplained things happen all around them. It was written by genre veteran Richard Matheson, and the blend of campy horror and genuinely unsettling scares makes it an underrated ’70s gem.
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7. Ju-On: The Grudge (2002)
The Ju-On series has been running for 22 years and so far includes 13 Japanese movies, four American films, and the recent Netflix TV spin-off. But it’s the original 2002 Japanese theatrical movie (which was preceded by two straight-to-video films) that remains the scariest slice of haunted house horror. The house in this case is a normal suburban home, in which terrible murders took place, putting a curse within it. Whoever enters the house then carries the curse to the location they die in, spreading it out like a disease. Along with Ringu, Ju-On helped establish J-horror in the early 2000s, and director Takashi Shimizu ensures the house itself is a deeply unnerving and oppressive location.
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6. The Others (2001)
This hugely successful ghost story draws clear inspiration from The Turn of the Screw, and is one of the 2000s’ most effective haunted house films. Nicole Kidman plays a woman living in a remote country house with her two children after World War II, who becomes convinced there are spectral beings living there with them. The Others is a slow but engrossing mystery that refrains from obvious jump scares associated with many films of its type. The movie has a big twist at the end, making it one of those films you want to instantly rewatch to see the details you missed the first time round.
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5. The Innocents (1961)
The Innocents was one of the first adaptations of The Turn of the Screw, and it’s still one of the best. It’s a restrained slice of gothic terror, with potent atmosphere, eerie sound design, and striking monochrome photography. Deborah Kerr delivers a memorable performance as the repressed governess who is employed to look after a pair of kids who she comes to believe have been possessed by ghosts, and the movie also boasts a groundbreaking electronic score.
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4. The Changeling (1980)
George C. Scott stars as a grieving father who moves into a haunted house in this super creepy chiller. The Changeling is old-fashioned in the best sense of the term, taking its time to set up the story and ensuring that the audience is fully invested in the characters before delivering the horror goods. Director Peter Medak is a master at evoking maximum chills from minimal props; who would’ve thought that a bouncing rubber ball or a wheelchair could be so scary? The movie also features one of the most frightening séances in horror.
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3. Paranormal Activity (2007)
Paranormal Activity cost only $15,000 to produce, and yet grossed $193 million worldwide, spawning a hugely successful franchise. It had an incredibly simple set-up–a young couple set up cameras around their new house in order to record the supernatural evil that is tormenting them at night. Director Oren Peli generates incredible tension by making the audience wait for minutes on end, watching people sleep, for something to happen, before delivering some expertly crafted scares.
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2. Poltergeist (1980)
Much has been written over the years about whether Poltergeist writer/producer Steven Spielberg left Tobe Hooper (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) alone to direct, or whether Spielberg was really the director in all but title. But either way, the result was a brilliant melding of both filmmakers’ styles, with Hooper’s skills as a horror director balanced by Spielberg’s love of magical fantasy and family stories set in suburban America. It’s impossible not to root for the Freeling family as they fight evil spirits in their house and try to rescue their daughter, who has been taken by these spectral invaders.
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1. The Haunting (1963)
The first screen adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House, released only four years after the novel’s publication, remains one the greatest haunted house movies of all time. It set the template for the genre, and is still a remarkably effective chiller all these years later. Part of this is due to director Robert Wise’s inventive filmmaking approach, which at the time was considered radical. The sets were all built with visible ceilings, to provide a claustrophobic feeling, and Wise used a new wide-angle camera that was still in development that caused the image to distort, adding to the feel of unease. Combined with clever visuals effects, fractured editing, and strong performances, the result is an all-time horror classic.
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Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company
While it’s still really hard to watch HBO Max for some people, as there is not an app for Roku or Amazon Fire TV Sticks yet, there is a lot of binge-worth content coming to the streaming service which debuted earlier this year. Check out everything arriving and leaving HBO Max in October 2020.
On October 8, HBO Max is releasing another anime series to the service, The God of High School. Furthering the streaming service’s partnership with Crunchyroll, the anime series follows Mori Jin, a 17-year old who is invited to compete in a martial arts tournament called The God of High School. The winner gets to have a wish granted by the shady corporation that runs the whole tournament.
Even though DC Universe is going through a tremendous transformation, many more DC superhero films are landing on HBO Max. On October 1, you have a solid list of superhero movies from DC to check out. This includes All-Star Superman, Catwoman, Constantine, Jonah Hex, Man of Steel, Son of Batman, and more.
Remember when everyone saw that trailer for Cats, and we all had a good chuckle about how silly it looked? Well, on October 10, you can watch the movie for yourself when it lands on HBO Max. Will you tell anyone you actually saw it is the real question.
However, not everything currently on HBO Max is staying forever. There are plenty of movies leaving as well. The bulk of the content making its exit from the service happens on October 31, and this includes many Batman animated movies along with a couple Lord of the Rings films.
Below, you’ll find everything coming to HBO Max for the month of October as well as everything leaving.
What’s coming to HBO Max in October 2020?
October 1:
A World of Calm, Documentary Series Premiere
Akeelah And The Bee, 2006 (HBO)
All-Star Superman, 2011
American Dynasties: The Kennedys, 2018
American Reunion, 2012 (HBO)
Analyze That, 2002
Analyze This, 1999
The Angriest Man In Brooklyn, 2014 (HBO)
Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery, 1997
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, 1999
Ball of Fire, 1941
Beavis And Butt-Head Do America, 1996 (HBO)
Beef (HBO)
Beginners, 2011 (HBO)
Best in Show, 2000
BLOW, 2001
Bombshell, 1933
Boogie Nights, 1997
Boomerang, 1992
The Bush Years: Family. Duty. Power., 2019
The Butterfly Effect, 2004
Cats & Dogs, 2001
Catwoman, 2004
Cellular, 2004
Cheech & Chong’s Up In Smoke, 1978
The Chronicles Of Riddick, 2004 (Director’s Cut) (HBO)
City Slickers 2: The Legend of Curly’s Gold, 1994
Clean and Sober, 1988
The Client, 1994
Collateral Beauty, 2016 (HBO)
The Color Purple, 1985
Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind, 2003 (HBO)
Constantine, 2005
Cradle 2 the Grave, 2003
Critters 2, 1988
Critters 4, 1992
The Curse of Frankenstein, 1957
Day Of The Dead, 1985 (HBO)
Death Sentence, 2007 (Extended Version) (HBO)
Deerskin, 2020 (HBO)
Dirty Dancing, 1987 (HBO)
Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights, 2004 (HBO)
Deliverance, 1972
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, 1969
Dreamcatcher, 2003
Edge of Darkness, 2010
Empire of the Sun, 1987
The End: Inside The Last Days of the Obama White House, 2017
Endings, Beginnings, 2020 (HBO)
Enter The Dragon, 1973
Eraser, 1996
Firewall, 2006
Frantic, 1988
Frequency, 2000 (HBO)
Friday, 1995
The Friday After Next, 2002
Galaxy Quest, 1999
The Golden Compass, 2007
Gothika, 2003
Grudge Match, 2013 (HBO)
Hairspray, 1988
Hairspray (Musical Remake), 2007
Harina (Aka Flour) (HBO)
The Haunting, 1999
The Hills Have Eyes, 2006 (Extended Version) (HBO)
The Hills Have Eyes II, 2007 (Extended Version) (HBO)
Horror of Dracula, 1958
The Hunting Ground, 2015
I Am Sam, 2002
Infamous, 2006
The Informer, 1935
The Invisible War, 2012
Jonah Hex, 2010
The Last Kiss, 2006 (HBO)
The Last Mimzy, 2007
Laws of Attraction, 2004
Lethal Weapon, 1987
Lethal Weapon 2, 1989
Lethal Weapon 3, 1992
Lethal Weapon 4, 1998
Libeled Lady, 1936
Life as We Know It, 2010
Little Baby Bum, 2011
Little Big League, 1994
Madea’s Big Happy Family, 2011
Malcolm X, 1992
Man of Steel, 2013
Marie: A True Story, 1985
The Matrix Reloaded, 2003
The Matrix Revolutions, 2003
The Matrix, 1999
Million Dollar Baby, 2004
Miracle of Morgan’s Creek, 1944
Mister Roberts, 1955
Monsters Vs. Aliens, 2009
The Mummy, 1959
Mutiny on the Bounty, 1935
Next Friday, 2000
Never, Rarely, Sometimes, Always, 2020 (HBO)
Nothing Sacred, 1937
Open Water, 2004 (HBO)
Open Water 2: Adrift, 2007 (HBO)
Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, 2013
The Pelican Brief, 1993
A Perfect Murder, 1998
The Perfect Storm, 2000
The Phantom of the Opera, 2004
Presumed Innocent, 1990
Race for the White House, Season 1
Raised By Wolves, Season 1 Finale
Revolutionary Road, 2008 (HBO)
Roger & Me, 1989
Sands of Iwo Jima, 1950
Scanners, 1981 (HBO)
Scooby-Doo! Haunted Holidays, 2012
Se7en, 1995
Semi-Pro, 2008
Sesame Street Presents Follow That Bird, 1985
Shame, 2011 (HBO)
Sherlock Holmes, 2009
Sleight, 2017 (HBO)
Son of Batman, 2014
South Park: The Pandemic Special
Steel, 1997
Superman vs. the Elite, 2012
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, 2010
Superman/Batman: Public Enemies, 2009
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, 1990
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2, 1991
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3, 1993
They Were Expendable, 1945
A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, 1996
The Thin Man, 1934
The Thing, 2011 (HBO)
A Time to Kill, 1996
Tin Cup, 1996
TMNT, 2007
Training Day, 2001
Tricky Dick, 2019
Turistas, 2006 (Extended Version) (HBO)
U.S. Marshals, 1998
Us, 2019 (HBO)
Vampire in Brooklyn, 1995
A Very Brady Sequel, 1996
We Will Rise: Michelle Obama’s Mission to Educate Girls Around the World, 2016
What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire?, 2018
When Harry Met Sally, 1989
Where the Wild Things Are, 2009
The Whole Ten Yards, 2004 (HBO)
The Wings of Eagles, 1957
You’ve Got Mail, 1998
October 2:
Lina From Lima (HBO)
October 3:
The ABCs of Back to School: A CNN/Sesame Street Town Hall for Families, 2020
Downhill, 2020 (HBO)
October 6:
Siempre, Luis, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
October 7:
Wild Card: The Downfall Of A Radio Loudmouth (HBO)
October 8:
Charm City Kings, HBO Max Original Film Premiere
The Fungies, Season 1B
The God of High School (Dubbed)
October 9:
Entre Nos Presents: Shayla Rivera: It’S Not Rocket Science (HBO)
Room 104, Series Finale (HBO)
October 10:
Cats, 2019 (HBO)
October 12:
Ghosts, Season 2
October 15:
Detention Adventure, Season 2
October 16:
La Odisea De Los Giles (Aka Heroic Losers) (HBO)
The Perfect Weapon, Documentary Special Premiere (HBO)
October 17:
David Byrne’s American Utopia, Special Event Premiere (HBO)
October 18:
Lovecraft Country, Season Finale (HBO)
The Vow, Docuseries Finale (HBO)
October 20:
Smurfs, Season 3
October 21:
537 Votes, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
October 22:
Equal, HBO Max Original Docu Series Premiere
October 23:
How To With John Wilson, Season 1 Premiere (HBO Original)
October 24:
Emma., 2020 (HBO)
October 25:
The Undoing, Limited Series Premiere (HBO)
October 27:
Ghosts, Season 2
It: Chapter Two, 2017 (HBO)
John Lewis: Good Trouble, 2020
The Soul Of America, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
October 28:
Burning Ojai: Our Fire Story (HBO)
October 29:
Vida Perfecta, Season 1
October 30:
Mano De Obra (Aka Workforce) (HBO)
October 31:
Black Christmas, 2019 (HBO)
Leaving HBO Max in October
October 8:
The Nice Guys, 2016 (HBO)
October 11:
Fantastic Beasts: The Crime of Grindelwald, 2018 (HBO)
It’s been a few weeks since WWE had back-to-back pay-per-view weekends. Now, with SummerSlam and Payback firmly in the rear-view mirror, it’s time for Clash of Champions, the one show each year where every championship title must be defended. At least, that’s what we keep hearing on WWE programming, although that certainly hasn’t always been the case.
This year’s Clash of Champions, like most WWE programming right now, will air live from the WWE Thunderdome located inside Orlando, Florida’s Amway Center on Sunday, September 27. If you still haven’t seen the massive set structure the company has built for its weekly Raw and Smackdown episodes, as well as PPVs, it’s time to check it out. The space is filled with video screens, pyro, and fans appearing in the audience via what is reminiscent of a giant Zoom call.
Below you’ll find the start times for Clash of Champions, plus all of the other information you’re going to want, from the final match card and how to watch the show, to come of GameSpot’s predictions.
Start time:
4 PM PT
6 PM C
7 PM ET
12 AM BST (September 28)
9 AM AEST (September 28)
Per usual, there will be a Kickoff Show on the WWE Network one hour prior to the main card of the PPV, which you can watch for free. As of this writing, the Raw Women’s Championship match has been slated to air during the kickoff show.
How to watch:
The best way to watch Clash of Champions is through the WWE Network. Yes, you can order the PPV through your cable or satellite provider, but it’s a bit pricier. The WWE Network costs $10 a month and aside from streaming live events, there is a large back catalog of wrestling shows and original series to check out.
As for the match card, Clash of Champions will see every championship title from Raw and Smackdown be defended. Sorry, NXT fans. That brand isn’t included in this show. Below, you’ll find the full card.
Match card:
Drew McIntyre (c) vs. Randy Orton (Ambulance match for WWE Championship)
Roman Reigns (c) vs. Jey Uso (Universal Championship)
Bayley (c) vs. Nikki Cross (Smackdown Women’s Championship)
Nia Jax and Shayna Baszler (c) vs. The Riott Squad (Women’s Tag Team Championships)
Cesaro and Shinsuke Nakamura (c) vs. Lucha House Party (SmackdownTag Team Championships)
Jeff Hardy (c) vs. AJ Styles vs. Sami Zayn (Triple threat for Intercontinental Championship)
The Street Profits (c) vs. Andrade and Angel Garza (Raw Tag Team Championships)
Bobby Lashley (c) vs. Apollo Crews (United States Championship)
Asuka (c) vs. Zelina Vega (Raw Women’s Championship) [KICKOFF SHOW]
Given that everyone has strong opinions about professional wrestling, we’re no different. So here’s who we think will win some of the show’s more notable matches.
Predictions:
Roman Reigns (c) vs. Jey Uso (Universal Championship)
There’s no way Reigns is losing his title already. That said, this will be the first real look at what his heel persona is. Thus far, we’ve yet to see him wrestle a full match. Instead, Reigns has picked his spots, spending as little time in the ring as possible. With this one-on-one match against his own cousin, though, that’s not going to be possible. While it’s practically impossible to imagine Jey Uso being victorious here, this could still serve as a catapult for him to singles stardom, helping to cement himself as a credible threat outside of the tag team division. Still, Roman is going to win.
Bayley (c) vs. Nikki Cross (Smackdown Women’s Championship)
Let’s go for something bold on this one. Niki is going to win the Smackdown Women’s Championship. Yes, that sounds crazy, but stick with us for a moment here. Bayley has made it clear nothing matters to her more than being the top dog in WWE. So, naturally, that’s what Sasha Banks will take aim at. For her, it’s not about gold, it’s going to be able to strike back at the person who betrayed her. So she costs Bayley the title, letting the two of them move into a vicious feud that doesn’t need a belt at the center of it. Meanwhile, Alexa Bliss celebrates with Niki only to go full-on The Fiend stan, taking her out and leaning into the heel version of Alexa Bliss so many fans adored. Please, wrestling gods, make this happen.
Crunchyroll’s fall lineup has been officially announced, featuring a ton of returning favorites and new shows. Chief among the most anticipated shows is the final season of Attack on Titan. In total, Crunchyroll is debuting 25 new or returning series for streaming, a bit of good news for fans who were saddened to see so many anime series delayed due to COVID-19’s impact on the Japanese anime industry.
Other returning series include Boruto: Naruto Next Generations, Black Clover, Case Closed, Digimon Adventure, Fire Force, Haikyuu!! to the Top, One Piece, Major Second, Healin’ Pretty Good Cure, Shadowverse, Golden Kamuy, IDOLiSH7: The Second Beat, Katana Maidens, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime OAD 5, and Genie Family 2020.
Some notable new anime series include:
Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? season 3.
Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon: The long-awaited Inuyasha sequel series, following the daughters of Inuyasha and Sesshomaru. The series debuts on October 3.
Iwakakeru – Sport Climbing Girls: A sports anime focused on a group of young women competing in the world of rock climbing.
The Crunchyroll Originals lineup, having experienced some solid success with The God of High School and Tower of God, continues with several new Originals series.
Noblesse – Based on the Webtoon series of the same name, Noblesse tells the story of Cadis Etrama di Raizel, a caster who has awakened after 820 years of sleep, and then joins a high school. Expect plenty of battles fueled by superhuman abilities.
Onyx Equinox: A young Aztec boy finds himself fighting as humanity’s champion during a battle between gods.
Tonikawa: Over the Moon For You: A new married life comedy from the creator of Hayate the Combat Butler.
Crunchyroll’s new simulcast series for the fall include some recognizable creators.
Burn the Witch: From Bleach creator Tite Kubo, this three-episode movie series premieres on October 1.
Jujutsu Kaisen: Crunchyroll’s hot new Shonen Jump series. The synopsis for this one is a lot to digest, but the long and short of it is a young high school student named Yuki joins an occult research club who accidentally unseals a dangerous talisman, setting off a chain of events in which Yuji becomes the host of a powerful curse and must consume all of the curse’s fingers while attending a magic school. If that doesn’t scream Shonen, I don’t know what does.
D4DJ First Mix: A new series based on the Bushiroad games.
With a Dog AND a Cat, Every Day is Fun: A slice of life anime for those who felt like last year’s My Roommate is a Cat gave too much credit to felines.
Crunchyroll’s announcement adds that the streaming service will be announcing additional anime titles next week.
So what anime series, new or old, are you most excited for? Let us know in the comments.
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Joseph Knoop is a writer/producer for IGN, and he’s getting back into the swing of things.
The new destination of Europa in Destiny 2‘s Beyond Light expansion is set to be different from any players have encountered in the game so far. The moon of Jupiter is a frozen frontier littered with ruins and secrets, and while you’ll wield some of that icy power in the new Stasis abilities, you’ll still have to contend with what the moon itself throws at you.
Bungie detailed some of what players can expect when they visit Europa in a blog post that discusses a new feature for the area: dynamic weather. Currently, weather in Destiny 2 pretty much exists for aesthetics. There are a few places where you’ll occasionally see things like rain when you enter an area, and the time of day is variable as you load into a public area on the various planets or on the Tower. On Europa, however, weather will be something you contend with–although Bungie says it won’t drastically change gameplay.
Europa is home to intense snowstorms, as Bungie explains, and new systems have been created for the destination to make it feel like a hostile environment. You’ll face those storms as you play, and they’ll arise dynamically while you explore; expect to see clear skies on Europa darken ominously in natural-feeling ways. Those snowstorms will drastically affect the look and feel of Europa, but they’ll go beyond aesthetic touches to cut visibility and make navigation difficult as you struggle to see what’s ahead of you, pick targets, and make out the silhouettes of distant landmarks. As Bungie writes in the post, you might want to bring a thermal scope to cut through the icy gale. You can already find guns with the occasional thermal scope in Destiny 2, but that might be a hint at what to expect from the weaponry you’ll find at the new destination as well.
The post describes how the weather systems allow for dynamic shifts as well as developer control over the weather, so expect to battle storms as well as Fallen enemies as you venture through Europa’s story content. But while snowstorms are going to affect the battles you fight, they won’t have major effects on them–Bungie describes trying gameplay tweaks, like high-force winds that affected grenade trajectories, and found the alterations made fighting on Europa a slog. So you’re not going to get knocked off your sparrow by a big gust of wind, or watch your throwing knife sail off in a different direction when you zip it toward an enemy’s head–but you will have to contend with the snow in your face and filling your vision.
The developer also detailed how it created sound for Europa to match its storms. You can read more about it (and hear what Europa will sound like) in Bungie’s blog post.
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At Amazon’s hardware event, the online retailer announced new editions of the Echo smart speaker and several updates to the smaller Echo Dot. All of these devices sport new spherical designs and are available for preorder now. They’re slated for release on October 22.
What’s new in these fourth-generation Echo devices? The spherical design is the most obvious change. Gone is the cylindrical case, replaced by an orb-like design that puts a bigger emphasis on the speaker. Amazon says the new Echo offers clear, rich sound that automatically adapts to where it’s placed in your room. Also, the light ring is now at the base of the device rather than on top.
They have a new built-in speech-recognition module that processes your Alexa requests locally, on the device itself. This means your request doesn’t have to travel the information superhighway before it can be processed. Amazon says this results in quicker response times for your requests. It also has a built-in smart home hub that’s compatible with Zigbee devices.
The new Echo and Echo Dot are available in your choice of three colors: charcoal black, glacier white, and twilight blue. There’s also a new Echo Dot with a built-in LED clock that’s available in white and black.
Finally, Amazon is updating the Echo Dot Kids Edition as well. The new model is available in spherical tiger or panda designs. They’re both pretty adorable. The Echo Dot Kids Edition comes with a year’s subscription to Amazon Kids+, which gets them access to kid-friendly audio books, interactive games, and other voice-related activities. It also includes a two-year warranty, so if your child destroys the Echo Dot, you can send it back for a free replacement.
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Chris Reed is IGN’s shopping and commerce editor. You can follow him on Twitter @_chrislreed.