Star Trek 4 Shelved, As Director Takes Game Of Thrones Job

It looks like the fourth entry in the new Star Trek series has hit an intergalactic roadbump. Deadline reports that SJ Clarkson, who was announced as the franchise’s first female director, is no longer involved with the project, and the film isf “shelved.”

Clarkson is keeping busy without Star Trek, however, as she’s directing the new Game of Thrones spin-off for HBO. Clarkson also directed episodes of Orange is the New Black and Jessica Jones.

This is just the latest setback for Star Trek 4, as it was previously reported that Chris Pine–who played the iconic Captain Kirk–had dropped out after contract negotiations broke down. Chris Hemsworth, who played Kirk’s father, also reportedly couldn’t come to terms on a contract.

The 2009 Star Trek reboot made $385 million worldwide, while 2013’s Star Trek: Into Darkness pulled in $467 million globally. 2016’s Beyond was the worst performer of the bunch, bringing in $343 million worldwide.

Back in August, it was reported that the new Star Trek movie was a “priority” at Paramount, with deals expected to close for the other cast members, including Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg, and John Cho. Actor Anton Yelchin, who played Chekov in the new films, died in June 2016 in a car accident.

The fourth Star Trek was being written by JD Payne and Patrick McKay, and while the film now may never happen, the pair are writing Amazon’s ambitious Lord of the Rings TV show. Star Trek 4’s story, which has never been revealed, was producer JJ Abrams’ favourite in the history of the franchise.

What happens next with the new Star Trek film remains to be seen, but whatever the case, it seems like it won’t be coming anytime soon.

The new, untitled fourth Star Trek movie was expected to be followed by another Star Trek film from Quentin Tarantino. However, it remains to be seen if that’s ever going to happen.

Pokemon Go: Last Chance To Catch Heatran

Pokemon Go‘s latest Legendary, Heatran, made its debut in Raid Battles last month immediately following Cresselia’s departure, but it won’t be around for much longer. The Lava Dome Pokemon is scheduled to leave the mobile game on January 15, making this your last opportunity to catch one if you haven’t yet.

As is the case with most other Legendaries in Go, to catch Heatran, you’ll first need to travel to a Gym that’s hosting a Heatran Raid, then team up with other players in-person to battle it. If you manage to successfully defeat the Legendary, you’ll earn a handful of Premier Balls along with an opportunity to catch it.

Heatran is unique among all Legendaries thanks to its typing. The Lava Dome Pokemon is a Fire- and Steel-type, giving it a resistance to Dragon and Psychic attacks. However, this combination also makes it susceptible to Fighting- and especially Ground-type moves, so you’ll want to bring along Pokemon such as Rhyperior and Groudon to battle it. Water Pokemon such as Swampert and Kyogre will also be very effective.

Heatran is the third Gen 4 Legendary to appear in Pokemon Go thus far, following Giratina (which arrived as part of Pokemon Go’s most recent Halloween event) and the aforementioned Cresselia. Niantic hasn’t announced what the game’s next Legendary will be, although a new one typically arrives as the previous leaves, so we presumably won’t have to wait long to find out.

In addition to Heatran, several older Legendaries are available in Pokemon Go once again through January’s Field Research. You’ll be able to encounter one of eight Legendaries–Articuno, Zapdos, Moltres, Raikou, Entei, Suicune, Ho-Oh, or Lugia–each time you achieve a Research Breakthrough through the end of February.

Pokemon Go’s ongoing Adventure Sync Hatchathon is also scheduled to wrap up on January 15. Through the end of the event, you’ll be able to receive twice the normal amount of Stardust and Candy for each Pokemon Egg you hatch, and you’ll have a higher likelihood of receiving 5 and 10 km Eggs by spinning the Photo Disc at PokeStops and Gyms.

The Messy Timeline of P.T., Hideo Kojima’s Silent Hills Horror Masterpiece

What happened to Silent Hill, or more specifically, the Hideo Kojima and Guillermo del Toro collaboration, Silent Hills? What’s going on with P.T., the playable teaser that announced Silent Hills, and is often hailed as one of the best horror games ever made? Is it gone forever? Is there any hope for it making an official return?

Some of these questions don’t have answers – the future of Silent Hill is very uncertain. But we can paint a clear timeline of the Silent Hills saga to better understand the events that lead up to this point. We’re coming up on P.T.’s fifth anniversary, and even after all this time, the mark that demo left on the horror gaming landscape is still there, spawning fan remake after fan remake and inspiring countless other games to follow in its footsteps.

Continue reading…

Glass (2018) Review: A Self-Conscious Superhero Movie

In the year 2000, when M. Night Shyamalan’s Unbreakable hit theaters, comic book movies were barely a thing. Unbreakable was the young director’s follow-up to the sensational Sixth Sense, and going in, it wasn’t clear what the movie was. That it turned out to be a low key superhero movie with a villain obsessed with comic books made it, in retrospect, way ahead of its time. Glass has the opposite problem: It’s overtly a comic book movie, but one for people who have never read a comic book. It feels hopelessly behind the times.

Glass is the follow-up to 2016’s Split, itself a surprise Unbreakable sequel, which wasn’t revealed until the extremely meta signature Shyamalan twist of Bruce Willis appearing in the movie’s final scene. Two decades ago, Unbreakable followed Willis’s David Dunn as he slowly discovered his own incredible strength and invulnerability, with plenty of encouragement from Samuel L. Jackson’s fragile but maniacally intelligent Elijah Price, AKA Mr. Glass. Split introduced a third super-powered individual, James McAvoy’s Kevin Wendell Crumb, or “The Horde,” a collection of split personalities who actually change the character’s physical state and abilities as they vie for control of his body.

Glass brings the whole thing together: After an exciting opening act of Dunn, who the internet has dubbed “The Overseer,” hunting The Horde before he kills more girls, all three main characters wind up in a very comic booky asylum. They’re overseen by Sarah Paulson’s new character, Dr. Ellie Staple, who’s designed special cells with the two newcomers in mind: David’s can fill with water, which renders him weak, and Kevin’s is equipped with bright strobe lights that force a personality change. Elijah, on the other hand, has been there for some time, heavily sedated 24/7. The setting makes for some wonderful tension throughout the movie, and it feels appropriately oppressive.

But that’s basically it. Almost the entire runtime is spent at this single location, as Dr. Staple works to convince all three that their powers are the imagined results of childhood traumas and frontal lobe injuries. This drama is well-acted (especially by McAvoy, who once again plays about a dozen distinct characters) and often deftly written, but it drags on way too long. Somewhere in the middle, you’re liable to experience a sinking feeling that this is going to be the whole movie, and you’re right.

Besides that, there’s another problem with this structure: As the audience, we’ve seen the evidence. We don’t need convincing. We know that Shyamalan isn’t about to undo two movies’ worth of build-up, so we wind up waiting most of Glass for the other shoe to drop. And when it finally does, it’s wildly anti-climactic, as the audience falls victim to one of Mr. Glass’s misdirects: The movie very deliberately leads us to believe the final showdown is going to be much more exciting than it actually is. What a twist?

Glass is weirdly self-conscious about being a superhero movie inspired by comic books. The three main characters’ bit players come along with them, including Dunn’s son Joseph (Spencer Treat Clark, the same actor from Unbreakable), Elijah’s mother (Charlayne Woodard, also from Unbreakable), and Split’s Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy), who originally bonded with some of The Horde’s personalities while being held hostage by others. They spend their time in the B-plot “discovering” things about comic books that everybody already knows. Each page they turn corresponds with some non-revelation about the bare bones basic structure of comic book stories, like the fact that a character’s parents are usually important to their origin story. We honestly didn’t need multiple scenes of wide-eyed page-flipping to figure that out, but we got it nonetheless.

No Caption Provided

Shyamalan takes some liberties with comic book culture in general, particularly in the script, which sometimes verges on terrible. “Have you ever been to a comics convention?” an exasperated Dr. Staple asks the assembled side characters as she attempts to convince them they’re all delusional. One especially irksome quirk has multiple characters, but especially Mr. Glass, constantly explaining the structure of events as they unfold, just in case the audience forgets for one second that this is playing out like a very basic comic book. “This is the part where they would draw you looking surprised,” or “Now the main characters have assembled!”

It’s grating, and it feels like Shyamalan understands comic books only on a theoretical level, grasping their basic structures and what makes them appealing, but having never actually read any himself. He has characters refer multiple times to “limited edition comic books, where the hero and the villain have a showdown,” which makes no sense on multiple levels. His staged comic book shop has two sections in the back labeled “Heroes” and “Villains,” and if you don’t realize what an organizational nightmare that would be, well, maybe the rest of this won’t bother you either.

No Caption Provided

But even if that’s the case, Glass isn’t the movie it should have been. There are hints of it early on, before the film takes a left turn and spends the rest of its stay focusing on all the wrong things. Like most of Shyamalan’s movies, Glass is well directed and scored, and there are moments of brilliance and tension throughout. But when the twist is literally that the climax won’t actually be as exciting as you’ve been led to believe, it’s impossible not to feel disappointed.

The Good The Bad
Solid performances, especially McAvoy Some terrible dialogue
Fun to follow up with these characters after so much time Dragging pace
Plenty of tension Deliberately anti-climactic twist
Feels outdated
A comic book movie for people who don’t read comic books

Avengers: Endgame – Major Plot Point May Have Just Been Spoiled

Marvel is keeping tight-lipped on many major plot points in Avengers: Endgame, but it appears the car manufacturer Audi may have inadvertently revealed who attempts to rescue Iron Man from space.

Spoiler warning: potential spoilers for Avengers: Endgame ahead.

As reported by CBR, at this year’s CES in Las Vegas, Audi is presenting an “in-car VR experience” which integrates car movement with what is being displayed on a VR headset in the backseat. The experience, officially called Marvel’s Avengers: Rocket’s Rescue Run, was developed by Disney Games and Interactive Experiences. It has the movements of the Audi translated as a spaceship’s movements being piloted through an asteroid field by Rocket Raccoon.

Continue reading…

New Star Wars Resistance Trailer Reveals Force Awakens Links, Season 2 Confirmed

Although the popular Star Wars Rebels finished last year, fans of the franchise’s animated output still have much to look forward to. A new season of the much-loved Clones Wars is being made for Disney’s new streaming service, Disney+, and ahead of that, we have the return of Star Wars Resistance this month. A new trailer for the second half of Season 1 has now been released.

Resistance is set before the movie The Force Awakens, and focuses on a young pilot named Kaz, who is recruited by the Resistance to take on a top-secret mission to infiltrate the First Order. This new trailer reveals that the upcoming episodes will contain various links to The Force Awakens, with a reference to Starkiller Base and appearances from General Leia, Poe Dameron, General Hux, and shots of Kylo Ren’s shuttle. Check it out below:

Star Wars Resistance returns to the Disney Channel on January 13. The studio has also confirmed that the show will return for a second season.

Resistance was created by Dave Filoni, who oversaw both Rebels and Star Wars: The Clone Wars. When it was first announced last year, Filoni spoke about his inspirations. “The idea for [the show] came out of my interest in World War II aircraft and fighter pilots,” he said. “My grandfather was a pilot and my uncle flew and restored planes, so that’s been a big influence on me. There’s a long history of high-speed racing in Star Wars, and I think we’ve captured that sense of excitement in an anime-inspired style, which is something the entire team has been wanting to do for a long time.”

As for The Clone Wars, Season 7 will premiere on Disney+, and will also be overseen by Filoni. The show seemingly ended with a short sixth season on Netflix in 2014, with many of the storylines incomplete.

Filoni will also direct an episode of The Mandalorian, the live-action Star Wars show that is currently in production and is also set to premiere on Disney+. The show is being produced by Jungle Book director Jon Favreau, and other directors include Thor Ragnarok’s Taika Waititi and Jurassic World star Bryce Dallas Howard. None of these shows have a release date, but Disney+ is expected to launch later this year.

AEW Roster: Every Wrestler Confirmed For All Elite Wrestling

New Spider-Man Comic Proves Smaller Can Be Better

Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man’s mission statement is basically right there in its title. Whereas Amazing Spider-Man continues to serve as the flagship, continuity-defining Spider-Man comic, this spinoff series is more concerned with exploring the smaller day-to-day struggles of Peter Parker and his supporting cast. It’s enough to question how much Marvel actually needs a book like this when there’s been so much emphasis on restoring Peter to a more traditional status quo in the pages of ASM lately. But with a creative team this talented, what more reason do you need?

Much like with its predecessor, Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man, the creative team is the main selling point. Writer Tom Taylor is the main who took a premise as inherently unappetizing as “evil, tyrannical Superman” and gave us the shockingly good Injustice: Gods Among Us tie-in comic. This series reunites Taylor with one of his All-New Wolverine collaborators, artist Juann Cabal. The result is every bit as good as you’d expect.

Continue reading…

Pokemon Dev’s Steam Game Rated For PS4, Xbox One, And Switch

While Game Freak is known primarily as the developer behind the mainline Pokemon series, the studio occasionally releases titles outside of its usual wheelhouse. One such example is Giga Wrecker, a stylish side-scrolling platformer available for PC via Steam, and now it appears the game is coming to home consoles as well.

A rating for Giga Wrecker Alt has been filed by the Taiwan Digital Game Rating Committee (via Gematsu). According to the filing, the game is coming to PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch, with Rising Star Games listed as the publisher.

Rising Star and Game Freak have yet to officially confirm if Giga Wrecker is indeed coming to consoles, although it isn’t uncommon for unannounced games to be outed by ratings boards. The addition of “Alt” to the title also suggests the game will boast some form of new content, although this likewise has yet to be confirmed.

Giga Wrecker first launched for Steam in 2017. The game takes place in a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by an army of robots, with players cast in the role of Reika, a girl with the power to control debris. Using this ability, she must manipulate the rubble littering the world to solve environmental puzzles and defeat enemies. You can watch the launch trailer for the original Steam version above.

Game Freak has another non-Pokemon game in the works for Switch: the tentatively titled Town. The game was unveiled last September during a Nintendo Direct presentation. Details about it are scant, but the entire adventure unfolds within a once-peaceful town that is being beset by monsters. A “core” Pokemon RPG is also slated to release for Switch this year.

Best Gaming At CES 2019

The technology industry loves to start the year with a bang and 2019 is no different. CES 2019 is currently taking place in Las Vegas, and tech companies big and small are showing off the latest and (relatively) greatest wares. It’s easy to get a bit lost in all the announcements and news, especially if you’re trying to stay on top of what’s relevant to gaming, as opposed to the next generation of smart TVs, refrigerators, and AI vacuum cleaners.

For that reason, we assembled a panel of experts to cut through the chaos and bring you the information you need to know. In the video above GameSpot’s Peter Brown, Lucy James, and Michael Higham are joined by CNET’s Jeff Bakalar to talk through what’s new at CES and what it means for the video game industry.

As you can imagine, a lot of the discussion is focused on new graphics cards which, this year, seem to be striking a better balance between power and affordability. One such card is the Nvidia RTX 2060, which is said to be on par with or better than the GTX 1070 Ti and is generally quite affordable, starting at $350 in the US. The panel also discusses Razer’s Turret, which is the first official mouse and keyboard for the Xbox One, and Viveport Infinity, a new subscription service that gives HTC Vive owners access to a library of VR games. You can see the chat around all that and more above.

For a more in-depth look at what’s going on at the show, make sure to check out CNET’s CES 2019 hub, where you’ll find news, features, and more providing comprehensive coverage of everything that’s happening.