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07 May 06:02

GoT Director on Why We Don't See Those Reactions to Jon's News

by Jim Vejvoda

Full spoilers ahead for Games of Thrones Season 8, Episode 4, "The Last of the Starks."

UPDATED with reactions from the episode's director, David Nutter.

The old adage is that information is power and on "The Last of the Starks," Jon Snow lets Sansa and Arya Stark in on his big secret -- that he is really Aegon Targaryen -- information that Sansa intends to use to tip the scales of power in the war for the Iron Throne. But why would Jon do something so naive -- dare we say, stupid? Something that will almost certainly provoke strife and not the unity and peace he seeks?

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07 May 06:00

Game of Thrones: What Does 'Dracarys' Mean?

by Jesse Schedeen

Warning: this article contains SPOILERS for Game of Thrones Season 8, Episode 4!

Update 5/6: IGN had the opportunity to talk with David Nutter, the director of last night’s episode of Game of Thrones, and got some context on Missandei’s final word: “Dracarys." When asked what Missandei was feeling when she said this, Nutter said:

"I think most importantly, Missandei wanted to show Dany that she was going to be brave, she was going to be courageous just as Dany’s been. I think it was important for her to get that across to Dany and also to let her know that you must, whatever you do, you must continue to go forward in the path you’ve chosen to take, because that’s the only way to get to Cersei and the only way she’s gonna be affected. I think there’s a defiance in Missandei that she’s learned how to grab hold of and to have courage by being close to Dany and all the things they’ve gone through, and I think there’s a real sisterhood there that was quite clear."

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07 May 05:29

Chernobyl is totally bleak and totally essential: EW review

by Darren Franich

Not a laugh riot, Chernobyl is not a title that prepares you for good times and happy puppies. Though there are some puppies — oh god, I can’t talk about it! The horror of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster is unthinkable, a cosmic event that infects the atmosphere and invades the blood. And yet I enjoyed the five-episode HBO miniseries, debuting tonight at 9 p.m. in the network shadow of Game of Thrones. It stares straight into the core of the matter. It makes the horror thinkable.

If you’re a Thrones viewer, you’ve seen those previews of Chernobyl, all frowny-freaky images of bespectacled Jared Harris pondering unfathomable radiation horror. Be scared, but don’t be scared away. The series is a vivid and detailed retelling of the cataclysm. It begins as a near-real-time thriller, following the confused reactions of various people standing way too close to the nuclear reactor. The timeline expands as the episodes progress, encompassing the official actions of the Soviet government and the attempt to understand what went wrong.

Harris plays Valery Legasov, a true-life chemist who helped lead the response to the calamity. Valery dies by suicide in the first scene, setting a deathly tone that lingers as the series flashes back to the titular power plant on the night everything went wrong.

There’s a scene that occurs constantly in the opening episodes. Someone will walk into a room — an engineer, a scientist, Valery, maybe a nuclear physicist — and they will say something like: The reactor has exploded. And the other person in the room — a middle manager, a boss, some Soviet functionary or other — will say something like: That’s not possible. Radiation seeps into the atmosphere, and fireman spray water hoses. Skin turns burnt red, and then turns other colors, and officials insist everything is going fine. Chernobyl takes pains to portray the event as a specific disaster of anti-expertise, of egotistical politicians disregarding every smart thing every smart person around them is saying.

Sound timely? Chernobyl becomes a compelling dark comedy when its attention shifts to the hallways of power, where Mikhail Gorbachev (David Dencik) and the Soviet apparatus constantly fails to respond appropriately. Russia circa 1986 is “a nation that is obsessed with not being humiliated,” says Borys Shcherbyna (splendid Stellan Skarsgård), a grandee at Gorbachev’s table paired with the bookish Valery for a mission that will more or less kill them both.

I know, I know, this all sounds depressing, and I haven’t even mentioned Vasily (Adam Nagaitis), the fireman from Pripyat called with his company to the reactor, or Vasily’s wife Lyudmila (Jessie Buckley), whose own tragic journey is one of many ticking time bombs throughout the miniseries. They’re both true-life people, and the dense realism of Chernobyl gives the show a freakish close-up terror. The director is Johan Renck, who helmed an early episode of The Walking Dead and some hours of Breaking Bad. This miniseries doesn’t have too many flourishes, and doesn’t need them. Whenever Vasily explains the statistics involved — the scope of the environmental disaster, the possibility of a meltdown seeping into the water supply — the scares are tangible.

Creator-writer Craig Mazin finds several intriguing approaches onto his subject matter. Valery and Borys make a compelling duo, the former a totalitarian lifer facing a tragedy that propaganda can’t fix, the latter a sensitive man of science adrift in a political environment that’s plenty invasive without the radiation. They’re trying to fix a busted nuclear power plant — and being followed all along by the KGB. Chernobyl spreads its attention to the local residents, and the miners called in to quick-fix a meltdown deterrent, and the soldiers tasked with clearing out the infected creatures from the dead zone.

Emily Watson also stars as Ulyana Khomyuk, a physicist who becomes the key figure in the investigation (and another target for the KGB). I gather that Ulyana is a composite character, and her arc tries to staple the show’s disparate parts together, wandering freely into other subplots. Watson’s giving a sincere performance, but you feel the character’s been given the most painfully loadbearing lines. “Someone has to start telling the truth,” she says in the fourth episode — a hopeful statement, almost a tagline, but by that point the surveillance is so omnipresent you can’t quite believe anyone would say words that direct. (For an entirely factual look at the event, I recommend Adam Higginbotham’s urgent, exciting Midnight in Chernobyl.)

The show’s best in small moments, suggesting subtly how Chernobyl revealed the existing horrors of a political system that would flail off history’s stage just a few years later. A man dying from radiation poisoning in a Moscow hospital asks his wife to describe what she sees out the window. She describes Red Square, the Kremlin, St. Basil’s — and we see, from her perspective, a bland building. “I told you I’d show you Moscow,” the man says. Maybe he knows she’s lying; either way, it’s a poem.

I found myself crying at random moments for not-so-obvious reasons: A master shot of the poisonous reactor, men wearing surgical masks that are obviously impotent against atomic invasion, Stalinist dormitories left empty after evacuation. This is the subject matter of science-fiction, of enviro-freakouts like Stalker or Annihilation. And it is a story of government cover-ups, of inconvenient facts controlled toward oblivion by the powerful.

The most compelling figure in the miniseries is the coal miners’ crew chief, a character whose name I’m not even sure we ever properly hear. (It’s “Glukhov,” HBO informs me.) He’s played by Alex Ferns with gruff fatalism, a look in his eyes like the slow creep of radiation sickness isn’t the worst death he’s imagined for himself. His men are working right underneath the Chernobyl plant, with fragile protective gear they have to toss when the supernova heat becomes unbearable. “When this is over,” he says, pointing toward his men, “Will they be looked after?” “I don’t know,” Borys says. Sad words, but at least someone’s being honest, for once. A-

Related content: 

See the chilling first trailer for HBO’s Chernobyl miniseries Midnight in Chernobyl author on how a workers’ paradise became a nuclear nightmare EW’s Best of Shows podcast: Dead To Me, Chernobyl, The Good Fight
06 May 07:14

TOOL Performs Two New Songs, 'Descending' And 'Invincible', At WELCOME TO ROCKVILLE (Video)

TOOL performed two new songs, "Descending" and "Invincible", as part of its headlining set Sunday night (May 5) at the Welcome To Rockville festival in Jacksonville, Florida. Although TOOL previously played an instrumental version of "Descending", last night's concert marked the first performance of the completed song with lyrics and vocals sung by frontman Maynard James Keenan. "Descending" and "Invincible" are both expected to appear on TOOL's long-awaited follow-up to 2006's "10,000 Days" album, which will tentatively arrive this summer. Drummer Danny Carey told The Pulse Of Radio a while back that the band usually figures out how to play its new songs live after recording them. "We've never been fortunate enough to perform our material live before we recorded it, so some of the songs we almost actually had to learn how to play live, you know, before we went out, and that was interesting," he said. "It always is, though. We've kind of stuck to the similar processes along the way, so we're used to it." There's still no official release date for TOOL's new disc, but Keenan said in February, "Best ballpark guess — release date somewhere between mid-May and mid-July. More focused updates to follow as we progress." Welcome To Rockville was the opening show of TOOL's latest U.S. tour, which will run through mid-May. A string of summer European festival appearances will follow.
06 May 06:37

Redmi Note 7 flies to space, takes photos, and returns without a scratch

We've seen plenty of unusual durability tests of the Redmi Note 7, including cutting fruits like a ninja on the screen and being stomped by people. To prove the ultimate quality of build, Redmi actually sent a unit in space, the phone took pictures at 31,000m altitude, before falling to the ground without any major damage. Plenty of enthusiasts and amateur weathermen have sent GoPros and other tech in space with a weather balloon, but this is the first time a Xiaomi mobile device went to the stratosphere of our planet. The Redmi Note 7 even took photos, that later were posted on...

06 May 05:47

Lego 'Star Wars' droid kit teaches coding with R2-D2's help

by Mariella Moon
All Lego Boost kits have the power to teach kids (and kids at heart) how to bring machines to life with coding, but the latest one has an edge over previous sets. The new Star Wars Boost kit has the adorable R2-D2 in its corner, supported by two othe...
06 May 05:46

US Air Force successfully shoots down multiple missiles with a laser

by Jon Fingas
The US Air Force just edged closer to its goal of outfitting aircraft with laser weapons. Testers at the White Sands Missile Range have successfully shot down multiple air-launched missiles using the Self-Protect High Energy Laser Demonstrator (SHiEL...
06 May 05:45

Israel is the first to respond to a cyberattack with immediate force

by Jon Fingas
It's no longer novel for militaries to respond to cyberattacks with physical force (the US used a drone strike in 2015), but now they're being treated with the same urgency as real-world bullets and missiles. Israel Defense Forces have launched an a...
04 May 06:40

Superhero Insider: ‘Supergirl’ star Nicole Maines on Dreamer’s ‘revolutionary’ speech

by Chancellor Agard

Each week, we break down the biggest moments from Supergirl, The FlashLegends of Tomorrow, Black Lightning, and Arrow — both here and on SiriusXM’s EW Live every Friday during Superhero Insider.

This week, Dreamer (Nicole Maines) introduced herself to National City on Supergirl, Arrow buried Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell), and heroes broke bad on DC’s Legends of Tomorrow and The Flash. Here are the highlights.

Supergirl

Nicole Maines’ Dreamer had her very own Supergirl moment in this week’s episode, which was directed by star David Harewood. Following Agent Liberty and the Children of Liberty’s recent attacks on aliens, a hopeless Kara realized National City needed a hero who could inspire humans and aliens alike, so she hijacked the airwaves for a live interview with Dreamer, who stepped up to defend the city in Supergirl’s absence. During the emotional chat, Dreamer revealed she was a half-human and half-alien and transgendered, and delivered a passionate Supergirl-like speech urging people to not fear their differences. It was an emotional moment for both Dreamer and the actress who plays her, too.

“Being able to just say that I’m a trans woman on television is revolutionary hands down,” said Maines when she dropped by Superhero Insider on Friday. “Then being able to do that in a super suit, being able to do that as a superhero coming out to the city to inspire hope, and being able to share that was so powerful for me to be able to that, just because it really made me think about how far we’ve come.”

She continued, “The original speech was much longer, but some of it ended up getting cut. Even without what was original in there, I think the final result was so powerful…It’s kind of like having that really special moment that’s not necessarily breaking the fourth wall, but it’s doing that on both fronts, if you know what I mean.”

Listen to the rest of Superhero Insider’s interview with Maines below.

Related: Read our recap, and catch a glimpse of James’ new powers.

DC’s Legends of Tomorrow

 

Legends’ latest episode “Egg MacGuffin” gave us several great pairings. First, there’s obviously Nate (Nick Zano) and Zari (Tala Ashe), whose romance is the season’s most delightful surprise. Then, Charlie (Maisie Richardson-Sellers) helped Mick (Dominic Purcell) embrace the fact that he is beloved writer Rebecca Silver, which was a surprisingly fun C-plot. Finally, we have Ray-as-Neron (Brandon Routh) seducing the constantly abused Gary (Adam Tsekhman) to the dark side, which was the episode’s most shocking development. While I couldn’t have predicted that Gary’s deal with a demon (or the creepily awesome visual of his lost nipple crawling across the floor), it definitely makes sense since the Legends have treated Gary pretty horribly all season long.

Arrow

The future-set “Star City 2040” teased Old Man Roy’s (Colton Haynes) anger issues and Monday’s episode revealed the source of them: Lazarus Pit bloodlust. At some point during his trip around the world with Thea (Willa Holland) and Nyssa (Katrina Law), Arrow‘s parkour king died and was resurrected by the Lazarus Pit. Thea and Nyssa tried curing his bloodlust with the Lotus elixir, but that didn’t take. Roy decided to keep all of this from Oliver when he returned to Star City to help foil the Ninth Circle’s latest terrorist plot, because he clearly didn’t learn anything about the dangers of keeping secrets from his time as Oliver’s sidekick. During the mission, Roy lost control and ended up beating two innocent guards to death, which forced the rest of Team Arrow to lie to the police, which definitely can’t lead to anything good. It seems as though Roy sticks around for the rest of the season, so we’ll hopefully find out what convinces him to exile himself to Lian Yu.

Related: Read the recap, and check out a first look at Colin Donnell’s return as Tommy Merlyn in next week’s episode.

The Flash

Yes, “Gone Rogue” featured a satisfying resolution to Barry (Grant Gustin) and Nora’s (Jessica Parker Kennedy) rift and the big reveal that Cicada II is planning on using old versions of Cisco’s (Carlos Valdes) metahuman cure to kill every metahuman; however, the one thing I can’t stop thinking about is the hour’s great season 1 callback. After Nora and her rogues cover band kidnapped Cisco for his technological expertise, he quips that he’s already been through this before (see: season 1’s “Rogue Time”). You know, it’s classic Cisco meta-humor. Unamused, Nora responds by going full Reverse Flash and threatening to phase her hand through his heart, which is yet another season 1 callback, one that sent chills down my spine because Thawne murdering Cisco is one of the show’s most affecting and unforgettable images. The fact that Nora would even threaten to do that to Cisco really conveys the dark place she’s in. Overall, I love how this scene mobilized The Flash‘s history for laughter and fright.

Related: Read our recap.

Listen to Superhero Insider

Click below to listen to this week’s Superhero Insider, which airs every Friday at 10 a.m. PT/1 p.m. ET on SiriusXM’s Ch. 105, hosted by Kyle Anderson and Chancellor Agard. Warning: Skip to 16:56 if you want to avoid Avengers: Endgame spoilers! 

Supergirl airs Sundays at 8 p.m. ET; DC’s Legends of Tomorrow airs Mondays at 8 p.m. ET, followed by Arrow at 9 p.m. ET; and The Flash airs Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET, all on the CW.

03 May 22:16

Avengers: Robert Downey Jr. Shares a Celebration of Women in Marvel

by Colin Stevens

Robert Downey Jr. celebrated the women of Marvel by sharing pictures that include (most) of the lead actresses of the MCU enjoying some well-earned lunch.

Posted on Instagram, RDJ shared two pictures (taken by Jimmy Rich) of a women of the MCU lunch he hosted while filming Endgame. Nine of the main actresses in the MCU are included in the photos: Gwyneth Paltrow, Pom Klementieff, Brie Larson, Zoe Saldana, Evangeline Lilly, Danai Gurira, Elizabeth Olsen, Karen Gillan and Letitia Wright.

Screen Shot 2019-05-02 at 3.40.25 PM

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03 May 22:10

Ghost Rider and Helstrom join Hulu's roster of live-action Marvel series

by Nick Romano

All Hell will break loose on Hulu come 2020.

With all the announcements coming out of the Hulu Television Upfront presentation in New York this week, the streaming studio announced Wednesday two more live-action Marvel series have joined its roster: Marvel’s Ghost Rider and Marvel’s Helstrom, both slated to debut next year.

Ghost Rider, showrun and executive produced by Ingrid Escajeda, will tell the story of Robbie Reyes, described as a “quintessential antihero” “consumed by hellfire and supernaturally bound to a demon. Reyes lives on the Texas/Mexico border and when he unleashes the Rider, Robbie brings vengeance for the innocents he encounters, but struggles to control the power he wields.”

Marvel fans will know Gabriel Luna plays Robbie on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,and EW has confirmed Luna will also star in Ghost Rider, which will also be executive produced by S.H.I.E.L.D. EPs Paul Zbyszewski and Jeph Loeb. According to Hulu, this isn’t a traditional spin-off of S.H.I.E.L.D. but will focus on the “same character with new story that lives unto its own.”

In a statement, Escajeda says the show fulfills her “love for grounded yet conflicted characters and my desire to scare the $&!# out of people.” She adds, “It’s important to me to find a take that thrills existing fans as well as wider audiences and I believe we’ve done just that.”

Helstrom, meanwhile, will focus on Daimon and Ana Helstrom, “the son and daughter of a mysterious and powerful serial killer.” As the logline notes, “The siblings have a complicated dynamic as they track down the terrorizing worst of humanity — each with their attitude and skills.”

It seems Marvel and Hulu are pulling from the comic book character of Daimon Hellstrom, a.k.a. Hellstorm, a.k.a. Son of Satan. Equipped with demonic abilities, he was capable of traveling between Hell and earth, and he first appeared in the Ghost Rider comics before going solo for the Son of Satan series.

Zbyszewski will be showrunning Helstrom on top of executive producing with Loeb.

The show is what Zbyszewski refers to as a “darker, thrilling corner of the comic book universe.”

“Marvel’s known for all the heart, humor, and action they put into every series, but this time around we’re adding some scares to that mix,” he said. “I think we’ve found a compelling way to dissect some of our deepest fears through the experiences of our two lead characters.”

In addition to a third season of its live-action Runaways, Hulu previously announced adult-geared animated series with Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K., Marvel’s Hit-Monkey, Marvel’s Tigra & Dazzler Show, and Marvel’s Howard The Duck — which will culminate in their own Avengers-type alliance in Marvel’s The Offenders.

Related content:

Marvel’s Runaways renewed for ‘epic’ season 3, will deepen ‘connection to the Marvel universe’ Hulu announces four new Marvel animated shows: Howard the Duck, M.O.D.O.K., more
03 May 22:10

Veronica Mars and her trusty taser are back in first trailer for Hulu revival

by Derek Lawrence

Welcome to Neptune, where Spring Break is deadly.

Kristen Bell returns as the titular spunky crime-solver in the first trailer for Hulu’s Veronica Mars revival, and she’s still just as you remember.

“When your best friend is murdered before your 17th birthday, you don’t develop a keen sense of mercy,” says Mars, before tasing a prospective mugger.

In the latest iteration of the cult series, Neptune is under attack during Spring Break, and clearly there is only one private investigator for the case. Here’s the official synopsis: “Spring breakers are getting murdered in Neptune, thereby decimating the seaside town’s lifeblood tourist industry. After Mars Investigations is hired by the family of one of the victims to find their son’s killer, Veronica is drawn into an epic eight-episode mystery that pits the enclave’s wealthy elites, who would rather put an end to the month-long bacchanalia, against a working class that relies on the cash influx that comes with being the West Coast’s answer to Daytona Beach.”

Veronica Mars‘ newest case begins streaming July 26 on Hulu. For everything else we know about the revival, go here.

Related content:

Ken Marino joins Veronica Mars revival — and everything else we know Veronica Mars revival shares first cast photo from the table read J.K. Simmons getting his hands dirty for Veronica Mars revival on Hulu
03 May 22:08

black-ish gets a season 6 — and a new prequel spinoff mixed-ish on ABC

by Patrick Gomez

black-ish is a little more than renewed-ish.

ABC has officially picked up the family comedy for a sixth season — and given an early series order to a new prequel series, mixed-ish.

It was announced earlier this year that black-ish would air a special episode that would give viewers a look at wife Rainbow (Tracee Ellis Ross) as a young girl growing up in the 1980s. That episode — titled “Becoming Bow,” which was slated to air next Tuesday, May 7 — will now “be held for next season,” according to ABC.

mixed-ish stars The Haves and the Have Nots‘ Tika Sumpter as the mom of a young Rainbow. (The role of Bow’s father was played by former Champions star Anders Holm in the already-filmed “Becoming Bow” but will be recast for the spinoff. The adult versions of Bow’s parents, Paul and Alicia, are played on black-ish by Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges.)

Young Bow is played by Arica Himmel, who has appeared on CBS’s God Friended Me, recurred alongside Amy Sedaris on Go90’s Thanksgiving, and starred Off-Broadway in Second Stage’s Production of The Layover. The new series will also star Veep actor Gary Cole as Bow’s paternal grandfather, as well as Ethan William Childress, Mykal-Michelle Harris, and Christina Anthony.

EW ran a first look at “Becoming Bow” in April. See the photos below.

 

 

Related content:

Oscar nominee Quvenzhané Wallis to guest-star on black-ish: First look black-ish’s 100th episode will celebrate Prince with a special musical showcase
01 May 14:54

Spoilers! Avengers: Endgame Ending Explained

by Joshua Yehl

Avengers: Endgame kicks off its fourth weekend in release and if you still haven't seen it, well, not sure why you're clicking on this SPOILER-FILLED article. But if you have seen it (once or multiple times) and still have questions about its ending, we're about to break it down and explain how it impacts the characters.

For even more Endgame coverage, check out our review, our rundown of every (truly) dead MCU character, all the Easter eggs, callbacks and references we caught, our explainer on the film's rules of time travel. the Marvel villains who could be the next big threat, how Endgame cements Iron Man's legacy in the MCU, what the directors had to say about that Loki theory, and where Endgame ranks among the highest-grossing movie of all time.

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01 May 14:48

Explaining the Most Complicated Part of Avengers: Endgame

by Scott Collura

Note: This story is updated with new (and conflicting) information from the filmmakers! Be sure to also read whether or not there's an Endgame post-credits scene, the essential films to watch before Endgame, whether or not the new season of Agents of SHIELD takes place after Endgame, and Endgame's biggest questions.

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01 May 13:00

How Spider-Man: Far From Home Will Deal With Endgame

by Jim Vejvoda

Warning! Full SPOILERS ahead for Avengers: Endgame!

Going to see Avengers: Endgame again this weekend? Then be sure to catch up on our reviewour explainer on its endinghow it may set up this classic Marvel villain for Phase 4, all the Easter eggs we caught, our biggest question about Black Widow, what's next for the Endgame cast, and our breakdown of the film's rules of time travel.

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01 May 06:41

The Big Bang Theory tapes its 279th and final episode

by Lynette Rice

The Big Bang Theory taped its 279th and final episode of the show’s 12-season run Tuesday — an exuberant half-hour that is sure to tickle fans who are no doubt expecting a happy ending for the tenants of apartments 4A and 4B.

As fans know, the May 16 finale will be two-parter — the first segment of which was screened for the studio audience Tuesday before the final 22 minutes were performed live on soundstage 25 at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif. Some parts of the finale will feel just like another week in the wacky world of Big Bang: Yes, Sheldon (Jim Parsons) wears a superhero T over a long-sleeved shirt, a few old friends stop by, and Leonard (Johnny Galecki) has plenty of fun poking at his longtime roommate. But in between solid jokes about sex, apartment decor, childcare and food, there are some tender and very unexpected surprises. And there’s at least two revelations that no one will see coming.

In between takes, Kaley Cuoco (Penny) lingered on stage and clapped with the audience while Galecki played some air guitar and wore a big grin. Maybe he was just trying to shake off the weepies: In one of his early scenes with Cuoco, it looked like he was truly on the verge of tears.

He finally shed them moments later. Before shooting the final scene of the episode, a choked-up Galecki addressed the crowd by saying, “This is a dream come true for all of us.”

“You’ve been the best fans for 12 years,” he continued. “You are a part of a family, and we love you very much.” He then called on Cuoco to join him, and she shared something series creator Chuck Lorre told the cast at their final table read: “The Big Bang Theory will live on in our hearts forever. It’s so sweet and simple, and it’s so true.”

Lorre, who was there with co-creator Bill Prady and the rest of the writers, snapped the clapboard for the last scene; it was met with raucous applause. During the final curtain call, the cast just waved to the audience and hugged each other. Prady, meanwhile, wandered about and looked bereft as the Green Day song “Time of Your Life” played over the studio speakers.

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After the series finale of TBBT, CBS will present Unraveling the Mystery: A Big Bang Farewell. The half-hour special will feature Galecki and Cuoco as they take viewers behind the scenes of the long-running comedy. The duo will share backstage secrets, personal memories, and highlights from the sitcom’s record-breaking 279 episodes.

The series finale will air from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. ET on May 16.

Related content:

Say goodbye to The Big Bang Theory with a special collectors edition Jim Parsons explains why he was ready to leave The Big Bang Theory The stars of The Big Bang Theory share emotional photos from the final table read
30 Apr 20:03

‘Game of Thrones’: Ser Jorah star breaks silence on that heartbreaking battle

by James Hibberd

Note: This story contains spoilers for Game of Thrones season 8, episode 3.

Iain Glen has just finished filming his final moment on Game of Thrones.

It’s last spring in Northern Ireland, and the actor who has been with the HBO drama since its very first episode has spent the morning laying perfectly still as dead Ser Jorah Mormont in front of the Winterfell castle. After wrapping his last shot, the 57-year-old Scottish actor treks his dusty boots into his trailer to chat. If he’s feeling sad about departing the series, he’s not showing it. The actor has had an enviable arc on the series as the protector, advisor and formerly unrequited lover of Daenerys Targaryen. He’s survived battles and gladiatorial fights and greyscale to make it deep into the final season, where Ser Jorah died in perhaps the manner that would most please him: Protecting his queen. (Note: Some of the quotes below have previously been reported).

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: I was honestly starting to think they had a figurine in place of you on that pyre because you were so still even between takes.IAIN GLEN: I know. I slightly drifted off, to be honest. I was aurally saying goodbye. Listening to the GoT set operating. What a vast slick machine it’s become and to hear It orchestrating. I got into it. Everything echoes backwards over the past decade. Trying to let the whole thing go. I feel happy about it. Having been in the pilot and every season I’ve had so many work experiences. an ephemeral beast and you go from one to the other and this is an extraordinary experience that went on for nearly a decade and occupies a big space in the memory bank in your heart. 

What was your reaction to learning Ser Jorah’s ending?You go through a bundle of emotions. Your best indication of what happens is they always list the cast on the first page of each script. I think all six came together at once. First script, yeah, I’m in that one. Second, yeah, I’m in that one. Third, I’m in that one. Fourth, yeah I’m that one — just being a corpse, but I didn’t know that yet. Then fifth, no, I’m not there. Sixth one: Oh no! So I knew I definitely died. Then I read the scripts and I just think they’re so good. I enjoy reading them. I’m as intrigued as anyone to find out what unfolds, whether it’s The Sopranos or Breaking Bad. You know you can’t please everyone all the time but I just think they did it incredibly right, the way they resolve all the various storylines. When I read the nature of his demise it felt right. It was the right conclusion. For eight years in a row, you go, “Please, please…” You just want to stay in the party. You just want to stay on board. Then this season comes and this is the season to go, if you’re going to go. It’s a heroic and satisfying demise. I think were sweetly nervous about everyone’s reaction and their instinct is you’ll be upset that you’re out. So the first thing I did is I went and emailed them and told them how much I loved the scripts. And they said, “Aw, you’re a gent.” And I said, “No, I’m really grateful for this conclusion.”

Your character has survived death so many times. You must have thought you had a shot of making it to the endYou could be a question mark or conclude as a character. The question mark ending is where you get to the end of the whole thing and people try to project forward what his future is that you’ll never know. I’m happy to conclude — particularly, as you say, as somebody who teetered on the edge of going out earlier. I remember when I got greyscale I asked if this is it and they said, “No, not this season.” So I thought I was definitely f—ed next season. But they were joshing. It has been a great gig.

Is there anything you wish your character had gotten to do?Other than the painfully obvious one of making love to Daenerys, way back when, in all honesty, no. It would feel churlish and ungrateful even if I could conjure up something. I’ve always felt very looked after. The whole greyscale journey was not in the original books, and that was something they gifted the character. I could say I wish Jorah expressed himself more, but that’s just not who he was. always said, slightly joshing, “You’re great in silence. We always like having you in a scene when you’re not speaking.” But they were being sweet. But no, there’s nothing. 

What was your favorite scene shot?If I had to pick, I’d say two: The whole gladiatorial sequence — what was required physically during that sequence for Daenerys’ benefit, trying to win her back. It was a very hard week and I loved doing that. So for the action side of things that sequence encapsulated it. In terms of emotional demands, and feeling satiated, it was probably being rejected by Daenerys when she found out there was a duality to my approach to her. When I came in front of her and she said she told me she never wanted to see me again.  

There’s often been bit sadness there, Jorah pining for Dany all those years when there was always with somebody else.I don’t know what people perceive. But in my mind, there was a significant shift when he lost her love and made this journey to try and win it back; once he won her favor again and was in her orbit. Of course, there has always been a profound love there but him wanting a reciprocal physical love has gone and he was just happy to be with her.

That’s definitely the vibe on screen.Good. And being promoted to being the head of her army is where he wanted to be. So Jorah got complete forgiveness and then went out the way he wanted to. I die saving her life and I’ve said that for a good few seasons the nobility of the man is very much within him and he would absolutely sacrifice his life for her to succeed. In a way he was given the conclusion he wanted.

The night shoots for Episode 3 have been super brutal.It was a real test. Most of this crew of dragon were on 11 weeks and it completely f—s your body clock. You have no life outside it. At least on day shoots you’ll go have a meal in the evening and then you do a bit of something. On night shoots those down hours are removed. You get to sleep at 7 in the morning and wake in midday and you can’t really do anything. It was the most unpleasant experience I’ve had on Thrones; the least enjoyable of all of it.

As I understand it, the more time shooting on these practical sets the less that’s done by special effects and the more realistic it is.It bleeds through to the reality of the Thrones world. You have an absolute f—ed bunch of actors. But on screen it’s horrible and dirty and dark and cold; it’s really miserable. Without getting too method about it, it bleeds onto the screen

What was working with director Miguel Sapochnik like?Miguel is an animal. I don’t know how he does it — to stay as engaged as fresh as he is with the weight on his shoulders. He takes care of each individual storyline so well. This kind of episode can get lost in action. If not telling an emotional story then it’s not going to be half as good. Everybody is fighting for a personal reason and he tries to imbue every moment in that. It’s phenomenal. 

Read more “The Long Night” coverage:— Maisie Williams, Kit Harington on the battle’s big Night King twist: ‘I thought it was going to be me!’Lyanna Mormont actress Bella Ramsey discusses her Winterfell battle fate 
Game of Thrones releases trailer for season 8’s mysterious episode 4
‘Game of Thrones’ showrunners: Why Winterfell battle didn’t have ice spiders
Our deep-dive recap for “The Long Night”

Listen to our GoT podcast on iTunesRadio.comSpotifyStitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.

30 Apr 07:57

Robot vacuum cleaner has a brush with the law

by hello@chrismerrimanmedia.co.uk(Chris Merriman)
Robot vacuum cleaner has a brush with the law

Feds, knobs and broomsticks

30 Apr 06:44

Game of Thrones recap of Winterfell battle in progress: A dark epic bloodbath

by James Hibberd

Six heroes gone.

The Battle of Winterfell saw the defeat of the Night King, but at a cost. Sunday’s third episode of season 8 was a hugely suspenseful and intense 82 minutes of action and thrills that witnessed the demise of Theon Greyjoy, Jorah Mormont, Lyanna Mormont, Dolorous Edd, Beric Dondarrion and Melisandre. It’s a steep price, yet perhaps not nearly as steep as what you were expecting — pretty much the entire core of fan favorites made it through okay, such as the Starks, Lannisters, Targaryens, Sam, Brienne and The Hound. Oh, and can you believe this: The crypts? Not safe during a zombie attack. Not safe at all!

This was an episode the cast and crew famously spent 55 nights filming (plus several more weeks inside a studio). Have there ever been so many different types of action intercut into one story? There was a field battle, zombie horror, a castle under siege and an aerial dragon-on-dragon fight. Yet none of the storylines were only focused on fighting. Each had moments where the characters could shine, often in heartbreaking or rousing ways.

Once again director Miguel Sapochnik (“The Battle of the Bastards”) has made an action epic that manages to weave character-driven stories through clear and comprehensible battle (we’ll talk about the “too dark” complaint in a moment). So many lavish Hollywood summer blockbusters have muddled, physics-defying and downright dull smash-and-bash action while GoT continues to make every fight unique, compelling and grounded. This was TV’s most relentless and mammoth battle ever, a super-sized series of setpieces that never wore out its welcome and generated constant dread and nerve-wracking suspense.

Before we recap the episode, let’s discuss a debate on Twitter: Was the episode — appropriately titled “The Long Night” — too dark, lighting wise? (Skip the next two paragraphs if you don’t care). GoT has always had some really dark scenes. I often get murky photos from HBO that I sneakily brighten up a tad before posting online. I was able to clearly follow the action on a TV that is big and bright and in a dark room. At the same time, a lot of people say they struggled to make out the action, and when I switched to watching the episode on a 20″ computer monitor I had a tougher time following along.

I guess the question is: How optimal of viewing conditions should be needed to watch the show? The episode seemed to push the envelope in terms of having a lot of darkness combined with a blizzard of debris (thanks, Night King). As I write this, I’m reminded of an executive at HBO’s new corporate overlords AT&T who made the amazingly boneheaded declaration that the network should cut down GoT episodes to 20 minutes each so people could enjoy them more on their phones. I’m not in the “all shows must be perfect for all devices” camp. GoT is full of visual detail and should be watched on as large of a screen as possible. But given the number of fans out there echoing the same “I couldn’t follow it” complaint, I wondered if the episode could have been a bit clearer so a larger number of viewers could have enjoyed it more.

Getting into the episode itself, I fired off one meager tweet near the beginning and then just stopped using social media for the rest of the episode. I wanted to sit back and enjoy this. Like “Battle of the Bastards,” some of the strongest moments were in the ramp up to the fighting: Tyrion regarding the preparations with silent dread. The inky black battlefield. Ramin Djawadi’s jittery score. The arrival of Melisandre like a lone horsewoman of the apocalypse. The first wave of Dothraki charging the Army of the Dead and their flaming swords getting extinguished like fireflies (“Why do that?” I yell from the couch. “Let them come to you!”).

And so many other moments that stick out: That brief impossibly romantic shot of Jon and Dany on their respective dragons above the clouds against the moonlight. Arya creeping around the library. Theon’s suicidal charge. Beric’s arms extended in the doorway, Christ-like, getting stabbed. Drogon swarmed with wights and trying to shake them off like murderous fleas. Daenerys breaking down and weeping like we’ve never heard her before at the death of Jorah Mormont. The Night King’s once-in-a-million fractional smile after surviving a blast of Drogon’s fire. That long continuous shot following Jon through the castle.

One very subtle bit that shocked me: When Jon Snow saw Samwell Tarley getting swarmed by wights and he didn’t stop moving. Because we know that under any other circumstances, Jon would have immediately run to save his best friend. But the situation was so dire, the stakes so high, it was every man for himself and Jon had to keep his focus on finding the Night King. There were several moments like that where you felt this sense of helplessness.

There were times I wished there were fewer wights shown invading the castle for another reason too. When you’re seeing what looks like hundreds of zombies swarming around you start to get that Starship Troopers “but nobody could survive that!” feeling, especially when the action cuts to a quiet moment with a character and you’re wondering why they’re not being overrun. 

But let’s run through some of the characters’ adventures:

Theon Greyjoy: Theon knew this was a one-way trip. The character has committed unforgivable acts (you don’t get a pass for killing two orphans), yet his redemptive journey has been pitch perfect and concise: From that fight against his own men on the beach at Dragonstone, to rescuing Yara, to deciding to return to Winterfell and then volunteering to protect the Night King’s top target.

As the Army of the Dead close in, Theon tells Bran he’s sorry for seizing Winterfell back in season 2. Bran, as usual, is distant and philosophical, noting, “everything you’ve done has brought you to where you are today.” Bran then wargs into a flock of ravens to, I assume, avoid making awkward small talk with Theon. 

Later, as the Night King closes in, the Three-Eyed Raven softens, for just once, and simply tells him: “Theon … you’re a good man.” Along with earning the respect of Yara, this is what Theon has longed to hear.

The show’s resident traitor and coward, Theon demonstrates the ultimate courage: Standing his ground vs. The Night King himself to protect Bran just a little bit longer.  

Ser Jorah Mormont: Like Theon, Ser Jorah has what might be an ideal death for his character. His whole story has been tied to Daenerys — falling in love with her, losing her, earning her trust to come back into her service, and now leading her army. He saves her one last time, which one has to think is exactly how he’d want to go out. Also, like Theon, he’s been with GoT since the very first episode.

The Hound: The Hound has had what might be called PTSD for awhile. Remember he quit a battle previously in season 2’s “Battle of the Blackwater” and froze up (thanks to his fire phobia) during the zombie polar bear attack in season 7. “They’re f–king death. We can’t beat death,” The Hound tells Beric, who gestures to Arya “Not Today” Stark fighting a multitude of wights and says: “Tell her that.” So The Hound finds his will to fight on.

Sansa Stark: Early on we get a fun moment when Arya gives Sansa a dagger. Sansa, never trained for combat, says she has no idea what to do with it. “Stick them with the pointy end,” Arya shoots back, in yet another season 1 callback. 

In the crypts, Sansa huddles with Tyrion awaiting their fate. Tyrion at one point wonders why they didn’t work out as a couple and whether they still could. Sansa reminds Tyrion of her objection to Daenerys, which Missandei nearby isn’t having: Dany is out there on a dragon trying to save you, you’re down in the crypt, and you’re snarking about her? 

Eventually, the Night King does his resurrection trick and all the corpses from the crypts come to life and attack. One of these zombies has to be Lyanna Stark, right? Rickon too? I’m assuming a headless Ned Stark is not among them. 

Dolorous Edd: Dolorous Edd has been around since the first season. He was fighting wights with Samwell when he takes one protecting his friend. And now his watch has ended.

Lyanna Mormont: The Lady of Bear Island refused to hide in the crypt. Realistically, she was always going to be an underdog to survive, but she went out rather heroically.

Lyanna faced off against a zombie giant. The moment the giant picked her up it was all over for Lyanna, but even as her bones were being crushed she managed to stab the giant through his eye, killing him. The smallest fighter took out the Night King’s biggest soldier. (We have an exit interview with Lyanna Mormont actress Bella Ramsey if you’d care to read it). 

Beric Dondarrion: Jon Snow’s resurrection buddy has been resurrected six times. But the seventh time’s the charm after he saved Arya Stark from wights. This is apparently why the Lord of Light kept bringing him back. You have to figure that, from Beric’s perspective — not knowing what Arya does next to save Westeros — this must be a little disappointing: You brought me back from the dead six times to save a random girl in a hallway? 

Jon Snow: We finally get the epic high-fantasy dragon fight we’ve long wanted. Dany on Drogon and Jon on Rhaegal vs. the Night King on his ice dragon. This is the stuff of Anne McCaffrey paperback covers and it brings the fabled past of Westeros alive. We’ve heard about the Targaryens and their dragon battles of yore, and here we finally get to see one. Well, sort of — the Night King brought a blizzard that reduced visibility to make it tougher for our heroes, but we get several cool sequences of Jon and Dany trying to pin down the demon while he’s riding a zombie dragon that can take seemingly any amount of damage.

At an hour of effort, Dany finally gets a clear shot at the Night King. The dragon lets loose, blasting him with an annihilating fireball. Normally whenever Dany says her magic word, “Dracarys,” she’s won and her enemies are defeated. We hold our breath. The fire clears. The Night King is still there, now with a bit of an undead smirk (add this to the Night King’s list of memes). How did he survive? Is the Night King force projecting from planet Arch-To? Nope, the Children of the Forest must have had “dragon fire” on the list of things the Night King can withstand. 

The episode is cleverly constructed so we keep thinking Jon is going to kill the Night King and he keeps getting pushed back. We get an amazing continuous shot of Jon as he runs and fights his way past so many other major characters as wights tumble into the castle on all sides. But he gets pinned down by zombie Viserion, blocking him with blue fire. In that last shot, it appeared like Jon was going to face down the dragon anyway and just go out in a blaze of suicidal blue glory. 

Arya Stark: Arya asked Gendry to make a staff with dragonglass on each end. This made some fans wonder if she was going to kill the Night King last week — which was totally correct even though her weapon had nothing to do with it.

After much fighting, Arya runs into Melisandre (who along with Arya is the MVP of this battle). The Red Woman has been talking about this climactic fight against the forces of darkness for the entire series, no way she was going to miss this.

Melisandre previously told Varys she was going to return to Westeros to die (“same as you”). She also made a prediction for Arya back in season 3: “I see darkness in you. And in that darkness, eyes staring back at me. Brown eyes, blue eyes, green eyes. Eyes you’ll shut forever”). Melisandre has long said her mission is to save Westeros from the wintery forces of death, even if that means doling out plenty of death herself.

Melisandre reminds Arya of her training and her prophecy. Arya’s not here to kill wights, as much fun as she’s having doing that. The “blue eyes” line tips her to aim higher.  

Just when Jon fails to kill the Night King, and he’s about to get Bran, Arya swoops in (I like how the White Walker’s hair flicks up as she rushes past off-screen). She jumps onto the Night King like he was Gendry. She takes her Valyrian steel dagger (another season 1 relic) that she got from Littlefinger. The Night King grabs her wrist. Arya drops the dagger into her other waiting hand and plunges it into his frosty old chest.  

As Sapochnik says in our interview (link to full story below): “I thought, ‘Hmm, if I see Arya running then I know she’s going to do something. So it’s about almost losing her from the story and then have her come in as a surprise and pinning all our hopes on Jon being the guy going to do it — because Jon’s always the guy. So we follow Jon in a continuous shot I want the audience to think: ‘Jon’s gonna do it, Jon’s gonna do it…’ and then he fails. He fails at the very last minute. So I’m hoping that’s a nice switch that no one sees coming.”

Melisandre: When you’re hundreds of years old and finally achieve your greatest goal and Davos is just itching to kill you despite the fact you just helped save mankind, you’re probably finished with living. Melisandre takes off the enchanted necklace that maintains her youth. We last saw her do this while resting in her Castle Black chamber. This time she walks into the snow, which has a Thanos finger-snap-like effect on the Red Woman. She ages, stumbles and turns to dust. It might be that Melisandre was just tired of wearing the exact same outfit for hundreds of years.

So … um… now what?

That’s the question you’re supposed to be asking: Now what? The overwhelming threat of the season has been defeated. There are three super-sized episodes left. Nearly 20 characters are gathered at Winterfell. Presumably, the struggle for the Iron Throne will resume in earnest. Can this alliance hold together? Or will the tense cracks between some characters that were on display in the first two episodes grow into catastrophic chasms? I’m really looking forward to the next three episodes which promise to return GoT to the zombie-free political intrigue and character-driven dramatics that mark some of its finest moments.

This is a recap in progress. Refresh for updates through Tuesday…… podcast coming tomorrow 

Read more:
— Maisie Williams, Kit Harington discuss the Winterfell battle’s big Night King twist: ‘I thought it was going to be me!’
Lyanna Mormont actress Bella Ramsey discusses her Winterfell battle fate 
Game of Thrones releases trailer for season 8’s mysterious episode 4

Trivia question for several Night King gifts from the HBO Store. How many people are still alive from Arya’s kill list? (We’re not counting The Hound anymore since she’s taken him off). Tweet to @EW with the hashtags “#EWGOTWIN and #sweepstakes.

30 Apr 06:37

Melisandre actress Carice van Houten on that Game of Thrones Winterfell battle

by James Hibberd

Sorcerous. Fanatic. Seductress. Murderer. Hero.

Melisandre was arguably Game of Thrones’ most morally complicated character. The Red Woman arguably committed the most horrifying and unforgivable act in the show’s ultra-violent history — burning an innocent child alive in a misguided attempt to try and magically help Stannis Baratheon win his war against Ramsay Bolton. Yet she also used her powers to resurrect Jon Snow and, in Sunday’s Battle of Winterfell, saved humanity by guiding Arya Stark to fulfill her destiny of killing the Night King. In the episode’s final moments, the 800-year-old sorceress, having completed her mission to defeat the forces of the dead, removed that mysterious necklace which maintains her youth and walked into the morning sun. The act somehow broke the spell that preserved her long life. Melisandre’s final sacrifice was herself.

During EW’s GoT set visit last spring, we got to see actress Carice van Houten perform her final walk, stumbling and staggering until she turned to dust (the aging effect was added later). As usual, Houten was in Melisandre’s signature blood-red dress, an outfit she wore since the character was introduced in season 2. Playing Melisandre was always challenging for Houten, as she candidly discusses below, both physically (she often worked in freezing temperatures wearing only her thin outfit) and emotionally (it’s tough to connect to an audience when playing an inhuman character).

EW interviewed Houten on the eve of her final day on set in a Belfast hotel lobby by a warm fire — perfect ambiance for The Red Woman. The actress often amusingly switched into using fruit-centric code language when tourists lingered nearby to protect spoilers from being overheard (Example: “Strawberry is definitely on a mission. The Banana that the Strawberry fought with is there when the jam is being made …”). So some of this conversation has been translated from fruit-speak for clarity.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What was your reaction to Melisandre’s storyline this season?CARICE VAN HOUTEN: I haven’t read the whole season. Why read it when I can see it? But I had a bit of a feeling it was not going to end well for me. I was a bit emotional. I really like that we finally know what she came for, and it’s the end of her journey. “I can go now, my work is done” — without it being really dramatic. It’s a life that’s been hundreds of years that’s come to an end now.

Did you have different predictions about what she might do in her final episodes?I knew I’d have something to do with Arya. I thought probably something with fire. I did know I was going to come back one more time as an old lady. I expected to live a little bit longer. But I really liked the way they ended my character. She actually saves the day, so she’s a bit of a hero in the end, which is cool. For a long time she was hated — and fair enough. I got some points when I brought back Jon.

Can you talk about that scene with Arya?It was good. Your character’s going to kick some ass. I felt like that guy in the movie who gives the main character one last push to do it, like in a football game. I thought it was a cool moment.

You also have that run in with Davos, who wants to kill Melisandre of course. And you’re like, “Wait, hold that thought…”That was a good moment. He’s sort of stunned by what I say. Because all of a sudden we’re all in this together. So yeah. Small enemies, small things don’t matter anymore because we have to fight this one enemy.

I watched the moment being shot where she walked down the trench and joined the body pile. I don’t know if you’re a person who looks at your scenes on the monitor after a shot, but it looked amazing.You saw that? Yeah. I don’t normally look, but I did that time. It does look amazing.

In the end she was just done with it all?It was kind of relief. I tried to play it with tiredness but also with relief. I can go now. It’s done.

What do you wish you got to do with your character?I would have loved to have more interaction with other actors. She and Cersei would be a good combination.

Oh yes, that would have been great.I would have liked to know a bit more about her past. Because she was a slave. It would have been a nice moment to show she is human and connect her to to others. As an actor it’s more interesting to play doubts and secrets. And it’s nice to tap from your own s—. I wish we knew a bit more about her s—.

What moment are you most proud of?The moment I liked most to play was when we had just burned Shireen and I think, “This is going to help us, this is going to save us, and the snow is melting.” She thinks worked. And then someone comes up to us and says that it’s all gone to hell. I just remembered really loved the silent acting of thinking, “Oh f—!” To show that with one look. That’s what I mean by it’s interesting for an actor to play secrets. whole world went upside down in that moment. I really like that kind of stuff. Another scene I liked to play was the scene in a bathtub where she’s mocking Stannis’ wife and being cheeky. I like that hint of humor. And the scene at the table with Stannis and his wife. It felt like — you know that scene with Jessie Pinkman at dinner table with Walter White and his wife?

In Breaking Bad, when Walt insists on Jessie staying for dinner…They’re having this awkward dinner. That’s a fun moment for me. I cannot complain because that’s not the character, but those few human moments I think is what I’m better at. This wasn’t an easy part for me at all. It’s not like me to be so sure of myself. The first shooting day I had to do the burning of the gods . I had to do that speech for all the soldiers. So many great actors were there and I had never been so cold in my life — and my character is never supposed to be cold. I got unlucky there because I get cold in the summer. That dress was so fitted I couldn’t wear anything underneath. I was so nervous and shy and insecure about what I was going to do and how I was going to do it and I couldn’t use because I had to be all about the Lord of Light. A lot of people bought , which is fun.

HBO is doing a prequel series. Any thoughts on that?Story-wise, there’s loads to tell. You can get so much more out of this world. But it’s also and a combination of a lot of factors when something works. I don’t want to be cynical, but I believe in the right moment. Maybe they can CGI me into a young girl. At the same time, all good things come to an end. says you’re actually another person now than when you started.

Because every seven years every cell in your body has been replaced.Right. So this is a new start I guess. Funny enough, I’ve had some emotional moments today. My last day is tomorrow. It’s that cliche of you don’t know what you have until you don’t have it anymore. I do love Belfast. I’m not going to see these people anymore. I’m not going to wear this dress anymore. I’ve cursed this dress sometimes. I’ve been in weird situations in my personal life in that dress because I’ve always worn the same thing. So that dress is connected to seven years of my life.

I assume you can’t keep one because GoT costumes are so valuable at this point. They’re wanted for exhibits and museums.Yeah. As they should be. They’re beautiful but impractical.

How do you think fans will react to the end of this series?I don’t know. People have had so much time to make up their own story. I guess they become attached to something they wish or fear for. Some will be surprised. Above all, they’ll say that it’s over. It’s a pretty f—ing unique show, let’s face it. This is freeing in a way. You need to jam in life a bit. Now I’m going to try another instrument.

You’re ready to move on too, it sounds like.I’m curious, tomorrow, if I’m going to cry. It wouldn’t surprise me if I cry.

Read more “The Long Night” coverage:— Maisie Williams, Kit Harington on the battle’s big Night King twist: ‘I thought it was going to be me!’Lyanna Mormont actress Bella Ramsey discusses her Winterfell battle fate 
Game of Thrones releases trailer for season 8’s mysterious episode 4
Our deep-dive recap for “The Long Night”

More “The Long Night” coverage to come Monday and Tuesday… 

29 Apr 06:38

Santa Clarita Diet eats it: Netflix cancels Drew Barrymore, Timothy Olyphant's zom-com

by Nick Romano

The life cycle of Santa Clarita Diet, Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant‘s zombie-comedy on Netflix, has come to an end.

The streaming service moved to cancel its wacky series with star power after the 10 episodes of its third season dropped on the platform March 29.

“The world had never known a ‘zom-com’ until Santa Clarita Diet, and we’re indebted to creator Victor Fresco for bringing this idea to Netflix,” a statement from Netflix reads (via The Hollywood Reporter). “To their endless credit, the incredible Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant were totally game, with an uncanny knack for comedy that brought Sheila and Joel Hammond to vibrant life, even though one of them was undead. We’re grateful to Victor, Drew, and Timothy, along with fellow executive producers Tracy Katsky, Aaron Kaplan, Chris Miller and Ember Truesdell and the terrific cast, including Liv Hewson and Skyler Gisondo, and crew for three hilarious seasons for Netflix members to discover for years to come.”

Barrymore, a star and executive producer on Santa Clarita Diet, called her character Sheila Hammond, a real-estate agent in California who transforms into a zombie, “one of my favorites.” Olyphant played her husband, Joel.

“She and Joel were an amazing couple, who had shared goals. And I am lucky to have worked along side Tim Olyphant,” Barrymore said. “It was an honor to get to do something so delightful. Sheila lives forever in me. And I am grateful to Victor Fresco, who created a world so unique.”

“I loved working on this show,” Olyphant, also an EP, said in his own statement. “I’m going to continue coming in and doing scenes. If they don’t want to film it, that’s up to them.”

Another member of the team, Tracy Katsky Boomer, an executive producer beside series creator Victor Fresco, commented on Twitter, “It’s been an incredible experience and I’m so so grateful to all the peeps but also you guys this sucks.”

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The cast also featured Liv Hewson, Skyler Gisondo, Mary Elizabeth Ellis, Natalie Morales, Richard T. Jones, Alan Tudyk, and Nathan Fillion.

Hewson, who played Abby Hammond, wrote the show was “such a treasure to make and be a part of” in tweeting about the cancellation. “I count myself very lucky to have lived three years of it. thank you all for watching and playing with us.”

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Fans are responding accordingly.

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29 Apr 06:37

'The Blacklist' recap: The death and birth of Raymond Reddington

by Jodi Walker

Well, it happened. We finally found out the truth about Raymond Reddington’s real identity, from one of the only living people in the world who knew it.

Or did we? Oh, I see what ya did there, Blacklist! You gave us a riveting, emotional episode full of flashbacks and perfect casting on younger versions of current characters, not to mention a truly inspired choice to have Gabriel Mann play a young, fake, semi-Russian James Spader…

All to have it thrown back in our faces! Surely some of Dom’s long and winding tale of how and why the man who plays Raymond Reddington on TV began playing him on TV was based in reality. But judging by Red’s reaction to Liz’s glee at telling him she’s now, like, so in the know—we’re only getting half of the true story about the death and birth of Raymond Reddington. At best.

And y’know what, well played. To spend two hours thinking we were getting those sweet, sweet answers we’ve been searching for, only to have one millisecond of Spader’s face twitching turn it all on its head? It’s a bold move! I feel like one of those contestants on Survivor who just has to shake their head and laugh approvingly as they congratulate the remaining sacks of bones for pulling a fast one on them on the way out of Tribal Counsel. You’ve got to respect a misleading hustle.

These most certainly were not answers — they weren’t even questions! We’re living in a gosh darn house of mirrors. Because as convincing as Dom’s Fraymond Freddington origin story was (somewhat), and as engaging as Gabriel Mann was somehow able to make a brand new character (extremely), there has to be a reason Red isn’t telling Liz who he was before he took on the identity of Raymond Reddington. A reason for Mr. Kaplan’s death, for Tom’s death, for — shudder — Dembe leaving. And I just don’t see I was your mom’s childhood best friend and I did it to protect her! as a very good reason for any of those awful things to have happened…

And I don’t think the writers want us to see this story as credible. So then why introduce us to Ilya at all? Why show us Katarina’s journey post-fire, post-death of the (alleged) death of Real Raymond Reddington? There’s something here; we just don’t know what it is yet. But if this episode taught me anything, it’s that if we care about getting to the bottom of the connection between Raymond Reddington and Elizabeth Keen, then we need to hold onto every little detail — every little memory — of Katarina Rostova. Especially if they take place near that cursed Cape May…

THE BROCKTON COLLEGE KILLER, NO. 92

Oh, have I not mentioned the first hour of The Blacklist at all? How odd. Maybe that’s because it’s a salacious romp through the notoriously shady world of audio-podcasting that is a wild time, sure, but not exactly as long-lasting in the ol’ noggin once you see Elizabeth Keen show up at her maternal grandfather’s doorstep.

So let me give you the recapped version of the Brockton College Killer recap, if I may: In 2013, there were a number of killings on Brockton College’s campus, wherein young women went missing, and then their bodies showed back on campus frozen in such a way that when you pushed them over, their bodies broke apart like mannequins. It’s gross! But the twist is that the kid who went to jail for it because he was the only person connected to all the victims, Tobias Carlisle, is getting a retrial because a former classmate of his, Kimberly Owens started a true crime podcast called “THAW” that uncovered not only a number of missteps in his original trial, but a valid alternative suspect…

This is a very real thing that happens with true crime podcasts! Less based in reality, however, is the reveal that it was actually Kimberly Owens who killed all those women because she was obsessed with Tobias Carlisle, and never intended for him to get put in jail, so y’know, had to create a whole podcast to get him out. But then, after they’ve slept together, and he finds her head-hittin’ mallet and ask her to kindly leave him alone, she locks him in a freezer.

Luckily, season 2 of “THAW” is put to an abrupt end when the FBI finally catch up with Kimberly Owens and arrest her. Another Blacklister off the streets! But the most important story of this first hour is how Red is handling what he considers to be a betrayal by Dembe, and what Dembe considers to be loyalty. I was quite shocked when Liz just went for it, finally telling Red that it was her who gave the tip to the authorities that ultimately got him arrested and nearly killed by lethal injection. And while I readily admit that it was naive of Liz to think that she could just get Red put in a holding cell for a few weeks while she put on her detectives’ cap and got to work figuring out his true identity, I don’t begrudge her stance that she deserves to know the truth.

She has consistently had the worst plans possible to find said truth, but she didn’t ask for Raymond Reddington to come out of the shadows and to turn her life upside down six years ago. He did that. And he continues to keep the reason why a secret from her. “You think you deserve to know the truth? That you’re entitled to that?” Red asks Liz, as she replies with both immediate and apologetic yeses. It’s a really great scene between Spader and Megan Boone, who I hate to see at odds, but I always believe a little more than when they’re at peace. Because who could ever be at peace with this situation? Every time Liz says that she is, she just ends up mad again, ends up curious again. Just look at what happens in the second hour…

But first, Raymond and Dembe have to sort through their differences. Dembe reminds Red that he keeps his secret out of loyalty even though he believes Red should tell Elizabeth to the truth. But Red sees Dembe keeping Liz’s secret out of loyalty to her as a betrayal to him. It’s a very twisted web they’ve woven! Red spends most of the episode at Dom’s house, asking him veiled questions if he ever forgave Katarina after she betrayed him by secretly working with the cabal and going against Russia. Dom says the he forgave Katarina, but implies that his lonely life in hiding is no better for it. “You forgave Katarina, but not me,” Red asks. “I forgave my child,” Dom replies…mysteriously.

Red asks Dom if he’s at peace with his decision to forgive Katarina, and Dom says that he is: “I am because I loved her. The real question is: how much do you love Dembe?”

And the answer is, a whole hell of a lot! When Red finally makes his decision to forgive Dembe and shows up at his house to—well, nothing short of confess his unconditional love for him, I really thought he was about to give the full Sex and the City maybe we could be each other’s soulmates” treatment. “I went away to think about you and me, and all I could think was that I missed you,” Red tells Dembe, who has his bag, plane tickets, and passport packed, seemingly ready to be excommunicated by Red. “I realized, you don’t need my forgiveness—ever. Because when it comes to this, you can do no wrong.”

“I appreciate that, Raymond,” Dembe responds. “But I can’t forgive you.”

Wow. That unexpected heartbreak hit me like a freight train. “I guess I don’t understand,” Red says in stunning stillness. “No, I suppose you don’t,” Dembe replies, and walks out the door.

No matter what anyone tells him, Raymond Reddington feels like he is justified in keeping his identity a secret — in asking others to keep it a secret too. And maybe he is. But decisions like that have costs. They have consequences. And in Friday night’s two hours, Raymond Reddington is paying the price.

RASSVET

Ressler finally comes clean to Liz about continuing to research Reddington’s true identity, and when he tells her that he found her maternal grandfather in the security footage from the P.O. Box, all that stuff she told Red circa an hour ago about no longer needing to know his secret because she realized, “I don’t care about who you were, I care for who you are”…oh yeah, that goes super out the window as soon as she gets a bonafide lead.

Because Liz has met Dom before. She didn’t know he was her grandfather then, but now that she does, she shows up at Dom’s doorstep all, What’s up gramps, you got the deets?

Dom tells Liz that he made a promise to stay away from her a long time ago in order to keep her safe. But now that she’s here, and the jig is up, he seems pretty willing to unload all the answers she’s looking for about her mother. They get in the car together because Dom wants to show her something, and from there, the majority of the episode is spent in flashback after Katarina Rostova stumbles out of the ocean, very much not dead, as she was presumed all those years ago.

It’s not as mystical or even as emotional as the landmark “Cape May” flashback episode, but the tradeoff is that it’s more informative (or at least, seems more informative). Katarina stumbles from the ocean into a church, and wakes up in a women’s shelter where she heals and mostly keeps to herself. But she knows that Russian agent Anton Velov will be looking for her — sure she’s not dead, knowing she’s a trader to her country — especially once an abused young Russian woman shows up at the shelter, and Katarina winds up killing her boyfriend before he kills her (in a very badass showing from Lotte Verbeek). After that, Katarina is on the run, knowing she needs to find a way to protect herself and her family.

She manages to get a message to a man we’ve never seen before who works at the U.S. Russian Embassy: Ilya Koslov, played by Gabriel Mann.

And y’all I admit, when I saw Mann appear on the screen, as a former lover of his eccentric performance on Revenge, I thought: Wow, what a perfect addition to a show with fellow eccentric, James Spader. And then later, with some small facial expression he made, I thought, Wow, that was so Red-like. And then, much, much later I thought: OOOOOOOOOH, I smell what you’re cookin’ here.

But the story that Dom tells Liz doesn’t have the same awe-inducing effect. It’s certainly interesting! And she buys it hook, line, and sinker. But questions remain…

The story he tells her includes many of the details we already know: Katarina giving Masha to Mr. Kaplan to protect before she disappeared; Mr. Kaplan giving Masha to Sam; before any of that, Masha shooing her father, Reddington, and Katarina removing his body from the fire, the bones from which would eventually dominate season 5. The detail that’s brand new to all of this is Ilya. He is Katarina’s oldest friend, and clearly in love with her, though seemingly content with it being unrequited, as long as he can make sure she’s safe.

Ilya was apparently also there when the house burned down, the night Raymond Reddington died. “We did everything we could, we got him out,” Ilya says as he takes Katarina’s photo for a new passport. Presumably his embassy connections are what give him the connections to be able to turn Katarina Rostova into Anna Croft, and his love for her is what makes him liquidate all of his assets to help get her parents out of Russia. It’s an emotional exchange between Katarina and her mother, but she goes along with the startling information that she’ll now have to live out her days in the United States, under a new identity, without any communication with her daughter or granddaughter…

Dom is a different story. As a reminder, he was also a Russian agent, and his daughter Katarina was his protégé, so he took the news that she was a traitor to he country especially hard. But when she shows up at his door, with Ilya waiting in the car, it is not all relieved hugs and rejoicing that she’s alive. As is Blacklist father/daughter tradition—it’s a little more complicated than that.

Especially once Velov’s men show up at young Dom’s door! For a moment it seems like he is about to give his daughter up, but no—he tells them that he’s meeting her at the airport and he can take them to her. But the men muscle their way inside, and it comes down to a fight with them on once side and Katarina and Dom on the other. And two men get them cornered, until Ilya shows up, swiftly shooting the remaining threats. They give Dom his passport and part ways, with him promising that he’ll get rid of the bodies and get himself to the United States. Which we know he did…

This is where things get a little more “inspired by a true story” than “based on a true story.” Dom tells Liz that from there Ilya and Katarina went to a hotel where Katarina called Masha at Sam’s and told her, “Whatever happens, mama will always love you.” Katarina fears for her daughter; she fears for what the cabal will do to Reddington’s reputation; she fears for Velov coming after her parents and Ilya. She is not in a good place.

When Ilya wakes with a start that night, he goes into her room to find it destroyed, and finds Katarina on the edge of the balcony, prepared to jump. He yells that he has a way to get her life back, and to get his life back too, which is what she seems to worry about most. And that’s when he presents his plan:
The world doesn’t know what happened to Raymond Reddinton…so we give them an answer.”

As we know from the trial, Raymond Reddington had access to millions and millions of dollars in accounts that were ultimately drained shortly after his initial appearance. That’s because when he emerged a year after the fire, Raymond Reddington was in fact Ilya Koslov, disguised as Raymond Reddington by Dr. Hans Koehler, and fed all the information he could possibly need to know about Raymond Reddington by his former spy-lover, Katarina Rostova.

Ilya becomes Raymond Reddington, and the sliver of Mann’s face we get to see as he walks into the bank to being draining the accounts is so deliciously Spader. Ilya does it all to protect Katarina, the girl—and now woman—he pledged his life to all those years ago. And she asks one more thing of him before heading into an unknown future: “If they get to me, if they take me…take care of Masha.”

“Like she was my own,” Ilya—Raymond—replies.

Dom and Liz arrive at the postal store where he tells her that Katarina gave both he and her mother a key to a P.O. Box inside. “She told us when she resurfaced, she would make contact with us.” He checks it every week, but for 28 years, he’s never heard a thing, until her mother sent that letter to Katarina on her deathbed. Liz thanks Dom for telling her the story, saying, “You and my daughter, you’re the only family I have.” He asks to meet her daughter, and she says yes…

A meeting I would love to see because I just thought we were pretending Agnes didn’t exist at this point. But the next scene we see is Liz showing up in Hong Kong to joyfully tell Red that she knows the truth now: “I know you were Ilya, and the incredible thing you did to protect my mother—to protect me.”

And Red’s response to finally being hailed a hero by the most beloved person in his life? “Who told you this?” She tells him she knows about Dom now too, and she knows he did it all to access Reddington’s accounts, and she knows that it worked, but she still has just one singular questions she’s unsure about: “You became Raymond Reddington, but then you stayed Raymond Reddington—and I don’t understand why?”

“I am what I am,” Red replies humorlously. “Popeye the Sailor Man.”

The episodes ends with Red showing up on Dom’s doorstep, a very popular place right now, demanding to know what he told Elizabeth. Dom tells Red that he should just thank him, and put all of this behind him for good. “Is that what you think you did?” Red spits. “Because I think you may have made things worse. So from the start: what did tell her word for word?”

A FEW LOOSE ENDS

THEY’RE ALL LOOSE ENDS!!!! So how about a few quick Q’s to get you rolling on what I’m confident will be a much considered analyzation in the comments:

Sure, that’s a great plan to hide Ilya in plain sight, but uh…what part of that plan was for Katarina? Just the money?

So what are we to make of “Cape May,” the episode that was very much a precursor to “Rassvet” and featured the current Raymond Reddington having an extended flashback that presumably only the real Raymond REddington—or, ahem, Katarina Rostova—would have been privy to?

Did Liz really not notice Red going full <BlinkingMan.gif> when she told him the story that Dom told her? I need answers people! Word. For. Word. Answers!

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Continue reading…

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