Kamis, 04 Juli 2019

Netflix's Stranger Things: Season 3 Review - IGN

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Stranger Things Season 3 is the series' best offering (so far).

The following contains SPOILERS for all of Stranger Things Season 3 on Netflix. Below, you can also find links to all the individual episode reviews for Season 3, for those who'd like a more focused take on a specific chapter, followed by our full (mostly spoiler-free) Season 3 review.

In the same vein as Game of Thrones, the adolescent cast members of Stranger Things have undergone a striking transformation over the years - both physically and as people. Season 3 effectively highlights the profound changes affecting the kids of Hawkins as they prepare for high school, while also trying to figure out how to grow up without growing apart. Series creators the Duffer brothers succeed in this particular narrative quest, by delivering a darker, scarier, and more action-packed season that surpasses its predecessors.

There's a lot to like about Season 3, but it all starts with the younger characters, who, after seemingly closing the portal to the Upside Down last year, are endeavoring to just be kids during the summer of 1985. Mike (Finn Wolfhard) and Eleven's (Millie Bobby Brown) constant make-out sessions are getting in the way of Will's (Noah Schnapp) yearning to play Dungeons & Dragons with the boys, while Dustin's (Gaten Matarazzo) return home from a month-long summer camp doesn't produce the happy reunion he was expecting. And while it's heartbreaking to see hormones getting in the way of established friendships, the group's division leads to a few exciting team-ups.

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Dustin and Steve (Joe Keery) are the ultimate comedic pairing in Season 3, with their evolving bromance leading to some emotionally stirring scenes. Both young men are struggling to come to grips with their respective new circumstances: Steve not getting into college and being forced to work at the local ice cream shop, and Dustin's friends not taking an interest in any of his new inventions. Throughout the season, Steve and Dustin's mentor/mentee dynamic is both charming and hilarious.

Joining the dynamic duo is newcomer Robin (played by Maya Hawke), who works with Steve at Scoops Ahoy. Like Dustin, Robin is another mentor for Steve "The Hair" Harrington, challenging the former high school heartthrob in unexpected ways. Hawke blends into the growing ensemble nicely, making it easy to forget that she's brand new.

Without getting into specifics, we can tell you that the Upside Down, the Mind Flayer, and its minions are alive and well, producing some terrifying new creatures and thrilling action sequences later in the season. The new monsters are unlike anything we've ever seen before, and you can tell that Netflix spared no expense in bringing them to life. The season finale, titled "The Battle of Starcourt," is an 80-minute supernatural roller coaster of suspense with movie-size production values. And we're happy to report that all eight episodes are essential viewing, without any of the "Netflix bloat" we've grown accustomed to.

On the adult side of things, Police Chief Hopper (David Harbour) and Joyce Byers (Winona Ryder) are going through their own significant character metamorphoses. Joyce is still struggling to get over the death of her beloved Bob Newby back in Season 2. Ryder's heartfelt performance is elevated by the Duffers' creative choices behind the camera, using flashbacks and violent imagery to accentuate Joyce's fractured state of mind.

For Hopper, he's going through the school of parenting hard knocks with his adopted daughter, Eleven. Harbour is incredible in his portrayal of an over-protective dad who's having difficulty accepting that his child is growing up. Together, Hopper and Joyce are an entertaining pair to follow, and their "will they/won't they" chemistry is delightful.

Apart from the supernatural creatures from the Upside Down, Stranger Things Season 3 also boasts a badass human villain named Grigori (Andrey Ivchenko), who eerily resembles Arnold Schwarzenegger from the first Terminator film. Grigori doesn't say much, but his threatening looks and '80s haircut speak louder than words. The mysterious Russian agent has some memorable fist-throwing encounters with Hopper, which are a nice change of pace from battling slimy monsters.

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Genre favorite Cary Elwes, who plays Hawkins' smarmy Mayor Larry Kline, is, unfortunately, one of the more forgettable additions to Season 3. Elwes plays his part as the villain well, but there's no nuance to his character - he's exactly who you presume him to be, which is a shame since Elwes is such a capable actor.

Stranger Things continues to grow in terms of its cast and the scope of its story, so it's understandable that not every character will get the attention they deserve... But it's still noticeable. Jonathan Byers (Charlie Heaton) and Nancy Wheeler (Natalia Dyer) fall into this particular category, with their respective storylines feeling inconsequential compared to the rest of the Hawkins gang. Even though Nancy and Jonathan are involved with the main plot, if you took them out of the equation, the season wouldn't suffer. Hopefully, the two aspiring reporters will have more to do in Season 4. Time will tell.

The Verdict

Netflix's Stranger Things Season 3 is the series' best outing so far, with bigger stakes and stronger character development than its previous two iterations. As the kids mature, so do their respective stories and the young actors continue to deliver the goods.

Newcomer Maya Hawke is an outstanding addition to the already stacked ensemble, with David Harbour's Hopper and Winona Ryder's Joyce adding a nice bit of emotional depth with their compelling storyline. The production value has also been given a boost, making this Season 3 feel more like something you might see in a movie theater.

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https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/07/04/netflixs-stranger-things-season-3-review

2019-07-04 07:06:28Z
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Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner Share Sweet First Photo of Their Wedding Day — See Her Fairytale Dress! - PEOPLE.com

| PEOPLE.com

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https://people.com/music/joe-jonas-sophie-turner-share-photo-wedding-day-see-her-dress/

2019-07-04 04:55:00Z
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Rabu, 03 Juli 2019

Disney’s Live-Action ‘Little Mermaid’ Casts Halle Bailey as Ariel - Variety

Chloe x Halle member Halle Bailey is ready to become part of Disney’s world.

The R&B singer has been tapped to play Ariel in Disney’s next live-action adaptation of “The Little Mermaid.” Although director Rob Marshall has spent the last couple of months meeting with talent, insiders say Bailey has been a clear front runner from the beginning.

“After an extensive search, it was abundantly clear that Halle possesses that rare combination of spirit, heart, youth, innocence, and substance — plus a glorious singing voice — all intrinsic qualities necessary to play this iconic role,” Marshall said in a statement.

Bailey is joining a cast that includes Jacob Tremblay and Awkwafina, while Melissa McCarthy is in talks to play Ursula.

“The Little Mermaid” will incorporate original songs from the 1989 animated hit as well as new tunes from original composer Alan Menken and “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda. Miranda is also producing the film along with Marshall, Marc Platt and John DeLuca.

David Magee wrote the script with Jane Goldman writing a previous draft. Jessica Virtue and Allison Erlikhman are overseeing for the studio.

The original 1989 animated hit followed the mermaid princess Ariel as she sought to fall in love with a human prince on land. Menken wrote the film’s original music, including the songs “Under the Sea,” “Part of Your World” and “Kiss the Girl.”

The role marks Bailey’s feature film debut, following the formation of her music group Chloe x Halle with her sister Chloe in 2015. The pair first rose to fame by posting YouTube covers of Beyoncé before they were eventually discovered by the R&B superstar and her record label. Since their discovery, the duo has signed a record deal with Parkwood Entertainment and has opened for Beyoncé on her “Lemonade” tour.

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https://variety.com/2019/film/news/little-mermaid-halle-bailey-chloe-x-halle-1203234294/

2019-07-03 19:25:00Z
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'Spider-Man' end credits suggest a cosmic Marvel future really far from home - CNN

The answer may just be really, really far from home. Cosmically far.
(Spoilers will spoil from this point forward -- venture forth at your viewing peril if you haven't seen the film, or several other recent Marvel movies.)
Given that it was the introductory appearance of Samuel L. Jackson as Col. Nick Fury in the then-groundbreaking tag scene of the first "Iron Man" film in 2008 that presaged the emergence of a greater shared universe and the notion of a superhero team in the form of the Avengers, "Far From Home's" end sequence puts Fury to clever use once more as the MCU prepares to enter what Marvel Studios refers to off-screen as Phase Four.
The sequence kicks off with the reveal that the veteran S.H.E.I.L.D. leader and his stalwart lieutenant Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders), who've shepherded Spider-Man (Tom Holland) into superheroic service throughout the film, are in fact a pair of disguised Skrulls, the shapeshifting alien race first encountered on screen in "Captain Marvel" earlier this year.
In fact, audiences met these particular Skrulls before in that film's '90s-era setting: Talos {Ben Mendelsohn), who first appeared to be an antagonist to Carol Danvers (Brie Larson) and a young Fury but later proved to simply be trying to rescue a long-stranded group of his people, including his wife and daughter, from the nefarious Kree, another alien race with its eye on Earth). He's taken on Fury's form, while his wife Soren (Sharon Blynn) has assumed Hill's identity.
Not only does this come as a welcome relief to audience members who'd noticed Fury and Hill acting a little out of character (including being taken in by Jake Gyllenhaal's Mysterio) and over-the-top throughout the film, it provides a neat entry into the next intriguing setup: Talos, whom we last saw on good terms with Fury twenty-some years earlier, has been pressed into service by the ever-vigilant, always-working-every-angle superspy, while Fury is...doing what, exactly?
That's the big question: when Talos reaches out to fill Fury in on the events we've just witnessed, and Fury is at first apparently sipping a tropical drink on a sun-soaked beach somewhere, seemingly indulging in a getaway after the harrowing conclusion of "Endgame" (not to mention being Thanos-dusted and dead for five years). But we quickly discover Fury's only indulging in a simulation of Hawaiian holiday, thanks to some super-high-tech trickery, and is actually aboard an eye-popping spacecraft of some sort. We should've known Nick Fury never gets vacation days.
Tom Holland as Peter Parker in 'Spider-Man: Far From Home'

S.W.O.R.D.

For those familiar with the comic book equivalent of the Marvel Universe, this suggests that another top secret organization is about to make its debut: S.W.O.R.D., which stands for Sentient World Observation and Response Department. It's basically S.H.I.E.L.D. in space -- a peacekeeping force designed to protect the planet from the increasing intergalactic attention it's been getting of late, akin to Tony Stark's vision of a suit of armor surrounding the Earth.
S.W.O.R.D was co-created by none other than Joss Whedon, during a stint on an X-Men comic back in 2004. Whedon also introduced its snarky, resourceful, green-haired director Abigail Brand, a plumb role for any actress not already in the MCU's orbit.
After the Kree-Skrull conflicts and serving as a battleground in Thanos' Infinity War, Fury has clear reason to be concerned that Earth may be about be caught in some very dangerous cosmic crosshairs -- which may serve as the same kind of interconnective story tissue among the MCU's upcoming films as the Infinity Stones did in Phases Two and Three.
The universe is certainly expanding, now that Thor's off adventuring in the cosmos, the Guardians of the Galaxy continue to establish new frontiers in space (including opening the door to Marvel's spacefaring cult favorite Warlock, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and given definition by Thanos' creator Jim Starlin), and there's still some two decades of Captain Marvel's galactic crusade against the Kree to catch up on.
The Skrulls open up potentially juicy plot springboards as well: 2008's "Secret Invasion" proved to be one of the comic books' most potent storylines, with the many longtime characters revealed to be Skrull sleeper agents in disguise, sparking a massive global conflict -- although Marvel has already gone down a similar road with the use of the terrorist organization Hydra.
There's also the legendary "Kree-Skrull War" from 1971, one of the comics' first far-reaching crossover tales with the Avengers at its center, in which the two races engage in all-out combat. And there's a well-remembered sequence from 1983 in which the gargantuan planet-eating being Galactus -- who's become a popular figure of speculation as Phase Four's ultimate Big Bad, in the vein of Thanos -- devoured the Skrull homeworld. That could provide a great entry point for the most cosmic Lee-Kirby creation of all, Galactus' noble herald The Silver Surfer, whose film rights are now back in the hands of Marvel Studios following Disney's acquisition of previous right holder 20th Century Fox.
Perhaps most intriguingly of all, the Skrulls could possibly open the door for the MCU introduction of another of Marvel Comics' crown jewels, the Fantastic Four, also recently returned to the studio in the Fox deal. The changelings first debuted back in 1961, at the very dawn of the Marvel Universe, in Fantastic Four #2, where the superhero team defeated them by hypnotizing them into believing they actually were dairy cows, whose bovine shapes they'd assumed.
Hey, Marvel made a talking racoon and a sentient tree work on screen, so who knows what else the studio can make us believe?

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/03/entertainment/spider-man-end-credits/index.html

2019-07-03 16:40:00Z
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How Many "Stranger Things" Characters Can You Actually Name? - BuzzFeed

How well do you know the characters in Stranger Things? Test your knowledge by naming as many as fast as you can in three minutes! Good luck!

Netflix

FYI: No-name characters (like "agent") and pets (sorry, Mews!) are not included. But we are covering characters from Season 1 and Season 2, so the more you remember...the better you'll do!

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https://www.buzzfeed.com/crystalro/stranger-things-characters-names

2019-07-03 14:46:00Z
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Taylor Swift 'ghosts' Scooter Braun, disagrees with Scott Borchetta on offers to buy back her masters: reports - Fox News

An attorney for Taylor Swift disputed reports that she had offers to buy back her masters from Big Machine founder Scott Borchetta.

“Scott Borchetta never gave Taylor Swift an opportunity to purchase her masters, or the label, outright with a check in the way he is now apparently doing for others,” Swift's lawyer, Donald Passman, told Page Six Tuesday.

On Sunday night, Swift, 29, posted a blistering blog slamming Borchetta for selling Big Machine, along with all six of her past albums' worth of masters, to Scooter Braun, whom she accused of "manipulative bullying" through his associations with former client Kanye West and West's wife, Kim Kardashian, who infamously recorded Swift and West's "snippet" of a phone call in which she appeared to give her blessing to the lyrics to his song "Famous."

TAYLOR SWIFT'S FEUD WITH SCOOTER BRAUN: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE BIG MACHINE RECORDS DEAL

"For years I asked, pleaded for a chance to own my work. Instead, I was given an opportunity to sign back up to Big Machine Records and ‘earn’ one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in," Swift wrote. "I walked away because I knew once I signed that contract, Scott Borchetta would sell the label, thereby selling me and my future. I had to make the excruciating choice to leave behind my past. Music I wrote on my bedroom floor and videos I dreamed up and paid for from the money I earned playing in bars, then clubs, then arenas, then stadiums."

TAYLOR SWIFT SLAMS KANYE WEST'S FORMER MANAGER SCOOTER BRAUN FOR 'MANIPULATIVE BULLYING,' BUYING HER MASTERS

Taylor Swift and Big Machine Label Group President and CEO Scott Borchetta attend the 49th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 6, 2014 in Las Vegas. Swift slammed Borchetta for selling the Big Machine record label to Scooter Braun, who used to represent her nemesis, Kanye West.

Taylor Swift and Big Machine Label Group President and CEO Scott Borchetta attend the 49th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on April 6, 2014 in Las Vegas. Swift slammed Borchetta for selling the Big Machine record label to Scooter Braun, who used to represent her nemesis, Kanye West. (Getty)

A LONG, DRAWN OUT HISTORY OF TAYLOR SWIFT'S FEUDS

She added, "Never in my worst nightmares did I imagine the buyer would be Scooter. Any time Scott Borchetta has heard the words 'Scooter Braun' escape my lips, it was when I was either crying or trying not to. He knew what he was doing; they both did. Controlling a woman who didn't want to be associated with them. In perpetuity. That means forever."

Swift also alleged that Borchetta never informed her of the deal and that she learned about it from the press.

Borchetta vehemently denied Swift's claims, writing on the Big Machine website that he and Swift "were working together on a new type of deal for our new streaming world" that wasn't determined by a number of albums, but a "length of time."

KIM KARDASHIAN RILES TAYLOR SWIFT FANS BY POSTING 'FAMOUS' VIDEO ARTWORK

He also included a text he claims to have sent the singer the night before The Wall Street Journal published the first story about the new Big Machine deal. Swift's rep denied that she saw the text before the story went live.

TAYLOR SWIFT'S TRANSFORMATION FROM COUNTRY SINGER TO POLITICAL ADVOCATE

Borchetta also published a portion of terms negotiated for her to purchase her masters, which she reportedly declined. "Taylor had every chance in the world to own not just her master recordings, but every video, photograph, everything associated to her career," he wrote. "She chose to leave." Sources told Variety that there were at least two offers to sell Swift her masters and that she declined both.

BIG MACHINE BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEMBER ACCUSES TAYLOR SWIFT OF BULLYING, TRYING TO 'REWRITE HISTORY'

Borchetta said he and Swift were on good terms when she informed him she wanted to explore opportunities at other labels. She signed with Republic Records, a subsidiary of Universal Music Group, in November 2018; Borchetta alleged that Swift texted him, rather amicably, minutes before her new deal went public.

TAYLOR SWIFT SAYS NEW ALBUM WILL HAVE 'POLITICAL UNDERTONES'

Braun, meanwhile, has yet to publicly comment on any of Swift's allegations, though his wife and some of his clients, including Demi Lovato and Justin Bieber, have defended him through social media. Sources told Page Six that the SchoolBoy Records founder attempted to reach out to Swift privately through mutual friends in hopes of a "mature conversation," but was "ghosted" by the "ME!" singer.

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Reps for Swift and Braun did not return Fox News' requests for comment.

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https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/taylor-swift-scooter-braun-scott-borchetta-masters-ghosted

2019-07-03 14:44:20Z
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"He's a lovely soul!" Jake Gyllenhaal on his Tom Holland bromance in Spider-Man: Far From Home. - BBC Radio 1

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DuCwOWDgIzY

2019-07-03 12:12:03Z
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