Sabtu, 08 Februari 2020

Was that a real hyena in 'Birds of Prey'? Margot Robbie spills Harley Quinn's secrets - USA TODAY

If you’re Gotham City hellraiser Harley Quinn, a dog is not your best friend.

A hyena is.

In “Birds of Prey,” Margot Robbie’s anti-heroine introduces us to her pet hyena, Bruce (a subtle nod to fellow Gotham resident Bruce Wayne), who acts like a razor-toothed puppy and eats Twizzlers a la "Lady and the Tramp." After adding Bruce the Hyena to the script, Robbie and screenwriter Christina Hodson realized they needed to find such a friendly hyena.

And, you know, there aren’t many. 

“We thought it would be hilarious to have one of Harley’s hyenas in the film,” Robbie says, recalling their quest during preproduction. “Suddenly, everyone was like, 'What do we do? We can’t just have a hyena?!’ ”

Go on the set of 'Birds of Prey': Margot Robbie juggled jobs, migraines and the Joker

The group trekked out to meet a film-friendly hyena named Fonzi, but it was not meant to be. “We went to go visit him, but quickly learned that it was going to be near impossible to shoot with him the amount we needed,” Robbie says. “He was obviously very dangerous, and anything you gave him was his.” (In other words, it soon became shredded)

Director Cathy Yan says, “It didn’t make sense to have a real hyena on set and have Margot feed it Twizzlers." 

But they didn’t want to rely on a fully computer-generated creature. The fix? Bruce was actually “two really lovely German shepherds,” Hodson says, then special effects took over.

Her hyena may be Hollywood trickery, but that really was Robbie doing a ton of stunts on roller skates.

“I do a lot of roller skating,” Robbie says. “I think everyone just assumed I’d be brilliant at it because I’d done ‘I, Tonya,’ " in which she played controversial figure skater Tonya Harding. "And it helped a lot, but it still is different. Making contact with other human bodies whilst on wheels proved to be more difficult than I anticipated.”

Remember the “Birds of Prey” fight scene that took place on a rotating carousel (with Robbie on skates)? It was no laughing matter.

“That was a really difficult day,” Yan says. “We’d have to do these long takes, and if we had one (actor) mess up, we’d have to start over. The women had to do the choreography over and over again to get it right. I was probably the most hated person after those two days." 

It even wiped out the eternally jovial Robbie. "I remember asking Margot to do one more take, and she looked over me like, ‘Are you sure?’ ” Yan says. 

"It was a tiny platform with a ton of bodies moving around," Robbie recalls, noting the carefully timed carousel scene was even tougher than one that had her chasing a runaway car on roller skates. 

Hodson says, “I’ve never ever seen Margot that tired before.”

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2020-02-08 16:30:39Z
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Orson Bean Dead: 'Dr. Quinn' Actor Was 91 - Hollywood Reporter

He was a standout on Broadway, played Mr. Bevis on 'The Twilight Zone' and was related to Calvin Coolidge and Andrew Breitbart.

Orson Bean, the witty New Englander who starred on Broadway, was a longtime panelist on To Tell the Truth and played the dour owner of the general store on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, died Friday night after being hit and killed by a car in Venice, authorities said. He was 91. 

The Los Angeles County coroner's office confirmed Bean's death to the Associated Press, saying it was being investigated as a "traffic-related" fatality. It provided the location where Bean was found, which matched reports from local news outlets.

L.A. police told The Hollywood Reporter a pedestrian in his 90s was walking eastbound in the area of Venice Boulevard and Shell Avenue at 7:35 p.m. when he was hit by a vehicle.

A second driver then struck him in what police say was the fatal collision, and both drivers remained on the scene, L.A. Police Department Capt. Brian Wendling initially told local stations, which identified Bean based on eyewitness accounts.

Survivors include his wife, actress Alley Mills, best known for playing the mother Norma Arnold on The Wonder Years and the dutiful Pamela Douglas on The Bold & the Beautiful. The two also starred together in a play that opened in Venice in January 2018.

A second cousin of President Calvin Coolidge, Bean also was the father-in-law of Andrew Breitbart, the late conservative commentator.

Bean starred with Jayne Mansfield and Walter Matthau as a magazine writer who makes a deal with the devil in the original 1955 Broadway production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? and he earned a Tony nomination for his playing another writer in the 1962 risque musical comedy Subways Are for Sleeping.

The slender actor also starred on the memorable 1960 Twilight Zone episode "Mr. Bevis," playing an eccentric loser who meets his guardian angel and has a chance to turn his life around.

Although his energies were usually directed toward comedies and musicals, Bean delivered a strong turn as an Army doctor testifying in court in Otto Preminger's Anatomy of a Murder (1959). In Being John Malkovich (1999), he portrayed a 105-year-old man who had the power to get into another person's body, and he was a Holocaust survivor in The Equalizer 2 (2018).

Starting in the early 1960s and throughout the '70s, Bean charmed TV viewers on To Tell the Truth, the game show from Goodson-Todman Productions that was hosted by Bud Collyer and then Garry Moore. Bean often shared the panel with Kitty Carlyle, Peggy Cass and, at other times, Bill Cullen or Tom Poston.

He also appeared on I've Got a Secret, Match Game and Password, What's My Line and The $10,000 Pyramid.

For six seasons, Bean played the crotchety Loren Bray on 146 episodes of the 1993-98 CBS drama Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. He later portrayed Roy Bender, the love interest of Karen McCluskey (Kathryn Joosten), on ABC's Desperate Housewives.

A frequent guest on The Tonight Show who often subbed for Jack Paar, Bean was on the program on Feb. 11, 1960, when the host — angry that NBC had censored one of his jokes the previous night — walked off the set in the middle of his monologue.

"He surprised everyone," Bean recalled in a 2014 interview. "Hugh Downs was the sidekick and took over. Paar said he was never coming back. I kind of expected that I would replace Paar because I was a regular substitute. I stuck up for Paar. I had heard there was a suit who was really pissed off at me for badmouthing NBC, so I was taken out of the running." (Paar returned to The Tonight Show about three weeks later.)

Bean's career took a hit in the '50s when he was identified as a communist and blacklisted. He said he drew attention to himself because he was "horny for a communist girl, and she dragged me to a couple of meetings."

Bean was born Dallas Frederick Burroughs in Burlington, Vermont, on July 22, 1928, as Coolidge was in the White House as the 30th president. When Bean was 16, his mother committed suicide.

He served in the U.S. Army, then embarked on a career in show business.

Bean did sleight-of-hand magic tricks and told jokes in two-bit nightclubs in places like Fall River, Massachusetts, and Albany, New York, before landing a two-year contract in the early 1950s to perform at the famed Blue Angel nightclub in New York. (That proved to be a huge career boost, and at one time, he was on a bill with Nichols & May, Harry Belafonte and Eartha Kitt.)

In a 2014 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, he explained how he came upon his stage name.

"One night in a club in Boston, I tried the name Roger Duck. No laughs. The next night, I tried Orson Bean, putting together a pompous first name and a silly second name. I got laughs, so I decided to keep it," he said.

"Orson Welles himself came into the Blue Angel one night, summoned me to his table. I sat down. He looked at me for a moment and then said, 'You stole my name!' And he meant it. Then he dismissed me with a wave of his hand."

In 1954, Bean parlayed his act into hosting a summer-replacement series that emanated from the Blue Angel, and he won a Theatre World Award for his performance in the revue John Murray Anderson's Almanac.

Bean was one of Ed Sullivan's favorites and appeared on his variety show several times before he was blacklisted. However, actors tarred by the scandal were able to work on Broadway, and he rode things out thanks to his yearlong stint on Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?

Bean later played the ineffectual Reverend Brim on the syndicated soap-opera satire Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman and a spinoff, Forever Fernwood; voiced Bilbo Gaggins on two animated telefilms in the '70s; and portrayed John Goodman's father on the short-lived Fox series Normal, Ohio.

He also had guest stints on such shows as Robert Montgomery Presents, The Love Boat, The Fall Guy, The Facts of Life, Ellen, Ally McBeal, Will & Grace and Modern Family, and he was seen on the big screen in How to Be Very, Very Popular (1955), Richard Donner's Lola (1970), Forty Deuce (1982) and Innerspace (1987).

Bean wrote a quirky 1971 book, Me and the Orgone: The True Story of One Man's Sexual Awakening, and a memoir, 1988's Too Much Is Not Enough.

In 1964, Bean, actor Chuck McCann and others founded The Sons of the Desert, a group devoted to "the loving study of the persons and films" of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.

Bean also was married to actress Rain Winslow from 1956-62 and to fashion designer Carolyn Maxwell from 1965-79. He and Maxwell spent several years living in Australia. He married Mills in 1993.

His daughter Susannah, one of his four children, was married to Breitbart.

Sharareh Drury contributed to this report.

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2020-02-08 15:33:01Z
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Are Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer Back Together? 2020 Is the Year of the Exes for 'Friends' Star - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Jennifer Aniston’s name has made headlines a lot in 2020. Whether it’s for winning her first SAG award in over 20 years or that epic run-in with ex-husband, Brad Pitt, it’s her time to shine. Now, the Morning Show star was recently spotted leaving a restaurant within moments of another ex, John Mayer. Are the two rekindling an old flame?

Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer dated in 2008

Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer
Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer arrives at the 2009 Vanity Fair Oscar Party | FilmMagic Inc/FilmMagic

At first glimpse, Jennifer Aniston and John Mayer’s relationship didn’t make a lot of sense. With an eight-year age-gap and Mayer’s playboy reputation, no one could’ve foreseen the two ending up together.

Neither cared what anyone else thought, which is a great reminder of how private relationships truly are — even for celebrity couples. Aniston and Mayer only dated for about six months and later reconnected to try again.

The couple ultimately went their separate ways but remained friendly through the years with neither badmouthing the other. Aniston went on to date, and eventually marry, actor, Justin Theroux. That relationship ended in 2017 but they, too, have also stayed friends.

Mayer ended up with a slew of other celebrities such as Taylor Swift, Cameron Diaz, and, of course, Katy Perry, with whom he dated on and off for four years.

Ironically, Mayer told Ellen Degeneres in 2009, he’s leery of relationships.

“I don’t know if you know this, I have sort of a funny track record,” he said. “I’m a little freaked out right now about it, to be honest.”

Are Aniston and Mayer getting back together?

According to Page Six, and a number of other outlets, Aniston and Mayer “shared dessert at the starry Sunset Tower Hotel ahead of the Oscars.”

Aniston and Mayer weren’t alone, though. Aniston’s friend and co-producer of The Morning Show, Amanda Anka, as well as Bravo host, Andy Cohen, also joined the pair.

John Mayer and Andy had dinner at the San Vicente Bungalows earlier on Thursday, then headed to the Sunset Tower for dessert with Jennifer,” the source told Page Six. “It wasn’t a romantic meeting, they are good friends, the four of them had dessert.”

The two left moments apart from one another after the group discussed plans for Aniston’s 51st birthday, according to the source. While meeting up for dessert can be a romance-rekindling scenario, this appears to be two old friends catching up.

2020 is Aniston’s ‘year of the exes’

The nation was captivated when Aniston and ex-husband, Pitt, reunited backstage at the SAG awards. Those candid shots — that really only lasted a few brief moments — reignited fans’ hopes for reconciliation.

15 years since Aniston and Pitt dissolved their marriage, the red carpet run-in may not mean the two will end up together. However, that, plus news of the meetup with Mayer, prove 2020 is Aniston’s year for success in her career and reminding all the exes what they’re missing out on. #goals

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2020-02-08 16:21:35Z
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Orson Bean, longtime actor and comedian, hit and killed by car in Los Angeles - CBS News

Orson Bean, the witty actor and comedian, was hit and killed by a car in Los Angeles, authorities said. He was 91.

The Los Angeles County Coroner's office confirmed Bean's Friday night death, saying it was being investigated as a "traffic-related" fatality. The coroner's office provided the location where Bean was found, which matched reports from CBS Los Angeles.

Orson Bean
Orson Bean attends the LA Premiere of "The Equalizer 2" at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Tuesday, July 17, 2018, in Los Angeles.  Richard Shotwell via AP

A man was walking in the Venice neighborhood when he was clipped by a vehicle and fell, Los Angeles Police Department Capt. Brian Wendlinginitially told local stations. A second driver then struck him in what police say was the fatal collision. Both drivers remained on the scene. Police were investigating and didn't identify the pedestrian to local outlets, which named Bean based on eyewitness accounts.

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Bean enlivened such TV game shows as "To Tell the Truth" and played a crotchety merchant on "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman."

He appeared in a number of films - notably, "Anatomy of a Murder" and "Being John Malkovich" - and starred in several top Broadway productions, receiving a Tony nod for the 1962 Comden-Green musical "Subways Are for Sleeping." But fans remembered him most for his many TV appearances from the 1950s onward.

Orson Bean and Dina Merrill
Orson Bean and Dina Merrill, actress, gag it up for photographer during luncheon at the Four Seasons restaurant in New York on March 12, 1964, for veteran actress Edith Evans. David Pickoff / AP

"Mr. Bean's face comes wrapped with a sly grin, somewhat like the expression of a child when sneaking his hand into the cookie jar," The New York Times noted in a review of his 1954 variety show, "The Blue Angel." It said he showed "a quality of being likable even when his jokes fall flat."

Born in Burlington, Vermont, in 1928 as Dallas Frederick Burrows,  he never lost the Yankee accent that proved a perfect complement to the dry, laconic storytelling that established him as popular humorist. He had picked the stage name Orson Bean "because it sounded funny."

His father, George, was a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union and Bean recalled later that his "house was filled with causes." But he left home at 16 after his mother died by suicide.

In a 1983 New York Times interview, he recalled his early career in small clubs where the show consisted of "me - master of ceremonies, comedian and magician - maybe a dog act, and a stripper." It was a piano player in one such club, he said, who suggested replacing Dallas Burrows with some funny name like "Roger Duck" - or Orson Bean.

Bean's quick wit and warm personality made him a favorite panelist for six years on "To Tell the Truth." The game required the panelists to quiz three contestants to figure out which one was a real notable and which two were impostors. The dramatic outcome inspired a national catchphrase as the host turned to the three and said: "Will the real (notable's name) please stand up?"

Bean's style appealed to both Jack Paar and Johnny Carson, and he appeared on "The Tonight Show" more than 200 times.

But his early career was hobbled for a time when he found himself on the Hollywood blacklist in the early years of the Cold War.

"Basically I was blacklisted because I had a cute communist girlfriend," he explained in a 2001 interview. "I stopped working on TV for a year."

The blacklist didn't stop him in the theater. Bean starred on Broadway as a timid fan magazine writer in George Axelrod's 1955 Hollywood spoof "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" alongside  Jayne Mansfield and Walter Matthau. He also starred on Broadway with Maureen O'Sullivan in "Never Too Late" and with Melina Mercouri in "Illya Darling," based on her hit film "Never on Sunday."

Daytime Emmy Awards Arrivals
Orson Bean and Alley Mills arrive at the Daytime Emmy Awards on Sunday Aug. 30, 2009, in Los Angeles. Matt Sayles / AP

Bean took a break from his career  for a time in the 1970s  when he dropped out and moved to Australia, where he lived a hippie lifestyle. But he returned to the U.S. and - after a period as a self-described "house-husband" - resumed his career.

"I got sick of contemplating my navel and staring up at the sky and telling myself how wonderful it was not to be doing anything," he explained in a 1983 interview with The New York Times.

In the 1990s, he played the shopkeeper Loren Bray on the long-running drama "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman." He remained active on the screen in recent years with guest shots in  such shows as "Desperate Housewives," "How I Met Your Mother" and "Modern Family."

Meanwhile, his politics turned more conservative. He became related to a leading right-wing commentator, Andrew Breitbart, when his daughter, Susannah, married him. Breitbart died in 2012 and Steve Bannon, later a top adviser to Donald Trump, took over Breitbart's eponymous website, for which Bean had penned occasional columns.

Bean wrote a memoir called "Too Much Is Not Enough" and a book about a non-traditional therapy called "Me and the Orgone."

He had already shown his interest in non-traditional thinking in 1964 when he bought a building in Manhattan and opened up a school based on the philosophy of Summerhill, the progressive British school founded by A.S. Neill.

"I said to myself, we have to start with the children. Why not start a school?" he told The New York Times.

That same year, he co-founded the Sons of the Desert, an organization dedicated to comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, with chapters around the world.

More recently, income from "Dr. Quinn" and other voice and acting work allowed Bean to finance the Pacific Resident Theater Ensemble in Venice, where he appeared with his third wife, actress Alley Mills.

He had a daughter, Michele, from his first marriage to Jacqueline de Sibour, and sons Max and Ezekiel and daughter Susannah from his marriage to Carolyn Maxwell.

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2020-02-08 12:03:00Z
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Actor-comedian Orson Bean, 91, hit and killed by car in LA - The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Orson Bean, the witty actor and comedian, was hit and killed by a car in Los Angeles, authorities said. He was 91.

The Los Angeles County coroner’s office confirmed Bean’s Friday night death, saying it was being investigated as a “traffic-related” fatality. The coroner’s office provided the location where Bean was found, which matched reports from local news outlets.

A man was walking in the Venice neighborhood when he was clipped by a vehicle and fell, Los Angeles Police Department Capt. Brian Wendling initially told local stations. A second driver then struck him in what police say was the fatal collision. Both drivers remained on the scene. Police were investigating and didn’t identify the pedestrian to local outlets, which named Bean based on eyewitness accounts.

Bean enlivened such TV game shows as “To Tell the Truth” and played a crotchety merchant on “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.”

He appeared in a number of films — notably, “Anatomy of a Murder” and “Being John Malkovich” — and starred in several top Broadway productions, receiving a Tony nod for the 1962 Comden-Green musical “Subways Are for Sleeping.” But fans remembered him most for his many TV appearances from the 1950s onward.

“Mr. Bean’s face comes wrapped with a sly grin, somewhat like the expression of a child when sneaking his hand into the cookie jar,” The New York Times noted in a review of his 1954 variety show, “The Blue Angel.” It said he showed “a quality of being likable even when his jokes fall flat.”

Born in Burlington, Vermont, in 1928 as Dallas Frederick Burrows, he never lost the Yankee accent that proved a perfect complement to the dry, laconic storytelling that established him as popular humorist. He had picked the stage name Orson Bean “because it sounded funny.”

His father, George, was a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union and Bean recalled later that his “house was filled with causes.” But he left home at 16 after his mother died by suicide.

In a 1983 New York Times interview, he recalled his early career in small clubs where the show consisted of “me — master of ceremonies, comedian and magician — maybe a dog act, and a stripper.” It was a piano player in one such club, he said, who suggested replacing Dallas Burrows with some funny name like “Roger Duck” — or Orson Bean.

Bean’s quick wit and warm personality made him a favorite panelist for six years on “To Tell the Truth.” The game required the panelists to quiz three contestants to figure out which one was a real notable and which two were impostors. The dramatic outcome inspired a national catchphrase as the host turned to the three and said: “Will the real (notable’s name) please stand up?”

Bean’s style appealed to both Jack Paar and Johnny Carson, and he appeared on “The Tonight Show” more than 200 times.

But his early career was hobbled for a time when he found himself on the Hollywood blacklist in the early years of the Cold War.

“Basically I was blacklisted because I had a cute communist girlfriend,” he explained in a 2001 interview. “I stopped working on TV for a year.”

The blacklist didn’t stop him in the theater. Bean starred on Broadway as a timid fan magazine writer in George Axelrod’s 1955 Hollywood spoof “Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?” alongside Jayne Mansfield and Walter Matthau. He also starred on Broadway with Maureen O’Sullivan in “Never Too Late” and with Melina Mercouri in “Illya Darling,” based on her hit film “Never on Sunday.”

Bean took a break from his career for a time in the 1970s when he dropped out and moved to Australia, where he lived a hippie lifestyle. But he returned to the U.S. and — after a period as a self-described “house-husband” — resumed his career.

“I got sick of contemplating my navel and staring up at the sky and telling myself how wonderful it was not to be doing anything,” he explained in a 1983 interview with The New York Times.

In the 1990s, he played the shopkeeper Loren Bray on the long-running drama “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.” He remained active on the screen in recent years with guest shots in such shows as “Desperate Housewives,” “How I Met Your Mother” and “Modern Family.”

Meanwhile, his politics turned more conservative. He became related to a leading right-wing commentator, Andrew Breitbart, when his daughter, Susannah, married him. Breitbart died in 2012 and Steve Bannon, later a top adviser to Donald Trump, took over Breitbart’s eponymous website, for which Bean had penned occasional columns.

Bean wrote a memoir called “Too Much Is Not Enough” and a book about a non-traditional therapy called “Me and the Orgone.”

He had already shown his interest in non-traditional thinking in 1964 when he bought a building in Manhattan and opened up a school based on the philosophy of Summerhill, the progressive British school founded by A.S. Neill.

“I said to myself, we have to start with the children. Why not start a school?” he told The New York Times.

That same year, he co-founded the Sons of the Desert, an organization dedicated to comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, with chapters around the world.

More recently, income from “Dr. Quinn” and other voice and acting work allowed Bean to finance the Pacific Resident Theater Ensemble in Venice, where he appeared with his third wife, actress Alley Mills.

He had a daughter, Michele, from his first marriage to Jacqueline de Sibour, and sons Max and Ezekiel and daughter Susannah from his marriage to Carolyn Maxwell.

___

Bob Thomas, a longtime and now deceased staffer of The Associated Press, was the principal writer of this obituary.

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2020-02-08 11:53:22Z
CAIiEF_N1NcfTpNUHLnyaZol9yQqFwgEKg8IACoHCAowhO7OATDh9CgwruxQ

Orson Bean, 91, actor and game-show panelist, struck and killed by vehicle in LA: reports - Fox News

Orson Bean, a veteran actor known in the 1950s and 1960s for appearances on “The Twilight Zone” and other shows, then later as a panelist on TV game shows such as “To Tell the Truth,” died Friday night in Los Angeles, according to reports. He was 91.

Bean was reportedly struck by a vehicle while crossing a street in the city’s beachfront neighborhood of Venice, FOX 11 of Los Angeles reported. He was pronounced dead at the scene, Officer Tony Im of the Los Angeles Police Department told the station.

KIRK DOUGLAS' SON MICHAEL RETURNS TO LATE DAD'S HOUSE AFTER ANNOUNCING HIS DEATH

Police were called to the scene about 7:35 p.m. local time, Im said.

Actor Orson Bean, who died Friday at age 91, is shown in an undated photo.

Actor Orson Bean, who died Friday at age 91, is shown in an undated photo.

KNBC-TV of Los Angeles reported that Bean had actually been hit by “multiple vehicles” while trying to cross Venice Boulevard.

People were seen consoling one another at the scene following the accident, the station reported, adding that a driver believed to have struck Bean attempted to aid the actor after he was hit.

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Bean continued working into his 80s, with guest roles on TV series such as “Hot in Cleveland” and “Modern Family.”

Survivors include his third wife, actress Alley Mills, who played the mother on the TV series “The Wonder Years,” FOX 11 reported.

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2020-02-08 08:56:55Z
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Jumat, 07 Februari 2020

Birds Of Prey Ending Explained -- What's Up With The Post-Credits Scene? - GameSpot

Post-credits scenes are a tradition for superhero movies at this point, and while it may be because of the MCU's example, the modern DCEU has reliably followed suit. Wonder Woman, Aquaman, and Shazam all teased upcoming movies with their after-credits scenes, so it's only natural to assume that Birds of Prey would include one as well. But, in typical Harley Quinn fashion, sometimes it's better to expect the unexpected. Let's take a look at the ending of Birds of Prey and break down exactly what happened after the credits finished rolling.

Obviously, massive spoilers from here on out. Please proceed with caution!

The final act of Birds of Prey see the members of the titular team coming together for the first time, mostly on accident. Harley, in a bid to save her own life, has arranged a meetup with Black Mask at the Booby Trap, an abandoned funhouse, to hand over Cassandra Cain, who swallowed the encoded Bertinelli diamond he's so desperate to own. If Harley hands her over, Black Mask will let her go--or, that's what he says, at least. The odds of her surviving the exchange, she soon realizes, are a lot lower than she'd like. Things get more complicated, however, when both Renee Montoya and Dinah Lance catch wind of the meeting and show up at the Booby Trap to arrest Black Mask and save Cass respectively. Dinah arrives with Roman's right-hand man, Victor Zsasz, in tow, which in turn leads the final piece of the puzzle to the funhouse--Huntress, who doesn't actually care about Harley, Cass, or Roman, but wants Zsasz dead for his involvement in her family's murder, shows up. Finally, all five protagonists are in the same place at the same time.

After dealing with Zsasz by shooting him in the neck with a crossbow and stabbing him over and over with a tranquilizer dart (which may or may not have actually killed him--although Huntress clearly thinks it did), the team realizes that their only real option is to work together to take Roman down. But Roman, who surrounded the Booby Trap with heavily armed henchmen, doesn't plan on making it easy. What ensues is a massive fight through the Booby Trap, ending in a car chase with Huntress driving a motorcycle, towing a roller skate-wearing Harley behind her. It's Cass who ultimately saves the day by planting a grenade on Roman and pulling the pin, causing him to explode into a million tiny chunks over Gotham harbor. Zsasz may have a chance at surviving, but Roman definitely does not.

With the dust settling, the women find themselves taking stock of their situation at a Mexican restaurant, day drinking and actually getting to know one another. But before anyone can become too buddy-buddy, both Harley and Cass make a break for it, sneaking out to drive off into the sunset and leaving Renee, Helena, and Dinah to figure out their next steps. The three of them, as Harley narrates, go on to become a vigilante team of their own--calling themselves the Birds of Prey--after Renee quits the force, Dinah gives up trying to stay on the sidelines, and Helena is satisfied with her quest for vengeance. Harley and Cass's ending is a bit more open, but it's heavily implied that Harley intends to take Cass under her wing as a sort of protege, at least for the time being. Of course, this may mean Cass will have some role in the upcoming James Gunn Suicide Squad reboot, but we can't be sure, especially given how fast-and-loose the DCEU tends to be with shared universe continuity.

As for a proper post-credits stinger? Birds of Prey offers only an audio gag and no real scene. If you sit through the credits, Harley breaks the fourth wall to speak over the final seconds, promising that she's going to share a super-secret detail about Batman. But she only gets as far as saying "Batman f--" before the screen and her audio are cut off completely. What does Batman "f---"? The world may never know.

Harley's next big-screen outing will be The Suicide Squad, due out August 6, 2021.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiYmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmdhbWVzcG90LmNvbS9hcnRpY2xlcy9iaXJkcy1vZi1wcmV5LWVuZGluZy1leHBsYWluZWQtd2hhdHMtdXAtd2l0aC10aGUtcC8xMTAwLTY0NzM0Njkv0gFmaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ2FtZXNwb3QuY29tL2FtcC1hcnRpY2xlcy9iaXJkcy1vZi1wcmV5LWVuZGluZy1leHBsYWluZWQtd2hhdHMtdXAtd2l0aC10aGUtcC8xMTAwLTY0NzM0Njkv?oc=5

2020-02-08 01:33:00Z
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