Fanboys Anonymous

Week in Geek #122: Jamie Foxx Returning as Electro and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Saturday, October 3, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap

Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

Lion King 2

The director of Moonlight is going to do a follow-up to The Lion King "live action" film with a prequel about Mufasa. Depending on what the story is, I might check it out. It could be great to see his rise to the throne or it could be a bland cash grab of sorts. I didn't think the remake had any of the magic of the original cartoon, which is one of my 3 favorite animated films of all time. Maybe this will be better, though.

Jamie Foxx Returning as Electro in Spider-Man 3???

Rumor has it, we're going to get a return of the Electro from The Amazing Spider-Man 2, but as part of the next MCU Spider-Man film. Are we flat out getting Doctor Strange's film opening up literally all sorts of options to the point where a Spider-Verse thing is legit happening?

I'm so skeptical of this. I don't even necessarily believe it, but even if I do, I don't want his Electro back. Foxx is great. Electro can be a fun character. I think there are a handful of elements of TASM2 that aren't awful (and I actually enjoyed quite a bit of it on my first viewing back in the day, which doesn't hold up as much anymore), but how about we get a different, more comic book looking Electro, instead?

Then again, this could be awesome. It could mean we get Tobey and Andrew and Tom all on screen and such.

No Time to Die Delayed Again, So Regal Closes Down

The next James Bond film, No Time to Die, has now been pushed back to April 2021. As a response, the movie theater chain Regal Cinemas is apparently done. No indication of what that means for the grand scheme of things, how long they plan on having their doors shut, etc. However, it's certainly not a good thing if the parent company felt it was necessary. That's 2020 for you.

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE TOPICS?

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Week in Geek #121: WandaVision Trailer, Doctor Strange 2 Cameos and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Friday, September 25, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap

Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

WandaVision Trailer

How cool does this look? It's definitely a completely new approach to something in the MCU and has a horror vibe to it. This feels like a Twilight Zone episode. I'm down.

Tom Cruise, John Krasinski and Emily Blunt Cameos in Doctor Strange 2?

Rumor has it (take it with a grain of salt) that there will be a cameo for Tom Cruise in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness where he's playing the Tony Stark of another dimension. That would be awesome, and I really hope that happens. At one point in time, Cruise was in the mix to play Iron Man for a film before the MCU kicked off. Even if it's just for a brief moment, it would be cool to see what would happen with him inside the armor.

Update: A follow-up to that is that Emily Blunt may be Black Widow and John Krasinski could be Captain America to play off how both of them were up for those roles. I think that would be awesome. I still think Krasinski and Blunt in particular could be used for other characters in the future, but this shouldn't stop them and it could be pretty damn cool.

Peacemaker Spin-Off for HBO Max

John Cena's character in the upcoming The Suicide Squad (such a dumb title) film, Peacemaker, will be getting a spin-off series dedicated to the origins of his character. It will be on HBO Max.

Having not seen the film, I'm curious what this will end up being. Does his character have enough to justify a series dedicated to him? Probably not. Is this just another situation of WB saying they have plans to do something, only to have it all fall apart? Probably. Will I check it out? Yeah.

Nick Fury Series Coming to Disney+

No real information about this yet. No information needed for me to say I'm in. Sam Jackson as Nick Fury is awesome and I love that they'll flesh out the character.

Aldis Hodge Cast as Hawkman in Black Adam

I know nothing about Aldis Hodge as an actor, but he looks like he could play the part, as far as physical stature goes. And you know what? For anyone crying about how this is a black Hawkman, what's the matter? The character has nothing intrinsically tied to his race and if anything, with the whole Egyptian side of things, doesn't this make more sense than if he were some Irish guy or something?

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE TOPICS?

LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW!

72nd Primetime Emmy Awards 2020 Winners List of Results

Posted by Anthony Mango - Sunday, September 20, 2020

The 72nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards will be taking place September 20, 2020 broadcast by ABC.

Stay tuned for updates on the list of the winners and results from all of the categories.

List of 72nd Emmy Winners

PROGRAM CATEGORIES

Outstanding Comedy Series

Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO)
Dead to Me (Netflix)
The Good Place (NBC)
Insecure (HBO)
The Kominsky Method (Netflix)
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)
What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

Winner: Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)

Outstanding Drama Series

Better Call Saul (AMC)
The Crown (Netflix)
The Handmaid's Tale (Hulu)
Killing Eve (BBC America)
The Mandalorian (Disney+)
Ozark (Netflix)
Stranger Things (Netflix)
Succession (HBO)

Winner: Succession (HBO)

Outstanding Variety Talk Series

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Comedy Central)
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (TBS)
Jimmy Kimmel Live! (ABC)
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (CBS)

Winner: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Outstanding Variety Sketch Series

A Black Lady Sketch Show (HBO)
Drunk History (Comedy Central)
Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Winner: Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Outstanding Limited Series

Little Fires Everywhere (Hulu)
Mrs. America (FX)
Unbelievable (Netflix)
Unorthodox (Netflix)
Watchmen (HBO)

Winner: Watchmen (HBO)

Outstanding Television Movie

American Son (Netflix)
Bad Education (HBO)
Dolly Parton's Heartstrings: These Old Bones (Netflix)
El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie (Netflix)
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverend (Netflix)

Winner: Bad Education (HBO)

Outstanding Competition Program

The Masked Singer (Fox)
Nailed It! (Netflix)
RuPaul's Drag Race (VH1)
Top Chef (Bravo)
The Voice (NBC)

Winner: RuPaul's Drag Race (VH1)

ACTING CATEGORIES

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series

Anthony Anderson as Andre "Dre" Johnson Sr. on Black-ish (ABC)
Don Cheadle as Mo Monroe on Black Monday (Showtime)
Ted Danson as Michael on The Good Place (NBC)
Michael Douglas as Sandy Kominsky on The Kominsky Method (Netflix)
Eugene Levy as Johnny Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)
Ramy Youssef as Ramy Hassan on Ramy (Hulu)

Winner: Eugene Levy as Johnny Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series

Christina Applegate as Jen Harding on Dead to Me (Netflix)
Rachel Brosnahan as Miriam "Midge" Maisel on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
Linda Cardellini as Judy Hale on Dead to Me (Netflix)
Catherine O'Hara as Moira Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)
Issa Rae as Issa Dee on Insecure (HBO)
Tracee Ellis Ross as Dr. Rainbow "Bow" Johnson on Black-ish (ABC)

Winner: Catherine O'Hara as Moira Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series

Jason Bateman as Martin "Marty" Byrde on Ozark (Netflix)
Sterling K. Brown as Randall Pearson on This Is Us (NBC)
Steve Carell as Mitch Kessler on The Morning Show (Apple TV+)
Brian Cox as Logan Roy on Succession (HBO)
Billy Porter as Pray Tell on Pose (FX)
Jeremy Strong as Kendall Roy on Succession (HBO)

Winner: Jeremy Strong as Kendall Roy on Succession (HBO)

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

Jennifer Aniston as Alex Levy on The Morning Show (Apple TV+)
Olivia Colman as Queen Elizabeth II on The Crown (Netflix)
Jodie Comer as Oksana Astankova / Villanelle on Killing Eve (BBC America)
Laura Linney as Wendy Byrde on Ozark (Netflix)
Sandra Oh as Eve Polastri on Killing Eve (BBC America)
Zendaya as Rue Bennett on Euphoria (HBO)

Winner: Zendaya as Rue Bennett on Euphoria (HBO)

Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie

Jeremy Irons as Adrien Veidt on Watchmen (HBO)
Hugh Jackman as Dr. Frank Tassone on Bad Education (HBO)
Paul Mescal as Connell Waldron on Normal People (Hulu)
Jeremy Pope as Archie Coleman on Hollywood (Netflix)
Mark Ruffalo as Dominick and Thomas Birdsey on I Know This Much Is True (HBO)

Winner: Mark Ruffalo as Dominick and Thomas Birdsey on I Know This Much Is True (HBO)

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie

Cate Blanchett as Phyllis Schlafly on Mrs. America (FX)
Shira Haas as Esther "Esty" Shapiro on Unorthodox (Netflix)
Regina King as Angela Abar / Sister Night on Watchmen (HBO)
Octavia Spencer as Madam C. J. Walker on Self Made (Netflix)
Kerry Washington as Mia Warren on Little Fires Everywhere (Hulu)

Winner: Regina King as Angela Abar / Sister Night on Watchmen (HBO)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

Mahershala Ali as Sheikh Ali Malik on Ramy (Hulu)
Alan Arkin as Norman Newlander on The Kominsky Method (Netflix)
Andre Braugher as Raymond Holt on Brooklyn Nine-Nine (NBC)
Sterling K. Brown as Reggie on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
William Jackson Harper as Chidi Anagonye on The Good Place (NBC)
Dan Levy as David Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)
Tony Shalhoub as Abe Weissman on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
Kenan Thompson as Various Characters on Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Winner: Dan Levy as David Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

Alex Borstein as Susie Myerson on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
D'Arcy Carden as Janet on The Good Place (NBC)
Betty Gilpin as Debbie Eagan on GLOW (Netflix)
Marin Hinkle as Rose Weissman on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)
Kate McKinnon as Various Characters on Saturday Night Live (NBC)
Annie Murphy as Alexis Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)
Yvonne Orji as Molly Carter on Insecure (HBO)
Cecily Strong as Various Characters on Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Winner: Annie Murphy as Alexis Rose on Schitt's Creek (Pop TV)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

Nicholas Braun as Greg Hirsch on Succession (HBO)
Billy Crudup as Cory Ellison on The Morning Show (Apple TV+)
Kieran Culkin as Roman Roy on Succession (HBO)
Mark Duplass as Charlie "Chip" Black on The Morning Show (Apple TV+)
Giancarlo Esposito as Gus Fring on Better Call Saul (AMC)
Matthew Macfadyen as Tom Wambsgans on Succession (HBO)
Bradley Whitford as Commander Joseph Lawrence on The Handmaid's Tale (Hulu)
Jeffrey Wright as Bernard Lowe on Westworld (HBO)

Winner: Billy Crudup as Cory Ellison on The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

Helena Bonham Carter as Princess Margaret on The Crown (Netflix)
Laura Dern as Renata Klein on Big Little Lies (HBO)
Julia Garner as Ruth Langmore on Ozark (Netflix)
Thandie Newton as Maeve Millay on Westworld (HBO)
Fiona Shaw as Carolyn Martens on Killing Eve (BBC America)
Sarah Snook as Siobhan "Shiv" Roy on Succession (HBO)
Meryl Streep as Mary Louise Wright on Big Little Lies (HBO)
Samira Wiley as Moira Strand on The Handmaid's Tale (Hulu)

Winner: Julia Garner as Ruth Langmore on Ozark (Netflix)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or Movie

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Calvin "Cal" Abar / Doctor Manhattan on Watchmen (HBO)
Jovan Adepo as young Will Reeves on Watchmen (HBO)
Tituss Burgess as Titus Andromedon on Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverend (Netflix)
Louis Gossett Jr. as Will Reeves on Watchmen (HBO)
Dylan McDermott as Ernest "Ernie" West on Hollywood (Netflix)
Jim Parsons as Henry Willson on Hollywood (Netflix)

Winner: Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Calvin "Cal" Abar / Doctor Manhattan on Watchmen (HBO)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie

Uzo Aduba as Shirley Chisholm on Mrs. America (FX)
Toni Collette as Det. Grace Rasmussen on Unbelievable (Netflix)
Margo Martindale as Bella Abzug on Mrs. America (FX)
Jean Smart as Laurie Blake on Watchmen (HBO)
Holland Taylor as Ellen Kincaid on Hollywood (Netflix)
Tracey Ullman as Betty Friedan on Mrs. America (FX)

Winner: Uzo Aduba as Shirley Chisholm on Mrs. America (FX)

DIRECTING CATEGORIES

Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series

The Great (Episode: "The Great (Pilot)"), Directed by Matt Shakman (Hulu)
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Episode: "It's Comedy or Cabbage"), Directed by Amy Sherman-Palladino (Prime Video)
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Episode: "Marvelous Radio"), Directed by Daniel Palladino (Prime Video)
Modern Family (Episode: "Finale Part 2"), Directed by Gail Mancuso (ABC)
Ramy (Episode: "Miakhalifa.mov"), Directed by Ramy Youssef (Hulu)
Schitt's Creek (Episode: "Happy Ending"), Directed by Andrew Cividino and Dan Levy (Pop TV)
Will & Grace (Episode: "We Love Lucy"), Directed by James Burrows (NBC)

Winner: Schitt's Creek (Episode: "Happy Ending"), Directed by Andrew Cividino and Dan Levy (Pop TV)

Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series

The Crown (Episode: "Aberfan"), Directed by Benjamin Caron (Netflix)
The Crown (Episode: "Cri de Coeur"), Directed by Jessica Hobbs (Netflix)
Homeland (Episode: "Prisoners of War"), Directed by Lesli Linka Glatter (Showtime)
The Morning Show (Episode: "The Interview"), Directed by Mimi Leder (Apple TV+)
Ozark (Episode: "Fire Pink"), Directed by Alik Sakharov (Netflix)
Ozark (Episode: "Su Casa Es Mi Casa"), Directed by Ben Semanoff (Netflix)
Succession (Episode: "Hunting"), Directed by Andrij Parekh (HBO)
Succession (Episode: "This Is Not for Tears"), Directed by Mark Mylod (HBO)

Winner: Succession (Episode: "Hunting"), Directed by Andrij Parekh (HBO)

Outstanding Directing for a Variety Special

62nd Grammy Awards, directed by Louis J. Horvitz
72rd Annual Tony Awards, directed by Glenn Weiss
Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones, directed by Stan Lathan
Live In Front Of A Studio Audience: "All In The Family" And "Good Times", directed by Andy Fisher and Pamela Fryman
Super Bowl LIV Halftime Show Starring Jennifer Lopez And Shakira, directed by Hamish Hamilton

Winner: Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones, directed by Stan Lathan

Outstanding Directing for a Variety Series

A Black Lady Sketch Show (Episode: "Born at Night, But Not Last Night"), Directed by Dime Davis (HBO)
The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Episode: Dr. Fauci Answers Trevor's Questions About Coronavirus), Directed by David Paul Meyer (Comedy Central)
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (Episode: "Episode 629"), Directed by Paul Pennolino and Christopher Werner (HBO)
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (Episode: "Live Show; Chris Christie; Nathaniel Rateliff), Directed by Jim Hoskinson (CBS)
Saturday Night Live (Episode: "Host: Eddie Murphy"), Directed by Don Roy King (NBC)
Tiffany Haddish Presents: They Ready (Episode: "Flame Monroe"), Directed by Linda Mendoza (Netflix)

Winner: Saturday Night Live (Episode: "Host: Eddie Murphy"), Directed by Don Roy King (NBC)

Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series, Movie or Dramatic Special

Little Fires Everywhere (Episode: "Find a Way"), Directed by Lynn Shelton (Hulu)
Normal People (Episode: "Episode 5"), Directed by Lenny Abrahamson (Hulu)
Unorthodox, Directed by Maria Schrader (Netflix)
Watchmen (Episode: "It's Summer and We're Running out of Ice"), Directed by Nicole Kassell (HBO)
Watchmen (Episode: "Little Fear of Lightning"), Directed by Steph Green (HBO)
Watchmen (Episode: "This Extraordinary Being"), Directed by Stephen Williams (HBO)

Winner: Unorthodox, Directed by Maria Schrader (Netflix)

WRITING CATEGORIES

Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series

The Good Place (Episode: "Whenever You're Ready"), Written by Michael Schur (NBC)
The Great (Episode: "The Great"), Written by Tony McNamara (Hulu)
Schitt's Creek (Episode: "Happy Ending"), Written by Daniel Levy (Pop TV)
Schitt's Creek (Episode: "The Presidential Suite"), Written by David West Read (Pop TV)
What We Do in the Shadows (Episode: "Collaboration"), Written by Sam Johnson & Chris Marcil (FX)
What We Do in the Shadows (Episode: "Ghosts"), Written by Paul Simms (FX)
What We Do in the Shadows (Episode: "On the Run"), Written by Stefani Robinson (FX)

Winner: Schitt's Creek (Episode: "Happy Ending"), Written by Daniel Levy (Pop TV)

Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series

Better Call Saul (Episode: "Bad Choice Road"), Written by Thomas Schnauz (AMC)
Better Call Saul (Episode: "Bagman"), Written by Gordon Smith (AMC)
The Crown (Episode: "Aberfan"), Written by Peter Morgan (Netflix)
Ozark (Episode: "All In"), Written by Chris Mundy (Netflix)
Ozark (Episode: "Boss Fight"), Written by John Shiban (Netflix)
Ozark (Episode: "Fire Pink"), Written by Miki Johnson (Netflix)
Succession (Episode: "This Is Not for Tears"), Written by Jesse Armstrong (HBO)

Winner: Succession (Episode: "This Is Not for Tears"), Written by Jesse Armstrong (HBO)

Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special

Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones (Netflix)
Hannah Gadsby: Douglas (Netflix)
John Mulaney & The Sack Lunch Bunch (Netflix)
Patton Oswalt: I Love Everything (Netflix)
Seth Meyers: Lobby Baby (Netflix)

Winner: Dave Chappelle: Sticks & Stones (Netflix)

Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Comedy Central)
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (TBS)
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
Late Night with Seth Meyers (NBC)
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (CBS)

Winner: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie or Dramatic Special

Mrs. America (Episode: "Shirley"), Written by Tanya Barfield (FX)
Normal People (Episode: "Episode 3"), Written by Sally Rooney and Alice Birch (Hulu)
Unbelievable (Episode: "Episode 1"), Written by Susannah Grant, Michael Chabon, and Ayelet Waldman (Netflix)
Unorthodox (Episode: "Part 1"), Written by Anna Winger (Netflix)
Watchmen (Episode: "This Extraordinary Being"), Written by Damon Lindelof and Cord Jefferson (HBO)

Winner: Watchmen (Episode: "This Extraordinary Being"), Written by Damon Lindelof and Cord Jefferson (HBO)

What do you think of the results?
Tell us your thoughts in the comments below!

Week in Geek #120: We Have a She-Hulk, DC Universe Infinite and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Saturday, September 19, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap

Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

Jonathan Majors Possibly Cast as Kang the Conqueror in Ant-Man 3

I know nothing about Majors, but there are three major things to talk about with this news, according to Deadline:

1) This means Reed Richards and/or Sue Storm will be black. Of course, people are going nuts about that. OR, he's going to be blue-skinned. In my opinion, both Reed and Sue aren't characters that need to be white, so hey, as long as they get the right actors, whatever. My issue is that I don't think Sue and Johnny should be Michael B. Jordan and Kate Mara and adopted and whatnot.

2) Kang is far too big of a threat for Ant-Man to fight. He has to be just observing things or manipulating stuff in the background. We did hear about MODOK as a possibility and that makes more sense to me. I still think Black Ant would be the best option, but hey. At the very least, Kang could be setting up something with the Young Avengers and Cassie.

3) If they go with Kang as the benefactor, that would be surprising. I thought it would be Norman Osborn or someone else more street-level.

Animaniacs Returning November 20th on Hulu

I loved this show back in the day! Awesome! I'll definitely try to check it out.

The Mandalorian Season 2 Trailer

Everything looks cool as hell, as expected. Plus, is Sasha Banks a Jedi?? Very curious to see how she works into this. As you're likely aware, the sister site for Fanboys Anonymous is Smark Out Moment, so this is a rare scenario where we can have some crossover material between the two!

Tatiana Maslany Cast as She-Hulk

We finally know who will play Jennifer Walters in the She-Hulk TV series coming to Disney+ and it's Tatiana Maslany—someone I'm familiar with, but not familiar with. IE, I've heard her name and I've heard good things, and I've seen one episode of Orphan Black, but that's it.

Some people are thinking she doesn't have the musculature, but I think that's pretty ridiculous. We have CGI. Do you think Mark Ruffalo looks like Hulk? Of course not.

I get a good feeling about this. The rumors of Alison Brie were striking me odd, as she's wonderful, but not someone I figured would make for a good She-Hulk. Maslany has more of an edge to her and I can buy her being a lawyer that turns into She-Hulk much more. Thumbs up, so far at least!

DC Universe Infinite

The inevitable has happened and DC television projects and films will be on HBO Max going forward while DC Universe is going to be a comics-only platform, now rebranded DC Universe Infinite.

Ultimately, this is how it was guaranteed to go. There was no way they would keep the TV and movie content on a strictly DC service forever and not want to make those things applicable to HBO Max. Once that happened, there's less of a need for people to want to have DC Universe to go along with it. If you can consolidate your subscriptions, you're going to. That's why I think it's potentially even a better idea if they offer a package deal of getting both for a slight discount, as people will be more willing to spend $15 for 2 services than $10 for one and not doing the other, or $20 for both.

Harley Quinn Renewed for Season 3

Woooooooo! This show is so good and I wasn't ready to say goodbye to it.

If you haven't watched it already, do yourself a favor and check it out. It's so funny.

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE TOPICS?

LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW!

How to Bring the Cosmic Cube Into the Marvel Cinematic Universe

Posted by Anthony Mango - Tuesday, September 15, 2020

In Captain America: The First Avenger, we were introduced to the Tesseract. Eventually, as the series progressed, this was fleshed out more to be clarified as the Space Stone that made up the Infinity Gauntlet.

At least as far as Avengers: Endgame is concerned, the Marvel Cinematic Universe no longer truly has the Tesseract in play after Thanos "used the stones to destroy the stones" and reduced them all to atoms.

With that in mind, as well as how the Tesseract was utilized as the Space Stone, that means we've yet to truly get the Cosmic Cube in all its glory in the MCU. It's clear Marvel decided to somewhat merge the concepts and simplify things while representing the Cosmic Cube in some fashion. Red Skull and Thanos went after the Tesseract, just as they often do in the comics with the Cosmic Cube. It's just a lot simpler to tell people that it's one of many and move that plot thread along, rather than give them an entirely different MacGuffin and then sidestep to the Infinity Stones and treat them like a bigger deal.

But not having had the Cosmic Cube in the MCU means we're missing out on a chance to do some other stories. The Space Stone doesn't grant wishes like the Cosmic Cube does. Plus, there's no tie-in with the Beyonders or anything else that can be tapped into.

So what should happen to bring the Cosmic Cube into the MCU at some point in the series' future? I think there are a few things that have to be addressed: its creation, how to keep it a fresh idea, who wields it, which characters interact with it and so on.

The MCU cannot just randomly toss out the next all-powerful item and move on as if the Infinity Stones are yesterday's news without feeling like it's rehashing a similar formula. The Cosmic Cube has to come about through different means and not seem like an ancient thing the universe is built upon.

Luckily, there's a precedent in the comics that the Cosmic Cube can be artificially created and by many different civilizations. That opens tons of doors and options for how this can come about.

Here are just a few potential ways I think they could bring about the creation of a Cosmic Cube, if not multiple by picking a variety of these:

  • The Beyonders - Even if it isn't spoken of at first, there could be an eventual reveal that the energies contained in these are coming from the dimension the Beyonders dwell. That could bring them in as one of the biggest threats to the universe.
  • A.I.M. and M.O.D.O.K. - Let's assume the benefactor from Ant-Man 3 plays into all this. They can say that the Cosmic Cube has something to do with Pym Particles and the Quantum Realm. Advanced Idea Mechanics has been associated with the Cosmic Cube in the past, so that's a good tie-in.
  • S.H.I.E.L.D. - Project Pegasus was studying the Tesseract. Maybe they tried to create their own version of it and that's why this is a cube as well?
  • Skrulls and Kree - These two societies are old enough that they could have come across any of the necessary materials to create something like this. Skrulls have been involved with the Cosmic Cube in the comics, too, and with the amount of focus on the Tesseract from the MCU in Captain Marvel, there are more than enough connections.
  • High Evolutionary - Between everything going on with Adam Warlock and the High Evolutionary, I would be easily sold on wishes created from this kind of device being how The Sovereign can create their race and such.
  • Fantastic Four - The Negative Zone could be part of this (but I doubt it) and they could even tie this into being related to Franklin Richards. What if the Cosmic Cube has his reality warping powers, in a sense, wherein it works into his future self and Kang the Conqueror and all those story elements woven together? The Cosmic Cube could be one of the main things Reed Richards studies over the course of several films.
  • Doctor Strange - Since this is wish based, you can easily sell me on the idea that it ties into the Multiverse of Madness as another magical trinket that Doctor Strange studies.

Of course, all of this depends on what Marvel has in store for the next phases of the MCU. For all we know, the goal is to focus on Galactus as the sole cosmic force out there and something like this would take too much attention away from him.

Ideally, I'd love to see The Beyonder brought in, Battle World and Secret Wars to take place, some older characters like Steve Rogers and Tony Stark come into the fold with cameos based on wishes and for this idea to be fully realized, rather than just forgotten about as merged with the Space Stone. But what do you have in mind? What would you like to see the MCU do with the Cosmic Cube?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS IDEA?
LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW!

Week in Geek #119: Young Justice Phantoms, RoboCop Prequel and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Sunday, September 13, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap

Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

Dick Jones RoboCop Prequel

Did you ever think to yourself "RoboCop is cool and all, but I'd rather watch a story about the rise of Dick Jones climbing the corporate ladder in OCP?

Me neither.

Two Joker Sequels

Current rumor flying around is that they want to make two sequels to Joaquin Phoenix's Joker film.

Frankly, I think it's a bad idea. The story works best as a standalone. If they get into sequel territory, you have to canonize the events and eliminate the "was it all real" aspect that people like about the movie. That's kind of defeating some of its purpose, like if you made a sequel to Inception and exposed that Cobb wasn't dreaming anymore.

Young Justice: Phantoms

Young Justice has been renewed for a fourth season with no other information other than that its subtitle this time will be Phantoms.

Awesome. Big fan of the show (even though it has flaws of definitely wanting to take on too many different characters and not enough stories to keep track of, and then skipping ahead to just write off not needing to wrap up some story elements).

What could Phantoms be about? Dead characters from the past influencing the present day? The Phantom Zone? Something more on the mystical side? I hope not the latter, as the magic stuff has never been my favorite.

Wonder Woman 1984 Delayed

This is the DC version of The New Mutants. This movie has gotten delayed too many times to count, yet the film's script leaked online how long ago? Now, it's coming out Christmas. How much do you want to bet that doesn't happen, either?

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Fanboys Anonymous Team Members are GETTING MARRIED!

Posted by Anthony Mango - Wednesday, September 9, 2020

When I started Fanboys Anonymous back in October 2012, the aspiring goal was to create a platform for myself, my friends and fellow geeks alike to share their opinions about movies, television, video games, comics and anything else under the "nerd" spectrum. I've long thought that this site has immense potential that we haven't tapped into even 1% of, and there's no telling if, when or how any of those dreams will be realized.

However, as much as I feel Fanboys Anonymous has the ability to grow in all sorts of ways, I never would have imagined it would be the catalyst for an even more important part of my life: my future wife.

To let everyone in on some things behind the curtain who weren't already aware over time, part of my recruitment for the team was to post on LinkedIn threads of different types asking if anyone in these related fields would be interested in joining the site to write about whatever they're passionate about. One of those interested parties was Caroline, whom you've all heard on various podcasts and read articles from over the years.

Immediately, this connection was formed that was unlike any other and it grew into something much more beautiful than could ever be dreamed.

All these years later, I can now officially announce that as of this past Sunday, September 6, 2020, Caroline and I are ENGAGED.

Legit, true, 100% real engaged to be husband and wife. This is no advertisement ploy, marketing scheme, fan fiction gotcha or anything of the sort. This is real, and we couldn't be happier to let the readers know about this and share some of our happiness!

I want to thank everyone who has ever helped support Fanboys Anonymous over the years, in any fashion, for giving us this platform. Without this brand leading us to each other, there's no telling if we would have ever met at all, let alone fallen in love and taken the journey we've had to this point and heading into the future.

No matter what is going on with this site and the world around us, Fanboys Anonymous will never cease to be its own special corner of A Mango Tree. THANK YOU!

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap

Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

Tim Drake is Robin Again?

So Tim Drake's gone from Robin to Red Robin to just Drake and now back to Robin again.

MAKE HIM FLAMEBIRD. It's the thing that makes the most sense! It piggybacks off Nightwing, Drake has a connection word-wise to dragons and Flamebird is dragon-like, and it's a name that isn't being used by anyone that it would matter if they took it away from them because Bette can just stay Hawkfire.

It's so obvious! Just do it! Don't make Tim go back to Robin again just because this stupid Drake idea failed and you have no other option.

No Time to Die Official Trailer 2

Ana de Armas looks kind of bad ass in this, from those clips. Not digging much else from this trailer, as it was kind of generic. Still got a bad, bad, bad feeling about this movie and how they're going to want to do something drastic for the sake of getting people talking, like killing Bond or replacing him as 007.

Nothing here indicated that, necessarily. It was just some action clips and not much more.

A.P. Bio Season 3

Gotta say, after watching the 8 episodes of the newest season of AP Bio on Peacock, I'm disappointed. It seems like they just wanted to go wacky and zany for the sake of it this season and the show's lost its charm. It was best when it was about...you know...the premise? The idea of a jerk interacting with his students and getting revenge on people?

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I've been watching SilphSpectre's True Power tournament on YouTube and after checking out the most recent episode, Janine vs. Brock, something dawned on me: Janine as a character shouldn't even exist.

Indulge me as I go down this rabbit hole with another edition of FANBOYS FIX IT where I'll address why that problem is an issue and how to remedy the situation with a few tweaks that change as little as possible, while making what I think are the best alterations.

Janine Pokemon Gen 2 gym leader soul badge

Koga Graduates

As it stands with Generation II, the return to Kanto was one of the biggest selling points. Not only was it interesting to see that the Indigo League was actually on the Johto side, too, but that when you step into the Elite 4 challenge, you're not actually fighting the same group.

It wouldn't have made much sense for you to fight Lorelei, Bruno, Agatha, Lance and then Blue, anyway, as Red had beaten Blue. Theoretically, you could have set it up so you beat those 4 and then Red, while Blue goes off and does his Viridian City Gym business, but I think they had a decent idea with Will and Karen and so forth. It still doesn't help that Bruno is a Fighting specialist with his Rock types and all, nor does it make much sense Lance is the champion, but whatever. We're in the interest of changing as little as possible, remember?

So let's say we keep everything the same as far as Koga moving up to the Elite 4 and making the Poison/Psychic/Dark/Fighting quartet happen. I'm cool with that. It's kind of neat to see Koga move up the ranks and fill in the void left by Agatha, especially as she was supposed to be a Ghost-type specialist who actually had all Poison types on her team, anyway.

But with Koga moving up to the Elite 4, who takes his place in running the Fuchsia City gym? It would be too hard to create a whole new area for Gen 2 just to give another location a different gym (unless you went with Pallet Town having a gym now with Red as the leader, but that stops you from having Mount Silver's epic showdown).

Janine is Koga's Clone

Game Freak's response was to have Koga's daughter Janine replace him in what amounted to one of the least interesting scenarios imaginable.

Everything stayed basically the same. Fuchsia City went from having a Poison-type ninja-themed gym to having a Poison-type ninja-themed gym.

Even the Pokemon weren't different. Take a look at their teams:

Koga in Red and Blue:

  • Koffing (x2)
  • Weezing
  • Muk

Koga in Yellow:

  • Venonat (x3)
  • Venomoth

Koga in Gold and Silver as Elite 4 Member:

  • Ariados
  • Venomoth
  • Forretress (Bug and Steel??)
  • Muk
  • Crobat

Now look at Janine's team:

  • Ariados
  • Venomoth
  • Weezing (x2)
  • Crobat

Every single Pokemon she has is something Koga has had, and it didn't even need to be that way! She could have had Arbok, Beedrill, Nidoqueen, Nidoking, Tentacruel, and Qwilfish. That's a full team of six Poison types that aren't used elsewhere at that point in time.

I think this pretty much means Game Freak didn't have plans to put Koga in the Elite 4 spot. It probably would have been Agatha again, with Koga still operating out of Fuchsia City, and they just decided to put him in there on a whim. Then, out of laziness and not wanting to redo the Fuchsia City gym layout, they just said "eh, it's his daughter, so she inherited everything."

At the very least, giving her different Pokemon should have been done. But it's also a missed opportunity to do something else and that's what I'm suggesting should have happened instead.

Where's the Ground-Type Gym?

Outside of some tweaks to their teams, most Gym Leaders in Kanto didn't change. Brock is still in Pewter, Misty is still in Cerulean, etc. Cinnabar Island was messed up with the volcano, so that gym shifted, but it's still Blaine and he's still a Fire-type specialist. The only ones who really changed were Janine replacing Koga and Blue replacing Giovanni.

By doing so and getting rid of Giovanni, the Earth Badge for the Viridian Gym no longer makes any sense. Of course, it never made sense to begin with, as it's a green leaf or feather, but whatever. Blue isn't a Ground trainer by any means and shouldn't give out that badge. Likewise, without Giovanni in the mix, Ground is the only type that we don't have a Gym Leader or an Elite 4 member representing.

What should happen instead is that Blue should give out a different badge instead of the Earth Badge and a Ground-type Gym Leader should take Koga's place in Fuchsia City.

In regards to Blue, let's give him something that isn't type-specific. My three main suggestions are the Pride Badge (I know, it's in Pokemon Masters), the Honor Badge or the Glory Badge. The idea behind the name is that he's a former champion who used to have a big ego, but learned how to carry himself with the right sense of honor after his defeat as champion. He should instill that knowledge to you as a teacher and you should have pride in defeating a former champion in him.

The design could be something simple. It has no real theme, so you just make it look classy, as if it's something a champion would want to pin on his or her lapel. But you make it green in color, as it's Viridian City, after all, and Blue is technically named Green in the original Japanese games.

In regards to this new Ground-type Gym Leader for Fuchsia City, though, how do we go about that?

I say since the Safari Zone is decommissioned in this game, let's tear it down and have the Ground specialists as the ones responsible for closing it off. They're doing construction in rebuilding that whole place or possibly tearing it down entirely and won't let anyone in there, as it's hazardous.

To make things less confusing, I'd get rid of the Earth Badge entirely. The design just doesn't work as "earth" in any fashion. This also means the Soul Badge has to go, too, since that wouldn't make any sense. Again, it never made sense why Sabrina's Psychic gym has the Marsh Badge while the Poison gym has the Soul Badge, so this at least gets another one of those issues out of the way.

Instead, let's go with the Quake Badge (the next logical step that they would take as evidenced by future games). If not that, maybe the Hazard Badge where it has a hard hat or a construction tape vibe to it. Or maybe the Terra Badge or even the Dust Badge. Hell, you can even still call it the Earth Badge but just change the way it looks so it is brown and looks remotely ground-related.

The character who is the Gym Leader almost doesn't matter. Go with whatever you want. He/she should have Hikers and such in his gym and he/she should look like a construction worker of sorts. Want to go super punny? Make it a woman named Tera.

As far as her team, our options at this point in the series are:

  • Sandshrew / Sandslash
  • Nidoqueen
  • Nidoking
  • Diglett / Dugtrio
  • Geodude / Graveler / Golem
  • Onix / Steelix
  • Cubone / Marowak
  • Rhyhorn / Rhydon
  • Wooper / Quagsire
  • Gligar
  • Phanpy / Donphan
  • Swinub / Piloswine
  • Larvitar / Pupitar

Onix is a staple for Brock and Bruno, while Steelix is Jasmine's ace, so that line shouldn't show up here again. Blue has a Rhydon on his team, so let's take that out of the equation, too. The same goes for Swinub and Piloswine since Pryce has that covered for his Ice gym. I'd also say since you can't go with Tyranitar, you should skip Larvitar and Pupitar. That still leaves us with plenty of options to pick from.

  • Sandshrew / Sandslash
  • Nidoqueen
  • Nidoking
  • Diglett / Dugtrio
  • Geodude / Graveler / Golem
  • Cubone / Marowak
  • Wooper / Quagsire
  • Gligar
  • Phanpy / Donphan

My ideal situation is to get rid of Forretress on Koga's team and replace that with Nidoking. Then, we can have this Tera character have Nidoqueen along with Sandslash, Dugtrio, Golem and either Quagsire or Donphan.

Why not Gligar or Marowak? Well, Gligar being Ground/Flying and a base-form with no evolutions at that point seems contradictory and less amazing. Marowak also has the Lavender Town stuff on its own and doesn't need more of a focus. I'd certainly have trainers in the gym have those Pokemon, though, so they're still featured as part of this theme.

So that's it. You close off the Safari Zone by having the new Ground Gym Leader doing construction, you feature some of those Pokemon and make sure all the types have a character that represents them, fix the Soul Badge and Earth Badge issue and prevent Koga from being copied and pasted with this Janine character.

What do you think? Is this a good change in retrospect, or do you still prefer the way Game Freak set things up with Janine? Drop a comment below and let me know!

Week in Geek #117: Chadwick Boseman Passes Away and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Sunday, August 30, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap


Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

RIP Chadwick Boseman

Goddamn 2020 sucks. On top of the relentless, constant stream of bad news from all sides of life in general, we've also now just lost a fantastic actor who was taken way too soon. There's no telling what repercussions of this will follow with the MCU, too, as Black Panther was probably going to be one of the mainstay major characters to act as a driving force going forward in the wake of some of the original Avengers no longer appearing in the films.

Boseman was suffering from colon cancer for the past four years. Terrible news. That's the theme of this year. This is yet another crushing, crushing blow that just changes the game entirely and it's so sad to think about just how much more he had to offer that we'll be missing out on.

Equal Billing for The Wasp in Ant-Man 3

The first film, Ant-Man, made sense. Calling the sequel Ant-Man and The Wasp also made sense. Now, Peyton Reed has confirmed that will be the same #3 in that The Wasp will get the same credit, essentially, as a partner and not just a sidekick.

I'm all for it. I just hope the title isn't Ant-Man and The Wasp and Stature or something like that. That's kind of mouthy. Ant-Man and The Wasp 2 would be confusing, since its the third film. Ant-Man and The Wasp 3 would imply there's an Ant-Man and The Wasp 1 and 2, which there isn't.

Tough call. Maybe they can't avoid it being "Ant-Man and The Wasp: Subtitle" or whatever.

Of course, that implies movies are ever going to exist again with the way the world being how it is....

Bob McLeod is not Bob Macleod

Co-creator of New Mutants, Bob McLeod, has apparently had his name misspelled in the film's credits as Bob Macleod.

Ouch. It seems the movie is awful (NOW THERE'S A SHOCKER) and they couldn't even bother to do that right?

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Every X-Men Film Ranked from Best to Worst Tier List Movie Rankings

Posted by Anthony Mango - Friday, August 28, 2020

The original X-Men film franchise is officially over with the release of The New Mutants and will be expunged in favor of a whole new reboot that will bring these characters into the proper Marvel Cinematic Universe.

To commemorate the now concluded series, I've decided to go back and adjust my "Every X-Men Film Ranked from Best to Worst" list into a more structured Tier List ranking of every movie to see where each movie stands when stacked up against one another.

This franchise has had some massive heights and some embarrassing lows, effectively being at the top of the comic book movie genre one minute and then nearly killing the concept entirely the next, and while some of the films still hold up several years later, others just get worse as time goes on.

So what are the best and the worst? Let's get into it!

* Note: This list is as of August 2020. Future X-Men films will be added to this later.

[S-TIER | OMEGA LEVEL]

These are the best of the best.

1. X-Men: Days of Future Past - Rogue Cut (2014)

It takes a lot to beat out something as great as X2: X-Men United, but the Rogue Cut edition of X-Men: Days of Future Past takes the cake. This gives us the best of what First Class has to offer with that cast mixed in with the best of X2's crew, merging the tones as well to form one of the best time travel movies I've ever seen that feels very natural and not too full of itself. At the center of it all is the figurehead of the franchise, Wolverine, who was in rehab mode from Origins and was able to win back the audience while also saving two timelines. Nice work, bub.

For those who have only seen the theatrical version, I highly suggest setting the time aside to watch this extended edition, as it makes for an even more well-rounded experience. The use of Rogue in the story helps fix what went wrong with her character from The Last Stand as well as to up the stakes of the future scenes with the Sentinels hunting our heroes. Let's just say if you wanted this "last chance before we're all wiped out and eradicated from existence" movie to be even darker, you get it. Then, if you want to have some laughs to make up for it, make sure you hit the rewind button and listen to our FanTracks synced up with the film.

Just as with Deadpool, this is a movie that shows that you can take what works in the comics and manipulate facets of it, improve on it, and win universal acclaim from critics, the box office, and fans alike. All the trials and tribulations of what came beforehand with the bad films and the good ones duking it out felt as though they came to a logical conclusion that was worth it all, setting right what once went wrong. By the end of this movie, I was so content with what I had seen that I would have been okay if we never saw another film set in the X-Men universe ever again.

2. X2: X-Men United (2003)

For many, this is the benchmark of what comic book films should be. By 2016, there are aspects of it that have become dated and far surpassed, as you can tell there was still some reservation in the movie industry to go full-on superhero, but holy shit, this movie has so much nerdiness to it that was shockingly awesome for an X-Men fan back in the day.

If you were a fan beforehand, you no doubt geeked out over the allusions to the upcoming Dark Phoenix story, Cerebro being put to good use, Pyro's transition to the Brotherhood of Mutants, Magneto working alongside the X-Men, and diving more into Wolverine's past with the Weapon X program. One of the highlights of the whole list of movies here is in this film when Bobby Drake (Iceman) "comes out" as a mutant to his parents and there are more than obvious parallels to how that process would be for a homosexual teenager to do the same. Then again, if you want something less heavy on the emotional spectrum and more action-packed, you've got to love the berserker Wolverine slashing up intruders in Xavier's mansion sequence or Nightcrawler's White House attack.

[A-TIER LEVEL]

These are the second-best and are considered very good or great.

3. X-Men: First Class (2011)

After the bombs of X-Men: The Last Stand and X-Men Origins: Wolverine mentioned above, the series was in a period of much needed healing. A reboot of sorts was a necessity to help save it from fading away into obscurity, so Matthew Vaughn and company had to start fresh while also maintaining the audience that stuck around through the garbage. Prequels can often have a negative connotation after the Star Wars series mucked things up, so when First Class was announced, everyone was justifiably skeptical. After all, the track record was 2–2 and it was being marketed with a title that doesn't correlate with the original cast of characters from the "first class" run, so clearly these guys don't know what they're doing anymore, right?

Wrong. Somehow, for the second time, the casting of Professor X, Magneto and many others was just spot-on and we had a movie that breathed new life into the mutants. The 1960s setting was a fresh change of pace that felt almost like an otherwordly James Bond film with superpowers, yet it also didn't stray too much from coming off as an X-Men film.

Just as with any film, there are some issues—such as the Angel character (anyone named that character seems to be problematic in these films, oddly enough) and the questionable casting of January Jones as Emma Frost—and it certainly rests on the laurels of what the previous movies accomplished, with much of the heavy lifting having been done before its time, but there are some great gems that have kept the saga alive that spawned out of this. Who doesn't love Magneto's story, or how they suited up in yellow outfits for the first time? How awesome is it that the Cuban Missile Crisis was folded into the storyline and attributed to the mutant phenomenon?

4. Deadpool (2016)

I'm sure many people are going to say that this should be higher up on the list, but while I thought this movie was entertaining as hell, I definitely can't classify it as the same animal as all the others. This is a completely different type of movie in general than the typical superhero flick, so it can't really be compared in the same conventional ways. First off, it has a singular protagonist, so it is more along the lines of the two Wolverine films than the ensemble cast of the X-Men group ones. Secondly, it's self-referential and can't be taken seriously, so any laughable parts can be written off as going with the gimmick and not just a legitimate flub on the filmmakers' parts.

That being said, this is still a great representation of the character and something that I enjoyed through and through. It is the true Deadpool film that we were all hoping to get, and it took years and tons of struggling to bring it to the screen. Even more satisfactory was how well the movie did, making it so the fighting was worth it. While producers wrote the idea off as something that could never work, it ended up being a massive hit—earning a worldwide total of over $763 million on a measly budget of $58 million, making it just $8 million shy of surpassing the record of highest grossing R-rated film of all time (second to The Passion of the Christ). That's amazing.

This movie goes to show you that if you do a popular character justice, you don't let studio executives meddle too much, and you have a kickass marketing campaign, you'll be critically and financially acclaimed.

5. Logan (2017)

I'll elaborate on this another point in the future, but my general thoughts for this are that it's very similar to Deadpool in that the movie is a great character study, but not necessarily the best standalone film. There are a ton of amazing things about it, but if I'm honest, I can't tell you any of the character names beyond Logan, Laura and Charles, really.

For the quick thoughts, check out the Minute Man Review. For more in-depth thoughts, check out my Reviewpoint.

6. X-Men (2000)

Just as with X-Men Origins: Wolverine, I've previously written up a Fanboys Fix It for this film, so head on over to that article to read more of my thoughts on any problems this movie has. What I will say when it comes to positives, though, is that after 16 years, rewatching this recently made me appreciate it more. This film is responsible for the initial boom of superhero films. If it hadn't have succeeded, we wouldn't have gotten Spider-Man and the rest that followed, which would eventually lead into Iron Man and the proper Marvel Cinematic Universe we have now. It was a gargantuan task to take such a colorful world like the one the mutants live in and to ground it enough in reality for mainstream audiences to accept, while also keeping enough of the comic book flair to not piss off the core fanbase.

Of course, there are issues with it that would ripple throughout all of the films, but in the grand scheme of things, this was a fun movie that knocked a herculean ball of cinematic potential out of the park and deserves to be pat on the back more so than it tends to be.

[B-TIER LEVEL]

These are the third-best and are considered good, but not great.

7. Deadpool 2 (2018)

Check out my thoughts in full about this film here. The TL;DR of it is that I think it's nowhere near as good as the first, but it has some quality moments to it. Two years later, I haven't actually had the urge to watch it again even a second time, oddly, so it may not hold up as much over time.

[C-TIER LEVEL]

These are the fourth-best and are considered average or just okay.

8. X-Men: Apocalypse (2016)

By the time I rewatch this, I might end up lowering it a bit, as there are pacing issues, the villain doesn't measure up to his potential, and some characters are superfluous or just disappointing in general, but I left this movie in much better spirits than I thought I would be, considering the reviews.

If you want to hear a breakdown of the hits and the misses, check out the Reviewpoint podcast we did recently on the film. To summarize, this was a movie that has structural problems as far as filmmaking goes, but if you're a fan of the source material, it hits your inner nerd in a way that makes it all worthwhile.

[D-TIER LEVEL]

These are the fifth-best and are considered disappointing as they have more bad than good but aren't entirely irredeemable.

9. The Wolverine (2013)

This film is hard to place, as there are some amazing elements, but the sum of its parts doesn't quite match up to others on this list. The villains are weak (particularly the main one) but not out of theory, just out of execution. For example, the storyline of a dying old man wanting to take Logan's healing ability for himself is interesting. However, Kenuichio Harada is just some assassin dude who looks like he has a stomachache the entire movie, and Viper…ugh…what a shit job on behalf of the writers for that character and the actress bringing it to life.

Some positives are the serious tone, bringing Tao Okamoto and Rila Fukushima into the public consciousness, and Logan's tortured soul. This is a movie that could have benefited from another 20 minutes of screen time and it might have placed a little higher, but it can also be argued that it's on par or slightly better than the next film, just in different ways.

[E-TIER LEVEL]

These are the sixth-best and are considered just flat out bad with next to nothing good about them.

10. X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)

Speaking of garbage, few films are as disappointing as the third entry in the X-Men series. The first X-Men film did well, and it was followed up with an improvement in X2: X-Men United, so fans eagerly anticipated the next one with assumptions that it would be just as good, if not better. Boy, were they wrong.

I remember squirming in my seat while watching this, just utterly perplexed at how something with so much buzz and such a great framework to build from had turned into something so terrible. It unnerved me so much that I actually went to see it a second time just to try to convince myself it wasn't as bad as I had thought. It was and still is.

Disappointing is one thing, but with X-Men: Days of Future Past, the filmmakers literally undid everything in canon related to this movie as an apology. It's also referenced in X-Men: Apocalypse when Cyclops, Jean Grey, Nightcrawler, and Jubilee talk about how the third film in a trilogy is always the worst.

They kill off Cyclops and Professor Xavier (kind of) in this movie for no real reason or payoff. Jean Grey's storyline isn't handled properly, nor is the cure section of the film. Angel is an utterly pointless character. For all that this franchise has to do with tolerance of other people and accepting who you are, they fucking wrote Rogue's storyline to be that she changes her DNA just to be able to have sex with the boy she's crushing on, who of course is willing to cheat on her if she doesn't give it up! That's a terrible message to spread! The only thing positive about this movie is Kelsey Grammar as Beast, and I feel sorry for him for having gone through this experience.

11. X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)

This movie is one of the go-to examples of what not to do with the superhero genre. There are so many things wrong with it that are fairly unforgivable, and you have to question just how those decisions were made in the first place. What in God's name were they thinking when they took The Merc With the Mouth and sewed his mouth shut?!

For a more in-depth breakdown of the problems this movie has, check out the Fanboys Fix It article I wrote up a few months ago. To sum it all up: this film needed to make up for what went wrong with X-Men: The Last Stand, and instead it took things to an even shittier level, which made fans beg for the punishment to stop.

[F-TIER LEVEL | DREGS]

These are the absolute worst of the worst.

12. Dark Phoenix (2019)

Terrible. Just terrible. Check out the Reviewpoint podcast for more.

13. The New Mutants (2020)

This was not just a bad X-Men film, this was a damn near irredeemable movie in general. This felt like an awful rough pilot of a bad Syfy channel show that didn't even make it to the second cut before the plug was pulled. It's horrendous on so many levels that I've yet to find the time to want to dedicate to bashing it as that feels like it would be a waste.

How would you rank everything?

Drop your list in the comments below to keep the discussion going!

fanboys tier list rankings

LUCIFER Season 5 Part 1 Review: Giving the Devil His Due

Posted by Anthony Mango - Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Lucifer has finally returned to Netflix with part 1 of season 5. In what might be one of the most confusing timelines of cancellations and finishes ever for a TV series, Lucifer went from done to coming back for one season on Netflix, to coming back for another, to splitting that one in half, to having a sixth season.

But hey, you're not going to hear me complaining about it. I get more of one of my favorite shows that way!

So how did this season play out, and did I think it was an upgrade, a downgrade, or a lateral move from season 4 and what came before it?

Netflix desktop Lucifer wallpaper

LUCIFER
(Season 5 Part 1 - 2020)

SHOWRUNNERS: Joe Henderson and Ildy Modrovich

STARRING: Tom Ellis (Lucifer Morningstar), Lauren German (Chloe Decker), Kevin Alejandro (Daniel Espinoza), D.B. Woodside (Amenadiel), Lesley-Ann Brandt (Mazikeen), Aimee Garcia (Ella Lopez), Rachael Harris (Linda Martin)

*WARNING: THERE WILL BE SPOILERS BELOW!*


I wasn't fortune enough to have the time to binge these episodes in one go like I had planned. This week was swamped with WWE coverage over on my other site, Smark Out Moment, so I could only watch about an episode and a half per day when I was trying to sleep (and I averaged 2 hours of sleep per day). But I wish I had been able to check them all out in once, as it was a breeze to get through them. I don't think I would have reached a moment where I would have gotten annoyed with still having more episodes left.

I had stated before that I like Netflix as a much better home for the show than before. They don't push the boundaries too much, but they're still able to play around with a bit more risque material, but most importantly, timing. Not having to adhere to the same commercial breaks or placing certain episodes on sweeps weeks or anything like that allows much more flexibility.

I do think maybe this could have used two more episodes, though. Sometimes, it did feel as though a plot thread was introduced and resolved in the same hour and could have had a bit longer to build.

Last season, for instance, was Amenadiel having a protege of sorts who died in something like the next episode. This time, it was Maze and Lilith. I think one more episode's worth of that could have been better. The same for another whole episode of Dan dealing with having found out Lucifer is the real devil.

I'm overall a fan of that, by the way. Not necessarily how they did it (as that's not at all how I imagined it would have gone down) but the fact that it happened. It had been a little while since someone new learned the truth. Now, it's just Ella, oddly. I actually thought Ella might be before Dan, who would be the main antagonist of the final few episodes of the show before ultimately being okay with things, as a ceremonial "I'm okay with you and Chloe, too" type of thing. But hey, maybe they have something better in store for that.

Chloe quickly realizing Michael wasn't Lucifer is the type of thing that I enjoy not seeing dragged out. Had this been 20+ episodes on Fox, I think that would have been at least 6 episodes of meandering through that storyline. Here, they get right to it.

Also a thumbs up for how Chloe is quite mature about all this. You're in love with THE DEVIL and you're essentially like "Okay. Some weird shit goes on. But let's approach this like adults." I don't think I could do that. Kudos.

Poor Ella. I don't remember this random obsession with bad boys, but that helped set up Pete. I immediately liked him and then thought that it was way too easy for me to like him, so he must be evil. Look who was right.

The TV show parody of Lucifer and Chloe was great. I could have done without the flashback noir thing, though. Too campy for my tastes.

Some other quick notes and random tidbits I found interesting:

  • I loved how Linda still holds the sex she had with Lucifer in reverence.
  • No Eve? Damn.
  • That tease of God at the end wasn't the best cliffhanger in the world, but the mere fact God is now in the show made me interested to see where this goes.
  • Very curious what the end game is with Charlie. I'd imagine he's not just 100% normal mortal and that's the end of it, unless the story is about Amenadiel learning to come to terms with how his son isn't special in that way. Maybe he's the type of person who becomes a saint in the future or whatever.
  • I dig Michael as a villain. I hope he's not taken out of the equation too fast in the next episodes.

For the first half of a season, this was rock solid. I'm curious where the rest of the half will lead us, but I know I'll enjoy the ride just as I have with every other season so far.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE SEASON?
LEAVE YOUR THOUGHTS IN THE COMMENTS BELOW!

As a kid, two of my favorite movies were Tim Burton's Batman (1989) and Batman Returns. To this day, I still love them, but as my fandom and knowledge of the Batman mythos has expanded, I've found myself more and more critical of the way they chose to handle some aspects of those films.

Naturally, we've all heard the complaints that Joker shouldn't have killed Thomas and Martha Wayne instead of Joe Chill, or that it's weird Penguin is a monster and Catwoman has some sort of zombie cat powers. As a kid, it didn't even occur to me that Batman is straight-up killing people and going against one of the biggest foundations of his character, either.

But this post isn't about those things. It's about these two films creating brand new characters when they could have used a variety of others from the comics and had them work out just fine. And I'm not talking about going out of your way to name the mayor something specific. I'm talking changing the names of some rather large supporting characters.

The inspiration of this came about from a random recent rewatch of Batman, when it dawned on me that half the characters from '89 could be other people.

Bruce Wayne, Vicki Vale, Joker, Gordon (even though he's nothing really like him), Alfred and Harvey Dent...these guys are solid and don't need to be changed. Everyone else, though?

But what about Alexander Knox? If you think about it, his characterization is mostly that of an annoying, persistent reporter. He's not a villain, but he's far from a hero for nearly all of the film, too. He's also got a vibe that he doesn't get the hint when he's hitting on Vicki, which could be considered creepy.

Who should he have been? Creeper. Jack Ryder has been interpreted over the years as a talk show host, a reporter, etc, but he's always got at least some of an antagonistic vibe to him. In a 2010 comic, they even mention that he dated Vicki Vale. Obviously, you can't judge 1989 based on 2010 information, but that means its out there in this realm nevertheless.

You might not want to have two characters named Jack in the same film, but when you're writing the movie, Joker has no name. You don't need to name him Jack Napier. Or, just do it anyway. People can handle General Ross and Everett Ross in the MCU. Just call him Ryder for the whole film.

He's very Joker-esque and you could even play into that by having him dress up for the big parade and/or succumb to the toxin and turn into Creeper. Since this isn't an origin story for him, he could die and it's okay.

Then, there's Lt. Max Eckhardt. If I were to describe you a corrupt, overweight cop with a hat who smokes and has a scruffy face, who do you think I'd be describing. That's right, Harvey Bullock.

Granted, maybe you don't want to do Bullock because he's ultimately a hero, just a flawed one. But you've got Arnold Flass you could go with, too, like what they did with Batman Begins.

Carl Grissom? The mob boss in town was originally going to be Rupert Thorne and took inspirations from Carmine Falcone. Obviously, you could have gone with either of those or any of the countless other mobsters from the comics. There are far, far, far too many to name.

Alicia Hunt can't be replaced with Harley Quinn, as the character didn't exist at that time. But apparently, she's based on Black Mask's girlfriend Circe. But maybe if you took her and Bob the Goon and replaced them with some sort of Punch and Judy variant? I'm blanking on any specific names other than those two, but I'm positive they must have had some male and female henchmen at some point in the comics before 1989.

Then, there's Batman Returns and the immediate thought is that Max Schreck should have been Harvey Dent.

I know, I know. Dent isn't an awful, corrupt businessman. But Penguin isn't a freak who spits out black sludge, either. For this series, I think they could have made it work to have it be that Dent was actually corrupt—or, maybe, instead of having Schreck be a villain from the start, he/Dent just flat out isn't. He's targeted by Penguin and a lot of things play out in a similar, yet tweaked way. You've got an election, some media conferences, family money, whatever stuff you want to work into there. I think Dent can fit in mostly all of it.

But maybe you find out that while Dent is a champion for some of the good causes in Gotham City, he also has a darker side to him. He's Two-Faced (eh, eh) according to Selina Kyle, his secretary. Sometimes, he's on a good day and he's a charmer and a real hero. Other days, he's a real jerk. You can flip a coin to bet on which personality he's going to be on any particular day, she says.

At the end of the film, when Selina zaps him, maybe that's what causes his face to be scarred.

Ice Princess? Maybe she's Gilda. Maybe you can even change some of the oddball random characters like Jen to other people. I'm sure the database has countless names you can pull from different comics that are almost entirely unknown, but would be neat little references.

Ultimately, would it matter if the guy who gets his nose bitten is some random character who popped up in one issue in the 1950s or whatever? No. Especially back then when these films came out, average moviegoers weren't as obsessed. Even this day, you can ask most people to name 10 Batman villains and they'll probably struggle after naming Joker, Catwoman, Riddler, Penguin, Mr. Freeze, and the mainstreams. Nobody but the hardcores are going to bring up Birthday Boy.

Despite these observations, these movies are still awesome in their own way and two of my favorite films of all time. This was just the ramblings of a fan who had a few minutes to talk about a little quirk.

Week in Geek #116: DC FanDome Breakdown and More

Posted by Anthony Mango - Monday, August 24, 2020

Welcome to another edition of WEEK IN GEEK here at Fanboys Anonymous—a rundown of some of the events, news and stories that went down over the past few days in the geek culture spectrum.

This week in geek culture Fanboys Anonymous nerd recap


Here are some of the topics I felt like voicing my opinions about:

Planes, Trains and Automobiles Remake

The classic Thanksgiving film is getting a reboot with Will Smith and Kevin Hart.

I'm sure it'll be fine, but it won't capture the same magic the original did - and that's coming from someone who doesn't even love the movie as much as most people do.

Will Smith is phenomenal, but he's just not Steve Martin. They're two completely different amazing performers. Kevin Hart is great, too, but he's not John Candy. You can't just take two talented people and think they'll be the same as two other talented people.

But hey, I might check it out. Why not, right?

Olivia Wilde to Direct Spider-Woman Movie

All incarnations of the Spider-Woman character have never felt like they're worth a dedicated film, in my opinion. That goes doubly for when Sony has control over the characters and just desperately wants to have its own MCU, no matter what the cost.

The two studios who keep throwing things out there with no plan are Sony and WB, so at this point, Olivia Wilde directing a film like this feels like a 50/50 shot. Morbius got made. Most other movies didn't (thankfully).

With the idea that Wilde is "completely revamping" the character, I feel there's even less of a reason to get behind it, because more often than not, instead of fixing the problems behind it, people just make things worse.

The Batman Logo

Matt Reeves tweeted the logo for his upcoming The Batman film.

Meh. I mean, it's plain text with a grungy texture and a transparent version of the bat logo. It's not exactly thought-provoking or anything.

Call me crazy, but I find it more dynamic if a superhero film has a logo that has an actual logo and isn't something that could very easily be just a generic R-rated action flick if you change the text. That could say anything and it wouldn't make you think it was Batman without the logo overlay.

I'd rather have something more along the lines of the bottom left here or the Arkham game ones.

Ben Affleck Returning as Batman in The Flash

So Batman will be in The Flash and it'll be played by multiple people, with Batfleck being one of them.

Good call. I'm all for this.

The Batman Trailer

Okay. This had an awesome vibe to it. It didn't even feel like a Batman film. It felt more like a legit crime thriller. That has me kind of psyched. However, I'm not getting a Bruce Wayne vibe from Pattinson yet. I'd like to see something that shows more of his acting to sell me on him. Right now, he kind of looks like a kid who wants to be Batman, rather than Batman.

Wonder Woman 1984 Trailer

Nope. Not feeling it. This seems like its exactly like the leaked script and that was kind of trash. It feels VERY early 2000s superhero flick and not modern.

Gotham Knights

Is this set in the same universe as the Arkham games? You know what? Screw it. As long as Batman isn't actually dead (as that would be weird), this is still amazing.

Court of Owls? Sweet! Getting the ability to play as Dick and Barbara and Jason and Tim (I'm assuming its Tim and not Damian)? Super, super cool.

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League

Um....what? What is this? Also, they didn't show any footage of the game itself, which isn't surprising, since this CG stuff always looks so much better and it convinces people that the rest of the game will look like that.

I'm definitely interested in this. It's a Justice League thing, so of course I am. But this is really weird.

Shazam! Fury of the Gods

That's the title of the sequel. You know what? Not bad.

The Suicide Squad Teaser

So "it's so wacky and great and crazy and awesome and perfect you guys" is the gist of it. I guess we'll see. I still don't get the idea of having Deadshot but not Deadshot with the same basic "I've got a daughter" angle, if that's true. I mean, I've heard of Bloodsport before, but still. It seems like they wanted to do Deadshot and couldn't get Will Smith back, so they just said "idk, how about uh...." and tossed a random other character in his place.

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE TOPICS?
LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW!

Superman: Man of Tomorrow Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #30

Posted by Anthony Mango - Sunday, August 23, 2020

Welcome to another edition of the Fanboys Anonymous FANTRACKS podcast! For this episode, the panel will be watching the latest release of the DC animated films entitled Superman: Man of Tomorrow, set to relaunch the series with a new direction.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Superman: Man of Tomorrow

Release Date: August 23, 2020
Directed by Chris Palmer
Written by Tim Sheridan
Starring Darren Criss (Clark Kent / Kal-El / Superman), Alexandra Daddario (Lois Lane), Zachary Quinto (Lex Luthor), Ike Amadi (Martian Manhunter), Ryan Hurst (Lobo), Brett Dalton (Parasite), Bellamy Young (Martha Kent), and Neil Flynn (Jonathan Kent)

FanTracks Episode 30 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice .

Make sure to subscribe/follow on whatever platform you're listening, leave your comments on the videos or this post, share this with your friends and geek out with us!


WATCH THIS WITH US AND LEAVE YOUR COMMENTS BELOW!

FanTracks Superman: Man of Tomorrow audio commentary
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