Next Tuesday marks the end of the Season of the Forge and the start of the Season of the Drifter! In a new ViDoc, Bungie explores all of the new game modes, armor sets, and lore coming to Destiny 2. More within...
New Season Approaching! Grab a Gun!
Everyone's favorite scam-artist/Gambit Inventor, the Drifter, is getting a season all to himself in Destiny 2, starting this upcoming Tuesday, and it's looking very impressive. In traditional Bungie fashion, the studio and now sole-owner of Destiny 2 allowed their developers to share details about the upcoming season in a new ViDoc.
The Season of the Drifter will include two new game modes, Gambit Prime and The Reckoning, and Gambit armor sets. Plus, a quest for the exotic everyone loves to hate, Thorn. See it all in action in the aforementioned ViDoc.
As a new season of Destiny begins, developers from Bungie are back on...
New Season Approaching! Grab a Gun!
Everyone's favorite scam-artist/Gambit Inventor, the Drifter, is getting a season all to himself in Destiny 2, starting this upcoming Tuesday, and it's looking very impressive. In traditional Bungie fashion, the studio and now sole-owner of Destiny 2 allowed their developers to share details about the upcoming season in a new ViDoc.
The Season of the Drifter will include two new game modes, Gambit Prime and The Reckoning, and Gambit armor sets. Plus, a quest for the exotic everyone loves to hate, Thorn. See it all in action in the aforementioned ViDoc.
As a new season of Destiny begins, developers from Bungie are back on...
- 2/28/2019
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Matt Malliaros)
- Cinelinx
The real mystery of This Is Us‘ third season isn’t “Who is ‘her’?” — it’s “How in the world does Randall travel so quickly between Alpine, N.J., and Philadelphia?”
Though the NBC series treats Randall’s commute from his Garden State home to his Pennsylvania campaign grounds like a mere run around the corner, the approximately 110-mile trip actually takes roughly two hours by car. (And that’s one way, with no traffic.)
Since the start of Season 3, Sterling K. Brown’s Randall has made five round-trip drives to the City of Brotherly Love. That’s 20 hours of time on the road,...
Though the NBC series treats Randall’s commute from his Garden State home to his Pennsylvania campaign grounds like a mere run around the corner, the approximately 110-mile trip actually takes roughly two hours by car. (And that’s one way, with no traffic.)
Since the start of Season 3, Sterling K. Brown’s Randall has made five round-trip drives to the City of Brotherly Love. That’s 20 hours of time on the road,...
- 11/7/2018
- TVLine.com
Harvey Weinstein, through his lawyer Benjamin Brafman, filed paperwork in New York Supreme Court on Monday asking that it dismiss the five remaining counts in his sexual assault case.
Weinstein argues that the entire prosecution has been contaminated by police misconduct.
The request comes just a few weeks after Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. dismissed the accusations of Lucia Evans, who had accused Weinstein of forcing her to perform oral sex on him back in 2004. That was one of the six criminal charges Weinstein faced.
Also Read: Harvey Weinstein Criminal Case: Manhattan Prosecutor Drops 1 of 6 Counts
In the court documents filed on Monday, Brafman said the entire superseding indictment should be dismissed “because it was based on a defective Grand Jury proceeding, that was irreparably tainted by police misconduct, Lucia Evans’ false testimony and the District Attorney’s failure to provide the Grand Jury with exculpatory evidence of the long-term,...
Weinstein argues that the entire prosecution has been contaminated by police misconduct.
The request comes just a few weeks after Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. dismissed the accusations of Lucia Evans, who had accused Weinstein of forcing her to perform oral sex on him back in 2004. That was one of the six criminal charges Weinstein faced.
Also Read: Harvey Weinstein Criminal Case: Manhattan Prosecutor Drops 1 of 6 Counts
In the court documents filed on Monday, Brafman said the entire superseding indictment should be dismissed “because it was based on a defective Grand Jury proceeding, that was irreparably tainted by police misconduct, Lucia Evans’ false testimony and the District Attorney’s failure to provide the Grand Jury with exculpatory evidence of the long-term,...
- 11/5/2018
- by Trey Williams
- The Wrap
Dark Horse Comics' "Buffy the Vampire Slayer' - season 12 : The Reckoning" #3, the canonical continuation of the TV series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" is written by Christos Gage and illustrated by Georges Jeanty, with covers by Stephanie Hans, Scott Fischer and Jeanty, available August 22, 2018:
"...the battle against 'Harth', the future vampire and 'Slayer' twin, along with his legion of evil...
"...has already begun in the present when 'Buffy', 'Fray' and the 'Scoobies' return from the future ready to fight.
"'The Reckoning' is now, and if the future can be changed, it will take everything that Buffy has to save our world..."
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek "Buffy The Vampire Slayer"...
Find "Buffy The Vampire Slayer" Comic Books Here...
"...the battle against 'Harth', the future vampire and 'Slayer' twin, along with his legion of evil...
"...has already begun in the present when 'Buffy', 'Fray' and the 'Scoobies' return from the future ready to fight.
"'The Reckoning' is now, and if the future can be changed, it will take everything that Buffy has to save our world..."
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek "Buffy The Vampire Slayer"...
Find "Buffy The Vampire Slayer" Comic Books Here...
- 8/23/2018
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Screening at Edinburgh International Film Festival as part of a retrospective on writer John McGrath, Jack Gold’s first two features, The Bofors Gun (1968) and The Reckoning (1969), made for punchy, exciting viewing.
Both films were made fairly fast and cheap—Gold, experienced in TV, keeps them moving with stabs of the zoom lens, an active camera and choppy, rough-hewn cutting. They’re not things of beauty, visually, but take their energy and spleen from Nicol Williamson’s manic performances.
The Bofors Gun takes place at a British army base in Germany, where David Warner has to command the night’s guard of the titular cannon without incident in order to get returned to Blighty the following day. His reluctance to discipline his men leads to horrific consequences, mostly caused by a drunken Irishman played by drunken Scottish actor Williamson (Merlin in Excalibur). Williamson’s capacity for loquacious, frenzied and diabolic grandstanding is exercised thoroughly.
Both films were made fairly fast and cheap—Gold, experienced in TV, keeps them moving with stabs of the zoom lens, an active camera and choppy, rough-hewn cutting. They’re not things of beauty, visually, but take their energy and spleen from Nicol Williamson’s manic performances.
The Bofors Gun takes place at a British army base in Germany, where David Warner has to command the night’s guard of the titular cannon without incident in order to get returned to Blighty the following day. His reluctance to discipline his men leads to horrific consequences, mostly caused by a drunken Irishman played by drunken Scottish actor Williamson (Merlin in Excalibur). Williamson’s capacity for loquacious, frenzied and diabolic grandstanding is exercised thoroughly.
- 7/11/2014
- by David Cairns
- MUBI
Actor whose unpredictability never undermined his electrifying talent
Nicol Williamson, whose death of oesophageal cancer at the age of 73 has been announced, was arguably the most electrifying actor of his generation, but one whose career flickered and faded like a faulty light fitting. Tall and wiry, with a rasping scowl of a voice, a battered baby face and a mop of unruly curls, he was the best modern Hamlet since John Gielgud, and certainly the angriest, though he scuppered his own performance at the Round House, north London, in 1969, by apologising to the audience and walking off the stage. The experience was recycled in a 1991 Broadway comedy called I Hate Hamlet, in which he proved his point and fell out badly with his co-star.
Williamson's greatest performance was as the dissolute and disintegrating lawyer Bill Maitland in John Osborne's Inadmissible Evidence at the Royal Court theatre in 1964. It was...
Nicol Williamson, whose death of oesophageal cancer at the age of 73 has been announced, was arguably the most electrifying actor of his generation, but one whose career flickered and faded like a faulty light fitting. Tall and wiry, with a rasping scowl of a voice, a battered baby face and a mop of unruly curls, he was the best modern Hamlet since John Gielgud, and certainly the angriest, though he scuppered his own performance at the Round House, north London, in 1969, by apologising to the audience and walking off the stage. The experience was recycled in a 1991 Broadway comedy called I Hate Hamlet, in which he proved his point and fell out badly with his co-star.
Williamson's greatest performance was as the dissolute and disintegrating lawyer Bill Maitland in John Osborne's Inadmissible Evidence at the Royal Court theatre in 1964. It was...
- 1/27/2012
- by Michael Coveney
- The Guardian - Film News
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