Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #42, Trinity #19

Every week, Weekly Wonder Woman keeps you up to date on everything involving DC Comics’ premier superheroine

Movie news

Justice League is out on DVD/Blu-Ray/4K this week. I’ve reviewed that elsewhere, and since there are only a few extras and nothing much by way of extra footage with the release, I won’t bother saying much more than that.

The other bit of news is that Kristen Wiig has now been confirmed as playing Cheetah in Wonder Woman 2. But we talked about that a bit last week, so I won’t bother saying much more than that.

TV news

The best known of the TV Wonder Women – go on readers, name all the others… now! – Lynda Carter is getting a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on April 3rd. That’ll be at 6562 Hollywood Blvd, if you plan on going down there to watch or even just see the star once it’s in place. Guest speakers are Patty Jenkins (you know who she is) and Les Moonves. Moonves (you probably don’t know who he is) is the current head of CBS, which was the network that picked up the show in the 70s after ABC cancelled it – maybe he can say something about the sexual harassment that was going on on-set at the time

Comic reviews

Only a couple of appearances by our Diana this week. In Wonder Woman #42, Diana faces Grail again and her brother shows up with some nice new duds. Meanwhile, in Trinity #19, the Trinity have a great big battle and return to the outside world, ready for a new quest.

Yawn. Why am I yawning? Oh yes – James Robinson wrote them both.

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #42, Trinity #19”

Christopher Robin
News

Travelers, Schitt’s Creek, Bad Blood renewed; Killing Eve acquired; + more

Film trailers

  • Trailer for Disney’s Christopher Robin

Internet TV

Canadian TV

UK TV

US TV

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Mary Poppins Returns
News

Jessica Alba joins the Bad Boys; Mary Poppins Returns trailer; Martin Freeman – Breeder; + more

Film trailers

Internet TV

  • Teaser trailer for the final season of Netflix’s House of Cards
  • Priah Ferguson to recur on, Maya Thurman-Hawke joins Netflix’s Stranger Things

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Thor: Ragnarok
Film reviews

Movie Monday: Thor – Ragnarok (2017)

Once in a while on Monday, TMINE will review the select few movies it’s had time to watch when it’s not been watching TV. The film reviews A-Z lists every film ever reviewed here

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is a varied one. It has the James Bond-style adventures of an African King in Black Panther, the West Coast techno-adventures of Iron Man, the outer space comedy of Guardians of the Galaxy and the magical, reality-warping drama of Doctor Strange. Even within individual franchises, there’s diversity. Captain America was a Rocketeer-styled World War 2 period drama, for example, while Captain America 2 was more of a gritty Parallax View piece of spying.

So you never know what you’re going to get with any given Marvel movie. Thor began as a romance, in which geeky scientist Natalie Portman discovers that the buff bloke she met on a New Mexico road is really Thor, the Norse god of Thunder, exiled from Asgard and looking for redemption, if only his mischievous brother Loki will let him return home.

Thor 2: Dark World was a little bit funnier, but a little bit more of the same, as Thor helps protect the Earth from some Dark Elves who are after Portman. No one really liked it, particularly since there’s literally no way to get the Northern Line from Charing Cross to Greenwich, certainly not in the middle of a battle.

Thor: Ragnarok

Now we have Thor: Ragnarok. Fans of Norse myth will of course know that Ragnarok is the prophesied end of the gods, when giant wolves, serpents and the like come to kill the gods, so expectations were naturally for something a bit sombre, particularly since the Marvel franchises come in packs of at most three movies (eg Iron Man, Captain America) so this was also set to be the last of the Thor movies. Then, of course, there’s Cate Blanchett playing Hella, the Norse goddess of Death. Again, a move that didn’t suggest laughs a minute.

Certainly, watching Thor: Ragnarok, there is an underlying sadness to proceedings, when favourite character after favourite character from previous movies meets a quick and untimely death. But in the hands of director Taika Waititi (Eagle vs Shark, What We Do in the Shadows), it’s fair to say that Thor: Ragnarok is also the funniest Marvel movie to date. Seriously, it makes Guardians of the Galaxy look like a Ken Loach movie at times.

That’s despite Thor losing his mighty hammer Mjölnir, splitting up from Portman and landing up on a planet where he has to fight to the death for Jeff Goldblum against the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo).

Continue reading “Movie Monday: Thor – Ragnarok (2017)”