Sykes takes on the president in her Emmy-nominated Netflix special Not Normal. Lippman’s latest novel, Lady in the Lake, was inspired by two real-life Baltimore disappearances in the 1960s.
(Image credit: Atsushi Nishijima/Netflix)
Sykes takes on the president in her Emmy-nominated Netflix special Not Normal. Lippman’s latest novel, Lady in the Lake, was inspired by two real-life Baltimore disappearances in the 1960s.
(Image credit: Atsushi Nishijima/Netflix)
Paul Nicklen has spent decades documenting the Arctic and the Antarctic. He often finds himself in frigid waters, just a camera’s length away from deadly predators. Originally broadcast June 6, 2017.
Kelvin Harrison Jr. plays a popular teenager who was adopted from Eritrea as a kid. But underneath Luce’s charming smiles and polished speeches is the trauma of a former child soldier.
(Image credit: Jon Pack/Cinetic Media)
Before Sykes became a comic, she worked at the National Security Agency, where she had top security clearance. Now she takes on the president in her Emmy-nominated Netflix special Not Normal.
(Image credit: Atsushi Nishijima/Netflix)
Washington Post tech columnist Geoffrey Fowler listened to four years’ worth of audio that Amazon had captured and stored from his Alexa smart speaker. He was surprised by what he found.
The 1995 video game-inspired movie Mortal Kombat, which happens to be one of the top-grossing game adaptations of all time, is finally getting a reboot and will be produced by Aquaman’s James Wan, with actor Joe Taslim signed on as Sub-Zero.
And here’s some news that could make anyone anticipating the schlocky 1990s reboot even more fired up: “MK WILL be R-Rated and for the first time EVER, FATALITIES will FINALLY be on the big screen,” screenwriter Greg Russo confirmed.
And even more intriguing, Russo compared the tongue-in-cheek tone of the upcoming reboot to that of Deadpool, telling Comic Book:
“We looked at the games and then we also were looking at some film comps to compare our tone to. And I think things like Deadpool popped up and we’re like, we really like the tone of that, It’s got some great humor in there, but if you kind of take the humor out of it, it’s got real characters, like really emotional stakes behind what the characters are going through.”
“I mean Mortal Kombat‘s always been very tongue-in-cheek in how it approaches whether it’s kind of over the top violence or just kind of some of the insane story ideas that they come up with. I mean there’s always been this kind of fun nature to it,” he added.
Mortal Kombat is slated to hit theaters March 5, 2021.