Martin Scorsese and Jonah Hill Star in The Coca-Cola Energy Super Bowl Commercial

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Coca-Cola has launched a new energy drink called Coca-Cola Energy, and they are making a big promotional push for it during the Super Bowl with a commercial that stars Martin Scorsese and Jonah Hill.

It’s kinda of a weird commercial where Scorsese is waiting for Hill to show up at a party and Hill is tired and clearly doesn’t want to go. Scorsese text’s Hill to remind him about the party and the rest of the commercial focuses on the world waiting to see if Hill texts him back saying that he’s coming to the party. So does Hill join Scorsese at the party to be his wingman? You’ll have to watch and see!

I think the commercial is a dud. It’s funny, though, that after complaining about the film’s Marvel makes, he goes out and does this Coca-Cola Energy Super Bowl ad. Check out the commercial and tell us what you think!

A Demon Is Unleashed in a House Full of Magical Keys in New Trailer for LOCKE & KEY

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Netflix has released a new trailer for its upcoming series adaptation of Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez‘s graphic novel series Locke & Key. The trailer offers some new footage and insight into the story. I love the vibe and tone of the series, which is filled with creepy horror and dangerous magic.

Here’s the synopsis for the fantastic-looking series:

After their father is murdered under mysterious circumstances, the three Locke siblings and their mother move into their ancestral home, Keyhouse, which they discover is full of magical keys that may be connected to their father’s death. As the Locke children explore the different keys and their unique powers, a mysterious demon awakens — and will stop at nothing to steal them.”

The Netflix series comes from Carlton Cuse (Lost) and Meredith Averill (The Haunting of Hill House), with a cast that includes Darby Stanchfield as Nina Locke, Jackson Robert Scott as Bode Locke, Connor Jessup as Tyler Locke, Emilia Jones as Kinsey Locke, Bill Heck as Rendell Locke, Laysla De Oliveira as Dodge, Thomas Mitchell Barnet as Sam Lesser, and Griffin Gluck as Gabe.

Locke and Key will premiere on Netflix on February 7, 2020. Enjoy the new trailer and let us know if you like what you see!

Exclusive: Yvette Nicole Brown on Community Revival & Rick and Morty!

Yvette Nicole Brown Gives Updates on Community Revival and Rick & Morty Hopes!

Exclusive: Yvette Nicole Brown gives updates on Community revival and Rick & Morty!

Yvette Nicole Brown has been the woman about town since her breakthrough mainstream role on the cult favorite NBC sitcom Community, landing various key roles in acclaimed hits such as The MayorElena of Avalor and CBS’ Mom. Like the rest of her cast, she is definitely ready for a reunion with Community‘s creator Dan Harmon!

While attending the premiere for Disney+’s upcoming family adventure Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made, Brown took a moment to chat with ComingSoon.net, where she gave an update on Harmon’s work on the long-in-development Community revival film, as well as her hopes to work with him in other capacities.

“I hit up Dan Harmon more often to get a role on Rick and Morty,” Brown said. “That’s where the money is, Rick and Morty is going to last forever. I don’t even care who I play, I could be the black woman in the corner saying, ‘Hi, hi.’ I don’t care what it is, I just want to do a voice on there. I know that Dan’s going to write the Community movie someday and when he does, we’re all going to show up, whenever it is, we’re ready to do it just like you guys are ready for it.”

RELATED: Community Reunion Endorsed by Cast, But Dan Harmon is Uncertain

Brown played the lovable single mother Shirley Bennet in a main role capacity for the first five seasons, as well as a recurring role on the Yahoo-revived sixth season, but despite her frequency of working in the voice-over world, she has yet to make her debut on Harmon’s acclaimed Adult Swim series. The sci-fi comedy hit has so far seen guest appearances from Joel McHale as Hemorrhage in the second episode of the third season “Rickmancing the Stone,” Gillian Jacobs as Supernova in the fourth episode of Season 3 “Vindicators 3: The Return of Worldender” and Jim Rash in the seventh episode of Season 2 “Big Trouble in Little Sanchez.”

A film revival of the NBC hit sitcom has been discussed for nearly six years since its original conclusion on the primetime network, with a recent update coming at Vulture Festival in November where Harmon stated that he’s been trying to work on it but is uncertain about the project, as he’s unsure whether he can live up to the expectations of fans and even his stars, who are all very ready and excited to return for more.

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MAGIC: THE GATHERING Head Designer Says Fans Will “Adore” the Upcoming Anime Series

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During the summer, Netflix announced an upcoming series from Marvel directors Anthony and Joe Russo set in the world of Magic: The Gathering. I know many fans are excited to see this series come to life, or at the very least get more details. Well, we may not know much more, but Mark Rosewater, the head designer for MTG recently gave fans some words of encouragement. In an interview with Cracked.com Rosewater spoke very positively of the series:

People will throttle me if I actually give you details, but I can say this: I’m about a fan of Magic as there can be. I have a lot of emotional investment in this existing and being good. We have a top-notch team working on this. Literally, [the show’s executive producers, the Russo Brothers of Avengers: Endgame fame] directed the highest-grossing movie of all time, and their next project is working with us! I think the audience is just going to adore it. I think it’s something that’ll bring people who don’t know Magic to Magic, which is really exciting.

In a press release that was sent out, the Russo Bros. expressed their excitement about the series and revealed that they are lifelong fans of Magic: The Gathering.

“We have been huge fans and players of Magic: The Gathering for as long as it has been around, so being able to help bring these stories to life through animation is a true passion project for us.”

While we don’t know much about the plot, but it was revealed that it will focus on the expansive world of Magic: The Gathering and its Planeswalker, which are described as “Magic’s unique magic-wielding heroes and villains as they contend with stakes larger than any one world can hold.”

I cannot wait to learn more about this series. Hopefully, we’ll learn more in the coming months.

Watch The Road to F9 Concert & Trailer Drop Live Stream!

Watch The Road to F9 Concert & Trailer Drop Live Stream!

Watch The Road to F9 concert & trailer drop live stream!

Universal Pictures’ The Road to F9 concert and trailer drop event for Fast & Furious 9 will begin live streaming at 12:00 p.m. PT / 3:00 p.m. ET. You can watch the live stream in the player below!

RELATED: F9: New Character Posters Released for Universal’s Fast & Furious 9

Fast & Furious 9 was originally set to hit theaters on April 19 but was pushed back a year to make room for the first spin-off in the series, Hobbs & Shaw, which had premiered last August. As a result, Fast & Furious 9 will be getting a May 22, 2020 release with Justin Lin returning to directing in the franchise, after helming Fast & Furious parts 3 through 6. Dan Casey will pen the screenplay based on Lin’s story alongside series mastermind Chris Morgan.

RELATED: Fast & Furious 9 Teaser Released Ahead of Trailer Drop Event this Friday

The film will feature the return of Vin Diesel as Dominic Toretto, Michelle Rodriguez as Letty Ortiz, Jordana Brewster as Mia Toretto, Tyrese Gibson as Roman Pierce, Ludacris as Tej Parker, Enrique Guzman as Simon Toretto, Nathalie Emmanuel as Ramsey, Helen Mirren as Magdalene Shaw and Charlize Theron as Cipher. John Cena, Finn Cole, Anna Sawai, Vinnie Bennett, and Michael Rooker have also been cast for the latest installment.

You can buy the Fast & Furious films here.

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The post Watch The Road to F9 Concert & Trailer Drop Live Stream! appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

CS Interview: Lynne Sachs on Personal Journey in Film About a Father Who

CS Interview: Lynne Sachs on Personal Journey in Film About a Father Who

CS Interview: Lynne Sachs on personal journey in Film About a Father Who

One of the most compelling and buzzed-about features to debut at this year’s Slamdance film festival in Park City, Utah is Lynne Sachs’ documentary Film About a Father Who and ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to talk with the filmmaker to explore the very personal project that focuses on the connection a child has to their parents and how it shapes them into who they will become.

RELATED: CS Interview: Richard Stanley on His Passion Project Color Out of Space

Over a period of 35 years between 1984 and 2019, filmmaker Lynne Sachs shot 8 and 16mm film, videotape and digital images of her father, Ira Sachs Sr., a bon vivant and pioneering businessman from Park City, Utah. Film About a Father Who is her attempt to understand the web that connects a child to her parent and a sister to her siblings. With a nod to the Cubist renderings of a face, Sachs’ cinematic exploration of her father offers simultaneous, sometimes contradictory views of one seemingly unknowable man who is publicly the uninhibited center of the frame yet privately ensconced in secrets. In the process, Sachs allows herself and her audience inside to see beyond the surface of the skin, the projected reality. As the startling facts mount, Sachs as a daughter discovers more about her father than she had ever hoped to reveal.

When it came to diving into this tale and learning of her father’s web of secrets, Sachs didn’t view it as wanting to tell a story but would rather become engaged in the material in a “documentarian way” as she followed him around with a camera asking him questions.

“It sort of made that collaboration between me and my father more, in his mind, serious or professional or fun because it was like a creative thing that we were doing instead of just a home movie,” Sachs described. “Years later, once you’ve lived that life, it’s like the story becomes something that unfolds in a way that takes on the shape and the structure. But at the beginning, it was just that I had this very interesting dad that I knew from way back when, day one, and sometimes it was challenging to have a dad who’s so different from everybody else’s. But then, when I became an adult, I said ‘Hey, maybe I was lucky that I had a father who didn’t play by the rules  and that had an imprint on me.”

Sachs found that this not playing by the rules mentality her father had with life would sometimes bleed over into interviewing him on camera, as he was known to give pushback regarding certain questions she would ask.

“I’d say he was cooperative and he was a collaborator, but in a way, maybe I’d say he set up the rules,” Sachs said. “It wasn’t until much later that I kind of got the picture that my father was, in a sense, a performer or an actor on multiple stages. I just didn’t know how many stages he was being himself, but himself in various ways. I kind of realized that it was a bit like a Cubist painting, a Picasso painting, where you’re never really just looking at one façade, you have multiple façades, so it just took me years to understand that.”

RELATED: The Best of Slamdance 2020

Diving into her father’s life and secrets was a fairly emotional time for Sachs, learning about the multiple women he kept secret from her and her siblings, as well as him having fathered children with said women. Exploring this situation, Sachs describes, was essential to tying together the themes of how one’s place is tied to their connection to their parents.

“When you look at a photograph and you have the darkest blacks and you have these white, well-lit areas, and then you have all of the scale in between,” Sachs said. “I and my siblings, too, we had a lot of low moments because as a child or as an adult, you come to certain stages of your life where you think you might not understand who you are, at least as a child. Even if you’re 30 or 40 or 50, you’re still someone’s child and you understand it. If it keeps changing, it’s very unsettling, and it can be like a seismic reaction. So in some ways, the film helped me to kind of calibrate that and to work through it and to know that I’m my own person. So that’s a very mythic thing to say, I am separate from my parents, I know he or she is there, but I am separate. So then, if I can find that, and maybe I found that through the making of the film, then I could move on. It’s been very interesting to see how many people, no matter what age, are still trying to reckon with who they are in relationship to where they came from.”

Having started the documentary in ’84, Sachs began shooting it on 16 mm film and as technology evolved over the years she would eventually transition to 8 mm film for some of its filming but found herself returning to the older tech frequently.

“The only kind of camera that is consistent throughout the whole film is 16 mm film, the only really stable material is 16 mm film,” Sachs said. “Even knowing this from being in the film business or industry, everybody keeps saying film is dead, we can now say tape is dead but film still exists. That material to most people’s eye looks the most beautiful, so even as the technology becomes more and more sophisticated or state of the art, there is a kind of lushness and a kind of aesthetic pleasure that you get from film. There is a scene in the film where I do these interviews with my father’s second wife and one of his girlfriends, and that was shot in 16 mm with sound. That is a lot of equipment because I was using a big 16-mm camera and this kind of very professional audio and then video came in and we were all saying, ‘Oh, now it’s easy, now it’s all in one camera, sound, and image.’ But the problem is you compromise the quality of the image and the beauty of it for the ease of it, so I was always going back to 16 mm because I was really drawn to the texture of the image.”

With a lot of material and different styles of shooting over the years, Sachs took her time pouring over everything and putting it all together, finding that even some of what she considered flaws actually translated into a very helpful style of filmmaking for her themes.

“When I was watching the material, it took a year to really watch all of it and I transcribed everything,” Sachs recalls. “I was very, very critical of some of my shooting because I said, ‘Oh, the camera was shaking or why was I paying attention to what was being delivered to the table rather than what the person who would be —all these things that one does when in real life. Then I thought, maybe it becomes more personal — it’s not that I was trying to make excuses, but maybe it brings this connection between the person behind the camera and the person or whatever’s happening in front of the camera.”

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