Zaraah Abrahams in Da Sweet Blood of Jesus

[Weekly Netflix Fix] Mid-July 2015 Update

Sorry for missing last week's Weekly Netflix Fix - I was afflicted with a mild case of strep throat, and being sick in the middle of the summer is the worst thing to ever happen to man. This week, we have an extra-sized installment combining all of the latest Netflix Instant additions from the past two weeks. Spike Lee's most recent film, Da Sweet Blood of Jesus, has been added, the indie darling Faults starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), and Mark Duplass' Creep are my personal recommendations. Take a look at all of the new Netflix Instant additions below!

Changeling
Plague
10 Questions for the Dalai Lama
An Act of War
Carita de Angel
The Comedian
Da Sweet Blood of Jesus
El Chavo Animado: Season 1
El Chavo Animado: Season 2
El Chavo Animado: Season 3
El Chavo Animado: Season 4
El Internado: Season 1
El Internado: Season 2
El Internado: Season 3
El Internado: Season 4
El Internado: Season 5
El Internado: Season 6
El Internado: Season 7
Eugene Mirman: Vegan on His Way to the Complain Store
H2O: Mermaid Adventures: Season 2
Penguins of Madagascar: The Movie
The Physician
Rebelde
Todd Barry: The Crowd Work Tour
Vandal
XH Derbez
A Year in Champagne
America's Book of Secrets: Season 3
An Amish Murder
Bad Ink: Season 1
The Bible Rules: Season 1
Bible Secrets Revealed: Season 1
Carnal Innocence
Christie's Revenge
Creep 
From the Dark
God, Guns & Automobiles: Season 1
Goodbye to All That 2014
Human Planet
Human Planet: Behind the Lens
Imaginary Friend
The Killer Speaks: Season 2
Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr. Moreau
MonsterQuest: Season 1
MonsterQuest: Season 4
Pastor Brown
Preachers' Daughters: Season 2
Storage Wars: Texas: Season 1
The Unwanted
WWII From Space
Corvette Nation: Season 1
Corvette Nation: Season 2
Hard Drive
Adventures of Pepper and Paula
Opposite Field
These Final Hours
Chris Tucker Live
The Expendables 3
Violetta: Season 1
Violetta: Season 2
Are We Done Yet?
Deep in the Darkness
The Last Unicorn
Monsters: Dark Continent
The Phoenix Project
Serena
Baby Boom
Knights of Sidonia: Season 2
Faults
Hell on Wheels: Season 4
White Collar: Season 6
Superfast!
Bitten: Season 2
Underwater Dreams
Alien Outpost
Dark Summer
Gerontophilia
A Gesar Bard's Tale
Loitering with Intent
Monster High: Scaris, City of Frights
The Pact 2
The Search for General Tso
Wild Canaries
Witches of East End: Season 2
Genocide
Hjørdis
I Have Never Forgotten You
The Long Way Home
The Prime Ministers: The Pioneers
Winston Churchill: Walking with Destiny
Are We Done Yet?
Deep in the Darkness
The Last Unicorn
Monsters: Dark Continent
Serena


Photo of Elodie Yung

Marvel's Daredevil Finds Its Elektra In Elodie Yung

Marvel have announced the casting of French-Cambodian actress Élodie Yung as Elektra in the upcoming second season of Daredevil on Netflix. Yung is well versed in the action genre, having played Jinx, a ninja, in 2013's hopeless G.I. Joe: Retaliation. Marvel's Jeph Loeb described Yung as 'the perfect actress to embody both Elektra’s impressive and deadly physicality, as well as her psychological complexity. Paired with Charlie as Matt Murdock, the two will bring one of the most beloved and tumultuous comic book relationships to life with all the accompanying sparks and spectacular action sequences the show is known for.'

There will likely be some curiosity over whether Yung's interpretation of the character will see some changes to her history. In the comics, Elektra is a Greek woman who trains in martial arts following the deaths of her parents. She shares a mentor with Matt Murdock in the shape of Stick, played by Scott Glenn in the series, despite her later choosing to ally herself with The Hand, a sect of ninja assassins who have been hinted at as a long-term threat. Given Yung's heritage, it is also possible her Elektra will be linked in some capacity to Nobu, a ninja-turned-businessman who, prior to his fiery death at Murdock's hands, was allied to both Wilson Fisk and a clan with a strong resemblance to The Hand. That's strictly speculation, but with Jon Bernthal also joining the series as Frank Castle, aka The Punisher, there will be no shortage of fan favourites in play when the series returns in 2016.

[via Marvel]


The Simpsons' Harry Shearer

Harry Shearer Returns to The Simpsons

After a stressful two month period in which Harry Shearer, the voice of many characters on The Simpsons (including Principal Skinner, Ned Flanders, Mr. Burns, etc.), didn't seem too keen on returning to the long-running animated sitcom, Entertainment Weekly is reporting that Shearer will be rejoining the rest of The Simpsons cast through the series' two guaranteed seasons.

Shearer's contract, like the rest of the principal cast's, is for four seasons at more than $300,000 per episode, with Fox possessing the option for the final two seasons if The Simpsons gets renewed for two more seasons beyond the current guaranteeThe Simpsons' official Twitter tweeted their excitement over the news below.

It was a contentious two months for the show's fans, and while executives were adamant about re-casting the characters had Shearer not returned, it's good to know that this minor bump in the road has come to a happy conclusion. Now if only they can re-discover the charm that made them such an icon...

[via Entertainment Weekly]


Film still of Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa

[Weekly Netflix Fix] First July 2015 Update

Coinciding with the release of the amazing Creed trailer this week comes the return of the Rocky films to Netflix, which are the main highlights for this week. Some other highlights include the cult classic The Warriors, Adam Sandler's Big Daddy (a personal favorite of mine), Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, and the classic Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

You can find the full list of new Netflix Instant additions below.

My Italian Secret: The Forgotten Heroes
Twin Warriors
King of Comedy
Ballet 422
God of Cookery
Hasee Toh Phasee
What Happened, Miss Simone?
Cupcakes
Young & Hungry: Season 2
Katy Perry: The Prismatic World Tour
Dragons: Race to the Edge: Season 1
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Ralphie May: Imperfectly Yours
The Barber
NCIS: Season 1
NCIS: Season 2
NCIS: Season 3
NCIS: Season 4
NCIS: Season 5
NCIS: Season 6
NCIS: Season 7
NCIS: Season 8
NCIS: Season 9
La Reina del Sur
NCIS: Season 10
NCIS: Season 11
El Señor de los Cielos: Season 1
El Señor de los Cielos: Season 2
La Patrona
Camelia la Texana
The Pope from the End of the World
If You Don't, I Will
Born to Fly
The Day My Butt Went Psycho!: Season 1
The Day My Butt Went Psycho!: Season 2
Hard to Be a God
Toobys in English
Black Butler: Season 1
Sirius
Below Dreams
Next Goal Wins
An Honest Liar
The Immortalists
Pantani: The Accidental Death of a Cyclist
Mary Kom
Plot for Peace
El Crimen del Cácaro Gumaro
El Cartel: Season 1
Operación Jaque: Operation Checkmate
Octonauts: Season 3
El Secretario: Season 1
Made in Cartagena: Season 1
La Promesa: Season 1
El Cartel 2: Season 1
Las muñecas de la mafia: Season 1
La Ruta Blanca: Season 1
Worms
love and other catastrophes
The Widowmaker
Death in Paradise: Season 3
Dancer and the Dame
Dancing in the Light: The Janet Collins Story
Sweet Blackberry Presents: Garrett's Gift
Sweet Blackberry Presents: Henry Box Brown
Love & Engineering
How I Got Over
Xiaolin Chronicles: Season 1
Xiaolin Chronicles: Season 2
The Father's Love
Velvet: Season 2
Bad Hair Day
Man Up
Dave Attell: Road Work
Rocky V
Piglet's Big Movie
Road House
The Day the Earth Stood Still
The Browning Version
Underworld
Alive
You Got Served
Thumbelina
Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid
In Enemy Hands
Hostage
The Beverly Hillbillies
Kung Fu Hustle
Dutch  La Usurpadora
Underworld: Evolution
Grandma's Boy
Renaissance
Teeth
Some Kind of Hero
Saw V
Unstable Fables: Goldilocks and the 3 Bears
Hell Is for Heroes
Bionicle: The Legend Reborn
The Concert
House of the Rising Sun
Rubi
Para Volver a Amar
Captive
Inami: Season 1
Yakari: Season 1
Chicken Town: Season 1
XH Derbez
Foreign Letters
When Day Breaks
48 Hrs.
Batman
Conan the Barbarian
Mr. Mom
The Net
Rob Roy
Rocky 
Rocky II 
Rocky IV 
State Fair
The Terminator
WarGames
Shooting Fish
Pi
Silence of the Lambs
Bulworth
Star Trek: Insurrection
Big Daddy 
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 
Drive Me Crazy
Scary Movie
The Secret of Roan Inish
The Delta Force
Almost Famous
Chocolat
The Warriors 
How to Marry a Millionaire
Flashdance
From Here to Eternity
Rocky III
Street Smart
The Turning Point
Uncommon Valor
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey 
Bandits
Hombre


Donald Trump giving a political speech

Donald Trump is Suing Univision for $500 Million

Never one to quietly fade away, Donald Trump has neither apologized for his comments nor let any of it go. When Univision publicly reprimanded him after his bid for the presidency led to tirade of awful comments (most directed toward Mexican immigrants and how they're terrible people), it led to a landslide of consequences as I predicted earlier in the week. Univision refused to air Trump's co-owned Miss Universe pageant, most of the program's hosts and co-hosts left the show, and all of that led to NBC Universal cutting all their ties with him and his programs like The Celebrity Apprentice. Trump has essentially marred his brand even further...if that was even possible.

But, now he's choosing to fire back. Claiming breach of contract and suppression of free speech, Trump is suing the Spanish language company for $500 million:

Under the contract, Univision is required to broadcast the pageant live on television in Spanish. While Univision claims its decision came solely in response to comments by Mr. Trump during a June 16 campaign speech announcing his candidacy for President of the United States, the decision was, in reality, a politically motivated attempt to suppress Mr. Trump's freedom of speech under the First Amendment as he begins to campaign for the nation's presidency.

Speaking with Politico, Univision is fighting the suit:

We just reviewed Mr. Trump’s complaint for the first time, and it is both factually false and legally ridiculous. We will not only vigorously defend the case, but will continue to fight against Mr. Trump’s ongoing efforts to run away from the derogatory comments he made on June 16th about Mexican immigrants. Our decision to end our business relationship with Mr. Trump was influenced solely by our responsibility to speak up for the community we serve.

This looks like it's getting uglier as it rolls on. But at least it means Trump's candidacy is losing any semblance of legitimacy it might've had. We'll keep an eye on this as it rolls on.

[via BBC]


MTV's Scream TV Series' Bella Thorne

Watch the First 8 Minutes of MTV's Scream TV Series

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I'm not a big fan of horror films, but I've always loved the Scream series. Its slasher horror tinged with a goofy and meta rule book really stood out among a genre where every film was nearly the same. It came out at exactly the right time, too. The rebellious 90s angst was fit for skewering and no better horror film caught the feeling of the time. Which is why MTV reviving the series with a TV show is so weird.

Slasher films (or horror in general) don't lend well to TV, so I'm wondering what the long term effects of this will be. With this first 8 minutes, the series establishes a completely different tone than the original films. Gone is the kooky humor (and pop referential killer), and replaced with faux social medias. On one hand, I'm digging the new tone. There's still a weird sense of humor that a teenager would be in a house that lavish (and will continue walking around in a bikini despite being frightened), and the "Heads up" bit made me laugh. On the other, why take the name if you're going to change everything about the original.

Then again, there was a time where MTV would've censored that gore. The kills in this opening scene are impressive, so I've got to admit I'm hooked. I'll keep an eye out on this show and see if it can keep up this interesting take.

Scream premieres on MTV, Tuesday at 10/9c.


Univision Logo - Ruby Hornet

Why Univision Dropping Miss USA is a Big Deal

Through the years, I've learned to dismiss older folks when they make racist comments, thinking they were just a product of their time. I figured if I'd wait it out long enough, all those comments would go away. Unfortunately, that's no longer the case as those negative voices are getting much louder. Last week, Donald Trump announced his bid as candidate for the 2016 presidential election. Normally I'd just ignore him like I do every angry white man, but Trump just started spouting the worst kinds of things.

Along with his stances on gay marriage, health care, and ISIS, he had this to say about immigration laws:

The US has become a dumping ground for everybody else's problems...When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re sending people that have lots of problems. And they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime, they’re rapists, and some, I assume, are good people...It's coming from all over South and Latin America and it's coming, probably, probably from the Middle East.

[youtube id="bMSBmjeDTFA"]

Univision (one of the largest Spanish language television networks), rightfully angry at his comments, refused to air the upcoming Spanish translated broadcast of the Miss USA Pageant and will no longer have anything to do with Miss Universe, which Trump partly owns:

Today the entertainment division of Univision Communications Inc. announced that it is ending the Company’s business relationship with the Miss Universe Organization, which is part-owned by Donald J. Trump, based on his recent, insulting remarks about Mexican immigrants. At Univision we see first-hand the work ethic, love for family, strong religious values and the important role Mexican immigrants and Mexican-Americans have had and will continue to have in building the future of our country. We will not be airing the Miss USA pageant on July 12th or working on any other projects tied to the Trump Organization.

While Trump blames the Mexican government (thinking they put some kind of pressure on Univision to break their $10 million contract due to trade deals or something), he doesn't seem to grasp how big of a move this is for Univision, and how much more it's going to hurt him in the long run. You see, as much as he wants to build a wall to keep Mexican immigrants out, traditional Mexican families make up a huge chunk of the television watching audience. As big networks are finding out, immigrants are one of the few demographics left that subscribe to event television like big pageant shows (basically stuff that you have to watch live to get the full experience instead of on Hulu later). That's why you've seen a greater amount of Latino representation lately (and why pandering programs like Cristela and Devious Maids exist, or in Cristela's case, existed) as those Mexican families increasingly use television to connect with the American lifestyle.

Trump at the 2012 Miss Universe Pageant

This is going to deal major damage to Trump's television shows, and it's only the start of the landslide. Roselyn Sanchez (who was brought on to co-host the Spanish simulcast of the Miss USA pageant and serendipitously stars on Devious Maids), has left the broadcast, NBC (the network which hosts the brunt of his programming like his numerous Apprentice shows) has separated itself from his comments, ending their business relationship with him earlier today.

As Trump vies for the presidency, he claims he cares less about his precious money. Hopefully he understands how much of that he's going to lose here. As the Spanish speaking audience increases, so does their buying power. Eventually that buying power is going to ring louder than any thoughtless rant from a slowly aging man. Good luck getting that presidential nomination, Trump.


The Avengers' Patrick Macnee Ruby Hornet

RIP Patrick Macnee, Star of The Avengers TV Show & Role Model For Boys Everywhere

Patrick Macnee, best known for starring as John Steed in the '60s British television phenomenon, The Avengers, died of natural causes yesterday, aged 93, at his home in California.

Some of you may have read the article I posted last month about the impact The Avengers had in pioneering powerful female characters on television. For those who still remember the show, often the first thing that comes to mind is Diana Rigg's Emma Peel, the show's karate-chopping, catsuited co-lead between 1965-1967 who became an immediate fashion and feminist icon of her time. While the show's array of brilliant and beautiful female characters may live most vividly in the popular memory for their impact on culture and beyond, it was Macnee's John Steed who was its constant anchor, lasting its entire run from 1961-1969 before returning for two more years between 1976-1977 with the New Avengers revival.

My article focused on the show's positive impact for women, but it should never been forgotten how important Macnee's role as Steed was in providing a role model for young boys to look up as well. On the surface, Steed is often interpreted as representing the good in old-fashioned values where his female partners represented modernity and youth. While that is all true, it overlooks what a nuanced, progressive character Steed actually was. He embodied all the wonderful aspects of the traditional English gentleman, always gracious in manner, quick of wit and exquisite - barring a few questionable casual shirts in the Tara King era - of dress, showing how a masculine role model could evolve to work alongside women as equals.

He was cheeky and flirtatious, instantly loveable thanks to Macnee's avuncular charm, but never patronising or domineering. He respected his female partners as effortlessly as they respected him. Just as Honor Blackman's Cathy Gale, Diana Rigg's Emma Peel, Linda Thorson's Tara King and Joanna Lumley's Purdey gave women figures to strive towards, so too was Patrick Macnee's Steed an exemplar for all good men to aspire to. Diana Rigg, in particular, has credited Macnee for his support during a difficult time towards the end of her tenure on the show when she discovered that, despite being the star, she was being paid less than the cameraman.

Avengers' Peel and Steed

Looking back at Macnee's unconventional childhood, one can perhaps find the roots of the positive values he brought to the show and his character. Like Steed, Macnee had something of the eccentric aristocrat about him from birth, with his mother Dorothea, socialite niece of the 13th Earl of Huntington, going into labour at a party and rumoured to have given birth to him in a carriage halfway down Bayswater Road. His parents divorced when his mother came out as a lesbian, and it was she and her partner Evelyn who raised the young Patrick and paid for his education at Summerfields, where he became acting acquaintances with Christopher Lee, and then Eton. His father was no less eccentric, a racehorse trainer nicknamed 'Shrimp' for his lack of height, who was sent home from India in disgrace after urinating from a balcony onto the Raj and his officials at a race meeting. It was his fondness for fine clothes that inspired the same quality in Steed. Patrick inherited his parents' knack for challenging social mores and was expelled from Eton for selling pornography and bookmaking for his fellow students. In other words, the friend we all wish we'd had.

After serving in the Motor Torpedo Boats during the Second World War, saved from D-Day thanks to a bout of bronchitis, he began his screen acting career in Powell and Pressberger's 1943 classic, The Life And Death Of Colonel Blimp. After seeking new opportunities in North America, he returned to England in 1960 and was cast in his defining role as Steed a year later. The part dominated the rest of his career, though he also made high-profile film appearances in This Is Spinal Tap and A View To A Kill (joining Blackman, Rigg and Lumley as Avengers alumni going on to star in Bond movies), along with television guest spots in Columbo and The Love Boat among others. He also popped up in the video for Oasis' seminal '90s Britpop hit, Don't Look Back In Anger.

It will nevertheless be as Steed that Macnee will undoubtedly be most fondly remembered by his many fans. As sad as it is to discover his passing, I am proud to have had him as a personal hero growing up, the inspiration for many ridiculous memories of putting on a bowler hat and grabbing an umbrella before running outside to recreate and invent various episodes of The Avengers in the garden. The tributes pouring in show such memories are shared just as fondly among many others across the world. Patrick Macnee, you always kept your bowler on in times of stress, you conquered every diabolical mastermind who crossed your path, and looked more worldly and debonair in a suit than any man has before or since. You were and are my hero, the original Avenger, and my bowler will forever be doffed to your memory.

R.I.P. Patrick Macnee, 1922-2015.