Axel-In-Charge: Navigating the "Civil War II" Landscape, Bringing DMC to Marvel
Comic Books
Voice actors JP Karliak and Bob Bergen discuss what they enjoy most about the new take on the classic “Looney Tunes” characters in “Wabbit” and how they keep their work and the characters fun. They also [...]
The voice of Bugs Bunny himself, Jeff Bergman, and producer Gary Hartle discuss balancing a return to the iconic nature of early Bugs stories with modern sensibilities in “Wabbit — A Looney Tunes Prod.” and what [...]
Inspired by Whitley Strieber’s “Alien Hunter” series of novels, Syfy’s “Hunters” tells the story of Flynn (Nathan Phillips), an FBI agent with a dark past searching for answers in the wake of his wife’s disappearance. That [...]
Syfy’s “12 Monkeys” revolves around a time traveler named James Cole (Aaron Stanford) who travels from the year 2043 to 2015 to stop a deadly plague that nearly wipes out humanity in 2017. Cole and José [...]
In a TV landscape full of police procedurals, doctor and lawyer shows, and a growing number of super hero stories, WGN America’s “Underground” is a definite outlier. It’s the story of a group of slaves who [...]
Under the pen name James S.A. Corey, Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck have created a beloved sci-fi novel series set hundreds of years from now in which the solar system has been colonized. But with control, [...]
If you’ve only seen Terry Gilliam’s 2005 film “12 Monkeys,” you don’t actually know the full story of “12 Monkeys.” Instead of a time-traveling Bruce Willis trying to convince Madeline Stowe he’s not crazy and that [...]
Inspired by the 1995 film of the same name, “12 Monkeys” follows a time-traveler’s mission from the year 2043 to the present day to prevent a near-extinction-level event from occurring. With the help of virologist Dr. [...]
In the second half of their conversation with CBR TV, “How to Train Your Dragon” writer/director Dean DeBlois and OGN co-writer Richard Hamilton share the comic books that left the greatest impact on them creatively, future [...]
In part one, “How to Train Your Dragon” writer/director Dean DeBlois explains why the animated franchise is making the jump to the printed page at Dark Horse as well as what problems and possibilities it opens [...]