Plus: John Boorman's 'Excalibur' gets a 4K upgrade, a wholesome new sci-fi epic from the director of 'WALL-E,' & more.Plus: John Boorman's 'Excalibur' gets a 4K upgrade, a wholesome new sci-fi epic from the director of 'WALL-E,' & more.
Inverse Daily
How Wyatt Russell Became The Secret Weapon Of Two Massive Franchises
How Wyatt Russell Became The Secret Weapon Of Two Massive Franchises

The instant likability of Wyatt Russell is hard to deny, but perhaps even harder to explain. As the son of the legendary Kurt Russell, the younger Russell has a kind of instant familiarity and an everyman feeling in nearly all his roles. When Wyatt Russell shows up in a genre project — from Black Mirror to Marvel — he’s the kind of guy you want to root for right away, but also seems like an old friend. He’s also an action hero with a twinkle in his eye, as if Captain Kirk were the guy paying for your beers.

But in the Marvel universe, where he plays John Walker, and in Apple TV’s Monsterverse series, Monarch, where he plays Lee Shaw, he’s also a very specific brand of reluctant hero, an archetype that he both embodies and has invented for himself. “I'm able to give this character the things that I want to be able to give this character, then you have the right guy,” Russell says of his process in finding the vibe of the men he plays.

This year, Russell is silently dominating the science fiction world, returning as John Walker in Avengers: Doomsday, as well as Steven Spielberg’s upcoming alien invasion film, Disclosure Day. He’s also going to be in the Monarch world for a while; his timey-wimey Lee Shaw is getting a new spinoff set in the 1980s, full of monsters, nostalgia, and more.

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What Is 'Backrooms'? The Terrifying Internet Phenomenon Behind A24's New Horror, Explained
Explainer
What Is 'Backrooms'? The Terrifying Internet Phenomenon Behind A24's New Horror, Explained
The Backrooms became an overnight horror sensation and the lore has expanded significantly since then — now it's about to terrify a whole new audience.
Mackenyu, Cailee Spaeny, John Boyega, and Scott Eastwood in Pacific Rim: Uprising
Legendary Pictures
Preview
With 'Final Breach,' Pacific Rim Is Getting The Weirdest Finale Possible
The Pacific Rim franchise is finally fixing its biggest missed opportunity.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff in Kraven the Hunter
Sony Pictures
Opinion
There’s Only One Reason For Sony To Reboot The Spider-Verse
Sony's Spider-Verse could get another unnecessary reboot — and there's only one way to make it work.
Cool Stuff
The Best Lord Of The Rings Movie That Never Was Is Finally Getting A 4K Upgrade
The Best Lord Of The Rings Movie That Never Was Is Finally Getting A 4K Upgrade

First conceived as a 'Lord of the Rings' adaptation, John Boorman's 'Excalibur' is a cinematic feat unto itself. And it's now available in 4K.

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Spoilers!
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How The Director of 'WALL-E' Made The Year’s Most “Wholesome” Sci-Fi Movie
How The Director of 'WALL-E' Made The Year’s Most “Wholesome” Sci-Fi Movie

What makes a sci-fi movie a sci-fi movie? Is it a movie set in the future? A movie that incorporates technology that does not exist? A movie where impossible things happen? Usually, sci-fi is a “know it when you see it” genre, but not always. Take, for example, In the Blink of an Eye, the latest movie from longtime animation director Andrew Stanton. Using a unique structure, it tells three different stories that all coalesce into one message. Is it sci-fi? The better question is, does it really matter?

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