Halo Season 2 Episode 3 Photos Visegrad – 203: “Visegrad” John and Silver Team embark on an unsanctioned mission. Laera, Kwan and Kessler must escape Soren’s mutinous crew. Ackerson receives troubling intelligence from Cortana. The threat of an impending attack forces Ackerson to make an irrevocable decision. Directed by: Craig Zisk Teleplay by: Marisha Mukerjee In Halo season two, Master Chief John-117 leads his team of elite Spartans against the alien threat known as the Covenant. In the wake of a shocking event on a desolate planet, John cannot shake the feeling that his war is about to change and risks everything ... Read more...
- 2/9/2024
- by Thomas Miller
- Seat42F
Plot: In season two, Master Chief John-117 leads his team of elite Spartans against the alien threat known as the Covenant. In the wake of a shocking event on a desolate planet, John cannot shake the feeling that his war is about to change and risks everything to prove what no one else will believe – that the Covenant are preparing to attack humanity’s greatest stronghold. With the galaxy on the brink, John embarks on a journey to find the key to humankind’s salvation, or its extinction — the Halo.
Review: Halo debuted in 2022 with fifteen years of development baggage heaped on top of it. With sky-high expectations for the series, anything less than a seismic shift in video game adaptations was bound to fail. Halo debuted with a muted response that found the Game of Thrones-esque intrigue and conspiracies distracting from what made the game one of the biggest franchises in history.
Review: Halo debuted in 2022 with fifteen years of development baggage heaped on top of it. With sky-high expectations for the series, anything less than a seismic shift in video game adaptations was bound to fail. Halo debuted with a muted response that found the Game of Thrones-esque intrigue and conspiracies distracting from what made the game one of the biggest franchises in history.
- 2/5/2024
- by Alex Maidy
- JoBlo.com
This Snowpiercer review contains spoilers.
Snowpiercer Season 3 Episode 8
Another day, another environmental calamity on board Snowpiercer that requires valiant intervention to prevent total systemic meltdown. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. It’s not a new situation on board Snowpiercer, but all things considered, that the train is still running this long, and this well, through such terrible conditions is a borderline miracle. I’ve worked places where the Internet broke down every time it rained, and that’s not even in a frozen post-apocalyptic hellscape. I can only imagine the challenge the engineers have had trying to keep the train running through thick and thin, revolution and dictatorship.
It’s a lot of work for three engineers plus an occasionally helpful prisoner in Wilford (Sean Bean), so it’s not a surprise that when the chance to recover a missing person in the form of Melanie...
Snowpiercer Season 3 Episode 8
Another day, another environmental calamity on board Snowpiercer that requires valiant intervention to prevent total systemic meltdown. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. It’s not a new situation on board Snowpiercer, but all things considered, that the train is still running this long, and this well, through such terrible conditions is a borderline miracle. I’ve worked places where the Internet broke down every time it rained, and that’s not even in a frozen post-apocalyptic hellscape. I can only imagine the challenge the engineers have had trying to keep the train running through thick and thin, revolution and dictatorship.
It’s a lot of work for three engineers plus an occasionally helpful prisoner in Wilford (Sean Bean), so it’s not a surprise that when the chance to recover a missing person in the form of Melanie...
- 3/15/2022
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
UK outfit Seven Stories to make cricket series for SVoD giant.
Netflix has ordered an Indian drama from All3Media-owned UK independent producer Seven Stories.
The London-based firm, established by film directors Anand Tucker and Sharon Maguire and chaired by Stephen Lambert, is producing Selection Day, a story about cricket and corruption.
The multi-part series, which is based on Booker Prize winning author Aravind Adiga’s novel, tells the story of rivalry between two teenage boys in Mumbai.
It is one of Netflix’s first original dramas to emerge from India and is its latest global commission.
Selection Day is the first order for Seven Stories, which was set up by India Summers and Shopgirl director Tucker and Bridget Jones’ Baby director Maguire in 2015.
Erik Barmack, vice president of international original series at Netflix, said the SVoD service was excited to be expanding its slate of originals in the country.
“These projects...
Netflix has ordered an Indian drama from All3Media-owned UK independent producer Seven Stories.
The London-based firm, established by film directors Anand Tucker and Sharon Maguire and chaired by Stephen Lambert, is producing Selection Day, a story about cricket and corruption.
The multi-part series, which is based on Booker Prize winning author Aravind Adiga’s novel, tells the story of rivalry between two teenage boys in Mumbai.
It is one of Netflix’s first original dramas to emerge from India and is its latest global commission.
Selection Day is the first order for Seven Stories, which was set up by India Summers and Shopgirl director Tucker and Bridget Jones’ Baby director Maguire in 2015.
Erik Barmack, vice president of international original series at Netflix, said the SVoD service was excited to be expanding its slate of originals in the country.
“These projects...
- 8/3/2017
- ScreenDaily
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Finally, Heroes Returns gets back to the present and clears the way for a potentially strong final act...
This review contains spoilers.
1.9 Sundae, Bloody Sundae
Luke and Joanne work out their issues over some ice cream and Matt Parkman attempts to recreate The Prisoner this week as Heroes Reborn returns to the present day with Sundae, Bloody Sundae. With all the head-scratching time travel and info-dumping from the past two episodes out of the way, Heroes Reborn gets to return to a streamlined, less hasty format as we are reacquainted with the main timeline, albeit with the addition of a few squashed butterflies. The more sedate pace is a pleasant change of gear after the intensity of the June 13th two-parter and it’s a relief to be back in more familiar territory and to catch up with the characters who took a back seat for the flashback episodes.
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Finally, Heroes Returns gets back to the present and clears the way for a potentially strong final act...
This review contains spoilers.
1.9 Sundae, Bloody Sundae
Luke and Joanne work out their issues over some ice cream and Matt Parkman attempts to recreate The Prisoner this week as Heroes Reborn returns to the present day with Sundae, Bloody Sundae. With all the head-scratching time travel and info-dumping from the past two episodes out of the way, Heroes Reborn gets to return to a streamlined, less hasty format as we are reacquainted with the main timeline, albeit with the addition of a few squashed butterflies. The more sedate pace is a pleasant change of gear after the intensity of the June 13th two-parter and it’s a relief to be back in more familiar territory and to catch up with the characters who took a back seat for the flashback episodes.
- 11/13/2015
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Heroes Reborn, Season 1, Episode 9, “Sundae, Bloody Sundae”
Written by Marisha Mukerjee and Sharon Hoffman
Directed by Gideon Raff
Airs Thursdays at 8pm (Et) on NBC
Where is Erica’s cane?
Seriously, what happened to it? These Heroes Reborn reviews tend to divulge into just listing mistakes. That’s a bit cheap and it’s a bit unfair to the show; this is supposed to be a critical space, not a dog pile. But the show should meet the review space halfway, at least. Tired of reading a list of dumb mistakes your show makes, theoretical Heroes Reborn producer? Then stop making dumb mistakes for reviewers to pick up on. If you give a character that didn’t have a cane before a cane halfway through the season and then show that character using her new cane in the “Previously on” clips , that character has to have a cane for the rest of the season,...
Written by Marisha Mukerjee and Sharon Hoffman
Directed by Gideon Raff
Airs Thursdays at 8pm (Et) on NBC
Where is Erica’s cane?
Seriously, what happened to it? These Heroes Reborn reviews tend to divulge into just listing mistakes. That’s a bit cheap and it’s a bit unfair to the show; this is supposed to be a critical space, not a dog pile. But the show should meet the review space halfway, at least. Tired of reading a list of dumb mistakes your show makes, theoretical Heroes Reborn producer? Then stop making dumb mistakes for reviewers to pick up on. If you give a character that didn’t have a cane before a cane halfway through the season and then show that character using her new cane in the “Previously on” clips , that character has to have a cane for the rest of the season,...
- 11/13/2015
- by Jj Perkins
- SoundOnSight
The Bridge Season 2, Episodes 9 & 10 “Rakshasa”/”Eidolon”
Written by Marisha Mukerjee/Patrick Somerville
Directed by Guillermo Navarro/Colin Bucksey
Airs Wednesdays at 10pm Et on FX
For all the talk around the internet of how The Bridge solved “the David Tate” problem of season one by removing the whole Serial Killer with a Personal Vendetta crap from the proceedings, “Rakshasa” and “Eidolon” both prove – as the entire season has, really – that the show hasn’t really ‘solved’ this issue at all, even after killing off David Tate a few weeks ago. They’ve merely replaced it, morphing a scorned employee of a main character’s wife into a one-off villain whose personality and characteristics are as random as the motivations David Tate seemed to have throughout season one’s episodes. I’m obviously talking about Eleanor Nacht – and while the performance and dramatic storytelling around it continue to be entertaining, her...
Written by Marisha Mukerjee/Patrick Somerville
Directed by Guillermo Navarro/Colin Bucksey
Airs Wednesdays at 10pm Et on FX
For all the talk around the internet of how The Bridge solved “the David Tate” problem of season one by removing the whole Serial Killer with a Personal Vendetta crap from the proceedings, “Rakshasa” and “Eidolon” both prove – as the entire season has, really – that the show hasn’t really ‘solved’ this issue at all, even after killing off David Tate a few weeks ago. They’ve merely replaced it, morphing a scorned employee of a main character’s wife into a one-off villain whose personality and characteristics are as random as the motivations David Tate seemed to have throughout season one’s episodes. I’m obviously talking about Eleanor Nacht – and while the performance and dramatic storytelling around it continue to be entertaining, her...
- 9/13/2014
- by Randy Dankievitch
- SoundOnSight
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