With the good reviews that Blade Runner: 2049 has been receiving, we look at just how well it stacks up against other films of the cyberpunk subgenre.
The term “cyberpunk” was originally coined by Bruce Bethke as a title for his 1983 short story. He invented the word to describe future children who would become so technologically inclined that older generations would have difficulty dealing with them (sound familiar?). That term would later be utilized to describe an entire subgenre of fiction, and later, film that focused heavily on mankind's technological advancement. From a fiction perspective, cyberpunk was born out of the new wave movement in the 1960’s. During that time period, the trend away from traditional writing styles and methods allowed for more experimentation and investigation into topics such as psychology, biology, and abstract thinking. Science fiction was one genre in particular which allowed further exploration into these areas, but...
The term “cyberpunk” was originally coined by Bruce Bethke as a title for his 1983 short story. He invented the word to describe future children who would become so technologically inclined that older generations would have difficulty dealing with them (sound familiar?). That term would later be utilized to describe an entire subgenre of fiction, and later, film that focused heavily on mankind's technological advancement. From a fiction perspective, cyberpunk was born out of the new wave movement in the 1960’s. During that time period, the trend away from traditional writing styles and methods allowed for more experimentation and investigation into topics such as psychology, biology, and abstract thinking. Science fiction was one genre in particular which allowed further exploration into these areas, but...
- 10/25/2017
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (G.S. Perno)
- Cinelinx
Over the last 50 years of filmmaking, there are very few films that have influenced modern filmmaking like Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner.” Unlike other landmark films that changed Hollywood – ranging from “Easy Rider to “Jaws” – Ridley Scott’s 1982 film was a box office disappointment. Of course, the lasting impact of “Blade Runner” was also quite different than these films that became instant cultural phenomenons.
“‘Blade Runner’ is simply one of those cinematic drugs, that when I first saw it, I never saw the world the same way again,” said Guillermo del Toro told one interviewer, when describing why “Blade Runner” was one of his five favorite films of all-time.
Del Toro wasn’t alone. For a whole generation of filmmakers – including the cinematographers, productions designers and visual effects artists – a direct line can be drawn between “Blade Runner” and the imagery of modern sci-fi movie. In the 35 years in which...
“‘Blade Runner’ is simply one of those cinematic drugs, that when I first saw it, I never saw the world the same way again,” said Guillermo del Toro told one interviewer, when describing why “Blade Runner” was one of his five favorite films of all-time.
Del Toro wasn’t alone. For a whole generation of filmmakers – including the cinematographers, productions designers and visual effects artists – a direct line can be drawn between “Blade Runner” and the imagery of modern sci-fi movie. In the 35 years in which...
- 10/3/2017
- by Chris O'Falt
- Indiewire
Cyberpunk: a dark vision of the future in which technology has shaped social order. The thematic concept of “high tech low life” was first pioneered by authors such as William Gibson and Philip K. Dick with their respective novels Neuromancer and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (Blade Runner), but the genre has since spilled over to other mediums including video games, resulting in some of the most grimly fascinating and atmospheric games of all-time.
More grounded than far flung futuristic science fiction, cyberpunk typically paints a bleak, noir vision of humanity, as a result of the negative impact of iterations of our contemporary science such as cybernetics and information technology. In this way, their dystopian settings often feel entirely relatable; a dreary existence that only takes a little imagination to see how easily it could become a reality, and indeed, cyberpunk typically draws parallels with today’s consumerist,...
More grounded than far flung futuristic science fiction, cyberpunk typically paints a bleak, noir vision of humanity, as a result of the negative impact of iterations of our contemporary science such as cybernetics and information technology. In this way, their dystopian settings often feel entirely relatable; a dreary existence that only takes a little imagination to see how easily it could become a reality, and indeed, cyberpunk typically draws parallels with today’s consumerist,...
- 9/6/2016
- by Alex Gibson
- We Got This Covered
facebook
twitter
google+
From the makers of The Witcher series comes Cyberpunk 2077. Here's everything we know about the eagerly-anticipated RPG...
Although there are still two substantial Dlc expansions on the horizon for The Witcher III: Wild Hunt, the highly acclaimed third (and final) entry in the swords-and-sorcery based RPG that has made Polish developers CD Projekt Red one of the gaming industry's hottest properties, focus is already beginning to shift towards their next project.
As Wild Hunt sits proudly atop the 2015 triple-a release pile, resplendent in its majesty and a sure-fire certainty for Game of the Year, let's take a look at what the studio have lined up for the future...
Appropriately enough, the company's future is the future - Cyberpunk 2077 is next on their slate and promises to be something very special indeed. Based on Cyberpunk 2020, the popular pen-and-paper role-playing game, the developers are set to take us into a bleak,...
google+
From the makers of The Witcher series comes Cyberpunk 2077. Here's everything we know about the eagerly-anticipated RPG...
Although there are still two substantial Dlc expansions on the horizon for The Witcher III: Wild Hunt, the highly acclaimed third (and final) entry in the swords-and-sorcery based RPG that has made Polish developers CD Projekt Red one of the gaming industry's hottest properties, focus is already beginning to shift towards their next project.
As Wild Hunt sits proudly atop the 2015 triple-a release pile, resplendent in its majesty and a sure-fire certainty for Game of the Year, let's take a look at what the studio have lined up for the future...
Appropriately enough, the company's future is the future - Cyberpunk 2077 is next on their slate and promises to be something very special indeed. Based on Cyberpunk 2020, the popular pen-and-paper role-playing game, the developers are set to take us into a bleak,...
- 10/12/2015
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
CD Projekt is Red teasing its sci-fi RPG Cyberpunk 2077 - a "far, far bigger" game than The Witcher 3, the developer says...
With the increasing popularity of the Witcher series, developer CD Project Red has grown into one of the most respected purveyors of RPGs currently operating.
Its latest game, The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt, is the final entry in the series and widely regarded as the best one yet. But according to the studio's visual effects artist Jose Teixeira, CD Projekt Red's next game, Cyberpunk 2077, will be even bigger and more complex.
“Cyberpunk is far bigger than anything else that CD Projekt Red has done before,” visual effects artist Jose Teixeira told McV. “Far, far bigger. “We're really stepping into the unknown in terms of complexity and size and problems we encounter.”
Cyberpunk 2077 will be the studio's first game outside the Witcher universe, and its first foray into science fiction.
With the increasing popularity of the Witcher series, developer CD Project Red has grown into one of the most respected purveyors of RPGs currently operating.
Its latest game, The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt, is the final entry in the series and widely regarded as the best one yet. But according to the studio's visual effects artist Jose Teixeira, CD Projekt Red's next game, Cyberpunk 2077, will be even bigger and more complex.
“Cyberpunk is far bigger than anything else that CD Projekt Red has done before,” visual effects artist Jose Teixeira told McV. “Far, far bigger. “We're really stepping into the unknown in terms of complexity and size and problems we encounter.”
Cyberpunk 2077 will be the studio's first game outside the Witcher universe, and its first foray into science fiction.
- 10/7/2015
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
In this 1990 documentary directed by Marianne Trench, William Gibson, author of Cyberpunk classic "Neuromancer", Timothy Leary, famous advocate of psychedelic drugs, and others share their thoughts on the future of society and technology.
I remember a University prof screening this years ago for a Science Fiction Literature class I took. Looking it up, I was not surprised to see it was available online. It's a fascinating, time-capsule look back at the sub cultures forming around the genre at the time. Some wild ideas are floated here as well as some pretty amazing boasting by authors, futurists and counter-culture types.
About Cyberpunk:
Cyberpunk is a subgenre of science fiction in a future setting, noted for its focus on "high tech and low life". It features advanced tec [Continued ...]...
I remember a University prof screening this years ago for a Science Fiction Literature class I took. Looking it up, I was not surprised to see it was available online. It's a fascinating, time-capsule look back at the sub cultures forming around the genre at the time. Some wild ideas are floated here as well as some pretty amazing boasting by authors, futurists and counter-culture types.
About Cyberpunk:
Cyberpunk is a subgenre of science fiction in a future setting, noted for its focus on "high tech and low life". It features advanced tec [Continued ...]...
- 9/2/2015
- QuietEarth.us
On May 26th, 1995, music video director and artist Robert Longo made his directorial debut with Johnny Mnemonic, an adaptation of William Gibson’s futuristic short story of the same name (Gibson also penned the screenplay) that starred Keanu Reeves in the titular role as a “mnemonic courier” who finds himself in the middle of a corporate conspiracy with implications for all of mankind.
Johnny Mnemonic celebrates its 20th anniversary this month, and while it may not necessarily be a film many sci-fi fans celebrate, it’s always held a special place in my heart, undoubtedly being one of the coolest films I saw that year and one that also revitalized the cyberpunk film movement (yes, even before The Matrix came along and did it a bit more effectively).
For the uninitiated, Johnny Mnemonic transports us to the year 2021; in the opening text crawl, we learn that corporations have taken over...
Johnny Mnemonic celebrates its 20th anniversary this month, and while it may not necessarily be a film many sci-fi fans celebrate, it’s always held a special place in my heart, undoubtedly being one of the coolest films I saw that year and one that also revitalized the cyberpunk film movement (yes, even before The Matrix came along and did it a bit more effectively).
For the uninitiated, Johnny Mnemonic transports us to the year 2021; in the opening text crawl, we learn that corporations have taken over...
- 5/22/2015
- by Heather Wixson
- DailyDead
The Butcher Bird was dropped, impaled on the never to read pile its first time around, not for future consumption – just out of spite – and forgotten rather quickly and not unthankfully so. Even while sporting some blurbage from Cyberpunk don William Gibson and capo Pat Cadigan, my worst fears seemed to becoming reality in the first few chapters, namely, another fringe ultra hip wannabee, smart ass protagonist – complete with the job as a tattoo artist and oh yeah…his sidekick is of course a quip-ready, lesbian version of himself – who together find out reality isn’t what it seems. Couple that with the first sip into the quantum-chaos looking-glass mug really reminded me of a favorite comic of mine from the early 90’s, Dark Dominion, published by Defiant comics created by Jim Shooter and the legendary Steve Ditko (indeed the subtitle of Butcher Bird is A Novel of the Dominion...
- 4/12/2015
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
In one of the late Paul Walker’s final movies, some critics hailed “Hours” as an effective emotional acting performance for Walker’s career.
The film is about a father who was abandoned with his newborn daughter in a hospital after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans. The father must keep the baby alive by manually operating the respirator until help arrives.
Latino-Review interviewed “Hours” director Eric Heisserer via telephone after Walker’s passing earlier this month. We briefly discussed about Paul Walker in one of his final performances. We also talked about the plot, backdrop, Genesis Rodriguez and Heisserer’s directorial debut. And for fun, we talked about his start with tabletop games such as Cyberpunk and Dungeons & Dragons.
“Hours” is in limited theatrical release and also available on VOD.
Read the transcript interview below.
Latino-Review: Despite with what’s been happening, why don’t you go ahead and put...
The film is about a father who was abandoned with his newborn daughter in a hospital after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans. The father must keep the baby alive by manually operating the respirator until help arrives.
Latino-Review interviewed “Hours” director Eric Heisserer via telephone after Walker’s passing earlier this month. We briefly discussed about Paul Walker in one of his final performances. We also talked about the plot, backdrop, Genesis Rodriguez and Heisserer’s directorial debut. And for fun, we talked about his start with tabletop games such as Cyberpunk and Dungeons & Dragons.
“Hours” is in limited theatrical release and also available on VOD.
Read the transcript interview below.
Latino-Review: Despite with what’s been happening, why don’t you go ahead and put...
- 12/13/2013
- by Gig Patta
- LRMonline.com
Good Science Fiction horror is hard to come by, barring The Terminator and Alien. I used to run a Cyberpunk roleplaying game out of my basement. I was an avid follower of William Gibson and Blade Runner was my visual bible. When I went downtown in Los Angeles, that's the world I saw. I also loved horror films of course, but they were always separate, or at least presented that way. I was at the height of my Cyberpunk addiction in 1990 when a smal…...
- 12/29/2012
- Horrorbid
Exclusive Interview: John Shirley Talks Resident Evil: Retribution - The Official Movie Novelization
Dread Central recently had an opportunity to chat with author John Shirley to discuss several of his novels, including Resident Evil: Retribution: The Official Movie Novelization, Bioshock: Rapture, Borderlands: The Fallen and many more.
Resident Evil: Retribution: The Official Movie Novelization Synopsis:
Just as she finds a safe haven, free from the Undead, Alice is kidnapped by her former employers—the Umbrella Corporation. Regaining consciousness, she finds herself trapped in the most terrifying scenario imaginable. As the T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the world’s population into legions of flesh-eating monsters, Alice must fight her way back to reality in order to survive. Resident Evil: Retribution in 3D will be released on September 14, 2012. It is the fifth installment in the massively successful Resident Evil film series, based on the hugely popular Capcom survival horror video game series Resident Evil. The movie stars Milla Jovovitch and Wentworth Miller...
Resident Evil: Retribution: The Official Movie Novelization Synopsis:
Just as she finds a safe haven, free from the Undead, Alice is kidnapped by her former employers—the Umbrella Corporation. Regaining consciousness, she finds herself trapped in the most terrifying scenario imaginable. As the T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the world’s population into legions of flesh-eating monsters, Alice must fight her way back to reality in order to survive. Resident Evil: Retribution in 3D will be released on September 14, 2012. It is the fifth installment in the massively successful Resident Evil film series, based on the hugely popular Capcom survival horror video game series Resident Evil. The movie stars Milla Jovovitch and Wentworth Miller...
- 9/14/2012
- by Amanda Dyar
- DreadCentral.com
CD Projekt Red, the developers of the Witcher series announced today they are working on two new games, one of them most likely is the next Witcher game (just speculation). The other game they are working on was talked about during there press conference this morning, it will be a game based on the “Cyberpunk pen-and-paper game by Mike Pondsmith”.
The game will apparently be set up much like the Witcher series in that it will be an RPG where you can select different classes like mercenary or hacker, and then get to choose what cybernetic implants you want to give your character. There will also be a huge assortment of weapons to chose from as well. In addition, like the Witcher the game will feature a non-linear story line where your decisions can affect the outcome of the game.
CD Projekt Red mentioned they want to adhere to archetypal...
The game will apparently be set up much like the Witcher series in that it will be an RPG where you can select different classes like mercenary or hacker, and then get to choose what cybernetic implants you want to give your character. There will also be a huge assortment of weapons to chose from as well. In addition, like the Witcher the game will feature a non-linear story line where your decisions can affect the outcome of the game.
CD Projekt Red mentioned they want to adhere to archetypal...
- 5/30/2012
- by Matt Mann
- Obsessed with Film
Ideas nicked from the books of William Gibson have been leaking into cinema sci-fi for years, but to date, the only official screen-Gibson has been the wretched Johnny Mnemonic, Abel Ferrara's New Rose Hotel, and an X-File. That's finally about to change though, with a press release from Seven Arts Pictures confirming that work is properly underway on Vincenzo Natali's Neuromancer.Natali began working on his adapted screenplay when he finished the publicity rounds for Splice around this time last year, reportedly with the approval of Gibson himself. Seven Arts have been drumming up international interest at Cannes, and, says COO Kate Hoffman, "Response to this cult cyberspace thriller has been tremendous; the film ticks a lot of boxes with distributors. The film will be a Canadian/European co-production, with principal photography taking place in Canada, Istanbul, Tokyo and London."Published in 1984 (two years after Blade Runner, which,...
- 5/19/2011
- EmpireOnline
Deus Ex: Icarus Effect
Written by James Swallow | Published by Titan Books | Format: Paperback, 354 pages
“In the near future, with physical augmentation gaining ground and nano-cybernetics only years away, the dawn of limitless human evolution is just beyond the horizon, and a secret corporate cabal of ruthless men intends to make sure that humankind stays under its control. But two people on opposite sides of the world are starting to ask questions that could get them killed.
Secret Service agent Anna Kelso has been suspended for investigating the shooting that claimed her partner’s life. Anna suspects that the head of a bio-augmentation firm was the real target, and against orders she’s turned up a few leads concerning a covert paramilitary force and a cadre of underground hackers. But the cover-up runs deep, and now there’s a target on her back. Meanwhile, Ben Saxon, former Sas officer turned mercenary,...
Written by James Swallow | Published by Titan Books | Format: Paperback, 354 pages
“In the near future, with physical augmentation gaining ground and nano-cybernetics only years away, the dawn of limitless human evolution is just beyond the horizon, and a secret corporate cabal of ruthless men intends to make sure that humankind stays under its control. But two people on opposite sides of the world are starting to ask questions that could get them killed.
Secret Service agent Anna Kelso has been suspended for investigating the shooting that claimed her partner’s life. Anna suspects that the head of a bio-augmentation firm was the real target, and against orders she’s turned up a few leads concerning a covert paramilitary force and a cadre of underground hackers. But the cover-up runs deep, and now there’s a target on her back. Meanwhile, Ben Saxon, former Sas officer turned mercenary,...
- 3/20/2011
- by Baron Fornightly
- Nerdly
Science fiction writers of every generation had their own visions of the future, but what if their predictions became a reality? Rob dons his silver suit and delves into the archives to find out...
To me, living in 2010 seems like the future (well a bit anyway), and some of the things people dreamt of in years gone by have indeed come to pass. We have iPods which contain all our music, videos and data like the PADDs in Star Trek, have unlocked parts of the human genome, cloned livestock and created primitive artificial life. And while we don't have jet-packs, teleporters or the ability to travel to Mars, current technology hasn't don't too badly on the whole.
We love our technology, all sleek, thin and mobile, full of wafer-thin elements that can pass data at massive rates, wrapped up in shiny and lovingly-designed bits of kit. The ‘aesthetic of the...
To me, living in 2010 seems like the future (well a bit anyway), and some of the things people dreamt of in years gone by have indeed come to pass. We have iPods which contain all our music, videos and data like the PADDs in Star Trek, have unlocked parts of the human genome, cloned livestock and created primitive artificial life. And while we don't have jet-packs, teleporters or the ability to travel to Mars, current technology hasn't don't too badly on the whole.
We love our technology, all sleek, thin and mobile, full of wafer-thin elements that can pass data at massive rates, wrapped up in shiny and lovingly-designed bits of kit. The ‘aesthetic of the...
- 6/28/2010
- Den of Geek
Splice director Vincenzo Natali (he also brought us the wonderful Cube back in 1997) has been talking about likely future projects to io9. He'd like a crack at Swamp Thing, although that's more something on a wish list than a concrete future plan. He's working on an adaption of Jg Ballard's dystopian High Rise, which he describes as "High Rise 2.0" (with Ballard's novel serving as the backdrop to a new story). But the real geekgasm news is that he has an adaptation of William Gibson's seminal cyberpunk novel Neuromancer on the drawing board, with the blessing of the author."As soon as I finish my Splice tour, I'm going to start writing Neuromancer", says the Canadian director, describing the project as about "evolving our minds, where Splice is about evolving our bodies". Published in 1984 (two years after Blade Runner, which, when he saw it, almost caused him to stop writing...
- 5/11/2010
- EmpireOnline
Back when I was in highschool, Jeff Noon's "Vurt" was easily my favorite book. Heavily influenced by equal parts Irvine Welsh, William Gibson and "Alice in Wonderland," the book is dystopian cyberpunk on meth. I also remember that the rights were picked up by UK production house, Pathe, but then everything feel to s#!% when it was decided the project was unfilmable.
Another book that really got to me was "Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson. Coincidently it is also a Cyberpunk book, though when I learned that Stephensen was one of the most erudite and prolific contemporary science fiction writers around, I picked up two more of his books: the code-breaker tome, "Cryptonomicon" and "The Diamond Age." A couple years back, George Clooney's production company reported it would a mini-series based on "The Diamond Age." Nothing has happened since, and I highly doubt anything will.
So now I...
Another book that really got to me was "Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson. Coincidently it is also a Cyberpunk book, though when I learned that Stephensen was one of the most erudite and prolific contemporary science fiction writers around, I picked up two more of his books: the code-breaker tome, "Cryptonomicon" and "The Diamond Age." A couple years back, George Clooney's production company reported it would a mini-series based on "The Diamond Age." Nothing has happened since, and I highly doubt anything will.
So now I...
- 12/10/2009
- QuietEarth.us
Here's the deal. There's a mad scientist going around lobotomizing people and experimenting on them, turning them into sex slave cyborgs called Pinocchios. A nympho lesbian couple buys a model—serial number 964—but find that they can't be satisfied unless the model can stay hard 24/7. So they throw 964 out into the streets, much to the dismay of the mad scientist, who doesn't want the outside world to know about his business. So he sends agents to find and kill 964. Meanwhile, 964 stumbles into the care of a homeless amnesiac named Himiko. Together the two of them try to find out who they are and how they relate to the "normal" society.
Describing this movie as a surrealistic nightmare just doesn't quite cut it. It has a linear plot, and it definitely makes sense—so surreal probably isn't the right word—but everything in it is so exceedingly bizarre, you just can't...
Describing this movie as a surrealistic nightmare just doesn't quite cut it. It has a linear plot, and it definitely makes sense—so surreal probably isn't the right word—but everything in it is so exceedingly bizarre, you just can't...
- 9/18/2009
- by Arya Ponto
- JustPressPlay.net
Recently I’ve noticed the term ‘Cyberpunk’ thrown around a lot. Many bands call themselves and their sound Cyberpunk, and it has rapidly become a genre unto itself. Originating with the 1983 story of the same name by Phillip K. Dick Award-winning author Bruce Bethke, Cyberpunk is a cultural evolution that has come about as a result of the fusion between man and technology. The sound of Cyberpunk is largely rooted in a marriage of visceral instruments, such as guitars and live drums, bound with electronic programming. It also embodies an entire philosophical ideology that is strangely akin to the Punk movement from which it takes a lot of it’s styling. Mass-media, pop-psychology, and the mainstream approach to life are rejected in favor of an existence based in the reality of your own choosing, conception, and creation. A number of media events are tapping into this life-style, illustrating the validity of the concept.
- 4/10/2009
- Fangoria
Thanks to Quiet Earth reader Chris for directing us towards a recent blog post by famed "father of Cyberpunk," William Gibson, who discuses, among other things, the strange Neuromancer one-sheet that we dug up on Thursday. While he doesn't deny its validity as indeed being the first bit of marketing artwork to have been released for the film, he apparently had never seen it but, then again, admits to being "out of the loop on that one." Here's what he writes:
I see that I was too gnomic, yesterday, as some people now assume that I, like Warren Ellis, am holed up doing things related to screenwriting. Some even assume I'm doing something related to the mysterious Neuromancer film project, but in fact neither is true. I'm actually holed up (or anyway "distracted") in the early stages of a next novel, and the recent web-advent of that interestingly monochrome one-sheet...
I see that I was too gnomic, yesterday, as some people now assume that I, like Warren Ellis, am holed up doing things related to screenwriting. Some even assume I'm doing something related to the mysterious Neuromancer film project, but in fact neither is true. I'm actually holed up (or anyway "distracted") in the early stages of a next novel, and the recent web-advent of that interestingly monochrome one-sheet...
- 8/2/2008
- QuietEarth.us
Our buds over at Quiet Earth got the first look at what may possibly be the teaser poster for Neuromancer, a big screen adaptation of William Gibson's novel! Exciting news for us Cyberpunk fans! Bad news for those who aren't fans of Hayden Christensen.
Yup, the former Anakin Skywalker stars as "Case, a petty future Tokyo thief whose trade is jacking his brain directly into computer systems. When this skill is taken away from him, it seems his life is destined to end in an explosion of violence and drugs… until the mysterious Armitage offers redemption – at a price. Revelation follows revelation as Case discovers that no one is in control of his or her own destiny and a new form of sentient technology is taking over. It’s down to Case to face Neuromancer and do something he never has before: make the right choice"
Music video director...
Yup, the former Anakin Skywalker stars as "Case, a petty future Tokyo thief whose trade is jacking his brain directly into computer systems. When this skill is taken away from him, it seems his life is destined to end in an explosion of violence and drugs… until the mysterious Armitage offers redemption – at a price. Revelation follows revelation as Case discovers that no one is in control of his or her own destiny and a new form of sentient technology is taking over. It’s down to Case to face Neuromancer and do something he never has before: make the right choice"
Music video director...
- 7/31/2008
- by Kryten Syxx
- DreadCentral.com
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.