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The Simpsons is killing off Bart Simpson. At least for one episode.
On this year's "Treehouse of Horror" episode, Sideshow Bob (Kelsey Grammer) will finally get the one thing he's wanted for the past 25 years: to kill Bart.
The Simpsons producers revealed the deadly news during their ATX Festival
'It’s respectful of the first two films. Then suddenly it swerves...'
The new Terminator movie, Terminator Genisys, is designed as a launchpad for further cybernetic mayhem so there’s plenty riding on it for all involved. One man who’s already convinced, though, is James Cameron. The creator of the franchise rain-checked Avatars 2 and 3 for a few minutes to taken to the YouTubes and express his support and faith in the production. Click below to hear his thoughts.
“It’s very respectful of the first two films and then all of a sudden it just swerves,” he enthuses. "I feel like the franchise has been reinvigorated. This is a renaissance.” There was also a good-humoured dig at Rise Of The Machines and Terminator Salvation - “I think of the new film as the third film” - and an endorsement for Emilia Clarke’s new Sarah Connor. "For women, I think she represents a kind of empowerment, yet there’s a vulnerability there.”
As he points out, Cameron’s involvement in Genisys has been entirely unofficial. There were meetings and chats with Megan Ellison’s Annapurna Pictures along the way, but he’s approached the film with a layman’s eye and seems to like what’s he’s seen.
Plot-wise, the movie sees Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) volunteering to go back in time and save John’s mother, Sarah (Emilia Clarke). He arrives to discover that the timeline has been tinkered with and things are very different from the timeline he (and we) are familiar with.
This is not the be-permed, Everywoman Sarah we met in 1984’s The Terminator. Instead, this Sarah has lost her parents to a Terminator attack but raised by an ageing version of Arnie’s T-800. And Kyle will need her help when an Asian model of the morphing metal T-1000 threatens his life. Together, Sarah and Kyle must figure out what has happened and find a way to once more stop Judgment Day from happening.
The Fosters is tackling yet another groundbreaking story.
Last season, the ABC Family drama slowly built up the relationship between 13-year-old Jude (Hayden Byerly) and his best friend Connor (Gavin McIntosh) as the two realized they felt something for each other that went beyond just being friends.
Hot on the heels of yesterday’s promo footage, today brings us yet more Martian treats in the form of the film’s first trailer, which has just this minute touched down online. We see Matt Damon’s botanist, Mark Watney, injured and left for dead when the first manned mission to the red planet is forced to make an emergency evacuation. With no food, no supplies and a potential four year wait for rescue, Watney, in the best Breaking Bad tradition, sets out to “science the shit” out of his sticky situation and work some labcoat magic to keep himself alive until help comes.
Based on Andy Weir’s bestseller, The Martian has already made a significant splash in literary form and the screen adaptation has sent its script into orbit. The finished film will make planetfall in UK cinemas on 27 November.
Nicole Perlman to rework Hugh Howey's dystopian bestseller
Nicole Perlman wrote the initial drafts that helped Marvel’s Guardians Of The Galaxy start its journey to the screen, and the studio has kept her around as one of the duo writing Captain Marvel. Now she’s found another, much darker science fiction project to work on at the same time, signing on to rewrite the adaptation of Wool for 20th Century Fox.
Hugh Howey’s high concept novel was something of a sensation when the self-published e-book became a massive success and 20th Century Fox quickly dived in to snap up the rights. The book is set in a dystopian future where the planet’s air has become toxic and the population lives crowded in a giant underground silo. We follow several characters as they begin to learn that all is not quite how the authorities have told them.
Ridley Scott and Steven Zaillian are producing the adaptation, for which J Blakeson has written a couple of drafts. Perlman will now take over before the team starts looking for a director. If the film is a success, there are several Wool stories, plus prequel trilogy Shift and follow-up tome Dust just waiting to serve as source material for other movies.