Yearly Archives: 2020

Friends Reunion Special at HBO Max Officially Confirmed

An unscripted Friends reunion special will be available on HBO Max when the new streaming platform launches in May, the company has announced. Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, and David Schwimmer are all confirmed to return. The cast will record the special on the original soundstage where the show began filming about 25 years ago. Variety says each cast member is making $2.5 million for the reunion while The Hollywood Reporter says that payday could be as high as $3 million each. “Guess you could call this the one where they all got back together — we are reuniting with David, Jennifer, Courteney, Matt, Lisa, and Matthew for an HBO Max special that will be programmed alongside the entire Friends library,” said Kevin Reilly, chief content officer of HBO Max and president of TBS, TNT, and truTV. “I became aware of Friends when it was in the very early stages of development and then had the opportunity to work on the series many years later and have delighted in seeing it catch on with viewers generation after generation. It taps into an era when friends – and audiences – gathered together in real time and we think this reunion special will capture that spirit, uniting original and new fans.” The special was first reported to be in development in November 2019. That was after months of the cast answering questions about whether any sort of Friends reunion or reboot will take place. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/10/30/green-lantern-tv-show-coming-to-hbo-max-ign-now"] "...a reboot of the show? No," Aniston said on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in October. "We would love for there to be something, but we don't know what that something is. So, we're just trying. We're working on something." Friends aired 236 episodes from 1994 to 2004 on NBC. According to The New York Times, the Friends series finale was watched by more than 52.5 million people. That audience hasn't died down with People writing that Friends was the second most popular show on Netflix. The series left Netflix at the end of 2019 and every episode will be available on HBO Max at launch. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=everything-coming-to-hbo-max&captions=true"] HBO Max will have a hefty slate at launch including Joker, South Park, and the first three seasons of Rick and Morty. And there will reportedly be unlimited password sharing at launch to get your friends hooked. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN who will buy a year's worth of HBO Max if Ed, Edd n Eddy is on it.

Friends Reunion Special at HBO Max Officially Confirmed

An unscripted Friends reunion special will be available on HBO Max when the new streaming platform launches in May, the company has announced. Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, and David Schwimmer are all confirmed to return. The cast will record the special on the original soundstage where the show began filming about 25 years ago. Variety says each cast member is making $2.5 million for the reunion while The Hollywood Reporter says that payday could be as high as $3 million each. “Guess you could call this the one where they all got back together — we are reuniting with David, Jennifer, Courteney, Matt, Lisa, and Matthew for an HBO Max special that will be programmed alongside the entire Friends library,” said Kevin Reilly, chief content officer of HBO Max and president of TBS, TNT, and truTV. “I became aware of Friends when it was in the very early stages of development and then had the opportunity to work on the series many years later and have delighted in seeing it catch on with viewers generation after generation. It taps into an era when friends – and audiences – gathered together in real time and we think this reunion special will capture that spirit, uniting original and new fans.” The special was first reported to be in development in November 2019. That was after months of the cast answering questions about whether any sort of Friends reunion or reboot will take place. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/10/30/green-lantern-tv-show-coming-to-hbo-max-ign-now"] "...a reboot of the show? No," Aniston said on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in October. "We would love for there to be something, but we don't know what that something is. So, we're just trying. We're working on something." Friends aired 236 episodes from 1994 to 2004 on NBC. According to The New York Times, the Friends series finale was watched by more than 52.5 million people. That audience hasn't died down with People writing that Friends was the second most popular show on Netflix. The series left Netflix at the end of 2019 and every episode will be available on HBO Max at launch. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=everything-coming-to-hbo-max&captions=true"] HBO Max will have a hefty slate at launch including Joker, South Park, and the first three seasons of Rick and Morty. And there will reportedly be unlimited password sharing at launch to get your friends hooked. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN who will buy a year's worth of HBO Max if Ed, Edd n Eddy is on it.

Dreams Review – Create And Play

The first game I played in Dreams was a cute Captain Toad-inspired puzzle platformer called Pip Gemwalker. It's about a Sloth who has to collect hidden gems across seven increasingly-complex levels. The second game I played was Blade Gunner, a Resogun-style twin-stick shooter with upgrades, an in-game store, and online leaderboards. After that I hopped into Art Therapy, a first-person game where your goal, as a disgruntled artist wielding a baseball bat, is to smash your way through a museum without any of the guards catching you in the act. The fourth was Shadows Dance at Olivetop Reach, a fantasy RPG with turn-based combat and an XP-based levelling system.

Each of these games is vastly different from the last, not just in terms of genre and gameplay mechanics, but their use (or disuse) of cutscenes, voice acting, art style, music, narrative, and so on. The one thing they each have in common is that they were all created using the exact same set of tools. That's Dreams in a nutshell: a platform where you can create pretty much anything you can put your mind to. Developer Media Molecule has continued the mantra of "play, create, share" that it used to define the LittleBigPlanet series and applied it to a much more ambitious concept with a significantly broader scope. Metaphorically speaking, if LittleBigPlanet is a single country, then Dreams is the entire universe. There's just so much promise and potential for the burgeoning Dreams community to create some innovative and inspired art, all by using an intuitive toolset that's made accessible via a streamlined creation suite and the use of informative hands-on tutorials. Whether these creations take the form of an hour-long video game, a short film, a simple visual spectacle, or something as simple as a sound effect that another player can use in their own project. The possibilities are endless, which I know is a tired cliché, but in Dreams--more than anywhere else--it actually applies.

There are two parts to Dreams which both branch out like roots from a tree. DreamShaping is where you can begin creating your own projects and find myriad tutorials that will teach you how. DreamSurfing, meanwhile, lets you find other people's creations and play them for yourself. It's also where you'll find Media Molecule's own creations, including Art's Dream. If you want to construct a level in LittleBigPlanet, you are always confined to the base template of a side-scrolling 3D platformer. Inevitably, some people found inventive ways to circumnavigate this template, but compared to what you can do in Dreams it's overly restrictive. To demonstrate the monumental shift between LittleBigPlanet and Dreams, Media Molecule has created a showcase of sorts, placing Art's Dream front and centre when you jump into DreamSurfing for the first time.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Dreams Review – Create And Play

The first game I played in Dreams was a cute Captain Toad-inspired puzzle platformer called Pip Gemwalker. It's about a Sloth who has to collect hidden gems across seven increasingly-complex levels. The second game I played was Blade Gunner, a Resogun-style twin-stick shooter with upgrades, an in-game store, and online leaderboards. After that I hopped into Art Therapy, a first-person game where your goal, as a disgruntled artist wielding a baseball bat, is to smash your way through a museum without any of the guards catching you in the act. The fourth was Shadows Dance at Olivetop Reach, a fantasy RPG with turn-based combat and an XP-based levelling system.

Each of these games is vastly different from the last, not just in terms of genre and gameplay mechanics, but their use (or disuse) of cutscenes, voice acting, art style, music, narrative, and so on. The one thing they each have in common is that they were all created using the exact same set of tools. That's Dreams in a nutshell: a platform where you can create pretty much anything you can put your mind to. Developer Media Molecule has continued the mantra of "play, create, share" that it used to define the LittleBigPlanet series and applied it to a much more ambitious concept with a significantly broader scope. Metaphorically speaking, if LittleBigPlanet is a single country, then Dreams is the entire universe. There's just so much promise and potential for the burgeoning Dreams community to create some innovative and inspired art, all by using an intuitive toolset that's made accessible via a streamlined creation suite and the use of informative hands-on tutorials. Whether these creations take the form of an hour-long video game, a short film, a simple visual spectacle, or something as simple as a sound effect that another player can use in their own project. The possibilities are endless, which I know is a tired cliché, but in Dreams--more than anywhere else--it actually applies.

There are two parts to Dreams which both branch out like roots from a tree. DreamShaping is where you can begin creating your own projects and find myriad tutorials that will teach you how. DreamSurfing, meanwhile, lets you find other people's creations and play them for yourself. It's also where you'll find Media Molecule's own creations, including Art's Dream. If you want to construct a level in LittleBigPlanet, you are always confined to the base template of a side-scrolling 3D platformer. Inevitably, some people found inventive ways to circumnavigate this template, but compared to what you can do in Dreams it's overly restrictive. To demonstrate the monumental shift between LittleBigPlanet and Dreams, Media Molecule has created a showcase of sorts, placing Art's Dream front and centre when you jump into DreamSurfing for the first time.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Report: EA Canceled a Star Wars Battlefront Spinoff Last Year

A new report says EA quietly canceled yet another Star Wars video game last year in 2019, this time a planned spinoff of Star Wars: Battlefront. According to Kotaku, EA canceled a third Star Wars game, code-named “Viking.” Although details regarding Viking’s plot and settings are a secret, the report says it was planned to be a spinoff of Star Wars: Battlefront with open-world elements. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=every-ea-star-wars-project&captions=true"] Project Viking wasn’t a complete unknown. After Visceral’s Star Wars game under Uncharted director, Amy Hennig was canceled, EA Vancouver inherited some assets from project Ragtag to work on its own game which became project Orca. When Orca was also canceled, EA Vancouver began working on a third Star Wars project that was planned to be released in fall 2020. This project was Viking. According to Kotaku’s sources, Viking was being developed by EA Vancouver with the help of Criterion, best known for the Burnout series. Unfortunately, the cross-national development and multiple studios involved created a “too many cooks” situation and the project’s scope soon became too ambitious for its planned year and half development time. Without wanting to extend the deadline, EA canceled the project in spring 2019. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/04/13/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-story-trailer"] EA still has several Star Wars projects in development according to the report. A sequel to the wildly successful Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order at Respawn and a “smaller, more unusual project at EA Motive” based in Montreal. IGN has reached out to EA for comment. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him on Twitter.

Report: EA Canceled a Star Wars Battlefront Spinoff Last Year

A new report says EA quietly canceled yet another Star Wars video game last year in 2019, this time a planned spinoff of Star Wars: Battlefront. According to Kotaku, EA canceled a third Star Wars game, code-named “Viking.” Although details regarding Viking’s plot and settings are a secret, the report says it was planned to be a spinoff of Star Wars: Battlefront with open-world elements. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=every-ea-star-wars-project&captions=true"] Project Viking wasn’t a complete unknown. After Visceral’s Star Wars game under Uncharted director, Amy Hennig was canceled, EA Vancouver inherited some assets from project Ragtag to work on its own game which became project Orca. When Orca was also canceled, EA Vancouver began working on a third Star Wars project that was planned to be released in fall 2020. This project was Viking. According to Kotaku’s sources, Viking was being developed by EA Vancouver with the help of Criterion, best known for the Burnout series. Unfortunately, the cross-national development and multiple studios involved created a “too many cooks” situation and the project’s scope soon became too ambitious for its planned year and half development time. Without wanting to extend the deadline, EA canceled the project in spring 2019. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2019/04/13/star-wars-jedi-fallen-order-story-trailer"] EA still has several Star Wars projects in development according to the report. A sequel to the wildly successful Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order at Respawn and a “smaller, more unusual project at EA Motive” based in Montreal. IGN has reached out to EA for comment. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him on Twitter.

New Star Wars Movie Reportedly Coming From the Director of Sleight

A new Star Wars movie is reportedly in the works from director J.D. Dillard and Luke Cage writer Matt Owens, according to The Hollywood Reporter. It’s unclear whether this new Star Wars film will be a theatrical release or if it will debut on the Disney Plus streaming service. With Lucasfilm currently planning the next phase of Star Wars movies, executives are reportedly trying to decide which characters and stories are right for theaters and which would be better suited as a Disney+ exclusive, says THR. Dillard wrote and directed the sci-fi thriller Sleight, and while he is one half of the team developing this new Star Wars movie, it’s unclear whether he will be the one to direct it should the project move forward. He is joined by writer Owens, who is best known for his work on Marvel’s Luke Cage and Agents of SHIELD. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=31-celebrity-cameos-in-the-star-wars-sequel-trilogy&captions=true"] There are currently no plot, character or setting details. We’ve long heard rumors about new Star Wars movies being set in the Old Republic and High Republic eras. The abandoned Star Wars film trilogy from Game of Thrones showrunners D.B. Weiss and David Benioff was reportedly going to take place thousands of years before the events of the Skywalker Saga to explore the origins of the Jedi. This new project is unrelated to the Star Wars film pitch by Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige and Rian Johnson’s Star Wars movie project that, yes, he is still working on. Disney has scheduled three untitled Star Wars theatrical films for December 16, 2022, December 20, 2024, and December 18, 2026, although we still have no word on whose projects will fill those dates. As far as what we do know about the future of Star Wars, The Mandalorian will debut Season 2 later this year, and there are shows based on Obi-Wan Kenobi and Rogue One’s Cassian Andor and K-2SO in the works. Plus, the final season for Star Wars: The Clone Wars just kicked off on Disney+. Be sure to check out our review of the Clone Wars season premiere below: [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/02/21/star-wars-the-clone-wars-season-7-premiere-review"] [poilib element="accentDivider"] Joshua is Senior Features Editor at IGN. If Pokemon, Green Lantern, or Game of Thrones are frequently used words in your vocabulary, you’ll want to follow him on Twitter @JoshuaYehl and IGN.

New Star Wars Movie Reportedly Coming From the Director of Sleight

A new Star Wars movie is reportedly in the works from director J.D. Dillard and Luke Cage writer Matt Owens, according to The Hollywood Reporter. It’s unclear whether this new Star Wars film will be a theatrical release or if it will debut on the Disney Plus streaming service. With Lucasfilm currently planning the next phase of Star Wars movies, executives are reportedly trying to decide which characters and stories are right for theaters and which would be better suited as a Disney+ exclusive, says THR. Dillard wrote and directed the sci-fi thriller Sleight, and while he is one half of the team developing this new Star Wars movie, it’s unclear whether he will be the one to direct it should the project move forward. He is joined by writer Owens, who is best known for his work on Marvel’s Luke Cage and Agents of SHIELD. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=31-celebrity-cameos-in-the-star-wars-sequel-trilogy&captions=true"] There are currently no plot, character or setting details. We’ve long heard rumors about new Star Wars movies being set in the Old Republic and High Republic eras. The abandoned Star Wars film trilogy from Game of Thrones showrunners D.B. Weiss and David Benioff was reportedly going to take place thousands of years before the events of the Skywalker Saga to explore the origins of the Jedi. This new project is unrelated to the Star Wars film pitch by Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige and Rian Johnson’s Star Wars movie project that, yes, he is still working on. Disney has scheduled three untitled Star Wars theatrical films for December 16, 2022, December 20, 2024, and December 18, 2026, although we still have no word on whose projects will fill those dates. As far as what we do know about the future of Star Wars, The Mandalorian will debut Season 2 later this year, and there are shows based on Obi-Wan Kenobi and Rogue One’s Cassian Andor and K-2SO in the works. Plus, the final season for Star Wars: The Clone Wars just kicked off on Disney+. Be sure to check out our review of the Clone Wars season premiere below: [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/02/21/star-wars-the-clone-wars-season-7-premiere-review"] [poilib element="accentDivider"] Joshua is Senior Features Editor at IGN. If Pokemon, Green Lantern, or Game of Thrones are frequently used words in your vocabulary, you’ll want to follow him on Twitter @JoshuaYehl and IGN.