What I’m looking forward to in 2019

There’s a lot of cool things coming in 2019 and this list is by no means a definite one since I’m sure I’m missing things, but it’ll have to do for now.

TV

  • Project Blue Book — This new series on History about government sponsored UFO hunters in the 1960s looks to be an unofficial prequel to The X-Files. January 8
  • True Detective — After a delay of more than three years comes the third season of this HBO series. January 13
  • The Passage — This series on FOX is about a vampire apocalypse in the making. January 14
  • Roswell, New Mexico — A reboot of the popular early 2000s The WB series Roswell. January 15
  • Star Trek: Discovery — The second season of this CBS All Access series brings the Enterprise into the fold. January 17.
  • I Am the Night — TNT dramas can be hit or miss, hopefully this one is more Mob City than The Alienist. January 28
  • Doom Patrol — This series based on the comic book of the same name is set to premiere on the DC Universe streaming service. February 15.
  • Mindhunter — The second season of this series about FBI serial killer hunters is set to premiere in 2019 on Netflix.
  • Stranger Things — The kids of Hopkins, Indiana return to the “upside down” on Netflix next year.
  • Game of Thrones — The final season of the hit HBO series is set to premiere next spring.
  • Deadwood — This movie that was originally announced more than a decade ago is finally set to debut on HBO sometime next year.
  • Veep — The final season of this series is set to premiere in 2019 on HBO.
  • The Punisher — Reportedly debuting at the end of January is the second season of this Netflix show.
  • The Expanse — The fourth season of this series will debut on Amazon Prime in 2019.
  • Star Wars: The Mandalorian — This first live-action series based in the Star Wars universe, not counting the Star Wars Holiday Special, will launch the Disney+ streaming service at the end of 2019.
  • The Twilight Zone — Jordan Peele (Get Out) is set to reboot The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access in 2019.
  • Watchmen — A TV version of the Alan Moore/Dave Gibbons seminal comics work Watchmen debuts on HBO next year.
Alita: Battle Angel

Movies

  • Glass — This is the third movie in the M. Night Shyamalan Unbreakable franchise. January 18
  • Alita: Battle Angel — Based on the manga Battle Angel Alita this one is directed by Robert Rodriquez and produced by James Cameron, who was originally slated to direct years ago. February 14
  • Captain Marvel — The first Marvel Studios movie of the year is set to launch a new character into the universe. March 8
  • Pet Sematary — Kind’a a remake of the 1989 movie but really based on the Stephen King novel of the same name, this movie has one disturbing ending. April 5
  • Shazam! — This one looks to be a lighter look into the so-far dreary DC Universe of comic book movies. April 5.
  • Avengers: Endgame — While it’s called “Endgame” I can’t imagine any scenario where there aren’t more Avengers flicks since every time they come out Disney adds a billion + bucks to their bottom line. April 26
  • Brightburn — What looks like a horror version of the Superman origin mythos, this movie marks James Gunn first movie back after being fired from the Guardians of the Galaxy movies. May 24
  • Godzilla: King of the Monsters — The second of the new Godzilla movies, this flick is set to introduce a slew of new creatures to this universe. May 31
  • X-Men: Dark Phoenix — So far delayed three times from its original release date, this EIGHTH X-Men movie is out this summer. June 7
  • Spider-Man: Far From Home — Spider-Man returns from the dead for the second film in his modern franchise. July 5
  • Once Upon a Time in Hollywood — Four years after his previous movie Quentin Tarantino next one takes place in late 1960s Hollywood. July 26
  • *The New Mutants — Another delayed movie, I sense a theme, this one looks to cross horror with Marvel superheroes. August 2
  • IT: Chapter Two — The second and final movie of IT is set to move the monster fighting action from the early 1990s to the present day. September 6
  • Gemini Man — Originally announced more than 20 years ago and set to star Mel Gibson, Gemini Man is finally set to hit theaters with Will Smith in the title role. October 4
  • Joker — A stand-alone Joker movie starring Joaquin Phoenix hits theaters in time for Halloween. October 4
  • Midway — This one is set to bring modern CGI special effects to the WWII naval battle. November 8
  • Terminator — Yet another reboot in the Terminator franchise, this movie is set to bring the original Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) back into the fold after nearly 30 years. November 15
  • Star Wars: Episode IX — The final movie in the modern Star Wars trilogy hits theaters in time for Christmas. December 20

Direct Beam Comms #160

What To Watch This Week

Sunday

Ready to scar a whole new generation of kids, all episodes of the brand new animated series Watership Down are available on Netflix today.

Monday

The second in Goosebumps movie, Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween is available for digital download this week.

Tuesday (Merry Christmas!)

Will Farrell and John C. Reilly are teaming up once again in the new comedy Holmes & Watson in theaters today.

Wednesday

A night full of Burt Reynolds movies kicks off with Smokey and the Bandit on TCM tonight.

Friday

The horror-hit of the fall Halloween is available for digital download Friday.

The second movie to co-star John C. Reilly this week about the classic comedy duo Laurel and Hardy Stan & Ollie hits theaters this week with Reilly as Hardy.

Sunday

The best sci-fi thing on network TV right now The Orville returns for a second season premiere on FOX tonight with another episode airing Thursday night, the regular night for this series moving forward.

TV

The Orville commercial

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJDdDX2snII

Doom Patrol commercial

Movies

Men in Black: International trailer

Hellboy trailer

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie & TV Posters of the Week

The best TV series of 2018

I find that it’s really tough to rank TV series in this “best of” list every year. Like I think Better Call Saul and The Haunting of Hill House were my #1 and #2 shows of 2018, but for the rest the order is kind’a arbitrary. There were lots of great shows this year and putting them in any reasonable order is at best guesswork and at worse however I felt the day I was generating this list.

Better Call Saul

I’m honestly surprised that after all these years I still love Better Call Saul on AMC as much as I do. Usually, after a few seasons of a show I start to lose interest but I haven’t so far with this one. I think that’s because Better Call Saul has evolved and changed each season, meaning that what is Better Call Saul in its most recent fourth season is very much different than what it was in its first.

Essentially, Better Call Saul is the story of Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) and his transformation from being a meek and mild attorney to the infamous cut-throat lawyer to the criminal underworld Saul Goodman. Maybe “transformation” isn’t the best word, maybe a better one would be “descent.” Where Jimmy is a guy who can’t catch a break, as he starts becoming more Saul-like ironically he starts catching loads of breaks and begins making money doing things like selling disposable cell phones to crooks and even getting his law license back by lying and playing the sympathy card.

Crime does pay for Jimmy, even if we as the audience know that the end of the road for Goodman doesn’t lead to a fancy house and lots of riches, it leads to hiding out as a guy named “Gene” a lonely manager of a Cinnabon in Nebraska, on the run and panic stricken constantly looking over his shoulder for a bullet that may never come.

The Haunting of Hill House

The Haunting of Hill House
The Haunting of Hill House

Each year there’s always at least one series a season that surprises me as to how good it is, and that show in 2018 was The Haunting of Hill House on Netflix. This horror series is the stuff of nightmares, and I mean that literally since watching it gave me real nightmares. While most horror shows follow the same tried and true path, there are monsters and they are out to get us, The Haunting of Hill House is quite a bit different. This series about a family set in two time periods, one in the early 1990s where mom, dad and their four kids are trying to flip what turns out to be a haunted house, and modern-day where this family now grown are still dealing with all the ramifications of what happened when they were living at Hill House, and especially what happened the last night they stayed there, is fascinating. Most horror shows rely on the scares first, second and last and while there are a lot of scares in The Haunting of Hill House, see my report about nightmares above, it also has this underlying core of sadness to it.

The family of the 1990s were this not quite perfect but happy together family unit, yet because of what happened to them, and what we find during the course of the show is still happening to them, have splintered and shattered. They’re not quite family anymore and are instead simply “acquaintances.”

And honestly, I don’t know anything scarier than that.

The Terror

What do you think this guy is eating on The Terror?

I never thought there’d be more than one horror series on my best of list yet this year there’s two. The second is another amazing AMC series The Terror about an expedition to the Arctic that went disastrously wrong in the 19th century. This fictionalized telling of a real-life event seems to either be set a night, or the equally scary time of gloaming where the sun has just set casting the world in a weird, mysterious glow. And since this expedition was to the Arctic, a place where the sun is either up for months at a time or set for an equally long period, it means that much of the show is cast in this weird etherial light.

Mr Inbetween

Mr Inbetween
Mr Inbetween

I hadn’t even heard of the FX series Mr Inbetween until I stumbled upon a poster for the show that was set to start airing the next day. I was suspicious at first about a series where the lead guy is a hit-man in Australia who’s got anger management issues since that sounds like something Tony was going through in The Sopranos 20 years ago. But Mr Inbetween is different and I was hooked right from the first scene. Starring and written by Scott Ryan, Mr Inbetween is the rare crime show that has fully fleshed characters, not character archetypes. The stories vary from Ryan’s character Ray Shoesmith trying to help out a friend who’s been beaten and put in the hospital while at the same time trying to keep his new girlfriend in the dark about where he slips off to at night when he goes out to hurt people.

The Expanse

The Expanse
The Expanse

The fourth season of the SyFy series The Expanse continued to deliver in the realm of science fiction in one of the most satisfying sci-fi series on TV these days. Wait, did I say “SyFy!?” Well, SyFy in their infinite wisdom decided to cancel The Expanse shortly before the latest superb season ended. I guess they must’ve needed its time slot for more appropriate sci-fi shows like the reality monster makeup series Face Off. Luckily, Amazon Prime quickly picked up The Expanse for a fifth season which is set to premiere there sometime next year.

Barry

Barry
Barry

The HBO dramety Barry about a depressed hitman (Bill Hader) who dreams of becoming an actor in LA was another surprise this year. Barry can go from hilariously funny to downright scary in the blink of an eye, and I can’t think of any other show that can do that without coming off cheesy. And the way Hader plays Barry, he comes off as a real, troubled guy the audience is rooting for at the start of the show but by the end of the first season might actively be hating because of some of the things he does throughout the episodes.

GLOW

GLOW
GLOW

I’m not quite sure how they do it, but a TV series about women’s wrestling in the 1980s is one of the best things on Netflix right now. Mostly about the behind the scenes lives of the women who star in this show-within-a-show, GLOW chronicles how hard it is to make something, even something as silly as a women’s wrestling show, especially if you were a women in the 1980s.

Black Mirror

Black Mirror
Black Mirror

Black Mirror is one of the most disturbingly accurate shows on these days about what it’s like living in our 21st century where it seems like we’re constantly crashing into the future where people controlling the technology don’t always have our best interests in mind, or even realize the ramifications of what they’re doing, while our world constantly shifts around us and not always for the better.

Little Drummer Girl

Little Drummer Girl
Little Drummer Girl

Another limited series that ran on AMC this TV season was the adaptation of the John Le Carré novel Little Drummer Girl. I totally dig these spy series, especially ones by Le Carré like Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Smiley’s People and now Little Drummer Girl too. I just wish AMC had given this one a little more time for people to catch it, rather than burning its six episodes off in a three night “event” the week of Thanksgiving.

2018 Sci-Fi Report

I shouldn’t be surprised when I look back at the year overall, but in terms of sci-fi movies and TV there was a lot going on. Some things weren’t good, but an awful lot were, or at least they were interesting. I keep thinking back to years ago when we’d be lucky to have one or two interesting sci-fi movies a year and a handful of TV shows. Nowadays there seems to be a sci-fi movie coming out once every few weeks, and that’s not including superhero things since while I think they’re sci-fi I’m not counting them here, and there are loads of sci-fi series on TV.

Random thoughts…

  • BBC America really killed it in 2018 as being the home for all things Doctor Who, The X-Files and classic Star Trek TV.
  • And let’s give props to TNT/TBS as well for airing marathons of Star Wars every few weeks. Have I see every episode of Star Wars many, many times before? Yep! Do I watch them again every time they show up on TNT/TBS? You bet’cha!
  • Along those lines… We now live in a world where there is a brand new Star Wars movie being released each and every year, this year was Star Wars: A Solo Story, which is always something to be happy about.
  • While BBC America was the home for sci-fi in 2018, Syfy, the old SCI-FI Channel, was not. That network which barely airs any sci-fi anymore actually cancelled the one great sci-fi show they had The Expanse.
  • That being said Amazon Prime picked up The Expanse where it will air a fourth season in alongside The Man in the High Castle, another sci-fi show on that platform.
  • Netflix released a whole bunch of sci-fi movies in 2018 including good ones like The Cloverfield Paradox and not so good ones like Mute. Hey, they can’t all be winners.
  • The sci-fi/horror film A Quiet Place did what not a lot of sci-fi/horror movies have done in the past; it was very successful as well as gained lots of critical acclaim.
  • That being said not everything sci-fi at the box office worked, both Pacific Rim: Uprising and Overlord underperformed here in the US, though Uprising did great business overseas.
  • While I absolutely did not understand the ending of the second season of Westworld, I have to say that the ride getting there was a lot of fun.
  • I mentioned that BBC America was the home for all things classic Star Trek, but there’s also new episodes being added to the Trek canon every year with Star Trek: Discovery on CBS All Access.
  • Okay, okay, okay, I like to rag on Syfy a lot, but I do have to give them props for taking a big chance on the decent ten episode limited sci-fi/horror series Nightflyers a few weeks back. It wasn’t great, but at least it was science fiction.

Direct Beam Comms #159

TV

This time of year I always get into the Christmas spirit and put on some of my favorite holiday movies like Die Hard and Lethal Weapon as well as rewatch some very special Christmas episodes of my favorite TV shows.

Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire

The very first episode of The Simpsons was in fact a Christmas special that aired on December 17, 1989. If you want to see just how good The Simpsons was when it was an animated show about people rather than a cartoon about broadly drawn characters as which it has become you should check out this very first one.

Sherlock — “The Abominable Bride”

While most of the modern Benedict Cumberbatch Sherlock episodes were set present day, the special 2015 Christmas episode “The Abominable Bride” was set in a more appropriate Sherlocky year of Christmastime, 1895.

Space: Above and Beyond — “The River of Stars”

Not too many hard-edged sci-fi shows have a Christmas episode, yet “The River of Stars” from Space: Above and Beyond was the exception.

Community — “Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas”

Right at the height of the greatness that was Community came the fully animated Christmas episode “Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas” that had lots of laughs along with lots of tears and would go onto cement this series into the annals of history.

Batman: The Animated Series — “Christmas with the Joker”

In this episode that originally aired in 1992 Batman, in fact, did not smell nor does (spoiler alert) the Joker get away.

Black Mirror — “White Christmas”

It really isn’t the holidays without watching one of the most depressing episodes of Black Mirror ever in one entitled “White Christmas.” Divided into three chapters, each starring Jon Hamm and each more downbeat than the last, “White Christmas” begins with murder and ends with a man trapped in hellish loop of December 25th where the song “I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day” is on a constant, never-ending loop.

Happy holidays!

True Detective season 3 commercial

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZP6t1FmVO8

Star Trek: Discovery season 2 commercial

Movies

Glass trailer

Godzilla: King of the Monsters trailer

What To Watch This Week

Bumblebee
Bumblebee

Tuesday

Last fall’s thriller Bad Times and the El Royale is available on digital download today.

Wednesday

Mary Poppins Returns for a sequel more than 50 years after the original in theaters. Let’s put it this way, when the previous Mary Poppins movie was released The Beatles had only just arrived in the US.

Friday

The one movie I thought would never get made since the character was the butt of many a joke for years, DC’s Aquaman, hits theaters today.

The sixth film in the 11 year old Transformers franchise, this one taking place in the 1980s, Bumblebee is released to movie screens today.

The Netflix original movie Bird Box, about people who kill themselves after seeing some paranormal thing and the survivors having to wander the world blindfolded otherwise they’ll suffer the same fate, is available today.

The second season of the HULU series Marvel’s Runaways is available today.

Cool Sites

Lost Media Wikia — We explore and hunt for lost media and we use teams, and our fellow community members to contribute.

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie Posters of the Week