Lusine by the wall.
hayksenekerimyan posted a photo:
Where Silence Learns to Speak.
Some places donβt ask you to move on β they simply ask you to stay still for a while.
Black-and-white moments have a way of turning silence into memory.

hayksenekerimyan posted a photo:
Where Silence Learns to Speak.
Some places donβt ask you to move on β they simply ask you to stay still for a while.
Black-and-white moments have a way of turning silence into memory.

Naruto is one of the most memorable and iconically influential series ever created. The shΕnen anime follows the young ninja Naruto Uzumaki (Maile Flanagan), who is ostracized by his village for carrying the Nine-Tailed Fox within him, as he strives to earn the respect of his village and become the Hokage. The beloved classic delivers incredible storytelling across countless episodes and carries overwhelming cultural clout; still, being iconic does not automatically make it untouchable. Quite a few animated series have definitely managed to surpass the beloved action anime in one way or another.

Crime dramas rise and fall based on two key factors: atmosphere and momentum, so if you create an exceptional experience in both categories, there will be many actors who successfully take on roles in those same series, regardless of similar facts within other series. Bloodlands does more than find that balance.

For three seasons, Tracker has gotten away with a storytelling shortcut that was easy to overlook because the show itself was so entertaining. Whenever Colter Shaw (Justin Hartley) needed an answer, someone on the other end of the phone usually had one. More often than not, that someone was Randy (Chris Lee). Now, CBS may have finally found a way to solve that problem.

A great miniseries knows exactly when to stop. In fact, that is what makes the format so addictive in the first place. When writers donβt have the luxury of dragging the plot over several seasons, they have to be disciplined with their storytelling. This means that every episode and every scene has a clear purpose. The tension builds faster, and the pacing is relentless, which leads to the emotional payoff landing much harder.

Marvel fans have been enjoying a surplus of content on Disney+ this year, and it all started with the premiere of Wonder Man, the showbiz epic starring Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Ben Kingsley. The show was dropped as a binge at the end of January, but the same canβt be said for Marvelβs second Disney+ show of the year, Daredevil: Born Again Season 2. The MCU is also eyeing a big year on the big screen, starting with Spider-Man: Brand New Day, which stars Tom Holland as Peter Parker, Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner, and Jon Bernthal as The Punisher. The film is expected to lead directly into Avengers: Doomsday, starring Robert Downey Jr as Victor Von Doom, which is coming to theaters on December 18. However, there is one more Marvel project coming back this year that has everyone talking.

dannyhennesy posted a photo:
...as I said earlier I missed out on the Fright Knight theme, I started frequenting cafΓ©s, pubs and clubs... but a small AFOL was still around in me when I visited friends with Lego I was always ready to play with their kids (and their Lego...
Peace and Noise!
/Mushroombrain from the brick-block

People often cite Squid Game as Netflixβs biggest global success when discussing the streamer's major international hits. The South Korean survival/thriller series was the first true cultural phenomenon created by Netflix and dominated the global television landscape by surpassing all existing viewing records at the time. However, when looking at the revenue generated by Squid Game, it is easy to overlook that the platform had already proven years earlier that audiences would support non-English-language shows with Money Heist.

The problem with streaming is that shows can get cancelled out of nowhere. Shows like Mindhunter, The OA, The Society, I Am Not Okay With This, and Hannibal were all cancelled before they could finish their stories. Thatβs why miniseries are so satisfying. They tell a full story in just a handful of episodes. No waiting for a new season. No risk of getting ghosted by the platform. But even miniseries can go off the rails. Many of them start strong but completely fall apart by the end.

Over 30 years after it made its debut, Batman: The Animated Series remains the gold standard by which all small-screen Batman adaptations are judged. That series, and the larger DC animated universe that spun out of it, have now ended, but the story continues on in a variety of forms. Now, the story of Batman's most infamous foes and their struggle for control of Gotham City is coming into your home β and you'll control who wins.

X-Men '97returns for its second season next month, and it's pulling out all the stops. Not only will fans finally learn what happened to the X-Men when they were yanked through time, but Season 2 will also pit them against different versions of the mutant warlord Apocalypse. X-Men '97 Season 2 will also introduce even more mutants, including the return of the mutant government team X-Factor and Cable forming the paramilitary squad X-Force. Yet the biggest character reveal might have flown under fans' noses, and it hints at another major Marvel superhero team getting their own animated series.

Marvel may have some of the most popular characters in comic book history, but where the brand has really shone is with its teams. One of the first that comes to mind is Marvelβs First Family, aka The Fantastic Four, who have headlined several feature films and hundreds of comics over the years. The Avengers have also become one of Marvelβs biggest cash cows in recent years, particularly thanks to the rise of the team during the early days of the MCUβs Infinity Saga. There is, however, another Marvel team that stands above the rest as the most popular in comic book history: The X-Men.
