As it turns out, a movie in which Megan Fox portrays a battle-hardened mercenary is about as ridiculous as you'd imagine it to be. After being hired by an African bigwig to liberate his kidnapped daughter, Fox's Samantha O'Hara leads a team of soldiers-of-fortune on a snatch-and-grab mission in an unnamed African country. Things go awry, everyone questions O'Hara's leadership (including her) and the survivors find themselves stranded on an abandoned "lion farm" where poachers raise the big cats to be hunted for sport by wealthy tourists. After developing a taste for killing humans, one of the escaped felines on the farm goes rogue and proceeds to hunt O'Hara's team down one-by-one. So, as you can imagine, the big predator gets plenty of screen time.
But one of the myriad problems with Rogue is that when lions play a key role in your movie, you should spring for authentic-looking lions. Unfortunately, the CGI is so shoddy that the singing furballs from last year's Cats look like cinematic perfection by comparison.
A hot mess from beginning to end, Rogue's casting Fox as a special forces badass is so off that it'll make you miss Jesse Eisenberg's Lex Luthor in Batman v. Superman. However, the film's worst issues involve its handling of race. A jihadist group clearly meant to be a stand-in for Boko Haram is responsible for the aforementioned kidnappings. But where the real Boko Haram made international headlines for abducting Nigerian schoolgirls, Rogue's filmmakers saw fit to make its victims caucasian young women who were -- coincidentally -- shanghai'd from their school. This whitewashing is compounded by the fact that the lone surviving Black member of the rescue team, Pata, is singled out for berating and scolding by said schoolgirls. Naturally, he doesn't live to see the end credits -- none of the non-white characters do. If you really wanna see a VIP's kid get rescued amidst a hail of bullets, I advise you to just watch Extraction again. Skip this trash. Now streaming on VOD platforms.
Tom Cruise will debut two huge sequels next year. And Batman will get a do-over. Speaking of comic book movies, 2021 will look a lot like 2016: Superman, Batman and the Suicide Squad will finally return to theaters. For the first time, the MCU's rolling four movies out in one year (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Spider-Man 3, The Eternals and Black Widow) but Shang-Chi's the only one that looks promising so far. DC will have two big releases: The Suicide Squad and The Snyder Cut.
Outside the Wire
Release Date: January 15
As far as I can tell from the trailer, Outside the Wire features Anthony Mackie as a humanoid drone in the military of the future. Although it'll debut exclusively on Netflix, the action looks big screen-worthy so I'm in.
Judas and the Black Messiah
Release Date: February 12
Finally, Hollywood takes on COINTELPRO, federal government's concerted -- and successful -- effort to undermine and dismantle Black Power organizations in the 1960s.
Coming 2 America
Release Date: March 5
The follow-up to 1988 comedy classic Coming to America has finally gotten the greenlight from Paramount Pictures -- and with star and comedy legend Eddie Murphy on board, to boot. Murphy will reprise his role as Prince Akeem Joffer, the heir to the throne of the fictional African kingdom of Zamunda. Craig Brewer, who helmed Hustle & Flow, is the director of a screenplay written by "black-ish" co-creator Kenya Barris. The story will reportedly center on Akeem returning to America in order to meet the son he never knew he had.
Though the film's reportedly been in development for years, the phenomenonal success of 2018's Black Panther likely prompted a frantic Hollywood search for similar properties. Given the similarities between BP and Coming to America -- each movie features a predominantly Black cast and a story about a prince's ascendancy to the throne of a wealthy African kingdom -- the prospect of a Coming to America sequel likely had studio executives chomping at the bit. And moviegoers will soon have two African royal families to watch on the big screen.
The problem is, as funny as he is, Eddie Murphy has a horrible track record when it comes to sequels. Both Another 48 Hours and The Nutty Professor II were ginormous steps down from their respective predecessors and the Beverly Hills Cop films just got worse and worse with each new installment. But someone as hilarious as Eddie Murphy doesn't just forget how to make people laugh. So we'll see.
City of Lies
Release Date: March 19
Johnny Depp makes his comeback in a film based on a true story about police corruption that was completed years ago but never actually made it to American theaters. Until now. In his best movie to date, Depp portrays late LAPD detective Russell Poole, who uncovered more than he bargained for when he endeavored to solve the murder of legendary rapper Christopher "Biggie" Wallace.
The Many Saints of Newark
Release Date: March 12Moved to September 24
Even without the late James Gandolfini, the idea of this Sopranos movie hitting theaters is compelling -- except for one thing: The film'll be a prequel and what made the long-running Sopranos television series special was its focus on the MODERN mafia. The time period in which the movie's set will likely put it in the Goodfellas/Casino/Donnie Brasco era -- which we've obviously seen before. So this film will live or die by whatever new take the filmmakers can bring to the table.
Morbius
Release Date: March 19October 8Moved to January 21, 2022
Marvel's second-most famous vampire (the most famous is Blade, of course) will be making his big screen debut in this origin story about Michael Morbius, a scientist who accidentally turns himself into a living bloodsucker after an attempt to cure himself of a rare illness results in unforeseen side effects.
Justice League: The Snydercut
Release Date: March 18
After three long years of campaigning, fans of the original DCEU (which includesMan of Steel,Batman v. SupermanandSuicide Squad) and director Zack Snyder succeeding in convincing Warner Bros. management to fund the completion of Snyder's version of Justice League. Snyder was removed from the project when executives panicked following negative critical reviews for BvS and Suicide Squad (though both were hits with fans and brought in hefty profits) and replaced with Joss Whedon, who essentially made an entirely different film. Though Whedon's movie was intended to please critics, it disappointed moviegoers and consequently cost the studio an estimated $60 million in losses.
Now, the product of Snyder's original vision is set to debut on streaming service HBO Max at some undetermined time in March. The Superman, the Batman, Cyborg, Aquaman, the Flash and Wonder Woman will all face-off against Darkseid and his lieutenant Steppenwolf in a four-hour movie.
No Time to Die
Release Date: April 2Moved to October 8
No Time to Die was initially scheduled to hit theaters in April 2020, which is the strangest part of its release date move, given that so many past James Bond movies have debuted in November. The 25th 007 flick later landed where it always should've been -- November 2020. But due to the ice-cold reception to the movies that debuted in theaters between late August and early October, No Time was shifted to nearly a year after its original release date.
A Quiet Place II
Release Date: April 23Moved toSeptember 17Moved again to May 28
Without Remorse
Release Date: April 30
Without Remorse belongs to the Tom Clancy collection of films and television shows adapted from his books (The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger, The Sum of All Fears, Shadow Recruit, Jack Ryan). And frankly, it's refreshing to see one of these stories not revolve around CIA analyst and supposed desk jockey Jack Ryan. This one is about Navy SEAL Senior Chief John Kelly, originally portrayed by Willem Dafoe in Clear and Present Danger and later Liev Schrieber in The Sum of All Fears. But now, burgeoning action star Michael B. Jordan has taken over the role.
Free Guy
Release Date: May 21Moved to August 13
Since Free Guy is about a mediocre dude who doesn't realize that he lives inside of a video game who falls for a woman of action who shows up outta nowhere, it seems to pretty much be a live-action version of The LEGO Movie. But the visuals look great, so let's do this.
Ghostbusters: Afterlife
Release Date: June 11Moved to November 11
The Ghostbusters saga will try to repair the damage done by the 2016 reboot with this true sequel that pretends that that bucket of dishwater never even happened -- Terminator: Dark Fate-style. Hopefully, this movie doesn't also turn out to be a bucket of dishwater -- Terminator: Dark Fate-style. Picking up over three decades after Ghostbusters II, Afterlife will feature new busters alongside Winston, Peter and Ray.
In the Heights
Release Date:June 18
Maverick
Release Date: July 2Moved to November 19
Producing a sequel to an iconic film which revisits iconic characters several years later is always a dicey proposition. As Rocky Balboa, Live Free or Die Hard and Blade Runner 2049 prove, it can absolutely be a worthwhile endeavor. But for every Creed there's a Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The results mostly depend on the skill and approach of the director and writer.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
Release Date: July 9Moved to September 3
In Shang-Chi, the MCU will debut its second movie featuring a mostly minority cast and the first appearance of the real Mandarin, Iron Man's arch-nemesis from the comics. Unfortunately, Awkwafina seems to have a sizable role.
Dune
Release Date: September 17Moved to October 1 Moved again to October 22
The new Dune is a do-over for the 1984 mega-flop starring Sting and a pre-Star Trek Patrick Stewart that cost the studio an estimated $23 million. With Blade Runner 2049's Denis Villanueve behind the wheel, it's a good bet that no matter how much money the remake brings in, it'll at least be a better movie.
After three long years of campaigning, fans of the original DCEU (which includesMan of Steel,Batman v. SupermanandSuicide Squad) and director Zack Snyder succeeding in convincing Warner Bros. management to fund the completion Snyder's version of Justice League. Snyder was removed from the project when executives panicked following negative critical reviews for B v. S and Suicide Squad (though both were hits with fans and brought in hefty profits) and replaced with Joss Whedon, who essentially made an entirely different film. Though Whedon's movie was intended to please critics, it disappointed moviegoers and consequently cost the studio an estimated $60 million in losses.
Now, the product of Snyder's original vision is set to debut on streaming service HBO Max at some undetermined time in 2021. The Superman, the Batman, Cyborg, Aquaman, the Flash and Wonder Woman will all face-off against Darkseid and his lieutenant Steppenwolf in a four-part miniseries that'll also be presented as a four-hour movie. The trailer was released during DC's Fandome event on August 22 and eagle-eyed viewers will notice some interesting sights during the roughly two-and-a-half minute teaser. By now, most DCEU fans are aware that Kal-El will be rocking a black suit and cape for part of the movie. But it's the items on display during the probable "Knightmare" scene depicting a conquered Earth that'll come as shockers. For one, a singed Joker card can be seen floating through the air above the what's left of Wayne Manor. A brief glimpse of a portrait of Thomas Wayne is visible amidst the debris as well. Finally, Aquaman's trident is clearly visible just a few feet away. What does all this mean? And more importantly, when will Zack Snyder's Justice Leage finally debut? I guess we have more waiting to do.
Author Charles Dickens died in 1870 but he's still making money. Not only has he written over a dozen popular novels and novellas but many of them have been adapted to film, some several times. Just three years ago, an excellent big screen adaptation of his most well-known work, A Christmas Carol, hit theaters. This year, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, we'll have to settle for a cinematic version of one of his books not as familiar to audiences releasing to VOD platforms.
Instead of a holiday ghost story, The Personal History of David Copperfield is the fictional life-story of its Victorian-era title character. After spending the first few years of his life in childhood bliss, the young and imaginative David's widowed mother marries the cold-hearted but wealthy Mr. Murdstone, who brings his equally cruel sister into the family. David's abusive new stepfather forces him into child labor at his factory. Eventually, David's mother dies and he's informed -- after the funeral -- in a particularly callous way. This last indignity prompts David to run away to the estate of his weird aunt, Betsey Trotwood, who has an equally eccentric tenant. David Copperfield follows the British tradition of color-blind casting, which makes for a much more ethnically diverse array of characters than originally intended by the Dickens. And unless you're a stickler for historic accuracy, the less homogenized look is sure to please. The story is executed fairly faithfully, which makes the story itself -- not the adaptation -- the only real problem. The movie actually could've benefited from a less steadfast narrative. Everything starts off excellently but heads straight off a cliff by the end.
Mobile streaming service Quibi's newest movie, The Stranger, starts off intriguingly enough. Aspiring writer Clare pays the bills by driving for a rideshare service. But when her latest fare, Carl, pulls a knife and lets her know that he just murdered a family in the Hollywood hills mansion where she picked him up, Clare's previously normal night becomes the worst one of her life. After escaping Carl's clutches by wrecking her SUV on purpose, Clare discovers that not only does his skill-set include hacking (Of course. What internet troll/incel doesn't know his way around a computer?), but that he'd rather play a game of cat-and-mouse than murder her outright. Just when The Stranger veers off into predictable thriller territory, Clare meets JJ, who's not only as intelligent and internet-savvy as Carl, he's also Indian-American, which is something that you really don't see very often (if at all) in these types of movies. The movie's even self-aware enough to give JJ a line about his internet know-how making him a cliche'. On the contrary, he's actually a pretty fully-fleshed out character. Even more surprising, JJ's resourcefulness and street smarts keep them alive and off the radar of both Carl and the LAPD (Carl eventually frames them for killing a cop) -- for awhile, anyway. The blonde and the Indian even bond and share an intimate (but non-sexual, of course) moment.
But then JJ is killed off. And he doesn't even go out with a fight! So The Stranger finally becomes the celebration of white feminism that it's been threatening all along (Even after a nameless Latina is murdered, at least we had JJ). By the end of the movie, the white girl who's still carrying her Yorkie (Pebbles) around in a bag outsmarts the cartoonish misogynist and leaves him for dead, finally stepping into her birthright as the film's Final Girl. In a finale that made very little sense (it's still not completely clear how Clare caused Carl's BMW to crash), the killer is bumped off by a pack of coyotes that appear out of nowhere just in time. That car crash is a pretty good metaphor for the movie itself, to be honest. Maybe one of these days, Hollywood will realize that slasher films (not too mention most other genres) don't have to revolve around white girls. And they certainly don't have to be the lone survivor.
On paper, a biopic about legendary inventor Nikola Tesla starring Ethan Hawke seems like potential Oscar-bait. But since the filmmakers apparently believed that weirdness was synonymous with quality cinema, they ended up producing a hot mess instead of a watchable movie -- much less an award-worthy film. This movie has fourth wall-breaking monologues, an imaginary ice cream fight and made-up conversations between Tesla and Thomas Edison. And although the events take place in the 19th century, there are references to Google and Photoshop. At one point, a MacBook appears onscreen. Don't get me started on the karaoke performance of Tears for Fears' "Everybody Wants to Rule the World". I'm not even joking. You really have to see this bucket of dishwater to believe how lame it is -- except no one in search of entertainment should see it. You've been warned.
If you like punishing yourself, Tesla debuts on VOD on August 21.
Magic Camp is a throwback to two kinds of movies that don't come around much anymore: Family movies that aren't animated and summer camp comedies. If you liked Meatballs, Little Darlings or even American Pie Presents: Band Camp but wish you could watch them with the crumbsnatchers then Magic Camp is for you. There's no nudity or sex; just hijinks and self-discovery. MC also happens to be the best film about magicians since The Prestige and Sleight. When 12-year-old Theo can't get over the death of his dad, his mom sends him off to the Institute of Magic for the summer (Theo's dad taught him a few magic tricks before he kicked-the-bucket). But like any good summer camp movie, the story's also about the counselors. Former IM attendee turned failed magician/cab driver Andy Tuckerman is lured back as an instructor by the Institute's founder Roy Preston when the latter reveals that Andy's former flame and act partner turned superstar illusionist Kristina Darkwood will also be returning. Of course, Theo has to come-of-age, discover romance and overcome bullies alongside a group of misfits and goofballs. Meanwhile, Andy has to resolve his past issues in order to get on with life. C'mon man, that's how these movies go. Like your average magic act, it may be predictable but it's no less entertaining.
Streaming giant Netflix has gone from simply broadcasting old movies and television shows to actually rivaling movie theaters as a go-to venue for watching original films. With the help of A-list actors and directors, the network has even managed to nab an Oscar or two. While the majority of the flicks that moviegoers chilled to have been duds, a few have proven to be cinematic gems. Here they are:
Bonus:
Dolemite is My Name
14. American Son
After being notified that her son was involved in an altercation with law enforcement, an African-American mother spends a long night in a police station in search of more information.
13. The Cloverfield Paradox
This prequel to Cloverfield explains that a particle accelerator intended to provide limitless energy to the planet has been transported to the Cloverfield Space Station for testing, as it's unknown what the unintended ramifications of operating such a device could be. It's been theorized that the device has the ability to rip holes in the fabric of space, thereby allowing unimaginable abominations access to the Earth.
After the team of scientists aboard the station temporarily achieve stability after two years of unsuccessful attempts to operate the device, the particle accelator overloads, resulting in a power surge throughout the Cloverfield. The group, including communications officer Ava Hamilton, slowly begins to realize that they have inadvertently opened a doorway between our world and an alternate dimension. One of the consequences is that Ava's husband, Michael, witnesses a gigantic monster roaming through the city in which he lives.
12. The Harder They Fall
11. The Perfect Find
10. Murder Mystery 2
9. Bright
Bright is only second to The Battle of the Five Armies as a damn good movie involving a magic wand and has Harry Potter beat by a mile. You know how Game of Thrones takes place in a medieval world populated by humans, giants, dragons, zombies and witches? Bright is like a modern-day version of Thrones -- except all of the Black people aren't slaves. Keep your eyes peeled for the centaur and dragon too. Netflix spent $100 million putting this flick together and you can tell by looking. It was money well-spent.
8. Army of the Dead
After Vegas falls to a zombie outbreak, a billionaire hires a team of specialists to infiltrate the overrun city and retrieve his duckets from a casino vault.
7. 13th
The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution officially abolished slavery in this country. This abolition had to be an amendment because the protection of slavery as an institution had been incorporated into the Constitution at its inception.
13th, directed by Ava Duvernay (who also directed 2014's Selma), centers on a loophole built into the amendment which has been used to justify legal human bondage ever since its ratification in 1865. The amendment reads: " Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction." The film illustrates how that highlighted section has allowed convicted criminals to be effectively enslaved to this very day. One of the many things the documentary points out is the fact that no distinction whatsoever is made between horrendous crimes and petty misdemeanors. 13th explores the varied interrelated institutions at play including: racism; the relationship between the government and the private for-profit prison industry, which depends on criminal convictions for its survival; the "War on Drugs"; and the powerful, yet secretive coalition between U.S. politicians and Corporate America - ALEC.
ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) is a forty-year-old organization comprised of conservative, mostly Republican, lawmakers and corporation heads that has been responsible for drafting legislation aimed at furthering right-wing, corporate agendas for decades. This is roughly the way it works: Group members (both political and private sector) propose bills, which the legislators introduce to their respective legislative bodies, without ever divulging the true origin of said bills. During the 1980s, ALEC opposed U.S. efforts to end apartheid in then-segregated South Africa. Past members include: former Speaker of the House John Boehner; Ohio governor John Kasich; and North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms. While ALEC was effectively outed in 2011 by The Nation and later The New York Times,Bloomberg Businessweek and "The Daily Show", 13th points out that it continues to thrive and remains largely unknown to the American public. After it was dragged out of the shadows, many of ALEC's corporate members cut their ties for fear of fallout from the association, including: Wal-Mart; Google;Facebook; Coca-Cola; Blue Cross and Blue Shield; Wendy's; McDonald's; Amazon; Apple; GE; Procter & Gamble; Ebay; Yahoo!; Microsoft; BP; T-Mobile; and CCA.
CCA (Corrections Corporation of America), the largest owner and manager of private prisons in the country, profits from crime bills it promoted as a member of ALEC before rescinding its membership. The aforementioned crime bills, including the federal three-strikes Law, mandatory minimums, and stop-and-frisk policies insured a steady influx of inmates, largely African-American and Hispanic, into their institutions. The film also points out that ALEC introduced the controversial stand-your-ground law, which allowed the then-29-year-old George Zimmerman to legally pursue and kill unarmed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.
Pfizer, AT&T, ExxonMobil and State Farm Insurance are still active ALEC members.
Duvernay interviews dozens of people on all sides of the issues covered here, including: politicians, including Charles Rangel and Newt Gingrich; professors; social activists, including Angela Davis; former inmates; and social pundits, both conservative and liberal. Video footage (filmed years prior to their canditorial declarations) of the two current presidential front-runners, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, is presented in which each one gives an argument for incarcerating African-American men. Trump is featured in a clip decrying the Central Park 5 -- a group of African-American teenagers who were coerced by NYPD detectives into confessing to raping and violently assaulting a white female jogger, Trisha Meili, in New York's Central Park. He took out full-page ads in New York'sfour major newspapers advocating capital punishment for the teens. The young men were ultimately exonerated by DNA evidence after having served between six to 13 years in prison. Clinton gives her now-infamous speech labeling African-American teens as "super-predators". It's a wonder that so much ground is covered in the doc's scant 100-minute running time.
One of the most surprising moments of the film is Republican power-broker and Trump-supporter Gingrich declaring that white Americans have no idea what it's like to be African-American.
13th was filmed in secret and on September 30, 2016, became the first documentary to open the New York Film Festival. 13th's subject matter is not common knowledge - but it should be. See it immediately. If you have a Netflix account you can do just that.
6. Project Power
Because of the global movie theater shutdown spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, two MCU movies, a Spiderverse movie and the final X-Men film have all been postponed -- and only two remain on the release schedule for 2020. Well Project Power has filled the superpower movie void left by those release date shuffles in spectacular fashion. PP is a neo-noir featuring a mysterious loner and a police officer independently investigating the destructive proliferation of a new street-drug in New Orleans. Instead of providing a momentary high, these $500-a-pop capsules imbue the consumer with a unique superpower -- but only for five minutes. Because the pills react differently based on users' genetics, one dose can be lethal. Some of the users who actually survive the ingestion use their newfound abilities for nefarious purposes and the dealers themselves attract the violence that comes with the sale of most hard drugs. The story cleverly references real-life medical atrocities and conspiracies that I won't specify here because doing so would amount to giving spoilers. But the superpowers angle is enough to put pressure on some of your favorite comic book adaptations. There's even a teen sidekick named Robin and an appearance by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who portrayed Robin to Christian Bale's Batman in The Dark Knight Rises. Project Power is the first movie involving people with superpowers with a Black lead (Jamie Foxx's Art Reilly) since the phenomenally successful Black Panther. And though Panther has been assured a sequel, it's scheduled release date is two years away and more than two years have passed since the first film's debut. 2016's Suicide Squad has been given a quasi-sequel -- set to hit theaters next year -- but Will Smith's Deadshot won't be in it. Dwayne "the Rock" Johnson's Black Adam will debut at the end of 2021. And by the time the next Blade movie arrives, it will have been two decades since the Wesley Snipes-led Blade trilogy ended. So if a Project Power sequel is greenlit -- and PP is certainly good enough to warrant one -- it'll be a welcome and much-needed addition of color to the ever-growing field of superhero movie series. Project Power is unquestionably the best movie of the summer and if it becomes an actual franchise, the MCU, the DCEU and the Spiderverse may have some competition on their hands.
5. Sand Castle
Set during the second Iraq War, Sand Castleis the best film to cover that conflict.
4. Purple Hearts
Despite their mutual physical attraction, when Cassie meets Luke, she immediately stereotypes him. And her attitude prompts him to act accordingly. However, their respective dire straits lead to a literal marriage of convenience. Unmarred by silly rom-com conventions, Purple Hearts ditches the cheap laughs in favor of sincerely illustrating how people with seemingly divergent worldviews and different backgrounds can find common ground -- and more -- if they interact with each other long enough to see each other as people.
3. Extraction
Chris Hemsworth reteams with the Russo brothers -- without the Endgame fat suit -- for a non-superpowered comic book movie about a merc-with-a-mission to rescue an Indian drug kingpin's son. Hard-bitten Australian mercenary Tyler Rake runs point on a team hired to liberate an imprisoned Ovi Mahajan's son from goons employed by his equally powerful rival, Amir Asif. Eventually, Rake discovers that he's been double-crossed: Mahajan used him to set Ovi Jr. free and has sent his own ex-Indian Special Forces soldier, Saju Rav, to snatch Junior from his rescuers. After being betrayed again (by an old comrade) and realizing that he's met his match, the Aussie forms an alliance with Rav in order to complete the suicide mission and keep Asif's army of corrupt police officers from recapturing his charge.
2. Extraction 2
Tyler Rake's second cinematic mission proves to be just as exhilarating as his first -- and well worth the three-year wait for its streaming debut. What's concerning is the tell-tale ending -- complete with headliner Chris Hemsworth's MCU castmate, Idris Elba -- that suggests that this particular series is cueing up to expand into its own universe. And the movie's biggest flaw is the incongruous insertion of humor, which is neither wanted or needed in this saga about mercenaries and the brutal lives that they lead.
Sequels often invite comparisons to the film(s) that preceded them. But the Extraction movies are so intrinsically linked and similar (in narrative, tone and personnel) that ranking them seems inappropriate. Extraction 1 and 2 are simply two halves of a single story.
1. Outside the Wire
Outside the Wire offers a fresh take on the familiar "rogue AI" story, all the while questioning the wisdom of military reliance on detached warfare, such as the use of drones in combat. Star Anthony Mackie's casting is fitting, given his cinematic history as Sam Wilson, the right-hand man of Steve "Captain America" Rogers in five MCU movies. This time around, Mackie is the super-soldier and the captain as a U.S. Marine in the not-too-distant future.