Robert Kirkman is Desperate to Hire Bryan Cranston for Invincible and Only 1 Role is Perfect for Him
Bryan Cranston is one of the most distinguished actors in Hollywood at present. He has brought to life iconic roles such as Walter White in Breaking Bad and Hal in Malcolm in the Middle, among others. With every role, Cranston has always pushed the envelope of his skills on screen, and in the process, he has set the benchmark for versatility.
In addition to being a wonderful actor with a magnetic screen presence, Cranston has also lent his voice to different characters. During the early days of his career, the Drive actor took to dubbing various cartoons and even anime, interestingly.
With a wealth of experience and talent behind him, Cranston is one of the most sought-after voice actors in the industry. The creator of the show Invincible, Robert Kirkman, has been desperately trying to woo the actor to join his cast, and there is one role that is absolutely perfect for him.
In addition to being a wonderful actor with a magnetic screen presence, Cranston has also lent his voice to different characters. During the early days of his career, the Drive actor took to dubbing various cartoons and even anime, interestingly.
With a wealth of experience and talent behind him, Cranston is one of the most sought-after voice actors in the industry. The creator of the show Invincible, Robert Kirkman, has been desperately trying to woo the actor to join his cast, and there is one role that is absolutely perfect for him.
- 3/14/2024
- by Sreshtha Roychowdhury
- FandomWire
The LA film festival scene just got a bit brighter.
The Los Angeles Festival of Movies (Lafm), co-presented by Mubi and Mezzanine, announced the full lineup for its inaugural festival taking place April 4-7, 2024. The new festival will screen 11 titles including one world premiere, three 4K restorations, plus a featured artist talk, documentary series, and a curated short film program. Passes are currently on sale, and single film tickets go on sale March 14.
Per the festival’s organizers, Lafm was created to redefine Los Angeles as a destination for independent film. There are many film festivals in LA, primarily led by AFI Fest in the fall, but rarely do they make independent film their only focus.
The festival’s screenings will all take place at three recently opened venues on the east side of Los Angeles: Vidiots in Eagle Rock, 2220 Arts + Archives in Historic Filipinotown, and Now Instant Image Hall in Chinatown.
The Los Angeles Festival of Movies (Lafm), co-presented by Mubi and Mezzanine, announced the full lineup for its inaugural festival taking place April 4-7, 2024. The new festival will screen 11 titles including one world premiere, three 4K restorations, plus a featured artist talk, documentary series, and a curated short film program. Passes are currently on sale, and single film tickets go on sale March 14.
Per the festival’s organizers, Lafm was created to redefine Los Angeles as a destination for independent film. There are many film festivals in LA, primarily led by AFI Fest in the fall, but rarely do they make independent film their only focus.
The festival’s screenings will all take place at three recently opened venues on the east side of Los Angeles: Vidiots in Eagle Rock, 2220 Arts + Archives in Historic Filipinotown, and Now Instant Image Hall in Chinatown.
- 3/7/2024
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Indiewire
Like most rising star comics today, looking to further build their audience while reaping due rewards for their work, Joe Pera is self-releasing his latest special, Joe Pera: Slow & Steady, taking it directly to YouTube. Taped to a packed house at The Opera House of Williamsburg on June 15th, his new hour will premiere on Friday, October 6th at 8:00pm Et, exclusively on his YouTube channel @JoePeraComedy.
A trailer teasing the special can be found above.
Slow & Steady was independently financed and produced and comes to the internet following the conclusion of Pera’s cult favorite Adult Swim series, Joe Pera Talks With You. Little has been revealed about the subject matter he’ll address, but it will of course be marked by Pera’s singular slow, gentle style as, more or less, the Mister Rogers of comedy.
In Pera’s words, “The ‘Slow & Steady’ special is the culmination...
A trailer teasing the special can be found above.
Slow & Steady was independently financed and produced and comes to the internet following the conclusion of Pera’s cult favorite Adult Swim series, Joe Pera Talks With You. Little has been revealed about the subject matter he’ll address, but it will of course be marked by Pera’s singular slow, gentle style as, more or less, the Mister Rogers of comedy.
In Pera’s words, “The ‘Slow & Steady’ special is the culmination...
- 9/15/2023
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Amid the chaos of “I Think You Should Leave” Season 3, a cartoon figure in a computer game shows you its asshole. This crudely animated drawing isn’t an object that typically has an anus — let alone eyes, arms, and legs — but there it is: a black squiggly mark inside a circle, pinched between two parted butt-cheeks. It’s quite a sight, to be honest. An unforeseeable punchline in a sketch with more than a few big laughs. But the reason I mention it isn’t to spoil the joke; it’s because Tim Robinson’s Netflix series is so full of figurative assholes — who transfix and entertain, who scream and rant, who endear themselves to us across their embarrassing escapades, but who are still assholes in the plainest sense — that it’s extra jarring to see a literal asshole staring you right in the face.
This is not a complaint.
This is not a complaint.
- 5/30/2023
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
There’s a point near the end of the first episode of “Joe Pera Talks With You” in Season 2 when Joe surveys his surroundings and says, “This is nice.” There’s no irony, no rug pull, no cynicism in what he says. Just one person grateful for something that hasn’t even arrived yet.
That’s the show in a nutshell: a chronicle of a guy so enthusiastic about the tiny pleasures of life that he’s even happy about potential things. Pera, as the star and frequent writer of the series, plays Joe, a resident of a Michigan city who takes the viewers through the things that fill him with wonder.
His direct-to-camera descriptions — this season covering disparate topics like beans and hiking — remain as distinct as ever. No one digs into proper nouns with the same verve as Joe does, especially when he’s detailing plant genuses and...
That’s the show in a nutshell: a chronicle of a guy so enthusiastic about the tiny pleasures of life that he’s even happy about potential things. Pera, as the star and frequent writer of the series, plays Joe, a resident of a Michigan city who takes the viewers through the things that fill him with wonder.
His direct-to-camera descriptions — this season covering disparate topics like beans and hiking — remain as distinct as ever. No one digs into proper nouns with the same verve as Joe does, especially when he’s detailing plant genuses and...
- 12/6/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
Donald Trump's enemies list grows larger by the hour, but Late Night host Seth Meyers is an old pro at pissing off the Gop hopeful – a fact he cheerfully discussed with CNN's Anderson Cooper during Tuesday's Late Night. "Your show has basically been Donald Trump tonight so far," Cooper tells the host. "I gotta be honest," Meyers responds. "Last night, same thing."
Meyers has been Trump's enemy since he roasted the real estate mogul at the 2011 White House Correspondents' Dinner. Trump was the first person to tweet "congratulations" at...
Meyers has been Trump's enemy since he roasted the real estate mogul at the 2011 White House Correspondents' Dinner. Trump was the first person to tweet "congratulations" at...
- 8/12/2015
- Rollingstone.com
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