Doom Patrol Recap: The Living Years – Vulture

Doom Patrol

Dad Patrol

Season 2 Episode 8

Editors Rating 4 stars ****

Photo: Warner Bros.

A lot of this sophomore season of Doom Patrol has been a waiting game. The biggest wait, of course, has been regarding Dorothy and her whole thing. Her whole thing is the best way to describe it, honestly, because even now, eight episodes in keep in mind, this is a nine-episode season its not too clear. Shes definitely a special, dangerous little girl even the talking bunny knows this. But the whys of everything arent all too clear, and cryptic magic talk can only be interesting for so long before you start wishing everyone involved would just speak plainly. British accents can only do so much heavy lifting, even if they belong to Mark Sheppard and Timothy Dalton.

Some clarity is provided in this episode, though, in the sense that Dorothy isnt just naturally forever 11 years old: She maintains that age and youth because Niles continues to treat her like she is 11 years old (and even younger). Technically, she could grow to an older appearance, but her father very much hasnt treated her as old as she actually is at all this season, or in their past. And as it turns out, that is for good reason beyond just a fathers inability to let his little girl grow up. (Yes, the metaphor is there, but the show is making the metaphor literal. This is how TV works.) Dorothy has been doing everything she can all season to grow up with a lot of nudging from the Candle Maker, who ends up having a vested interest in that which is very much at odds with her fathers desires. The result is a little immortal girl getting her first period and all hell breaking loose. Again, the metaphor becomes literal, the subtext becomes text, and now puberty rears its ugly head as the true Big Bad of Doom Patrol season two.

Another little girls demons are at the forefront of this episode, as Dad Patrol (an episode title that takes on a less fun connotation when you apply it to this plot) opens with a flashback to young Kay, as we see how her monstrous father punished her by making her spend the night in a well. Its in that well that Kay prior to having the comfort of her multiple personalities loses her stuffed lamb (and best friend) Harry in the watery sludge, which brings us to Janes mission for the episode. Dad Patrol makes clear that the deal hasnt been completely done, and Miranda hasnt officially taken over the role of primary. Its more like a test drive. But the episode also reveals that more personalities are disappearing, as Lucy Fugue has gone now, too. Miranda chimes in from up top, telling Jane that its a little tragic when [she] cant see hope staring [her] right in the face, while also giving us a clearer understanding of what Mirandas deal is: Shes basically Jasmine from Angel season four. The conclusion to this plot in the episode confirms it, too, as it reveals shes been killing off personalities by dumping them in the Undergrounds well. (No, theyve not moved on, as Baby Dolls lifeless underwater visage makes very clear.)

But before thats officially confirmed, Miranda spouts off nonsense about the personalities moving on as a result of Kay finally starting to heal, which is, of course, the point of the personalities, right? While Jane tries to figure out from Kay if thats actually whats happening, all Kay can think about is Harry the stuffed lamb and how much she wants him back. While every personality is afraid to go search from Harry including, seemingly, MirandaJane decides shell do it, to prove why shes still the primary. To prove that shes the one who can really get things done. What follows is the rare pairing of Jane and Larry whos struggling with the idea of leaving his past behind to finally know peace with his negative spirit on their way to Kays family farm in Arkansas, as they bond over not wanting to fade away.

Jane finds Harry, but she also finds a letter from Miranda to Kays father, again showing just how formidable and strong Miranda was but also suggesting to Jane that Miranda was scared to come back to this place. Which is why Jane decides to fall in line with Miranda when she returns to the Underground and even gives her Harry to return to Kay herself. Instead, Miranda chucks Harry into the Underground well and then does the same to Jane (where Jane sees the dead personalities). Pretty sneaky, sis.

In terms of the potential for fun in the title Dad Patrol, the Cliff and Clara Steele plot is the one that really delivers although, due to the gloom and doom of the rest of the episode, it really does feel like the other shoe is going to drop by the end of it. But blissfully, it does not: Cliff reconnects with his daughter, accepts that she is a lesbian, gives her good life advice, and then gets invited to her wedding. He even learns hes having a grandson and sings some Mike + The Mechanics The Living Years in the process. The only bad thing that happens in this plot is that he cooks up his beloved severed finger with the sausage he makes Clara for breakfast. But the rest of it? Everythings coming up Cliff, baby.

Except for when it comes to Doom Patrol spin-offs with Cyborg, that is, as Ritas imagined Beekeeper & Borg spin-off a riff on the Emma Peel version of The Avengers, not the Marvel one might actually have Cliffs Steele & Stone beat. Rita is, of course, on a high from saving a mugging victim in Dumb Patrol, and now shes back on her superhero kick. Vic is also back on teasing her about that, as though hes not part of this ragtag bunch of misfits and being called a member of the peewee Justice League by FBI agents. Glass houses, Vic Stone. On the other hand, as hyped as Rita is about her new superhero persona The Beekeeper an upgrade from Blob Lady, surely and about accompanying Vic to Detroit to figure out what happened to Roni, when it finally comes down to possibly confronting Roni (after shes taken down the established Cyborg), Rita is obviously terrified. Your run-of-the-mill muggers are one thing, but ability-infused villains are actually super hero things.

Also, remember when Roni taught Vic about systemic injustice? Remember when they were in a support group for PTSD? Remember Vics PTSD? Remember any of the genuinely interesting aspects introduced in the Vic/Roni storyline that were apparently just a means to an underwhelming fight scene in this episode? (Roni punches Vic a bit before he just draws Cyborg arm at her. Its impressive what a little uma jelly from the Scants can do shes no longer dying, thanks to it as this episode reveals she definitely didnt even ingest all of it.) While the Niles/Dorothy plot this season suffers from being vague, the Vic/Roni plot suffers from rushing this relationship and skipping all the actually interesting components in favor of telling an epic love story thats missing some important parts. Its kind like the Robotman of Doom Patrol plots.

The other issue with this plot is that, in Vics black-and-white view of the world, even though hes right that cold-blooded murder is wrong, Roni taking out the head of one of Doom Patrols many shadowy organizations offscreen isnt the type of thing thats going to really make anyone turn on the character. In fact, its that she gets caught on camera and there isnt even a possibility she didnt that straight up hurts the character, not the fact that she killed this guy. Roni does make a good point that shes told Vic the whole time who she is while he still thinks its a matter of who she was but the story also relies on Vic simply ignoring that.

Plus, the pinnacle of romance for them was apparently eating at a sub sandwich shop. A tale of true heartbreak, this is not. If theres any plot in Dad Patrol that needed more daddy issues, its definitely this one.

This week, in Im Cyborg: Actually, its more like, This week, in Im Cyborgs partner. Vic definitely one-ups the FBI agent who insults him, but Rita gets the most out of the whole Cyborg thing due to her excitement over being The Beekeeper. Its early, so no one questions the lack of bees or bee-related abilities when it comes to Ritas superhero alter ego. But they really should.

Also in the Cloverton newspaper? Our Towns Our Town! Is A Conduit For Clovertons Chaos. The article must not have mentioned Rita, though, so it makes sense she doesnt mention it.

Niles uses a Reeses Peanut Butter Cup as a burner phone, and it is truly the best thing Niles has done since he created a bunch of immortal weirdos.

Clara calls Cliff dad on her way out, and Cliff almost cries as much as robot men can cry, that is.

For all of Niles worry about Dorothy getting into trouble and destroying the world, he sure lets her run off by herself all the time. That the gas station scene turns into a touching period moment instead of a massacre over people pointing at the freak is impressive. But then he lets her go off alone at a county fairs funhouse, where she ends up being haunted by her mothers spirit and the Candle Maker, so way to go, Niles.

While Niles remains a bad dad, at least episode writers Tom Farrell and April Fitzsimmons know what theyre doing. Case in point? They have Niles cough a bunch into a handkerchief, revealing blood and the fact that Niles is dying. Again, this is how TV works.

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Doom Patrol Recap: The Living Years - Vulture

Justice League: Ray Fisher ‘Will Not Relent’ Against Joss Whedon, Geoff Johns and Jon Berg – CBR – Comic Book Resources

Justice League's Cyborg actor Ray Fisher stated that he won't back down in his claims against Joss Whedon, Geoff Johns and Jon Berg.

Despite having once praised Joss Whedon's reshoots of the film,Justice League star Ray Fisher, who played Cyborg in the movie, recently retracted his wordsbefore claiming that Whedon had abused the movie'scast and crew. Fisher has now stated that he won't back down against Whedon, nor producers Geoff Johns and Jon Berg for supposedly enabling Whedon's behavior.

Fisher reaffirmed his stance on Twitter. "I understand full well the [personal] and professional risks associated with my speaking out against the abhorrent behavior of Joss Whedon and his enablers Geoff Johns and Jon Berg," the actor said in his tweet. "I will not relent. This is 'good trouble, necessary trouble.' Accountability>Entertainment."

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In the tweetwithhis initial accusations, Fisher stated that Whedon's behavior was "gross, abusive, unprofessional, and completely unacceptable." On the same day, Berg argued thatFisher's claims were "categorically untrue". Fisherwould later state that the Non-Disclosure Agreement in his contract prevented him from detailing Whedon's conduct any further.

Justice League stars Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Henry Cavill as Superman, Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Diane Lane as Martha Kent, Ciarn Hinds as Steppenwolf, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor and J.K. Simmons as Commissioner Gordon. Zack Snyder's Justice Leaguewill premiere exclusively on HBO Max in early-to-mid-2021.

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In MMA Theres Just More Exposure Than In Womens Boxing- Claressa Shields Speaks Out On Womens Boxing – Essentially Sports

Boxing icon Claressa Shields has revealed women in boxing arent pushed and promoted much, as compared to MMA.

Shields spoke about MMA stars such as Amanda Nunes and Cris Cyborg getting regular opportunities on pay-per-view and main events. Boxing is predominantly a male-dominated sport, with a majority of the viewers tuning in to see those fights.

READ: Manny Pacquiao? What the F*** are You Talking About?- Dana White Trashes the Idea of a Conor McGregor Return

The multiple weight champion revealed that in MMA, women get the same opportunities as men do. However, in boxing, the opportunities presented are completely different.

In MMA, theres just more exposure than womans boxing. I hate to say it from me just looking at social media, from me just seeing that theyre the main event on every other card and people are coming and filling up arenas for them. We dont have that in womans boxing. I havent even been on pay-per-view yet, and Im a three-time division world champion. But Gervonta Tank Davis is about to be on pay-per-view. Its like, its just not equal, lamented Shields during the Last Stand Podcast.

Shields has burst onto the scene this past year and has a record of (10-2). Shields last fought in January, where she defeated Ivana Habazin and unified the titles.

She revealed that she intends on fighting on the undercard of major fighters such as Manny Pacquiao, Deontay Wilder, or Errol Spence. She believes this is the only way women can advance in the sport, especially on PPV.

I would fight on the undercard of those guys, but Im not going to fight on the undercard of nobody whos not a world champion, especially on pay-per-view, said Shields, as reported by DAZN.

Shields is confident women will get more opportunities soon, however, it will surely take some time

What are your thoughts on Claressa Shields comments? Let us know in the comments below!

ALSO READ: The First Weekend of December Eddie Hearn Drops Blockbuster Announcement Regarding Anthony Joshua

Source: DAZN NEWS

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Jiro Kuwata, the Creator of 8 Man and the Batman Manga, Has Died – CBR – Comic Book Resources

Jiro Kuwata, who illustrated a manga based on DC Comics' Batman and created 8 Man and several other manga, has passed away at the age of 85.

Jiro Kuwata, who served as the writer and artist ofBatman: The Manga and8 Man, passed away on August 4at the age of85. Kuwata's publisher Akita Shoten confirmed the news in a brief statement.

Kuwata's first comic wasThe Strange Star Cluster, which he created at the age of 13. He would later rise to prominence with the creation of the original manga seriesMaboroshi Tantei, whichwould later be adapted into the tokusatsu seriesPhantom Detective. Kuwatalegacy was cemented with the creation of the Batman manga.

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Batman enjoyed a surge of popularity in Japan due to the 1966TV show starring Adam West. Kuwatatook a sci-fi approach to the Dark Knight, pitting him and Robin against a variety of villains including Lord Death Man and Professor Gorilla. The manga would later be adapted to English by DC Comics in 2014, after being highlighted in Chip Kidd's Bat-Manga! The Secret History of Batman in Japan. The entire series is currently available in three English-language volumes.

Kuwataco-created8 Man with writer Kazumasa Hirai in 1963. The manga follows a cyborg superhero and would receivean anime adaptation in the same year it was published.It has inspired a video game, as well as two live-action films.

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A freelance journalist based in Seattle, Collier enjoys all facets of pop culture, namely comics and anime. Spider-Man is his favorite fictional character of all time.

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Jiro Kuwata, the Creator of 8 Man and the Batman Manga, Has Died - CBR - Comic Book Resources

A Doom Patrol Hero Brings Another Piece of Watchmen Into the DC Universe – CBR – Comic Book Resources

Another part of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen officially has a place in the DC Universe, thanks to Doom Patrol's Robotman.

WARNING: The following contains spoilers for "Summer Bummer," a story in DC Cybernetic Summer by Max Bemis, Greg Smallwood and ALW's Troy Peteri, on sale now.

In between potentially world-ending battles and universe-rebooting Crises, the DC Universe and its denizens find various ways to have fun, as showcased in the DC Cybernetic Summer Special. Featuring numerous DC heroes and villains relaxing and tending to their civilian lives, the book's fun stories highlight less prominent characters like the Metal Men and Doom Patrol's Robotman.

These stories eschew supervillain battles to focus on the character's every day hobbies, such as hanging out at the beach, discussing their favorite anime, and going to the comic book store. And during his trip to the local comic shop, Robotman passed by a comic book that's featured in Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen in a moment that adds another small part of that iconic story's world to the DC Universe.

RELATED: Watchmen: Has DC Finally Made Doctor Manhattan a Hero?

In "Summer Bummer," Robotman is trying to hang out with his friend Mike. This story sees them laying about on the beach and going to the club. After a misunderstanding, they eventually find themselves in a local comic book store to pick up some of their favorite titles. They even encounter Cyborg and a few of the Metal Men along the way.

According to their conversation, Robotman is a frequent reader of traditional superhero comic books, whereas Mike prefers more indie comics. The store is filled with superhero and comic book memorabilia, including action figures and a Green Lantern logo poster. There are even books claiming to contain true stories about Superman and Batman.

However, one of the books they pass by stands out the most. Along with figures and comics of the Multiversity character Ultraa, there's also a copy of Tales of the Black Freighter, the story within a story of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen.

RELATED: The Doom Patrol Had One of the Oddest Superhero Weddings Ever

Tales of the Black Freighter exists within the narrative of Watchmen as its own comic book, though its story has thematic parallels with the story of Adrian Veidt himself. The pirate theme of the tale was meant to be as directly opposed to the main story's superheroes as possible. Moore famously surmised than in a world where superheroes were an actuality, comic book readers would turn to other topics for escapism, such as piracy, horror, fantasy and romance.

The story itself has a young shipman being the lone survivor of the attack on his ship. Using what was left of his shipmates to craft a raft, he manages to return to his home, hoping to warn them of the Black Freighter that had attacked him and is sure to come back. Believing that the Black Freighter may have already claimed his town, his leads to a number of moral mistakes which leave innocents dead in the young man's wake, including his wife. In the end, the ship does come, with the young man having been its goal all along.

This of course isn't the first time that Watchmen and the broader DC Universe have crossed over in some form or another. As far back as the Post-Crisis DC comics, Denny O'Neil and Denys Cowan's run on The Question had the faceless protagonist reading Watchmen and admiring Rorschach, who was ostensibly based on the Question. More recently, the DC Universe itself was rebooted by none other than Doctor Manhattan, with his tampering with the timeline being used as the explanation for the changes during the New 52 era, as explored in Geoff Johns and Gary Frank's Doomsday Clock.

While the precise nature of the current relationship between Watchmen and the DC Universe is still being unveiled by Dark Nights: Death Metal, this story reveals that Tales of the Black Freighter exists in both Watchmen's world and the DC Universe as works of fiction, with everyday citizens none the wiser that the fictional character that they're reading had an incredible impact upon their lives.

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10 Sith Lords That Undoubtedly Took From Darth Vader | ScreenRant – Screen Rant

Darth Vader is without a doubt one of the most beloved and feared villains in all of fiction, right up there with characters like The Joker, Hannibal Lecter, and Lord Voldemort. Nowadays in the realm of science fiction, it's practically impossible to find someone who doesn't take at least a little influence from the dark lord of the Sith.

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Even his fellow Sith Lords are guilty of the cyborg ruler's influence, no matter where they come from. Whether they originate in the expanded universe or the currentStar Warscanon, Vader has more than a few copycats out there. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, right?

Count Dooku was easily one of the highlights of the often bashed Prequel Trilogy, but that's partially thanks to the incomparable Christopher Lee. That being said, there's at least a healthy helping of Vader's influence to his demeanor, appearance, and presence, along with a little of Lee's Dracula. His calm and calculating nature, his long black cape, his deep voice, and powerful presence all call back to the original face of the Dark Side.

A member of theStar Warsextended universe, Darth Tenebrous was a precursor Sith Lord along with Darth Plagueis who shared more than a cybernetic breathing apparatus with Lord Vader. Not only was the character quite a powerful member of the Sith, but his attitude towards the Force is remarkably similar to that of Vader's.

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As a prolific scientist, Tenebrous saw the Force as a tool for progress instead of a power source alone. The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the Force, after all.

With the introduction of theStar Warsprequels, George Lucas and his team had the daunting task of creating a new villainous threat. Since Anakin Skywalker was barely old enough to have a pod-racer license, the film needed a new threat. Enter the frightening and agile Darth Maul. Though he lacked the cybernetics, his character was absolutely drenched in shadow and mystery. And once fans saw him fighting the Jedi, it was just like seeing Vader unsheath his lightsaber for the first time.

The Inquisitors are to Vader as the Death Eaters are to Voldemort. With their black leather attire, masks, and appetites for death and destruction, it's easy to see who they admire most. But none imitate the Sith Lord himself better than The Grand Inquisitor.

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He's as commanding, callous, and cruel as Vader, and even without his helmet, he bears a familiar resemblance to him unmasked. The only place he exceeds him is in pure intimidation.

Although his approach is far more ethereal and wraithlike than Vader's, Darth Nihilus is where the lines begin to blur. Like Vader, Nihilus was once a man, but due to being seduced and consumed by the Dark Side of the Force, he has become something else entirely. A manifestation of the Dark Side itself, Darth Nihilus hungers for Force energy, walking as an avatar of fear and suffering.

The Force Unleashedwas a hack-and-slash video game where players got to assume the role of a Sith apprentice under Darth Vader himself, but they were also given the choice to chose the good or evil side of the force.

RELATED:What Jedi: Fallen Order 2 NEEDS To Include

If they chose the path of the Dark Side, Galen Marek would essentially become Darth Vader's replacement under the Emporer. Galen even gets fitted with his own Vader-inspired suit and mask to top it all off.

Grievous is more than just a cyborg with a breathing problem, but a figure foreshadowing the future of a certain Jedi. He was a Kaleesh who was so consumed by hatred and pain, he gave himself over to the Dark Side to be Dooku and Sidious's sinister cybernetic project. More machine than organic being, Grievous is the Sith's perfect killing machine, slaughtering supposedly 100 Jedi by his hands. All of this is eerily similar to the fate that would befall Anakin Skywalker.

The Inquisitors have already been mentioned once, but Second Sister's appearance, manner, are so blatantly ripped off of Darth Vader, it's almost like she's practically the embodiment of genderswapped fan art.

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Joking aside, Second Sister is nothing to sneeze at. Although she lack's Vader's control and distinct presence, she is a deadly villain to be tangoed with inJedi: Fallen Order.

If one looks at theStar Warsseries from a timeline perspective, Darth Revan was Vader before it was cool. This Dark Lord of the Sith essentially laid out the basics for Vader in a few easy steps. Betray the Jedi, don a cool and intimidating mask that strikes fear into the hearts of your enemies, create a sizable body-count with the Dark Side of the Force, and leave a legacy of fear behind for future Darths to follow. It's as simple as that.

There is no bigger fanboy of Darth Vader in this or any other galaxy than his grandson, Ben Solo. Taking up the moniker of Kylo Ren, an angry young apprentice attempted to follow in his grandfather's footsteps by walking the way of the Dark Side. From the familiar-looking mask to the edgy black attire, Kylo is desperately trying to be Vader reincarnated. If only he could control that temper of his.

NEXT:Star Wars: 10 Storylines From The Sequel Trilogy That Were Never Paid Off

Next Star Wars: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Kylo Ren

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10 Sith Lords That Undoubtedly Took From Darth Vader | ScreenRant - Screen Rant

Where to start watching Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Season 2’s Samson and Delilah. – Slate

Fox Network

Despite being a childless, science fictionloving grad student with nothing but time on my hands back in 2008, I somehow missed Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles when it was on TV. Created by Josh Friedman, The Sarah Connor Chronicles was canceled after two seasons and 31 episodes, despite mostly positive critical reception. Bingeing it under pandemic conditions, as I have been doing recently, has been unexpectedly cathartic. This is a show about people living in a sunny, beautiful, Southern Californian present day while haunted by the knowledge that a grim future might be coming unless they change it by their actions. Its also about parenting under stress and feeling constantly under siege by inescapable circumstance, whichwell, if thats too real, you can always focus on the nifty killer cyborgs instead.

The haunted, hard-pressed characters on this show are nonetheless fun to watch. The Sarah Connor Chronicles stars Lena Headey as Sarah, the monomaniacal mama bear originally played by Linda Hamilton. Sarah Connor has a bit in common with Game of Thrones Cersei Lannister, now Headeys most famous role, in that both characters are driven to protect their families, but compared with Sarah Connor, Cersei is a beam of sunshine. Sarah Connor has but one single purpose, or at least a related set of themworry about Skynet, find out Skynets plans, thwart Skynetand that makes her understandably a little bit of a tough hang.

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Luckily, the other main cast members are delightful. John Connor, played by Thomas Dekker, is a teenager whos growing into his charisma and strength, all the while wishing there were some way out of his fate. Summer Glau, who put in some serious time in the science fiction TV mines in the 2000s and 2010s with Firefly, Dollhouse, The 4400, Alphas, and Arrow, might be my favorite Terminator in the whole Terminatorverseshes so icy and strange, with perfect skin and an intense, deadpan gaze. The casting director was clearly great at picking actors who can tap into the uncanny valley. (Garret Dillahunt, a wonderful hey, its that guy actor who plays the first seasons Big Bad, also has this gift.) And when Johns uncle Derek Reese appears, sent back from the future to help the Connors survive, you can enjoy the sight of Brian Austin Green convincingly playing a battle-hardened, tattoo-covered resistance fighter, offering world-class handsome uncle from out of town vibes.

The episode I recommend to the Sarah Connor Chroniclescurious out there is the second season premiere, Samson & Delilah. The action starts with an explosion: Glaus character, Cameron, the Terminator assigned to protect John, has been car-bombed, and her chip is damaged, causing her to turn on him and try to kill him. Samson & Delilah showcases Glaus creepy, quiet strength as well as plenty of run run run, shoot shoot shoot, drive drive drive. Theres a lot of action in Samson & Delilah, including some cool callbacks to the surprise special effects that made Terminator 2: Judgment Daythe best Terminator movie, dont @ meso memorable.

Working together, John and Sarah figure out how to trap Cameron and force her to reboot, giving them some time to access her head, open up her scalp, and take her chip out. John cuts into her, but before he takes her chip out of her head, she begs him not to, saying over and over, in a girls robotic voice, I love you! I love you! John goes ahead, then cleans her chip, and in the episodes climactic scene, as every trusted adult in his life warns him not to do it, reinserts it. Johnwho knows he will one day be the leader of the human resistanceoften struggles to understand how his future self would handle a problem, a dynamic thats not as well explored in the other Terminator films. What would it do to a person to know that hes going to grow into a leader everyone trustssomebody whom people will willingly die for? A future John Connor (this show posits the existence of multiple timelines) sent Cameron back to help his younger self survive. But his family tells young John that no metal can be trusted. Who is right?

The rest of Season 2 will see a lot of tragedy unfold because of the mistrust between Cameron and the adults who are protecting John and fighting Skynet. There are deep meditations about the meaning of humanity, tests of familial bonds, and revelations about peoples capacity to collaborate with evil. But most interesting of all is watching John, a dippy kid with messy hair, become John Connor. Im just sorry this show got canceled before we got to see where it wouldve taken him next.

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Where to start watching Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Season 2's Samson and Delilah. - Slate

To the Moon and Back with Sheyene Gerardi, kicks off its first season with space, rockets and cyborgs. – Press Release – Digital Journal

To the Moon and Back with Sheyene Gerardi, season premiere.

To the Moon and Back with Sheyene Gerardi docu-series will feature fascinating stories from Silicon Valley, including the world's most iconic figures such as Elon Musk (SpaceX), Jeff Bezos (Blue Origin) and Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook).

The Venezuelan model and television personality is back on the TV dial in more than 100 countries. In its premiere season, the show will feature fascinating stories from Silicon Valley, including the worlds most iconic figures such as Elon Musk (SpaceX), Jeff Bezos (Blue Origin) and Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook). Throughout this series, Sheyene Gerardi goes behind the scenes to uncover leading-edge technological developments taking place across the aerospace industry. "To the Moon and Back with Sheyene Gerardi" is available to some 600 million TV viewers globally. In the U.S., its available to around 45 million households in certain markets through Cable.

Sheyene Gerarardi is a model and one of Venezuelas most beloved television icons. She beat a prediction of 3 months to live and she has been involved in many philanthropic endeavors over the course of her career. This time she addresses the issue of her social work with a mission to use visual storytelling to amplify social issues and catalize social change. "Science is inherently optimistic. I love being able to use the power of entertainment to create positive change and help audiences to take action, and digital TV allows me to do this in powerful ways." - says Sheyene.

To the Moon and Back is about Sheyene doing what she does best: communicating hope and celebrating progress, with which she aims to educate audiences on a global level. Sheyene is also executive producing this series.

Each segment will air Nationwide during half-hour episode to millions of television households distributed throughout cable television, reaching approximately 100-million subscribers via Univision, DISH Network, DIRECTV, Verizon FiOS TV, Amazon Prime and more that 600 independent rural cable systems.

Media ContactCompany Name: Scriptten IncContact Person: Ligia GrigsbyEmail: Send EmailPhone: 9292490003State: NYCountry: United StatesWebsite: https://www.sheyenegerardi.net

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To the Moon and Back with Sheyene Gerardi, kicks off its first season with space, rockets and cyborgs. - Press Release - Digital Journal

Enjin Partners with SwissBorg and 8 Game Studios to Usher in the Era of Blockchain-Powered Cross-Game Events – BTCMANAGER

Gaming is a multi-billion industry, and the Enjin Network, with its 20 million registered users, holds a warm place in the heart of many gamers.

Enjin now also provides a blockchain development ecosystem that studios can use to build next-generation games that are powered by blockchain economies. As part of a long-term initiative to create a blockchain-powered games market, Enjin has announced an initiative with SwissBorg and eight other studios.

The deal also saw Enjin Coin (ENJ) added to the SwissBorg Wealth App, which means it is available with 17 fiat gateways accessible in over 100 countries.

Cloud computing has given creators and players god-like powers. It has opened possibilities that are perpetually changing the games industry on a day-to-day basis. Gaming environments are becoming indistinguishable from the real world, and events are scaling out to colossal proportions.

Perhaps emboldened by the industrys thirst for innovation, Enjins developer-friendly tools enable studios to build real-world economies to match the visual realism that can already be experienced within their games.

By partnering with SwissBorg, studios can easily access the Enjin Coin needed to make powerful blockchain assets using the Enjin Platform; gamers can use that Enjin Coin to buy and sell those assets via the Enjin Marketplace; and both gamers and developers can turn their ENJ earnings back into fiat using the SwissBorg Wealth App.

As the preferred blockchain gaming platform, Enjins solutions are built to break through walled gardens and create a more open and decentralized internet.

Enjin first launched the concept of the gaming multiverse in 2018. Since then over 30 games have joined their ranks, many of which are playable right now.

The launch of the multiverse unshackled the creativity of many game developers and sparked future plans to create a quest that spans through an array of games. They named it the Multiverse Quest.

When it launches, the grand prize for Enjins Multiverse Quest will be the Monolith a prized blockchain asset infused with 1,155,777 ENJ (or $200,000 at spot rates). When the time comes, it will be the ultimate reward for finishing the Multiverse Quest.

In preparation for this event, Enjin has teamed up with SwissBorg and eight gaming studios to create a prototype for cross-game events, called Cyborgs Quest.

Cyborgs quest emulates Ready Player Ones cross-game storyline, a movie based on Steven Spielbergs masterpiece that grossed $500 million.

Cyborgs Quest enables players searching for life-changing fortune, a chance to compete for a prize pool valued at over $50,000, including SwissBorg Premium Account tokens, Frozen ENJ, and SwissBorg-branded gaming items that can be used in three games.

All prizes will be in ERC-1155 assets, tradable on the Enjin Marketplace.

Players of Cyborgs Quest will journey through a total of eight blockchain games, split into two chapters, the first phase beginning on August 3, 2020.

Enjins goal when building this quest was to create a decentralized, real-life interpretation of Ready Player Ones cross-game voyage.

If successful, this event could have far-reaching implications for a games market that serves 2.7 billion players.

Cross-game events are likely to be an experience gamers enjoy regularly and Enjin has proven that blockchain makes it far more feasible.To join the quest, sign up to be notified at enj.in/cyborg-quest.

Earlier this month, BTCManager also reported Enjin Coins (ENJ) addition to Aaves DeFi Protocol. This move will also help bring DeFi to the $153.9 billion gaming market.

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Enjin Partners with SwissBorg and 8 Game Studios to Usher in the Era of Blockchain-Powered Cross-Game Events - BTCMANAGER

Jiro Kuwata, Batmanga and 8 Man Creator, Dead at 85 – Multiversity Comics

Jiro Kuwata

Kuwata was born in Suita, Osaka, on April 17, 1935. He entered the world of manga after the war, when he was only 13 years old, with the comic The Strange Star Cluster. In 1957, he created Maboroshi Tantei (Phantom Detective), which was adapted into a live-action TV series two years later. 8 Man, which debuted in 1963, also became an anime series in the same year, and subsequently inspired a video game, two live-action films, and more anime and manga in the 90s.

After the Adam West Batman TV series popularized the character in Japan, Kuwata created a manga starring the character that was featured in the magazines Weekly Shnen King and Shnen Gah from 1966 to 1967. The comics were the subject of Chip Kidds 2008 book Bat-Manga!: The Secret History of Batman in Japan, and eventually re-released by DC under the title Batman: The Jiro Kuwata Batmanga in 2014.

Kuwata battled depression and alcoholism throughout his life: he was arrested in 1965 for possession of a handgun, which he bought while contemplating suicide. (As a result, the original version of 8 Mans final issue was completed by other artists.) In 1977, he converted to Buddhism, and produced several art books about the life of Buddha, in addition to continuing his work in comics.

Other comics by Kuwata included Chken Leap and Elite, as well as adaptations of other (Japanese and American) TV shows like Moonlight Mask, Ultra Seven, The Time Tunnel, and The Invaders.

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Jiro Kuwata, Batmanga and 8 Man Creator, Dead at 85 - Multiversity Comics

Intense and Addictive Hit Amazon Chrome The Series in the Pipeline with Episode 2 for August 30 Release – Press Release – Digital Journal

"Susan Goforth as EL The Reclaimer, after a powerful confrontation with Chrome is reborn as a cyborg in Episode Two - The Bride Of Frankenstein that will be available on all the platforms August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One - Death Wish is on Amazon Prime, Amazon PPV, Amazon Prime UK, Vimeo, AppleTV+, Roku TV and more."

Chrome: The Series that debuted back on May 30th to millions of delighted fans and the applause of critics is prepping episode 2 for an August 30 premiere date.

Photo: Katie Erin Tomlinson returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Following on the heels of the pilot of Chrome: The Series that took audiences by storm with a surprise win from the 21-years-in-business independent Hollywood company Pendragon Pictures.

Pendragons president Susan Goforth beams, We couldnt be happier with the response to Chrome: The Series. Everyone always hopes for a win when you put out so much labor and love, but when it happens, it can be a bit heady. You have to ground yourself and remind yourself that it wasnt a fluke. It was the result of nearly two decades of hard labor and determination.

Photo: Susan Goforth returns as cyborg EL The Reclaimer who is transformed into a cyborg in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Photo: Natasha Coppola-Shalom returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

There are few series that will take you away from the troubles of the world like Chrome: The Series Episode 1 streaming on Amazon Prime.

Photo: Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Nearly 20 years in the making,Chrome with cliffhanger zeal continues to draw large audiences on Amazon Prime. The Pilot Episode titled "Death Wish" (each episode is named after a classic film) is being lauded by audiences and critics alike for its fresh take on the comic book movie genre.

Photo: Katie Erin Tomlinson returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

And now fans will get to see what happens next as the dystopian future world of robot slaves and lost lockstep humans unfolds in episode 2.

Photo: Dave Morrissey Jr. returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Katie Erin Tomlinson as Chrome, Susan Goforth as EL the Reclaimer, Natasha Coppola-Shalom as Perdix, Dave Morrissey Jr. as NAL will continue their roles along with new characters and cast members added like Donovan Le as Viper, Joanne Scorcia as Sparks and a few surprise star talents.

Photo: Anthony Piana as Colonel Zet returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Josh MacPhearson ofNJ4K Youtube Channelsaid of Chrome: The Series, I cant think of a better time when its message against the bully and tyranny could have been released. I love this kind of look to a film. Its films like this that keep my attention.

Critic MacPhearson drew attention to Chrome's sociological underpinnings, "Robots have been given personality. And in order to keep those personalities in check, they actually install them with inhibitors to stop them from saying no or striking back at their masters...The very fact that such a need for these machines is necessary shows only too well that humanity is fully aware of the new life they have created. The continent of artificial intelligence is just another commodity to be abused in a society of haves and have-nots."

Photo: Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

"So I just watched the first episode of Chrome, I couldn't stop, I couldn't look away, it was just too good. Right now only the first episode seems to be on Prime, but it is definitely one you should check out; super cool and had a Xena like vibe to it."- Luke Barnes, Another Millennial Reviewer

Photo: Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Director Timothy Hines reflects, Chrome: The Series largely surprised audiences as to how cool it was, how fun it was and that there was more depth to it than met the eye. With episode two, it isnt just more of the same, the story grows exponentially as the story unfolds and each character evolves revealing hidden aspects that are true, original, badass and fun.

Photo: Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

With the coronavirus pandemic having closed and limited theaters across the globe pushing back release dates of major Hollywood female superhero films Wonder Woman 1984, Black Widow and Mulan, a fresh female superhero Chrome: The Series landed on Amazon Prime and Apple TV+ on schedule this May 30, 2020. Moving into its 6th week with strong viewership and positive reviews, the superhero fantasy Chrome: The Series is filling a void left by the absent Hollywood blockbusters.

Photo: Dave Morrissey Jr. returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One - Death Wish is on Amazon Prime, Amazon PPV, Amazon Prime UK, Vimeo, AppleTV+, Roku TV and more.

Photo: Susan Goforth returns as the transformed EL the Reclaimer returns in Chrome: The Series Episode Two - Bride Of Frankenstein on Amazon Prime August 30! Chrome: The Series Pilot Episode One is now streaming on Amazon Prime with millions of delighted viewers and to the rave of critics.

Episode Two - The Bride Of Frankenstein will be available on all the platforms August 30!

Media ContactCompany Name: Pendragon PicturesContact Person: Susan GoforthEmail: Send EmailPhone: 1+ 310-480-0837City: Los AngelesState: CACountry: United StatesWebsite: http://www.pendragonpictures.com

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Intense and Addictive Hit Amazon Chrome The Series in the Pipeline with Episode 2 for August 30 Release - Press Release - Digital Journal

Holly Holm Defends Her Many Chances to Earn a UFC Title: ‘There’s a Reason’ – Sportscasting

Even if the UFC holds events for another 50 years, few moments will compare to Holly Holms head-kick KO of Ronda Rousey. Many fans believed Rousey would be the GOAT. But the loss to Holm and a followup loss to Amanda Nunes sent Rousey packing for WWE. Since her incredible upset win, Holm has managed only a 3-5 record in the UFC.

Although her losses were against some of the UFCs greatest, (Nunes, Cris Cyborg, Valentina Shevchenko, and Germaine de Randamie) a losing record doesnt seem to justify the three title shots Holm has received since losing the belt. Does she agree? Not so much.

Womens MMA is still a new sport, especially in the UFC. Holms win over Rousey is an all-time great moment. And Holm continued to be a great force for the sport. Shes taken fights that dont suit her, along with short-notice fights against heavily-favored opponents. Holm is loyal to the UFC brand and many of the womens divisions are still filling out.

Without top-level contenders, it makes sense for Holm to step in and create exciting fights in the meantime. It may seem like shes receiving title fights she doesnt deserve. But much of todays WMMA popularity is built on Holms career and shes not exactly pushing more deserving fighters aside.

Despite her up-and-down record, the UFC rankings currently list Holm at No. 2 among Womens Bantamweight fighters and No. 8 among all women. Her losses have been to the pound for pound No. 1, No. 3, and No. 9 fighters (along with Cyborg and Miesha Tate, who no longer compete in the UFC).

If theres an argument that Holm simply doesnt have it anymore, additional evidence is necessary. After retirement rumors swirled in mid-2019, Holm returned to the cage and won a unanimous decision over former title challenger Raquel Pennington. This set her up for another title fight in the near future.

RELATED: Tito Ortiz Ditched His Meth Addiction to Become a UFC Champion

Prior to facing Holm, Rousey felt the confidence that years of adoration from fans and critics create. Everybody tries to come at me in different ways, Rousey said, and I think their approach is going to be the most strategic and well-thought-out, but no amount of strategy can beat me, and Im going to show them that.

But things turned around quickly in the Octagon as Holm dominated the first round. Moving into the second, commentators wondered if Rousey would go to a decision for the first time in her career. A minute into round two, Holm landed a head kick that won her the belt. She dominated sports headlines for the next week.

RELATED: Ronda Rousey Absolutely Torched WWE Fans in Brutal New Interview

Since beating Rousey, Holm immediately lost the belt to Tate and managed a total record of three wins, five losses. But no amount of losses diminishes the shock that Holm sent throughout the MMA world when she knocked out Rousey. And some of that shock has certainly played into her title shots.

But that isnt necessarily a bad thing. Holm was the first fighter, man or woman, to win world championships in both boxing and MMA. Her impact will likely be felt for the entire future of womens MMA. Shes approaching 40 years old, but the shallow womens divisions she fights in have plenty of space.

Holms dominance in the boxing ring and strong point-fighting style in the Octagon have kept her largely injury-free throughout her career. Even if she never wins another fight, Holm has contributed a legendary story to MMA history and given boxers the blueprint to succeed.

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Holly Holm Defends Her Many Chances to Earn a UFC Title: 'There's a Reason' - Sportscasting

John Kavanagh and fiancee Orlagh Hunter welcome first child as Conor McGregors coach declares the champ is h – The Irish Sun

JOHN Kavanagh's fiancee Orlagh Hunter has given birth to the couple's first child this evening.

Conor McGregor's coach shared the news on social media tonight declaring: "The champ is here."

Earlier today, Kavanagh, 43, joked how the "scales set up" ahead of the tot's birth.

He tweeted: "Scales set up. Junior due to step on them on them in a few hrs. Coming in championship weight."

Tonight, people from across the fighting industry rushed to congratulate the couple on their newborn arrival.

Champion Irish boxer Michael Conlan said: "Congrats John, wishing you Orlaith and the baby health and happiness."

UFC commentator John Gooden tweeted: "Congratulations to you all!"

Broadcaster Mike Sheridan replied: "Huge congrats to you both, John"

UFC presenter Layla Anna-Lee said: "Wow. Congratulations such a wonderful feeling"

MMA legend Cris Cyborg simply replied: "Blessings."

Two-time Olympic bronze medallist Paddy Barnes said: "Congratulations to yas John"

MINI MEJohn Kavanagh has the 'scales set up' as he awaits arrival of 'junior'

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TOP FORMBrazil icon Ronaldo soaks up sun with partner Celina Locks on yacht in Formentera

LIL ISSUEBoris Becker's estranged wife begs his new girlfriend to 'step away from my son'

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SOR SUBJECTNeymar's ex-girlfriend Soraja Vucelic almost pops out of dress in steamy selfie

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'BROKE MY HEART''Ronnie's not fit to be called Dad, let alone Grandad', says his daughter

The MMA Gym owner is best known for training Conor McGregor and has been dating Hunter long term and are now starting a family together.

The pair have been engaged since 2014 but have yet to tie the knot, according to Hunter's Facebook page.

Hunter has been by John's side through all the big moments including the launch of his book Win or Learn and works at SBG.

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John Kavanagh and fiancee Orlagh Hunter welcome first child as Conor McGregors coach declares the champ is h - The Irish Sun

Augusts Filmmaker of the Month: Park Chan-wook – The Spool

Would there be a Parasite or at least, a Parasite that won Best Picture at the 2020 Academy Awards and swept the American box office without Oldboy? Its a presumptuous question, to be sure, but one worth asking, especially as global audiences grow more accustomed to (and enamored of) the intricacies and tone-defying appeal of South Korean cinema. While Bong Joon-ho is arguably the countrys most well-known and celebrated director today, another man must at least share credit with Director Bong for popularizing South Korean cinema in the West Park Chan-wook.

Much of what we associate with South Korean cinema can be traced back to the American audiences embrace of both Bong and Parks works the dark humor, the intricate lacing of absurdism with abject violence, the heavy hand of sociopolitical commentary undergirding every plot point and sumptuously-framed image. Contemporaries in the early 21st-century Korean cinema scene, both Bong and Park had huge crossover hits championed by folks like previous Filmmaker of the Month recipients Quentin Tarantino and Spike Lee. But before Bong could achieve cult status in America with his 2005 monster movie The Host, its arguably Parks Vengeance Trilogy Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy, and Lady Vengeance that put South Korea on the map for international audiences.

Despite their grindhouse notoriety, especially in the earlier parts of Parks career, his films are shockingly meditative, often musing on subjects as grisly as revenge, fate, and the specter of violence. He doesnt shy away from that violence, either: Oldboy is arguably his blood-soaked magnum opus, lingering on sliced-off tongues or claw hammers to the head with exploitation-movie levels of glee. And yet, with his painterly compositions and intriguing command of tone, even the bloodiest of his works feel like prayers massacres as pleas for humanity from people driven to the edges of their will. There are plenty of squib-heavy Korean action movies out there, but Parks thrillers feel more intriguingly messy than that. Images like Oldboys protagonist, Oh Dae-su, chomping greedily on a live octopus only hammer home (eh?) the notion that Parks protagonists all yearn for some kind of visceral connection to life. For the vampires of Thirst and the young sociopath at the center of Stoker, this disconnect from humanity is even more visible.

Its not all blood and guts, though; there are surreal rom-coms like Im a Cyborg But Thats OK, lush, queer period romantic thrillers (The Handmaiden), English-language debuts filled with southern Gothic energy (Stoker), and more, all contributing to Parks consistent work to live up to, and sometimes defy, his reputation. Over the course of the month, well explore the lions share of Parks ten films (and one television series) to date, and try to crack the code on the surprising connections between the tenderness and terror of a Park Chan-wook film.

Clint Worthington is the founder and editor-in-chief of The Spool, as well as one of the founders of the website/podcast Alcohollywood in 2011. He is also a Senior Writer at Consequence of Sound, as well as the co-host/producer of Travolta/Cage. You can also find his freelance work at IndieWire, UPROXX, Syfy Wire, The Takeout, and Crooked Marquee.

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The Terminator Is a Subtly Subversive Slasher – The Escapist

The Terminator is often discussed in terms of its contributions to specifically science fiction cinema. Prolific science fiction author Harlan Ellison earned an acknowledgement in the closing credits by filing a lawsuit alleging that the film stole various ideas from his television script Soldier for The Outer Limits, even though writer and director James Cameron would later dismiss Ellisons case as a nuisance suit. The Terminator contains elements associated with science fiction: time travel, cyborgs, post-apocalyptic warfare.

However, despite these trappings, The Terminator feels much more like a horror movie than a conventional science fiction adventure. Indeed, even beyond the shoestring budget and technical limitations imposed on the production, The Terminator stands apart in Camerons filmography. It is arguably closer in tone to the original Alien than Camerons sequel Aliens, using recognizable science fiction storytelling devices to frame an archetypal horror narrative.

It makes sense that The Terminator should feel like a horror. Cameron conceived of the film while in Rome working on his directorial debut, Piranha II: The Spawning. Cameron concedes the nightmare may have been prompted by a fever, but added, I think also the idea that because I was in a foreign city by myself and I felt very dissociated from humanity in general, it was very easy to project myself into these two characters from the future who were out of sync, out of time, out of place.

This nightmarish quality bleeds through into the film. The Terminator presents Los Angeles as a haunted landscape, particularly at night. While Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) arrives in the city, it is a labyrinth of dark alleyways lit by the neon strobe of police lights. The Terminator repeatedly suggests that Reese has swapped one nightmare for another, paralleling the homeless inhabitants of 1984 Los Angeles scavenging for food with the survivors foraging in the ruins of the apocalyptic future.

The presentation of Los Angeles in The Terminator is in step with the broader portrayals of the American city as a sprawling wasteland in contemporary films like RoboCop or even After Hours. The Terminator has been described as basically Walter Hills best film, recalling the urban nightmares of films like The Warriors or Streets of Fire. In particular, the use of washed out blues and greens in the nighttime scenes evokes a feeling of chronic insomnia, a blurring of dream and reality.

As played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Terminator itself might have a pseudo-rational explanation, but it is also just a literal distillation of the classic slasher villain. Like Michael Myers or Jason Voorhees, characters driving the popular horror franchises of the decade, the Terminator is a relentless and unstoppable killing machine. Cameron emphasizes this with repeated shots of the machine getting knocked down, seemingly defeated, only to twitch back to life to continue the pace.

Cameron is not shy about acknowledging this influence. My contemporaries were all doing slasher-horror movies, Cameron has explained. John Carpenter was the guy I idolized the most. He made Halloween for $30,000 or something. That was everyones break-in dream, to do a stylish horror movie. It was a very slasher film type image. And it really was the launching pad for the story. Carpenters influence looms large over the film, especially Halloween and Assault on Precinct 13.

This is most obvious in an early sequence in which the Terminator murders Ginger (Bess Motta) and her boyfriend Matt (Rick Rossovich). Ginger and Matt have just had sex, which makes them prime targets in a horror movie. Ginger makes a sandwich, leaving Matt lying in bed in the dark room. The Terminator quietly enters and brutally murders Matt as Ginger listens to her headphones in another room. Ginger is oblivious to her boyfriends death until his head is smashed through a wall.

However, what is particularly interesting about The Terminator is how it uses these horror movie tropes in interesting ways. Even on his second film, Cameron was cognizant of what these devices could mean. Although Schwarzenegger has joked that Cameron declined to O.J. Simpson as the Terminator because Simpson was not believable for a killing machine, Cameron has also candidly admitted, I wasnt interested in an African-American man chasing around a white girl with a knife.

It is worth considering Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), the target of the time-traveling assassination cyborg. Sarah is introduced in a manner similar to the young women who tended to headline these sorts of horror movies, like Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) in Halloween or Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp) in A Nightmare on Elm Street. While the Terminator and Reese navigate a gritty urban nightmare, Sarah is introduced riding a pink scooter against a clear blue sky.

In some ways, Sarah could be seen as an embodiment of the classic horror movie final girl. She is young, with 27-year-old Hamilton playing an 18- (or 19-) year-old character. She is wholesome, working a low-paying job at a diner to make ends meet. She is also presented as somewhat more chaste than Ginger. While Ginger spends the night at home with Matt, Sarah is getting stood up on a date. (The voice on the answering machine is Cameron himself, Hamiltons future husband.)

Cameron doesnt play all the classic horror movie tropes straight. Instead, he actively and pointedly subverts some of the core elements of the slasher movie template. The sexual politics of horror movies are undoubtedly complicated, with many critics reading the slasher genre as inherently misogynistic while others argue that it has embraced a progressive feminism over time. Still, however one reads the genre, there is a strong puritanical undertone to its attitudes towards sex.

In horror movies, female characters are often punished for having sex. In the self-aware horror movie Scream, film buff Randy (Jamie Kennedy) explains, You can never have sex. When the audience boos, he doubles down, Sex equals death, okay? In the equally self-aware Cabin in the Woods, the moral logic of horror movies is framed in terms of transgression. Gary (Richard Jenkins) clarifies, If they dont transgress, they cant be punished.

In many horror films, for many female characters, sex itself is treated as a transgression worthy of punishment. The final girl in these films is often defined by her abstinence, in contrast to the characters around her. Good girls dont die, but loose ones do, summarizes Adam Rockoff. To simplify it further, the girls who refrain from having sex survive(;) the ones who indulge in their passions die. This allows the audience of such films to have their cake and eat it: to be titillated by the sexual content of these slasher films, but to be reassured that morality is ultimately upheld.

There are legitimate criticisms to be made of the sexual politics of Camerons films. His films lean heavily on the importance of his female characters as mothers. In Dark Fate, Sarah herself mounts a fair retroactive criticism of the original Terminator. When Dani (Natalia Reyes) freaks out about being targeted by killer robots from the future, Sarah sarcastically sighs, Youre not the threat. Its your womb. While the original Alien offered a genuinely radical portrayal of its protagonist Ripley (Sigourney Weaver), Cameron constructs a surrogate nuclear family for her in Aliens.

However, in the context of The Terminator and the larger slasher genre, this emphasis on motherhood becomes slyly subversive. The Terminator is built around Sarahs sexual agency. In the conventional slasher movie, the heroine dies if she has sex. In The Terminator, humanity itself dies if Sarah doesnt have sex. When Reese and Sarah have sex in the third act of The Terminator, shortly before the Terminators final attack, it is Reese who becomes expendable and is brutally murdered.

The result is to make The Terminator a subtly subversive slasher movie, albeit a movie that is rarely discussed in those terms. Its a movie that exemplifies much of the appeal of low-budget horror filmmaking, but it also offers a sophisticated twist on the classic template. Perhaps The Terminator saw the future in more ways than it initially appeared.

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The Terminator Is a Subtly Subversive Slasher - The Escapist

Injustice’s Most Heartbreaking Death Is… Jim Gordon | CBR – CBR – Comic Book Resources

There are a number of deaths in the Injustice: Gods Among Us comic and game, but a stalwart Batman ally's death still hurts today.

TheInjusticeseriestakes place in an alternate DC Universe in which Superman, driven insane by the death of his family, transforms into a ruthless dictatorwho establishes a totalitarian regime that takes over the world. Opposing Superman's tyranny is Batman, who forms an insurgency in hopes of bringing the former hero down, resulting in a violent DC Universe unlike any before it.

Over several years, Batman and Superman recruit various allies and battle each other across the DC universe.The lives of several DC heroes and villains, usually ones allied with Batman, are lost during the long war. But of all the deaths in the series, the one that still ends up being the most heartbreaking is Commissioner Gordon.

Related: Mortal Kombat Creator Would Like To See A Live-Action Injustice Movie

In Year Two of the Injustice: Gods Among Us comics series, Superman has deployed his forces in Gotham and occupies the city. In an effort to liberate the city, Gordon and the GCPD team up with Batman and the Birds of Prey to fight back with Superman's soldiers. A massive war breaks out in the city, but Gordon's forces manage to stay in the fight with the help of Kryptonite pills that allow those who take them to acquire superhuman strength. After Gordon's forces take the Hall of Justice, he and Lex Luthor teleport themselves to the Watchtower to find Cyborg and stop him from finding the location of both Batman and his daughter Barbara Gordon/Oracle.

Gordon confronts Cyborg, who reveals that the lung cancer Gordon has is accelerating rapidly due to him taking the Kryptonite Pills and that he is dying. Undeterred, Gordon knocks Cyborg out and stops him from finding Barbara's location. While Luthor teleports Cyborg back to the Hall of Justice, Gordon remains on the Watchtower and looks down on the Earth as he talks to Barbara and Bruce one last time. Realizing that both Gotham and Barbara are safe, Gordon says goodbye to his daughter and quietly passes away on the tower.

RELATED: Tom Taylor's Latest Injustice Teaser Throws a Curveball at Fans

Gordon's death stands out when compared to many of the other deaths in the original Injusticecomics due to both the build-up leading to it and the quietness of how it happened.Many of the deaths within the first five years ofInjustice, from Green Arrow to Kyle Rayner, are defined by their brutality and how suddenly they occur. But Gordon's was foreshadowed at the beginning of Year Two when Superman revealed his cancer to him, so both he and the reader knew that he would most likely not survive the events of the comics.

Gordon also knew that taking the pills would cause him to die sooner, but he took them anyway because there was no other choice. All of these factors culminate in Gordon sacrificing himself to save both his family and the rest of the world, dying peacefully, knowing that his daughter will still fight for what's right.

Keep Reading: If Injustice 3 Is Coming, Will Mortal Kombat 11 Delay It?

Animal Crossing: Redd's Raffle, Explained

Sage Negron is a freelance writer from The Bronx, New York. He has written about books, movies, tv shows, video games and just about everything in between. He loves reading, writing and gaming (in that order). You can check out some of his earlier work at Bookstr.com

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Injustice's Most Heartbreaking Death Is... Jim Gordon | CBR - CBR - Comic Book Resources

Cyborg (comics) – Wikipedia

DC comics character

Cyborg is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by writer Marv Wolfman and artist George Prez and first appears in a special insert in DC Comics Presents #26 (October 1980).[1] Originally known as a member of the Teen Titans,[2] Cyborg was established as a founding member of the Justice League in DC's 2011 reboot of its comic book titles.

Lee Thompson Young portrayed Cyborg in the television series Smallville. Ray Fisher portrays the character in the DC Extended Universe films Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) and Justice League (2017). Joivan Wade also portrays Cyborg in the Doom Patrol television series on DC Universe and HBO Max.

Victor Stone is the son of Silas Stone and Elinore Stone, scientists who use him as a test subject for various intelligence enhancement projects. While these treatments are ultimately successful and Victor's IQ subsequently grows to genius levels, he grows to resent his treatment.

Victor strikes up a friendship with Ron Evers, a young miscreant who leads him into trouble with the law. This is the beginning of a struggle in which Victor strives for independence, engaging in pursuits of which his parents disapprove, such as athletics and abandoning his studies. Victor's association with underage criminals leads him down a dark path in which he is often injured, but he still lives a "normal" life in which he is able to make his own decisions. However, this rebellious path does not bury Victor's conscience considering that he refuses to participate in Evers' grandiose plans of racially motivated terrorism.

Victor's situation changes radically when he visits his parents' lab where experiments in inter-dimensional access are done. At that moment of his entry, an aggressive gelatinous creature was accidentally pulled through and Victor's mother is killed by it. It then turned on Victor and he was severely injured by its attack before his father was able to send it back to its native dimension.

With his wife dead and his son mutilated, unconscious and near death from the incident, Silas is driven to take advantage of prototype medical prosthetic research he has access to in order to treat Victor. Unfortunately, Victor only regains consciousness after the extensive artificial limbs and implants were installed in his body without his consent. Victor was horrified at the discovery of the metallic components, which involve most of the left side of his head and face, and raged that he would rather have died than be such a victim of his father's manipulations.

Although his bitterness remained for some time, Victor eventually calmed down enough to successfully adjust to his implants physically. He found himself rejected by the public because of his implants, including his girlfriend, who would later thoughtlessly blurt out that she would prefer he had died instead of being in that state. However, Victor's conscience was unbowed, as evidenced by the fact that when Evers tried to manipulate him into participating in a terrorist attack on the United Nations, Victor decided to equip himself with his weaponized attachments and stop him on the top of United Nations Headquarters.

When Raven assembles the Teen Titans, Victor joins initially for the benefit of a support group of kindred spirits and freaks, and has remained with that group ever since.[2] Fortunately, Victor eventually finds additional new civilian friends of better character such as a group of juveniles who are adjusting to their own prosthetics and idolize him because of his fancy parts and his exciting adventures. It also turns out that their beautiful teacher Sarah Simms, who has often assisted Cyborg and the Titans, admires him as well.

Another person who sees past the cybernetic shell is Dr. Sarah Charles, a S.T.A.R. Labs scientist who helps him to recuperate after having his cybernetic parts replaced. Cyborg and Dr. Charles date for some time and she, along with Changeling, keeps trying to reach him when he is seemingly mindless following the severe injuries he incurs during the "Titans Hunt" storyline.

Although Cyborg's body was repaired by a team of Russian scientists after the missile crash he had been in, albeit with more mechanical parts than previously, his mind was not. Eventually, his mind was restored by an alien race of computer intelligences called the Technis, created from the sexual union of Swamp Thing and a machine-planet when Swamp Thing was travelling through space. Cyborg, however, had to remain with the Technis both to maintain his mind and because, in return for restoring him, he had to teach them about humanity. He took the name Cyberion, and gradually started becoming less human in outlook, connecting entirely to the Technis planet.

Eventually, Cyberion returned to Earth, establishing a Technis construct on the moon and a smaller base on Earth. With Vic's consciousness dormant, but his desire for companionship controlling the actions of the Technis' planet, it began kidnapping former Titans members, his conscious mind so suppressed that he was not only searching for deceased Titans, but even sent one probe looking for himself as Cyborg. He ended up plugging them into virtual reality scenarios, representing what he believed to be their "perfect worlds"; for example, Beast Boy was back with the Doom Patrol, Damage was spending time being congratulated by the Justice Society as a true hero, and Nightwing was confronted by a Batman who actually smiled and offered to talk about their relationship. Although the Titans were freed, there was a strong disagreement between them and the Justice League over what action to take; the League believed that there was nothing left of Victor to save, whereas the Titans were willing to try, culminating in a brief battle, where the Atom and Catwoman (who had followed the Justice League to investigate) sided with the League while the Flash fought with the Titans. While Vic was distracted trying to aid his friends, a Titans team consisting of Changeling and the original five Titans were sent by Raven to try making contact with Vic's human side, while Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, the Martian Manhunter, Power Girl, Captain Marvel, and Mary Marvel moved the moon back to its proper place. Eventually, thanks primarily to Changeling's encouragement, and Omen and Raven holding Vic together long enough to come up with a plan, Vic's consciousness was restored, and "downloaded" into the Omegadrome, a morphing war-suit belonging to former Titan Minion. In the wake of this event, the Titans reformed and Vic was part of the new group.[2] However, he felt less human than ever before.

Shortly after this, Nightwing revealed he had cloned Vic's body, and by flowing the Omegadrome through the clone, Vic regained his human form, but still had the abilities of the Omegadrome. He often used the Omegadrome to recreate his original look in battle. With his newfound humanity, Vic took a leave of absence, moving first to L.A. with Beast Boy and then to Central City. While in Central City, Vic was involved in one of the Thinker's schemes, helping Wally hack the Thinker's attempt to plug himself into the minds of Central City's population so that Wally could outthink his opponent, though Vic lost the abilities of the Omegadrome in the process.

Vic mentored the new incarnation of the Teen Titans, consisting mainly of sidekicks, most of whom have taken over the identities of former members (i.e. Tim Drake, the third Robin, instead of Dick Grayson, the original Robin and Titans leader), as well as stalwarts such as Starfire, Raven, and Beast Boy, where they have fought enemies such as Deathstroke, Brother Blood, Doctor Light, The Titans Tomorrow, and a brainwashed Superboy and Indigo during a team up with the Outsiders in the Insiders storyline. In the end, Cyborg was the only one capable of standing up to Dr. Light, thanks to his solar shields, although he makes it clear that he only won the fight because the rest of the Titans had softened Light up first.

During the 20052006 storyline "Infinite Crisis", Cyborg joined Donna's New Cronus team that went to investigate a hole in the universe that was found during the Rann-Thanagar War. He left Beast Boy in charge of the Titans while he was gone. They arrived at the reset center of the universe and with the help of assorted heroes aided in the defeat of Alexander Luthor, who was attempting to recreate the multiverse and build a perfect Earth from it.

According to 52 Week 5, Cyborg was fused together with Firestorm after returning to Earth. This was caused by the energy ripples caused by Alexander Luthor Jr. which altered the Zeta Ray Beams the heroes were going to use to return home.

After being severely damaged during the events of "Infinite Crisis", Cyborg was rebuilt over time in thanks to Tower caretakers Wendy and Marvin. He awoke a year later to find a wholly different Teen Titans being led by Robin, the only member from the team he formed prior to going into space. He is still a member of the team, but feels that Kid Devil and Ravager are hardly worthy Titans, and thus is attempting to find a way to reform "the real Titans".

After the team along with the Doom Patrol defeated the Brotherhood of Evil, Cyborg asked Beast Boy to rejoin the Titans, but Gar refused, saying that his skills were needed with the Doom Patrol. After returning to Titans Tower, Cyborg began reviewing the security tapes during the last year, in which it appears that he was looked to by all the Titans of the past year for a shoulder to lean on, despite being in a coma-like state.

It appears that although Cyborg has returned to the team, the role of leader is now in the hands of Robin. He does however retain the position of statesman amongst the team and occasionally plays second-in-command.

In Justice League of America (vol. 2) #3, Batman, Wonder Woman, and Superman agree that Cyborg should be offered membership in the new Justice League. However, following a battle against Amazo, Green Lantern and Black Canary take over the formation of the JLA, and Cyborg is not amongst the roster.

In the Teen Titans East one-shot, Cyborg gathered together a new team of Titans. During a training exercise, the group was attacked by Trigon, and Cyborg was blasted by a giant energy beam. He was last seen in a crater, with only his head and torso remaining.

In the aftermath of Trigon's assault in the Titans East one shot, Cyborg has been placed into a special hoverchair while he recuperates. Cyborg's body is completely repaired in Titans #5. Soon after, the resurrected and unbalanced Jericho enters Cyborg's body, using him to manipulate the defenses at Titans Tower to kill the Teen Titans. Jericho's plans are foiled when Static, the newest Teen Titan, uses his electrical powers to overload the Tower's systems, causing feedback that knocks Jericho out of Cyborg.[3] After recovering, Cyborg pretends to still have Jericho inside of him, in order to draw out Vigilante, who was currently targeting Jericho. The plot works too well when Vigilante appears and shoots Cyborg in the head.[4]

In an unspecified time during the Teen Titans comics, a man with enhancements similar to Cyborg's attacks Dr. Sarah Charles on the day of her wedding to Deshaun, a young scientist. Cyborg rushes in for the save, discovering how Deshaun, connected to Project M, has sold the technology used to turn Stone into Cyborg to the military. He also finds that the enhanced man was Ron Evers, once Vic's best friend now turned terrorist, who was seeking vengeance for the soldiers used as test subjects. After Cyborg manages to calm down his friend and discovers the truth: Mr. Orr, revealed as the mastermind behind Project M's cyborg research, brings his Stone-derived best subjects: the current Equus, an armored form of the Wildebeest, and a cyberized man sporting enhancements even more powerful than Stone's current ones called Cyborg 2.0.

Cyborg 2.0 turns out to be the Titans Tomorrow Cyborg 2.0, snatched from his proper timeline and cajoled by Orr into fighting his younger self for the possession of their shared technology and Orr's permission to use it in the battlefield. Cyborg is soon forced to fight simultaneously against the Phantom Limbs, an elite force of soldiers crippled in the Middle East and restored by his tech, and the Cyborg Revenge Squad, a broader formation composed of the Fearsome Five, Magenta, Girder, the Thinker, and Cyborgirl. Although the Cyborg Revenge Squad soon gains the upper hand, with the help of his fellow Titans Cyborg is able to hold his own in combat, reverse engineer on the fly some of the future technology used by Cyborg 2.0, and enhance his own body enough to win against Mr. Orr. He later decides to get a new lease in life, forgiving Deshaun and Sarah Charles on their wedding day for abusing his technology, resuming dating Sarah Simms and having the Phantom Limbs fitted with new, non-military, prosthetics. It is however implied the Phantom Limbs, unwilling to see Stone's offer as a sign of good will, are trying to get back their weaponized prosthetics and wait for a rematch.

During the events of Blackest Night, Cyborg joins with Starfire, Beast Boy, and several other heroes to form an emergency team to fight off the army of dead Titans who have been reanimated as Black Lanterns. He later joins in the final battle at Coast City.

Following the dissolution of the current JLA after Justice League: Cry for Justice, Cyborg is invited by Donna to join Kimiyo Hoshi's new Justice League.[5] He befriends Red Tornado, and claims that he has come up with a plan to make him indestructible.[6]

After a battle with Doctor Impossible's gang, Cyborg is forced to take a leave of absence from the team in order to not only help rebuild Red Tornado, but also help Roy Harper, who had his arm severed by Prometheus.[7] During this time, Victor leads Superboy and Kid Flash to the city of Dakota to rescue the Teen Titans, who had been defeated and captured by Holocaust.[8] The Titans emerge victorious from the battle after Kid Flash uses his powers to send Holocaust plummeting into the Earth's inner core.[9]

Despite apparently being written off the team, writer James Robinson explained that Cyborg will continue to have a presence on the JLA, and will even be given a co-feature in the back of the book for Justice League of America #4850.[10] In the co-feature, Cyborg battles Red Tornado after he has been driven insane by the power of the Starheart. In the midst of the battle, a flashback reveals that Victor had rebuilt Red Tornado using self-replicating nanites similar to the ones that Prometheus infected Roy with after cutting off his arm, thus making the android indestructible.[11] Cyborg manages to free Red Tornado his power matrix.[12]

Cyborg briefly appears in Justice League: Generation Lost, where he is shown helping Wonder Woman and Starfire search for Maxwell Lord after his resurrection.[13]

Following an adventure in another dimension, Static is left powerless, and Miss Martian is rendered comatose. Cyborg stops the powerless Static from returning to Dakota, and instead tells him that he and a scientist named Rochelle Barnes will be taking him to Cadmus Labs to find a way to get his powers back and awaken Miss Martian. As Static packs up his belongings, Cyborg and Rochelle have a conversation which reveals that they are lying to Static, and have an ulterior motive for taking the two Titans to Cadmus.[14]

He later appears in the final two issues of The Return of Bruce Wayne, where he helps his former teammate Red Robin in his attempt to stop Bruce Wayne from inadvertently unleashing an apocalyptic explosion of Omega Energy.

Cyborg and Red Tornado later travel to the moon alongside Doctor Light, Animal Man, Congorilla, Zauriel, Tasmanian Devil and Bulleteer as part of an emergency group of heroes gathered to assist the Justice League in their battle against Eclipso. Shortly into the battle, Cyborg and the others are taken over by Eclipso and are turned against their JLA comrades.[15] The reserve JLA members are all freed after Eclipso is defeated.[16]

As of August 2011, Cyborg is featured as one of the main characters in a new Justice League ongoing series written by Geoff Johns and drawn by Jim Lee as part of DC's The New 52 relaunch. Johns has said of Cyborg, "He represents all of us in a lot of ways. If we have a cellphone and we're texting on it, we are a cyborgthat's what a cyborg is, using technology as an extension of ourselves."[17]

The first storyline takes place five years in the past and details the revised origin of the original Justice League. Victor Stone appears as a high school football star who is heavily sought after by a number of college scouts, but apparently has a distant relationship with his father, Silas. After winning a big game, Victor is shown calling his father and angrily telling him that he broke his promise and missed yet another one of his son's games.[18] Later Victor appears at S.T.A.R. Labs where his father works. The scientists appear to be working on the Mother Box that Superman came in contact with from the Parademon. Victor engages in another argument with his father and tells him that the scouts were there to give him full scholarships to college. When asking if his father will ever appear at any of his games, his father replies "No." Just then the Mother Box explodes, killing the other scientists and destroying most of Victor's body while Victor's father looks on in horror.[19] Silas does everything he can for Victor's survival. He along with Sarah Charles, and T. O. Morrow go in "The Red Room" in S.T.A.R. labs which contains every piece of technology from around the world. Silas attempts to treat Victor with something that has never been attempted before and he is seen injecting Victor with some type of nanites and having Dr. Morrow put the robotic pieces on Victor (devices such as: a Promethean skin graft, Doctor William Magnus' responsometer, Anthony Ivo's A-maze operating system, The classified and prototypical B-maze operating system and Ryan Choi's White Dwarf Stabilizer). Vic's life is saved and the energies from the Mother Box are incorporated into his new form as Cyborg. This allows Victor to access the vast New Gods data library and discover Darkseid's true invasion plans.[20]

In the following issue we see Victor as Cyborg. As the issue opens Victor cannot feel his hands or legs. He sees himself for the first time with his robotic parts and is panicked by his new body. Suddenly, Parademons burst into the red room and leap toward Sarah Charles. However, Cyborg's defense systems react, automatically weaponizing his arm into a sound cannon from which he fires his powerful white noise cannon, disintegrating the two Parademons and blasting a gigantic hole in the Star Labs building. After saving Sarah's life Victor asks his father what has happened to him, his father tells him that he couldn't let him die. Cyborg obviously distraught exclaims, "You did this to me." and flees, despite Silas' plea for him to wait. Later in the street Cyborg sees a woman being set upon by a group of Parademons. He leaps to the woman's aid, punching the parademon. However, in ensuing scuffle Cyborg inadvertently absorbs some of the Parademon's components giving him access to Boom Tube technology. This new ability automatically transports or teleports Victor to where Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash, Green Lantern, and Aquaman are fighting the Parademons, moments before Darkseid arrives. Cyborg fights alongside the other heroes against Darkseid and his Parademons, but despite their best efforts Darkseid proves to be too strong. Cyborg is able to reverse engineer the alien boom tube technology and with a considerable amount of stress on his systems he is able to teleport all the invading aliens including Darkseid off the planet, saving the Earth. After sending Darkseid back where he came from, Cyborg helps to found the Justice League.

Victor has not begun any process of reconciliation with his father, who is primarily concerned with Victor's mechanics rather than his humanity. Cyborg primarily focuses on his super-heroics, aiding Batman and others when he can and monitoring crime through his cybernetics. After the villain David Graves makes an attack against the Justice League, Cyborg and his teammates travel to the Valley of Souls. There he learns that he walks the line between life and death. He sees a false apparition of his human self that tries to convince him that Victor Stone is dead and Cyborg is just an imitation. Victor quickly sees past this ruse, and he and the rest of the Justice League defeat Graves. We learn through a conversation with Flash, that Cyborg questions his humanity now that he is part machine and that he lives on the Watch Tower, the Justice League's headquarters.[21] Flash cracks a joke in an attempt to lighten the mood and assure Cyborg he is still human. During the Throne of Atlantis storyline, Cyborg at first rejects an upgrade his father has that would allow him to operate underwater at the price of his remaining lung which to him would mean sacrificing more of his humanity.[22] However following the capture of the rest of the Justice League by Orm who sentenced them to the bottom of the ocean, Cyborgas he calls in reserves to hold off Orm's forcesreluctantly accepts the upgrade.[23] This allows him and Mera to rescue the others.[24]

During the "Trinity War" storyline, Cyborg gets a visual of Shazam heading to Kahndaq, to which Batman assembles the Justice League with the help from Zatanna to meet in Kahndaq to stop Shazam.[25] Following the supposed death of Doctor Light in Kahndaq, Batman tells Superman that Cyborg and Martian Manhunter are doing an autopsy to prove his death was not Superman's fault.[26] As Wonder Woman leads the Justice League Dark to go look for Pandora, Cyborg is among the superheroes that remain at A.R.G.U.S. while Batman, Flash, Aquaman, Shazam, Steve Trevor, the Justice League of America, Zatanna, and Phantom Stranger go to stop Wonder Woman.[27] Cyborg was present when Atom tells him, Superman, Element Woman and Firestorm the true purpose of the creation of the Justice League of America and that she was spying on the Justice League which is how the Justice League of America ended up in Kahndaq.[28] When the Crime Syndicate arrives on Prime Earth, Cyborg's old prosthetic parts combine to form a robot called Grid (who is operated by a sentient computer virus).[29] During the Forever Evil event, after Batman and Catwoman drop Cyborg off to his father in Detroit,[30] he makes the choice to willingly receive a new cybernetic body and helps his father and Dr. Morrow create one that is slimmer in appearance so Cyborg could look more human.[31] Working together with the Metal Men created by Doc Magus, Cyborg succeeds in shutting down Grid.[32]

Afterwards Cyborg helped newcomer to the group Shazam fit in with the league as the rest set out to find Power ring's missing accessory which flew off after the death of the former wearer.[33] While on monitor duty he and Shazam experiment with some of his magical powers to aid in finding the ring after joking of having an Xbox in his left shoulder; only for the young ward to conjure up a ping pong table, which they play while having spare time on their hands.[34] Eventually the call goes out and everyone in the league mobilizes to secure the new rampaging Power Ring before the Doom Patrol does.[35] After coaxing Billy into action against Jessica Cruis, Victor moves in to interface with the ring itself, finding out a great deal about the ring of Volthoom and his current host, only to be forcefully thrown out after the ring entity rejects him by causing his systems to short circuit, removing him from the battle.[36] He is last seen recovering at S.T.A.R. Labs, after Shazam rushed him to the med bay, following the power ring crisis. Cyborg wondered what he saw within the ring, after his dad warned him interfacing with it again could trap him in it forever.[37]

An incident involving Batman's son, Damian Wayne, during the "Robin Rises Alpha & Omega" story arc in Batman, led up to most of the justice League battling against Glorious Godfrey and a Parademon horde from Apokolips when they captured the chaos shard and the sarcophagus of Damian, before retreating back home.[38] All the league members present, Cyborg included, state to an adamant Bruce Wayne that running headlong into unmarked X-factor territory for a suicide mission was less than ideal, considering the consequences that could befall earth. This eventually culminates with Batman hijacking Cyborg's teleportation systems, to zip up to the Watchtower in an attempt to retrieve an experimental and highly dangerous combat suit, in order to mete out his agenda; But Cyborg manages to block his administrative access so that he, Shazam, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Lex and Cold could physically restrain him, causing Batman to begrudgingly give up and retire to the batcave.[39]

After the Bat left, the rest of the Bat Family turned up asking Victor for help with some digitized doppelgangers of baddies that Bruce initially set up in order to distract the League, destabilize watchtower security to secure the Hellbat, and eventually use a personal Mother Box (secured from a Parademon kept in cold storage) to vacate to Apokolips.[40] After making his way to the Batcave to meet with them, he's directed over to a console which enabled him to directly access the Batcomputer's more sophisticated systems. However, it was all a ruse utilizing a preemptive countermeasure devised by Batman tailored to Cyborg's specific weaknesses. Cyborg was temporarily incapacitated and was set into a VR simulation where he relived his more peaceful days in college, while Batgirl went to work on his Mother Box in order to secure a path towards Apokolips and chase after their father. But Victor eventually snapped out of his dream haze and followed them through, angered that they used him in such a way.[40] Cyborg traveled along with Titus, who hitched a ride on his leg, to catch up with the rest of the Batman Family. They all then have a run in with the scavengers of Armegeddo who quickly vacate after some Apokoliptian Hunger Dogs make their way onto the scene. They eventually catch up with the armor-clad Dark Knight ripping his way through a sizable chunk of Apokolips's forces singlehandedly. Jason Tim and Barbara show Batman the Robin Medals Alfred gave them in order to remind him of his purpose, causing him to snap out of his berserker rage and note that Cyborg had reluctantly accompanied them to Hell itself. Having made their way into Darkseid's citadel where Kalibak was readying his Chaos Cannon to fire again, the caped crusaders kept Darkseid's forces occupied while Cyborg made short work of the massive war engine, literally tearing it in half. But when he went to set a timed self-destruct sequence within the Apokoliptian computers, Vic suffered a catastrophic feedback that fried most of his internal systems leaving him inoperable just as Darkseid himself made his appearance.[41]

While Batman fought and held Darkseid off, Cyborg ran Batgirl through a crash course on how to hot wire his own Mother Box. Since Darkseid smashed Batman's Boom Tube generator, Cyborg was their only chance off Apokolips. After successfully jury-rigging his internal systems, Cyborg and the rest of the Bat rogues made a hasty exit stage left as Bruce powered his recovered fragment of the Chaos Shard with Darkseid's Omega Effect, blasting Darkseid against a wall to cover their escape.[42] In the aftermath, Cyborg, who is still unable to facilitate himself, wonders what is going on as Damian Wayne is successfully revived, however a second anomaly cranks out of the Boom Tube that was opened and Kalibak comes charging through it. With Kalibak occupied by the rest of the gang, Vic tries his best to reestablish his downed systems. He is successful and gains control over the still-open tube as Batman readies the Batplane. As Batman rams his jet into the evil New God sending him careening back to Apokolips, Cyborg closes the portal banishing Darksied's first born for good. With the threat over, Cyborg heads back topside to inform the rest of the league of what all transpired and stating he has JL business to attend to.[43]

An eponymous ongoing series, by writer David F. Walker and artist Ivan Reis, debuted in July 2015.[44]

This article needs to be updated. Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (August 2017)

As of Rebirth, he is a part of the relaunched Justice League bi-monthly series as well as his own solo monthly series. It is unclear whether he has the ability of flight in Rebirth.

During Dark Nights: Metal, he is captured by the alternate Batmen of the Dark Multiverse, who attempt to hack him in order to learn the secrets of his teammates. As the crisis escalates, Cyborg is confronted by the controlling consciousness of other Mother Boxes, who claim that he will only gain the power to overcome the Dark Batmen if he fully surrenders to the Mother Box that powers his body at the cost of the transformation deleting his old personality. He is nearly tempted to give in to this transformation, but the appearance of Raven's soul-self convinces him to hold on to himself while partially succumbing to the transformation. This allows him to free his teammates and 'hack' the multiverse as they travel to find new allies in the battle against the Dark Batmen.

Following this and the Justice League: No Justice miniseries, the Justice League series was cancelled after 43 issues and was relaunched into a new monthly series and Cyborg will also be featured as part of a separate Justice League faction that is part of the new Justice League Odyssey series. In addition, Cyborg's own solo monthly series was also cancelled and ended in June 2018 with the release of Issue 23.[45]

Large portions of Victor Stone's body have been replaced by advanced mechanical parts (hence the name Cyborg) granting him superhuman strength, speed, stamina and flight. His mechanically-enhanced body, much of which is metallic, is far more durable than a normal human body. Cyborg's internal computer system can interface with external computers. Other features include an electronic "eye" which replicates vision, but at a superhuman level. His mechanical parts contain a wide variety of tools and weapons, such as a grappling hook/line and a finger-mounted laser. Perhaps his most frequently-used weapon is his sound amplifier (often referred to as his "white sound blaster" in the comic books; the Teen Titans animated series calls it a "sonic cannon") which can be employed at various settings either to stun the ears of his foes or to deliver concentrated blasts of sound potent enough to shatter rock or deform steel.[46]

Cyborg is consistently depicted as tinkering over time with his cybernetic parts, enhancing his functions and abilities to levels beyond those set by his father, which has allowed writers flexibility in adding new powers that suit the needs of a given story over time. Following DC's New 52 reboot in 2011, Cyborg's origin story was changed so that his enhancements were the product of alien technology, specifically that of a Mother Box from planet New Genesis. His cybernetics are now seen as a living extension of his body, and a host of new skills such as EMP blasts, technology absorption, and underwater adaptation were added to his powerset. Most significantly, he was given the ability to generate boom tubes powerful teleportation tunnels that are used by the New Gods to travel across infinite distances due to this Mother Box connection. Elements of Victor's original backstory were re-established following DC's Trinity War storyline, when his father rebuilds systems following extensive damage to them.

In addition to his mechanical enhancements, Stone possesses an "exceptionally gifted" level of intelligence; his IQ has been measured at 170.[47]

In the Flashpoint event, the timeline is greatly altered. In this alternate version of events, Cyborg is America's greatest superhero (occupying the role held by Superman in DC's standard timeline). He attempts to put together a group to stop the war between Aquaman and Wonder Woman's forces. However, the heroes he approaches all refuse, after Batman declines.[48] Cyborg connects the resistance member Lois Lane to spy on the Amazons for any information.[49] Cyborg rescues people in the subway station from arsonist Heat Wave.[50] Abin Sur crashes on Earth; he is subsequently taken into custody by Cyborg and the US government to be questioned about his reasons for being on Earth. When Abin Sur is recovering, he is on a mission to retrieve the Entity, however Cyborg convinces him to join with Earth's heroes.[51] Afterwards, Cyborg is seen talking with the President in his headquarters in Detroit. The President states that Steve Trevor sent a signal to the resistance but was intercepted by a traitor among the heroes that Cyborg tried to recruit and suspicion leads to the Outsider. For Cyborg's failure, he is relieved of duty as the Element Woman sneaks into the headquarters. Later, Cyborg is called by Batman and the Flash for help in tracking down "Project: Superman", the government branch responsible for 'raising' Kal-El after his rocket destroyed Metropolis upon its arrival. Cyborg and them agree to join the cause to stop Wonder Woman and Aquaman, but only if Batman gets to choose whom to recruit, and Cyborg agrees as long as he comes with them. The three sneak into the government underground bunkers, and the group comes across a giant vault door bearing the Superman logo. Cyborg opens the door and sees a weakened Kal-El, with the arrival of guards. Forced to escape, Kal-El's powers begin to manifest and flies off leaving them at the hands of the guards.[52] While they are fending off the guards, they are rescued by Element Woman. Later, Cyborg and other heroes arrive at the Marvel Family's place helping the Flash from drastically forgetting his memories. After the Flash is recovering, he asked to stop the Atlantean/Amazon war from casualty, although Cyborg and the heroes are not willing unless Batman wants to join them, because Cyborg explains to him that they believe Batman was invincible. However, the Flash convinces him that no one is invincible and the group of heroes are agreeing to join the Flash. The heroes arrive at New Themyscira to stop the Atlantean/Amazon war, and the Flash tells Cyborg to find Aquaman's ultimate bomb to dispose of it.[53]

In the Titans Tomorrow storyline, a future version of Victor Stone called Cyborg 2.0 is a member of Titans East. He is shown having similar plating as the animated Cyborg from the Teen Titans animated series.[54]

An alternate version of Cyborg appears as part of the Justice League of Earth-23 in the DC Multiverse.[55]

Cyborg appears as the third Robotman as part of Superman's Justice League. Robotman is now completely liquid metal. He is petrified by the nuclear blast.

Cyborg appears as a character in the prequel comic to the game, where he joins Superman's Regime to force peace on the world. He serves as Superman's eyes and ears over the world, offering insight on any activity deemed disruptive. At the end of Year Two he discovers someone is trying to hack into the Regime's system during a war with the Green Lantern Corps (Oracle) and goes to the Watchtower to locate her. Jim Gordon follows and corners him, managing to rip Cyborg's metallic face plate off and knock him unconscious, stopping the locating sequence. Cyborg spends most of the next year a prisoner of the Insurgency until he is released when the two groups collide in a battle that nearly destroys them when Trigon and Mr. Mxyzptlk get involved. In Year Four he and the Regime are confronted by the Greek Gods, who want Superman to step down as ruler. While the Regime is forced to go underground, they come together to defeat the gods once and for all. During Year Five tension grows among the Regime because of Superman's growing hostility and controversial decisions, such as enlisting the aid of villains to help the Regime. Cyborg is especially disgusted when he discovers that during a rally with supporters of the Joker who reject Superman, the Man of Steel killed over two hundred defenseless protesters in anger. Batman and Batwoman later go to the Hall of Justice to kidnap Cyborg because he is the only one aware of this and has the information stored in his data. He is incapacitated and taken underground to the ruins of Metropolis where Batgirl works to find the data and reveal to the world. While they succeed in finding it, Raven casts a massive blackout over the world to prevent the video from being seen, and the Insurgency is forced to retreat before Flash comes to get Cyborg. Superman has Cyborg erase any data containing information on his killings so the incident will not repeat itself.

Cyborg appears in a prequel comic to the sequel game. He remained in prison with Superman, even after the League of Assassins and impostor Batman's Suicide Squad raid the Ryker's Island to free only Damian Wayne/the current Nightwing.

Cyborg appears in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU), played by Ray Fisher. He first appears in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice in a brief sequence of footage that is viewed by Wonder Woman. The footage depicts Cyborg's origin story. Cyborg, played by Fisher, makes a full appearance as one of the main characters in Justice League, released on November 17, 2017. Fisher is scheduled to reprise the role in upcoming DCEU films a stand-alone Flash film and a sequel to Justice League. A stand-alone Cyborg film was initially scheduled for a release date of April 3, 2020, but it has since been delayed.[61][62] In the films, the effects for his cybernetic parts are achieved using CGI.[63] Cyborg, played by Ray Fisher, will appear in Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021).[64]

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Cyborg (comics) - Wikipedia

Victor Stone (New Earth) | DC Database | Fandom

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Victor Stone is a Cyborg. Kept alive by Prometheum plating and cybernetic enhancements, he feared of becoming an outcast, until he found a new family - the Teen Titans.

Victor Stone was the son of a pair of scientists, Silas and Elinore Stone, who decided to use him as a test subject for various intelligence enhancement projects. However, Victor grew to resent this treatment and fell in with a young miscreant named Ron Evers who led him into trouble with the law.[1] This was the beginning of a struggle where Victor strove for his own life engaging in pursuits his parents disapproved of such as athletics. In addition, Victor still kept bad company that led him into incidents such as when he was talked into participating in a street gang fight in which he was wounded. For the most part however, Victor still had a largely normal life under the circumstances where he also refused to follow his best friend's grandiose plans of racially motivated terrorism.

All that changed one day when he visited his parents at work at S.T.A.R. Labs. Coincidentally, an experiment in dimensional travel went horribly awry when a massive gelatinous monster crossed over an experimental portal and killed Victor's mother. The creature then turned on Victor and severely mutilated him before his father managed to force the creature back through the portal. To save his son, who was unconscious at this time, Victor's father outfitted him with experimental prostheses of his own design. However, the equipment could not be worn inconspicuously, and thus Victor was horrified upon regaining consciousness to see much of his body, including part of his face, replaced with sheer metallic limbs and implants. Although Victor wanted to die at this shock, he adjusted enough through his resulting physical therapy to control his implants with suitable skill.

Upon release from medical care, he found his life was seriously inconvenienced with the fearful reactions of the public at his implants; even his girlfriend rejected him. In addition, he was also disallowed his participation in athletics not only for his implants but for his poor grades which were further exacerbated by his long convalescence. However, when his old friend attempted to use Victor's troubles to manipulate him into attempting a terrorist attack on the United Nations, Victor found a new purpose as he equipped his weapons attachments and stopped his friend in a pitched battle on the UN building.

He joined the Teen Titans, initially for the benefit of a support group of kindred spirits and freaks and has remained with that group ever since. In addition, Victor found new friends who saw past his disfigurements to his own nobility such as a group of children who were adjusting to their own prostheses and idolized Victor with his fancy parts and exciting adventures as well as their beautiful therapist who took a shine to him herself.

Throughout his association with the Titans, Victor has been destroyed, reconstructed, assimilated by an alien race, and had his humanity restored. He later went on to mentor a new Teen Titans group, consisting mainly of sidekicks, most of whom have taken over the secret identities of former members (i.e. Tim Drake, the third Robin, instead of Dick Grayson, the original Robin and Titans leader), as well as stalwarts such as Starfire, Raven, and Beast Boy, where they have fought enemies such as Deathstroke, Doctor Light, The Titans of Tomorrow and Superboy and Indigo during the Insiders storyline with a team up with the Outsiders.

Cyborg always had a problem with his humanity. Since he had lost most of his body in that horrible accident which turned him into a hero; he had always been challenged to maintain his human-side along side living with his robotic body. After a while Cyborg began to upgrade his body with new powers, weapons, and abilities. He became more of a robot; his voice changed and his mannerisms were more technical. Although he maintained he was still human not much was left. Eventually during the event of the Technis Imperative a robotic life form named Technis came to earth during it's universal search for knowledge and cataloging. When it tried to assimilate Earth the Titans stopped it, but Technis singled out Cyborg as he was practically a walking computer. Cyborg's one main crave was his humanity back to it's original level so he could be the athlete he always wanted to and Technis sought to serve this purpose. Technis was not one single being he was a mass of hundreds of them; beings who had a linked minded aptitude to collecting. So Cyborg joined their group in exchange for his soul, essentially. He became Cyberion and Technis became his family, but in the search and cataloging that spanned the universe Cyborg decided to ask Beast Boy to help him on his journey. Beast Boy accepted and Cyborg, now called Cyberion Technis, travelled around the universe until the day Technis was destroyed in a battle. This utterly changed Cyborg as he now lost his second family which shook loose his humanity again and he began to remember his old self and longed for it's return.[2]

After this entire event Beast Boy lost faith momentarily in his best friend and fled back to earth. Now entirely alone, Victor Stone, lost all sense of humanity in a matter of days. Without a team of Teen Titans on earth and with members spread across the globe Cyborg eventually came back to earth in a big way. He became Planet Cyberion and on his cascading trip back to earth he began assimilating and collect everything in his way until he became as big as the moon and when he returned to earth he overcame the moon and with it the JLA Watchtower. The Justice League was angered at this hostile takeover and attacked Cyborg not knowing the man within. Cyborg began to take every single Titan ever on the roster at all (including Green Lantern Kyle Rayner and Atom Ray Palmer. But since the Justice League attacked Cyborg his actions started to affect the Earth and it's atmosphere (he was riding on the moon). Horrible natural disasters and terrible technological threats and shut downs afflicted the earth plant-wide. All the Titans were brought in pods to Titan's Island in New York City. Once all of the Justice League, Young Justice, JLA Reserves, Titans and Teen Titans were brought together a massive fight broke out over the destruction of Cyborg vs. the savior of the world. This fight distracted Cyborg's programming and allowed a team of Leaguers and Titans to break off and head towards the moon where the main central power core of Cyborg's being as held. The Titans (mostly Beast Boy) succeeded in bringing the human out of Cyborg by manipulating his virtual reality environmental programming and using it on Cyborg himself; this produced an image of Victor's father that said only pleasant things to Victor. Victor's soul was finally free and Raven herself brought his soul to try and upload it into the Titan's mainframe computer. However Victor's soul rejected the computer programming and Beast Boy suggested putting his soul in the Omegadrome Suit and she did. Cyborg then became Omegadrome; the golden suit, shape shifting Cyborg.[3]

During Infinite Crisis, Cyborg joined Donna's New Cronus Team that went to investigate a hole in the universe that was discovered during the Rann-Thanagar War. He left Beast Boy in charge of the Titans while he was gone. They arrived at the re-set center of the universe and with the help of assorted heroes, aided in the defeat of Alexander Luthor, who was attempting to re-create the Multiverse and build a perfect Earth from it.

Cyborg was fused together with Firestorm after returning to Earth. This was caused by the energy ripples caused by Alexander Luthor Jr. which altered the Zeta Ray Beams the heroes were going to use to return home.[4]

After being severely damaged during the events of Infinite Crisis, Cyborg was rebuilt over time in thanks to Tower caretakers Wendy and Marvin. He awoke one year later to find a wholly different group of Titans led by Robin, the only member from the team he formed prior to going into space. Cyborg felt that members such as Kid Devil and Ravager were hardly worthy of being Titans, and thus was attempting to find a way to re-form "the real Titans".

After the team along with the Doom Patrol defeated the Brotherhood of Evil, Cyborg asked Beast Boy to rejoin the Titans, but Gar refused saying that his skills were needed with the Patrol. After returning to Titans Tower, Cyborg began reviewing the security tapes during the last year, in which it appears that he was looked to by all the Titans of the past year for a shoulder to lean on, despite being in a coma-like state.

Although Cyborg did retain the position of statesman amongst the Teen Titans and occasionally played second-in-command to Robin's lead, he no longer operated as a Titan in any official capacity.

Shortly thereafter, Batman, Wonder Woman and Superman agreed that Cyborg should be offered membership in the new Justice League. However, following a battle against Amazo, Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) and Black Canary took over the formation of the JLA, and Cyborg was not included among the roster.[5]

Cyborg began putting together a new branch of Titans East which consisted of Anima, Dove, Hawk, Lagoon Boy, Little Barda and Power Boy. During a training exercise, the team was attacked by an unknown foe and Cyborg was severely injured.[6] This incident inspires the original members of the "New" Teen Titans to regroup and investigate the situation.[7]

Cyborg's new team didn't work out and when the new Teen Titans formed after his Titan's East's destruction he played second in command again. Although not officially on the roster he helped them on their investigations; he later joined officially and headed the new team of Teen Titans. They had many adventures together when their numbers started to grow and the founding members started to move on to bigger things. Wonder Girl began to lead this new team and they moved to Titans Tower in San Francisco, California. Soon the old founding members joined an unofficial team called the Titans to work as a family and a place to relax from their all overwhelming lives. But the peace didn't last when lives started to overlap and intersect and fewer members started showing up.

When the Titans fell apart again, Cyborg joined the JLA alongside Dick (as Batman) and Donna Troy. Officially on the team, he did not enter the field of battle much. Instead, he devoted his time to helping improve the Red Tornado's android body.

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Victor Stone (New Earth) | DC Database | Fandom

‘A Late Chrysanthemum’: A short story collection full of pathos and maturity – The Japan Times

There is something discernibly old-school about this anthology of short stories. In this solid introduction to Japanese literature of the 20th century, translator Lane Dunlop includes the work of literary giants such as Osamu Dazai and Yasunari Kawabata, and there are none of the felons, sociopaths, shut-ins or cyborgs that stalk the pages of most contemporary literature. The dialogue is muted but expressive, the inner emotions of characters are held in check and inference prevails over explicit description. When there are shocks and revelations, they are released in the fullness of time, like depth charges.

A Late Chrysanthemum: Twenty-One Stories from the Japanese, by various authorsTranslated by Lane Dunlop178 pagesTUTTLE PUBLISHING

In the aptly named Infatuation, Naoya Shiga traces the course of a mans extramarital affair. The spouse compares his partners drab and pathetic appearance to that of his young lover, a woman whose flesh was like the pure white meat of a crab caught in northern seas. While showing that he has no affection for her, he derives pleasure from the torment he inflicts on his long-suffering wife. Shiga gives little indication of his own position on infidelity, but hints at the psychological damage wreaked on marriages by male narcissism.

We remain in the morally dubious world of sexual fixation with The Wagtails Nest by Shiro Ozaki. Here, a man enjoying a long sojourn at a country inn begins to take an interest in an orphaned adolescent living in a nearby temple. Again, the imagery draws analogies between the delectably edible and the human body, descriptions that are likely to make many contemporary readers flinch. The narrator, in this instance, compares changes to the girls complexion to conditions during the rainy season when a loquat takes on the color of ripeness day by day. Any reservations we might have to read or, in an act of unconscious complicity, allow such retrogressive attitudes to women, are moderated by the craft demonstrated by these masters of the short story form. Even with the hapless characters that appear in Kobo Abes surrealist entries, the entire collection reminds us of the Japanese sensitivity for revealing details.

Toward the latter half of the collection, an intimation of twilight, of the denouement of life and beauty, settles on the book. In the title story, A Late Chrysanthemum, Fumiko Hayashi, the only female writer in the book, gives us a poignant and meticulously detailed portrait of a woman in her late 50s waiting for the arrival of an ex-lover she has not seen for many years. The character, who believes her retreating beauty can still be saved with a thorough regimen that involves the application of expensive creams to her face and thighs and a drop of sake to flush the cheeks, resolves that she must look even more youthful than she had that time when they parted. It would be a defeat if she let him feel her age.

Its a poignant ending to an anthology that resonates with pathos and resigned maturity.

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'A Late Chrysanthemum': A short story collection full of pathos and maturity - The Japan Times

DCEU Cyborg Wants TV Crossover Better Than The Flash In Crisis – Screen Rant

The DCEU's Ray Fisher would be open to a Cyborg crossover with Doom Patrol, but only if it was more than a quick hello between the two characters.

Ray Fisher, the DCEU'sCyborg, would love a TV crossover withDoom Patrol, but only if it was better than the Flash's Crisis on Infinite Earths cameo. Fisher first stepped into the role of Victor Stone, AKA Cyborg, for 2016'sBatman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,though his part was little more than a quick cameo. He then played the superhero again forJustice Leaguein 2017, a film that was meant to serve as Cyborg's true DCEU origin story. However, following director Zack Snyder's departure from the film, much of Cyborg's arc was altered by Joss Whedon.

Fisher isn't the only active Cyborg right now, as DC Universe and HBO Max'sDoom Patrolhas one of its own. Jovian Wade plays Victor on the quirky series, which recently returned for a second season. Fisher has previously shared his support for Wade on social media, calling him "my cybernetic brother from another mother." While Cyborg isn't typically included among the Doom Patrol in the comics, the show has managed to find a perfect spot for him among the team.

Related:Doom Patrol Does Cyborg Better Than The DCEU (So Far)

During his Justice Con panel, Fisher was asked about whether he would be willing to appear in a crossover with Wade's Cyborg, similar to how Grant Gustin and Ezra Miller's Barry Allens came together in the Arrowverse's Crisis on Infinite Earths earlier this year. "It depends, I would say," Fisher began with a smile. He then went on to explain it like this:

It depends on what the actual auspices of it are. I feel the same way about that as I do about a Cyborg standalone. I only want to do it if I know what the story's going to be in advance. If it's just like, 'Oh hey, what's up?' 'Hey, what's up... bye,' that doesn't really... Like if you could share a moment where both of these guys - both of these people who've lost half of themselves see one another and sort of like have a moment of wholeness, or whatever that would be, if we could get deep about the situation... sign me up.

A quick hello is pretty much all Miller's cameo amounted to, and while it was certainly a fun surprise for fans, it makes sense that Fisher might want a bit more for a crossover of his own. Fisher has been vocal about how much Cyborg'sJustice Leaguestoryline means to him, especially when it pertains to the character's backstory. His idea for a crossover withDoom Patrol's Cyborg wherein they bond over their traumatic experiences would make for a very emotional and poignant moment.

Technically, Crisis on Infinite Earths proved every DC universe, whether on the big screen or small, exists alongside each other, so who knows what the future holds for these two Cyborgs. Fisher will be in the spotlight once again with the arrival ofZack Snyder's Justice Leagueon HBO Max next year, and fans are certainly excited to see his full arc. As for what comes after, that remains to be seen, though there are some who are holding out hope that Fisher will finally get the solo Cyborg film he was supposed to get this year. Or, perhaps Fisher will find himself onDoom Patrolsomehow. Only time will tell.

More:Justice League Star Says Joss Whedon Should Be Scared Of Reshoot Details

Source: Spotlight on Ray Fisher/Justice Con

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Rachel LaBonte is a news and features writer for Screen Rant with a deep passion for movies and television. A recent graduate of Emerson College, she majored in Media Arts Production while specializing in screenwriting. She's been a writer ever since high school when she realized she was rather good at it and joined as many entertainment news clubs as she could while in school. Most notably, she wrote for Emerson's website Emertainment Monthly, and one of her film reviews won an Evvy (Emerson's student awards) for Best Review. Her deep love of movies led to her working at a movie theater for five years, which she loved despite the angry customers. An avid reader who constantly buys books before reading the ones she already owns, Rachel is a huge fan of superheroes (especially of the Marvel variety) and wizards and will likely never be able to catch up on all the movies/TV shows she longs to watch.

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DCEU Cyborg Wants TV Crossover Better Than The Flash In Crisis - Screen Rant