Watch the exclusive trailer debut for Injustice, based on the NetherRealm Studios game.
Injustice, which arrives October 19, 2021, on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Combo Pack, Blu-ray, and Digital, is inspired by the NetherRealm Studios game Injustice: Gods Among Us and the DC graphic novel based on the game, Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year One by Tom Taylor.
Check out the trailer for Injustice in the player above or via the embed below:
The all-star voice cast includes Justin Hartley (Smallville, This is Us) as Superman, Anson Mount (Star Trek Discovery, Hell on Wheels) as Batman, Gillian Jacobs (Community) as Harley Quinn, Kevin Pollak (The Usual Suspects) as Joker, and Jonathan Kent, and Janet Varney (The Legend of Korra, Stan Against Evil) as Wonder Woman.
Halloween Kills Review
Tired of living in constant fear, the townspeople of Haddonfield decide to form a mob and hunt down The Shape. This is a unique theme for a slasher movie and one that Halloween Kills doesn't really know what to do with. There are interesting questions raised about mob mentality and what fear does to a community, but the script never fully decides whether to condemn or celebrate it.
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Even if he has the entire town looking for him, Michael Myers is in no way the underdog. If anything, this is a much angrier, darker, and more violent film than 2018's Halloween, and it includes some of the most shocking and disturbing kills in the entire franchise. Where often the Halloween movies would cut away right as Michael gets the jump on someone and only reveal the aftermath of the crime, Halloween Kills fully displays Michael's brutal butchering of his victims.
Seriously, these murders are gory. The shock value is best exemplified when Halloween Kills gives us our first proper look at Michael's sadistic artistic expression via his grandiose and campy staging of mutilated corpses, which is more disturbing than any Silver Shamrock product. Even John Carpenter's score is darker, slower, and more dramatic than any of his previous Halloween efforts, building up to what can best be described as the Empire Strikes Back of the Halloween franchise.
This is a much angrier, darker, and more violent film than 2018's Halloween.
That's not to say that Halloween Kills is completely devoid of fun. It still knows when to balance the scares with moments of levity, including two new comic relief characters, played by Scott MacArthur and Michael McDonald, that steal the show every time they're on screen, much in the same way Julian Morrisey (Jibrail Nantambu ) did in the 2018 film.




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