The Ava Duvernay-directed “A Wrinkle in Time” will be hitting theaters next month, and two organizations are coming together to give underprivileged children a chance to watch the children’s book classic on big screens.
AMC Theaters and Color of Change are joining forces to create the Give A Child The Universe initiative, a chance for these kids to see the film for free at AMC theaters starting on March 9, Deadline reports.
Using the #BlackPantherChallenge as inspiration, this new initiative is a way for an individual or group to purchase tickets for children. This campaign will allow low-income kids, identified through a network of community partners, to watch matinee showings of the Disney movie at their local AMC theater.
The #BlackPantherChallenge raised over $400,000 for black kids to go watch the Marvel blockbuster.
“Color of Change believes in the power of images and supports those working to change the rules in Hollywood so that inclusive, empathetic and human portrayals of Black people and people of color are prominent on the screen,” said Rashad Robinson, executive director of Color Of Change in statement.
Duvernay tweeted her support of the movement on Friday, calling the initiative “very moving.”
The Ava Duvernay-directed “A Wrinkle in Time” will be hitting theaters next month, and two organizations are coming together to give underprivileged children a chance to watch the children’s book classic on big screens.
AMC Theaters and Color of Change are joining forces to create the Give A Child The Universe initiative, a chance for these kids to see the film for free at AMC theaters starting on March 9, Deadline reports.
Using the #BlackPantherChallenge as inspiration, this new initiative is a way for an individual or group to purchase tickets for children. This campaign will allow low-income kids, identified through a network of community partners, to watch matinee showings of the Disney movie at their local AMC theater.
The #BlackPantherChallenge raised over $400,000 for black kids to go watch the Marvel blockbuster.
“Color of Change believes in the power of images and supports those working to change the rules in Hollywood so that inclusive, empathetic and human portrayals of Black people and people of color are prominent on the screen,” said Rashad Robinson, executive director of Color Of Change in statement.
Duvernay tweeted her support of the movement on Friday, calling the initiative “very moving.”
You can donate a ticket to the initiative here.
Women's March co-chair Tamika Mallory voiced her frustration with the national response towards the Florida school shooting as compared to the shootings we see taking place in urban neighborhoods.
Mallory was a guest on The View alongside #MeToo founder Tarana Burke and Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors to talk with host Sunny Hostin about the impact of their movements. And she said that her frustration is based on how certain voices and stories are being erased to accommodate this new gun violence prevention movement.
"I was so frustrated over the last few days watching this storyline come out..." she told Hostin.
“Seventeen people...mostly children..white children are shot and killed in a school in Florida, and somehow that erases the 17 children shot on the corners of Chicago,” she continued. “That’s a problem when we are not doing the intersectional work to be able to have both conversations at once."
She made it clear that she fully supported the young people behind the call for stricter gun laws. But she says the erasure of one group for another was a dangerous line of thinking because it also affects how movements are funded.
Mallory also pointed out that the bigger organizations that are now getting involved in these movements, often steal the hard work already done by grassroots organizations on the ground.
“It has been mom and pop organizations on street corners that are on the ground that are doing the real work," she said. "And we as people of good moral conscious need to pay attention to where we put our resources and our time."
Watch the full interview here.
Unlike other series on Amazon Prime, The Tick was split into two half seasons. The first six episodes dropped last August 2017, and the last six drop today (February 23, 2018). When we last left The Tick, Arthur (Griffin Newman) had been kidnapped and the Tick (Peter Serafinowicz) vowed to find his little moth buddy. Arthur also learned that The Terror (Jackie Earle Haley), long thought dead, was in fact still alive. The crazed madman who had murdered Arthur’s favorite superheroes, The Flag Five—causing the death of Arthur’s father in the collateral damage—was now holding Arthur hostage.
It was a long wait for Tick fans eager to find out what insanity the Terror had in store for Arthur and The Tick—along with Dot (Valorie Curry), Overkill (Scott Speiser), Superian (Brendan Hines), Dangerboat (voiced by Alan Tudyk), and even ultra-villain Ms. Lint (Yara Martinez)—and I’m here to say your eagerness will be fully rewarded. As Ben Edlund, creator of The Tick, said in a recent interview (which we’ll bring to you in a few days because it’s chock full of season spoilers), “All the fun sort of interpersonal nonsense and relationships and sort of superhero craziness that we initiated in the first half kind of spirals up into an unchecked crescendo.”
He definitely means it. The second half of the season brings the absurdity in fabulous, hilarious (and sometimes grossly violent) bursts, along with great new characters, such as the heroic talking dog, Midnight (Townsend Coleman, the voice of the animated version of The Tick). It also ties up its season-long arc while introducing a mystery for the next season (already greenlit by Amazon Studios). Easter eggs abound, and things circle back to previous episodes in a deeply satisfying way. Everyone should watch it. You’ll laugh. You’ll cry—from laughing. It’s seriously keen.
In preparation for the second half of the series, The Nerd Element spoke to The Tick and Arthur themselves, Serafinowicz and Newman. Speaking of laughing, Serafinowicz and Newman are two of the funniest people out there, so some answers dissolved into laughing (indicated in brackets). Also, as well as talking about the show, the interview turned into a thoughtful discussion of what binge-watching means in terms of TV viewing and is presented here almost verbatim (minor edits were made for readability) for your nerdly enjoyment:
The Nerd Element: What do you want to share with our readers about the second half of Season One?
Griffin Newman: I’d like to share with them that it will be streaming exclusively on Amazon Prime Video starting February 23rd, and if they watched it, it would be..[laughs].
Peter Serafinowicz: I as well. For people who haven’t watched the first six, to watch all of them—to binge them all—all 12 episodes—that would be quite an experience, you see.
GN: Yes.
PS: I think that would be unlike any series binge that has even been up until now.
GN: Because sometimes I think people are scared. “Oh, is it too late to jump into a show? I didn’t watch it when it premiered.” I think you’re lucky if you didn’t watch the first six episodes last August. You get to watch 12 all at once. You get to really kind of freebase this thing in its purest form.
TNE: And that is the new model. I actually did binge the last six episodes.
PS: Oh, did you?
TNE: Before I talked to you and it was fabulous just being able to see everything and finish it all at once. What has the fan reaction been since the first six episodes were released?
PS: I don’t know what the reaction’s been.
TNE: I figured you might have encountered some fans along the way before this.
PS: When we did the main Comic-Con [Ed.: in San Diego], this series hadn’t aired, so it was only the pilot that people had seen, which while it was pretty consistent with the series, it was weird just to be speaking to fans who only had the pilot as a reference point when we’d filmed another 11 episodes.
GN: It was the New York Comic-Con where the first six episodes had come out. You do so much of that song-and-dance where you’re just kind of, “Please watch the show, please watch the show.” I found it a lot more rewarding to answer questions from people, especially as a panel, as fans were coming up who had watched it and had opinions and things they wanted to know about.
PS: It was kind of limited though. Probably three people asked questions at the panel. I’ve had nice comments from people who seem to really dig the show, but I don’t know. I haven’t really thought about it this last couple of months that much in terms of tracking what people think of the show. Do you know what I mean?
GN: It’s also so weird because it’s like—you know, it used to be if you were on a TV show, okay, it’s premiering Wednesday night at eight o’clock, and you will know after that episode airs this is how well you did. The feedback is kind of immediate.
But then part of the appeal is The Tick will be on Amazon until the end of time. We’re making something not just for the week it comes out but trying to make something that will just live forever so people can watch it on their own.
I remember being on Twitter when the first six episodes from the people who had been waiting, who had been counting down the clock until it came out and were watching it live and were responding to things versus people who were just now catching up it with it and finding it new and people are now being able to watch all 12 at once. It seems positive, but it’s also just…
PS: I mean I’m sure there’s probably some kind of sound business reasons for this—you could still have the episodes premiere like at eight o’clock on Friday, the new episode, and gradually build up so you have it both ways. At the end of it, all the episodes are there and available for eternity, but you still have that kind of temporal thing where people are tuning in.
GN: It’s like the Wild West because all these companies are trying to figure out like—this whole split season thing was something that Amazon hadn’t done before, and so everyone is constantly tinkering with this format. You put all these episodes up at once, how many do you do now in the modern era, do you put them up once a week? I think The Handmaid’s Tale did that, where they had one episode per week and then they would accumulate.
PS: But like Game of Thrones, right—the appeal of Game of Thrones is for two days, there would be people talking about that episode all over the world, and then that’s it. If you had Game of Thrones dropped at the same time, all the episodes, I don’t know whether it would provoke as much discussion, and I love that feeling as well, being part of a discussion, something global.
GN: I know we’re just getting into a larger conversation than that. I remember I was such a fanatic for Lost that I used to watch Lost with a group of 15 people sometimes. I had a different group each season I watched it with related to where I was in my life, who I was friends with at the time, but it was always a group of people and part of the beauty was getting together before the episode and say what do we think is gonna happen this episode? And then afterward spending the next hour and a half unwinding and trying to make sense of what we just saw and speculating and knowing there are six more episodes left, so how much time are they gonna have left, what are they gonna resolve, what will they not.
We’re in a weird time. The confines of a movie have pretty much stayed the same for decades; there’s a pretty much standard range of length that a movie is. You watch it at home or you watch it in a theater. TV is this changing medium and you gotta have people write it. “Do I write one long script and just split it up into parts, or am I trying to write separate episodes that have their own sort of tones and things?” It’s an interesting…[laughs]. It’s a lot of big questions.
PS: Having binge-watched quite a few series in my time, I know that watching The Tick that way, watching all 12 episodes, that’s a unique experience [laughs]. That would be a unique experience. I might try it!
TNE: I did really enjoy just being able to jump right into the next episode instead of having to wait a week to find out what’s going to happen next, but also as someone who’s a little older now, it helped because I didn’t have to remember what happened in the last episode—it was all very fresh.
TNE: Peter, when you do the opening narration for each episode, who do you think that the Tick is speaking to?
PS: I think he’s speaking to—I think he’s in love with the sound of his own voice, but not in a narcissistic way, if that is possible. There’s nothing—there’s no vanity in it.
GN: The Tick is also very childlike. I remember as a kid who was obsessed with movies and TV and stuff, I would walk around the street and do an inner monologue, a voiceover in my head as if it was the movie about my adventures of trying to get to school every morning. I think the Tick is so in love with the mythology of what a superhero is, of what being a superhero means that it’s like—he’s not living life to the fullest unless he’s giving himself the same sort of pomp and circumstance. He’s narrating this to the world so that his story has the weight that he thinks a superhero should hold.
PS: I think you’re right. I hadn’t thought of that, but yes. [Newman laughs]
TNE: Both of your characters are dealing with an absurd world from different perspectives: Tick from a place of certainty in his morals, but he’s uncertain in his identity, and Arthur is more fragile, and maybe even more uncertain, but more grounded in reality. I wanted to know how each of you approached playing the more serious character beats against the craziness of the situations the writers placed you in?
GN: One of my favorite moments in the whole series is in the episode where I go work in my office and The Tick shows up and he’s like, “How much longer are you gonna be here?” Arthur says, “I think about half an hour,” and The Tick thinks that is absurd. The Tick views the idea of going and sitting at a desk and typing the same things over and over again for eight hours to be absurd.
PS: Which it is. On top of that, on top of the mundane absurdity that we endure and embrace every day, just the way the world is at the moment, the things that are going on are far more absurd than what happens in our show.
GN: You start to take a talking dog seriously. But I think both Tick and Arthur have very consistent viewpoints. They don’t totally know how to live their lives, but they know what they believe in, they know what they want to stand for, so I think the way you ride that tone is just staying honest to that. You stay honest to what their kind of spine is, the characters, and then try to match the energy of what the scene is. And you look at the script and you go, “Ok, I recognize here that I have to get a laugh out of this line. I recognize here that it’s important information I need to get across for the story, so you have to be a little sort of technical in that sense because it’s functional…to what you’re servicing on a scene-to-scene basis. The Tick wants to be good. The Arthur be Arthur. [Both gentlemen laugh]
PS: Bea Arthur wants to be…
GN: Bea Arthur wants to be Maude. [laughs] Arthur doesn’t want other people to be hurt, and he doesn’t want the bad people to continue unchecked. And you have to constantly just filter it through that sort of kaleidoscope.
TNE: Thank you, guys. I really appreciate your time and I love the new series.
All 12 episodes of the first season of The Tick are currently available on Amazon Prime Video for your streaming and binge-watching pleasure.
Black Panther was one of the best movie experiences of my life.
First, this film isn’t “homework.” Typically, movies featuring a black cast feel as if they need to instruct audiences about the ills of society past and present. Black creatives know we may never have the media mic again, so we don’t waste any moments. In my humble opinion, you’re grown, and it’s unrealistic to burden a mainstream movie with responsibility to make you a better person. That cake is baked. The only hope for a better tomorrow lies within the children. Which is why the stories they see and hear about heroic people that look like them, and don’t, are vital. Blissfully, there are no sermons in Black Panther. White colonizers never even knew the technocratic marvel of Wakanda existed, so Wakandan society flourished atop a mountain of the most precious metal on earth, unmolested.
But, to director Ryan Coogler’s and Marvel Studios’ credit, Black Panther doesn’t shy away one iota from speaking truth to power about the broader consequences of isolationism, classism or societal injustice. Thematically, the tone of the film is a tasty gumbo of an Aesop fable and James Bond political pot-boiler with a side of Game of Thrones court intrigue and a dash of hot sauce. The strongest nations throughout history learn the greatest threats are not from without but within; Wakanda is no different. No one can escape the consequences of the choices they’ve made, whomever you are, from a lowly orphan to a mighty King, to a nation of millions, as Malcom X said famously, “Your chickens will always come home to roost.”
There has been some buzz by angry white fanboys with absurd notions regarding Black Panther. They’ve declared comic book characters or stories must somehow be “apolitical”. And that the political agenda surrounding this film makes them “uncomfortable.” (Aw, pobrecito!)
However, black folks continue to celebrate the creative, cultural and financial success of the only big budget comic book movie featuring a black cast and crew undeterred.
The tone-deaf reaction of some can be expected. Wonder Woman debuted to similar trolling about sexism (against men) and uproars about Alamo Drafthouse Theaters’ woman-only screeings. Racism, sexism and pop culture fandom aren’t mutually exclusive, in fact, any female, non-gender specific person, Bleek, cosplayer, collector, or actor of color can relay incidences of racism, sexisim or homophobia they’ve encountered. This harassment both online; like John Boyega for the crime of being a black stormtrooper in “The Force Awakens” or at cons where “Cosplay is not Consent” has to be repeatedly drummed into grabby Comic Con attendees.
I’ve been trolled by white men I don’t know from Adam with the caucasity to tell me I had “no right to speak about Black Panther because I’m not a real comic book fan.” Now, not liking or even hating Black Panther doesn’t make you a racist. Telling me I can’t love it does. And using the fig leaf of “political agendas have no place in Comic Book Movies” to hide your bigotry only exposes your own political agenda.
As hard as it may be for you to believe, Jimothy, this movie isn’t about you…
This isn’t just a blow to conventional wisdom about minority-led blockbusters, it’s a blow to conventional wisdom concerning the MCU. One of their more outside-the-box offerings, one of their most director-driven films and one of their most overtly political pictures yet, one that plays more like a drama than an action spectacular, is now on pace to be one of their very biggest movies. Like Pixar, I hope the MCU is realizing that its (stereotypically) riskiest bets turn out to be their biggest wins. Playing it safe is no longer the safe choice.”
Let’s talk a little about “politics in comics” before we move forward. Because this will come up more often as women, blacks, Asians, non-binary folks and others underserved in the pop media landscape take the lead on both sides of the camera and all phases of production in Hollywood. Let’s look at an example of how political thought not only has always been a part of comics, it grounds the greatest heroes and drives the best stories.
Captain America was created by cartoonists Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, his first appearance was Captain America Comics #1 published in 1941 by Timely Comics, a predecessor of Marvel Comics. Captain America was designed as a patriotic supersoldier who fought the Axis powers of World War II and was Timely Comics’ most popular character during the wartime period. Steve Rogers, “the skinny kid from Brooklyn” that became America’s enduring champion and the “First Avenger” in Marvels MCU, was 4F but wanted desperately to serve his country like his only childhood friend Sgt. Buchanan “Bucky” Barnes. Steve endured bullying with courage and tenacity, he knew what it meant to be powerless, which is why Dr. Erskine, the lead scientist of the super soldier program, believed Rogers was the ideal candidate.
Dr. Abraham Erskine: The serum amplifies everything that is inside. So, good becomes great. Bad becomes worse. This is why you were chosen. Because a strong man, who has known power all his life, will lose respect for that power. But a weak man knows the value of strength, and knows compassion. Steve Rogers: Thanks. I think. Dr. Abraham Erskine: [he pours two drinks] Whatever happens tomorrow, you must promise me one thing. That you will stay who you are. Not a perfect soldier, but a good man.”
Rogers, now a super soldier, dressed in red white & blue named Captain America quit touring with the USO selling war bonds, went to the front lines and punched Nazis in the face on a daily basis.
That’s a political statement.
It’s endemic to who he is. Rogers believes in, if not America as it is, the aspirational ideal of what America SHOULD be for all her people. He’s such a patriot, once he leaned the truth about what the American government was doing in our name? He helped take down SHIELD, fought Iron Man, and became a fugitive from justice. Can you separate Captain America’s political views or core beliefs about freedom and justice from his character?
Of course not. Nor should you. That’s WHY we love Captain America. It’s what makes him a hero.
-Amnestic fanboys must have forgotten political stances made in The Avengers and all three Captain America Movies. SHIELD/HYDRA. Steve Rogers RAFT breakout after Civil War. The Sakovia Accords; UN oversight of “enhanced” individuals that split the Avengers. The political asylum granted by Wakanda. The entire X-Men comic run since Mutants were allegories of blacks during the Civil Rights Era of the 1960’s. MUTANT REGISTRATION ACT. TRASK Sentinel Program. The Legacy Virus that decimated fictional mutants concurrently during President Reagan’s silence on the spread of HIV in the 90’s that cost millions of real people their lives. Or, the second episode of Superfriends that spoke out against man-made climate change and promoted ocean conservation in the 1970’s.
I could go on.
Decades of the politics of the day driving comic book stories that no one cared about, that is, when blacks were sidekicks. This changed last Thursday.
Black Panther is a movie about the heir to the throne of a fictional African nation who wears the hereditary mantle of both monarch and protector of his realm “The Black Panther.” Is it possible to ignore or separate his blackness and his unique Afrocentric culture or world view from this character? Should every narrative he’s a part of ignore the plight of black people that do not enjoy the privilege of Wakandan citizenship?
Of course not.
One of the most powerful Black Panther comic book stories was the Jungle Action series of the seventies featuring Black Panther vs. The Ku Klux Klan. How do you de-politicize a black king taking on the the Klan? Why should we even want to? Like Cap’s political stance and core beliefs, Black Panther’s ethnicity & culture are central to his narrative and endemic to the character.
Black Panther is a powerful, resonant, self-reflective exercise that pays homage to both the source material and the African diaspora. It represents with unconditional love, deep respect, unique style, and an effortless flourish, yet still remembers to be a hell of a good time at the movies!
Black Panther was more than I could possibly ask for and one of the best examples of what a comic book movie can be. Period.
#wakandaforever
Editor’s Note: This article is excerpted from a longer piece. Read the article in its entirety at The Good Men Project