http://www.essence.com/celebrity/serena-venus-williams-dad-tennis-hall-fame
He will be recognized for his coaching contributions by the nation’s oldest African American sports Association
He will be recognized for his coaching contributions by the nation’s oldest African American sports Association
Many of us had a reaction to seeing Keshia Knight Pulliam walking alongside her defamed television father Bill Cosby. Whether it was feelings of contentment or anger, the reactions, at least on social media, were strong.
But perhaps none more visceral that that of Knight Pulliam’s baby daddy Ed Hartwell.
Hartwell told TMZ that Keshia’s decision to escort Bill Cosby into the court room was not only selfish, it violated their custody agreement.
In new legal documents, Hartwell says that he only gets to see their daughter Ella Grace one twice a week for just one hour. When Keshia was out of town, she infringed upon his visitation rights. When it was his day to see his daughter, Keshia was still out of town and Hartwell did not get to see Ella.
He says that Keshia is in contempt and wants her to arrange a make up visit ASAP. He is also requesting that she cover all court and lawyer fees for this particular incident.
These two will never quit.
The post Ed Hartwell Says Keshia Knight Pulliam Violated Their Custody Deal Flying To Be With Bill Cosby appeared first on MadameNoire.
After what seems like an interminable wait, we are at last blessed with our first real look at director Ryan Coogler’s take on Marvel’s Black Panther.
Following the first poster this morning, we longed for the teaser trailer’s drop tonight, and all of our feverish anticipation was more than repaid. I’ll wait until you bask in the glory of T’Challa & co., and then we’ll resume. Yeah, I watched it several times in a row, too.
Okay, are you back? Wow, right? Rather than tease us with mere surreptitious flashes, the trailer starts to flesh out the full, striking scope of Wakanda, and shows us all of the major players and a lot of the action to come.
It begins with a scene between U.S. Deputy Task Force Commander of the Joint Counterterrorism Center Everett K. Ross (Martin Freeman, who appeared in the role in Civil War), and a chained-up Ulysses Klaw (Andy Serkis). Klaw asserts that there’s far more to Wakanda than meets the world’s eye.
(It’s also fun to watch Bilbo Baggins talk to Gollum, but that’s for another conversation.)
“Textiles, shepherds, cool outfits,” is what Ross offers of the African nation. “All a front,” says Klaw. “Explorers have searched for it. Called it El Dorado. Looked for it in South America. But it was in Africa the whole time.” As he speaks, we see Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa, the Black Panther, descending into green waters and emerging to a cliff face of clamoring, brightly clad people, from which a futuristic craft later takes off.
And this is just the first thirty-five seconds! We then glimpse, in a series of rapid cuts: Danai Gurira as Okoye, the leader of the Dora Milaje, the elite force of women warriors who guard T’Challa; Michael B. Jordan as the fantastically named baddie Erik Killmonger in the most awesome mask, who is threatening Wakanda’s dynasty; Angela Bassett as Ramonda, T’Challa’s royal mother, gorgeously white-haired; my soulmate Lupita Nyong’o as a member of the Dora Milaje, and Letitia Wright as Shuri, T’Challa’s sister and princess of Wakanda; the Dora Milaje ready to kick all of the ass and take all of the names.
4. Erik Killmonger w/ mask pic.twitter.com/g21Bcu9yDJ
— FanBrosShow (@FanBrosShow) June 10, 2017
Of course, the main focus here amidst all of these incredible sights is T’Challa himself. Boseman’s warrior-prince-turned-king was the best part of Civil War, stealing all of his scenes and our hearts, and the mere idea of an entire movie centered around him seems like a gift that we are not worthy of. “You are a good man, with a good heart, and it’s hard for a good man to be a king,” the voiceover tells us. As T’Challa engages in acrobatic battle scenes in the heart of jungles, framed by waterfalls, and in fantastic cityscapes, I’m having trouble breathing.
We here at The Mary Sue have been anxiously following every Black Panther development, which is in the trusted hands of Coogler (Creed, Fruitvale Station) and a stunning, all-star cast. To finally witness Black Panther come to life with vibrant landscapes, eye-catching effects, gorgeous costumes, and the promise of intense drama and action is beyond exciting.
Please pardon me while I watch the teaser once again, and be sure to tell me what you’re thinking in the comments.
(image: screengrab)
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So… Wonder Woman is out. I volunteered to review it. Holy Heck, How do you review a film like Wonder Woman?
I’m an old hat at reviewing superhero movies. My litmus test for a good superhero flick is its ability to express the essence of its hero and the world found in the pages of their comics. Few heroes have as many pages to draw from as Diana, Princess of Themyscira, Daughter of Hippolyta, aka Wonder Woman. Not the first superheroine but she’s been the First Lady of comics since 1941.
Throughout the ages, she’s been everything from a mortal martial arts master to a demi-goddess and for a short spell the Goddess of Truth. The character of Wonder Woman been a symbol of feminism, pacifism, Queer womanhood and controversy.
A GREAT Wonder Woman movie would convey all that she is while also being a well-crafted film. A good Wonder Woman film would, at the very least, portray her as an antithesis of toxic masculinity as her creator, psychologist William Moulton Marston, intended. A terrible Wonder Woman movie would be based on anything Frank Miller wrote with her.
It seems so simple, but it took more time to come to terms with my opinion of 2017’s Wonder Woman than I expected. A fair review’s hard to form when expectations have been building since you were a toddler. Her fans have been yearning for a Wonder Woman movie for 76 years. When you’ve been told your entire life that Wonder Woman wasn’t worth her own film despite achieving global cultural importance you want to love all 141 minutes she’s on the big screen.
That burning desire for this to be THE moment for women-centered superhero films maybe why it pained me to admit that Wonder Woman was just “aight.” I’m not trying to Bell Hooks all up in your Lemonade, but nostalgia and reverence for the cultural importance of a character don’t erase obvious flaws in its movie adaptation. After a Thursday preview showing in Real 3D, Friday standard showing and a boozy Saturday matinee I gotta put on my big girl knickers and accept the Wonder Woman adaptation we’ve been waiting for is at best, okay.
It’s a disservice to say Wonder Woman is only a serviceable movie in comparison to the rest of the DC Extended Universe. Director Patty Jenkins’ eye for movement and bold dismissal of the male gaze fashions a visually and emotionally engaging movie. The charisma of the cast outshines the clunkiness of Allan Heinberg’s script, which manages to feel overstuffed with big ideas, yet thinly plotted at the same time.
look at these amazing pics of the amazons on set of #WonderWoman OMG pic.twitter.com/02csVQslHL
— ANTHONY OLIVEIRA (@meakoopa) June 4, 2017
The movie is at its strongest in the first act. Opening with Diana (Gal Gadot) receiving an old photograph from her BFF Batfleck and transitions to her girlhood and coming of age on the Amazonian island of Themyscira. Even my jaded nerd heart was a flutter to see this paradise island realized. It was intoxicatingly joyous to see a diverse collection of women on screen just being, with wrinkles, laugh lines and pores.
Diana’s origin — and I say Diana because no one calls her Wonder Woman — ventures more than a bit from the source material. The Pantheon of Greek Gods, save for the villainous Ares, are dead. Destroyed in a battle amongst themselves over the nature of mankind. Diana believes Ares corrupted humanity beings too innocent and weak to resist him and it the duty of the Amazons to liberate them.
Queen Hippolyta (Connie Nielsen) forbids Diana from learning the ways of war as a young girl. Diana’s rebellious spirit proves unkillable, and her mother discovers she’s been training with her Aunt Antiope (Robin Wright), general of the Amazonian army, in secret. After Antiope persuades Hippolyta to let her daughter choose her own way it’s decided that Diana will train to be the greatest warrior the Amazons ever produced.
Shortly after, man spy Steve Trevor (Chris Pine) crashes off the shore of Themyscira pursued by Germans. While Diana saves him, the Amazons unleash hades on the German soldiers. Seriously, the Amazons make the Spartans of 300 look like the Tuesday night crowd at CURVES. If the movie were just about Amazons wailing on dudes with weapons a thousand years more advanced than theirs I would give the film every star in this galaxy and the next.
Sadly, Themyscira is absent after the first act as our hard-headed heroine exiles herself to eliminate war from the World of Man. My biggest gripes with Wonder Woman becomes painfully clear in the second act. The movie adaptation of the OG Feminist Social Justice Warrior didn’t see fit to center any other women. For the rest of the film, the only women who appear are mere vestigial pastiches of the source material’s supporting cast.
Lucy Davis’ Etta Candy — featured prominently in the trailers — is given nothing to do. Which is such a waste in the comic Etta was a groundbreaking figure. Etta was a smart, loyal companion to Wonder Woman who kicked Nazi ass while being an unapologetically fat bodied woman in the Golden age. She’s been an active character for most of her existence except during the Silver and Bronze age when she barely appeared. Here Etta shows up, shops, gives the minimum required amount of sass and disappears for the rest of the film.
The only other woman with more than one line in the last 2/3 of Wonder Woman is classic Wonder Woman antagonist Dr. Poison or Dr. Maru in her cinematic debut played by Elena Anaya. Dr. Maru is intriguing but is sidelined as second fiddle to the male villain Erich Ludendorff (Danny Huston), a fictionalization of historical figure Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff. Since its Ludendorff and not Dr. Maru who Diana suspects as being influenced be the god of war the two women have almost no interaction.
Confoundingly, once Trevor and Diana reach London, the film introduces three more men hired to help stop Dr. Maru from making a super mustard gas. The characters exist to help Diana expand her understanding of concepts like veteran neglect and racial inequality, which are completely alien to her. While I have no issue with the trio or the actors that brought them to life, why couldn’t they have been Etta and two Holliday Girls?
Disappointingly, despite a fun over the top final boss battle and feeling emotionally connected to the characters, the third act never really earns its denouement. I could forgive the underwhelming effects but not a poorly executed big “twist.” During my first viewing, it was met with audible groans and confused grunts. With no build up in the previous two acts, the “big reveal” is less…
And more…
It left me more annoyed at the time wasted on plot lines that went nowhere for characters that could have been better utilized.
Despite its flaws, it still manages to be a more light-hearted and hopeful action romp than its predecessors. Under Jenkins’ direction, Gadot and Pine are at their most charismatic. The odd couple chemistry between the two is so warm and natural. Gadot triumphs when tasked with something more challenging than sexily grimacing while gripping the steering wheel of a very expensive car. She is able to convey Diana’s tenacious optimism and integrity alongside the innocence of her idealism. Much to my surprise, Pine’s Trevor is believable, vulnerable and compelling. I’ve only seen Pine as Kirk in the Star Trek remakes, so my expectations of him were barely scant.
Wonder Woman is hopefully the turning point for the DC Extended Universe, with a predicted big opening weekend I also hope that a sequel will allow Wonder Woman to return with a stronger script and the bravado to let the character to return to her daring Golden Age roots.
Ultimately this is a fun film, but a pretty flawed one. The male-gaze-free first act alone makes it worth checking out. You’ll be entertained for the most part save for some clunky pacing in the third act. It’s the kinda movie you’re totally pumped while watching but by the time you’re in the parking lot, the awe will be already starting to wane.
As for my litmus test for superhero films, it’s a tough call. I was able to speak briefly with comic expert and author of Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-1948, Noah Berlatsky and ask him if he thought Wonder Woman made the cut. His response:
Wonder Woman has been around a long time, and I think different folks have different ideas about what’s essential. I think for a lot of people she’s about women being powerful and heroic, and I think it captured that. Marston’s original championing of female community, queerness, and love didn’t really come through for me, though.