For the first time ever, e.l.f. Cosmetics, the affordable makeup brand found in retailers like Cvs, Target, and Ulta Beauty, is releasing a TV commercial during the 2023 Super Bowl on Sunday. They’ve tapped The White Lotus’ Jennifer Coolidge to star in the 30-second campaign, and Mike White, creator of the hit HBO comedy-drama series, to write it.
“Jennifer is a fan of e.l.f. She loves Power Grip Primer, and she is especially drawn to our cruelty-free stance,” Kory Marchisotto, e.l.f. Beauty’s chief marketing officer, told The Hollywood Reporter in an emailed statement. “Her authenticity, humor, beauty and e.l.f.ing energy, coupled with Mike White’s brilliant writing, brought the campaign to life in a way that no one else could do. It was a dream come true for us on many levels.”
e.l.f. (which stands for eyes lips...
“Jennifer is a fan of e.l.f. She loves Power Grip Primer, and she is especially drawn to our cruelty-free stance,” Kory Marchisotto, e.l.f. Beauty’s chief marketing officer, told The Hollywood Reporter in an emailed statement. “Her authenticity, humor, beauty and e.l.f.ing energy, coupled with Mike White’s brilliant writing, brought the campaign to life in a way that no one else could do. It was a dream come true for us on many levels.”
e.l.f. (which stands for eyes lips...
- 2/13/2023
- by Evan Nicole Brown
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Secondsight Publishing Signs With Spirit Rider Productions According to Secondsight founder and C.E.O. Bradley Golden, Secondsight Publishing has signed a multiple comic book movie deal with award winning Director Brian Vaughan and Spirit Rider Productions. The comic books to be optioned are: Horror Comics, Leave on the Lights, These Damn Kids and Sonny. Secondsight Publishing …
The post Secondsight Publishing Signs With Spirit Rider Productions appeared first on Hnn | Horrornews.net.
The post Secondsight Publishing Signs With Spirit Rider Productions appeared first on Hnn | Horrornews.net.
- 6/5/2020
- by Adrian Halen
- Horror News
Kayti Burt Mar 25, 2019
Marvel's Runaways will be back with a third season on Hulu.
Marvel's Runaways Season 3 is a go! Hulu has renewed the TV show based on the classic comic book run by Brian Vaughan for a third season.
Runaways stars Rhenzy Feliz, Lyrica Okano, Virginia Gardner, Ariela Barer, Gregg Sulkin, and Allegra Acosta as six teens who join forces to stop their villainous parents, portrayed by Angel Parker, Ryan Sands, Annie Wersching, Kip Pardue, Ever Carradine, James Marsters, Brigid Brannagh, Kevin Weisman, Brittany Ishibashi, and James Yaegashi.
Runaways Season 3 will get 10 episodes, which is down three from Runaways Season 2, but is on par with the Runaways Season 1 order. Series showrunners/writers Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage seemingly poised to return.
"We are so excited to tell more Runaways stories and are so grateful to Marvel, Hulu, our amazing cast and crew and of course our passionate audience,...
Marvel's Runaways will be back with a third season on Hulu.
Marvel's Runaways Season 3 is a go! Hulu has renewed the TV show based on the classic comic book run by Brian Vaughan for a third season.
Runaways stars Rhenzy Feliz, Lyrica Okano, Virginia Gardner, Ariela Barer, Gregg Sulkin, and Allegra Acosta as six teens who join forces to stop their villainous parents, portrayed by Angel Parker, Ryan Sands, Annie Wersching, Kip Pardue, Ever Carradine, James Marsters, Brigid Brannagh, Kevin Weisman, Brittany Ishibashi, and James Yaegashi.
Runaways Season 3 will get 10 episodes, which is down three from Runaways Season 2, but is on par with the Runaways Season 1 order. Series showrunners/writers Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage seemingly poised to return.
"We are so excited to tell more Runaways stories and are so grateful to Marvel, Hulu, our amazing cast and crew and of course our passionate audience,...
- 3/25/2019
- Den of Geek
Marvel's Runaways second outing is a lot of fun, but again fails to fully commit to this show's killer premise and themes.
Marvel's Runaways Season 1 came onto the superhero TV scene with a great deal going for it. Helmed by teen drama experts Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage, adapted from a classic comic book run by Brian Vaughan (with his involvement!), and featuring a highly likeable cast of both newcomers and veteran TV actors, this show had narrative energy to burn.
Unfortunately, Season 1 didn't seem to really know what to do with all of that narrative energy. After a strong first few episodes, the show lingered in a liminal state of will-they-won't-they when it came to the tenuous relationship between the show's teen characters and their villainous parents. When the Season 1 finale ends with the show's teenaged characters finally running away from their parents with a defined mission to...
Marvel's Runaways Season 1 came onto the superhero TV scene with a great deal going for it. Helmed by teen drama experts Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage, adapted from a classic comic book run by Brian Vaughan (with his involvement!), and featuring a highly likeable cast of both newcomers and veteran TV actors, this show had narrative energy to burn.
Unfortunately, Season 1 didn't seem to really know what to do with all of that narrative energy. After a strong first few episodes, the show lingered in a liminal state of will-they-won't-they when it came to the tenuous relationship between the show's teen characters and their villainous parents. When the Season 1 finale ends with the show's teenaged characters finally running away from their parents with a defined mission to...
- 12/24/2018
- Den of Geek
James Hunt Sep 29, 2016
In the week Marvel's Luke Cage arrives on Netflix, here's our interview with showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker...
James interviewed Luke Cage's showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker, covering Coker's comic book influences, the importance of world-building and somewhat less plausibly, a future Visionaries movie.
(Note: anyone who knows John Byrne's Alpha Flight inside out might get a spoiler for Luke Cage Episode 7, but we'll take a chance on that being a relatively small number of you.)
Hi, I'm James for Den of Geek.
Hey, I was reading a piece on your site the other day that said Luke Cage maybe falls into some of the tropes that superhero shows have. And you know, that was a big challenge for us, to keep it in that genre and be original.
On one hand, being a geek I want to tell the best comic book story possible, as someone...
In the week Marvel's Luke Cage arrives on Netflix, here's our interview with showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker...
James interviewed Luke Cage's showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker, covering Coker's comic book influences, the importance of world-building and somewhat less plausibly, a future Visionaries movie.
(Note: anyone who knows John Byrne's Alpha Flight inside out might get a spoiler for Luke Cage Episode 7, but we'll take a chance on that being a relatively small number of you.)
Hi, I'm James for Den of Geek.
Hey, I was reading a piece on your site the other day that said Luke Cage maybe falls into some of the tropes that superhero shows have. And you know, that was a big challenge for us, to keep it in that genre and be original.
On one hand, being a geek I want to tell the best comic book story possible, as someone...
- 9/28/2016
- Den of Geek
Saga #32
Story by Brian K. Vaughan
Art by Fiona Staples
Letters by Fonografiks
Published by Image Comics
Warning: Spoilers! Big Nasty Spoilers!
Last time, Hazel, Izabel, and Klara were being held in a Landfall prison after years of separation from their family. In this issue, Alana and Marko search for their lost daughter. This newest issue contains a heist, action-packed drama, and the return of fan favorite characters.
The first 16 pages of the issue are of Alana and Marko breaking into a building and searching for clues to where Hazel has been taken. This scene is not only action-packed, but demonstrates the couple’s relationship. Alana is spunky, playful, and willing to fight back. Marko is strong-willed yet also a pacifist–he refuses to even fight with his fists and instead uses sleeping dust to knockout a guard. Despite their differing personalities, the two work together like a well-oiled machine to overcome obstacles.
Story by Brian K. Vaughan
Art by Fiona Staples
Letters by Fonografiks
Published by Image Comics
Warning: Spoilers! Big Nasty Spoilers!
Last time, Hazel, Izabel, and Klara were being held in a Landfall prison after years of separation from their family. In this issue, Alana and Marko search for their lost daughter. This newest issue contains a heist, action-packed drama, and the return of fan favorite characters.
The first 16 pages of the issue are of Alana and Marko breaking into a building and searching for clues to where Hazel has been taken. This scene is not only action-packed, but demonstrates the couple’s relationship. Alana is spunky, playful, and willing to fight back. Marko is strong-willed yet also a pacifist–he refuses to even fight with his fists and instead uses sleeping dust to knockout a guard. Despite their differing personalities, the two work together like a well-oiled machine to overcome obstacles.
- 12/30/2015
- by Ben Howard
- SoundOnSight
On October 21, 2015, I woke up in my Atlantic Beach home around 7:00 Am. I got dressed, made sure my bags were packed, ate a light breakfast, and took off in my car. Today was my trip to Melbourne, Florida where I would be meeting my friend Jade, and we both would be going to Famous Faces & Funnies for a Skype Q&A with the one and only Brian K. Vaughan.
Brian K. Vaughan is the Eisner-award winning writer of The Runaways (with Adrian Alphona) for Marvel; Y: The Last Man (with Pia Guerra), Ex Machina (with Tony Harris), Pride of Baghdad (with Niko Henrichon) for DC/Vertigo; Saga (with Fiona Staples) and We Stand On Guard (with Steve Skorce) for Image. Vaughan’s creator-owned content is not only voluminous but high quality, as evidenced by critical praise and accolades. He mostly writes science fiction with healthy doses of drama and social/political commentary.
Brian K. Vaughan is the Eisner-award winning writer of The Runaways (with Adrian Alphona) for Marvel; Y: The Last Man (with Pia Guerra), Ex Machina (with Tony Harris), Pride of Baghdad (with Niko Henrichon) for DC/Vertigo; Saga (with Fiona Staples) and We Stand On Guard (with Steve Skorce) for Image. Vaughan’s creator-owned content is not only voluminous but high quality, as evidenced by critical praise and accolades. He mostly writes science fiction with healthy doses of drama and social/political commentary.
- 12/2/2015
- by Ben Howard
- SoundOnSight
Comic-Con International has announced the nominations for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards for 2015. The nominees, chosen by a blue-ribbon panel of judges, highlight the wide range of material being published in comics and graphic novel form today, from companies big and small, in print and on line. The awards will be given out during a gala ceremony on Friday, July 10 during Comic-Con International: San Diego.
Best Short Story
“Beginning’s End,” by Rina Ayuyang, muthamagazine.com
“Corpse on the Imjin!” by Peter Kuper, in Masterful Marks: Cartoonists Who Changed the World (Simon & Schuster)
“,” by Lee Bermejo, in Batman Black and White #3 (DC)
“,” by Max Landis & Jock, in Adventures of Superman #14 (DC)
“When the Darkness Presses,” by Emily Carroll, http://emcarroll.com/comics/darkness/
Best Single Issue (or One-Shot)
Astro City #16: “Wish I May” by Kurt Busiek & Brent Anderson (Vertigo/DC)
Beasts of Burden: Hunters and Gatherers, by Evan Dorkin...
Best Short Story
“Beginning’s End,” by Rina Ayuyang, muthamagazine.com
“Corpse on the Imjin!” by Peter Kuper, in Masterful Marks: Cartoonists Who Changed the World (Simon & Schuster)
“,” by Lee Bermejo, in Batman Black and White #3 (DC)
“,” by Max Landis & Jock, in Adventures of Superman #14 (DC)
“When the Darkness Presses,” by Emily Carroll, http://emcarroll.com/comics/darkness/
Best Single Issue (or One-Shot)
Astro City #16: “Wish I May” by Kurt Busiek & Brent Anderson (Vertigo/DC)
Beasts of Burden: Hunters and Gatherers, by Evan Dorkin...
- 4/24/2015
- by Luana Haygen
- Comicmix.com
Much loved graphic novel Y: The Last Man has had plenty of ups and downs on the way to the big screen — and now, accordingly to Vulture, it's currently on a pretty big 'up'.Though they don't have any direct quotes, their sources at New Line say that the adaptation is one of its first priorities at the moment, following on from the news back in March that Brian Vaughan and Pia Guerra’s beloved comic series was getting a new script from Warehouse 13's Matthew Federman and Stephen Scaia.In case you forgot, the story focuses on Yorick, an amateur escape artist who has become the lone male human survivor after a mysterious plague killed off everyone else with a Y chromosome — including all male animals. Except, that is, for his pet capuchin monkey, Ampersand, who follows him around like Ross's Marsel, but in a much friendlier, less irritating way.
- 9/11/2012
- EmpireOnline
Updated, 1/7: Each year, the five broadcast networks develop hundreds of scripted dramas and comedies in hopes they’ll become the next NCIS and Desperate Housewives, or the latest Modern Family and The Big Bang Theory. And like every year, a great deal of them are not worth mentioning here — mostly because they involve the bland types of cops, lawyers, and doctors who you’ve already seen fighting crime or sneaking a kiss on the way to the ER.
But fascinating projects continue to pass the first smell test at the broadcast networks. The key is whether the suits take...
But fascinating projects continue to pass the first smell test at the broadcast networks. The key is whether the suits take...
- 1/6/2011
- by Lynette Rice
- EW - Inside TV
Deadline is reporting that Marvel Studios is moving forward with "Runaways," based on a comic book idea hatched by Brian Vaughan ("Lost"). The new film will be distributed by Paramount Pictures, since the deal was made before Disney acquired Marvel. "Nick and Nora's Infinite Playlist" director Peter Sollett is currently in negotiations to direct "Runaways," which is a youth-oriented film that is being called "The Breakfast Club" with superheroes. The story deals with children of supervillains who are cursed with evil powers, but decide to use them for heroic purposes. Even though Vaughan is the main person on the project, Joss Whedon ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Firefly") has previously stepped in to write several installments of the comic.
- 4/6/2010
- WorstPreviews.com
In another of these on-going sagas that tend to stick to adaptations of much-loved comic books, rumours are circulating that Louis Leterrier is in line to direct the film version of Y: The Last Man, the insanely popular graphic novel series from Brian Vaughan.
Fresh from directing Clash Of The Titans and currently in town to promote it, Leterrier might be joining the project after it has gone through several iterations that have seen the likes of Eagle Eye director D.J. Caruso and star Shia Labeouf attached to the New Line story, which is about one young guy's journey through a world in which all men except him are dead.
Leterrier has also been named as being on Marvel's possible list of Avengers directors, but no doubt this and the Y gig will depend on how Titans goes down at the box office on its release next week.
Georgine Waller...
Fresh from directing Clash Of The Titans and currently in town to promote it, Leterrier might be joining the project after it has gone through several iterations that have seen the likes of Eagle Eye director D.J. Caruso and star Shia Labeouf attached to the New Line story, which is about one young guy's journey through a world in which all men except him are dead.
Leterrier has also been named as being on Marvel's possible list of Avengers directors, but no doubt this and the Y gig will depend on how Titans goes down at the box office on its release next week.
Georgine Waller...
- 3/29/2010
- Screenrush
Written by Rj Sevin
When I first heard of Joe Hill, some five years ago, my first thought was of the dedication page in one of my favorite novels, Stephen King’s The Shining: This is for Joe Hill King, who shines on. My second thought: Nah. Probably not him.
“Pop Art,” a heart-breaking slice of magical realism about a balloon boy, was being discussed in reverential tones among those who had read it, and his short-fiction collection, 20th Century Ghosts, was, some said, a revelation. Despite the accolades, I wasn’t in a mad rush to read Hill’s writing. In small press Horror circles, high praise sometimes comes a little easier than it should, and is not always to be trusted.
“Have you read Joe Hill?” asked a friend of mine, sounding a little like a Sutter Kane convert from John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness.
When I first heard of Joe Hill, some five years ago, my first thought was of the dedication page in one of my favorite novels, Stephen King’s The Shining: This is for Joe Hill King, who shines on. My second thought: Nah. Probably not him.
“Pop Art,” a heart-breaking slice of magical realism about a balloon boy, was being discussed in reverential tones among those who had read it, and his short-fiction collection, 20th Century Ghosts, was, some said, a revelation. Despite the accolades, I wasn’t in a mad rush to read Hill’s writing. In small press Horror circles, high praise sometimes comes a little easier than it should, and is not always to be trusted.
“Have you read Joe Hill?” asked a friend of mine, sounding a little like a Sutter Kane convert from John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness.
- 2/16/2010
- by rj sevin
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
Myself and others who have read Vertigo’s Brian Vaughan written future set story Y: The Last Man could swallow it when reports some time back said that Transformers star Shia Labeouf would be playing the lead, Yorick. Seeing him trample around the world as the only man with his pet monkey Ampersand was something to look forward to, until Labeouf squashed it down in July’s issue of Wizard Magazine.
Shia's not Yorick anymore?
Well it seems that the friend of the Autobots in this reporter’s opinion does not know how to tell the difference between two completely different characters (between Sam and Yorick).
“I’m not willing to make that movie currently,” he says bluntly,”and may be too old to play the role by the time it does come around.”
Does he expect to be in his late thirties the next time he has some space in his schedule?...
Shia's not Yorick anymore?
Well it seems that the friend of the Autobots in this reporter’s opinion does not know how to tell the difference between two completely different characters (between Sam and Yorick).
“I’m not willing to make that movie currently,” he says bluntly,”and may be too old to play the role by the time it does come around.”
Does he expect to be in his late thirties the next time he has some space in his schedule?...
- 6/9/2009
- by Melissa
- Atomic Popcorn
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