• IGN UK Podcast #610: Deathloops and Toffee Hoops

    Cardy, Matt and Emma are here to talk about the delight that is Deathloop. We also have impressions of the Call of Duty Vanguard beta which Emma has been playing, a lovely photo puzzle game called TOEM which Cardy enjoyed, and Matt's journey through the psychedelic rock coming of age tale, The Artful Escape.

    Want to submit your own Endless Search, food opinion, or a bit of other nonsense? Feel free to get in touch with the podcast at: [email protected].

    IGN UK Podcast #610: Deathloops and Toffee Hoops

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    Blue Bayou Review

    Blue Bayou premieres in theaters on Sept. 17, 2021.

    Immigration stories told on film are almost always emotional wringers. Even if the person arrives in their new country with relative ease and no trauma, there are the overwhelming issues of acclimation and belonging as shown in Brooklyn and Avalon. Blue Bayou, however, beautifully personalizes a part of the broken immigration system that isn’t talked about nearly as much as others, exposing the plight affecting children adopted from foreign countries, brought to America and then never naturalized by their guardians or adopted parents. Vulnerable to deportation for a myriad of reasons, many are permanently sent back to countries they don’t even remember.

    Writer/director Justin Chon lays out this particular situation through Antonio LeBlanc (played by Chon), a Korean American living in Louisiana. He’s happily married to Kathy (Alicia Vikander), and is a genuinely doting husband to his pregnant wife and a loving stepfather to her young daughter, Jessie (Sydney Kowalske). Covered in ink and riding a motorcycle, Antonio is the fun dad that plays hooky with Jessie and works in a tattoo parlor. But Antonio also can’t catch a break. He’s got two glaring felonies on his record for past crimes that keep him from getting better employment with benefits, so he’s behind on his mounting bills and has a mother-in-law who isn’t impressed.

    Worse yet is Kathy’s ex, Ace (Mark O'Brien). A New Orleans cop who abandoned her and Jessie, he now wants back into their life and is resentful for Antonio taking his place. Those bad feelings are what usher in a cataclysmic downward spiral for Antonio as he’s provoked into a fight that gets him arrested and then picked up by ICE for not being naturalized. Antonio is as shocked as anyone, which leaves him and Kathy scrambling to find the money to pay for a lawyer to make a case for him to stay.

    While the problems stack up on Antonio in an unrelenting fashion, Chon’s naturalistic direction captures the intimate moments of this small family. This window into their relatable world is what keeps the film from sinking into melodrama. We genuinely feel for the emotional wounds left unresolved, and delicately revealed to us, from Antonio’s young life that have followed him into adulthood. We’re allowed to experience the painful spaces Antonio has long kept hidden from himself, and his wife, as he reckons with the trauma inflicted on him by terrible “parents” as an adopted, and then fostered, child.

    His urgent situation to find money and bolster his immigration case creates a tangential friendship with Parker (Linh Dan Pham), a Vietnamese immigrant dying from cancer who comes to Antonio for a tattoo. Pham beautifully infuses Parker with a compassion that paves a path for Antonio to understand his absent heritage and ignite a curiosity for his own roots that no one has ever stoked in him before. It’s played like a needed, graceful lifeline appearing just when both character’s situations are most dire.

    The rest of the core cast is equally impressive. Chon’s Antonio sounds like an authentic boy from the bayou, but he’s not and he knows it as he continues to navigate his otherness from childhood into adulthood. Despite his mistakes, he’s earned love and compassion in his found family of Kathy and Jessie. And both actresses deliver quiet and sincere performances, especially young Kowalske, who takes us on a journey of paternal adoration to heartbreak that culminates in a scene that is so emotionally gutting and shattering that her performance just wrenched the tears out of me.

    Chon’s naturalistic direction captures the intimate moments of this small family.

    If the film stumbles a bit, it’s in the machinations of Ace and his alpha male partner. They both feel overly arch and a tad too convenient in their dogged pursuit of Antonio. Plus, their storyline is the only one where the melodrama feels overly present and layered on a bit too thick. The great compliment about why it doesn’t sit right is that Chon’s film doesn’t need it. The truth of Antonio’s situation, which is a reality for so many real adopted children from foreign countries right now, is harrowing enough to land the movie’s point.

    What Chon is able to convey in Blue Bayou, both emotionally and informationally, is memorable, admirable, and haunting.

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    One Line of Queen’s Gambit Dialogue Leads to $5 Million Netflix Lawsuit

    Netflix has been sued by chess grandmaster Nona Gaprindashvili due to a line of dialogue about her in The Queen's Gambit.

    Gaprindashvili filed a defamation suit against Netflix on Thursday seeking $5 million in damages with more in punitive damages, as well as a demand for the episode to be altered to remove the dialogue, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The dialogue comes from a chess commentator in the show's final episode.

    While talking about the show's fictional lead character, Beth Harmon, the chess commentator says, "The only unusual thing about [Harmon], really, is her sex. And even that’s not unique in Russia. There’s Nona Gaprindashvili, but she’s the female world champion and has never faced men.”

    Gaprindashvili claims she had competitively played chess against 59 males by the time the episode takes place in 1968. 10 of those were reportedly grandmasters. Sure enough, as The New York Times points out, an article was published in The New York Times on April 15, 1968 with the headline "Chess Miss Gaprindashvili Beats 7 Men in a Strong Tourney." Also, the lawsuit mentions that Gaprindashvili is Georgian and not Russian.

    "Netflix brazenly and deliberately lied about Gaprindashvili’s achievements for the cheap and cynical purpose of ‘heightening the drama’ by making it appear that its fictional hero had managed to do what no other woman, including Gaprindashvili, had done," the lawsuit says.

    Netflix replied to the suit by praising Gaprindashvili's accomplishments but pushing back against the lawsuit. "Netflix has only the utmost respect for Ms. Gaprindashvili and her illustrious career, but we believe this claim has no merit and will vigorously defend the case," a Netflix spokesperson said, according to THR.

    The Queen's Gambit was released on Netflix in October 2020. It reportedly appeared in Netflix's U.S. daily top ten rankings more times than almost any other show in 2020. The show is nominated against WandaVision for Outstanding Limited Or Anthology Series at the 2021 Emmy Awards.

    Here's a full list of what's new on Netflix in September 2021 including the final season of Lucifer and a new season of Sex Education.

    Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN.

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    A Deleted Picture of Tom Hardy in a Hat Has Fans Convinced Venom’s Joining the MCU

    Tom Hardy has been spotted wearing a Spider-Man: No Way Home hat, sparking speculation that Venom might soon be joining the MCU.

    Twitter user @MarvlUpdates posted the now-deleted photo of Hardy sporting the baseball cap with the Spider-Man: No Way Home logo on it. The tweet credited the Spider-Man Brasil account for the picture but stated that it originally came by way of director and stunt coordinator Lin Oeding on Instagram. He has reportedly now removed the post from his grid.

    There could be several reasons that Hardy is wearing a No Way Home hat without it necessarily meaning that Venom is headed for the MCU, however, it hasn't stopped fans from speculating over the possibility of Hardy's alien symbiote making an appearance in a future Marvel movie, perhaps even the next Tom Holland-led Spider-Man film.

    One fan pointed out the hat Hardy is pictured wearing is the same one donned by "the cast and crew" of No Way Home whilst another suggested it was a very plausible idea that Venom would be featured amongst the film's rogue's gallery of villains, considering the first trailer teased a team-up of foes from past movies, like Doc Ock and Green Goblin.

    Eddie Brock was previously a part of Sam Raimi's Spider-Man 3 back in 2007. The Marvel villain has since seen his own entirely separate franchise of films, which star Hardy as Brock, but have never crossed over with Holland's take on Spider-Man. Sony has, however, indicated that there is "actually a plan" to connect Sony's Spider-Man Universe to the MCU.

    Sony's comments combined with a dark figure being spotted in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it section of the trailer have only fuelled rumors that Spider-Man's symbiote nemesis could be back to wreak havoc. A number of fans highlighted one particular frame that may show Venom's eye markings, though it could also signal the return of another classic Spidey villain.

    Venom director Ruben Fleischer has said that Sony is "building towards" a confrontation between Tom Hardy's Venom and Tom Holland's Spider-Man, so it's not out of the question that this could be a cameo leading to something bigger. However, fans likely won't find out until No Way Home hits theaters this December.

    Adele Ankers is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.

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    Sega’s Mysterious New RPG Is a Mobile Game With a Non-Linear Story

    Sega released a teaser website and Twitter account for a new mobile RPG, which it plans to reveal during Tokyo Game Show. The RPG will seemingly feature a non-linear story, allowing for player choice.

    The new game so far has a website with a pretty piece of art and a teaser trailer that hasn't been released in English at this time. That teaser confirms the RPG will be a mobile game, and hints at an anime-inflected visual style. The teaser features a quill pen drawing out anime characters and a landscape before various concept art images flash at the end of the teaser, but there's seemingly no gameplay.

    Translated by IGN Japan, a voiceover explains that the (still unannounced) team behind the game wants to make something different to the linear stories prevalent in RPGs, and take inspiration from tabletop RPGs that could take the form of one-off experiences without a set ending. The goal is to release a smartphone RPG where the player gets to decide how the story unfolds through their choices.

    "Not a straight road, Let's make a one-time trip," the tweet reads, according to Google Translate. "#Trueroleplaying. Information ban lifted October 1, 2021 (Friday) 22:50 #TGS2021 online #SEGAnewRPG."

    The teaser and website promise more information will be revealed at Sega's Tokyo Games Show presentation on October 1. Sega's presentation begins at 22:00 JST and ends at 23:50 JST, according to the TGS website. The teaser trailer says this specific game will be revealed at 22:50 JST. We'll be covering the show throughout, so make sure to check back for more information.

    The full Tokyo Games Show 2021 lineup will also include new presentations from Xbox, Square Enix, Capcom, and more. The only other information revealed about Sega's presentation is that Atlus will be involved. There's no confirmation that Atlus worked on the new RPG that Sega is teasing.

    Sega's next major release is Lost Judgment, a sequel to the Yakuza spinoff Judgment. IGN's Lost Judgment review says the game, "disappoints with its main story and simplistic detective work, but excels with its substantial school-based side quests."

    Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN.

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