• Free Guy Cameos: Which Celebrities Appear in Ryan Reynolds’ Video Game Movie?

    Spoilers ahead for Free Guy!

    Director Shawn Levy’s action-comedy Free Guy revolves around Ryan Reynolds’ bank teller Guy, an NPC in a raucous GTA-style, open-world shooter game called Free City who rebels against his programming.

    But while Guy is the focus of the story, Free Guy doesn’t take place wholly within the realm of the video game. The movie sees “real world” characters, such as Jodie Comer’s coder Millie Rusk enter the game as avatars.

    With Free Guy set in both the real world and one where people can hide behind their avatars, the film was ripe for cameos and Easter eggs — and Levy and Reynolds didn’t waste the opportunity to enlist some of their industry pals (among others) to appear in the movie.

    Here are the biggest celebrity cameos in Free Guy, starting with …

    Chris Evans

    The Captain America actor appears as himself for a quick moment. A bearded Evans is in a cafe watching the Free City stream and gives a WTF reaction when he sees Guy wield Cap’s shield against Dude in the final battle.

    Channing Tatum

    The Magic Mike actor — whose involvement in Free Guy actually leaked last year — plays the avatar of Keith, an obnoxious gamer (played by Matty Cardarople). Keith’s avatar is starstruck to meet the in-game celebrity Guy and wants him to plug his stream. Keith, through his avatar, is also in possession of a key bit of digital data that Guy and Molotov Girl/Millie need in order to expose that the code for Free City was stolen.

    Tina Fey

    Fey, who previously starred in director Shawn Levy’s Date Night, voices Vacuuming Mom, the parent of the aforementioned Keith whose vacuuming interrupts his stream.

    Hugh Jackman

    Director Shawn Levy enlisted his Real Steel star to voice Masked Player in Alley, an avatar Molotov Girl seeks out for information — and then kills for asking too many questions. Hugh Jackman and Free Guy star Ryan Reynolds have a faux rivalry on social media where they troll each other, something Jackman was cool enough to do exclusively for IGN in the video below.

    Dwayne Johnson

    The Rock, who co-starred with Ryan Reynolds in Hobbs & Shaw as well as in the upcoming Netflix action movie Red Notice, voices Bank Robber #2 in one of Free Guy’s sequences set in Guy’s place of employment.

    John Krasinski

    The actor-director, a native of Massachusetts where Free Guy was filmed, provides the voice of Silhouetted Gamer.

    Ninja, Pokimane, Lazarbeam, Jacksepticeye, and DanTDM

    The YouTube gaming stars all play themselves at various points throughout the movie.

    Alex Trebek

    The late Jeopardy host plays himself in a “real world” sequence where Free City is one of the categories.

    Lara Spencer

    The co-anchor of ABC's Good Morning America plays herself in the film.

    What did you think of Free Guy? Let us know in the comments. And for more, check out our Free Guy review and Ryan Reynolds’ chat with us on Instagram.

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    Aussie Deals: Up to 85% Off Fighters, Monster (Hunter) Deals, Price-Sliced ACs and More!

    The weekend is upon us! Why not celebrate by gearing up on some (or all) of the following cheap video games? Xbox enthusiasts can score a number of classic, "XOX enhanced" Assassin's entries. PSFolk can nab sexy, price-slashed accessories. Switch faithful can acquire some more Mario adventures. Lastly, the Steam valve has been opened, and a ton of fighting games are in the pipeline for your PC!

    Notable Sales for Nintendo Switch

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    Sign up to get the best Aussie gaming deals sent straight to your inbox!

    Adam's an Aussie deals wrangler who spends too much of his income on the bargains he finds. You can occasionally find him @Grizwords.

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    Star Trek: Lower Decks Creator Mike McMahan on the Three Steps to Bringing Back Legacy Characters

    Slight spoilers for Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2, Episode 1 follow.

    Paramount Plus’ Star Trek: Lower Decks has quickly ascended as a fan favorite among the pantheon of shows in the franchise, and now the 10-episode Season 2 has kicked off with Lower Deckers Mariner, Tendi, Rutherford, and, yes, even Boimler (even though he’s off on the USS Titan now) getting up to more wacky, if very deeply nerdy, antics.

    Creator and showrunner Mike McMahan is always a ton of fun to talk to, not just for his vast knowledge of Star Trek — he’s a fan himself first and foremost — but also because of his deeply considered approach to writing the show, which after all is the first sitcom — and an animated one at that — in Trek history. Still, as funny as the show is, McMahan seems to always have a bigger purpose to the stories he’s telling beyond just going for laughs. I jumped on a call with him recently to discuss Season 2, and we talked about the process behind bringing back legacy characters like Riker and Tom Paris, the canon that he would prefer to avoid on his show, and much more. (And be sure to read our Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2, Episodes 1-5 review.)

    We’ll Always Have (Tom) Paris, or How to Cast Classic Trek Actors

    The trailer for the new season has shown that, as with Season 1 of Lower Decks, we can expect some familiar faces to pop up on and around the USS Cerritos. Whereas last year we got Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Marina Sirtis as Troi, among others, this time around we’re going to see Robert Duncan McNeill’s Tom Paris, of Star Trek: Voyager fame, appear on the show. Or a collector’s plate version of him at least.

    McMahan explains that there are several levers that need to be pulled behind the scenes in order to make a guest appearance of a Trek alumnus like that happen.

    “It's a couple different tiers,” he says. “The first one is, is this worth doing, or is it just going to feel like pandering? Are we using a character because it makes sense? Because I never want it to feel like it's The Muppet Show and they're like Mark Hamill, the guest star of the week! Or like SNL or something that's, like, a football player is here this week! Which is kind of what we're making fun of — a Tom Paris doing the handshake tour, and it's somebody who's walking on and they're all applauding. And at the same time, that's what we do with species. I really wanted to have a Tamarian [the race from the popular TNG episode ‘Darmok’] in the show. So we talked a lot about what does that mean? And the exocomp [from last season], and those are kind of guess star species in a way.”

    I never want it to feel like it's The Muppet Show and they're like Mark Hamill, the guest star of the week!

    Once the writers decide that the character actual merits an appearance or story that makes sense for Lower Decks, the next step is to e-mail Trek HQ, which is franchise uber-producer Alex Kurtzman’s Secret Hideout production company.

    “I'm like, ‘Here's the story area we're doing. Here's the legacy actor we're thinking of using. Are you guys cool with this/can we just double-check that all the other Star Trek shows aren't doing the same thing?’” continues McMahan. “And then the next question is, does the legacy actor want to be on the show? We reach out to them. We explain the episode. We tell them why we want to work with them, and we let them decide. If they're down, then the final step is do we have budget for it?”

    Yes, budget of course also figures into things. And Lower Decks is like any other film or TV production, where sometimes the money can go to a more important aspect of making the show better.

    “It's interesting because if we create a new character, that's a brand new character that [hasn’t] existed in Star Trek,” he says. “There's all sorts of existing character fees and all this sort of stuff. It's fine. We can afford all that, but we stay on budget on Lower Decks. And sometimes it's like, do we want to put this budget into a legacy actor? If it really means something, yes. Otherwise, do we want to make the Cerritos look that much better? It's always that production balance.”

    The Final Frontier… That Star Trek: Lower Decks Won’t Cross

    Star Trek: Lower Decks has established that it is willing to pour on the Trek canon references like no show before it, and Season 2 continues that trend (in Episode 1 alone we get Cardassians, Cardassian lights, a Reliant-type ship, a Gary Mitchell call-out, and more). But McMahan says that it all starts with wanting to do something new.

    “I think every Trek show is wanting to avoid walking down the same path as the Trek shows before them,” he says. “Like TNG didn't want to do the same stories as TOS. And Voyager, I don't understand how they wrote that show because it was like, all right, don't write any stories that feel like TOS, TNG, or Deep Space Nine. And they have to be fresh and new! Because then at least Enterprise jumped back in time [and] that gives them a little bit of a new era to play with.”

    That said, there are some specific plot developments that, really, just seem better untouched too.

    “For me, I think that the things I mostly avoid are stuff like, if you go at warp too much, you start to destroy the fabric of space,” continues McMahan. He’s referring to the TNG episode “Force of Nature” which established that warp drive was damaging space itself. It was an interesting concept, but it also set up a limit to how starships could travel from that point forward in the franchise, and it was basically dropped from future stories.

    There's some TNG episodes that I feel like create such a big canon thing that I kind of dodge around it.

    “There's some TNG episodes that I feel like create such a big canon thing that I kind of dodge around it,” he says. “There was an episode or maybe two about the species that populated the galaxy, and that's why everybody looks like humanoids with weird wrinkly noses. [The episode is called “The Chase.” –Ed] I'm like, yeah, that's fine. Let's just maybe not pay too much attention to that. Temporal Cold War stuff is tough too because [with] time travel … you have to be really careful to not paint yourself into a corner. But other than that, our audience loves everything about Star Trek that you or I might love. So it's pretty much how does our show tell our show's version of those kinds of stories?”

    To Reset or Not to Reset

    Star Trek has been around for 55 years, which put another way is Star Trek has been around for the majority of the history of television. As such, the various Trek shows have evolved in how they tell their stories, starting with the standalone style of TOS where Captain Kirk didn’t even seem to remember the previous week’s adventure most of the time (Edith Keeler who?) and continuing on with TNG and then DS9 in the 1980s and ’90s as more long-form arc storylines were slowly integrated into the format. For McMahan, there’s a balance that needs to be struck between the two forms.

    “You get to have both now,” he says. “You get to have some scenes that are emotional and other scenes that are comedic. Or it's really always totally comedic. But if you’ve tuned into every episode, you're on a journey with the characters as well. And my writers, we love when we're discussing and breaking these episodes. We want to follow our own rules. We want to track these changes with these characters. I never want the audience to be ahead of us.”

    As an example, McMahan cites the dynamic between Tawny Newsome’s Mariner and her mom, the Cerritos’ captain Carol Freeman (Dawnn Lewis). At the end of Season 1, the previously dueling daughter/mother duo decided to work together as partners, which seemingly set up a new dynamic between them for Season 2. But by the start of Episode 1 of the new season, things are already falling apart.

    “The whole audience who knows our show knows that's what they're going to be getting [in Season 2],” he says of Mariner and the captain’s fraying team-up. “So instead, we time-shifted a little bit. Now we're in the middle of them working together and you're already getting to see the friction that's causing instead of having to wait for that to happen. I never want the audience to feel like they're checking their watch for something they know is coming. But Mariner and her mom in Season 2 feels night and day from Mariner and her mom in Season 1. Because there's this character friction access point that they've worked together to get past. Now, Mariner is still bending and breaking rules, and the captain is still getting frustrated with her, but it's coming from a place of them understanding each other a little bit better.”

    For McMahan, that’s the kind of stuff that keeps him coming back for more on Lower Decks.

    “It's those kinds of serialized elements that I really like to write,” he says. “Because then we still get to have fun, and we still get to tell comedic stories. We still get the characters that disagree, but it's not in the same way that we saw before.”

    Talk to Executive Editor Scott Collura on Twitter at @ScottCollura, or listen to his Star Trek podcast, Transporter Room 3. Or do both!

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    Thor: The Dark World Director Recalls ‘Losing the Will To Live As a Director’ After Fan Backlash

    Thor: The Dark World director Alan Taylor says he “lost the will to live as a director” after the negative backlash to the poorly received Thor sequel and later Terminator: Genisys.

    In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Taylor discussed how working on the blockbuster franchises impacted his mental health, as well as how Thor: The Dark World’s narrative and tone changed in post-production.

    “The version I had started off with had more childlike wonder; there was this imagery of children, which started the whole thing,” he says of the unseen “Taylor Cut.” This original version featured a "more magical quality" and that because of the convergence there were some "of these magical realism things," that appeared in the movie.

    Thor: The Dark World was by no means a box office bomb. The sequel earned $644 million globally, but production seemed troubled before Taylor even arrived. Wonder Woman director Patty Jenkins bowed out as director due to script issues, saying she "did not believe that I could make a good movie out of the script that they were planning on doing. It would have looked like it was my fault.”

    Taylor added that he was so affected by directing Thor: The Dark World that his girlfriend recommended he turn down director Terminator: Genisys, but Taylor took the job to similar results as Thor: Dark World: A respectable box office, but backlash from fans.

    “I had lost the will to make movies,” Taylor says. “I lost the will to live as a director. I’m not blaming any person for that. The process was not good for me. So I came out of it having to rediscover the joy of filmmaking.”

    Despite being an Emmy-winning television director for his work on Game of Thrones and The Sopranos, Taylor suggested that a writer-director type like Thor: Ragnarok’s Taika Waititi may have been able to save The Dark World.

    “I really admire the skill set of somebody who can go in with a very personal vision — like [Thor 3 director] Taika Waititi or James Gunn — and manage to combine it with the big corporate demands,” Taylor told THR. “I think my skill set may be different.”

    Marvel has historically had a very controlling relationship with its blockbuster directors, spurring multiple directors to turn down projects due to creative differences. Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson stepped down from directing the sequel in early 2020, and famously Scott Pilgrim and Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright also left Ant-Man due to creative differences.

    Meanwhile, Taylor is directing The Many Saints of Newark, a movie prequel to The Sopranos. You can check out our huge interview with Taylor for his take on the Sopranos and what a young Tony Soprano means for the plot.

    Joseph Knoop is a writer/producer/Christopher Eccleston fanboy for IGN.

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    Nintendo Announced a Bunch of Great Looking Games Coming to Switch – NVC 573

    Welcoooome to Nintendo Voice Chat! From the surprise release of Axiom Verge 2, to the announcement of Loop Hero coming to Switch later this year, the list of great-looking games coming to the Nintendo Switch is longer than ever. Join Seth Macy, Reb Valentine, Brian Altano, and Peer Schneider for this week's episode of Nintendo Voice Chat.

    After discussing Nintendo's Indie World Showcase, they get into the best Metroidvanias (that aren't Metroid or Castlevania).

    NVC is available on your preferred platforms!

    You can also Download NVC 573 Directly Here

    You can listen to NVC on your preferred platform every Thursday at 3pm PT/6pm ET. Have a question for Question Block? Write to us at [email protected] and we may pick your question! Also, make sure to join the Nintendo Voice Chat Podcast Forums on Facebook. We're all pretty active there and often pull Question Block questions and comments straight from the community.

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