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Sarah Shook & The Disarmers Live Preview: 8/15, Robert's Westside, Forest Park
Photo by Jillian Clark
BY JORDAN MAINZER
For Sarah Shook & The Disarmers, Revelations (Abeyance) is, as its title suggests, an album about clarity. Though River Shook had publicly come out as nonbinary before the release of 2022's Nightroamer, their fourth album with longtime band The Disarmers is their first wholly born out of two other weights off their chest: Shook's journey to sobriety and dealing with diagnoses of ADHD and borderline autism spectrum disorder. The output is not necessarily an album about any of that as it is Shook's most empathetic record to date, a result of exercises in songwriting as the means to embrace oneself and others.
Revelations succeeds because its exclaims are simple, as direct as, "We don't need no god to feed each other good" on country rocker "You Don't Get To Tell Me", an argument for each life's inherent value. Sure, there's bad in Shook's world, from the ex who'll be "six circles deeper" in hell than them, or the domestic abuser on "Jane Doe", but Shook spends most of their time focusing on the person on the other end, overcoming despite it all. The haze of Blake Tallent's guitar and thuds of Jack Foster's toms emulate the "black cloud following me around" on the title track, the heavy head of clinical depression in a world subsumed by religion and capitalism. Nevertheless, Shook persists: "I'm done listenin' when the old guard tells me what my word is worth." "I built my life on the edge of a knife when nobody believed that I could," they sing on "You Don't Get To Tell Me".
Further, on "Dogbane", Shook posits that there is growth in the burning. Over a rollicking beat and sprinkled guitars, they sing, "Well it's lookin' like the end of days / If it ain't underwater, it's ablaze / And we got hope and heartache in each gaze." They look back at times of thriving in, or despite, chaos, hooking up on "Backsliders", leaving their ex on "Motherfucker". "When I die and split hell wide, gonna be some sight to see," Shook claims on the latter. Acoustic guitars and Nick Larimore's pedal steel complement Shook's nasal twang that momentarily becomes a yodel when they sing, "Sick to death of you," the very showy moment they promise in the song. Shook's always been an expert presenter of the high and lonesome in classic country, whether through their vocal performance or the versatility and expansiveness of The Disarmers. Revelations is their first album on which the very existence of its songs is a paean to survival.
Sarah Shook & The Disarmers headline Robert's Westside tomorrow night. Local singer-songwriter and Sad Cowgirl of Chicago, Reilly Downes & The Acid Cowboys open. Doors open at 6:30 PM, Downes goes on at 8, and Shook goes on at 9. General admission tickets still available at time of publication.
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#live picks#sarah shook & the disarmers#robert's westside#river shook#blake tallent#revelations#jillian clark#abeyance#the disarmers#jack foster#nick larimore#reilly downes#the acid cowboys#reilly downes & the acid cowboys
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The end of an era: Six cruise productions have officially closed
13 productions (plus two cancelled ones), four and a half years and 103 queens later. A chaotic but iconic era in six history is over.
Candace Furbert, Hazel Karooma-Brooker, Caitlin Tipping, Sophie Golden, Alicia Corrales, Viquichele Cross, Natalie Pilkington, Bryony Duncan, Lori McLare, Jasmine Jia Yung Shen, Kelly Sweeney, Amy Bridges, Jessica Niles, Georgia Carr, Amelia Walker, Liv Alexander, Elizabeth Walker, Jade Marvin, Lucy Aiston, Gabriella Stylianou, Scarlet Gabriel, Rebecca Wickes, Megan Leung, Abbi Hodgson, Sophie-Rose Middleton, Artemis Chrisoulakis, Ellie Sharpe, Melinda Porto, L'Oréal Roaché, Wesley Carpenter, Maya Christian, Brianna Brito Mooney, Meghan Dawson, Marilyn Caserta, Ashlee Waldbauer, Lauren Irving, Danielle Mendoza, Shelby Griswold, Kennedy Monica Carstens, Abigail Sparrow, Jarynn Whitney, Madeline Fansler, Channing Weir, Gabbi Mack, Casey Esbin, Ellie Wyman, Sasha Renae Brown, Nicole Lamb, Aja Simone Baitey, Willow Dougherty, Kayla McSorley, Jessie Bodner, Jasmine Hackett, Janice Rijssel, Lucia Valentino, Elena Breschi, Princess Sasha Victomé, Rae Davenport, Gianna Grosso, Kathryn Kilger, Reca Oakley, Jillian Worthing, Bethany McDonald, Sunayna Smith, Hannah Taylor, Sarah McFarlane, Eden Holmes, Fiorella Bamba, Lucinda Wilson, Haley Izurieta, Caitlyn De Kuyper, Amanda Simone Lee, Gabriella Boumford, Meghan Corbett, Analise Rios, Ruby Gibbs, Cydney Clark, Caroline Siegrist, Eloise Lord, Deirdre Duncan, Audrey Fisher, Lorren Santo-Quinn, Billie Kerr Amelia Atherton, Giulia Marolda, Izzy Formby-Jackson, Laura Blair, Maddison Firth, Emily Harrigan, Kara-Ami McCreanor, Sadie Hurst, Adrianna Glover, Alizé Ke'Aloha Cruz, Kristina Walz, Chelsea Lorraine Wargo, Emily Rose Lyons, Meg Dixon-Brasil, Lois Ellise, Jasmine Smith, Jaelle Laguerre, Kate Zulauf, Brooke Aneece, Hannah Lawton
Plus Gabrielle Davina Smith, Melissa Ford, Kaylah Attard, Fia Houston- Hamilton, Rhiannon Bacchus and Rhiannon Doyle who were set to join Breakaway before lockdown.
#six the musical#six cruises#six bliss#six breakaway#six alternates#did I use a ton of land production photos?#yes I did#and so many points to people who go on cruises and then take high quality six photos#true heroes#for the record this was supposed to post last friday#and tumblr dissapeared it
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John Lee Clark:
"Since then, though, protest has remained the primary mode. Perhaps it’s because Deaf people’s cultures and languages continue to be marginalized. Protest is a worthy, logical response, but it can also be limiting. Instead of the full range of our realities and imaginations, we get drawn into arguments we did not choose for ourselves. For example, “visual music” and “ASL is beautiful” are the two most common tropes in Deaf poetry, working to counter audist notions of deafness and muteness; meanwhile, in real life, Deaf people are busy cooking, videochatting, texting, dating, raising families, and making transactions, not all of them legal. I realized that I needed to write beyond these arguments, not to leave behind our causes or obscure my identity, but to claim more and more space in which we can just be."
Jim Ferris:
"We. I presume, I claim an “us,” even though there are myriad ways of embodying (and denying) disability, and no two disabled people’s experiences are the same. Disabled people are well schooled, whether impairment is acquired early or late, to identify with and aspire to be as much like nondisabled people as possible.
But if we don’t claim our difference, if we don’t write disability, the normies will keep doing it for us. It is crucial that we don’t keep leaving the field to them, even when we love them. Even when they tell us it’s for our own good."
Jillian Weise: "I like John’s point: “We get drawn into arguments we did not choose for ourselves.” Sometimes I feel like I would rather talk about Kathy Acker. But what does the word “disability” mean? Is it useful to me? Can I get some heat from it? I am reminded of what Borges said to his nephew, “If you behave, I’ll give you permission to think of a bear.” Most often, I think about disability when I am asked to think about it. Then I feel an obligation to behave.
[...]
Yes, there is ableism. One able-bodied writer said to me, “Jillian, do you know why we use disabled speakers?” Do tell, Grandmaster. “Because all writers are outsiders and disabled speakers are the most outsider.” Noted. But I also hear this kind of thing: another writer once wrote to me, “I wish your book was not so dominated by disability poems.” And there’s the trap of ableism: disability is for able-bodied writers to write, because it’s easy for them, and they don’t have to think too hard about it, but disabled writers should stay out of it altogether."
John Lee Clark: "I agree with Jillian. Editors really need to start rejecting that kind of bad poetry. But I’m more concerned about what they do reject as “too niche,” “not a fit,” or simply “not poetic material.” Isn’t that funny? They are happy to publish poems with made-up disabled speakers, but these are mainly by poets who aren’t disabled, or, which is sometimes worse, by poets who are disabled but follow the “script.” You get a very good idea of what’s expected of you when editors ask you, “Why don’t you include something about how hard it is to be deaf?” or, “Why don’t you write about the things you miss seeing?” I get tired of explaining that it isn’t hard to be deaf or that I don’t regret becoming blind."
John Lee Clark:
"There’s something amiss — and missing — in publishing. Thirty million Americans are Deaf or hard of hearing. Add to that twenty-two million for the blind slice of the pie, and millions more for other groups — physical disabilities, different kinds of intelligences, and the rest — and what do we have? Nearly a quarter of the total population? Thanks to the capitalist interests driving the medical industries, that number is always growing, as more and more things are targeted as “abnormal” and in need of treatment. Disability is a major, major realm. But you wouldn’t know it from reading literary magazines or any of the “name” anthologies."
Jim Ferris: "How to change that bias? My best answer is to write the poems that you want and need to read, and keep sending stuff out there. (I’m speaking to myself as much as anyone else here.) Because there are editors and publishers and most importantly readers who are open to our work, who want our work, whether they know it before they see it or not. One of my poems is in part about rejecting messages that disabled people get about changing or at least hiding their nonconforming bodies. I have been repeatedly surprised at how powerfully that poem speaks to others who have heard such messages, particularly breast cancer survivors. I had no idea. What a robust reminder that my job is to make these little paper airplanes as well and as beautifully as I can and then sail them out into the breeze. How far they fly, where they land, what happens after they land — this is none of my business, except as it helps me to make the next airplanes better. My work is to make them and sail them — and then make more."
Jillian Weise: "May I talk about a different swindle? I was told there are speakers of poems and I believed it. When I invented disabled speakers I was told, “Those aren’t speakers. That’s you.” With minority writing, then, you don’t get the privilege of yourself. Self is constructed elsewhere. You are expected to be the speaker and represent the minority. Though, as Jim mentions, we’re not recognized as a minority yet. You are expected to be moral and teach. I think this is why Amiri Baraka wrote “Fuck poems / and they are useful.” Or what Laura Hershey meant by “Everything you say will prove something about / their god, or their economic system.”
I think there are certain kinds of disabled poems that some publishers want: the speaker overcomes disability; the speaker’s friend/relative is disabled or diagnosed; the speaker notices a disabled person on the side of the road. I avoid those poems at all costs."
Jennifer Bartlett: "Editors also may fear the considerations of “disability poetry”; real truths about prejudices and studies on the difficulties of the corporeal. No one wants to read that! It’s too scary. What people want to read in terms of disability is the aspect of how awful and difficult it can be. This leads readers to develop empathy (or her naughty sister pity), which is something they can connect with.
I have a current manuscript that questions and pushes the issue of ableism in a direct way. I’ve had a really hard time getting it published. I often am slow to publish, but sometimes I wonder whether the manuscript has been in limbo for so long due to its content. I try to imagine an able-bodied publisher who will publish a book directly challenging ableism. I do not have an answer."
from the article "disability and poetry", an interview with Jennifer Bartlett, John Lee Clark, Jim Ferris, and The Cyborg Jillian Weise, here: x
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@jen_lilley - ✨ Had the best time on the red carpet for A Little Women’s Christmas premiere! 🎄❤️ I’m so grateful to have worked with such an incredible cast—Jillian Murray, Trevor Donovan, Laura Osnes, Julia Reilly, Jesse Hutch, and his sweet, talented daughter, Charlize, making her acting debut as our on-screen daughter, Gladys Knight, and Kyle Kupecky! Shout out to our director Brandon Clark and production team Third Coast film and Brian Bird. 🎬🌟 Plus, I got to see my dear friend Danica McKellar, who has been such a wonderful champion of other actors for years. I truly cherish her support and friendship. 🥰 Can’t wait for you all to catch this heartwarming film on Great American Family on November 23! 📺💫 #ALittleWomensChristmas #GreatAmericanFamily #ChristmasMovies #HolidaySeason
#great american family#great american christmas#danica mckellar#jen lilley#laura osnes#jesse hutch#a little women's christmas
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Project 21 dances I want to see next season
(That is if any of these dancers actually decide to stay)
Duets/Trios (GIVE US DUETS PLEEEEASE):
Berkeley and Bristyn Scifres: 1920s Jazz Duet
Maya and Anya: Contemporary (not to any weird noises please, actual music
Isabella and Diana: Musical Theatre Dance
Olivia, Nyla and Elliana: Hard hitting Jazz Trio
Cali and Sara: Musical Theatre Duet
Makeila and Airi: pretty lyrical Duet
Kendyl, Rylee and Leighton: Any style, Ocpaa reunited
Sammi and Avery: Contemporary Duet
Davyd and Gracyn: Ballroom (?), Idk, I just want them to have a Duet because they seem to be very good friends - also, I'm a fan of lifts hehe
Kenzie, Katie and Kami: Jazz Trio (Y'all I would SCREAM)
Jillian and Sara: Musical Theatre (with a lot of expression 🥹)
Regan, Esme and Isabella: Contemporary trio
Groups:
One with all of the twins
A Talia Flavia group
A Queen/Freddy Mercury Production
A Billy Bell group
A danny lawn group
A group without lead - everyone gets a featured part
Remake of dance like yo daddy (with current minis)
Realistic Studio switches to P21 but probably won't happen:
Addison Paul - PLEASE
Shannon Mather - just checking if anyone is actually still reading
Jordyn Rocket
Realistically unrealistic Studio switches to p21 that definitely won't happen:
Everleigh Soutas - her daily commute might take a tad to long
Cha Cha Shen - she's been at Mather since she could Cha Cha, I don't think that's gonna change
Stella Brinkerhoff
Campbell Clark
Lainey Hess
Madysin Amos
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Superfam Family Tree v8
high quality here
added:
multiple Pa Kent's siblings, golden age Minerva (her parrot almost gave away Clark's identity to everyone), silver age Kendall (tried to buy Clark SEVERAL times because he's so super rich and needs an heir... yep it was weird 😐), bronze age Bert (apparently was an anarchist or a hippie and denied inherited wealth) and his daughter Jillian (was eventually adopted by Kendall), modern age Harry and golden age George (lied for years in letters to his brother about his beautiful son Judd, bc he was jealous of the relationship between John and Clark, and crooks took advantage of this *sigh*). well, i fulfilled George's dream and Mon-El became that son. also the writers were sometimes confused and Kendall and Bert were written as Martha's brothers. oh, and the name of Clark's adoptive grandma comes from the golden age. Sam Kent's previous names were Hiram and Matthew.
house of El. NOT ALL. otherwise my head will immediately explode thinking how to connect another branch with Thara
one issue children, Tommy, Johnny-Jimmy, gosh Clark was the really worst for this poor kid, he didn't even remember his name T_T and Gregor
one issue Lois’ adopted daughter, Little Moon. and this story... hasn't aged well😬
their adopted son Hunter Prince, Diana's bio son from another alternate future
Karen's magical fucking pregnancy. from the time when she was still considered Atlantean, not Kryptonian. wild bullshit worthy of being in the same trash can as Carol Danvers' pregnancy. i hate these stories soooo much
#yep i keep playing with the tree#superfam#family tree#dc#clark kent#kon el#conner kent#lois lane#linda danvers#chris kent#jon kent#kara zor-el#lex luthor#matrix#supergirl#superboy#laney kent#lana lang#natasha irons#john henry irons#cir-el#karen starr#power girl#mon-el#jim harper#otho-ra#osul-ra#bizarro#ariella kent#lena luthor
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still thinking abt how i think we found the npc in lostwing voiced by stewart clark and im like 'wait talk to him again i think thats dions voice' and jillian just 'huh. ive never heard dions voice before but i did think that npc was oddly breathy and depressed'
#also i forgot belanus tor was after garuda somehow#i screamed like my team won the superbowl#and baha didnt even fight for two whole minutes#brihamut's mercy
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Kingdom Hearts IV predictions:
Kairi is the leader of a team consisting of Riku, Terra, Aqua, Ventus, Roxas, Xion, Lea, Naminé, Hayner, Pence, Olette, and Chirithy.
Sora’s mother returns.
While Donald and Goofy revisit the old worlds, Sora visits all of the new ones.
The inhabitants of each world returning from the previous games are, of course, thrilled to see Donald and Goofy again, but are sad to hear about Sora’s sacrifice.
Cast:
Haley Joel Osment as Sora
Lindsay Jones as Strelitzia
James Patrick Stuart as Luxu
Ray Chase as Master of Masters
Tony Anselmo as Donald Duck
Bill Farmer as Goofy Goof
Bret Iwan as King Mickey Mouse
Alyson Stoner as Kairi
David Gallagher as Riku
Jason Dohring as Terra
Willa Holland as Aqua
Jesse McCartney as Ventus
Jesse McCartney as Roxas
Alyson Stoner as Xion
Quinton Flynn as Lea
Meaghan J. Martin as Naminé
Zachary Gordon as Hayner
Tristian Chase as Pence
Ashley Boettcher as Olette
Lara Jill Miller as Chirithy
Susanne Blakeslee as Maleficent
Jim Cummings as Pete
Joe Ochman as Jiminy Cricket
Kaitlyn Robrock as Queen Minnie Mouse
Tress MacNeille as Daisy Duck
Corey Burton as Chip
Tress MacNeille as Dale
Enn Reitel as Scrooge McDuck
Danny Pudi as Huey
Ben Schwartz as Dewey
Bobby Moynihan as Louis
Jeff Bennett as Merlin
Corey Burton as Yen Sid
Bill Farmer as Pluto
Kathryn Beaumont as Kairi’s Grandma
David Dayan Fisher as Dilan
Dave Boat as Aeleus
Robin Atkin Downes as Luxord
Kirk Thornton as Isa
Derek Stephen Prince as Even
Vincent Corazza as Ienzo
Ryan O’Donohue as Demyx
Michael Johnston as Ephemer
Madison Davenport as Nameless Star
Kath Soucie as Sora’s Mother
Isabela Merced as Foreteller Ava
Kevin Quinn as Foreteller Gula
Travis Willingham as Foreteller Aced
Matt Mercer as Foreteller Ira
Karissa Lee Staples as Foreteller Invi
Corey Burton as Ansem the Wise
Dylan Sprouse as Yozora
Square Enix Cast:
Doug Erholtz as Leon
Cody Christian as Cloud Strife
Andrea Bowen as Aerith Gainsborough
Britt Baron as Tifa Lockhart
Mae Whitman as Yuffie Kisaragi
Tyler Hoechlin as Sephiroth
Chris Edgerly as Cid Highwind
Hedy Burress as Yuna
Tara Strong as Rikku
Gwendoline Yeo as Paine
Will Friedle as Seifer Almasy
Brandon Adams as Rai
Jillian Bowen as Fuu
Crispin Freeman as Setzer Gabbiani
Melissa Disney as Vivi Ornitier
Shaun Fleming as Tidus
Molly Keck as Selphie Tilmitt
Dee Bradley Baker as Wakka
Matt McKenzie as Auron
Atlantica (The Little Mermaid)
Takes place after The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea.
Cast:
Jodi Benson as Ariel
Christopher Daniel Barnes as Eric
Cam Clarke as Flounder
Philip Lawrence as Horatio Felonious Ignacious Crustaceous Sebastian
Chris Edgerly as Scuttle
Jim Cummings as King Triton
Tara Strong as Melody
Kari Wahlgren as Attina
Jennifer Hale as Alana
Tara Strong as Adella
Grey DeLisle as Aquata
Grey DeLisle as Arista
Tara Strong as Andrina
Michael J. Gough as Grimsby
Grey DeLisle as Carlotta
Ben Diskin as Chef Louis
Max Casella as Tip
Corey Burton as Dash
Jeff Bennett as Benjamin
Kevin Michael Richardson as Ray-Ray
Kevin Michael Richardson as Cheeks
Rob Paulsen as Ink Spot
Jim Cummings as Shelbow
Charlie Adler as Seahorse
Kari Wahlgren, Jennifer Hale, Tara Strong, & Grey DeLisle as Flounder’s Guppies
Frank Welker as Max
Village (Beauty and the Beast)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Julie Nathanson as Belle
Robby Benson as Adam
Corey Burton as Maurice
Jeff Bennett as Lumière
Jane Krakowski as Mrs. Potts
Bob Joles as Henry Cogsworth
Jessica DiCicco as Chip Potts
Jo Anne Worley as Madame de la Grande Bouche
Kimmy Robertson as Fifi
Frank Welker as Philippe
Frank Welker as Sultan
Agrabah (Aladdin)
Takes place after Aladdin and the King of Thieves.
Cast:
Scott Weinger & Brad Kane (singing) as Aladdin
Jim Meskimen as the Genie
Linda Larkin & Liz Callaway (singing) as Jasmine
Jeff Bennett as Sultan Hamed Bobolonius II
Brian Hull as Iago
John Rhys-Davies as Cassim
Jim Cummings as Razoul
Frank Welker as Abu
Frank Welker as Cave of Wonders
Frank Welker as Rajah
Pride Lands (The Lion King)
Takes place between The Lion King and The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride.
Cast:
Cam Clarke as Simba
Vanessa Marshall as Nala
Kevin Schon as Timon
Ernie Sabella as Pumbaa
Khary Payton as Rafiki
Jeff Bennett as Zazu
Gary Anthony Williams as Mufasa
James Horan as Scar
Andy’s Room (Toy Story)
Takes place between Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3.
Cast:
Jim Hanks as Woody
Mike MacRae as Buzz Lightyear
Kathryn Cressida as Jessie
Wallace Shawn as Rex
John Ratzenberger as Hamm
Blake Clark as Slinky Dog
Patrick Fraley as Mr. Potato Head
Melissa Sternenberg as Mrs. Potato Head
Sawyer Cole as Andy Davis
Laurie Metcalf as Andy’s Mom
Hannah Unkrich as Molly Davis
Jeff Pidgeon as Aliens
Frank Welker as Bullseye
La Cité des Cloches (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Ari Rubin as Quasimodo
Renee Faia & Heidi Mollenhauer (singing) as Esmeralda
Phil LaMarr as Captain Phoebus
Jim Cummings as Victor
Jason Alexander as Hugo
Pat Lentz as Laverne
Paul Kandel as Clopin
Corey Burton as Brutish Guard
Bill Fagerbakke as Oafish Guard
Frank Welker as Djali
Thebes/Olympus/Underworld (Hercules)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Tate Donovan as Hercules
Robert Costanzo as Philoctetes
James Woods as Hades
Susan Egan as Megara
Corey Burton as Zeus
Bobcat Goldthwait as Pain
Matt Frewer as Panic
Jim Cummings as Amphitryon
Barbara Barrie as Alcmene
Samantha Eggar as Hera
Wayne Knight as Demetrius
Lillias White as Calliope, Muse of Epics
Cheryl Freeman as Melpomene, Muse of Tragedy
LaChanze as Terpsichore, Muse of Dance
Roz Ryan as Thalia, Muse of Comedy
Vaneese Y. Thomas as Clio, Muse of History
Paul Shaffer as Hermes
Keith David as Apollo
Lisa Kudrow as Aphrodite
Frank Welker as Pegasus
The Land of Dragons (Mulan)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Ming-Na Wen & Lea Salonga (singing) as Fa Mulan
B.D. Wong & Donny Osmond (singing) as Li Shang
Mark Moseley as Mushu
Harvey Fierstein as Yao
Gedde Watanabe & Matthew Wilder (singing) as Ling
Jerry Tondo as Chien-Po
James Hong as Chi-Fu
Jet Li as Fa Zhou
George Takei as First Ancestor
Sandra Oh as Fa Li
Benedict Wong as General Li
Wang Deshun as Emperor of China
Lisa Lu as Grandmother Fa
Frank Welker as Cri-Kee
Frank Welker as Kahn
Ant Island/Bug City (A Bug’s Life)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Dave Foley as Flik
Andrew Stanton as Hopper
Jodi Benson as Princess Atta
Alma Versano as Princess Dot
June Squibb as the Queen
Richard Kind as Molt
David Hyde Pierce as Slim
Flula Borg as Heimlich
Nick Jameson as Francis
Jim Cummings as Manny
Jennifer Hale as Gypsy
Bonnie Hunt as Rosie
Michael McShane as Tuck
Michael McShane as Roll
John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea
Brad Garrett as Dim
Corey Burton as Mr. Soil
Grey DeLisle as Dr. Flora
Marc Maron as Thorny
David Ossman as Cornelius
Frank Welker as Thumper
Jacob Tremblay as Ant Boy 1
Jessica DiCicco as Ant Boy 2
Andrew Stanton as Fly Brother 1
Jess Harnell as Fly Brother 2
Carlos Alazraqui as Loco
John DiMaggio as Axel
Kevin Schon as Slick
Miles Luna as Bug Zapper Fly
Andrew Stanton as Harry
Sabrina Fest as Daisy
Mariel Sheets as Grub
Ashley Tisdale as Lead Blueberry Scout
Melissa Sternenberg as Bar Waitress
Rodger Bumpass as Mosquito
Jess Harnell as Bus Beetle
Brad Hall as Grasshopper 1
Jeff Pidgeon as Grasshopper 2
Lee Unkrich as Ant 1
Bill Farmer as Ant 2
Dave Fennoy as Thud
J. Michael Tatum as Bouncer Wasp
Debi Derryberry as Baby Maggots
Bob Bergen as Aphie
Deep Jungle (Tarzan)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Tony Goldwyn as Tarzan
Olivia d’Abo as Jane Porter
Susanne Blakeslee as Kala
April Winchell as Terk
Jim Cummings as Tantor
Jeff Bennett as Archimedes Q. Porter
Monstropolis (Monsters, Inc.)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Christopher Swindle as James P. Sullivan
Carlos Alazraqui as Mike Wazowski
Mary Gibbs as Boo
Jennifer Tilly as Celia Mae
John Ratzenberger as Yeti
Bob Peterson as Roz
Christopher Swindle as Jeff Fungus
Stephen Stanton as Needleman
Stephen Stanton as Smitty
Bonnie Hunt as Ms. Flint
Regan Burns as Jerry Slugsworth
Stephen Stanton as George Sanderson
Christopher Swindle as Thaddeus “Phlegm” Bile
Phil Proctor as Charlie Proctor
Gregg Berger as Peter “Claws” Ward
Roger Craig Smith, Pete Docter, & Teddy Newton as Child Detection Agents
Great Barrier Reef/Deep Ocean/Marine Life Institute (Finding Nemo)
Takes place after Finding Dory.
Cast:
Jess Harnell as Marlin
Jennifer Hale as Dory
Tara Strong as Nemo
Ed O’Neill as Hank
Kaitlin Olson as Destiny
J.P. Karliak as Bailey
Eugene Levy as Charlie
Jen Brown as Jenny
Willem Dafoe as Gill
Brad Garrett as Bloat
Allison Janney as Peach
Austin Pendleton as Gurgle
Stephen Root as Bubbles
Vicki Lewis as Deb (& Flo)
Jerome Ranft as Jacques
Andrew Stanton as Crush
Grey DeLisle as Squirt
Idris Elba as Fluke
Dominic West as Rudder
Geoffrey Rush as Nigel
Bob Peterson as Mr. Ray
Jess Harnell as Bruce
Eric Bana as Anchor
Bruce Spence as Chum
Torbin Xan Bullock as Gerald
Katherine Ringgold as Chickenfish
Torbin Xan Bullock as Becky
Andrew Stanton as Seagulls
Metroville/Nomansian Island (The Incredibles)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Craig T. Nelson as Bob Parr/Mr. Incredible
Holly Hunter as Helen Parr/Elastigirl
Jason Lee as Buddy Pine/Syndrome
Norma Maldonado as Mirage
Sarah Vowell as Violet Parr
Gillian Jacobs as Dash Parr
Brad Bird as Edna Mode (E)
Philip Lawrence as Lucius Best/Frozone
Jonathan Banks as Rick Dicker
Mark Andrews, Brad Lewis, Pete Docter, Peter Sohn, Andrew Stanton, & Jeff Pidgeon as Syndrome’s Guards
Eli Fucile, Maeve Andrews, & Nicolas Bird as Jack-Jack Parr
Bret Parker as Kari McKeen
Michael Bird as Tony Rydinger
Kimberly Adair Clark as Honey Best
Teddy Newton as Manta Jet Computer
Frank Thomas as Frank
Ollie Johnston as Ollie
Teddy Newton as Robot Bird
Nicolas Bird as Rusty McCallister
Radiator Springs/Rusteze-Dinoco Racing Center/Fireball Beach/Thunder Hollow/Thomasville/Florida International Speedway (Cars)
Takes place after Cars 3.
It isn’t combat based. Missions include keeping up with McQueen’s top speed by racing down Radiator Springs’ main street, learning how to turn right to go left at Willy’s Butte, keeping up with Cruz’s top speed on Fireball Beach, avoiding pushy competitors with the Thunder Hollow challengers, and practicing with Cruz at Thomasville, culminating in the Piston Cup race at Florida International Speedway, where the objective is to win against Jackson Storm.
Sora enters the world as a custom-made sports coupe mixing a few real-life sports car models before visits to Luigi’s Casa Della Tires and Ramone’s House of Body Art end with him modified into a next-gen race car sponsored by Dinoco (with Tex’s blessing) and with Cruz’s number.
It’s set during Cruz’s first Piston Cup racing season, so McQueen still has Doc’s colors and spends the Florida race as Sora’s crew chief.
As Sora finishes his story, Mater is certainly unhappy with Xehanort’s actions forcing Sora’s hand. “That dad-gum Xehanort”, he says angrily. Extra points if Sora doesn’t get to the part where Xehanort is dead, then Sarge gets in his face and demands him to teach Xehanort a lesson when he gets back in a militaristic manner. “Is that understood,” Sarge yells. Then Sora tries to correct him, but gets cut off and asked again, “Is that understood,” and has to respond, “Sir, yes, sir!”
Of course, during the top speed races, Luigi is the one to signal the race to begin.
In the Radiator Springs race, Sora’s top speed is tracked by Sheriff’s speed radar, and on Fireball Beach, it’s via Cruz’s personal assistant, Hamilton.
If you fail the “Turn Right to go Left” mission, Sora goes flying into the bed of cacti, and Mater fishes him out.
I know I’ll get hate for this, but Cars 2 elements are here. Heck, maybe Mater can’t be present most for the training because he’s busy with Finn and Holley. After all, does he still owe Holley a first date?
I wanted the player character in this world to be Kairi just so Storm can feel the embarrassment of losing to not one, but two “costume girls”.
The Piston Cup race is announced as a 500-lap race, but no game developer is that malicious to force the player to race 500 laps around an oval, so they’d take after the first Cars game and make it twelve laps with the sun slowly lowering throughout the race.
Cast:
Keith Ferguson as Lightning McQueen
Cristela Alonzo as Cruz Ramirez
Larry the Cable Guy as Sir Tow Mater
Chris Cooper as Smokey
Bonnie Hunt as Sally Carrera
Tony Shalhoub as Luigi
Guido Quaroni as Guido
John Ratzenberger as Mack
Lloyd Sherr as Fillmore
Paul Dooley as Sarge
Cheech Marin as Ramone
Jenifer Lewis as Flo
Michael Wallis as Sheriff
Laraine Newman as Lizzie
Jerome Ranft as Red
A.J. Hamilton as Jackson Storm
Kerry Washington as Natalie Certain
Martin Jarvis as Finn McMissile
Emily Mortimer as Holley Shiftwell
Nathan Fillion as Sterling
Wendie Malick as Louise “Barnstormer” Nash
Kevin Michael Richardson as River Scott
Jason Douglas as Junior “Midnight” Moon
Teresa Gallagher as Mater’s Computer
Bob Peterson as Chick Hicks
Lea DeLaria as Miss Fritter
Humpy Wheeler as Tex Dinoco
Lewis Hamilton as Hamilton
Bob Costas as Bob Cutlass
Darrell Waltrip as Darrell Cartrip
Richard Petty as Strip “The King” Weathers
Ray Evernham as Ray Reverham
Madeleine McGraw as Maddy McGear
Shannon Spake as Shannon Spokes
Kyle Petty as Cal Weathers
Corey Burton & Paul Newman (archived recordings) as Doc Hudson
A.J. Riebli III as McQueen’s Biggest Fan
Steve Purcell as Tractors
Lori Alan as Millie
Michel Michelis as Tomber
Jason Isaacs as Siddeley
Vanessa Redgrave as the Queen
Joe MacDonald as Stephenson
Christopher Sabat as Prince Wheeliam
Andra Day as Sweet Tea
Angel Oquendo as Bobby Swift
Will Collyer as Brick Yardley
Jeremy Maxwell as Arvy Motorhome
Bob Peterson as Dr. Damage
Will Collyer as Roscoe
Peter Sohn as Mr. Drippy
Patrick Rodriguez as Taco
Anthony Sardinha as Jimbo
Andrew Stanton as T-Bone
Jessie James Grelle as APB
Jessica Nigri as Blind Spot
Kaiji Tang as Pushover
Jen Taylor as Tailgate
Barbara Dunkelman as Cigalert
Dustin Matthews as Fishtail
Kyle Phillips as Broadside
Maggie Tominey as Patty
Tyler Coe as Bill
Brendan Blaber as Pileup
Lindsay Jones as High Impact
Jason Pace as Faregame
Tiana Camacho as Airborne
Django Craig as Superfly
Jen Brown as Jambalaya Chimichanga
Samantha Ireland as Liability
Gus Sorola as Hit
Christopher Guerrero as Run
Alex Mai as Todd
Daniel Suárez as Danny Swervez
Ryan Blaney as Ryan “Inside” Laney
Bubba Wallace as Bubba Wheelhouse
Chase Elliott as Chase Racelott
Kerry Shawcross as Tim Treadless
Corey Krueger as Rich Mixon
Zeno Robinson as Cam Spinner
Alejandro Saab as H.J. Hollis
Adam Ellis as Ed Truncan
Burnie Burns as Herb Curbler
Miles Luna as Aaron Clocker
Garrett Hunter as Harvey Rodcap
Michael Jones as J.D. McPillar
Yuri Lowenthal as Flip Dover
Kyle Taylor as Barry DePedal
Blaine Gibson as Steve LaPage
Aaron Marquis as Conrad Camber
Gavin Free as Sheldon Shifter
Flynt Flossy as Paul Conrev
Travis Willingham as Michael Rotor
Ben Schwartz as Ritchie Gunzit
Nick Landis as Eric Braker
Neath Oum as Spikey Fillups
Connor Pickens as Chris Roamin’
Clifford Chapin as Dan Carcia
Scott Frerichs as Jonas Carvers
Howard Wang as Jim Reverick
Dustin Matthews as George New-Win
Eric Baudour as Noah Gocek
Aaron Dismuke as Will Rusch
Todd Womack as M. Fast Fong
Mick Lauer as Nick Shift
Richard Norman as J.P. Drive
Christopher Wehkamp as Tom W.
Aaron Dismuke as Sudeep
Grant George as Krzysztof
Bryce Papenbrook as Shiriam
Django Craig as Kurt
Carlos Alazraqui as Ronald
Todd Haberkorn as Junyi
Harvey Guillén as Gabriel
Angel Oquendo as Aiden
Michael Malconian as Jae
Robbie Daymond as Ernesto
Anna Hullum as Melissa Bernabrake
Jason Rose as Pat Traxson
Kara Eberle as Laura Spinwell
Anairis Quiñones as Gale Beaufort
Paris/Gusteau’s Restaurant (Ratatoullie)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Patton Oswalt as Remy
Brian George as Chef Skinner
Lou Romano as Alfredo Linguini
Travis Willingham as Django
Peter Sohn as Emile
Corey Burton as Anton Ego
Brad Garrett as Auguste Gusteau
Janeane Garofalo as Colette Tatou
Will Arnett as Horst
Julius Callahan as Lalo
James Remar as Larousse
John Ratzenberger as Mustafa
Teddy Newton as Talon Labarthe
Tony Fucile as Health Inspector
Julius Callahan as Francois
Tony Fucile as Pompidou
Jake Steinfield as Git
Brad Bird as Ambrister Minion
Brad Lewis, Lindsay Collins, & Lori Richardson as Rats
New Orleans (The Princess and the Frog)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Anika Noni Rose as Tiana
Bruno Campos as Prince Naveen
Keith David as Dr. Facilier
Michael-Leon Wooley as Louis
Jennifer Cody as Charlotte La Bouff
Jim Cummings as Raymond
Peter Bartlett as Lawrence
Jenifer Lewis as Mama Odie
Debra Wilson as Eudora
Brian Cummings as Eli “Big Daddy” La Bouff
Ritchie Montgomery as Reggie
Dave Fouquette as Darnell
Paul Briggs as Two Fingers
Jerry Kernion as Mr. Henry Fenner
Corey Burton as Mr. Harvey Fenner
Michael Colyar as Buford
Emeril Lagasse as Marlon the Gator
Kevin Michael Richardson as Ian the Gator
Randy Newman as Cousin Randy
Danielle Moné Truitt as Georgia
Kelly Hoover as Stella
Kwesi Boakye as Newspaper Boy
Mick Wingert as Travis
Jennifer Kilger as Swooning Girl
Phil Proctor as Cajun Firefly
Seth R. Williamson as Prince Ralphie
Kingdom of Corona (Tangled)
Takes place after the movie.
Can we have a reprise of I’ve Got a Dream, and now Sora gets a chance to share his dream, to return to his friends?
Cast:
Kelsey Lansdowne as Rapunzel Fitzherbert
Zachary Levi as Eugene Fitzherbert
Kari Wahlgren as Queen Ariana
Clancy Brown as King Frederic
M.C. Gainey as Captain of the Guard
Brad Garrett as Hook Hand
Chris Marlow as Big Nose
Paul F. Tompkins as Shorty
Charles Halford as Vladimir
Stephen Stanton as Attila Buckethead
Ron Perlman as Sideburns Stabbington
Brian Hull as Patchy Stabbington
Bob Bergen as Pascal
Nathan Greno as Maximus
DunBroch (Brave)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Kelly Macdonald as Merida
Billy Connolly as Fergus
Emma Thompson as Elinor
Susanne Blakeslee as the Witch
David Tennant as Lord Dingwall
Kevin McKidd as Lord MacGuffin
Craig Ferguson as Lord Macintosh
Michelle Gomez as Maudie
Peigi Barker as Young Merida
Kevin McKidd as Young MacGuffin
Steven Cree as Young Macintosh
Steve Purcell as the Crow
Callum O’Neill as Wee Dingwall
Patrick Doyle as Martin
John Ratzenberger as Gordon
Game Central Station (Wreck-it Ralph)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Brian T. Delaney as Wreck-it Ralph
Sarah Silverman as Vanellope Von Schweetz
Jack McBrayer as Fix-it Felix Jr.
Jane Lynch as Sergeant Tamora Calhoun
Ed O’Neill as Mr. Stan Litwak
Rich Moore as Sour Bill
Maurice LaMarche as Tapper
Dennis Haysbert as General Hologram
Raymond S. Persi as Mayor Gene
Melissa Villaseñor as Taffyta Muttonfudge
Brandon Scott as Kohut
Grey DeLisle as Mary
Skylar Astin as Roy
Don Fullilove as Nolan
Rachael Harris as Deanna
Jess Harnell as Don
Jen Brown as Nell
Jason Douglas as J. Norwood
Pamela Adlon as Lucy
Grey DeLisle as Meg
Katie Lowes as Candlehead
Jamie Elman as Rancis Fluggerbutter
Adam Carolla as Wynnchel
Chris Pratt as Duncan
Josie Trinidad as Jubileena Bing-Bing
Cymbre Walk as Crumbelina Di Caramello
Bella Blanding as Snowanna Rainbeau
Jaeden White as Swizzle “The Swizz” Malarkey
Sawyer Cole as Gloyd Orangeboar
Suzie Yeung as Minty Zaki
Romi Dames as Adorabeezle Winterpop
Josie Trinidad as Citrusella Flugpucker
Suzie Yeung as Torvald Batterbutter
Suzie Yeung as Sticky Whipplesnit
Romi Dames as Nougetsia Brumblestain
Tucker Gilmore as Sugar Rush Announcer
Phil Johnston as Surge Protector
Arendelle (Frozen)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Kristen Bell as Anna
Idina Menzel as Elsa
Jonathan Groff as Kristoff
Josh Gad as Olaf
Frank Welker as Sven
Ciarán Hinds as Grandpabbie
Chris Williams as Oaken
Stephen J. Anderson as Kai
Maia Wilson as Bulda
Rebecca Mader as Gurda
Robert Pine as Bishop
Paul Briggs as Marshmallow
Lewis Cleale as Cliff
Jack Whitehall as Gothi
Annie Lopez as Baby Troll
San Fransokyo (Big Hero 6)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Ryan Potter as Hiro Hamada
Scott Adsit as Baymax
Brooks Wheelan as Fred Fredrickson
Damon Wayans Jr. as Wasabi No Ginger
Jamie Chung as Ethel “Go Go Tomago”
Génesis Rodríguez as Honey Lemon
Maya Rudolph as Cass Hamada
James Cromwell as Robert Callaghan
Alan Tudyk as Allistair Krei
Katie Lowes as Abigail Callaghan
David Shaughnessy as Heathcliff
Daniel Henney as Tadashi Hamada
Riley’s Mind/Mindscape (Inside Out)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Kate Higgins as Joy
Phyllis Smith as Sadness
Lewis Black as Anger
Jason J. Lewis as Fear
Ashley Adler as Disgust
Kaitlyn Dias as Riley Andersen
Diane Lane as Jill Andersen (Mom)
Kyle MacLachlan as Bill Andersen (Dad)
Pete Docter as Dad’s Anger
Carlos Alazraqui as Dad’s Fear
Josh Cooley as Dad’s Fear
Patrick Seitz as Dad’s Joy
J.P. Karliak as Dad’s Disgust
Lori Alan as Mom’s Sadness
Paula Pell as Mom’s Anger
Laraine Newman as Mom’s Fear
Sherry Lynn as Mom’s Joy
Mona Marshall as Mom’s Disgust
Zootopia (Zootopia)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Ginnifer Goodwin as Judy Hopps
Jason Bateman as Nick Wilde
Idris Elba as Chief Bogo
Jenny Slate as Dawn Bellwether
Nate Torrence as Benjamin Clawhauser
Bonnie Hunt as Bonnie Hopps
Don Lake as Stu Hopps
Tommy Chong as Yax
J.K. Simmons as Theodore Lionheart
Octavia Spencer as Mrs. Otterton
Alan Tudyk as Duke Weaselton
Allison Trujillo Strong & Shakira (singing) as Gazelle
Raymond S. Persi as Flash
Maurice LaMarche as Mr. Big
Phil Johnston as Gideon Gray
John DiMaggio as Jerry Jumbeaux Jr.
Katie Lowes as Dr. Madge Honey Badger
Gita Reddy as Nangi
Jesse Corti as Mr. Manchas
Kevin Michael Richardson as Finnick
Josh Dallas as Frantic Pig
Leah Latham as Fru Fru
Rich Moore as Doug
Kath Soucie as Young Nick
Peter Mansbridge as Peter Moosebridge
Byron Howard as Bucky Oryx-Antlerson
Jared Bush as Pronk Oryx-Antlerson
Mark “Rhino” Smith as Officer McHorn
John Lavelle as Mouse Foreman
Kristen Bell as Priscilla
Jackson Stein as Junior Ranger Scout Bully
Rich Moore as Larry
David Thibodeau as Gary
Fabienne Rawley as Fabienne Growley
John DiMaggio as Jesse
John DiMaggio as Woolter
Zach King as Muzzled Wolf
Cissy Jones as Officer Francine
Raymond S. Persi as Officer Higgins
Fabinne Rawley as Jumbeaux Café Customer
John DiMaggio as Parking Ticket Moose
Melissa Goodwin Shepard as Parking Ticket Mouse
Madeleine Curry as Parking Ticket Hippo Daughter
Brendan Blaber as Beaver Reporter
Kaiji Tang as Sheep Reporter
John DiMaggio as Pig Reporter
Bonnie Hunt as Oryx Reporter
Selah Victor as Rabbit Reporter
J. Michael Tatum as Pig Peace Rally Protester
Jen Taylor as Leopard Peach Rally Protester
Tiana Camacho as Carrot Customer
John DiMaggio as Sheep Officer
Motunui/The Great Oceans (Moana)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Auli’i Cravalho as Moana
Dwayne Johnson as Maui
Rachel House as Gramma Tala
Temuera Morrison & Christopher Jackson (singing) as Chief Tui
Jemaine Clement as Tamatoa
Nicole Scherzinger as Sina
Alan Tudyk as Heihei
Oscar Kightley as Fisherman
Troy Polamalu as Villager 1
Puanani Cravalho as Villager 2
Alan Tudyk as Villager 3
Land of the Dead/Santa Cécilia (Coco)
Takes place during the movie.
Cast:
Anthony Gonzalez as Miguel Rivera
Gael García Bernal as Papá Héctor Rivera
Benjamin Bratt & Antonio Sol (singing) as Ernesto de la Cruz
Alanna Ubach as Mamá Imelda Rivera
Renée Victor as Abuelita Elena Rivera
Jaime Camil as Enrique Rivera (Papá)
Alfonso Arau as Papá Julio Rivera
Herbert Sigüenza as Tío Óscar Rivera
Herbert Sigüenza as Tío Felipe Rivera
Gabriel Iglesias as Clerk
Lombardo Boyar as Plaza Mariachi
Lombardo Boyar as Gustavo
Ana Ofelia Murguía as Mamá Coco Rivera
Natalia Cordova-Buckley as Frida Kahlo
Selene Luna as Tía Rosita Rivera
Edward James Olmos as Chicharrón
Sofía Espinosa as Luisa Rivera (Mamá)
Carla Medina as Departures Agent
Dyana Ortelli as Tía Victoria Rivera
Luis Valdez as Tío Berto Rivera
Luis Valdez as Don Hidalgo
Blanca Araceli as Emcee
Salvador Reyes as Security Guard
Cheech Marin as Corrections Officer
Octavio Solís as Arrivals Agent
John Ratzenberger as Juan Ortodoncia
Denise Blasor as Ceci
Libertad García Fonzi as Young Coco
Juan Carlos Tinoco as de la Cruz’s Security Guards
Carla Medina as Tía Gloria Rivera
Montse Hernandez as Rosa Rivera
Polo Rojas as Abel Rivera
Maite Perroni as Arrivals and Departures P.A.
Ricardo Bautista as Battle of the Bands Stagehand
Emilio Fuentes as Sunrise Spectacular Stagehand
Carlos Becerril as Sunrise Spectacular Emcee
Trujo as Policeman
Rosalba Sotelo as Dead Mother
Erica Edwards as Tía Chelo
Miguel Ángel Ruiz as T-Shirt Seller
Emmanuel Bernal as Gustavo’s Band Trumpeter
Lee Unkrich as Skeleton with Corn
Emmanuel Bernal as Héctor’s Cousin
Kumandra (Raya and the Last Dragon)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Kelly Marie Tran as Raya
Awkwafina as Sisu
Gemma Chan as Namaari
Izaac Wang as Boun
Benedict Wong as Tong
Thalia Tran as Noi
Daniel Dae Kim as Chief Benja
Sandra Oh as Chieftess Virana
Alan Tudyk as Tuk Tuk
Lucille Soong as Dang Hu
Dichen Lachman as General Atitãya
Sung Kang as Dang Hai
Ross Butler as Spine Chief
Dumbfoundead as Chai
Dichen Lachman as Spine Warrior
François Chau as Kahn
Sierra Katow as Fang Officer
The Encanto (Encanto)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Stephanie Beatriz as Mirabel Madrigal
María Cecilia Botero & Olga Merediz (singing) as Abuela Alma Madrigal
John Leguizamo as Bruno Madrigal
Jessica Darrow as Luisa Madrigal
Diane Guerrero as Isabela Madrigal
Angie Cepeda as Julieta Madrigal
Demián Bichir as Agustín Madrigal
Carolina Gaitán as Pepa Madrigal
Mauro Castillo as Félix Madrigal
Rhenzy Feliz as Camilo Madrigal
Adassa as Dolores Madrigal
Ravi Cabot-Conyers as Antonio Madrigal
Maluma as Mariano Guzmán
Rose Portillo as Sra. Guzmán
Alyssa Bella Candiani, Noemi Josefina Flores, Paisley Day Herrera, Brooklyn Skylar Rodriguez, & Ezra Rudolph as Town Kids
Alan Tudyk as Pico
Toronto, Canada (Turning Red)
Takes place after the movie.
Cast:
Rosalie Chiang as Meilin Lee
Ava Morse as Miriam Mendelsohn
Hyein Park as Abby Park
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Priya Mangal
Tristan Allerick Chen as Tyler Nguyen-Baker
Sandra Oh as Ming Lee
Orion Lee as Jin Lee
Wai Ching Ho as Grandma Wu Lee
Lori Tan Chinn as Auntie Chen
Mia Tagano as Lily
Sherry Cola as Helen
Lillian Lim as Auntie Ping
James Hong as Mr. Gao
Lily Sanfelippo as Stacy Frick
Addie Chandler as Devon
Lauren Tom as Sammy (Goth Girl)
Anna Brisbin as Lauren
Madison Brunoehler as Kat (Stacy’s Second Friend)
Jackson Parfitt as Carter Murphy-Mayhew
Patricia Summersett as Jaiden (Goth Girl with Green Dye)
Jordan Fisher as Robaire
Finneas O’Connell as Jesse
Topher Ngo as Aaron T.
Grayson Villanueva as Tae Young
Josh Levi as Aaron Z.
#kingdom hearts iv#square enix#the little mermaid#beauty and the beast#aladdin#the lion king#toy story#the hunchback of notre dame#hercules#mulan#a bug’s life#tarzan#monsters inc#finding nemo#the incredibles#cars#ratatouille#the princess and the frog#tangled#brave#wreck it ralph#frozen#big hero 6#inside out#zootopia#moana#coco#raya and the last dragon#encanto#turning red
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Lydia Loveless: Nothing’s Gonna Stand in My Way Again (Bloodshot Records, 2023)
Layout: George Hondroulis Photography: Jillian Clark.
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Design Doc 14: The Reservation
Chaos's obsession level: 1.5/3?
I do think the concept of this location had potential, but be warned that a good chunk of the Weirdness of VB is concentrated in this one doc. Expect landmines.
Also, it's longer than Hoover Dam's doc? Wasn't expecting that.
Already we have timeline/lore contradictions re: how Dr Sebastian ended up here.
Jillian time.
Oh, hi there, Measles the bastard. Nice of you to stop by.
Advance warning that Measles is probably going to be the main focus of this discussion from here on out lol.
Didn't realise a sneaky Prisoner could get pretty much dragged before Measles and interrogated right off the bat. I was under the impression that he tries to initially present himself as Just Another Ghoul rather than essentially second-in-command of the whole shebang.
I truly do not get why there's such a focus on ghouls allegedly having no use for toilets.
Someone please tell me why this document contains the sentence 'don’t try to picture it, it will rot your brain and make you start thinking David Hasselhoff is a sexy man'. Hdghjhgf.
Aha, landmine time.
Measles's bed does not touch a single wall on any side. Only his bed is like this. Absolute weirdo behaviour.
Just been hit in the face by a massive fucking landmine I forgot was here. Damn. Choices were made, huh?
Okay, what in fresh hell are the Born Ghouls doing in their bedrooms that causes there to be bone fragments in there?!
I find it pretty funny that the Prisoner could blow up the main generator... only for the impact to be underwhelming as the backup generators would just take over.
A ton of the ghouls have higher Agility stats than I anticipated. They're all flexible for some reason.
The 'Banzai' perk wasn't unique to Measles, Klik has it too. Still no hint as to what it actually does.
Wait, did I accidentally scroll back up, or are whole character profiles duplicated in here?
Fort Abandon is getting involved. Another location without a leaked design doc.
Clark's corpse can end up impaled on a flagpole for all to see. Holy crap lol. Sure would send a message that the place is under new management.
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Newly obsessed with Clark's cousin Jillian who shows up in exactly one comic issue when their rich uncle kendall once again tries to force clark to inherit his millions of dollars and both clark and jillian are like Uncle Kendall I Think Inherited Wealth is an Archaic and Evil Institution. All of Clark's family members are either obscenely wealthy or absolutely despise money
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what i read in march 2023
poetry
to march - emily dickinson
willow - anna akmatova (trans. jennifer reeser)
i grant you ample leave - george eliot
worm moon - mary oliver
deer on the side of an american highway - devin kelly
reading - a.r ammons
the lady’s yes - elizabeth barret browning
“south of the north, yet north of south, lies the city of a hundred hills” - aaron coleman
the honest tongue - laura da!
why did it - william j harris
thursday - james longenbach
hello - naomi shihab nye
[like a white stone] - anna akhmatova (trans. babette deutsch, avrahm yarmolinsky)
the horse fell off the poem - mahmoud darwish (trans. fady joudah)
a lesson from my father about electricity - monica rico
abell 2218 - eric gamalinda
molly brodak - molly brodak
ancestors wildest dreams - kinsale drake
books
closer baby closer - savannah brown (poetry collection)
i must be living twice - eileen myself (poetry collection, p1-51)
detransition baby - torrey peters
university readings
‘chapter 3: michel foucault: society must be defended’ in portraits of violence, evans and wilson, 2016 (modernism and after)
‘pregnancy: reproductive futures in trans of colour feminism’, micha cárdenas, 2016 (intro to queer studies)
‘the transfeminist manifesto’, in catching a wave: reclaiming feminism for the 21st century, 2003 (intro to queer studies)
‘academy as potentiality’, in A.C.A.D.E.M.Y revolver, irit rogoff, 2006 (intro to queer studies)
chapters 1-2 of ‘borderlands/la frontera’, gloria anzaldúa, 1987 (intro to queer studies)
‘queer intersections: sexuality and gender in migration studies’ in the international migration review vol 40, martin f. manalansan, 2006 (intro to queer studies)
‘deconstructing the filmmakers gaze: an interview with celine sciamma’, cineaste vol 45, garcia, m (intro to queer studies)
‘visual pleasurea and narrative cinema’, laura mulvey (intro to queer studies)
substack
paging dr. lesbian: does the female gaze exist
patti smith: reading a poets poem
perfectly imperfect newsletter: #290 morgan maher
tv dinner: queer advice #55 really serious really quickly
the sushi shop: an ode to bad television and its brightest stars
maybe baby: #138 do you pass the turing test
maybe baby: #140 the art of pandering
cup of stars (carmen maria machado): dear kitty
articles
‘loneliness and me’, claire bushey, financial times, 2020
‘the reading summer: fragments on loneliness’, eve lio, medium, 2021
‘the state of UK prisons and the urgent need for reform’, callum clark, 2022
‘our prisons are a manifest failure. would that be tolerated in any other public system?’, kathleen maltzahn, the guardian, 2019
‘prison art, a dark place where the muse never leaves’, jillian steinhauer, the new york times, 2019
‘why pop art was the first queer art movement’, andy stewart mackay anothermag, 2020
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Too Many Ideas
Had hoped to work on a drawing tonight but I've got a pounding headache, so I figure I'll ramble a bit and we can call it content!
I find with a lot of creatives they seem to have this one big story they want to tell, and as such they can maintain focus on it for long periods of time. I, on the other hand, fall into an ADHD trap where once I hit a point where the creating aspect is no longer fully engaging me, I begin to loose interest entirely. I do know others who suffer from this, and the solution is to try and have multiple ideas to bounce between.
So here are a few ideas bouncing around in my head right now and the creative goals associated with them.
Project: Akimoto Basically a reaction to folks constantly saying "Finish FOGClub." I'd rather remake FOGClub than continue it, but if I push the story further enough into the future I can focus on Scott and Annamae's kid. ALSO. The young girl graphic marvel market is where the money is right now, so I've always tried to approach it like Scholastic was gonna publish a 200 page GN. This leads to internal tonal whiplash, as I try to make a 80s tokusatsu show but for a 2020 Gen A audience.
Hyper Justice Project Akimoto's "Comic within a comic" which is just me wanting to stretch my muscles making a 90s inspired superhero comic
Angel V Project Akimoto's "show withing a comic" because I can't just have Jillian be a fan of Cutey Honey Flash or something, so I repurposed the characters from my short comic Raise the Dead into that.
The Bard I tried making this a few years ago as a 24 hour comic and stopped because I hated the character designs. It's a story of a wandering bard returning to her home town because her friend has gone missing, and it ties into a series of mysterious disappearances/attacks. The gag is that it's a D&D campaign set in modern day. With each character being a class and having stats and such.
SUPERMAN GA Literally just a thought experiment of "if I could do a out-of-continuity Superman story what would I do? Just full of things I like about Superman like Lex and Clark being friends and Lex having long locks of red hair and making Superman Red/Blue an ability and trying to give it a bit of a shonen manga flair.
(Working Title) Fashion! Passion! Question? As close to the elusive idea of a "passion project" as I can manage as I know how I want this book to feel I just have no idea what the hell it's actually about. The goal is a slice-of-life series set in an alternate world full of things that I find interesting and fun to look it (Japanese style vending machines, retro cars, block-style apartments) that doesn't really have to go anywhere because it's just a vehicle to show off the world. I want it to feel like Do it Yourself!, Keep Your Hands off Eziouken, and Yokohama Shopping Trip, to name a few.
I totally get why Grant Morrison decided to stop being an illustrator and just focus on writing.
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Jillian Weise: "And the metaphors. The moon is blind. The sky is deaf. My love is lame. Your death is a phantom limb. This is a complaint about bad poetry more than ableism. Can we agree that in 2014 disability stereotypes and cliched metaphors make bad poetry? As Rosemarie Garland-Thomson writes, “the always overdetermined metaphoric uses of disability efface and distort the lived experience of people with disabilities, evacuating the political significance of our lives.” Or is it too soon to come to this agreement? Will it take time? I hope one day editors reject these poems."
from the article "disability and poetry", an interview with Jennifer Bartlett, John Lee Clark, Jim Ferris, and The Cyborg Jillian Weise, here: x
#i'm posting this one#don't know if i want to link the article yet pretty sure there's something here that made me go ''huh. i don't like that''#poetry#ableism#disability
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Great American Family is taking on the March family story.
“A Little Women’s Christmas,” the network’s first ensemble Christmas movie, is a contemporary retelling of Louisa May Alcott’s classic 1868 novel, starring Jillian Murray as Jo March, Trevor Donovan as Friedrich “Fritz” Baehr, Laura Osnes as Beth March, Jen Lilley as Meg March, Jesse Hutch as John Brooke and Julia Reilly as Amy March. Gladys Knight also stars and will perform her new original Christmas song, “Joy.”
The movie will air during the fourth annual “Great American Christmas.” Previously announced other titles for their 2024 holiday slate include “Aurora Christmas,” “A Christmas Less Traveled,” “Love at the Kettle,” “My Grown-Up Christmas Wish,” “A Royal Christmas Ball” and “A Vintage Christmas.”
“‘A Little Women’s Christmas’ is a new Christmas classic in the making, with an incredible ensemble cast and an adaptation of an original story that is one of the best I have read,” says Great American Media president and CEO Bill Abbott. “Louisa May Alcott was intentional about focusing on the culture of young women, their hopes, ambitions, and dreams, and it remains one of the most widely read and beloved stories ever written.”
The film, directed by Brandon Clark, is written by Dione Sheehan and Taylor Bird. Executive Producers include Hutch, Knight, Clark, Brian Bird, Tai Truesdell, Darin Chavez, Brian Williams, Charly White, Lori Overholt, William McDowell and Joyce Miller Roy. “A Little Women’s Christmas” is produced by Rodney Eldredge, True Brand Entertainment, Third Coast Film and Empress of Soul Productions.
“Little Women” has been frequently adapted for both stage and screen. In 1933, Katharine Hepburn led the first sound adaptation of the film, followed by the first color adaptation with Elizabeth Taylor and Janet Leigh in 1949, which landed two Academy Award nominations and one win. In 1994, Gillian Armstrong directed a large ensemble led by Winona Ryder, Kirsten Dunst, Claire Danes, Susan Sarandon, Christian Bale and others, which landed three Oscar nominationss. In 2017 (and 2018 in the U.S.), the BBC and PBS’ Masterpiece turned Alcott’s novel into a TV series, led by Maya Hawke as Jo. Then, in 2019, Greta Gerwig’s “Little Women” became a box-office sensation, and was nominated for six Academy Awards.
#great american family#great american christmas#jen lilley#trevor donovan#jesse hutch#jillian murray#laura osnes#julia reilly#gladys knight#little women christmas
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Scarlett #5 Review
Scarlett #5 Review #GIJoe #scarlett #comics #comicbooks #news #art #info #NCBD #comicbooknews #previews #reviews #IMAGE #Amazon #imagecomics
Writer: Kelly Thompson Artist: Marco Ferrari Colorist: Lee Loughridge Letterer: Rus Wooton Editor: Ben Abernathy Logo & Publication Design: Andres Juarez Production: Jillian Crab Cover Artists: Marco Ferrari & Lee Loughridge; Siya Oum; Gleb Melnikov; Vasco Georgiev; Taurin Clarke Publisher: Image Comics Price: $3.99 Release Date: October 9, 2024 Scarlett helped Jinx find the Soul Of The…
#Energon Universe#G.I. Joe#Image#image comics#Image Comics reviews#image reviews#Reviews#Scarlett#Scarlett 5#Scarlett 5 Review#Skybound#Skybound Reviews
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