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Some years ago, Zazie Beetz had the unlikely distinction of emerging from a Deadpool movie as a potentially credible action star, in large part because her character Domino was only a figurative cartoon character, rather than one literally brought to life with computer effects. That’s not to say her fight scenes avoided heavy CG trickery; just that Beetz looked the least dragged-and-dropped into the action, maybe paradoxically owing to her unflappable deadpan. Beetz makes a belated return to action with They Will Kill You, a movie that seems like it shares DNA with the Deadpool movies—as so many recent action movies do, even when they’re aiming for The Raid. It’s styled like a comic book that would particularly excite a 12-year-old; relatedly irreverent in its humor; and brazenly, cartoonishly gory in its violence, all qualities that align it with Ready Or Not 2, Pretty Lethal, and Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice—and that only covers its peers of the last week. Deadpool-wise, it does those movies one better by featuring some characters who can (eventually) keep fighting after getting limbs sliced off, just like the merc with the mouth.
Though They Will Kill You is not a true original, it manages to do a little more than bounce around the John Wick-to-Deadpool spectrum (also known as the David Leitch Scale). Despite her connection to one of those franchises, Beetz is one reason why. As Asia Reaves, a woman fresh out of prison who gets a maid job at an upscale apartment building called The Virgil, she’s handed a familiar character: A protective warrior of few words, searching for her younger sister Maria (Myha’la), who she was forced to surrender back to their abusive father when a failed escape resulted in her arrest. It wouldn’t be accurate to say that Beetz turns Asia into a fully dimensionalized person. It more than suffices, however, that she fights her way through the pulp with a ferocity that feels genuine.
Asia knows that Maria works somewhere within The Virgil, and knows that she may need her well-honed combat skills to retrieve her. She’s less aware, however, of the building’s specifically sinister nature, hidden by its head of staff Lilith (Patricia Arquette with an Irish accent for some reason) and wealthy tenants like Sharon (Heather Graham) and Kevin (Tom Felton). Compared to the Ready Or Not movies also encompassed by this particular trend, They Will Kill You goes easy on the stale “fucking rich people!” jokes (though it does all but reprise that line from the first Ready Or Not). The Virgil residents are rich and powerful, but they do at least some of their own dirty work, setting upon their new recruit almost immediately; the gnarly resilience of Graham and Felton in particular serves as a funny counterpoint to the usual wave after wave of anonymous henchmen. This may dilute the satire, but They Will Kill You isn’t insightful enough for that to matter much.

Over the years, Junji Ito has carved out a niche and gathered a following outside the manga industry’s typical target audience. That is, he speaks to the horror freaks. His work has received live-action and animated adaptations, been referenced to oblivion online, and has even been gobbled up by the pop culture-obliterating machine known as Funko Pops. Across his long career, he’s written dozens of short stories, and thankfully, Viz Media has been translating most of them into English in recent years. Their latest release is Statues, an anthology of 10 short stories that delivers what you’d expect from the author: nib-sketched nightmares that are both gross and absurd. The collection takes us through out-there setups that mostly stick the landing, and even in the handful that don’t come together, there’s likely at least a panel or two that will stick in your memory (probably when you’re trying to fall asleep).
What ties together many of the best stories in this anthology is the combination of the supernatural with much more mundane human flaws. In “Scarecrow,” a town struck by tragedy finds that if they prop up scarecrows in their growing cemetery, these straw men will eventually take on the likenesses of recently departed loved ones. Instead of focusing on the mystery of why this is happening, Ito dives into something more interesting: how people react. They don’t flee in terror, but instead, fall over each other attempting to bring back the people they’ve lost, even if these are clearly incomplete replicas of the real thing (which also look extremely haunted).

Stephen Colbert will say goodbye to The Late Show in just under two months, but he has perhaps an even bigger dream on his horizon. Overnight, Deadline reported that Colbert, along with Philippa Boyens and Peter McGee, is set to write a new Lord Of The Rings film, tentatively titled The Lord Of The Rings: Shadow Of The Past. The film is set to be based on the “Fog On The Barrow-Downs,” one of the so-far unadapted chapters of The Fellowship Of The Ring. In the chapter, a handful of Hobbits are trapped by a Barrow-wight in a thick fog. The film will also introduce Tom Bombadill, a character left out of Peter Jackson’s Lord Of The Rings adaptations. Per Deadline, the film will be set 14 years after the departure of Frodo and will see Sam, Merry, and Pippin retracting the first steps of the Hobbits’ quest. Sam’s daughter, Elanor, will also investigate how the War Of The Ring was nearly lost.
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Sting operations have become a favorite tool of many police departments over the past half century. As John Oliver explained on last night’s Last Week Tonight, a sting operation usually ends up producing a video of someone committing a crime, making the jobs of prosecutors easy. However, that fact has also incentivized a lot of police departments to set sting operations, whether they’re stopping anyone who actually presents a looming danger to a community or not.