Skadoosh! In Kung Fu Panda 3, Dragon Warrior Po (Jack Black) finally reunites with his long-lost father, Li (Bryan Cranston). That doesn’t mean that all is well in the third
IPinstallment of the popular animated film series, however. A supernatural enemy, a bull named Kai (J.K. Simmons), threatens all of China, and it’s up to Po to train a new class of pandas to stop him. But the adventure also brings up some bigger questions for the unlikely hero — who’s never spent time as an adult with other pandas — about his place in the animal kingdom. –C. Molly Smith
Image Credit: DreamWorks Animation
The setting is the flight deck of a crashed airship, and there’s a brawl on board that has turned the old wreck into a combat zone. The guy in the red mask is Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds), who is employing his superhuman abilities — and katana swords named Bea and Arthur — against the ax-wielding Ajax (Ed Skrein), a sadistic lab assistant who ruined his life. The climactic fight scene was no laughing matter. “Ryan’s like Muhammad Ali, dancing around, whispering in my ear. And I’m George Foreman,” says Skrein. “Every blow is like a haymaker and I just want to take his head off.” –Joe McGovern
Concept art for the Bat Cave from Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (March 25)
A man’s home is his castle, but Wayne Manor was never really Batman’s home. In Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, the hero (Ben Affleck) has let his dynastic estate fall into disrepair, watching it crumble to ruins as surely and completely as its owner’s sense of optimism. Rest assured, however, the Batcave remains as well-equipped and well appointed as ever. After all, you want your tech to be up-to-date if you’re keeping the company of gods. –Keith Staskiewic
For more than a decade Melissa McCarthy has been musing on a character she created as a member of the improv group the Groundlings: a “megalomaniac narcissist” named Michelle Darnell. “If you keep obsessing and expanding on a character, it’s probably worth exploring,” she says. So she’s made a movie about her. The Boss, written by McCarthy, her husband and director, Ben Falcone, and longtime friend Steve Mallory, finds Darnell sent to prison for insider trading. Upon release, she tries to claw her way back to the top via a Girl Scout-type troop, the Dandelions. “We have, like, a Gangs of New York brutal street fight with children,” McCarthy says with a laugh. “Flawed characters are the most fun to play.” —Sara Vilkomerson
.and many more.EW,YouTube
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