
Tickets on sale for exclusive Superman screening at Vue Hamilton
Those who book the slot can also take home a very special piece of comic book history.
To mark the arrival of the highly-anticipated relaunch of Superman, Vue Cinema in Hamilton is holding an extra-special screening of the film – with those who book the slot taking home a very special piece of comic book history.
Taking place during the film's opening weekend, on Friday, July 11, there will be just one Superman Hero Screening at Vue Hamilton and every booking for the limited screening will come with a copy of All Star Superman No.1 - the comic that inspired James Gunn's new take on the Man of Steel - to pick up on the day.
Tickets for the screening are available to book now, however the offer will only be available while stocks last.
The film introduces David Corenswet as Clark Kent (Pearl and Hollywood) and Rachel Brosnahan (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) as Lois Lane, alongside a whole new roster of DC characters.
The latest superhero outing has fans excited for what is expected bold new take on the franchise – with Superman as you've never seen him before. Teresa Hussain, general manager at Vue Hamilton, said: 'We know how excited audiences are for James Gunn's interpretation of Superman.
'This exclusive screening gives fans the rare opportunity to take home a special piece of cinematic history - the very comic issue that helped shape the film's story.'
The All Star Superman No.1 giveaway is one comic per booking – not per ticket – and only applies to tickets purchased for the Superman Hero Screening on July 11.
For the avoidance of doubt this does not apply to Superman screenings without the 'Hero Screening' tag.
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The Guardian
15 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘It's hard to find work': Marlee Matlin on making Hollywood history but waiting for change
In 1987, at the age of 21, Marlee Matlin became the youngest person ever to win a best actress Oscar. Footage of her victory appears early in Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore, a new documentary on the trailblazing actor's life and career: Matlin, remarkably fresh-faced even for 21, in her very 80s purple dress, her brunette hair swept up by a floral headpiece, black-rimmed glasses on, appears stunned as William Hurt, her co-star in Children of a Lesser God and her boyfriend at the time, reads her name. Thunderous applause. The camera captures fellow nominee Jane Fonda mouthing 'that's so great' as Matlin, the first and still only deaf actor to win the award, approaches the podium and kisses Hurt. As she delivers her speech in American Sign Language (ASL), she seems almost too shocked to emote, overcome with the gravity of the moment. Matlin's win was indeed groundbreaking, a watershed moment for deaf representation. But as Not Alone Anymore explains, it was also much more complicated than a feelgood story of societal triumph, or a turning point for deaf creatives. Nor was it one of personal glory. Halfway through the film, the scene is replayed again, this time with the sound taken away – the thunderous applause muted to just a simulation of Matlin's own thunderous heartbeat as she walked to the stage. 'I was afraid as I walked up the stairs to get the Oscar,' Matlin recalls on screen in ASL. 'I was afraid because I knew, in my gut, that he wasn't that happy.' Hurt, 16 years her senior and an established Hollywood star, was intensely jealous of her success, and had already begun physically abusing her. Without sound and with context, what once read as overwhelming shock on her face instead appears as something darker, shaded with fear. The twist, of sorts, is one of many decisions by director Shoshannah Stern to subvert the hearing perspective that most viewers automatically assume. 'I wanted to return to her Oscar-winning moment twice,' Stern, a deaf actor herself, told me through an interpreter, 'because sound does limit people. There are a lot of things that I feel hearing people miss when they are just listening with their ears and not listening with their eyes.' When I first watched Matlin's win, I assumed, as Stern expected, that 'it's this roaring applause, so we're celebrating'. Without sound, the picture is clearer. 'You could see in that moment how scary it is,' said Stern. 'And it's right there. It's been in front of us this whole time.' Stern's intrinsic understanding of the deaf perspective was the reason Matlin, who went on to a long career on such shows as Seinfeld, The West Wing, The L Word and, most recently, the Oscar-winning film Coda, decided to make the film at all. 'Almost none of the documentaries that I've seen that have to do with a subject matter like myself have not been done right,' she told me over Zoom via her interpreter, Jack Jason, who has worked with Matlin since 1985. When PBS's American Masters approached her about a documentary, she had one demand: the director had to be deaf, and it had to be Stern, a longtime friend and occasional collaborator who co-created the show This Close. As she did with early financiers of Coda who wanted to cast big-name hearing actors for two deaf roles, Matlin stuck to her guns. Deaf participation, take it or leave it. 'I wanted to have that type of conversation I could [with] Shoshannah, where I could feel free and sign and not worry about an interpreter voiceover, not worry about my surroundings, not worry about any of that, just be there,' Matlin said. 'That was the first time that I felt at ease.' Much of Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore, which first premiered at the Sundance film festival, features Stern and Matlin in conversation unlike in any prior documentary I've seen, even with deaf subjects. The two women sign without voiceover, just subtitles for hearing viewers. Any ASL interpreters were not only off camera, but in a different room, communicating via earpieces. 'I wasn't accustomed to that approach. I've never seen that,' said Matlin. 'I'm accustomed to being voiced over, because that's how it's been in my entire career. That's the hearing perspective.' As the first Oscar-winning deaf actor and still the most famous, Matlin knows how, as Stern puts it, 'the world often tries to force perspectives on people, put the weight of explaining an entire community's experience on one person'. Voiceover and interpreters 'are another forced perspective', she said. 'When I'm interviewed by hearing people, I have to look at the interpreter. Where are they? How is my language being translated into English? And then I'm limiting myself. I'm thinking in a way that the hearing interviewer or the hearing director is thinking. I'm not thinking as myself.' 'It wasn't what I wanted Marlee to say in our documentary, it was how she spoke, how that changes when our expectations and our perspectives change,' she added. 'Accessibility is for everyone. It's not just for us as deaf people, but a lot of times that responsibility, that weight, is put on one person.' Not Alone Anymore illustrates that weight, which Matlin felt acutely as a very young person experiencing rapid professional success. Cast in Children of a Lesser God fresh out of high school, Matlin was new not only to screen acting but the world beyond her small community in suburban Chicago. The youngest of three children in a hearing family – Matlin became deaf at 18 months, for unknown reasons that, she recalls, nevertheless left her parents guilt-stricken – she attended a mixed deaf/hearing school and began acting at age seven; she was inspired, in part, by Henry Winkler, a lifelong mentor she first met backstage at a school show at age 12. (In 1993, Matlin married Kevin Grandalski, a cop she met on the set of Reasonable Doubts, in the Winklers' back yard. They have four children.) Matlin's family was not fluent in ASL, and it took years for her to understand the loneliness and isolation at home. She coped by smoking marijuana. At 19, she began dating Hurt, who was then 35. Her drug use escalated with the physical and emotional abuse; she has said she smoked 20 joints a day, plus cocaine. In the midst of her awards season run, she entered rehab. She emerged sober, and also the face of a deaf community she did not totally understand. 'I didn't realize that there were more deaf people out there, outside of Chicago, a whole community. It was bigger than what I even realized,' she said. Not Alone Anymore powers through cringey clips of interviewers asking Matlin to explain deafness. How did it feel to be deaf? Had she come to terms with it? Matlin powered through as best she could. She quickly became an activist, successfully pushing legislation in the US requiring closed captioning on TV and streaming sites. But she struggled as the lone representative of deafness for hearing people. The film lingers on backlash from the deaf community when Matlin spoke at the 1988 Oscars, which many felt encouraged the stereotype that deaf intelligence was connected to one's ability to imitate hearing speech. Matlin says the incident, fanned by hearing media attention, drove her away from the deaf community for over a decade. 'I had no guidance in terms of someone to sit down to me and explain about the language that was being used, about the language that I used,' she said. 'I had to find out the hard way.' Matlin faced similar media blowback, though of a different tenor, when she disclosed Hurt's abuse, as well as incidents of molestation by a babysitter and teacher in her childhood, in her 2009 memoir, I'll Scream Later. Not Alone Anymore again assembles very pre-#MeToo clips in which interviewers discounted or dismissed her experience. In one clip, Joy Behar asks about 'spectacular' sex with Hurt. 'Marlee has always been ahead of the curve,' said Stern of Matlin's willingness to speak up years before it became more common to do so. When Hurt died in 2022, at the age of 71, Matlin found her name once again brought up in his wake. 'On social media, I had to look at both sides of the conversations,' she recalled. In posts and comments, some people accused her of lying about the abuse; others were mad at those who accused her of crying wolf. 'They were trying to define me,' she said. 'And I would have none of that. I wanted them to stop, but at the same time, I decided to step away from the conversation' during Coda's press run. Did she wish now that she said anything? 'No, I don't,' she answered, after a beat. 'Because nothing would satisfy these people. And why should I have to? I didn't trust what would happen if I did get involved, because of my past experience of being ignored, of being overlooked, not getting any help. But it was interesting to observe, to see the two factions fighting about me thinking that they knew me.' It's a typically strident answer from Matlin, who has never minced words, particularly on how her Oscar did not open up more opportunities for deaf actors – the film's title comes from her emotional reaction to Coda costar Troy Kotsur's supporting actor Oscar in 2022, becoming only the second deaf actor to win. As with Matlin's 1987 trophy, Kotsur's win hasn't changed much. 'I'm not seeing more opportunities open up,' said Stern. 'It's still up to deaf people or people from a minority group to explain their experience to the majority,' she added. 'We continue to say what is expected of us, which is: 'Great story. Representation has changed! There's going to be so many job opportunities!' That's what people are expecting us to say. And if we say that, nothing's going to change.' 'My least favorite question is: Are you working? What's next?' said Matlin. 'I hate answering that question. I say, 'Oh, well, I have this.' I try to change the subject, talk about something else because they won't understand what I'm going through. 'It's hard to find work,' she said, but still insists: 'This is something I love to do. This is a business that I love being in. I love acting. I love it all.' Naturally, she can't say what is next – 'waiting for a yes or no, an answer, that's typically what I do' – beyond press for a film she and Stern both hope challenges some perspectives. 'I hope it makes people think. I hope that people feel seen,' said Stern. 'I hope people know that they have value in how they see the world, and you don't just have to accept how things have been done for so long.' Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore is out now in US cinemas


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Spider-Man actor dies aged 96: Jack Betts shared home with Everybody Loves Raymond star
Spider-Man and Spaghetti Western actor Jack Betts has died at the age of 96. The Hollywood veteran, who befriended Everybody Loves Raymond star Doris Roberts and whom he went on to share a home with, died in his sleep at his house in Los Osos, California, on Thursday. Born in Miami, Florida, in 1929, Mr Betts studied theater and first began his career in a Broadway adaptation of William Shakespeare's Richard III. He would go on to play an array of debonair characters across TV shows and movies, including cameos in Batman Forever in 1995 and Batman & Robin two years later. But it was his performances as Hunt Powers across a swathe of Italian Spaghetti Western films that immortalised him on the big screen. He first appeared as the gun-slinger in Franco Giraldi's Sugar Coat in 1966 after bluffing his way into contention for the starring role. And after finding success in the role, it would be the first of around 12 consecutive films in which Mr Betts held it - a run that ended in 1972. Despite worldwide recognition for his performances, his films at that time did not air in the US or Canada - a problem made all the more difficult due to the stardom of his hotel neighbour. Mr Betts, who befriended Everybody Loves Raymond star Doris Roberts (left) and whom he shared a home with, died in his sleep on Thursday He told The Dev Show in 2021: 'In the hotel next to mine was Clint Eastwood,' 'He'd go up to his mountain and do his Western and I'd go up to my mountain and do my Western. But while his films had distribution all over the world, my films were distributed [everywhere] except Canada and America.' When returning home from Italy, Mr Betts turned his hand to Broadway again where he starred as Dracula between 1977-80. In the years after, he appeared on many TV shows, including a lengthy run as Dr Ivan Kiping in the series, One Life to Live, which ended in 1985. Three years later, Mr Betts accepted Ms Roberts' invitation to move from his place in New York and into a downstairs apartment in her Hollywood Hills home. After Ms Roberts' death in 2016, Mr Betts said the pair were 'best friends to the very end' and that they had 'wonderful times together'. They even shared the screen when Mr Betts appeared in an episode of Everybody Loves Raymond in 1999. He also made fleeting appearances in shows such as Seinfield, Frasier, Friends and Power Rangers. In Sam Raimi's Spider-Man, his character played a pivotal role after telling Norman Osborn, played by Willem Dafoe, that he was 'out' at his company. This spurred Osborn onto become the Green Goblin, who would later return and kill Mr Betts' character, Henry Balkan, and his fellow Oscorp businessmen. News of his death has touched movie fans, who have taken to social media to share their tributes. One wrote: 'Well shoot, another Hollywood gunslinger rides into the sunset. Jack Betts was one of those actors who could make even a B-movie feel like an A-list production.'


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
The 20 best superhero TV shows of all time
Superheroes might have been a screen staple since the 1950s but capes, tights and masks never go out of style. Indeed, a ceaseless production line of Hollywood blockbusters have made them the dominant genre of the early 21st century. Marvel's latest TV effort is Black Panther/Iron Man spin-off Ironheart, following science student Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) as she invents an Iron Man-style armoured suit. But what are the best shows ever to pow, zap and fly into our living rooms? Here's our countdown of the all-time TV top 20. How did we select our 20? As Spider-Man's Uncle Ben always had it, 'with great power there must also come great responsibility' (although, sorry, Spidey, you haven't made our cut). We've looked at the entirety of the superhero genre on TV, determined not to fall into the cliché of just relying on Marvel and DC staples. That means, you'll find some more whimsical family favourites nestling between the stern jaws and pumped pecks of some of our line-up. Heartfelt apologies, however, to SuperTed, the 1960s Spider-Man cartoon (of 'does whatever a spider can,' fame) and the Bill Bixby/Lou Ferrigno The Incredible Hulk series; all of which just fell outside our selection. Turns out there's one super-villain that can't be beaten: The capricious TV critic! 20. He-Man & The Masters of the Universe (CBS/ITV, 1983-1985) 'By the power of Grayskull!' The biggest, daftest cartoon of the Eighties was this fantasy romp based on a Mattel toy range. When helmet-haired, muscle-bound Prince Adam held aloft his sword and uttered the magic words, he transformed into the universe's most powerful human and foiled the evil plans of cackling villain Skeletor. It spawned literal sister series, She-Ra: Princess of Power, plus films, reboots and even more toys. Ker-ching. 19. Moon Knight (Disney+, 2022) If you can overlook leading man Oscar Isaac's creaky Cockney tones, which creep into Dick Van Dyke territory, there is much to enjoy in this tragicomic Marvel miniseries. As a mercenary with dissociative identity disorder, Isaac had a ball giving each alter ego a different personality (and accent) as he unravelled a mystery involving nocturnal warriors and Egyptian gods. Wild, weird and witty. Cor blimey, Mary Poppins. 18. Wonder Woman (ABC/CBS/BBC One, 1975-1979) 'All the world is waiting for you / And the power z you possess / In your satin tights / Fighting for your rights / And the old red, white and blue.' It's since had a Hollywood reboot – hasn't everything? – but the DC Comics adaptation about an Amazonian princess coming to America is a true cult classic. Lynda Carter became a pop culture icon as the feminist heroine, battling crime with her bullet-deflecting bracelets and golden lasso. Huge fun and just camp enough. 17. The Thundermans (Nickelodeon, 2013-2018) This surprisingly sophisticated teen-com followed the titular superpowered family as they attempted to live a normal existence in the fictional city of Hiddenville. While the parents struggled not to use their powers, their wisecracking children enjoyed exploring theirs – or, in the case of son Max, dreamed of becoming an evil supervillain – complete with a sassy talking rabbit. 16. Daredevil (Netflix, 2015-2018) British actor Charlie Cox excelled as blind New York lawyer Matt Murdock, who used his heightened senses to lead a double life as a masked vigilante. His nocturnal crusade set him on a collision course with crime lord Wilson Fisk (a skin-crawlingly creepy Vincent D'Onofrio). The bruising combat scenes, memorably a pulverising corridor fight, were widely acclaimed. It was recently resurrected for Disney+ sequel series Daredevil: Born Again. 15. Preacher (AMC/Amazon Prime Video, 2016-2019) A trio of Britons led this western-style comic book adaptation. Dominic Cooper starred as Texan preacher Jesse Custer, who was infused with a supernatural gift during a crisis of faith. He sets out on a quest to understand his new-found cosmic powers, joined by gun-toting ex-girlfriend Tulip (Ruth Negga) and vagabond Irish vampire Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun). Gleefully gory, it blended horror with humour to hugely entertaining effect. 14. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (CBS/BBC One, 1987-1996) It was conceived as a superhero parody but soon took on a life of its own. Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo – a Renaissance-named quartet of anthropomorphic turtle brothers, trained in ninjutsu (still with us?) – became 'heroes in a half-shell' by fighting evil from the sewers of New York City. The cartoon became a playground phenomenon, birthing a turtle-powered franchise of comics, films, games, toys and even breakfast cereal. Cowabunga indeed. 13. Agent Carter (ABC/Fox UK, 2015-2016) The Marvel universe did period drama – and did it jolly well – in this stylishly rendered series about Captain America's love interest. Our own Hayley Atwell was winningly charismatic as all-action spy Peggy Carter, battling baddies and post-war sexism at the Strategic Scientific Reserve. A perky, pulpy romp with a knowing wink and pleasing Britishisms ('Crikey O'Reilly!' was among her catchphrases). 12. Jessica Jones (Netflix, 2015-2019) The most noirish of the first wave of Marvel series, this brooding, slow-burn thriller followed a traumatised ex-superhero, superbly played by Breaking Bad's Krysten Ritter. Hard-drinking Jessica Jones fought her demons by working as a private eye in Hell's Kitchen. Our sardonic anti-heroine faced off against a worthy foe in David Tennant's monstrous, mind-controlling Kilgrave. 11. Super Gran (ITV, 1985-1987) Is there nothing she cannae do? Like a Beano comic strip come to life, this Tyne Tees caper saw a sweet old lady (Gudrun Ure) acquire superpowers when zapped by a magic ray. As she kept the town of Chisleton safe from villainous Scunner Campbell (Iain Cuthbertson), the series was sold worldwide and won an Emmy. A gallery of guest stars included Billy Connolly, George Best and Barbara Windsor. It just edges out SuperTed, Bananaman and Danger Mouse in our 'quintessentially British children's TV parody' slot. 10. Heroes (NBC/BBC Two, 2006-2010) 'Save the cheerleader, save the world.' Creator Tim Kring's pre-Marvel, post-Lost fantasy yarn was impossibly exciting when it first touched down on our screens. As a seemingly ordinary group of civilians slowly became aware of their special abilities, it delivered globe-straddling, comic book-style thrills. Later series got too wrapped up in mystical mumbo-jumbo and its own mythology but for a while back there, Heroes was ambitious, blockbuster television. 9. The Penguin (HBO/Sky Atlantic, 2024-present) Arguably this dark psycho-drama doesn't quite qualify because its anti-hero is technically a baddie. But the show's sheer quality means we've turned a blind eye. A Sopranos-esque mob saga stars Colin Farrell, near-unrecognisable under heavy prosthetics, as disfigured gangster Oz Cobb on his rise through Gotham City's criminal underworld. Fox drama Gotham – another Batman prequel, this time starring Ben McKenzie as a young Chief Gordon – isn't half bad either. 8. Misfits (E4, 2009-2013) This very British riff on the genre began with a group of gobby young offenders doing community service. When stuck outdoors during a strange electrical storm, they acquired a supernatural power apiece. Think X-Men with an Asbo. Howard Overman's scripts fizzed with street humour, while the bright young cast – Iwan Rheon, Antonia Thomas, Nathan Stewart-Jarrett, Lauren Socha and scene-stealer Robert Sheehan – would go on to bigger things. 7. WandaVision (Disney+, 2021) Marvel's first Disney+ series was unexpectedly eccentric and an utter delight. Witchy Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) and android Vision (Paul Bettany) were the Avengers-turned-homemakers, trying to conceal their true natures while living in a sitcom-style suburban idyll. Each episode paid loving homage to TV history, slowly peeling back the couple's domestic bliss to expose the darker truths beneath. A love story wrapped in a David Lynchian mystery, this was a thoughtful exploration of grief and nostalgia. 6. Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (ABC/BBC One, 1993-1997) This sparky screwball-style spin on the Man of Steel made stars out of Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher, who were hugely charming as Daily Planet colleagues Clark Kent and Lois Lane. The pair's will-they-or-won't-they romance provided the backdrop to Clark secretly donning the costume to fight for justice. Airing at Saturday teatimes in the pre-Strictly era, it united the generations. As Superman TV series go, it eclipses teen prequel Smallville, which ran for a few series too long and lost its way. 5. Watchmen (HBO/Sky Atlantic, 2019) Alan Moore's graphic novel masterpiece is traditionally described as 'unfilmable', so Lost creator Damon Lindelof called his miniseries a 'remix'. Smart, cinematic and endlessly surprising, his wild reimagining dropped the masked vigilantes into present-day Oklahoma. A cast led by Regina King, Don Johnson and Jeremy Irons served up a boiling brew of racial tension and dystopian chaos. Defying expectations of a comic book adaptation, this was bold, bravura TV. 4. Supacell (Netflix, 2024-present) The newest UK entry on our list transcended superhero tropes to become something truly ingenious. Created by musician and director Rapman, the distinctive drama saw five South Londoners suddenly develop supernatural abilities. Their contrasting reactions to their newfound powers were compelling. Raising awareness of sickle cell disease while acting as a metaphor for black Britishness, this was supa-smart social commentary. 3. The Boys (Amazon Prime Video, 2019-present) Incongruously, one of Amazon's biggest hits is this near-the-knuckle, anti-capitalist twist on the familiar superhero formula. A welcome antidote to dark origin stories and cinematic pomposity, The Boys is like Marvel's lippy teenage brother, with a taste for ultra-violence and transgressive sex scenes. Pitting the commercialised 'Supes' against a band of black ops vigilantes, it's a nihilistic satire with plenty to say about institutional corruption and corporate America. And it usually says it in luridly vulgar language. In Antony Starr's sociopathic Homelander, it also boasts one of the best villains on TV. 2. Legion (FX/Fox UK, 2017-2019) Writer Noah Hawley, who masterminded the award-winning Fargo anthology and the upcoming Alien: Earth, is one of the most boundary-busting showrunners on TV. His 'anti-Marvel Marvel series' was built around a stunning star turn from Downton Abbey alumnus Dan Stevens as the schizophrenic son of X-Men leader Charles Xavier. Imprisoned in a psychiatric facility, he tried to control his mutant powers and fight the sinister forces who wished to harness them. Dramatising the inner workings of the human mind, it was visually dazzling and utterly unique. 1. Batman (ABC/ITV, 1966-1968) Holy top spot, Batman! Nowadays the Caped Crusader is a brooding, traumatised creature of the night. Once upon a time, he was actually fun. Starring Adam West as Batman and Burt Ward as sidekick Robin, this swinging Sixties crime caper followed the Dynamic Duo as they defended Gotham City from a rogue's gallery of camp supervillains. With hammy performances, tongue-in-cheek humour, a killer theme song and shameless cliffhangers, it gleefully embraced its comic book origins, coming to define the genre for the next three decades. Its only rival in the TV Batverse is Nineties modernisation, Batman: The Animated Series. Ker-pow!