“Viola Davis is now expected to reprise her role as Amanda Waller in a new Peacemaker and Suicide Squad spin-off series on HBO Max. According to a new report from Variety, the actress is now tied to a new project that is based around her character as the helm of Task Force X, also known as the Suicide Squad. The project will pick up after Davis’ appearance at the end of John Cena’s Peacemaker, where her daughter Adebayo (Danielle Brooks) exposed her mother’s diabolical work with the band of misfits to the public. Waller will have to deal with the aftermath as she tries to regain her position as one of the most influential figures in the DCEU.” Read more at HypeBeast Finn seemed like he was poised to be one of the best characters in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, so what happened? Here are some ideas for what FN-2187’s story could’ve been. Read more at The Mary Sue Oscar Isaac just starred in a TV series based on a comic, and now he’s ready to make a comic book of his own. “Step aside, Keanu Reeves and Emilia Clarke—there’s a new celebrity comic purveyor heading to the racks. In an announcement, no doubt timed to today’s Moon Knight finale, the star of that Marvel Disney+ series (and a lot of other stuff we like!), Oscar Isaac, is working with Legendary Comics on ‘supernatural noir graphic novel’ Head Wounds: Sparrow.“ Read more at Gizmodo Sam Raimi has had a film career sprawling across many decades, but how do all of his films stack up against one another? Read more at The A.V. Club It’s been 17 years since the release of the original LEGO Star Wars game, and we don’t want to talk about one somewhat cursed image. “Kind of long ago, in a galaxy not that far away…The original LEGO Star Wars game came to be, and it was great, a wonderful and silly retelling of the Star Wars Prequel Trilogy using Legos and kid-friendly gameplay. It was a mostly wholesome adventure. Except for the weirdly cursed ‘pregnant Padme’ minifigs that appeared in the game’s cutscenes, and which I’ve never forgotten since.” Read more at Kotaku What Star Wars flick is the most popular in your state? Read more at Mental Floss