Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Roundup with Jeff Stockton (SEASON 36 ROUND 5)

 

We're officially at the halfway point of Season 36, but the season still all over the place. There have been enough quality films to keep me engaged, but the box office has been living paycheck to paycheck. Here's The Roundup....


LUKE CAGE: THE PURPLE MAN
This is how you make a sequel. One of the easiest mistakes filmmakers make is simply trying to recreate what worked the first time. Dwight Gallo, Jimmy Ellis, and George Tillman Jr. wisely avoided that trap. The first Luke Cage embraced the gritty blaxploitation feel of early-'70s Harlem. Instead of repeating themselves, Luke Cage: The Purple Man shifts into the flashier disco era, and the movie's entire personality changes with it.

That's a risky move.

Change too much and audiences reject it. Change too little and they accuse you of making the same movie twice. Somehow this team threaded the needle. The new aesthetic feels fresh without abandoning what made the original work, and the Purple Man himself gives the sequel a completely different type of threat. It's a sequel that evolves instead of imitates, and that's exactly what franchise filmmaking should strive for.


ECHOES OF RED
Here's the frustrating thing about Echoes of Red: It's so close. The foundation is incredibly strong. The cast is loaded with talent, the central mystery keeps you invested, and Cate Blanchett finally gets an LRF role worthy of an actress of her caliber. It's been several seasons since she's had material this substantial, and she absolutely takes advantage of it. This feels like one of those performances that's going to linger in the awards conversation all season.

I have my issues with the movie—and we'll get to those in a minute—but when a film gives an actor like Blanchett room to really work, that's worth celebrating. Sometimes a movie doesn't have to be perfect to remind you why certain performers remain among the best in the business.



PROFITS
Now let's talk about the elephant in the room.

Less than half a billion dollars in total profits through fifteen releases. That's... concerning.

Season 36 still has time to recover, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to imagine this slate reaching the billion-dollar profit mark unless the back half catches absolute fire. The problem isn't the blockbusters—they've done their job. The problem is that too many films are merely breaking even or losing money outright.

This season has produced enough quality movies. It just hasn't produced enough profitable ones.


1016 WEST MONROE
Jazz is fertile ground for drama. Chicago is fertile ground for drama. Put those elements together and you should have something rich, emotional, and alive. Instead, 1016 West Monroe never seemed to figure out exactly what story it wanted to tell.

Quitessa Swindell simply wasn't able to carry the weight of the film for me, and while Lewis Pullman and Diana Silvers both have talent, neither performance provided the spark necessary to elevate the material. More importantly, the screenplay itself felt oddly small. Not intimate—small. The story drifted from idea to idea without ever building much momentum, leaving the entire experience feeling unfocused and strangely underdeveloped.

Honestly, when the box office numbers came in, I wasn't surprised.


ECHOES OF RED
Yes...
It somehow lands in both columns.

Because this is exactly the kind of movie that frustrates me. The story is good. Cate Blanchett is excellent. Most of the cast works. The atmosphere is terrific. But then the screenplay occasionally gets... sloppy.

Whether those rough edges were intentional or not, there were moments where the mystery seemed less interested in logical progression than in simply arriving at its next twist. It's never enough to derail the movie, but it's noticeable.

And then there's Jessica Barden. I like Jessica Barden as an actress. I did not buy Jessica Barden as a detective for one second.

Maybe that's superficial, but casting is about credibility. The second she appeared in that role, I found myself questioning it instead of believing it. Does she even meet the police department's height requirement? I'm only half joking.

Monday, June 29, 2026

ON LOCATION (SEASON 36 ROUND 5)

 

1016 West Monroe
- Cleveland, Ohio, USA


Echoes of Red
- Montreal, Quebec, Canada


Luke Cage: The Purple Man
- New York, New York, USA

BOX OFFICE BREAKDOWN (SEASON 36 ROUND 5)

 

1016 WEST MONROE
Budget: $18,000,000
Total Box Office: $12,992,089
Total Profit: -$22,124,357


While commercially disappointing, the result is hardly surprising given the film's challenging subject matter and niche appeal.

BOX OFFICE FACT
Never one to shy away from unconventional stories, Meirad Tako sees 1016 West Monroe finish 42nd out of the 47 films he has written for LRF in terms of worldwide box office gross.

GENRE RANKINGS
Drama: #396
Music: #25




ECHOES OF RED
Budget: $42,000,000
Total Box Office: $82,814,137
Total Profit: $10,590,000


Emerald Fennell continued her impressive start at LRF with another profitable theatrical release. While nowhere near the commercial heights of her debut, Echoes of Red demonstrated that the director's success wasn't solely tied to franchise filmmaking.

BOX OFFICE FACT
Through just two LRF films, director Emerald Fennell has now accumulated $886 million worldwide at the box office. While Supergirl: Power accounts for the lion's share with $804 million, Echoes of Red gives the filmmaker back-to-back commercial successes.

GENRE RANKINGS
Crime: #45
Thriller: #81




LUKE CAGE: THE PURPLE MAN
Budget: $81,000,000
Total Box Office: $249,978,106
Total Profit: $72,115,611


Marvel's street-level corner of the LRF universe remained a dependable financial performer as Luke Cage: The Purple Man comfortably entered profitability. While it didn't approach the studio's biggest superhero blockbusters, the sequel reinforced the strength of Marvel's R-rated strategy.

BOX OFFICE FACT
Among the 12 R-rated entries in LRF's Marvel Universe, Luke Cage: The Purple Man ranks 7th all-time in worldwide box office gross.

GENRE RANKINGS
Action: #186
Superhero: #108
Crime: #6



Season 36 Round 5 Total Box Office:
$345,784,332

Season 36 Round 5 Total Profit:
$60,581,254

Round 5 marked another profitable outing for the studio, with Luke Cage: The Purple Man accounting for over 72% of the round's total profit and leading a balanced slate anchored by two successful mid-budget releases.



Season 36 Total Box Office:
$2,781,001,751

Season 36 Total Profit:
$495,357,892

Five rounds into the season, LRF sits just shy of the half-billion-dollar profit mark, with blockbuster franchise films continuing to offset losses from more experimental prestige projects.


SEASON 36 BOX OFFICE STANDINGS
1. Boba Fett — $763,673,771 👑
2. Donkey Kong Country — $720,434,668 👑
3. Lobo — $480,893,956 🔥
4. Luke Cage: The Purple Man — $249,978,106 💰
5. Stretch Armstrong — $144,189,611 ☠️
6. Echoes of Red — $82,814,137 💰
7. Double Date — $80,369,160 💰
8. Gray — $62,441,218 💣
9. 1995 — $40,003,252 💰
10. Pirouette — $39,100,555 📉
11. Three Rounds — $34,386,590 💣
12. The Quiet Between Us — $26,319,562 📉
13. Heartbeat — $25,404,407 💣
14. Diary of a Wimpy Kid — $18,000,669 💣
15. 1016 West Monroe — $12,992,089 💣

Sunday, June 28, 2026

LRF TRIVIA TIDBITS (SEASON 36 ROUND 5)

 

Round 5 of Season 36 shines a spotlight on long-term careers and expanding cinematic worlds. Whether it's an actor finally stepping outside a signature franchise role, a legendary performer reaching another career milestone, or Marvel continuing to flesh out its period storytelling, each film adds another layer to LRF history.

1016 West Monroe
1016 West Monroe marks a significant first for Diana Silvers. In her fifth LRF appearance, she finally plays a character outside of Marvel's Rogue, having previously portrayed the X-Men fan-favorite in Gambit and Rogue (Season 16), X-Men: The Cure (Season 20), X-Men: Sinister (Season 24), and X-Men: Age of Apocalypse (Season 24).

Echoes of Red
Cate Blanchett’s LRF career has been remarkably consistent, if surprisingly unrewarded by the Golden Reel Awards after an explosive start. She debuted back in Season 4, earning two GRA nominations and winning Best Actress in her very first season. Echoes of Red marks her eleventh LRF film, though she has yet to receive another acting nomination since that early triumph.

Luke Cage: The Power Man
Luke Cage: The Power Man becomes just the third 1970s-set film in LRF’s sprawling 51-film Marvel Universe. It joins the original Luke Cage: Power Man from Season 24 and The Immortal Iron Fist from Season 28, continuing the studio’s occasional exploration of Marvel history outside its contemporary timeline.

Release: Luke Cage: The Purple Man

 

Luke Cage: The Purple Man
Genre: Action / Superhero / Crime
Director: George Tillman Jr.
Writers: Jimmy Ellis & Dwight Galo
Based on Marvel Comics characters
Cast: Omari Hardwick, Olivia Munn, Nathalie Emmanuel, Matthias Schweighofer, Sabrina Carpenter, Fred Williamson, Meagan Good, Colman Domingo (cameo)

Budget: $81,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $148,978,102
Foreign Box Office: $101,000,004
Total Profit: $72,115,611

Reaction: This sequel managed a nice little numbers uptick in every box office category compared to the first Luke Cage film - always nice for a sequel to accomplish.


"The film’s psychological angle is compelling, but the pacing dips and the stakes can feel diffuse. The nightclub sequences impress visually, though the story occasionally loses focus. Olivia Munn and Nathalie Emmanuel are strong, while Sabrina Carpenter’s Dazzler feels underwritten despite her presence. Killgrave is unsettling, but not always commanding enough." - Frank Washington, Comicbook.com




"Dropping the blaxploitation tone of Power Man for a disco-infused thriller, The Purple Man feels like a superhero take on Nighthawks—stylish but uneven. The tonal shift doesn’t always land, but the supporting cast (Munn, Emmanuel, Schweighöfer, Carpenter) elevates the material. It’s an imperfect but bold evolution." - Cooper Wilson, The Earl Hays Press




"Luke Cage is back at it again in a more superhero type plot that may not offer anything new to the returning characters or more than a decent plot but great action, confident direction, Sabrina Carpenter shines as Dazzler and Matthias Schweighofer chews scenery as its mind controlling villain." - Mary Bloomington-Grant, Associated Press







Rated R for language, sexual content/nudity, and violence






Saturday, June 27, 2026

Comic to Film: Luke Cage: The Purple Man

 

Welcome back for another Comic to Film! This time around we are going to take a look at the disco-dancing cast of Luke Cage: The Purple Man, the sequel to surprise Season 24 hit... Luke Cage: Power Man. Returning behind the camera this Marvel Universe production will be director George Tillman Jr. (Big George Foreman, Luke Cage: Power Man) and writers Jimmy Ellis (Rubicon Lies, Coriolanus) and Dwight Gallo (The Punisher: Purgatory, X-Men: Age of Apocalypse).