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Charles Pulliam-Moore

Charles Pulliam-Moore

Film & TV Reporter

Charles Pulliam-Moore is a Film & TV writer for The Verge focusing on genre entertainment and how disparate, fandom-specific conversations coalesce into what we know as "the discourse."

Before coming to The Verge, Charles wrote about comic books, labor, race and a multitude of other topics at io9 and Gizmodo, and his writing has also been featured on NPR's Code Switch blog.

When he isn't reading the source material for a piece or decompressing with a comfort horror movie, Charles is usually somewhere on his bike.

Henry Cavill is suiting up for Amazon’s live-action Voltron movie.

It still doesn’t really feel like it has been long enough since Netflix’s Voltron: Legendary Defender series ended for Amazon to be producing its own live-action take on the 80s sci-fi franchise. But the Rawson Marshall Thurber-directed project has just added Henry Cavill to its cast, which makes it seem that much more likely we’ll be seeing it in theaters soon enough.


“The Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare” New York Premiere
Photo by Cindy Ord/WireImage
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Youtube
This prophecy girl is on fire.

Into every generation, a(t least one) fictional girl destined to save the world from demons is born, and the latest addition to the Buffy-inspired canon comes by way of Echo Wu’s Jentry Chau vs. The Underworld.

The show hits Netflix on December 5th.


Apple’s Disclaimer uses sex and scandal to shape your perception of reality

Alfonso Cuarón’s Disclaimer is a gripping erotic thriller about the power stories have over us.

And then there’s Hal.

There was still time for HBO to make its Lanterns show all about Aaron Pierre’s John Stewart, but the network has just officially cast Kyle Chandler to co-star as Hal Jordan.


A photo of Kyle Chandler, and an image of a man in a green and black superhero costume wearing a green ring.
HBO / Warner Bros.
Netflix is putting an end to all the Kaos.

Netflix’s Greek myth-inspired drama Kaos seemed like it had quite a bit (like Jeff Goldblum) going for it, but Variety reports that the show has been canceled after just one season.


Two women in suits. The woman on the left is looking to her right forlornly, while the woman on the right is looking at the other woman with shock on her face.
Netflix
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Let’s stop (motion) and take another look Over the Garden Wall.

Though Over the Garden Wall still remains criminally unavailable on Max where it belongs, a new two-minute-long stop-motion short from series creator Patrick McHale and Aardman is coming to Cartoon Network’s YouTube channel on November 3rd.