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SpectreVision Seeks To Transform Podcasting Landscape
SpectreVision Seeks To Transform Podcasting Landscape

Forbes

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

SpectreVision Seeks To Transform Podcasting Landscape

Just one year after launch, SpectreVision Radio is hellbent on taking the podcasting medium where no one has gone before (with all due respect to Captain Kirk). The above-mentioned podcast network run by SpectreVision, the horror-focused production banner founded by Elijah Wood, Daniel Noah, and Josh C. Waller, announced today 'a bold expansion into video podcasting" by turning their 50-show catalogue into full-on productions. 'When we started this thing, it was with the intention of just making audio podcasts,' Noah tells me over Zoom. 'We had a couple shows with a video component, but then, come December, the data started trickling in to the industry that consumers were overwhelmingly favoring podcasts with video. We found ourselves in this really unique position, wherein we were one of the only networks that were also filmmakers. So we started to realize that there was a demand that we could answer quite directly.' For Noah and his two co-founders, 'the notion of bringing real, cinematic storytelling techniques to podcasting is not just novel — it's necessary," he affirms. 'Just a short time ago, the Joe Rogan format of a couple people sitting around a table was pretty much the only game in town. But we look at this as filmmakers and say 'Why can't we get up off the desk move things around?' We're trying to get creative. In some cases, it is just windows with people talking to each other. But even in those cases, we're really trying to make them look very pretty and professional." As of this writing, they've already begun the process of converting shows into novel, chimeric configurations. For instance, Soren Narnia's short fiction podcast Knifepoint Horror was 'the big proof of concept' that it could done effectively. 'The way I described it to Soren was, 'Let's think of this as the visual equivalent of a Brian Eno record. It's not necessarily meant to capture your full attention. It's there as a seasoning, a flavor. Something to zone out to if that's what you want to do,'' Noah recalls. And so, they added the visual element of a dark road viewed through the windshield of a car driving at night for an episode about a road trip. Not long after, the podcast was among the Top 10 titles on Spotify. 'That was when we realized, 'Okay, there's something happening here,'" Noah adds. 'We have 50 shows that we're rolling out, and nearly every single one of them is in some process of converting to video. We're working very closely with the creators and saying, 'Listen, let's, figure this out together. What is a natural and organic visual expression of what you're doing that isn't just a ring light and a Yeti microphone? How can we really up the game?'' The end goal is to create a fresh medium that defies all current definitions, falling 'somewhere between podcasting and traditional television," explains the SpectreVision-co-founder. 'There is an understanding that this will not be as fully-produced as traditional, institutionalized television, but there still will be an understanding, or an expectation, that there will be something creative.' The best part? Neither Hollywood nor the wider podcasting community have yet to grasp the true potential of this burgeoning entity. 'I think that by the time they do realize what's happening, they will be so far behind the curve," Noah continues. 'Because the content creators who are aware of this and already running way out ahead of the pack will be the trendsetters and the leaders in this space. I think what's so thrilling about it, is it belongs to the artists. This is a very rare dynamic when artists are dominating and owning a space.' This trailblazing podcast endeavor marks the latest stage in the company's evolution into a multimedia juggernaut. Just last month, Forbes Entertainment spoke with Noah about SpectreVision's forthcoming comic book series at Oni Press, High Strangeness, which will shine a more accurate light on popular paranormal topics like cryptids and the Men in Black. 'These things, when they happen, are very strange and very confounding, and don't necessarily have easy answers,' concludes Noah, who is overseeing the project. 'We're just leaning into the ambiguity of all that.'

Daniel Noah Is Making It Weird In Oni's New ‘High Strangeness' Series
Daniel Noah Is Making It Weird In Oni's New ‘High Strangeness' Series

Forbes

time14-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Daniel Noah Is Making It Weird In Oni's New ‘High Strangeness' Series

Cover version "F" of High Strangeness due out from Oni Press, October, 2025. As a writer, producer and director of films and podcasts, Daniel Noah always enjoys telling good ghost stories. But he's taking the supernatural extremely seriously in High Strangeness, a new deluxe graphic series coming this October from edgy independent publisher Oni Press. Noah is co-founder (with Elijah Wood and Lawrence Inglee) of SpectreVision, the production company known for films like Mandy and A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, which is collaborating with Oni on the publication. For most of his life, he described himself as a hardcore skeptic when it came to the occult. Then a night in the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado (the haunted hotel that inspired The Shining) left him questioning whether there was more to reality than meets the eye. Writer/Producer Daniel Noah (SpectreVision) 'Our last night there, a group of folks gathered in the room with the Ouija board, which I regarded as a child's game. I was not happy to be doing it,' Noah recounted in an interview last week. 'Then something happened that was so undeniable that my only options were to believe that my friends had spent half a million dollars concocting an unlikely prank, or that we'd had a genuine encounter with a ghost.' Following that experience, Noah began examining the lore of the unexplained with a new eye, eventually coming to believe that a whole range of phenomena from UFO encounters to hauntings to the original, super-creepy Men in Black, were all manifestations of the same set of real experiences people were having all over the world, dressed up in the guise of fiction and folklore. Noah found a kindred spirit in Oni Press Publisher Hunter Gorinson, who encouraged him to develop the idea for comics. 'We want to make this as spectacular and entertaining and beautifully complex as possible,' said Gorinson. 'We're doing this five-issue series in a high quality format with no ads and a ton of expert back-matter to expand on the nonfiction element.' Noah is serving as 'showrunner' of the series, working with a creative team including writer Chris Condon (Ultimate Wolverine, The Goddamn Tragedy) and Ringo Award-winning artist Dave Chisholm (Plague House); writer Zac Thompson (Cemetery Kids Run Rabid) and artist Noah Bailey (Station Grand, Double Walker); Eisner Award nominee Christopher Cantwell (Out of Alcatraz, Thanos) and artist Valeria Burzo (EC's Epitaphs from the Abyss); New York Times best-selling writer Cecil Castellucci (Shade the Changing Girl) and artist Chloe Stawski (Sapphic Pulp); and multiple Eisner Award winner Christian Ward (Batman: City of Madness). Senior editor Bess Pallares is overseeing the project on Oni's end. Page from High Strangeness #1 from Oni Press Noah said he is excited to work in the comics medium for the first time. 'I've worked in every aspect of media, but comics are new to me,' he said. 'I've never experienced this much support for free creative expression anywhere. Nothing has come close. I also feel a great sense of responsibility because that these guys are supporting some really crazy stuff, you know, not just in the content, but even in the way that the story is told.' While stories that blend the line between supernatural fiction and reality are nothing new in comics, Gorinson said High Strangeness is honoring the ambiguity of the material by challenging the reader rather than providing easy answers. He also said that, despite collaborating with a company like SpectreVision, which produces projects across different media, the books will adhere to Oni's primary mission of delivering good comics, without an eye toward a bigger media footprint. Attendees of this year's San Diego Comic-Con can get a preview of what's in store for High Strangeness during a live recording of the SpectreVision podcast Saturday, July 26 at the Neil Morgan Auditorium in the San Diego Central Library. Gorinson, Pallares, and writers Chris Cantwell and Chris Condon will join Noah, Elijah Wood and host Jim Perry for what the company describes as a 'a wide-ranging, investigative conversation a will surveil the liminal spaces where reality, hallucination, science and mythology give way to cosmic wonder and existential terror.' HIGH STRANGENESS: BOOK ONE – 1967 arrives in comic shops on October 8th with a covers by Jock (Wytches, Detective Comics), Dave Chisholm (Spectrum), Becca Carey (Benjamin, Radiant Black), and Malachi Ward (Black Hammer). High Strangeness #1 Cover A by Jock, from Oni Press, 2025

THEN AND NOW: The cast of 'The Lord of the Rings'
THEN AND NOW: The cast of 'The Lord of the Rings'

Business Insider

time09-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Business Insider

THEN AND NOW: The cast of 'The Lord of the Rings'

The first installment of the beloved "Lord of the Rings" trilogy came out in 2001. Several stars like Ian McKellen and Orlando Bloom reprised their roles in the "Hobbit" films. Sean Bean and Karl Urban have gone on to play iconic TV characters. Believe it or not, it's been over two decades since the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy wrapped in 2003. The film franchise, based on the J. R. R. Tolkien novel of the same name, received critical acclaim — and also launched several actors' careers. Since leaving Middle Earth, many of the franchise's stars have gone on to play other iconic roles. Here's a look at what the star-studded cast is up to today. Elijah Wood played Frodo Baggins. Wood played a hobbit named Frodo in the "Lord of the Rings" films. After inheriting the One Ring from his cousin Bilbo Baggins, Frodo bravely volunteers to take it to Mordor to be destroyed, kicking off the epic journey across Middle Earth. Wood began acting at a young age and had several major film credits before "The Fellowship of the Ring" (2001), like "Flipper" (1996) and "Avalon" (1990). Wood has since acted across a variety of genres. Wood has stayed busy with movies of all genres, including the action-comedy "Spy Kids 3D: Game Over" (2003), romantic drama "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" (2004), animated musical "Happy Feet" (2006), and psychological slasher "Maniac" (2012). In 2010, Wood cofounded the production company SpectreVision, formerly known as The Woodshed, and has gone on to produce films like "A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night" (2014), "Mandy" (2018), and "Color Out of Space" (2019). In addition to his other career as a DJ, Wood still found time to work on projects like Cartoon Network's "Over the Garden Wall," "I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore" (2017), and "Come to Daddy" (2019). These days, you can catch him in the ensemble cast of Showtime's "Yellowjackets." Viggo Mortensen played Aragorn. The Danish-American actor Mortensen played Aragorn — the son of Arathorn, heir of Isildur, and eventual King of Gondor. Aragorn is a member of the Fellowship and leads the fight against Sauron's army while the One Ring is being destroyed. Before joining the "Lord of the Rings" cast, Mortensen had worked with directors like Peter Weir, Brian De Palma, Tony Scott, Ridley Scott, and Jane Campion. Fans would likely recognize him from films like "Young Guns II" (1990), "Crimson Tide" (1995), "The Portrait of a Lady" (1996), and "G.I. Jane" (1997). Mortensen has been nominated for several Academy Awards. Mortensen has since been nominated for best actor at the Academy Awards three times, for "Eastern Promises" (2007), "Captain Fantastic" (2016), and "Green Book" (2018), and has received numerous other honors. He made his feature directorial debut with the 2020 drama "Falling," which he also wrote, coproduced, and starred in opposite Lance Henriksen. Sean Bean played Boromir. Bean played Boromir, the son of Denethor and a member of the Fellowship. Boromir primarily appears in the first movie, as he dies defending Merry and Pippin against a horde of orcs after briefly allowing himself to be tempted by the One Ring. Bean was previously known for his roles in action thrillers like "Patriot Games" (1992), "GoldenEye" (1995), and "Ronin" (1998). Bean played another beloved fantasy character on "Game of Thrones." After meeting his character's demise in "The Fellowship of the Ring," Bean appeared in "Equilibrium" (2002), portrayed Odysseus in "Troy" (2004), and chased Nicolas Cage in "National Treasure" (2004). He went on to famously play Ned Stark on HBO's "Game of Thrones." More recently, he played Mr. Wilford on TNT's "Snowpiercer," John Parse in Brandon Cronenberg's 2020 sci-fi thriller "Possessor," and Ian on the BBC drama "Marriage." Dominic Monaghan played Meriadoc "Merry" Brandybuck. Monaghan played the troublesome hobbit Merry in the "Lord of the Rings" films. Merry is a hobbit from Frodo's village who finds himself leaving the Shire and joining Frodo's dangerous adventure. He had acted in several TV movies, but "The Fellowship of the Ring" was Monaghan's big-screen debut. Monaghan had a major role on "Lost." After concluding the film trilogy, Monaghan landed the role of Charlie Pace on ABC's "Lost" and appeared on the series until 2010. After that, he hosted and produced the BBC wildlife docuseries "Wild Things With Dominic Monaghan" from 2012 to 2016. He also starred in the video short for Eminem and Rihanna's "Love the Way You Lie," played a mutant in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" (2009), and joined another major franchise when he appeared in "Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker" (2019). He voiced Archibald Desnay on Amazon Prime's 2022 animated adaptation of "Critical Role," "The Legend of Vox Machina." Most recently, he voiced an Orc in the animated "Lord of the Rings" prequel "The War of the Rohirrim" (2024). Sean Astin played Samwise Gamgee. Astin portrayed the loyal hobbit Samwise, Frodo's best friend. Save for a few brief separations, Sam is always by Frodo's side and risks his life many times to save his friends. Astin had several notable credits before the fantasy franchise, famous for roles in films like "The Goonies" (1985) and "Rudy" (1993). Astin has worked on several major TV shows. Astin has since done a lot of voice-over work for animated films and video games, even providing the voice for Raphael on Nickelodeon's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles." In 2017, he joined the second season of Netflix's "Stranger Things" as Joyce's love interest, Bob Newby. He has several projects in the works, and he also recently played a recurring role on the sitcom "The Conners." Ian McKellen played Gandalf. If not for McKellen's character, the Fellowship would never have formed and likely would not have survived. McKellen mainly began his professional acting career on the stage in the early 1960s. A year before the fantasy trilogy debuted, he joined the Marvel universe as Magneto in the "X-Men" franchise. McKellen also appeared in the "Hobbit" films. McKellen continued playing Magneto during and after the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, most recently in "X-Men: Days of Future Past" (2014). The actor is one of the few "Lord of the Rings" cast members to also appear in the "Hobbit" films, reprising his role as the powerful wizard. Some of McKellen's more recent turns include Cogsworth in the live-action "Beauty and the Beast" (2017) and Gus the Theatre Cat in "Cats" (2019). He also has several recent theater credits in the UK, including "Hamlet" and "The Cherry Orchard." John Rhys-Davies played Gimli. The Welsh actor Rhys-Davies portrayed the dwarf warrior Gimli. Gimli is the representative for the dwarfs in the Fellowship and the son of Glóin, one of Bilbo's companions during the events of "The Hobbit." Rhys-Davies, who also provided the voice of Treebeard in the films, previously played Sallah in several "Indiana Jones" films and Vasco Rodrigues on NBC's miniseries "Shogun," for which he received an Emmy nomination. Rhys-Davies has continued working on fantasy projects. After "The Lord of the Rings," he appeared in a number of notable TV movies and on shows like Comedy Central's "TripTank." There are a few other fantasy projects on his recent résumé, including ABC's "Once Upon a Time" and MTV's "The Shannara Chronicles." Rhys-Davies has also lent his voice to video games and animated projects like Guillermo del Toro's Netflix miniseries "Wizards" and the 2019 feature "Mosley." Most recently, he voiced a character in"Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom" (2023). Orlando Bloom played Legolas. Bloom played the master archer and wood elf Legolas. The arrow-wielding hero is also a member of the Fellowship and eventually becomes Gimli's best friend, even though dwarfs and elves historically hated each other. Bloom was relatively unknown when he was cast in the trilogy, but between the first and second films, he appeared in "Black Hawk Down" (2002). Bloom has played other action-packed roles. Bloom famously played Will Turner in four of the "Pirates of the Caribbean" installments. Alongside McKellen, he also revisited the role of Legolas in the "Hobbit" films. In addition to other hit projects like "Troy" (2004) and "The Three Musketeers" (2011), the actor starred on the Amazon series "Carnival Row" as Rycroft Philostrate. More recently, he starred in the action film "Red Right Hand" (2024). Billy Boyd played Peregrin "Pippin" Took. Boyd played Pippin, the immature best friend of Merry, and appeared in all three "Lord of the Rings" films. As a part of the Fellowship, his antics cause trouble for the group, but he always means well. Boyd had primarily worked on television before he was cast in the first film of the trilogy and continued to do so in between the franchise's sequels. Boyd continues making music and acting. Boyd appeared in "Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World" alongside Russell Crowe in 2003, the same year as "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King." The next year, he provided the voice of Glen and Glenda for the horror film "Seed of Chucky" (2004). Boyd is also a musician and got to write and perform a song for "The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies" (2014). He was seen on episodes of FX's "Snowfall," ABC's "Grey's Anatomy," and Starz's "Outlander." He also appeared in the 2021 thriller "An Intrusion." More recently, he voiced a character in the anime "Lord of the Rings" prequel, "The War of the Rohirrim." Ian Holm played Bilbo Baggins. The English actor Holm played Bilbo Baggins, the previous ring bearer. Bilbo is Frodo's guardian and cousin, and he is unnaturally old because of the effects of the One Ring. Even before the film franchise, Holm was a Tony Award-winning actor, probably best known to fantasy and sci-fi fans for playing Ash in the Ridley Scott film "Alien" (1979). Holm has starred in a variety of films. After the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, Holm worked on an impressive array of films like "Garden State" (2004), "Lord of War" (2005), and "Ratatouille" (2007). In 2020, Holm died at age 88 of complications related to Parkinson's disease. Liv Tyler played Arwen Undómiel. Tyler brought Arwen, daughter of Lord Elrond, to life on the big screen. The elf saves Frodo from the Black Riders and later marries Aragorn. Before "The Fellowship of the Ring," Tyler had been in plenty of films, including "Stealing Beauty" (1996) and "Armageddon" (1998). Tyler has since been on several hit shows. Tyler joined another major franchise in 2008 as Betty Ross in Marvel's "The Incredible Hulk." In 2025, she reprised the role in "Captain America: Brave New World." Elsewhere, Tyler played Meg Abbott on HBO's "The Leftovers," Lady Isabella Fitzwilliam on ITV-Hulu's "Harlots," Eve in the sci-fi thriller "Ad Astra" (2019), and Michelle Blake on Fox's "9-1-1: Lone Star." Hugo Weaving played Lord Elrond. Elrond, played by Weaving, is the Lord of Rivendell. The elf was there when Isildur claimed the One Ring and tried to get him to destroy it, to no avail. Fans would likely recognize Weaving as Agent Smith in "The Matrix" films, a franchise that mostly ran at the same time as the "Lord of the Rings" movies. Weaving continues to act in blockbuster hits. Weaving went on to play V in "V for Vendetta" (2006), voice Megatron in Michael Bay's "Transformers" films, and portray the Red Skull in "Captain America: The First Avenger" (2011). Weaving starred in the drama "Lone Wolf" and appeared on the Binge miniseries "Love Me" in 2021. Most recently, he played the villainous Frank Harness in the thriller series "Slow Horses." Cate Blanchett played Galadriel. Blanchett portrayed Galadriel, Lady of the Golden Wood and grandmother to Arwen. In "The Fellowship of the Ring," she gives each traveler a special gift, including the "star-glass" that later proves useful against the giant spider. Blanchett didn't get a ton of screen time in the films — only a minute and 23 seconds, according to Screen Rant. She had appeared in several movies before "The Lord of the Rings," like "Elizabeth" (1998) and "The Talented Mr. Ripley" (1999). Blanchett is now an Academy Award-winning actor. Immediately after "The Lord of the Rings," Blanchett appeared in "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou" (2004) and "The Aviator" (2004), which earned her an Oscar win. She racked up more nominations for "Notes on a Scandal" (2006), "I'm Not There" (2007), and "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (2007) before winning another Oscar for "Blue Jasmine" (2013). Blanchett was nominated yet again for her work in "Carol" (2016) and played the activist Phyllis Schlafly in the FX miniseries "Mrs. America." More recently, she starred in "Don't Look Up" (2021), "Tár" (2022), "Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio" (2022), and the TV series "Disclaimer" (2024). Andy Serkis played Gollum. Serkis' portrayal of Gollum was an impressive feat of motion-capture technology. Throughout the films, Gollum, originally known as Sméagol, is painted as an antagonist and a representation of the One Ring's consequences. Before his performance in the trilogy, Serkis had been in several shows and films, like "Career Girls (1997)" and "Among Giants" (1998). Serkis has appeared in other major film franchises. Serkis reprised Gollum in "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" (2012) and did groundbreaking performance-capture work for the "Planet of the Apes" films. He then joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the flesh as Ulysses Klaue, provided the voice of Baloo in "Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle" (2018), and was Snoke in the recent "Star Wars" trilogy. Recently, Serkis played Alfred Pennyworth in "The Batman" alongside Robert Pattinson and Kino Loy on the Disney+ series "Andor." Christopher Lee played Saruman. A film legend, Lee took a notable turn as the wizard Saruman the White, who was introduced as a respectable ally but turned out to be a power-hungry pawn of Sauron. Before his role in the fantasy films, he starred in many movies like "Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace" (1962) and "Count Dracula" (1977). Lee acted in several other notable films. After the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, Lee appeared in several films and shorts, like "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" (2005) and "Hugo" (2011), before reprising his role as Saruman in "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." In 2015, Lee died at age 93 after being hospitalized for heart failure and respiratory problems. Miranda Otto played Éowyn. Otto played arguably one of the most important characters in the trilogy, Éowyn. Disguised as a Rider of Rohan, Éowyn, shield maiden of Rohan and daughter of Éomund, ultimately kills the Witch-king of Angmar during the Battle of the Pelennor Fields. Before her turn in the "Lord of the Rings" films, Otto appeared in movies like "The Well" (1998) and "The Thin Red Line" (1998). Otto has acted on several series. Shortly after the Middle Earth films, Otto appeared on-screen again in the 2005 adaptation of "War of the Worlds." She has since worked on films like "Annabelle: Creation" (2017) and miniseries like USA's "The Starter Wife," ABC's "Cashmere Mafia," and Fox's "24: Legacy." In 2018, she showed off her fantasy roots on the Netflix series "Chilling Adventures of Sabrina" as aunt Zelda Spellman. Otto recently appeared on several TV miniseries, like SBS' "The Unusual Suspects." In 2024, she reprised her role of Éowyn in the "Lord of the Rings" prequel anime film, "The War of the Rohirrim." John Noble played Denethor II. Noble made playing a troublesome ruler look fun. The last viewers saw of Denethor, he was falling off a cliff on fire after he had tried burning his son alive. Before the fantasy franchise, the actor had been on TV series and in films like "The Monkey's Mask" (2001). Noble has since worked on several hit TV shows. Noble is probably best known for playing Walter Bishop on the Fox series "Fringe." Like his "Lord of the Rings" costars Blanchett and Weaving, Noble also appeared as a guest on the ABC series "Rake" before signing longer stints on shows like Fox's "Sleepy Hollow," The CW's "DC's Legends of Tomorrow," and CBS' "Elementary." He also showed up as Billy Butcher's father on an episode of Amazon Prime's "The Boys." More recently, he worked on Netflix's "Cowboy Bebop," Paramount+'s "Star Trek: Prodigy," and Apple TV+'s "Severance." Karl Urban played Éomer. Urban played Éomer, the leader of the Riders of Rohan who later becomes King of the Mark. Before the trilogy, he played Julius Caesar on Syfy's "Xena: Warrior Princess" and appeared in several films. Urban continues to make a name for himself as an action star. Urban became an action-movie star shortly after "The Return of the King" with "The Chronicles of Riddick" (2004), followed by "The Bourne Supremacy" (2004) and "Doom" (2005). He later played Leonard "Bones" McCoy in "Star Trek" (2009) and continued his action-star legacy as the titular judge in "Dredd" (2012). Urban plays Billy on "The Boys" — making Noble's guest appearance a "Lord of the Rings" reunion.

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