Oscar Isaac is in talks to star as the titular character in the Marvel series “Moon Knight” at Disney Plus, according to Variety.
“Moon Knight” tells the story of Marc Spector, an elite soldier and mercenary who decides to fight crime after he becomes the human avatar of Khonshu, the Egyptian god of the moon.
It was previously announced that Jeremy Slater will serve as the writer, executive producer, and showrunner on “Moon Knight.” As with all the Marvel-Disney Plus shows, it will be produced by Kevin Feige’s Marvel Studios.
So far on my blog, I’ve covered the first two steps of writing a novel: developing realistic characters and coming up with a plot. Congratulations! You now have an A plot.
An A plot is the surface level plot. It’s what your character is doing and what’s happening to them. This plot deals with questions like:
What is wrong with my character’s life at the beginning of the novel?
What do they think will fix their lives when—spoiler alert—it won’t?
Why haven’t they achieved this goal yet?
What catalyst (or inciting incident) will cause them to get off their butts and start chasing this goal for real?
Now it’s time to move on to the B plot. The B plot is about your character’s development and changing who they are as a person. This is about working out not what your character wants but what they need.
Remember all those flaws we gave our characters? This is where we need to ask the questions:
How does this flaw affect the rest of my hero’s life?
Do my characters flaws get in the way of them achieving their goal?
How is the plot going to help them realise this flaw and overcome it by the end of the novel after their breaking point?
How is overcoming this flaw really going to make their lives better?
This character development is what gives novels their sparkle. The A plot is what makes your plot interesting, but the B plot is what makes your characters interesting.
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No way they brought back "good is not a thing you are it's a thing you do"
This is such a terrible death
Amazing Spider-Man #26 (2023)
written by Zeb Wells art by John Romita, Jr., Scott Hanna, Marcio Menyz, & Erick Arciniega
New Avengers #29 - “Illuminati Assemble” (2012)
written by Brian Michael Bendis art by Mike Deodato
the captain & the congressman spend their (very few) off days together
The real question is whose job was it to oil up Hugh Jackman like that
Look me in the eyes and tell me Wade didn't wanna fuck him
I think Ed and oswald would still try to kill each other if they were married
DORK!
Guardians of the Galaxy issue #5 (2013)
Not a single character in that Spiderman comic seemed that concerned that Kamala was dead. I think that's the funniest part.