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Mads Mikkelsen goes full-on John Wick in new trailer for Netflix’s Polar
mardi 8 janvier 2019, 02:28 , par Ars Technica
Mads Mikkelsen is international hitman Kaiser Black in new trailer for Netflix film Polar.
With the release of John Wick 3: Parabellum just a few months away, is there room in the entertainment landscape for a TV movie about another reformed hitman reluctantly pulled out of retirement to exact vengeance? Netflix is betting there is with its forthcoming original film, Polar. The film is based on a webcomic by Victor Santos featuring an international hitman named Kaiser Black. Santos considered his work a mix of classic Marvel comics (especially Jim Steranko's S.H.I.E.L.D. comics), Jason Bourne movies, and manga. The webcomic, which debuted in 2012, didn't even have dialogue, mostly because Santos wasn't keen on translating the comic from Spanish to English. Dark Horse Comics produced a hardcover graphic novel entitled Polar: Came From the Cold in 2013, adding dialogue in speech balloons. Two more Polar volumes appeared in 2015 (Eye for an Eye) and 2016 (No Mercy for Sister Maria). A fourth and final volume, The Kaiser Falls, is slated to be released this April. Duncan Vizla, aka the Black Kaiser (Mads Mikkelsen) has quite the resume. [credit: YouTube/Netflix ] So Netflix's film version is certainly timely. The film's plot is adapted from the first Dark Horse volume, Came From the Cold, with a script by Jayson Rothwell. The agent formerly known as Black Kaiser (played by Hannibal's Mads Mikkelsen) is trying to enjoy his well-earned retirement in solitude under the name Duncan Vizla. He tells his neighbor, Camille, that he used to be in 'the funeral business.' But his former employer, the Damocles Agency, is keen to collect on an unusual clause in his contract. If an agent dies after retirement, his $8 million fortune reverts to the agency. Now there's a price on the Black Kaiser's head, and a group of young, ambitious assassins is happy to take on the job. Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1437511
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