
‘The Umbrella Academy’ unveils teaser trailer and first-look images for final season
The Hindu
Get ready for the final season of The Umbrella Academy on Netflix, premiering August 8 with new challenges and threats.
Netflix has unveiled a teaser trailer and exclusive first-look images for the fourth and final season of The Umbrella Academy. The series, created by Steve Blackman and based on Gerard Way and Gabriel Bá’s Dark Horse comic series, is set to premiere on August 8.
The final season picks up after the dramatic events at the Hotel Oblivion, where the Hargreeves siblings face a reset timeline and the loss of their powers. Scattered and struggling to adapt to their new lives, they soon realize that normalcy is short-lived. Their father, Reginald, has reemerged as the head of a powerful business empire. Meanwhile, a secretive group known as The Keepers believes that their reality is an illusion, warning of an impending reckoning. As new threats loom, the siblings must reunite to confront these challenges and restore order.
Returning cast members include Elliot Page, Tom Hopper, David Castañeda, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Robert Sheehan, Aidan Gallagher, Justin H. Min, Ritu Arya, Colm Feore, Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, and David Cross. The show is produced by UCP, a division of Universal Studio Group, for Netflix.
Steve Blackman continues as showrunner and executive producer. Gerard Way and Gabriel Bá also serve as co-executive producers.

In a few days, there would be a burst of greetings. They would resonate with different wavelengths of emotion and effort. Simple and insincere. Simple but sincere. Complex yet insincere. Complex and sincere. That last category would encompass physical greeting cards that come at some price to the sender, the cost more hidden than revealed. These are customised and handcrafted cards; if the reader fancies sending them when 2026 dawns, they might want to pick the brains of these two residents of Chennai, one a corporate professional and the other yet to outgrow the school uniform

‘Pharma’ series review: Despite strong performances and solid premise, the narrative misses the mark
Pharma offers strong performances but falters in storytelling, making it a passable watch despite its intriguing premise.

The Kochi Biennale is evolving, better, I love it. There have been problems in the past but they it seems to have been ironed out. For me, the atmosphere, the fact of getting younger artists doing work, showing them, getting the involvement of the local people… it is the biggest asset, the People’s Biennale part of it. This Biennale has a great atmosphere and It is a feeling of having succeeded, everybody is feeling a sense of achievement… so that’s it is quite good!










