All posts by Madison Santel

Straight outta Brooklyn, NY, Madison covers Ecology and Climate Issues along with Entertainment and Lifestyle.

Greta Thunberg: Climate Activist focused on Change now, not hopes for an Uncertain Future

Graphic Collage / Lynxotic

Young Environmental Activist Who is less Interested in Hope for the Future, but rather Change in the Present

Her recent speech at the 2019 UN Climate Action Summit, along with many inspiring voices, was perhaps loudest and most impactful of them all. She is a sixteen-year-old Swedish girl who is rapidly becoming a flash point for those in the movement to raise awareness of the global emergency of global warming and climate change. Her name is Greta Thunberg, and her goal is to evoke immediate change in the way the world is handling the climate crisis.   

Born in 2003, Greta Thunberg dropped out of school at the age of fifteen to begin a career in environmental activism. Entirely self-motivated, Thunberg started out by protesting outside of the Swedish parliament building. Since then, she has spoken at Climate Action meetings around the world, criticizing leaders for a lack of effort and campaigning for transformation on behalf of the younger generation.

Greta has gotten the attention of many fellow activists, celebrities, and leaders over the past week, among them are Anne Hathaway, Leonardo DiCaprio, and former President Barak Obama, many of whom have met with her in person and all of whom have expressed their support via social media. This year Time magazine named her a “next generation leader” and many have pointed to her as an inspiring symbol of youth leadership.

Greta Thunberg’s Speech at the U.N. on September 23, 2019

Greta Thunberg’s intention is not to inspire hope, though, and she is not interested in waiting for the “next generation” to solve the environmental issues of today. Her speech from the Climate Action Summit went viral. In it, she cautions leaders not to feel hopeful, and instead urges them to “panic,” react, and change their ways now. She wants people to see the climate crisis for what it is—a crisis. 

Urgency in Equal Measure to the Problem at Hand

Her veracious rhetoric is contrary to the diplomatic way that many activists and politicians talk about climate change. Given that we have known about global warming for generations, yet have made very little progress in preventing its effects, the human race may be beyond diplomacy by now. And if we aren’t already, we will be at a tipping point sometime within the young Thunberg’s life.

While many rebellious young people may throw education to the wayside to pursue dreams of becoming celebrities or attaining fortunes, Greta Thunberg simply stumbled into fame, and there is hardly any money attached to the work that she does. Thunberg may be inspiring many of her peers and becoming a face of change, but she is not in it for personal recognition or gratification. The young activist—who is also diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder—simply has an uncontrollable itch to save the world from this impending environmental catastrophe. Uncontrollable, yet absolutely rational. 

Haters Hate but the Numbers of Believers is Rising

Despite all of the praise that Greta Thunberg has received, her efforts are not without criticism, particularly from the American far right and even President Trump. Some of her resistors are simply climate change-deniers who do not believe in the scientifically viable phenomena that she is combating. Others, however, scoff Greta for being a no more than a kid filled with teenage pathos that should not be taken seriously. Nevertheless, Thunberg’s speeches are well grounded in scientific evidence and on top of that, her emotions are perhaps reflective of how we should all feel, knowing that consequences for our destruction of the natural world are right around the corner.

In total, although Greta Thunberg is not aiming to evoke hope, but rather direct action when it comes to fighting climate change, we cannot help but applaud her bravery and get a surge of inspiration from her. With any luck, older generations will listen to her as but one among billions of young people who are concerned for the future, and actually do something about the problem. Until then, we salute Greta Thunberg and strive to do whatever we can as individuals to take her message to heart and make her efforts worthwhile.


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‘Jay and Silent Bob Reboot’: Kevin Smith Strikes again with Self-referential Comeback Clone

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/jay-and-silent-bob-reboot/jay-and-silent-bob-reboot-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official trailer for “Jay and SIlent Bob Reboot”

Kevin Smith’s Sequel follows a Decade of Offscreen Exploits

It’s been ten years since filmmaker Kevin Smith introduced us to Jay and Silent Bob in his 1994 indie cult-classic “Clerks.” Known for lazing outside of stores, smoking marijuana, and pondering the world, over the past twenty-five years, the pot-head duo has become a staple of Smith’s View Askewniverse, the fictional universe in which all of his films take place. Since “Clerks,” Jay and Silent Bob—respectfully played by Jason Mewes and Smith himself—have appeared in “Clerks 2,” “Mallrats,” and “Chasing Amy.” They even received their own movie, “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” in 2001.

Today, Kevin Smith is perhaps better known for his stand up comedy, pop-culture podcasts, and transmedia producing than he is for his movies. While he has some recent TV credits for directing episodes of the DCEU’s “Supergirl” and “The Flash,” it has been over three years since he last directed a feature film. That film was titled “Yoga Hosers,” and it received abhorrent reviews.

Still, perhaps more so than any other filmmaker, Kevin Smith is well aware of his artistic pitfalls and takes immense pleasure in mocking himself through his work. Nowhere does he do this better than in Jay and Silent Bob segments, which are filled with self-referential moments and humorous commentaries on pop-culture. With today’s audiences showing an appreciation for conglomerate media and throwback characters, Jay and Silent Bob would certainly have a lot of material to work with, and their return to the screen would likely be accepted with open arms.

For those reasons exactly, Jay and Silent Bob are finally coming back to the big screen together. Coming out Tuesday, Mewes and Smith are reprising their iconic roles in the new Kevin Smith directed “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot.”

If you exclude the 2013 animated movie, “Jay and Silent Bob’s Super Groovy Cartoon Movie!” it has been over a decade since the two characters appeared in a film together. “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” came out over eighteen years ago. In that film, Jay and Bob went to Hollywood to sabotage a movie being made about their comic book counterparts, Bluntman and Chronic. After a wacky adventure filled with countless celebrity encounters, the two characters get their deserved royalties and return to their New Jersey roots.

Low-brow 90s Comedy, Loud and Proud with Star Powered Cameos

As the title of “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot” may suggest, this follow-up project will follow an almost identical plot. Again, a Los Angeles studio is trying to rip off the leading characters, and again, they travel to the West Coast to take back what they deserve. We cannot really criticize the movie for being unoriginal, though, for it is purposefully redundant, openly parodying the lack of new content and the constant remakes that contemporary Hollywood churns out.

Director Kevin Smith has been very forward about this in interviews. In his usual self-deprecating way, he does not promote the new film by championing it as a work of art. Instead, he candidly sells it as a raunchy stoner comedy that nobody asked for and was made with no prestigious intent. At the end of the movie’s trailer, a character played by Jason Biggs even states on a Comic-Con Panel that the reboot “sucks” and laughingly asks, “who’s directing this [explicit] anyway? Kevin [explicit]ing Smith?”

Thus, there is really no excuse for taking “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot” too seriously. Nevertheless, with cameos from the likes of Matt Damon, Chris Hemsworth, Ben Affleck, and Val Kilmer, the movie cannot help but get us a little bit excited. Furthermore, as Smith is a comic book aficionado, we look forward to seeing what kinds of jokes and scenarios he will make up regarding the superhero genre’s current domination in Hollywood.

Roadshow to Drum up Support will follow Initial Release

Also joining the cast for “Reboot” is Kevin Smith’s daughter, Harley Quinn Smith, who comically plays Jay’s daughter in the film. Her inclusion in the duo’s journey across America will pave the way for additional humor—both metahumor about family and parenting humor, as the slacker weed-inhaling Jay will now be a father.

“Jay and Silent Bob Reboot” will have its world premiere in Los Angeles, at which time Smith and Mewes will also receive Stars on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame and get their hands ceremoniously engraved in cement before the TCL Chinese Theater. The movie will then have a limited theatrical release over the weekend before Kevin Smith does a roadshow tour of the film, screening it in different cities around the United States. Smith will attend all of these screenings and stick around for Q&A sessions afterwards. The tour starts on October 19th in Smith’s home state of New Jersey, and ends on February 26th in New Orleans. It will also have a few events overseas.


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“NINE” Blink-182’s New Album and Sound Evolution Transformation

song – i really wish i hated you – by blink-182

New Album Brings An Unfamiliar Sound And Suggests More Grown Up Themes Than Its Predecessors

The notorious pop-punk band Blink-182 has released their ninth album—appropriately titled “NINE”—and based on everything we’ve heard so far, it seems promising that the new record will take the band in a new direction, one that is perhaps lighter on the punk and heavier on the pop aspect of their distinctive musical genre.

“NINE” includes fifteen new tracks from Blink, and they pre-released five of them to give listeners a taste of what is in store. The first song they put out, titled “Blame It On My Youth,” met mixed feedback from fans and critics for its somewhat synthesized sound. Subsequent releases—the explosive “Generational Divide,” the sing-along “Happy Days” and “Darkside,” and the gloomier “I Really Wish I Hated You”—are a bit more familiar sounding, but they still retain large traces of new-age music. 

Of course, this is not the first time that Blink has changed-up their style. Since the San Diego band’s conception in 1992, they have gone through three different lineups and several different musical phases, each one bringing new influences into their unique sound. 

Photo / Graphic Collage / MCA / Lynxotic

The original lineup of guitarist Tom DeLonge, bassist Mark Hoppus and drummer Scott Raynor played together on the band’s first three albums: “Buddah,” “Cheshire Cat,” and “Dude Ranch.” These records had a very raw punk sound with perverse lyrics. At the time, Blink sounded like kids making up dirty songs in their parents’ basement. It was fitting because, quite frankly, that is exactly what they were.

The band replaced Raynor with current drummer Travis Barker in 1998, and their subsequent albums had a new intensity. Because post-grunge had found a mainstream fanbase in the late 1990s, Blink also found more commercial success at this time. Their 1999 record, “Enema of the State” put them in the spotlight with hit songs such as “All The Small Things” and “What’s My Age Again?” dominating radio and MTV. They continued with a similar pop-punk sound on their next album, “Take Off Your Pants and Jacket” before dabbling in more hardcore, introspective, and emo tracks on their following untitled album.

The band then had a hiatus and each member got involved with their own side-projects—Angels & Airwaves for DeLonge, +44 for Hoppus, and a slew of collaborations for Barker. When the group reunited in 2011, they brought these outside influences and experiences together in the studio, recording their versatile sixth album, “Neighborhoods.” 

Sadly, “Neighborhoods” was Blink’s final collaboration with DeLonge—not including the short 2012 EP “Dogs Eating Dogs”—before the signature lead-singer took off to focus on Angels & Airwaves and form a paranormal investigation company called “To The Stars.” From this separation, however, emerged Matt Skiba, lead singer of Alkaline Trio, who stood in for DeLonge on guitar and vocals at Blink concerts and recorded the 2016 album “California” with Hoppus and Barker. 

Despite the switch from DeLonge’s unmistakable nasally SoCal voice to Skiba’s milder Chicago vocals and clean-sounding guitar, “California” was very much a retro-album, recapturing the early 2000s punk rock vibes of “Enema of the State” and “Take Off Your Pants and Jacket.” Most of the songs were energetic, simple, and familiar. All experimental material was left to the bonus tracks on the album’s deluxe version.

Photo / Graphic Collage / MCA / Lynxotic

Blink highlighted “California’s” retro aspect with the album’s accompanying tour, where they shared the stage with other pop-punk bands from yester-decade such as The All-American Rejects, All Time Low, and A Day To Remember. 

As soon as Blink returned to the studio, however, they claimed that their next project would be playing it far less safe and that they would be trying out some new tricks. This was further confirmed when Hoppus released the EP “Strange Love,” which was the product of a side-collaboration called Simple Creatures with All Time Low’s Alex Gaskarth. The EP featured highly alternative tracks, which perhaps foreshadowed the direction that Hoppus would take Blink in.

Meanwhile, Blink also announced that their next tour would be featuring rapper Lil Wayne, whose music has a strikingly different and more modern appeal than that of the “California” tour’s opening acts. Recently, the band even released a remix of “What’s My Age Again?” meshed up with verses from Lil Wayne’s “A Millie.”

At the same time, though, this tour also marks the twenty-year anniversary of “Enema of the State.” Thus, Blink has been performing the album cover-to-cover at every show, displaying a huge respect for the old and a ray of nostalgia persevering into the new.

Perhaps this temporal mixture paints a picture of what we can expect from “NINE”—a strained attempt at balance between Blink’s past and the future. This is evident not only from the new songs’ styles, but from their lyrics and themes as well. While the songs from “California” suggested that the band was reliving their glory days, on “NINE” so far, Blink seems to be writing from an older perspective, looking back on the past and attempting to digest how things have changed. 

“Blame It On My Youth” vaguely tells the story of the bands origin. Meanwhile, “Generational Divide,” ends with Skiba jadedly belting out, “I’m not the generational divide,” in a way that seems all but defensive. Then, “Happy Days” feels like Blink’s love song to the past, yearning in the chorus, “I wanna feel happy days… walls of isolation inside of my pain, and I don’t know if I’m ready to change.” While the song is upbeat in tempo and structure, its lyrics certainly suggest a touch of emotional uncertainty when it comes to the band’s rocky relationship with the ticking clock.

Photo / Graphic Collage / MCA / Lynxotic

Some might argue that this new sound is not punk rock enough for Blink, and that they are straying too far from their roots. However, the paradox of punk rock is that it is a genre built upon generic defiance. Therefore, once conventional punk has become the expectation—as is the case here—perhaps the most punk thing a band can do is veer off in an entirely different musical direction. Blink becoming more alternative and entering a nebulous zone of unanticipated and genreless music is the ultimate break from any semantic constraints that may attempt to label and therefore restrain punk.

Then, of course, there is the absence of Tom to consider. Although DeLonge refuses to say that he is permanently gone from Blink, this is the band’s second album without him, showing that “California” was not a fluke and that there is no sign of a reunion in the near future. While most fans have come to accept Skiba as an addition to the band, for many, it is simply not Blink without Tom and his bratty, angst-filled pipes that distinguished the group from day one.  

While the current lineup has come around to at least acknowledging Tom’s existence—Mark Hoppus now gives him shout outs before certain songs at shows—his absence on stage and in the studio remains an enormous elephant in the room. Tom’s inexact place in the band’s past and present will be one more detail for fans to consider while reading into “NINE,” as the band wistfully glances back in the rearview mirror, seeing how their family has changed over the years and doing their best to come to terms with this open-ended relationship.

It was twenty-two years ago when Blink released the hit song, “Dammit.” It its chorus, Mark Hoppus sings “Well I guess this is growing up.” At the time, Hoppus and DeLonge were in their early twenties. They were still playing alongside Scott Raynor and their rise to stardom was just beginning. Now, over two decades later, it seems that Blink-182 is still working to decipher what it means to grow up. From the five tracks we’ve heard so far, we reckon that “NINE” will be a testimony to this phase in the aging band members’ lives and careers. We look forward to what the album’s other ten songs have to say in that regard.


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‘The Addams Family’: Back to the Future for the 60’s based Classic Caricatures

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/mgm/the-addams-family/the-addams-family-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
official trailer for ‘the addams family’

‘The Addams Family’ tries to get 1960s Nostalgia Right, and still have a Contemporary Appeal 

In a world of lack-luster “Smurf” and “Peanuts” reboots, we are really hoping that the new Addams Family movie finally gets the Baby-Boomer pop-culture icon recreation right. MGM and Cinesite Animation’s “The Addams Family” comes out October 11th, aiming to capture some family-friendly spookiness just in time for Halloween.  

Of course, “The Addams Family” is based off of Charles Addams’ famous 1960s live-action TV series of the same name.  Just like the series, it focuses on the title family, which is made up of ghoulish versions of American nuclear family archetypes. As aforementioned, though, while Hollywood has been successful in cultivating 1980s nostalgia in recent years, its attempts to bring back icons from the early days of television has been less than fruitful.

The last time that the Addams family appeared in a movie was 1998’s “The Addams Family Reunion” and that same year they came back for “The New Adams Family” TV series. In the nineties, however, such black-and-white television era intellectual property may have been more marketable. After all, this was the decade that gave us cinematic remakes of “Leave It To Beaver,” “Dennis the Menace,” and “The Little Rascals.”

In 2019, even parents may not be familiar with the characters from “The Addams Family.” This is not to say that the movie will lack quality, but rather that the appeal may not be as strong as it was twenty years ago.

Photo / MGM

Family Friendly Halloween fare that Resurrects a Favorite from the Boomer’s Childhoods

Nevertheless, “The Addams Family” has been getting a lot of marketing, and its trailer looks very endearing. Even if we may not recognize the characters by name, they all seem like fun, quirky people worth spending time with. Likewise, there are only so many Halloween movies that the whole family can enjoy—unless you want to terrify your kids by taking them to “Joker” or a delayed screening of “It: Chapter Two.”

Similarly, the film does not seem stuck in the past. It has many modern twists as members of the family attend contemporary schools and interact with neighbors who are suspicious of the Addams family’s abnormalities. The movie’s villain will even be a proper, overly-conservative lady who riles up the community with fear of the Addams family’s nonconformity. 

This gives way to the film’s touching and timely message. As it always has been with the Addams family, beneath all the jokes and slapstick grotesqueness, family perseveres as the core theme. The movie’s first trailer begins with illustrations of different kinds of American families, from nuclear families to biracial families to queer families and so on. All the while, a voice over narration explains, “every family is different, but some families are more different than others,” before revealing the monstrous Addams. 

Thus, the movie’s ultimate moral will likely have to do with diversity and acceptance within both families and communities. With a dazzling cast of Oscar Issac, Charlize Theron, Chlöe Grace Moretz, Finn Wolfhard, Nick Kroll, and Snoop Dogg, though, and wacky team of writers and directors who have credits ranging from the classic “An American Tale” to the raunchy “Sausage Party,” the new movie is likely to show this message in a very unique way. One that does not lack in humor, daringness, quality, or emotionality. 


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‘Lucy In The Sky’: Natalie Portman in Saga best remembered for a peculiar travel aid

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox_searchlight/lucy-in-the-sky/lucy-in-the-sky-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
official trailer for “lucy in the sky”

Space-Race on Screen Continues with ‘Lucy’

Before Natalie Portman returns to the Marvel Cinematic Universe in “Thor: Love and Thunder” in 2021 she is taking a journey through a more familiar cosmos in “Lucy In The Sky,” the grounded Fox Searchlight Pictures sci-fi movie that is loosely based on a true story.

Natalie Portman plays Lucy Cola, an astronaut who visits space once and from there on becomes obsessed with returning to the infinite frontier. While the small slice of the film that actually takes place in space has a celestial feeling in the same vein as Alfonso Cuaròn’s “Gravity,” the bulk of the story happens back on Earth, as Cola feels increasingly detached from the planet and trains tenaciously for an opportunity to go back to the stars.

Photo / FoxSearchlight

John Hamm plays Lucy’s ‘other’ Obsession

The movie is inspired by the true story of Lisa Norwok, an ambitious astronaut who had an affair with her colleague William Oefelein and was arrested for attempting to kidnap Oefelein’s other lover at the Orlando airport in 2007. 

It is unclear how much “Lucy In The Sky” will actually take from Norwok’s life. It looks like the movie will focus more heavily on the fictional Lucy Cola’s ambition and her ceaseless drive to get back to space. However, the affair will surely play some role in the movie, as John Hamm plays the William Oefelein character named Mark Goodwin. If nothing else in the film, Goodwin’s relationship with Cola will spark scandal and put up roadblocks to her achieving her professional goals. 

This quasi-fictional story was pieced together by director Noah Hawley and writers Brian C. Brown and Elliot G. DiGuiseppi. DiGuiseppi is actually best known as an editor for TV shows such as “Teen Wolf” and “Faking It.” Meanwhile, this is the first major feature film credit for both Hawley and Brown, both of whom have backgrounds predominantly in television.

Photo / FoxSearchlight

Sometimes Bizarre Story not Strange Enough?

Naturally, with such an experimental creative team, we can expect a few narrative kinks in “Lucy In The Sky.” Ever since it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, the film has been meeting criticism. In terms of genre, many complain that the film is hard to place, toeing the line of tonal inconsistency. While there is nothing negative to say about Portman or Hamm’s performances in the movie, many claim that their talents are not enough to keep the project afloat.

At the same time, some have accused the film of being scientifically or historically inaccurate. According to real astronaut Marsha Ivins, the movie’s notion that astronauts lose their grip on reality once they’ve been in space, is simply non-existent on any recognizable scale. Likewise, some have pointed out inconsistencies in the way “Lucy In The Sky” tries to reconfigure the Lisa Norwok story in a way that is not entirely accurate.

At the end of the day, though, “Lucy In The Sky” remains a piece of fiction. It may not be the fantasy space epic of “Star Wars” or even the grounded hard science fiction of “Ad Astra,” but it is ultimately a made up story. Certain elements may come from the real world, but on the whole, we should not compare the story to reality, but rather appreciate it for the creative entity that it is.


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‘Memory: The Origins of Alien’: SciFi Documentary on Ridley Scott’s Classic Franchise

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/memory-the-origins-of-alien/memory-the-origins-of-alien-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
official trailer for “memory: the origins of alien”

Deep Dive into Cinematic Sci-Fi History

Ridley Scott’s 1979 “Alien” was a game changing film. A classic in both the science fiction and horror genres, the movie offered grotesque imagery and an unprecedentedly eerie illustration of space. Set on a spaceship named Mother, and filled with uncanny fetal imagery and a one-of-a-kind set design that evokes senses of both past and future, “Alien” taps into emotions and feelings that are subliminal, perhaps even primal for the viewer.

From an industry perspective, “Alien” was also the beginning of a billion dollar franchise, starting a series that would include three sequels, two prequels, a line of comic books, and two spin-offs where the title extraterrestrials face off against the equally iconic monsters from the “Predator” movies.

Photo / Exhibit A Pictures

The series continues to this day, as a sequel to the 2017 “Alien: Covenant” has been tossed around in development for the past couple of years. With Hollywood in a current state of conglomeration and nostalgia for 1970s and 80s intellectual property—after all we are getting a new Rambo and Terminator movie this year—and with “Alien” being such an intriguing film, it is only natural that people are interested in the film right now. At forty years old, “Alien” is even returning to select theaters this October, showing that people are still seeking out new ways to analyze and enjoy it.

While there is still no new word on the “Covenant” sequel, a documentary about the making and legacy of Ridley Scott’s original “Alien” will hit theaters this Friday. The documentary is titled “Memory: The Origins of Alien” and it takes audiences behind the scenes of how Ridley Scott and his team developed, designed, and produced the revolutionary movie.

With exclusive footage inside interviews, “Memory” looks at how Scott pieced together inspiration from several different sources to come up with the movie’s unique story and vision. This inspiration did not just come from previous movies. As the documentary shows, “Alien” was a thematic amalgamation of ancient mythology, mid-century European art, early transmedia storytelling, and neo-Freudian psychology, all tied up in a harrowingly original screenplay from Dan O’Bannon. 

Photo / Exhibit A Pictures

Historical Perspectives with Scholarly Deconstructions

To delve into all of this fully, “Memory” will be looking at “Alien” primarily from an academic lens, getting input from fans, critics, and scholars to analyze the film, the filmmaker, and all of their layered intricacies.  

Alexandre O. Philippe is directing “Memory.” This is the same filmmaker who created “The People vs George Lucas” in 2010 as a scathing critique of the George Lucas and his Star Wars prequel trilogy. Clearly, Philippe does not lack cinephilic opinions, and he is not afraid to play hardball with his subjects. 

Ridley Scott is not attached to “Memory” in any direct way. Thus, there are no rules dictating what Philippe might say about the director. Comfortingly, though, “Memory” does not look like it will be a critique of Scott or his legendary movie, but rather an intelligent and insightful deconstruction of one of the most important moments in science fiction cinema. “Alien” is truly a fantastic film that still conjures feelings of wonder and mystery to this day. “Memory” is thus a long overdue homage to the timeless picture and a necessary breakdown of everything it means.


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‘The Parts You Lose’: Aaron Paul Stars in Thriller ahead of Breaking Bad spinoff

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/samuel_goldwyn/the-parts-you-lose/the-parts-you-lose-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
official trailer for “the parts you lose”

Fugitive Survival Tale with a Twist

No doubt the most anticipated movie starring Aaron Paul to come out in October is Netflix’s “Breaking Bad” spinoff, “El Camino.” That being said, “El Camino” will only get an extremely limited theatrical release and most of its viewers will come directly from the streaming service. Thus, if you want the opportunity to appreciate Aaron Paul on the big screen, you will have to look elsewhere. Luckily, you won’t have to look very far.

Coming out a week before “El Camino,” Aaron Paul also stars in “The Parts You Lose,” a thrill-ride movie about a criminal on the run. The movie was announced nearly a year ago, but oddly enough, story’s bare bones actually sound pretty similar to “El Camino,” as Paul plays a fugitive in both.

“The Parts You Lose,” however, is different because the narrative focuses in particular on the fugitive’s relationship with a young, deaf boy, who finds and helps the criminal hide from law enforcement. It is therefore a story of vulnerability and friendship, as both characters have clear weaknesses, but they still manage to get along and look out for each other.

Photo / Samuel Goldwyn Films

Badlands Start Treating us Good?

Make no mistake, though, “The Parts You Lose” is not your everyday odd-couple flick either. The movie’s tone is actually quite grave. The story begins with Paul’s character being the sole survivor of an armed robbery attempt in South Dakota. The deaf boy then finds him lying somewhere on the remote plains, caked in blood and freezing to death.

Of course, Aaron Paul’s character is also a wanted vigilante. Therefore, although he is endearing enough for the audience to empathize with and approachable enough to foster a sincere bond with the boy, he remains a potentially dangerous threat. This kind of character is Aaron Paul’s bread-and-butter in a sense, as he perfected the likable yet jaded criminal archetype in “Breaking Bad” and has frequently returned to it in different roles. 

The movie also introduces British actor Danny Murphy as the young deaf boy. Murphy is only fifteen years old, but he has been acting in skits and videos since 2008. It is all the more impressive that Murphy is deaf in real life and has learned how to act with imperfect hearing.

Photo / Samuel Goldwyn FIlms

Subtle Signals and Communications that build Rapport

Hearing impairments run in Murphy’s family. Both his parents are deaf and British Sign Language is the actor’s first language. His talents have already won him awards from the British Deaf Association, and he landed the role in “The Parts You Lose” with casting support from the Deaf West Theatre. For the film, he learned and uses American Sign Language.  

In short, Danny Murphy is a remarkable young man and it is wonderful to see production companies The H Collective and Samuel Goldwyn Films championing disabled people with this kind of authenticity. Starring alongside Paul and Murphy are Scoot McNairy and Mary Elizabeth Winstead. Behind the camera are novice director Christopher Cantwell and reputable writer Darren Lemke of “Shazam!” and “Goosebumps.”

“The Parts You Lose” looks like it will be an exciting trip with a unique sense of people and place. Perhaps it will fall in the shadow of “El Camino,” but on the other hand, perhaps “El Camino” will spark additional interest in Aaron Paul and “The Parts You Lose” will find a larger audience its second week at the box office.


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Out now: ‘Abominable’: The Long-awaited Project from “Toy Story” animator and “Monster’s Inc.” writer Jill Culton

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/dreamworks/abominable/abominable-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official Trailer for “abominable

You may not recognize animator Jill Culton by name or face, but odds are, her work had some impact on your childhood. With an aptitude for art and a strong imagination, Culton played crucial roles in some this generation’s of the most foundational and celebrated animated films.

Her story begins way back in 1995, when she served on the animation team for Pixar’s “Toy Story,” the groundbreaking film that revolutionized the world of cartoons forever by introducing 3D animation to the big screen. After “Toy Story,” Culton stayed with Pixar for several years, being an art director for “A Bugs Life” in 1998, a story artist for “Toy Story 2” in 1999, and taking a more-than-successful stab at co-writing “Monster’s Inc.” in 2001.

In 2003, she went over to Sony Pictures Animation, where she had her directorial debut with “Open Season” in 2006. She then served as executive producer for “Open Season 2” in 2008 before moving over to DreamWorks in 2010. Shortly thereafter, however, she went on a hiatus and created nothing.  For years, vague rumors circulated about Culton working on a new project, one that would center on a girl and an abominable snowman and their epic journey to Everest. In 2016, however, it was stated that she was dropping the project, and that there were no expected future endeavors for the influential animator.

Photo / Universal

Now, three years later, with DreamWorks under the wing of Universal’s Illumination Animation, Culton’s illusive project from the turn of the decade is finally going into theaters.

“Abominable” comes out September 27th. It is the story of a girl named Yi, who comes across a captive yeti in the city and helps him escape back to his Himalayan home. It is a narrative reminiscent of the original “Free Willy,” except “Abominable” is set in an ultramodern world filled with fantasy and magic, a world that Yi and her group of friends must traverse in order to return their furry ally to his rightful habitat.

The enchanted world is the product of Culton herself, who not only wrote the screenplay for “Abominable,” but also directed it along with Todd Wilderman, a fellow animator and art director known for his visual effects work on “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” and his more recent story art on DreamWorks’ “Home” and “Trolls.”

Culton was unfortunately not a direct animator on the project, but as director, she did create the vision. Actual animation was in the more than capable hands of some of DreamWorks’ most talented and experienced employees.

Photo / Universal

The 3D computer animation style of “Abominable” is similar to that of DreamWorks’ “How To Train Your Dragon” and Disney’s “Big Hero 6.” Essentially, the characters are bubbly and caricature-esque. The form may lack some of the finer details and texture seen in recent Pixar movies, but it is full of expression and makes for some very compelling landscapes. After all, when it comes to this kind of animation, the goal is not realism but rather a unique aesthetic that feels playful and evokes imagination.

For a PG rated DreamWorks movie, though, it is not really the cast, crew, or animation style that makes or breaks the project at the box office. “Abominable” is the third sasquatch-themed animated movie to come out in the past twelve months. Annapurna Pictures’ “Mission Link” and Warner Animation’s “Smallfoot” both have their similarities to “Abominable,” and although “Missing Link” touted the most impressive cast and perhaps the most innovative animation style of the three, it flopped at the box office.

Photo / Universal

With few exceptions, kids do not really care for those kinds of details in movies. This is not to say that children lack taste or do not recognize quality. In fact, it is quite the opposite. Children usually do not think about who is in the movie or who made the movie. All they really focus on is what the movie is in its finished form. As far as marketing goes, if the movie looks fun and entertaining, then they will want to see it. And if they see it and it delivers on their expectations, then they will talk about it at school and convince others to see it.

Many films have children as their target audiences, but children are not the ones writing the reviews. They don’t know who Jill Culton is even if they’ve seen all of her movies. They do not know the voice actors are in “Abominable,” even though the movie is awesomely featuring a nearly all Asian-American cast fit for its East Asian setting.

So, what is all of this saying? Unless you have children or are a child yourself, you probably weren’t planning on seeing “Abominable.” However, perhaps by knowing the background of director Jill Culton or the effort put into the film, we can be reassured by the fact that studios aren’t slacking off on animated projects just because they are meant for kids. And maybe by learning where “Abominable” comes from, you will get a jolt of nostalgia, learn to see the value in animation as an adult, and see that even if a movie is marketed to one group of people, the screen does not discriminate, and anyone has the right to go see and enjoy a movie.


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’10 Minutes Gone’: Michael Chiklis stars alongside Bruce Willis in Amnesia-Fueled Thrill Ride

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/lionsgate/10-minutes-gone/10-minutes-gone-trailer-1_h1080p.mov

Earlier this year, the struggling movie theater subscription service MoviePass announced that they would be producing and distributing its first original film in an effort to combat rising debt. It was a bold tactic, but once we learned that Bruce Willis had signed on to the project, it seemed more legitimate, and we became eager to find out what would happen when “10 Minutes Gone” hit theaters.

“10 Minutes Gone” is directed by Brian A Miller, a frequent collaborator with Bruce Willis on movies such as “The Prince,” “Vice,” and “Reprisal.” In this new movie, Willis will only be taking a co-starring role, the lead going to Michael Chiklis of FX’s “The Shield.”

Both of these middle-aged bald actors have talent, but can they draw in an audience? Chiklis may be recognizable on television, but he is yet to have a hit on the big screen. Willis is of course a household name and face, but he is arguably over-saturated in the action genre. His last few action movies, “Reprisal,” “Air Strike,” “Death Wish,” and “Act of Violence,” all managed to fly under the radar and underperform at the box-office despite having his renowned star-status attached to them.

The virtually unknown Kevin Mao and Jeff Jingle wrote the script for “10 Minutes Gone.” It is the first writing credit for Mao, who has only been involved in one other short movie as a producer, and the second writing credit for Jingle, who is best known as a special effects artist on films such as “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra,” “Pacific Rim,” and “Cowboys & Aliens.” It is a daring move for MoviePass to put the story in the hands of such inexperienced talent, but young minds should of course not be underestimated, and script can speak for itself.

The plot starts out simple enough, with Bruce Willis’ crime-boss character curating a team of highly skilled people to pull off a robbery. The heist is an effort to break into a vault and steal an unmarked case that supposedly contains something immensely valuable. The team, which includes Chiklis’ character Frank and his brother Joey, manages to retrieve the case. However, during the getaway, somebody hits Frank over the head, knocking him out. When wakes up ten minutes later, Joey is dead, the case is gone, and he has no idea who is responsible.

Photo / Lionsgate

For the rest of the movie, Frank must track down whoever took the case. It also becomes a revenge story, though, as Frank obviously wants retribution for his brother being murdered. Meanwhile, there is a hint of mystery, for Frank and the audience alike want to figure out not only who is responsible, but what happened during those crucial ten minutes when Frank was unconscious.

As the plot progresses, it gets more complex and nobody can be trusted. Willis’ character remains the heist’s overlord, but other members of the team become prime suspects in Frank’s search. Meanwhile, government officials are also after the case, making it so even those on the right side of the law could be culprits. The trailer also ends with Chiklis and Willis standing face-to-face as Chicklis sinisterly remarks “so much for honor among thieves,” so it is quite possible and even probable that Willis’ character will end up more involved than we think. After all, if you have Bruce Willis in your movie, you might as well use him to his maximum potential.

Anyway, the hallowed case in the movie will probably remain a MacGuffin, and the plot will likely lead to a climactic downtown shootout between the film’s central characters and the police department. It will probably be a satisfying, albeit predictable, ending to a pretty standard film.

Sadly, “standard” will probably not be enough to save MoviePass. The company, which allows subscribers to see three movies a month for $90/year, has hit hard times lately. It is unlikely that it will be able to sustain itself for much longer. While we applaud their audacity to collaborate and create an original film in an effort to pull themselves out of financial trouble, it does not look like “10 Minutes Gone” will be anyone’s ultimate savior.

Given the limited marketing, generic heist-centered backdrop, and corny trailer featuring a dated Don LaFontaine-like voiceover, it unfortunately looks like “10 Minutes Gone” will be no more than just another title in a long list of forgettable action movies. If that is the case, then MoviePass will need to find a new way to keep itself afloat.

Photo / Lionsgate

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‘Anthropocene: The Human Epoch’: Documentary shows Reality of Climate Change

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/anthropocene/anthropocene-trailer-1b_h1080p.mov
Official trailer for “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch”

A Growing Urgency and yet Denial Remains a Stubborn Reality

Coincidentally or not, corresponding with week’s nationwide climate strike, Mercury Films is releasing an environmental documentary focusing on the human impact on the planet. In “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch,” filmmakers Jennifer Baichwal, Edward Burtynsky, and Nicholas de Pencier travel to twenty countries across six continents to show the irreversible effects that human beings have had on the natural landscape.

While many environmental documentaries with such a global scale might focus on the earth’s beauty in order to get audiences to appreciate the planet, “Anthropocene” takes the opposite route, and looks at the some of Earth’s least flattering, most unnatural images. Rather than taking us to the mountains, prairies, or deep seas, the film shows us landfills, mines, power plants, refineries, and junkyards on both land and water, revealing the Anthropocene’s unavoidable and unattractive reality.

Anthropocene as a term denotes a new geological age, or epoch, in which humans are the primary influence on the natural world. With today’s hot debates about climate change and global warming, Anthropocene has become somewhat of a buzzword, but the term dates back to the 1980s when scientists Paul J. Crutzen and Eugene F. Stoermer first coined it. Evidently, the process has been going on for a while, but in the current day and age, the Anthropocene is increasingly hard to ignore, as the human footprint eats up more of the natural world and the effects of climate change are becoming increasingly tangible.

Photo / Mercury Films

Where are the Solutions and what can any of us do to Slow Down the Juggernaut?

The question on everybody’s mind, then, is how do we combat climate change? It is a lofty question that even the brightest of scientists and the most ambitious of politicians struggle to find consensus on. At the most basic, humanistic level, the answer might start with everybody doing their parts to live sustainably and spread awareness of the issue. From an artist’s perspective, that means of spreading awareness might come in the form of a painting, a novel, or a film. 

Film has certainly had its bouts with addressing climate change in the past. Many documentaries from Al Gore’s revolutionary “An Inconvenient Truth” to Leonardo DiCaprio’s foreboding “Before The Flood,” have zeroed in on the issue. On the complete opposite side of the cinematic spectrum, the concept has even made its way into recent blockbuster movies such as “Avengers: Infinity War” and “Mission Impossible: Fallout,” both of which had eco-terrorists as their main villains.

It almost seems impossible to make a movie about the world and not have it relate to climate change in some way. Animal-focused docuseries like BBC’s “Planet Earth” or Netflix’s “Our Planet” may avoid people altogether, but their subject-matter always comes back to anthropogenic preservation. Similarly, documentaries working in other sectors of environmentalism, such as the recent “Supersize Me 2: Holy Chicken!” or “The Game Changers,” which focus on diet and nutrition, all circle back to the correlation between consumption and climate in one way or another. Clearly, the issue is deeply engrained in any conversation we might have about the environment, and with eco-criticism becoming a growing sector of theory and thought, audiences will start to notice the topic emerging in even more ways.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/anthropocene/anthropocene-clip-excavator_h1080p.mov
Clip – Excavator from “ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH”

Watching “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch,” however, does not require a lot of deep thinking to realize that it is addressing global warming. The subject is made quite clear through the documentary’s unambiguous and straightforward expository mode.

Directors Baichwal, Burtynsky, and de Pencier are no strangers to this blatant style of informative documentary that focuses on pressing issues. The three have collaborated before on the award winning documentaries “Watermark” and “Manufactured Landscape,” both of which covered environmental topics. But while these two earlier films only touched on the concept of climate change and its effects, “Anthropocene” goes full-throttle, traveling far and wide to illustrate the harrowing impacts of this new epoch. It shows urban floods, melting glaciers, excavated canyons, and poached animals on the edge of extinction, all aiming to evoke an emotional response from viewers—none of whom are blameless for or exempt from this planetary phenomenon.

Photo / Mercury Films

What does it take to Wake Up a Population that Sleeps as the Threat keeps growing?

Nevertheless, as effective as “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch” might be in pulling on our heartstrings and making us fear for the future, one must question weather the environmental documentary is as impactful as people often make it out to be. Fourteen years have gone by since Al Gore warned us about global warming in “An Inconvenient Truth,” and since then countless documentarians have approached the topic from several different angles. Sadly, though, we are hardly any closer to an environmental reformation. The general public may have caught on to the issue’s severity, but many people—particularly people in power—still refuse to even acknowledge climate change. 

This is not to say that “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch” or other films in the same vein are futile gestures. They are compelling and will likely inspire many people to live more environmentally consciously. However, as a society—or rather, as a human species—we should probably be past exposition and be making more progress in combating and adapting to the changes already going on in the world around us. As a film, “Anthropocene: The Human Epoch” is bound to be captivating and informative. As a piece of activism, though, the odds are unfortunately against it.


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‘The Game Changers’: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jackie Chan and Chris Paul all champion Plant-based Diet

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/the-game-changers/the-game-changers-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official Original Trailer for “The Game Changers”

from Gladiators to Olympians, meat is losing favor

In recent years, you may have noticed plant-based diets becoming a growing trend in the United States. A plant-based diet is a diet centered around foods originating from plants—essentially vegetables, fruits, seeds, and nuts. The term has become somewhat of a buzzword as it broadly encompasses both vegetarianism and veganism in its liberal definition. 

These meatless dietary choices are particularly topical nowadays, for studies have shown that they have significant health benefits and that avoiding meat can hugely reduce one’s carbon footprint, thus making it a powerful weapon against climate change

Unfortunately, even though plant-based diets seem to have become increasingly popular in the past few years, polls suggest that the percentage of vegetarians and vegans in the U.S. has hardly changed in the past decade. Only about 5% of the country identify as vegetarians and only 1-2% call themselves vegans. Compare that to the nearly 10% of Canadians who avoid meat products.

Photo / Game Changers Film, LLC

Despite the hype, the actual numbers may be less optimistic sounding than you’d expect. However, the widely talked about benefits that come from meatless diets remain true, and now, those who have decided to go the plant-based route have some strong allies in their corner.

For years meat products have been marketed as the quintessential food group for creating toughness and strength, making the word “beefy” a literal synonym for “muscular.” As Arnold Schwarzenegger makes clear in the new documentary “The Game Changers,” though, “you have to understand that that’s marketing; it’s not based on reality.”

“The Game Changers” screened at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year and it got a larger release earlier this week. The film focuses and deconstructing the myths that meat is essential to fitness and that plant-based diets are detrimental to athleticism.

To prove this point, “The Game Changers,” turns to some of the world’s best athletes, all of whom have benefitted from cutting meat from their diets. On top of former Mr. Universe, Arnold Schwarzenegger appearing in the movie to talk about these meat-eating-myths, the documentary also features track athlete Morgan Mitchell, strength athlete Patrik Baboumian, cyclist Dotsie Bausch, surfer Tia Blanca, and Olympic weightlifter Kendrick Harris among many, many others. 

These are some of the fittest people on earth, and they all managed to attain their impressive physiques and athletic accomplishments without meat. In fact, as the documentary shows, many of them even found that their performances improved when they switched to plant-based eating.

Photo / Game Changers Film, LLC

The film looks to more than just these contemporary athletes for proof, though. It also investigates plant-based eating from a historical perspective, looking all the way back to gladiators. Based on scientific records, gladiators—some of the world’s earliest and most renowned athletes—were vegetarians. This shows that the meat-toughness correlation in our culture is not just biologically inaccurate, but the fundamental ideology that conflates animal products with manliness is based on a farce. Gladiators are symbols of strength in Western culture, but notions of them wolfing down meat at every meal could not be further from the truth.

“The Game Changers” also has a lot of fascinating, environmentally-minded folks on the other side of the camera. Louie Psihoyos directed the film. Known for his ecological documentaries, Psihoyos created the climate-focused“Racing Extinction” in 2015 and won an Academy Award in 2010 for “The Cove,” which exposed animal abuse in Japanese dolphin coves.

Recognizable names also come up in the movie’s long list of producers. In addition to appearing in the movie, Arnold Schwarzenegger is also serving as an executive producer alongside fellow action movie star Jackie Chan. A familiar collaborator with Schwarzenegger, director James Cameron, is also helping produce the film.

Photo / Game Changers Film, LLC

Blockbuster Talent and Athletic Luminaries Join Forces

Cameron may be better known for blockbuster spectacles like “Titanic” and “Aliens,” but his short list of documentary directing credits include “Aliens of the Deep,” in which he explores the ocean’s uncharted depths. Clearly, the man has an interest in the natural world, and thus its preservation. Even some of his feature films can be viewed through an eco-critical lens. After all, both “The Terminator” and “Avatar” are essentially about organic beings combating industrial entities. It is not a stretch to see how they could be read as environmental narratives.

Louie Psihoyos’ picture may not be as enthralling as a war between man and machine, and it may not be as sublime as a journey to the bottom of the ocean, but as a documentary with a mission of deconstructing expectations and promoting a positive change in the way people see the world around them (and the food inside of them), it is effective. The project is powerful and passionate, and although it is only one in a long line of docs before it to champion environmentalism through sustainable eating habits, it offers an original angel, focusing on athleticism to tear apart the meat-myths and maybe inspire a few people to change their lifestyles for the betterment of all.


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Hustlers gets Positive Buzz at Toronto Film Fest, J LO Oscar Talk

Perfect Timing ahead of September 12th Release

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/hustlers/hustlers-trailer-1_h1080p.mov

Based on an article published in “New York Magazine” in 2015, this feel-good stripper story is getting strong, effusive positive reviews after its debut at the Toronto International Film Festival this weekend.

Talk of an Oscar nod for J Lo is already out there based on her performance as the head of an underdog-stripper crime “family”. In a kind of “Robin-Hood as Stripper” twist based on the original report.

With a star studded cast, lead by Jennifer Lopez, Constance Wu (“Fresh off the Boat”, “Crazy Rich Asians”), Cardi B, Julia Stiles and Keke Palmer, the crime drama has the mixture of a heist movie with built in sex, money and post feminist empowerment all wrapped into one.

Photo / GEM Entertainment

Fresh Fiction even went so far as to call it :

“Scorsese in stilettos, Goodfellas slathered in frosty lip gloss and body glitter, this is a must-see Girl’s Night Out movie.”

– Courtney Howard, Fresh Fiction

And also evoking the Italian Mob Variety opined:

“[It] does for a gang of New Yawk bad girls what Goodfellas did for the mob…adapted by writer-director Lorene Scafaria at her most Scorsese.”

– Peter Debruge, Variety

Written for the screen and Directed by Lorene Scafaria, “Hustlers” is riding the buzz straight into opening weekend with what appears like it will be a big first weekend beginning on September 12th.

Photo / GEM Entertainment


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Strange But True Official Trailer: Intriguing labyrinth

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/strange-but-true/strange-but-true-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
2nd Version Official Preview Trailer for “Strange but true”

Neo-Noir Thriller that cuts close to home in 2019…

This weekend, Lionsgate and CBS Films will be releasing Strange But True, the Rowan Athale adaptation of John Searles’ 2004 bestselling coming-of-age thriller novel. Although Athale is but an up-and-coming director, his short filmography has merit and the film touts an impressive cast including Nick Ryan, Margaret Qualley, Amy Ryan, and Greg Kinnear amongst others. While Amy Ryan and Greg Kinnear are the film’s best known veteran actors at this point, each having an academy award nomination under their belts, it is the young Nick Ryan and Margaret Qualley who play the main characters, and thus will have to carry most of the story’s emotional weight.

Luckily, the two rising stars have already proven themselves as talented and recognizable through recent hit movies like “Love Simon” and “Jurassic World” for Ryan, and “Once Upon A Time In Hollywood” for Qualley.

British Helmer Athale sets unique tone

The cast is promising, but what really makes “Strange But True” stand out is its cross-genre energy and unique tone. Like Searles’ source material, the trailer presents the film as a generic blend of horror, teen movie, and family drama. It suggests that fantastical elements such as Immaculate Conception and spiritual entities will play a role in the plot, but also grounded concepts such as rape and murder. At the same time, though, it all seems somewhat disguised in a teenage love story and a heartbreaking tale about loss.

Essentially, the complex plot seems to boil down to this: on prom night, a couple gets into a car accident and the boy dies; five years later, the girl shows up at the boy’s house; she is pregnant with what she claims is the boy’s child, and the family must dissect whether this is some miraculous truth or if there is a more disturbing form of deceit at hand.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/strange-but-true/strange-but-true-clip-there-could-be-trouble-for-you_h1080p.mov
Clip excerpt “there could be trouble for you” for “Strange but true”

Indie Cred and looking at Lies Vs. Truth

Needless to say, “Strange But True” is not the kind of straightforward blockbuster narrative that will rake in hundreds of millions of dollars, but it is understandably not trying to be. With limited marketing and a shared release date with “IT: Chapter Two”, “Strange But True” comes across as completely aware of its indie status.

In a way, the film is a thriller, but unlike “IT” or other conventional horror flicks, it does not seem like “Strange But True” will rely on monsters or jump scares, but rather on mystery, psychological twists, and a touch of social commentary.

Perhaps call it a neo-noir picture, with a layered and labyrinth-like structure that keeps viewers and characters alike wondering what is real and what is fabricated. As evident from the title alone, truth vs. untruth will be one of the film’s major themes.

The tagline on the film’s promotional poster reads “some things are impossible to conceive” and in the trailer, the words “the only thing stranger than the mystery is the truth” flash across the screen before one of the characters’ voice overs asks, “if we knew the whole truth, would we be less afraid, or more?”

Whether intentional or not, given current trends in media and politics, the movie’s focus on truth verses lies may serve as some kind of latent social commentary. Thrillers and noir films have a long history of reflecting socio-cultural trends in America, and “Strange But True” may be an interesting addition to that pattern.

Rather than creating a blatant political drama, by using the power of suburbia and family mixed a hint of fantasy the film tells a story that is timely and subtly relevant in a quasi-political sense.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/strange-but-true/strange-but-true-trailer-1_h1080p.mov

Of course, all of this is just speculation for now. After all, a good mystery movie can only give away so much from its marketing. Actually seeing the movie is the only way that viewers will really be able to tell what kind of message and story Strange But True is trying to relay.

But from where we currently stand, just on the brink of knowing the actual truth, it seems like that there will be many different ways to watch and interpret Strange But True, and hopefully each way will meet expectations and deliver for a film that certainly seems unconventional, but appealing nonetheless. Strange, but somehow… intriguing.


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IT Chapter Two: Stephen King Based Killer-Clown Sequel will have to get by without 1980s Nostalgia

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/wb/it-chapter-two/it-chapter-2-trailer-2_h1080p.mov
2nd Official trailer for “it chapter two”

It’s All Grown Up: Monster Stephen King novel takes a Scary Jump into Adulthood…

This week, the most anticipated horror movie of the year finally hits theaters. “IT: Chapter 2” is the sequel to Warner Brother’s 2017 blockbuster hit, “IT”, but audiences already know that the film will not be the most conventional of sequels, particularly based on the timeline and source material that it grapples with.

Based on Stephen King’s epic 1986 novel, the two “IT” movies, both directed by Andrés Muschietti, try to translate the over-one-thousand-page book into film. Thus, the project was pretty much always bound to be more than just one movie.

A pre-planned franchise is nothing new to Hollywood. More interesting is the way that Warner Brothers and Muschietti plan on adapting the novel’s intricate narrative structure. Over hundreds of pages, King’s original book switches back and forth between the main characters’ present lives and their childhoods.

It seems that the modern films have decided to take a more linear approach, though, with the first It focusing entirely on the characters as children and “IT: Chapter Two” telling their adult story.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/wb/it-chapter-two/it-chapter-two-teaser-1_h1080p.mov
1st OFFICIAL TRAILER FOR “IT CHAPTER TWO”

Liberties taken Could be the Ticket to Clarity

This may be a wise decision on Muschietti and Warner Brothers’ part, for a previous adaptation of “IT”—the miniseries that aired on ABC in 1990—attempted to follow King’s original structure and ultimately ended up congested and ill-paced.

Splitting the extensive story into two chronological films will likely be a more enthralling and digestible way to appreciate It, even if it does deviate from King’s literary form. Therefore, what makes this film an anomaly in the world of direct sequels, is that it takes place twenty-seven years after the events of the first film.

Of course, the “distant sequel” has been somewhat of a trend in Hollywood lately, with classic franchises like Star Wars, Blade Runner, and Men in Black (amongst others) all returning to the big screen within the past few years after decades-long hiatuses.

However, these distant sequels are effective in part because the temporal gap between them and their predecessors is usually mirrored in real time. Seeing beloved characters and settings come back on camera after such long absences can evoke a strong senses of nostalgia, and lure in wistful audiences, also introducing the stories to new generations.

“IT: Chapter Two”, however, has skipped the “real time” gap and instead simply re-casted the characters as adults. It also helps that first film took place in 1989, which causes the twenty-seven year gap to land the sequel right in modern times.

Grown-ups of the Present Day vs. Kids of our Memories

This may allow the sequel to have more contemporary relevance, the relatively short time since the 2017 original allows Warner Brothers to capitalize on the current fanaticism around the first film.

At the same time, though, it sacrifices a sense of authentic nostalgia, and given the amount of mileage the first film got out of retro 1980s references, the lack of nostalgia may put Chapter Two at a critical disadvantage.

Similar to they way that the childhood storyline from Stephen King’s novel took place in the 1950s and made references to the era’s classic horror movies, the first It movie exploited 1980s nostalgia, with music queues, cultural references, and cinematic troupes that brought viewers back to the thriller-filled decade of Nightmare on Elm Street, The Shining, and Friday the 13th, but also the blissful bildungsroman blockbuster era of Stand By Me and ET.

This was evident from the first movie’s marketing alone—the opening line of the 2017 trailer being “when you’re a kid, you think the universe revolves around you,” over shots of the tween-aged characters biking around town and jumping into swimming holes.

The trailers for Chapter Two — which is all we have to go on until the film opens — do not have the same 1980s nostalgic flavor.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/wb/it-chapter-two/it-chapter-two-teaser-1_h1080p.mov
“old’ original official trailer for “it chapter two”

It seems like the sequel will keep a small foot in that door through flashbacks, but the bulk of the movie will have to stand on its own unconventional two legs as a modern-day adaptation of a beloved thirty-year old horror novel.

Expectations are high and the trailers imply that “IT: Chapter Two” will deliver on scariness and epic-ness, but without the Kevlar of nostalgic charm that truly made the 2017 movie stand out, audiences will have to see if Chapter Two compensates those lost strengths.

Photo / Warner Bros.

Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

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Brittany Runs A Marathon

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/brittany-runs-a-marathon/brittany-runs-a-marathon-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official Preview Trailer for “Brittany Runs A Marathon”

Adroitly Handled Feel-Good Plot Showcases Jillian Bell and Paul Downs Colaizzo’s Dramedy Talents…

Have you ever seen a movie where the plot seems telegraphed by the title and yet, somehow, you still want to see how the twists and turns of the story get you there? And once you are in the mix and anticipating the somewhat obvious outcome, you find yourself thoroughly enjoying the journey?

That, in a nutshell is what Director Paul Downs Colaizzo, Jillian Bell (Brittany) along with cast and crew have achieved in “Brittany Runs A Marathon”.

The milieu is believable and the characters, based on “Brittanys” real life story as seen through the eyes of her then real-life roommate (Paul Downs Colaizzo), have an effortless familiarity, and that is all mixed with impeccable comic timing from veteran, Bell.

Not to say that this is all laughs and farce. There are real dramatic moments, adroitly handled by the Director and his lead actor.

Read More: Summer Books to Mark a Most Unusual Adventure and Unexpected Circumstance

Bell’s previous credits are an impressive list of a talented comedic character actor on the verge of breaking into bigger roles: “Curb Your Enthusiasm”, “Workaholics” and “Idiotsitter” on Comedy Central, for example. Her appearances on “22 Jump Street” led to Jonah Hill designating her “the funniest person I have ever met in my life.”

As with many New York based productions, the city also factors in as a character in the dramedy. The final act is, indeed, the moment when Brittany does attempt the run her NYC marathon. Again, although telegraphed and known as the clear destination for the story, it is nevertheless suspenseful and emotional once the audience has lived the journey with Brittany in order to get to the climax.

The Amazon funded project (let’s not hold that against them) won the Audience Award, (US Dramatic) at Sundance and appears to likely to do respectably at the box office with a tiered US roll out – on the two coasts starting August 23, 2019, and then nationwide by September 13th.


Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

Enjoy Lynxotic at Apple News on your iPhone, iPad or Mac and subscribe to our newsletter.

Lynxotic may receive a small commission based on any purchases made by following links from this page.

Apple Card is Now Available: Daily Cash Expanded, All USA can Apply in Wallet App

https://www.apple.com/105/media/us/apple-card/2019/c90ec3fe-63dc-4557-b1ea-50d7539c76bd/films/this-is/apple-card-this-is-tpl-cc-us-2019_1280x720h.mp4

Uber and Uber Eats added to Daily Cash at 3%, more vendors expected soon…

As with most things financial, there are lots of details, but some interesting perks, particularly for frequent customers of Apple products.

Immediate sign up on your iPhone

First perk: no lengthily complicated application process. According to the pre-launch information (see video above), just go to the Wallet app and tap on the Apple Card interface (once the Card is live) and go through the simple activation steps.

Read More: 2019 Was a Huge Year for Apple: Here are some Milestones that will Lead to the “Apple Decade” in the 2020s

Once the sign up steps are complete, you can immediately start using the card as you would Apple Pay.

Small but expected caveat: For non-Apple Pay purchases in a traditional store setting you will need to wait until your physical card arrives in the mail. Also, although a pre-approved status will often be in place, availability is still subject to qualification, like any credit card.

Using the Card

The card will function as would any other card in your wallet for Apple Pay. This includes online purchases and in-store checkout where you normally would use Apple Pay.

You can designate the Apple Card as your default payment method in your wallet for purchases using your iPhone, iPad, Mac or Apple Watch.

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/AppleCard_Keynote_M.mov
video of keynote announcing launch of apple card

The MasterCard Goldman Sachs Connection

The extended uses for the digital and physical version of the card are enabled through the partnership between MasterCard and Apple. You will be able to use the Apple Card anywhere that a MasterCard is accepted.

Goldman Sachs is the credit provider for your Apple Card and they will set your interest rate based, as would be expected, on your current credit score. Rates are projected to be in the range of 13.24% to 24.24% which is below the average in the US.

An extended fixed payment system is likely to be offered for large purchases according to the pre-release data.

Read More: 2020 Pulitzer Picks: “The Nickel Boys” Makes History, “A Strange Loop” and Susan Sontag Bio Take Gold

Main Perks and Advantages

There are many unconventional and improved aspects to the use and especially the user experience associated with the new card. In the keynote announcement earlier this year (see video above) a great emphasis was made on the ways that the project was focused on improving the experience and helping users attain a healthier financial lifestyle.

This includes various features designed to help reduce interest charges, not only by offering lower overall rates, but by giving the user options and calculations that can provide payment alternatives to the traditional “minimum monthly” payment currently the norm.

Payments can be made from your linked bank account or can be transferred from Apple Cash in your Wallet app.

There is no annual fee for the card, no international fees and no fee for exceeding your credit limit or making a late payment. Also, there is not increased interest rate penalty, per se, for late payment, which is common in some other credit card accounts. Late payment will, naturally, result in interest accrual, but based on your current rate.

There is an separate app, particularly useful on iPad, which does not have the Wallet app, where data on transactions, payments and other details are provided. This, in typical Apple style, is far superior to any credit card app interface from banks and lenders.

Rewards and “Daily Cash”

Rather than a points system commonly seen on traditional credit card accounts, the Apple Card has a cash back system which can kick back up to 3% on a daily basis.

They call this “Daily Cash” and, as the name implies, your rebated cash will be credited to your account every 24 hours and be directly transferred to your Apple Cash account. If you do not sign up for Apple Cash, you will get your rebates sent to your bank account monthly.

Percentages vary, 3% is for all purchases made directly from Apple, 2% for all Apple Pay transactions and 1% for using the physical card at any non-Apple Pay retailer.

There is no cost to transfer your rewards cash to your bank account and this can take from one to three days. There will be an option to get instant transfers, which will incur a 1% fee. The transfers are done through the Apple Cash card from the Wallet app to the linked bank account.

Best Features and Conclusion

The overall sense is that this is going to be a very popular offering, based on the positive attributes of the card and the deal.

Although the terms are clearly slanted towards encouraging financial activity benefiting the emerging Apple financial eco-system, with the reward percentage on direct Apple purchases and Apple Pay coming in higher than the “out of network” transactions made with the physical card only, the rest of the perks are more than enough to pique the interest of a great number of iPhone users.

The titanium card appearance, styling and feel will attract many for that reason alone. Quel chic! And it is likely that the card will cause an increase in Apple Pay transactions, with double cash back for pulling out your iPhone instead of the physical card.

Ultimately, the software tools enabling privacy – no data to Apple and Goldman Sachs promising never to use or sell your data – along with the fantastic tools for tracking transactions, spend, payments and interest are perhaps the most likely to create love.

Who doesn’t hate dealing with credit card companies and their antiquated interfaces and systems? Some credit card providers do not even allow automatic payment scheduling, apparently hoping you will pay late so they can rack up those late payment penalty fees. Doing away with even the worst, most evil, aspects of credit card accounts is already a huge step forward.

Let’s hope that Apple will manage this as well as it appears. It looks like a top flight offering that has plenty of advantages that make it head and shoulders above the pack, and, for iPhone users it seems like a “must have” if there ever was one.

  • Easy sign-up on iPhone
  • Accepted worldwide (wherever Mastercard is available)
  • Up to 3% cash back
  • Daily cash back
  • No fees
  • Engraved Titanium physical card with concealed numbers
  • Spending tracking
  • Clear transaction labeling with more data
  • Built-in Privacy

Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

Enjoy Lynxotic at Apple News on your iPhone, iPad or Mac and subscribe to our newsletter.

Lynxotic may receive a small commission based on any purchases made by following links from this page.

Toy Story 4 is now the 5th Billion Dollar Box Office Success for Disney, so far This Year

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/pixar/toy-story-4/toy-story-4-trailer-4_h1080p.mov

Toy Story 4 has surpassed this significant hurdle in less than two months…

This, the fifth film already surpassing the billion dollar mark for Disney, with The Lion King, Aladdin, Avengers: Endgame and Captain Marvel all also passing that level earlier in 2019…

Toy Story 4 is now the 8th highest grossing animated film in history. Earning $421.8 million at the domestic box office, in addition to $579.9 million raked in overseas.

With a nine year gap since Toy Story 3, due to various production delays and release date conflicts, the delay appears not to have dampened the spirits of fans of Woody and the gang all across the globe.

Now playing in theaters throughout the US.


Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

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The Kitchen: 70s Crime Story Features Juicy Dramatic Role for Melissa McCarthy

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/wb/the-kitchen/the-kitchen-trailer-1_h1080p.mov

Based on a graphic novel, The Kitchen refers to the infamous Hell’s Kitchen on the West edge of Midtown in New York City, a perfect setting for an Irish working class mob story taking place during the 70’s.

Starring Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish and Elisabeth Moss, the cast and the 70s crime drama concept make for high expectations. It was written and directed by Andrea Berloff, who received an Oscar nomination for original screenplay for “Straight Outta Compton”.

Melissa McCarthy, also an Oscar nominee, although best known for her comedic roles, takes on the challenge of transcending her roots in a deep dive into more dramatic fare. Elisabeth Moss, after her success in both “Madmen” and “The Handmaids Tale” brings her resume to bear. Playing housewives who are married to mobster husbands, all languishing behind bars, they choose to take matters, literally, into their own hands in their absence.

Photo / Warner Brothers

The Verdict is…Wrong?

Reviewers have not been kind. The film has received any number of clever criticisms, from cooking metaphors to polyester put downs, most of which all fault the writer / director for not making the most of the cast and concept.

Our take is that this will do better than the reviews would indicate, although the phenomenon is hardly unique, even “The Lion King” was panned by many scribes before going on to break box office records across the globe.

The mob genre with a female twist, though not exactly unheard of, is thoughtfully explored, and the 70s look and feel are not miles off from “Taxi Driver” or “The French Connection” at least in capturing the era with superficial accuracy, if not the caliber of filmmaking.

The trailer above can give enough of a taste of what the film has to offer, for those considering a night out to see it in a theater, or want a preview to stream at a later date, can surely make an informed decision. I’d say yes on this one.

Opens in theaters beginning today, August 9th.

Photo / Warner Brothers

Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

Enjoy Lynxotic at Apple News on your iPhone, iPad or Mac and subscribe to our newsletter.

Lynxotic may receive a small commission based on any purchases made by following links from this page.

Launch of Apple Card is Imminent: Here’s What You Need to Know

https://www.apple.com/105/media/us/apple-card/2019/c90ec3fe-63dc-4557-b1ea-50d7539c76bd/films/this-is/apple-card-this-is-tpl-cc-us-2019_1280x720h.mp4

The New Offering Will Take Off Fast, Based on the Perks and Details…

As with most things financial, there are lots of details, but some interesting perks, particularly for frequent customers of Apple products.

Immediate sign up on your iPhone

First perk: no lengthily complicated application process. According to the pre-launch information (see video above), just go to the Wallet app and tap on the Apple Card interface (once the Card is live) and go through the simple activation steps.

Once the sign up steps are complete, you can immediately start using the card as you would Apple Pay.

Small but expected caveat: For non-Apple Pay purchases in a traditional store setting you will need to wait until your physical card arrives in the mail. Also, although a pre-approved status will often be in place, availability is still subject to qualification, like any credit card.

Using the Card

The card will function as would any other card in your wallet for Apple Pay. This includes online purchases and in-store checkout where you normally would use Apple Pay.

You can designate the Apple Card as your default payment method in your wallet for purchases using your iPhone, iPad, Mac or Apple Watch.

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/AppleCard_Keynote_M.mov
video of keynote announcing launch of apple card

The MasterCard Goldman Sachs Connection

The extended uses for the digital and physical version of the card are enabled through the partnership between MasterCard and Apple. You will be able to use the Apple Card anywhere that a MasterCard is accepted.

Goldman Sachs is the credit provider for your Apple Card and they will set your interest rate based, as would be expected, on your current credit score. Rates are projected to be in the range of 13.24% to 24.24% which is below the average in the US.

An extended fixed payment system is likely to be offered for large purchases according to the pre-release data.

Main Perks and Advantages

There are many unconventional and improved aspects to the use and especially the user experience associated with the new card. In the keynote announcement earlier this year (see video above) a great emphasis was made on the ways that the project was focused on improving the experience and helping users attain a healthier financial lifestyle.

This includes various features designed to help reduce interest charges, not only by offering lower overall rates, but by giving the user options and calculations that can provide payment alternatives to the traditional “minimum monthly” payment currently the norm.

Payments can be made from your linked bank account or can be transferred from Apple Cash in your Wallet app.

There is no annual fee for the card, no international fees and no fee for exceeding your credit limit or making a late payment. Also, there is not increased interest rate penalty, per se, for late payment, which is common in some other credit card accounts. Late payment will, naturally, result in interest accrual, but based on your current rate.

There is an separate app, particularly useful on iPad, which does not have the Wallet app, where data on transactions, payments and other details are provided. This, in typical Apple style, is far superior to any credit card app interface from banks and lenders.

Rewards and “Daily Cash”

Rather than a points system commonly seen on traditional credit card accounts, the Apple Card has a cash back system which can kick back up to 3% on a daily basis.

They call this “Daily Cash” and, as the name implies, your rebated cash will be credited to your account every 24 hours and be directly transferred to your Apple Cash account. If you do not sign up for Apple Cash, you will get your rebates sent to your bank account monthly.

Percentages vary, 3% is for all purchases made directly from Apple, 2% for all Apple Pay transactions and 1% for using the physical card at any non-Apple Pay retailer.

There is no cost to transfer your rewards cash to your bank account and this can take from one to three days. There will be an option to get instant transfers, which will incur a 1% fee. The transfers are done through the Apple Cash card from the Wallet app to the linked bank account.

Best Features and Conclusion

The overall sense is that this is going to be a very popular offering, based on the positive attributes of the card and the deal.

Although the terms are clearly slanted towards encouraging financial activity benefiting the emerging Apple financial eco-system, with the reward percentage on direct Apple purchases and Apple Pay coming in higher than the “out of network” transactions made with the physical card only, the rest of the perks are more than enough to pique the interest of a great number of iPhone users.

The titanium card appearance, styling and feel will attract many for that reason alone. Quel chic! And it is likely that the card will cause an increase in Apple Pay transactions, with double cash back for pulling out your iPhone instead of the physical card.

Ultimately, the software tools enabling privacy – no data to Apple and Goldman Sachs promising never to use or sell your data – along with the fantastic tools for tracking transactions, spend, payments and interest are perhaps the most likely to create love.

Who doesn’t hate dealing with credit card companies and their antiquated interfaces and systems? Some credit card providers do not even allow automatic payment scheduling, apparently hoping you will pay late so they can rack up those late payment penalty fees. Doing away with even the worst, most evil, aspects of credit card accounts is already a huge step forward.

Let’s hope that Apple will manage this as well as it appears. It looks like a top flight offering that has plenty of advantages that make it head and shoulders above the pack, and, for iPhone users it seems like a “must have” if there ever was one.

  • Easy sign-up on iPhone
  • Accepted worldwide (wherever Mastercard is available)
  • Up to 3% cash back
  • Daily cash back
  • No fees
  • Engraved Titanium physical card with concealed numbers
  • Spending tracking
  • Clear transaction labeling with more data
  • Built-in Privacy

Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

Enjoy Lynxotic at Apple News on your iPhone, iPad or Mac and subscribe to our newsletter.

Lynxotic may receive a small commission based on any purchases made by following links from this page.

Apple Card Set Up Video: : Application Process Now Available, with Invitation

https://wallet.apple.com/assets/videos/apple_card_how_to_apply_1920x1080h.mp4
Apple Card “How To ApplY” Video

Immediate sign up on your iPhone…

On Monday Apple took the first step in launching the Apple Card. Initially called “Apple Card Preview”, selected iPhone owners are able to set up an account through the wallet app. The Next, very simple, steps are shown in the video above.

Remember, even with an invite, you must qualify as per the list here:

Before you start, there are a few things to check.

If you are not yet invited and you’d like to be notified when Apple Card is available, click here.

If you are wondering about all the details and perks that come with an Apple Card we have provided the whole story, with the original keynote video, below (reprinted from an earlier post):

The New Offering Will Take Off Fast, Based on the Perks and Details…

As with most things financial, there are lots of details, but some interesting perks, particularly for frequent customers of Apple products.

First perk: no lengthily complicated application process. According to the pre-launch information (see video above), just go to the Wallet app and tap on the Apple Card interface (once the Card is live) and go through the simple activation steps.

Once the sign up steps are complete, you can immediately start using the card as you would Apple Pay.

Small but expected caveat: For non-Apple Pay purchases in a traditional store setting you will need to wait until your physical card arrives in the mail. Also, although a pre-approved status will often be in place, availability is still subject to qualification, like any credit card.

Using the Card

The card will function as would any other card in your wallet for Apple Pay. This includes online purchases and in-store checkout where you normally would use Apple Pay.

You can designate the Apple Card as your default payment method in your wallet for purchases using your iPhone, iPad, Mac or Apple Watch.

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/AppleCard_Keynote_M.mov
video of keynote announcing launch of apple card

The MasterCard Goldman Sachs Connection

The extended uses for the digital and physical version of the card are enabled through the partnership between MasterCard and Apple. You will be able to use the Apple Card anywhere that a MasterCard is accepted.

Goldman Sachs is the credit provider for your Apple Card and they will set your interest rate based, as would be expected, on your current credit score. Rates are projected to be in the range of 13.24% to 24.24% which is below the average in the US.

An extended fixed payment system is likely to be offered for large purchases according to the pre-release data.

https://www.apple.com/105/media/us/apple-card/2019/c90ec3fe-63dc-4557-b1ea-50d7539c76bd/films/this-is/apple-card-this-is-tpl-cc-us-2019_1280x720h.mp4
Apple Card Informational Video

Main Perks and Advantages

There are many unconventional and improved aspects to the use and especially the user experience associated with the new card. In the keynote announcement earlier this year (see video above) a great emphasis was made on the ways that the project was focused on improving the experience and helping users attain a healthier financial lifestyle.

This includes various features designed to help reduce interest charges, not only by offering lower overall rates, but by giving the user options and calculations that can provide payment alternatives to the traditional “minimum monthly” payment currently the norm.

Payments can be made from your linked bank account or can be transferred from Apple Cash in your Wallet app.

There is no annual fee for the card, no international fees and no fee for exceeding your credit limit or making a late payment. Also, there is not increased interest rate penalty, per se, for late payment, which is common in some other credit card accounts. Late payment will, naturally, result in interest accrual, but based on your current rate.

There is an separate app, particularly useful on iPad, which does not have the Wallet app, where data on transactions, payments and other details are provided. This, in typical Apple style, is far superior to any credit card app interface from banks and lenders.

Rewards and “Daily Cash”

Rather than a points system commonly seen on traditional credit card accounts, the Apple Card has a cash back system which can kick back up to 3% on a daily basis.

They call this “Daily Cash” and, as the name implies, your rebated cash will be credited to your account every 24 hours and be directly transferred to your Apple Cash account. If you do not sign up for Apple Cash, you will get your rebates sent to your bank account monthly.

Percentages vary, 3% is for all purchases made directly from Apple, 2% for all Apple Pay transactions and 1% for using the physical card at any non-Apple Pay retailer.

There is no cost to transfer your rewards cash to your bank account and this can take from one to three days. There will be an option to get instant transfers, which will incur a 1% fee. The transfers are done through the Apple Cash card from the Wallet app to the linked bank account.

Best Features and Conclusion

The overall sense is that this is going to be a very popular offering, based on the positive attributes of the card and the deal.

Although the terms are clearly slanted towards encouraging financial activity benefiting the emerging Apple financial eco-system, with the reward percentage on direct Apple purchases and Apple Pay coming in higher than the “out of network” transactions made with the physical card only, the rest of the perks are more than enough to pique the interest of a great number of iPhone users.

The titanium card appearance, styling and feel will attract many for that reason alone. Quel chic! And it is likely that the card will cause an increase in Apple Pay transactions, with double cash back for pulling out your iPhone instead of the physical card.

Ultimately, the software tools enabling privacy – no data to Apple and Goldman Sachs promising never to use or sell your data – along with the fantastic tools for tracking transactions, spend, payments and interest are perhaps the most likely to create love.

Who doesn’t hate dealing with credit card companies and their antiquated interfaces and systems? Some credit card providers do not even allow automatic payment scheduling, apparently hoping you will pay late so they can rack up those late payment penalty fees. Doing away with even the worst, most evil, aspects of credit card accounts is already a huge step forward.

Let’s hope that Apple will manage this as well as it appears. It looks like a top flight offering that has plenty of advantages that make it head and shoulders above the pack, and, for iPhone users it seems like a “must have” if there ever was one.

  • Easy sign-up on iPhone
  • Accepted worldwide (wherever Mastercard is available)
  • Up to 3% cash back
  • Daily cash back
  • No fees
  • Engraved Titanium physical card with concealed numbers
  • Spending tracking
  • Clear transaction labeling with more data
  • Built-in Privacy

Find books on Big TechSustainable EnergyEconomics and many other topics at our sister site: Cherrybooks on Bookshop.org

Enjoy Lynxotic at Apple News on your iPhone, iPad or Mac and subscribe to our newsletter.

Lynxotic may receive a small commission based on any purchases made by following links from this page.

Little Monsters Rejoice, Haus of Gaga is Launching Haus Beauty: Pre-Order on Amazon

Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, aka, Lady Gaga is adding another dimension to her current house – Haus Beauty, which the star trademarked in late February of this year. The name, Haus of Gaga, is used to describe and represents the team of professional creatives, that together help Gaga in fabricating her innovative and distinct style on the red carpet and on stage. 

On July 15th, Lady Gaga’s new make-up and beauty line, Haus Laboratories, will give customers a sneak peak of some of their products on the official pre-order online launch. The line will be available exclusively through hauslabs.com and on amazon.com (for Prime members only).

Read More: New Music Video by Lady Gaga “Stupid Love” Yields Eye Popping Views and All Shot on an iPhone

Strategically planned, the launch date coincides with the first Prime Day (this year it will take place on both July 15th and 16th).

Lady Gaga’s choice to partner with Amazon for her make-up line is in contrast to some other major celebrity cosmetic lines, who chose to team up with fashion retailers such as Sephora or Ulta, (Rihanna, Kat Von D, Jennifer Lopez ) or to keep the business completely in house, such as Kylie Jenner (Shopify).

https://youtu.be/Q9X42Pa3e5c

 Why did Gaga choose Amazon? In an interview with Business of Fashion (BoF), Gaga stated that other companies were not willing to accept all of her vision and would have wanted her to change parts of her “equation”, to which Gaga ultimately said “No deal. “No message of self-acceptance, no deal”, as she put it. She went on to say that Amazon gave her free rein in creating her brand and all she’s envisioned for it.

Lady Gaga’s brand has been synonymous with all that is unique, daring to push the norm with provocative and visually experimental choices, in both her costumes and performances. She has thrived on being “different” and at the same time champions self-acceptance and love for all: it’s no surprise that she wants her make up line to embody those qualities as well.  

Lady Gaga told Business of Fashion, her new make-up line is about “inclusion” and aimed for everyone. “I have a platform in the world. God gave me this voice for a reason, I don’t know why, I ask myself that question all the time, but I’m sure as hell not going to put out a beauty brand that is going to drive insecurity and fear into people. This is about liberation”, she said.

“I have a platform in the world. God gave me this voice for a reason, I don’t know why, I ask myself that question all the time, but I’m sure as hell not going to put out a beauty brand that is going to drive insecurity and fear into people. This is about liberation”

– Lady Gaga

“ Your glam, your expression, and your artistry, we want you to love yourself.  

OUR HAUS, YOUR RULES

HAUS LABS INSTAGRAM

For the the July launch, the brand will offer three distinct products : “Le Riot” lipgloss, “RIP” semi-matte lip liner and “Glam Attack” all-over liquid shimmer powder in a variety of different shade colors. Gaga and her team carefully crafted theme names for the varying shades, with a unique names like Aphrodite, Myth, Venus, Chained Ballerina, En Pointe  and Corset.  All of Haus Laboratories products are cruelty-free and vegan.

“At Haus Laboratories, we want you to see yourself. When you look in that mirror, we want you to go: ‘That’s the you that I love. I’m in love with that person.’ I don’t want people to feel like they have to look like me.”

– Lady Gaga

After pre-order launch, products will be available for purchase beginning in September on both hauslabs.com and Amazon. The line is also rumored to include a full collection in the future with additional products like foundation, perfume, highlighter, skin line, and nail polish. The kits will be available in the US, UK, France, Germany and Japan; additionally customers outside the three continents will still be able to buy through the global store.

Lady Gaga is just one celebrity amongst many that are teaming up with Amazon for Prime Day with touted “star-studded deals”. Kristen Bell – This Saves Lives (granola bars with proceeds that helps children in need), Jaden Smith – JUST Water (eco-friendly water), Hilary Duff – Cubcoats (hoodies that fold into a stuff animal), and Kobe Bryant – Art of Sport (body skincare line), to name just a few, are some of the big names Amazon has chosen to offer new collaborations and exclusive deals with to kick off one of the largest online shopping days of the year. Gaga’s Haus Laboratories will make its Amazon debut and allow Prime members the opportunity to pre-order products before the September release.


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Spider-Man: Far From Home Beats the Box Office -Projected to Reach Over $800 Million Worldwide

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Spider-Man (Sony / Marvel) bested the rest in theaters this weekend with an estimated $45 million take.

In it’s second week in the US, the film took in more than the next three titles combined, including the likes of “Toy Story 4” (Disney-Pixar), “Crawl” (Paramount Pictures) and “Stuber” (Disney). The last two in the top four sport an “R” rating, however.

As our report on the initial Asian release tallies indicated, (see below) the blockbuster sequel should eventually top the $1 billion mark in worldwide box office.

Although “The Lion King“, due to be released state-side on July 18th, will hit a similar demographic, even with the expected loss to the large cat, Spidey should reach that ever more reachable, but still enormous, $1 billion mark. 

As a matter of fact, “Far From Home” could eventually top all previous Spider-Man flicks to become the highest grossing entry in the long running franchise.

While “The Lion King” is fully expected to take over the top spot next weekend, if “Far From Home” can hold steady at #2, the future looks bright for the web-slinger’s box office destiny. 

Asian Box Office Portends a Strong Holiday for SPIDER-MAN: Far From Home

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