Tag Archives: Featured

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

blink-182 - I Really Wish I Hated You (Lyric Video)
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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‘Gemini Man’: Does Two x Will Smith Equal more than One or Less?

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/paramount/gemini-man/gemini-man-trailer-2_h1080p.mov
2nd official trailer for “gemini man”

Ang Lee’s Newest Direction is an Attempt to Elevate a Clichéd Genre…

No two movies from visionary director Ang Lee are quite the same. One moment he is making a modern martial arts classic, the next, an introspective superhero movie, and after that, a heart wrenching romance about two gay cowboys. If there is one commonality across his entire filmography it is that every movie is ambitious. Thus, we knew from the get-go that his new film “Gemini Man” was unlikely to be a standard shoot-em-up action movie. The sight of a twenty-three year old looking Will Smith acting in the trailer confirmed this. 

Skydance Media, the company behind the latest Mission Impossible and Terminator movies is producing Gemini Man. The film falls in with their impressive line of action movies that tout A-List stars in the leading roles, except this time, there are two leading men, but still only one A-List star.

In “Gemini Man,” Will Smith plays two versions of the same character. One of them is a middle-aged man who fits the actor’s natural current look. The other one, however, is a young adult that looks like Will Smith out of his “Fresh Prince of Bel Air” days… well, that plus a touch of CGI makeup.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/paramount/gemini-man/gemini-man-trailer-1-_h1080p.mov
official original trailer for “Gemini man”

Can VFX Extend the Reach of Will Smith via Digital Clone?

CGI has definitely come a long way since the turn of the millennium, but the human eye has also learned to recognize when things are off. Thus, generating a human face, especially one as recognizable as Will Smith’s, with computer technology is one of the trickiest tasks for a visual effects artist.

With the help of over seven-hundred people on the VFX team, “Gemini Man’s” young Will Smith was created through motion capture animation. Smith would perform all of the young character’s scenes wearing sensors on his face, and then the VFX team would animate over his face to essentially de-age the actor while preserving the performance. It is a technique made popular by Andy Serkis’ performance as Gollum in “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy and has more more recently been boldly used to recreate Peter Cushing’s Grand Moff Tarkin in “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.”

Attempts to create human beings out of CGI and motion capture are not without their critics. Especially when the CGI human being is based off someone whose look the audience knows, it becomes easy to tell when the slightest detail is off. Digitized images have a certain over-polished, almost plastic look to them. So when the image is trying to resemble something as organic as a human face, it is very difficult to fool the viewer. 

We cannot deny that there is a something just a little prosthetic looking about the young Will Smith in “Gemini Man.” Then again, maybe that is just due to the fact that we know what Will Smith actually looked like at twenty-three and our knowledge of the on-screen face being artificial forces us to seek out the blemishes.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/paramount/gemini-man/gemini-man-featurette-becoming-junior_h1080p.mov
Bonus Featurette – Becoming Junior

will Will Save You from Yourself? Hubris Implies only a Hero’s Clone can Beat the Hero

Narratively in the movie, the young Will Smith is a clone of the older Will Smith, whose blood was used for an experiment against his knowing twenty-five years ago. In the present, the two Will Smiths are both hit-men pinned against one another. When they learn that they are the same person, though, the situation becomes far more complicated.

The movie’s first trailer made it look like a flat out Will Smith versus Will Smith story, a sci-fi action flick about one version of the self against another in the vein of Rian Jonson’s 2011 “Looper.” However, the second trailer reveals more about the man behind the cloning, the young Will Smith’s mentor and the older Will Smith’s former boss. While there will still be plenty of Smith on Smith action, this crime-boss character, played by Clive Owen, will likely be the archvillain, and perhaps we will witness the two Smiths teaming up to take him down in the end.

Even if there is something a little uncanny about seeing a CGI Will Smith, with Ang Lee behind the camera, an enormous VFX department, and an impressive cast of writers including David Benioff, Billy Ray, and Darren Lemke, “Gemini Man” is bound to be an interesting ride, so much so, that we may be able to look past the digital imperfections to appreciate what it is in all of its originality.


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‘Pain and Glory’: Subtlety and Depth from Antonio Banderas and Seasoned Director Almodóvar

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/sony/pain-and-glory/pain-and-glory-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
official trailer for “pain and glory”

Indie Style all Grown up with Veteran Cast

Pedro Almodóvar is one of the most acclaimed Spanish filmmakers of the modern era. An Academy Award winning screenwriter and a nominee for best director, Almodóvar worked from the bottom-up, starting out poor and making independent films reflective of Spain’s counter-culture. 

Now, Almodóvar may be more established, but he still implements his signature indie style and personal narratives into his project. This is more apparent than ever before in his latest film “Pain & Glory,” which tells the story of a fictional movie director reflecting on his long life and prosperous career. 

The autobiographical inferences are countless in “Pain & Glory,” as the film is not only about Spanish cinema, but also deals with family, friendship, and a middle-aged perspective on life—the last of which may especially hit home for Almodóvar, who just turned seventy this past week.

Photo / Sony Pictures Classics

Penelope Crúz joins Banderas for possible renaissance accolades

Leading the film’s strong Latinx cast featuring Penelope Crúz, Asier Etxeandia, and Leonardo Sbaraglia, it is Antonio Banderas, who might be on the verge a mini-renaissance due to his starring role in Netflix’s much anticipated “The Laundromat.” 

Banderas’ performance in “Pain & Glory” has already received praise, winning him Best Actor at this year’s prestigious Cannes Film Festival. At the Festival, “Pain & Glory” also won the Cannes Soundtrack Award for composer Alberto Iglesias’ score and Almodóvar received nominations for the Palme d’Or and Queer Palm Awards. 

Coming from Spain, “Pain & Glory” is of course entirely in Spanish—its original title is “Dolor y Gloria.” An English subtitled version will debut in the U.S. this Friday. Although foreign language films do not always prosper in American theaters, perhaps the star power and hype around “Pain & Glory” will make it stand out. It is an exciting film that could even get some Oscar recognition, but at the very least, it is a fascinating form of self-expression from one of Spain’s most celebrated filmmakers alive today. 


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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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Tesla and Elon Musk are Smiling: Gas Pumps Out, Charging Stations In –

Is this a Canary in the Coal Mine moment?

Say what you want about radical engineer Elon Musk, but his companies have certainly produced some very innovative products over the years. None are perhaps as revolutionary as Tesla’s line-up of wildly popular and stylish electric vehicles that require no gasoline.

This past weekend, a beacon of progressive light shone through the clouds as two gas stations on different sides of the world got rid of all their fuel pumps and transitioned entirely to EV charging stations. One of the gas stations is in Norway and it is a branch of the global Circle K convenience store company. The other is a local gas station in Takoma Park, Maryland called RS Automotives

This is significant, not due to the world adding two more charging stations, there are many already and Tesla’s network of stations is truly remarkable. The news here, however, is that these are stations that have decided to abandon gas, oil and, presumably, gasoline-based auto maintenance for EV charging and convenience. This is a trend that, hopefully, will accelerate.

In the wake of the UN 2019 Climate Action Summit, these initiatives are but small victories in the fight for environmental reformation. Nonetheless, we can take these updates as signs of individual improvement and solace. Either they are money-driven transformations reflective of more people turning to electric vehicles, or they are examples of non-money driven actions that we may need businesses to make in order to shift consumers in the superior, ecologically sensitive direction.

While gasoline-electric hybrid vehicles have been around for a while with popular older models such as the Toyota Prius and the Honda Insight, Tesla stands as the first widely popular electric car that runs on zero fluids excluding the windshield-wiper fluid (or tiny amounts for cooling batteries). Instead of filling it up with gas, you charge it up like a phone.

Admittedly, charging up a Tesla can, in some situations, take a while— close to an hour if fully discharged and topped off (Tesla suggests 80% maximum at any time to promote battery health and longevity). Although over half a million Teslas have been sold since their first all-electric Model-S debuted in 2012, some people still assume that the time it takes to charge one up is Tesla’s greatest weakness.

The “Range Anxiety” debate is not new, and not entirely real

This “weakness” is part propaganda, part wishful thinking and part scare tactic. The reality is, pumping gas also takes time and if you add in a bathroom break and a short stop to grab a drink to go, a supercharger can approximate, with ease, the turn-around time. Not to mention the peace of mind that comes with using a fill-up (charge up) as a break from driving rather than a hurried gas smelling pit-stop.

Charging stations have been popping up more frequently across the country and the world in the last few years. Tesla, Volkswagon and some venture capital-based start-ups have made initiatives to put up tens of thousands more EV charging stations along highways and roads.

This trend can be seen as a canary in the coal mine moment for the demise of fossil fuel based transportation and, ultimately, the fossil fuel based economic model. The looming climate crisis, breaking out virtually every day into the news, is but one reason to cheer this development. There are many more and many CitCM moments to come.


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Louie Schwartzberg’s Documentary, “Fantastic Fungi” Is A Psychedelic-Fueled Ecology Lesson

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/fantastic-fungi/fantastic-fungi-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official trailer for “Fantastic Fungi”

Natural Magic of the Unseen and Wonders beneath our feet

Louie Schwartzberg’s documentaries have always had to do with seeing the world through different lenses. From his independent shorts “Mysteries of the Unseen World” and “Moving Art: Forests” to his Disney-backed butterfly doc “Wings of Life,” Schwartzberg has been opening audience’s eyes to visual beauties hidden in plain sight.

His latest film, “Fantastic Fungi” takes this motif to the next level, as Schwartzberg not only uses his distinct visual style deliver a message, but that message itself is actually about our world beneath the surface and our minds beyond our senses.

The topic, of course, is mushrooms, or rather fungi of all sorts, the plantlike organisms that sprout from the earth and extend beneath our feet in all different directions. As Schwartzberg documents, fungi are of unparalleled importance to the natural world, and if used correctly, they could also help people improve their perception of life on the inside and out.

The movie starts out standard enough, with Schwartzberg’s signature time-lapses, landscape shots, and animations illustrating the awesome lives of mushrooms in the wild. Over interviews with ecologists, journalists, nutritionists, and more, the film shows how fungi’s roots are all connected beneath the surface, creating an enormous active network of billion-year-old ecological information that humans only understand the very beginning of.

Fungi’s potential is thus unpredictable. The natural sophistication of mushrooms could make them an inherent resource for health, sustainability, medicine, nutrition, and more. Their relationship with people is a beautiful example of humans not just learning about, but learning from a different form of life in its untouched place on earth.

Despite the intriguing topic, though, this first part of the movie still feels kind of like a simple National Geographic special or something cut out of a “Planet Earth” episode. “Fantastic Fungi” really distinguishes itself in its second and third acts. After Schwartzberg introduces us to fungi in the wild, he then delves into the ways humans use the organism for their own advantage.

Here, the film obviously looks at the ways mushrooms can be used as food and medicine, but it also talks about the ways that fungi preserve water and adapt efficiently, making them potentially valuable resources in creating revolutionary environmental progress.

Additionally, the film digs into the psychedelic aspects of mushroom consumption, interviewing mental health councilors and patients who use fungi as therapeutic tools. This is where the film becomes meta, as the experience of taking psychedelic mushrooms is meant to play with perception and ultimately make people feel extra clam or enlightened.

https://fantasticfungi.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/FF.mp4
Clip from “Fantastic Fungi”

Maybe there’s more to Fungi if we Become One with them?

Perhaps gratuitously, this raises the question of what it would be like to watch “Fantastic Fungi” under the influence of these mushrooms. Certain films, particularly movies with intricate colors or visuals, are known for being extra interesting when watched on psychedelics. Because “Fantastic Fungi” has some very cool, high-resolution visuals as well as an illuminating message, one could expect that watching the film with a mushroom-tinted consciousness might be a transcendent existential experience. Given the subject matter, we cannot help but wonder whether or not this was aesthetically intentional all along.

The film was featured at the Maui Film Festival’s Celestial Cinema screenings. Along with Louie Schwartzberg as the movie’s director, Brie Larson narrates the film and Mark Monroe of “Before the Flood” and “The Cove” wrote the screenplay. Monroe has written many documentaries that have to do with environmentalism and the human body, most notably perhaps the Oscar-winning “Icarus,” which started as a film about athletic doping in Russia, but eventually escaladed into a political thriller.

“Fantastic Fungi” looks like it will be leaving politics at the doorstep, though. Except for maybe a brief conversations regarding the legality of psychedelics, the film looks will probably be a happy and hopeful movie, one that not only teaches us an interesting lesson in ecology, but like a mushroom trip itself, will open up our minds to possibilities we never considered before.


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Renée Zellweger tour de force in ‘Judy’: Late Judy Garland Biopic

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/roadsideattractions/judy/judy-trailer-2_h1080p.mov
2nd Official Trailer for “Judy”

Recreation of the Epoch as well at the Star Bio…

For the past eighty years, generations of Americans have grown up knowing the face of Judy Garland as the young Dorothy Gale in Victor Flemmings’ classic fantasy film “The Wizard of Oz.” Few, however, know the story of the actress after the cameras went off, after she tapped those ruby slippers together, returned home, and the credits rolled on her happy Kansas prairie ending.

English director Rupert Goold is finally shedding light on the actress’ career after “The Wizard of Oz” in his new biopic, “Judy.” Goold is best known for his work in theater—for which he has many more directorial credits than he does in film—and therefore, “Judy” is employing a certain theatricality to it, focusing on Garland’s life less as an actress, but more as an singer at London’s famous Talk of the Town nightclub.

The movie will be a period piece just as much as it will be a biopic, taking place in the late sixties, a flashy, spectacle of a time for London’s entertainment industry. Thematically, the movie looks like it will spend lots of time dealing with nostalgia, being a retro-story in its own right about the sixties while also focusing on Garland a full generation after “Oz” put her in the spotlight.

Helping create this nostalgic energy is production designer Kave Quinn of “Trainspotting” and “Woman in Black,” and costume designer Jany Temime of “Skyfall” and the Harry Potter franchise. Evidently, the movie’s aesthetics are in good hands.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/roadsideattractions/judy/judy-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Original OFFICIAL TRAILER FOR “JUDY”

Total transformation to play the historic icon

In front of the camera, Academy Award winning actress Renèe Zellweger is playing the title character. The aged version of Garland featured in the movie is long past her prime. At the film’s point in her life, she has been married four times and she is trying to re-enter the spotlight for the sake of making enough money to stay with her children. The film’s 1968 setting also corresponds with the year before the actress died of a drug overdose. It is unclear whether or not the narrative will actually include the main character’s death, but regardless, it seems promising that given the timeline, it will not offer the most innocent portrait of Judy Garland.

Thankfully, Zellweger’s life and career is not as dark or intense as Garland’s was towards the end. Nevertheless, there is something fitting about this casting decision. It would be unfair to say that Zellweger’s career has gone downhill in recent years, but she certainly had a youthful peak in the late nineties and early two-thousands. The actress made a name for herself in 1996’s “Jerry McGuire” and in 2002 and 2003 respectively, the Academy nominated her for Best Actress for her performances in “Brigit Jones’ Diary” and “Chicago.” She then won Best Supporting Actress in 2004 for “Cold Mountain.” 

Since then, she has done respectable and consistent work. But while her public image has successfully avoided any pitfalls, Zellweger has not really been talked about all that much in the present decade. She went from an up-and-coming star to just another working actress in the business. Maybe “Judy” will offer her a comeback. Either way, her current situation kind of makes her a perfect fit for playing an older Garland trying to bounce back after the height of her career.

In a current market where Freddy Mercury, Elton John, and Mötley Crüe are getting their own movies, Judy Garland is perhaps not the most expected subject for the next musical-themed biopic. However, it follows suit to a decent degree, and for fans of classical-era Hollywood or the bygone genre of show tune music, “Judy” may be a more appealing picture than any of these rock-and-roll flicks.

The movie may not exactly draw in young people at first, but audiences will naturally follow quality, so if the film is up to snuff, then it may introduce Garland to a whole new generation as more than just the blue-dressed girl from Kansas, but as a star who truly went over the rainbow, and crash-landed just south of the pot of gold.


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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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New iPad 10.2″ Retina Released – Video from Apple keynote Showcases the First 7th Generation iPad

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/iPad_Release.mp4
Above: Video of Apple September Special Event keynote announcing the new ipad 7th gen.

$329 price point for this size is groundbreaking

This new iPad will benefit greatly from the new, iPadOS 13.1. With a bump from 9.7 to 10.2 this new version is twice as fast and has a larger screen in the same size case. Not quite as powerful as the current iPad Pro model, but with the A10 Fusion chip it will have some power for all the new multi-tasking features in iPadOS.

The new OS is a huge and “under the radar” shift in the history of tablets and computing. The long running debate over the possibility of the iPad being considered a “laptop replacement” continues but the beginning of the end comes with iPadOS.

It’s not the features or performance, although those are impressive, but the commitment to building an OS that is neither a “touch-screen computer” or, well, an iPad.

Instead, the new direction (finally!) for iPadOS, is an attempt, often emphasized by Apple while few listened, to take advantage of possibilities that only the iPad could achieve. The workflow and User Experience will continue to grow and transform and, at the same time, remain a completely unique and new “thing” living between laptop, desktop and iPhone.

Photo / Apple

The Smart Keyboard is compatible with the new iPad, as is the Apple Pencil. The emphasis in the “September Special Event” this year, as we, unlike some others, expected, is the truly huge evolution of the entire Apple Ecosystem. A particular and spectacular new product? Well, that’s in the eye of the beholder. “Just a better camera, just more pixels? just a faster processors?, all of this is great, but we’ve all become jaded and unmoved.

It’s the “invisible” evolution of the infrastructure that is the real “one more thing” that is never mentioned. Although many can not or do not take full advantage (in all fairness, who can?) it is the slowly creeping, relentless improvement in how the various devices work and, most importantly, work together, that is the real “game changer”.

Photo / Apple

Also in stealth mode until the September Special Event unveiling, is what Apple is calling “Machine Learning” along with Deep Fusion which are sort of like forms of AI without the scary world ending Musk scenarios. The new chips in iPad, iPhone and Macs (don’t forget Apple Watch!) are extending and continuing this aspect of why intensely complex activities gradually become commonplace on and across devices.

Features enabled by Machine learning have been growing in the background in iPhone and iPad, particularly in new models from the last 2 years, but now this will go into overdrive. Add 5g next year and the second wave will be ready to commence.

Naturally, stay tuned for other new iPad models models that may arrive later in the fall.


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Trump tweet and Ingraham’s “Children of the Corn” comments Expose a Generation that deserves Oblivion

Photo / Lynxotic / Adobe Stock

Opinion, observation and outrage:

…Children of the corn? You have no idea. Children of your Demise is more like it. And it’s about time.

There is no doubt that Greta Thunberg represents the future. And, after reactions from these two, who clearly represent the past, the future can’t come soon enough. It is a hopeful trend that obvious truths, truths that children can see clearly with their own eyes are finally being spoken out loud, without fear but with the outrage that the facts deserve.

“My message is that we’ll be watching you.

“This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be up here. I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean. Yet you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you! You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words. And yet I’m one of the lucky ones. People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!

“For more than 30 years, the science has been crystal clear. How dare you continue to look away and come here saying that you’re doing enough, when the politics and solutions needed are still nowhere in sight.”

“You say you hear us and that you understand the urgency. But no matter how sad and angry I am, I do not want to believe that. Because if you really understood the situation and still kept on failing to act, then you would be evil. And that I refuse to believe.”

“The popular idea of cutting our emissions in half in 10 years only gives us a 50% chance of staying below 1.5 degrees Celsius, and the risk of setting off irreversible chain reactions beyond human control.

-Climate activist Greta Thunberg, 16, addressing the U.N.’s Climate Action Summit, September 23, 2019

Enough is enough, Anyone with a brain can agree

For nearly 100 years the human race has been held hostage by the fossil fuel industrial complex, Middle East Oil and the greed and corruption that has maintained its strangle hold on our lives.

It was already clear in the 1960s that the dependence on Oil was, at best, a temporary means of survival. And yet, during the next 60 years the dependence only deepened and the forces of corruption buried the truth.

Renewable energy was always a better way. Electric cars have been feasible for many decades and have other clean modes of transport, only to be blocked by governments and evil, greedy people like Trump and Laura Ingraham.

Elon Musk and Tesla are of the establishment and yet still attacked on all sides due to the danger they pose to the status quo. However, the future will embrace those, like Tesla, who face facts… The coming generations will see the charade for what it is; absolute suicidal greed and evil towards all mankind.

Greta Thunberg and her generation will not have the luxury of pretending that lies are true. And neither do we.

Greta Thunberg is giving voice to the painfully obvious reality we all face. She is speaking to all who are ready to remove the veil of lies and obfuscation and look at the situation that generations of short-sighted, self-serving sycophants have done to the earth and it’s future survival hopes.

Today must represent a turn away from those past generations. Today the lines must finally be drawn in favor of the real facts, the obvious realities that have been clear for decades, and yet were “hidden” behind agendas furthering the perpetuation of the status quo and it’s self-destructive greed.

Change can begin when the truth is allowed to exist in sunshine and be taken for what it is. That enormous step forward, perhaps late but no less welcome for it, has already begun.

Dismissing Greta Thunberg with disgusting tweets or derisive comments will only shine an even brighter light on the truth of her words. As it should be. And the reaction of the dinosaurs should be seen for what it is; the howling of a species that sees it’s own imminent demise and extinction in the face of the future.

A future that can not come soon enough if any of the rest of us hope to survive, or see our children’s hopes for the future be restored.

https://twitter.com/CurtisIngraham1/status/1176340343194669057?

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iPhone 11 Pro Max: Night Mode for all and Elon Musk’s Cyborgs come to life

On Friday we took out the new iPhone 11 Pro Max for a spin and got some Manhattan Beach photos and video footage. Saturday night we did some Night mode tests. The tests revealed some amazing revelations. Below are reactions and examples.

First, the autopsy. According to Apple, intelligent software and A13 Bionic are behind what makes Night mode possible. This, while in the past would be considered a compromise, is now an integral part of the concept of this new technique for shooting photos in very low light situations.

In traditional photographic techniques a long shutter “speed” setting would leave the shutter open, collecting light, for several seconds, even as long as hours for very advanced experimental shots. Although the results can be spectacular the set up, requiring virtually perfect conditions, make these type of photos “pro only” for the most part.

The long shutter opening is the starting off point for Night mode but that is where the similarities end, for the most part. Ultimately the way the iPhone 11 Pro produces ultra-low-light images is the beginning of what is bound to be a long and interesting road; software assisted real-time image processing using machine learning and all manner of highly sophisticated tech enhancements only possible within Apple’s unique total eco-system of chips (hardware), software and A.I.

Sept 13 Keynote featuring the iPhone 11 Pro image processing systems using Bionic A13 chip, GPU and Neural Engine

But in the “real” world it is precisely the simplicity that takes this little upgrade into a whole other head space. First – no tripod needed (unless you are doing ultra max long exposure, and even then you can get by with a steady hand). This alone is, for anyone that has tried long exposures without stabilization, just astounding. Night mode senses that a potential photo can be enhanced and turns on automatically – and the results can be seen (in approximation) live before shooting. Once you shoot there is a delay – from, generally, 1-12 seconds (but usually 3-5 seconds) while the light is gathered and the software goes crazy. At the end is an almost noiseless photo that appears as if light was there that really wasn’t. It’s very odd. But often breathtakingly beautiful.

In the image below you can see the camera app layout during Night mode. On the bottom left you see the automatic setting (in this case set to 3 seconds) and if you tap on that icon the manual controls pop-up (on the right side of the image below) where you can manually adjust the exposure time or, if you want to disable Night mode and take a “normal” shot in low light, you can set it to zero.

iPhone 11 Pro in camera app with Night mode activeand with an auto-setting of 3 seconds

Here is where it gets interesting. And, a little confusing. Confusing because newer iPhones are already automatically enhancing and increasing the “simulated exposure” settings. This means that, to get a photo of what the human eye actually sees in a given low light situation, you either have to use different software with manual settings or simulate the darkness in Lightroom / Photoshop, etc.

So, all the “with and without” Night mode comparisons all over the internet? They are all misrepresenting the “real” situation. To illustrate we have done a mock up with the 3 levels – first on the far left is the simulated “human” light situation and the middle is the Night mode off setting and finally the Night mode end result:

Below, you see the “human vision simulation” and on the right the basic Night mode enhanced version. The room had basically zero light in it except the very dim led Christmas lights on the tree in the subject.

What are we looking at here? We are talking about some sort of Navy Seal, Ninja “let’s take pictures in the dark -cause we can” kind of thing! The Apple examples below, while beautiful and fantastic, don’t even begin to address the Pandora’s Box we are opening here:

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/apple-night-mode.mp4
Apple Instagram night mode video

What one feels when exploring uses of this tool is that it is simply an increased range of lighting situations that suddenly become available and viable. The “usual” thought process of what a photo reveals vs. what the eye sees is literally gone. And one has to start thinking in a completely different way about what, when and where a photo can be taken.

Shot in virtually total darkness with iPhone 11 Max Pro

What is remarkable about the photo above is nothing, except that it was pitch black and the sign was unreadable to the naked eye. If this was a shot needed for a Lifeguard video shoot and the sun had already set, no worries, sun not required. The end result is “normal” but the idea of shooting in the darkest corners and the result looking “normal” is quite strange indeed.

The shot below is a more traditional type of long exposure setting. A girl with a flash light happened to run by and that is where the decorative line was created. So far, other than a shot in nothing but moonlight such as the Apple Joshua Tree in Mojave example in the above video, using Night mode to recreate high contrast “traditional” long exposure photos is actually far less effective than re-thinking the entire photo-taking process to incorporate settings that heretofore were simply not viable for any camera, let alone a “cell-phone” camera.

We are all Cyborgs and the Door is opening to the Second Wave

Elon Musk said recently “we are already Cyborgs” because we carry cellphones. The idea is, a la Marshall McLuhan, that our iPhones (and computers and media and all tech) are extensions of our senses and, ultimately, ourselves. So now, just like that, we have Night Vision. Perhaps the use of the word “Bionic” for the A13 chip is no accident. But it is us, iPhone users, that are becoming Bionic.

“We are already Cyborgs”

Elon Musk at “Super-intelligence: Science or Fiction” conference

Here at Lynxotic, we are dedicated to the exploration of all new “languages” that can be used online. Photos led to film and film to video and now, via the internet we also use various evolving hybrids: animated gifs, live photos, Emojis, Animojis, Memojis, and now “Slofies” and Day-for-Night-mode shots that represent an experience that can only be possible as a Cyborg or Bionically enhanced human.

More and more, so many of us, particularly those of us that work in tech and media, live “inside” our computers and devices. Although our blurry eyes attest to some of the downsides of this life, upgrades, particularly to software relating to the sensual, sensory experiences we share daily, are a very big upside. When you are bionic and live inside your “phone” an upgrade to your vision is nothing less than a tune-up for your soul.

” When you are bionic and live inside your “phone” an upgrade to your vision is nothing less than a tune-up for your soul.”

– D.H.

We believe that we are in ultra-early times in the Second Wave. Just as a grunting cave man was “pre-Shakespearean” in his communication skills, we are searching for new ways to reach out to one another over digital networks and every new tool or method can change our digital lives, irreversibly. Night mode will be one such tool.

Photo shot using iPhone 11 Pro Max, Manhattan Beach CA on 9-20-19 using equivalent 52mm lens

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iPhone 11 Pro Max photo and video examples

We took out the new iPhone 11 Pro Max (that’s a mouthful, right?) for a spin on the first day of availability (delivered on time via online pre-order from Sept. 13th). Here are some of the results. Naturally these are all 100% “raw” in the sense that we used only the built-in apple camera app (third party camera and video apps are not yet functioning) and we did no post processing whatsoever.

The first thing that was noticeable was how the software adjusted for the light much more than in the previous combination of software (camera app) and hardware, and on last year’s XS Max. Well before “magic hour” would naturally turn everything golden, the sun gleaming off the ocean (see above) was already looking very stylized. With some very slight Photoshop or Lightroom adjustments this would “pop” for certain.

Photo shot using iPhone 11 Pro Max, Manhattan Beach CA on 9-20-19 using equivalent 52mm lens

Without more time with the machine and post production software etc. (not to mention the 3rd party apps which do make a huge difference) it is hard to say what the ultimate verdict is on how much better the output is compared to last year’s model. However, the first reaction is: wow. Also it should be noted that the very, very best place to view iPhone 11 Pro photos… is on an iPhone 11 pro (!). The screen resolution improvements are part of the immediate and obvious reaction if you are shooting and viewing the work on the same device. That’s is a little odd, but this is part of an overall disconnect that will be present during the ultra-early times in the Second Wave.

4k VIDEO SHOT USING IPHONE 11 PRO MAX, MANHATTAN BEACH CA ON 9-20-19 USING EQUIVALENT 52MM

For video we got similar, if somewhat less dramatic results. Bear in mind that 4k over YouTube can only be seen if you are using a chrome browser and you may need to manually dial up the setting. If you are looking at this for pro-test footage research you know what I am saying. Mostly you would be seeing this in 1080p and that does still look pretty luscious.

VIDEO SHOT USING IPHONE 11 PRO MAX, MANHATTAN BEACH CA ON 9-20-19 USING EQUIVALENT 13MM lens

Above you can see the same general scene using the ultra wide angle lens (equivalent to a 13mm) which is very wide and does create some distortion and enhancement of perspective – which always looks “cool” in music videos and some landscape settings.

The option to switch (without image degradation) between the three cameras / lenses: the ultra-wide 13mm, the wide 26mm and the 52mm “tele” is very handy, and having the ultra-wide angle will produce some great images not previously seen in iPhone photography. However, as a pro in “real life” with a full set up prime lenses there would definitely need to be an 80mm or 100mm for greater production of depth of field (bokeh and portrait styles) and to capture closer framing without resorting to digital zoom degradation. Also if they would have asked me I would have suggested something like 13mm, 40mm and 80mm. The 80mm is probably not possible due to the fact that it would be very thick (!) but the 26mm is a bit of an orphan getting skipped over, in many situations when looking for dramatic shots. But, hey ! It’s a smart phone!


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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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“Ad Astra” will play with our Minds and Hearts, can it live up to Astronomical Expectations?

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox/ad-astra/ad-astra-trailer-2_h1080p.mov
Above: Official Trailer 2 for “Ad Astra”

Director James Gray has certainly made some interesting movies in his career, but none have been as star-studded and hyped as the upcoming “Ad Astra.” Set to be released September 20th, “Ad Astra” is an original science fiction odyssey based on the screenplay written by Ethan Gross alongside Gray himself, and starring Brad Pitt, Tommy Lee Jones, and Liv Tyler.

The plot looks complex and enthralling, as an astronaut played by Pitt crosses the solar system in search of answers about his deceased father. In a movie market where superheroes and fantasy tend to dominate the science fiction genre, “Ad Astra” looks like it will be a refreshing return to hard sci-fi, where the science is realistic and integral to the story. 

Of course, that does not mean that the film will be a two-hour Neil Degrasse Tyson lecture. The trailer promises a high degree of action and emotion along with some great performances. Most notably, having Brad Pitt as the movie’s main protagonist comes at a good time, as Pitt’s recent performance in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time In Hollywood has earned the actor a late resurgence in popularity and buzz.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox/ad-astra/ad-astra-moon-rover_h1080p.mov
Official Moon rover sneak peek clip from “ad Astra”

Perhaps just as captivating as the talent on screen, though, is the talent behind the camera. After all, a movie that takes place in space is only going to get so far without strong visual effects and cinematography. In “Ad Astra,” Brian Adler of “Avengers: Endgame” is helming the position of visual effects artist, and Academy Award nominee Hoyte Van Hoytema — best known for movies like “Interstellar,” “Dunkirk,” and “Her” — is director of photography.  This, along with a compelling score from composer Max Richter, is bound to make “Ad Astra” a treat for all senses.

In more ways than just Van Hoytema’s cinematography, “Ad Astra” looks quite reminiscent of Christopher Nolan’s “Interstellar.” They are both examples of indie directors gaining enough of a reputation to piece together their own big-budget science fiction movie, and then using that opportunity to create something remarkably original and compelling within the genre. 

At the same time, however, James Gray never had a groundbreaking studio Batman franchise to launch him into the spotlight. While “Ad Astra” may be getting more marketing and attention than any of Gray’s previous films, it is not guaranteed that it will rake in anything close to the $677 million that “Interstellar” earned in 2014. Then again, “Ad Astra” was made on an $80 million budget. While this is a far greater budget than any of Gray’s previous projects, it is hardly half of what it cost to create “Interstellar.”

We should not get caught up in the numbers, though. After all, even if “Ad Astra” looks similar to “Interstellar,” there is no assurance of them being comparable as final products. For all of the potential and prestige that “Ad Astra” touts, there is the risk that it will turn out less like the renowned “Interstellar” and more like the lackluster “Passengers”—the star-studded original sci-fi movie that managed to flop at the box office despite looking like a guaranteed success on paper.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox/ad-astra/ad-astra-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Original official trailer for “Ad Astra”

Like deep-space itself, “Ad Astra” will likely deal with dark matter and other mysterious phenomena that it is not willing to reveal until the film hits theaters. The movie is destined to play with our minds as well as our hearts, but how it will do so in terms of narrative remains justifiably clouded. Lets hope that the film delivers on its cosmological story, makes the most of its talent, and maybe even launches James Gray to a new directorial status, allowing him to create more original movies with the budget to back them.


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‘Where’s My Roy Cohn?’: Ruthless and Unscrupulous Trump ‘hero’ in Documentary Film Exposé

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/sony/wheres-my-roy-cohn/wheres-my-roy-cohn-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Above: Official Trailer for “Where’s My Roy Cohn?”

Ask anyone who took American history in high school if they have ever heard of Roy Cohn, and you may get blank stares. Of course, those who lived in the United States during the sensational attorney’s controversial career should recall the name, but otherwise, this immensely powerful, remarkably influential, and at times, terribly harmful figure in American politics has mostly been kept in the dark, hidden away in a backlog of national figures despite the tremendous effects he’s had on the country.

The son of a New York City judge, Roy Cohn was born in the year 1927. After a Jewish upbringing in the Bronx, he received a BA and JD from Columbia University and made a name for himself as a prosecutor for the U.S. Department of Justice. He was particularly successful in locking up Communists and soon became a close member of Senator Joseph McCarthy’s counsel.

For the next few decades, he had vast, yet subtle influence over American politics, informally advising presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, and even representing a young Donald Trump in a business case. He stood as a pillar of xenophobia and homophobia, ingraining such values into our leaders, all in the interest of preserving a perverse image of the American way.

Indeed, Cohn is not the kind subject often discussed in a civics classroom. However, he is the perfect anti-hero for an enlightening and entertaining cinematic experience. With feature films like “Vice” focusing on Vice President Dick Cheney and docuseries like Netflix’s “The Family” about White House evangelist Douglas Coe, there is an obvious market for media that digs deep into the true stories of individuals manageing to garner and manipulate power without ever really entering the spotlight—individuals like Roy Cohn.

A Cinéma-Vérité view of Corruption as a Lifestyle

Sony Pictures Classics’ documentary “Where’s My Roy Cohn?” screened earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival and it is getting a wider release at the end of the week. Behind the camera is journalist-turned-director Matt Tyrnauer, who has previously proved his affinity for creating historical bio-docs with 2008’s “Valentino: The Last Empire” and 2016’s “Citizen Jane: Battle for the City.” 

“Where’s My Roy Cohn?” of course places the attorney’s controversial work with American politicians at the story’s core, unveiling in striking detail the level of silent sway he managed to attain over some of the nation’s most public leaders. However, Tyrnauer’s film does not end there. The documentary does a thorough investigation into Cohn as a human being, starting at his childhood to try and understand the origins of his narrow American vision and his insatiable drive for preserving it.

The doc will also look at Cohn’s personal complications as an adult. Although the lawyer worked with Senator McCarthy to rid the federal government of homosexuals during the 1950s Lavander Scare, Cohn himself was allegedly attracted to men. Whether as a latent power trip or a hidden secret, Cohn reportedly had sexual relations with many men throughout his life, and suspicions surrounding his sexual orientation continued and even intensified after he died of AIDS in 1986.

Cohn with senator Joseph McCarthy Photo / Sony Pictures Classics

The documentary will also view his career as more than just the facts. Continuing with the intimate approach, the movie will look at the personal relations he held with Washington’s most powerful people. It will investigate what happened behind closed doors between him and sitting presidents, and it will look at the master-apprentice dynamic that he held with Trump during the 1970s.

Evidently, there is more to Cohn than just the egregious effects he had on policy and national morale. For everything he did on paper, Roy Cohn was a human, and the human soul is a convoluted thing. He is definitely not an American hero.

In fact, one could even call him a villain, but as Freddy Kruger, Jason Voorhees, or Dick Cheney have proved before him, villains, especially ones that hold power in the palm of their hands, make for fascinating movie topics. And if “Where’s My Roy Cohn?” approaches the topic of Cohn well, maybe the audience will also be able to learn something about America along the way.


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‘Jojo Rabbit’ wins top Award at Toronto Film Fest: Audience Award, Precursor to Oscar Nomination

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox_searchlight/jojo-rabbit/jojo-rabbit-trailer-2_h1080p.mov
2nd Official preview trailer of “Jojo Rabbit“

New Zealand director Taika Waltiti’s new movie “Jojo Rabbit”will not be widely released until October 18th but a few lucky patrons were able to catch an early screening at the Toronto Film Festival. Their reactions were positive, and the film won the audience award putting it in line, if past years winners are any indication, for a possible Oscar nod. Waititi was also awarded the Festival’s new Ebert Director Award.

Waltiti is known for directing wacky comedies such as “What We Do In The Shadows,” “Hunt For The Wilderpeople,” and the borderline parody Marvel hit, “Thor: Ragnarok.” His latest film, “Jojo Rabbit” follows this same vein of outrageous, yet charming humor, but there is one key difference… “Jojo Rabbit” focuses on Germany’s Nazi party during World War II, making its hilarity just a touch more complicated.

More specifically, “Jojo Rabbit” is about a young boy in the Hitler Youth. Like many German kids of the time, he aspires to be a Nazi soldier when he grows up. He buys into the party’s ideologies and believes their propaganda. That is until he comes face to face with a Jewish girl and learns, despite what the Nazis have taught him, that she is harmless, pleasant, and appealing.

On the surface, the premise seems like the bones of a complex and sophisticated historical drama. With Waltiti behind the camera, though, such is obviously not the case. Instead of dry historical accuracy, Waltiti makes the Hitler Youth look like a summer camp filled with likable children and goofy leaders. Most boldly perhaps, Waltiti himself plays Adolf Hitler in the movie, but rather than depict him as the brutal dictator that he was, Waltiti makes him out to be the kind-uncle archetype, a socially inept, hilarious motivator and idol for the children in the story.

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/fox_searchlight/jojo-rabbit/jojo-rabbit-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Original Official preview trailer of “Jojo Rabbit“

Artful Comedy of a Bygone Era

Of course, radical World War II and Nazi-themed comedies have existed in the past. From Quinten Tarantino’s “Inglorious Bastards” all the way back to Charlie Chaplin’s 1940 “The Great Dictator,” filmmakers have mocked the Nazi party through satire for generations. “Jojo Rabbit” will be no different in that regard. Obviously, given the current political climate in America and the world, a movie about the buffoonery and absurdity surrounding Nazi ideologies is somewhat timely. It will probably be impossible to watch this movie from an apolitical perspective while retaining a clear conscious.

At the same time, though, “Jojo Rabbit” is not a Nazi satire or comedy quite like we’ve seen before. Despite the heavy subject matter, the movie doesn’t look particularly dark. In fact, it looks incredibly playful, almost like a children’s movie. In many ways, it seems reminiscent of Wes Anderson’s “Moonrise Kingdom,” which essentially turned a kids summer camp story into an artistic film for adults. “Jojo Rabbit” looks like it will do the same thing, but then go the extra subversive mile by putting that summer camp in Germany circa 1939.

The trailer effectively presents this by including German versions of heartwarming American songs like The Monkees’ “I’m A Believer,”and by showing examples of slapstick comedy and cute gags around the relationships between our young protagonists. The characters—even those playing Nazis—all seem to have endearing qualities to them. It looks heartfelt, and almost kid friendly, as the children banter, grow up, and learn about the world all before the harrowing and bizarre backdrop of World War II Europe.

So where do we place “Jojo Rabbit”? Is it a movie about friendship? A romance? A historical piece? A coming-of-age-comedy? A feel-good movie? Who is its target audience and what is its intended message? Is it a social commentary? If so, then for who and on what? All of these questions are impossible to answer in any general sense right now, for the movie looks of no particular genre and is unique on so many levels.

Photo / Fox Searchlight Pictures

The only thing that seems predictable about “Jojo Rabbit” is that it will make us laugh and that it will make us think

There is no guarantee that it will leave us feeling any better or worse about the world, that we will necessarily learn anything from it, or if we will exit the theater any less confused than we are right now. All we know is that we don’t know what to expect, and we are all excited to see what Taika Waltiti has in stores… excited, but with a hint of respectful, perhaps even nervous, reservation.


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As It Was: Oasis Frontman Triumphs in Survival and Redemption via Song

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/liam-gallagher-as-it-was/liam-gallagher-as-it-was-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
New – Official trailer for “as it was”

Liam Gallagher Comeback-Rockumentary Light on Noel and Oasis, but Heavy on Personal Career and Music…

Oasis was the biggest rock band to come out of Britain in the 1990s. Formed in Manchester during the year 1991, brothers Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher stood at the band’s center, writing songs that they would eventually perform around the world. Hits such as Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger and Champagne Supernova still play on the radio (and in our heads) to this day.

Sadly, in 2009, the brotherly dynamic duo broke up, and they did not do so quietly. Ever since then, the Gallaghers’ relationship has been soured and fans have been praying for the two to set aside their differences and reunite on stage. 

Ten years after the band’s separation, the odds of Liam and Noel getting back together do not seem any more promising than they ever were. As far as fans know, the brothers’ relationship is muddier than ever, and their time in Oasis has become somewhat of a wistful legend in the world of rock n’ roll, a short-lived story of two haughty English brothers who were worldwide sensations and then, at their height, unexpectedly fell out of each other’s graces. 

While 2019 cannot promise Oasis’ return in any way, shape, or form, it is offering a unique chance to look back at the band and learn about one of its members recent attempt at returning to the world of music. Coming out this week, directors Gavin Fitzgerald and Charlie Lightening will be releasing “Liam Gallagher: As It Was“, a documentary bio-pic that follows Liam Gallagher, his present life and work, and perhaps most interestingly, his time in Oasis the dynamic bond he had with his brother. 

As It Was will be Fitzgerald and Lightening’s first collaboration together. Both are up-and-coming directors, with filmographies that only go back to 2010, but both have excelled in music-themed documentaries. In 2013, Lightening directed 12-12-12 about the Hurricane Sandy relief concert, and in 2017 Fitzgerald did the short The Truth About Irish Hip Hop.

Nevertheless, this upcoming Liam Gallagher pic —set to be released today— will probably be both directors’ most ambitious project yet. There have been many rockumentaries and concert videos centered around Oasis since the turn of the millennium, but few have approached the topic on such a personal level since the breakup. As It Was, however, is not meant to be an Oasis picture per-se, but a specific, in-depth look at Liam Gallagher’s past and present.  

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/liam-gallagher-as-it-was/liam-gallagher-as-it-was-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
First – OFFICIAL TRAILER FOR “AS IT WAS”

In many ways, this Liam-centric focus provides a number of challenges for As It Was. Foremost, the film cannot rely as much on a backlog of historic stories from Oasis’ rise and fall, for it instead focuses on Liam’s unsteady career since the breakup and his slow (but ultimately successful) return to music with an upcoming solo album. 

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/liam-gallagher-as-it-was/liam-gallagher-clip-second-chance_h1080p.mov
Official Teaser CLip from “As it was”

Similarly, because Liam and Noel’s relationship is still rocky, the latter brother did not want to be involved in the film, so the directors had to tell the story without his cooperation. They were restricted in how much old Noel footage they could use and were even deprived the right to include Oasis songs in their soundtrack without getting into a legal battle. 

In a movie about triumph and bouncing back, it is perhaps only logical that the filmmakers would have to overcome a few obstacles behind the camera as well. Liam Gallagher spent lots of time in the shadows after his fall from stardom, but as the film will chronicle, he rose from his ashes, regained a following, and created the album Why Me? Why Not, which will be released on the September 20th.

When it comes to As It Was, let’s hope that Fitzgerald and Lightening have done as good a job as Gallagher has in hurdling the roadblocks towards creating their art, and that audiences will appreciate the inspiring story they aim to tell. 

Film Poster for “As It Was” – Photo / Screen Media

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Apple TV+ to Launch on November 1: One Year Free with iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac, Touch

https://www.apple.com/105/media/us/apple-tv-plus/2019/ca7883f2_885a_42c7_b0cc_529b287c1925/films/morning-show/apple-tv-plus-morning-show-tpl-cc-us-2019_1920x1080h.mp4
Above: “The Morning Show,” a cutthroat drama starring and executive produced by Reese Witherspoon and Jennifer Aniston, and starring Steve Carell, explores the world of morning news and the ego, ambition and the misguided search for power behind the people who help America wake up in the morning.

On 11-1-19, Apple will start streaming original shows worldwide, to over 100 countries and have a subscription fee of $4.99 per month. For the uncertain there will also be a seven day free trail period.

Using the Apple TV app, It will be possible to view shows on iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, Apple TV and also online at tv.apple.com. Some of the previously announced shows that will be available initially will be “The Morning Show”(see trailer above), “Dickinson”, “See”, “For All Mankind” and “The Elephant Queen”. New original shows, movies and documentaries will be added each month, according to Apple.

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/videos/see/AppleTV_Plus-see-cc-us-_1920x1080l.mp4
Above: “See,” an epic drama starring Jason Momoa and Alfre Woodard, is set 600 years in the future after a virus has decimated humankind and rendered the remaining population blind. When all humanity has lost the sense of sight, humans must adapt and find new ways to survive.
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/videos/for-all-mankind/AppleTV_plus-mankind-cc-us-_1920x1080l.mp4
Above: “For All Mankind,” a new series from Ronald D. Moore, imagines what would have happened if the global space race never ended and the space program remained the cultural centerpiece of America’s hopes and dreams.
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/videos/dickinson/AppleTV_Plus-dickinson-cc-us-_1920x1080l.mp4
Above: “Dickinson,” a darkly comedic coming-of-age story, explores the constraints of society, gender and family through the lens of rebellious young poet, Emily Dickinson.

Some of the originals to be added monthly include:

“Helpsters,” a new children’s series from the makers of “Sesame Street,” stars Cody and a team of vibrant monsters who love to help solve problems. It all starts with a plan.

“Snoopy in Space,” a new original from Peanuts Worldwide and DHX Media, takes viewers on a journey with Snoopy as he follows his dreams to become an astronaut. Together, Snoopy, Charlie Brown and the Peanuts crew take command of the International Space Station and explore the moon and beyond.

“Ghostwriter,” a reinvention of the beloved original series, follows four kids who are brought together by a mysterious ghost in a neighborhood bookstore, and must team up to release fictional characters from works of literature.

“The Elephant Queen,” an acclaimed documentary film and cinematic love letter to a species on the verge of extinction, follows a majestic matriarch elephant and her herd on an epic journey of life, loss and homecoming.

Oprah Winfrey joins the world’s most compelling authors in conversation as she builds a vibrant, global book club community and other projects to connect with people around the world and share meaningful ways to create positive change.

Following data provided by Apple:

More Apple TV+ originals will be added to the Apple TV app each month, including:

“Truth Be Told,” a gripping new series starring Academy Award winner Octavia Spencer and Emmy Award winner Aaron Paul, explores America’s obsession with true crime podcasts and navigates urgent concerns about privacy, media and race.

“Little America,” inspired by the true stories featured in Epic Magazine, brings to life the funny, romantic, heartfelt, inspiring and surprising stories of immigrants in America.

“The Banker,” a feature film inspired by a true story, stars Anthony Mackie and Samuel L. Jackson as two African American entrepreneurs who try to circumvent the racial limitations of the 1950s and quietly provide housing loans to the African American community in Jim Crow Texas. Nia Long and Nicholas Hoult also star.

“Hala,” a feature film and official selection of the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, follows a high school senior struggling to balance being a suburban teenager with her traditional Muslim upbringing.

Starting today, viewers can watch trailers and add Apple TV+ series and movies to Up Next on the Apple TV app, so they can be notified when the first episodes become available. At launch, most Apple TV+ series will premiere with three episodes, with one new episode to roll out each week, while full seasons of some series will be available all at once.

Audiences worldwide can enjoy Apple TV+ originals subtitled and/or dubbed in nearly 40 languages, including Subtitles for the Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing (SDH) or closed captions. Apple TV+ series and movies will also be available with audio descriptions in eight languages.

Apple TV+ is one of Apple’s newest services, joining Apple Arcade, the world’s first game subscription service featuring over 100 new and exclusive games; Apple News+, which brings together over 300 magazines, newspapers and digital publishers within the Apple News app; Apple Music, the home of over 50 million songs, thousands of playlists and daily selections from the world’s best music experts; Apple Card, a new kind of credit card created by Apple and designed to help customers lead a healthier financial life; Apple Pay, the most popular mobile contactless payment system in the world that gives customers an easy, secure and private way to pay using their Apple devices; as well as the App Store and iCloud.

Pricing and Availability

  • Apple TV+ will be available on the Apple TV app for $4.99 (US) per month with a seven-day free trial starting November 1 on iPhone, iPad, Apple TV 4K, Apple TV HD, Apple TV (3rd generation), iPod touch and Mac. To subscribe to Apple TV+, customers must update to iOS 12.3 or later, tvOS 12.3 or later and macOS Catalina. The subscription will automatically renew at $4.99 per month at the end of the seven-day free trial.
  • Apple TV+ will also be available on the Apple TV app on select 2018, 2019 and newer Samsung smart TVs, and on Amazon Fire TV, LG, Roku, Sony and VIZIO platforms in the future.
  • Customers can also subscribe to and watch Apple TV+ at tv.apple.com in Safari, Chrome and Firefox.
  • Customers with AirPlay 2-enabled Samsung, LG and VIZIO smart TVs must update to iOS 12.3 or later or macOS Catalina to play or mirror Apple TV+ originals from the Apple TV app on iPhone, iPad, iPod touch or Mac directly to their smart TVs. Customers with eligible Sony smart TVs will be able to enjoy AirPlay 2 support later this year.
  • Customers who purchase any new iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac or iPod touch starting September 10 can enjoy one year of Apple TV+ for free. Beginning November 1, customers can initiate the one-year free offer in the Apple TV app on the device running the latest software. Customers have three months after device activation to claim the offer, or if the device was purchased and activated before the launch of Apple TV+, they will have three months starting November 1. The subscription will automatically renew at $4.99 per month after one year. Customers can cancel at any time in Settings at least one day before each renewal date. Customers who cancel during the offer period will forfeit the remainder of their offer. This limited time offer applies to both new and refurbished models, including devices from the iPhone Upgrade Program, is not restricted to any specific sales channel (e.g., Apple Store, resellers) and will be available in all countries where Apple TV+ will launch. Up to six family members can share one Apple TV+ subscription and watch using their own Apple ID and password. Only one one-year offer is available per family, regardless of the number of devices purchased.

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Apple Special Event: Expect the Unexpected? Again?

Everybody Knows Everything that will Happen? Let’s Hope not and Expect the Unexpected…

What about the vaunted world class secrecy that Apple used to be famous for? Aside from a fiasco or two many years ago, and the attendant bru haha, shouldn’t there be some sense of dramatic reveal?

Sure, Ming-Chi Kuo, is known far and wide as predictor extraordinaire and has an uncanny ability to spill the beans with great accuracy. And, it seems, practically any Apple News Outlet seems to be able to tell you exactly what to expect. Or are they?

This year, we have a tile-like gadget which sounds pretty fantastic – and the rumor stems from iOS 13 code so there must be something there. Somehow Kuo and macrumors have determined that the findable gadgets will be “circular”.

imaginary concept for findable bluetooth device (Lynxotic)

Names, Specs, Features and Performance

As far as iPhones, the consensus is 3 models. Possibly called “iPhone 11” and “iPhone 11 Pro” and with better waterproofing, better camera with both hardware and software upgrades as well as video recording improvements related to the camera changes, appear to also be likely.

The list of changes to the specifications include items such as battery performance (with a larger battery), navigation and more ram and so on and so on. And this tiny partial list of what has been debated and discussed does not even include the already well known changes that iOS 13, macOS Catalina and iPad OS will all bring, and how those will interact with the new devices and new device features.

Naturally there are many possible and likely upgrades to the iPhone but also to a whole array of products, software and services.

As we detailed in a recent story the Apple TV+ launch is due, in all likelihood this month. iPad, MacBook, Mac Pro availability, much that was partially or fully announced at WWDC in May is bound to get some attention again.

As a matter of fact, 2019 is a year during which almost every non-iPhone product has been upgraded already. MacBook Air is another recent example. Even an emoji upgrade was announced recently!

Is Excessive Love A Crime?

Although further speculation towards more and better smacks of greed or at least excessive love, what if there are surprises that even the great Ming-Chi Kuo and Macrumors are not yet aware of?

What if the once formidable Apple security and anti-leak team was actually successful in keeping something under wraps?

Perhaps just even better secret details on the changes and improvements to the hardware, particularly the iPhones? Maybe the camera and its increasingly AI based software has something big in the offing?

Or, what if there is actually even one piece of hardware or one aspect of the iPhone “11 Pro” that literally no one has warned us about yet? If the one thing that we will all be talking (and writing and tweeting and posting) about Tuesday afternoon is not on the radar of any of the “what to expect” pundits that have already weighed in?

That is a “what if”, not only to keep in the back of our wide-open minds, but truly, for the faithful, as was in the days of Steve Jobs keynote addresses of yore, it would be one more thing, devoutly to be wished.


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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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iPhone Photography Awards Announced, Volume 10: Other and Series

https://video-lynxotic.akamaized.net/PhotoAwards-1-M-final.mp4
Above: short video introducing our iphone photography awards series

In this, the Final Article in a Series Featuring all the Winners, See Photos of the Top Three Awards for the Categories: Other and Series

Pushing creativity to the limits of the imagination – or just taking what feels interesting and puting together later into a series. In volume 10, the final installment of our coverage, the categories that go above and beyond, so to speak, are shown.

Established in 2007, IPPAWARDS have featured the worlds best iPhone photographers and photos since the iPhone’s inception. The deadline to enter the next years program is March 2020, so, use these great images as inspiration to take your best shot. Who knows, it might be you taking the Grand Prize in 2020!

First Place Winner, Other : Neri Rivas

First place Other photo shot in Busan, South Korea, on an iPhone X by Sari Sutton – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Sari Sutton – IPPAWARDS

”Sari likes to explore the intersection between the natural and human-constructed, industrial elements of the landscape through her photography. She has a keen interest in abstract composition and the conceptual. Her photographic practice includes art, landscape, street, social and environmental documentary. She is a member of the ‘Unexposed Collective’ of Australian women/ non-binary street photographers and her work has been shown in a number of group exhibitions.”

”I loved the playful surrealist symbolism of this modest painted building, visually merging architecture and nature, physical object and void, in an unpretentious yet conceptually very clever way.”

Second Place, Other : Kirill Voynovskiy

Second place Other photo shot in Maryland, USA, on an iPhone 7 by Dyllon Wolf – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Dyllon Wolf – IPPAWARDS

”I am a 19 year old college student from Maryland studying Biology and Psychology at the University of Utah. Photography has always been a major interest of mine and I have been taking photos with my iPhone ever since I got my first one in 2013. I love using knowledge from my college classes to find and compose unique photos of ordinary things that I wouldn’t have found interesting before.”

”We received a large package with an absurd amount of this brown packing paper and my younger brother and I decided to get creative with it.”

Third Place, Other : Caren Drysdale

Third place Other photo shot in Rancho Cucamonga, California, on an iPhone 6 Plus by Caren Drysdale  – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Caren Drysdale – IPPAWARDS

”My interest in Mobile Photography began several years ago when I purchased an iPhone 5. It is reassuring to know that I always have a camera with me, and I enjoy being able to quickly capture moments with my phone. I also find it amazing how much you can accomplish making art with your photos using all of the various apps packed into a mobile device.”

”I shot this photo in a local restaurant, I was captivated by the beautiful woman seated at the table across from us. She was preparing to leave, and her table was cluttered with dirty dishes, but I focused on the bright, shimmering fabric and the shiny gold sandals she was wearing.”

Third Place, Series : Larisa Baricheva

Third place Series photos shot in Lobitos Beach, Peru, on an iPhone 7 by Larisa Baricheva  – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Larisa Baricheva – IPPAWARDS

”I’m a Russian-Jewish woman and I was born 74 years ago in Moscow, Russia, but for the last 52 years I have lived in Peru. I love nature, its shapes and colors, its textures and combinations. I search tirelessly for beauty. I’m passionate about photography with my iPhone camera and I travel a lot through Peru, discovering a new world every time.”

”I live in Milan and during the weekend I often go back to the lake to spend time with my parents. One of my favorite  things to do  is to take the ferry boat across the lake with no definite destination. I spend hours going back and forth with the sole purpose of observing passengers.  Series look capivated by the beauty of the landscape. In one of these solitary journeys of mine  I focused on this man, as he reminded me of my father’s fragility.”

Second Place, Series : Dimpy Bhalotia

Second place Series photos shot in Bombay and Tamil Nadu on an iPhone X by Dimpy Bhalotia – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Dimpy Bhalotia – IPPAWARDS

”Street photography may just be one way of seeing and capturing the world for many for us, but for Dimpy Bhalotia, it’s both the toughest and purest form of creative photography. It requires patience, a keen sense of observation, and perfect timing to capture the “decisive moment”. The stories captured are not works of fiction. This, she says, makes it the “most truthful art in the world.”

First Place, Series : Carol Allen Storey

First place Series photos shot in Kaese, Uganda on an iPhone 8 by Carol Allen Storey  – IPPAWARDS
Photo of Carol Allen Storey – IPPAWARDS

”A native New Yorker, Storey resides in London. Carol Allen-Storey is an award-winning photojournalist specialising in chronicling complex humanitarian and social issues. Her imagery illuminating people’s dignity and quest for survival reflects the unique trust and respect she engenders with her subjects.”

”These intimate portraits focus on how adolescents cope with being HIV positive. Amidst these chilling narratives, extraordinary stories of hope and glimpses of heroism in their quest to pursue their dreams emerged.


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Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice – A Reintroduction to her Saga and Sound

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/linda-ronstadt-the-sound-of-my-voice/linda-ronstadt-the-sound-of-my-voice-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
 Official Preview Trailer for “Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice”

The Latest Central Subject In The Celebrity, Activist, Bio-Pic Documentary Trend…

When it comes to cinema, documentary is not a distinct genre per-se. It is a mode in and of itself, a unique filmic language with its own rolodex of forms, tropes, and trends. Thus, it is hard to look at documentary as a whole and pick out the medium’s exact kinds of iconographic shifts. Most documentaries attempt to be didactic, and teach the audience something concrete through their narratives. Usually that something is culturally relevant.

A handful of recent documentaries have been looking to the past in order to say something about the present. “Apollo 11”, “Leaving Neverland”, and “Woodstock: Three Days That Changed A Generation” are just a few examples of docs that came out in the past year that have dug deep into the stories of previous generations.

On top of that, audiences have shown a fascination in celebrity stories with documentaries such as Won’t You Be My Neighbor about Fred Rogers and Amazing Grace about Aretha Franklin garnering success in 2018.

Lastly, documentaries about identity and social justice, particularly in light of the current political climate, have been ubiquitous. Netflix’s Knock Down The House and Magnolia Picture’s RBG have both been examples of films about strong females rising above all odds to inspire, empower, and evoke change.

With all of these popular trends at hand, it was only a matter of time before a documentary came out that combined them all. Perhaps the right subject or story just needed to come along.

Encapsulating her Unique and Meaningful Life and Career

Linda Ronstadt was a celebrity and musical sensation across the 1960s, 70s, 80s, and 90s. In addition to being a brilliant singer-songwriter, Ronstadt was an activist, using her music and influence during the Civil Rights era to stand up for the rights of many marginalized groups. In particular, she advocated for gay, feminist, Latinx, and immigrant rights and spoke out against oppressive policies in the second half of the twentieth century.

Additionally, Ronstadt was also an actress and record producer, influencing the entertainment industry in a highly patriarchal period of its history. Now, Linda Ronstadt adds to her impressive resume being the central subject of the new documentary, “Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice”.

Photo / Greenwich Entertainment

Greenwich Entertainment and CNN Films are set to release “The Sound of My Voice” in select theaters beginning September 6th. Rob Epstein and Jeffery Friedman directed the film, the same duo that created “Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt” back in 1989. “Stories from the Quilt” chronicled the lives of people affected by the AIDS virus in the days before the 1987 gay-rights march on Washington. Clearly, the directors are not new to telling controversial stories and championing important subjects.

“The Sound of My Voice” promises to be just as enthralling and inspiring as Epstein and Friefman’s previous collaboration, but with a large dose of upbeat, Linda Ronstadt energy. The film will focus on Ronstadt’s bravery and initiative, how she stood up to adversary, overcame roadblocks, and helped other women achieve success and recognition in music.

These stories are told primarily through interviews with other musicians who knew and worked with Ronstadt during her prime. Footage of Ronstadt herself, in concert and making both personal and public appearances across her decades in the spotlight.

At the same time, it seems like the film will also be a celebration of Ronstadt’s amazing career. While Linda Ronstadt involved herself in many very heavy topics over the years, she remains a great artist at her core. The belief that she is a superb singer is unanimously held, and all politics aside, everyone can enjoy her music. At times the songs were sad, at times they were introspective, but at other times they were uplifting, soulful, and happy.

If the film does not lose sight of this, it will leave viewers appreciating Ronstadt in her entirety, as a musician, and as a singer; as a songwriter, as an actress, as a producer and as an activist; as sensation, and as an icon; as a woman.

Photo / Greenwich Entertainment

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