August 14, 2015

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Disney Reveals New Details and Images for 'Toy Story 4,' 'Finding Dory,' 'The Good Dinosaur,' 'Zootopia' and More

On the first day of this year’s D23 Expo for Disney fans, a whole lot of news was announced about upcoming movies from Walt Disney Animation and Pixar. We also got to see a bunch of new stills and artwork for many of these titles. Here’s all you need to see and know, in alphabetical order by title:

Coco

This is Pixar’s long-in-development feature based on Dia de los Muertos, aka Mexico’s Day of the Dead. Coco is the name of a character in the movie, which is directed by Toy Story 3‘s Lee Unkrich, but 12-year-old Miguel is the protagonist. We didn’t get any new images, but you can see the logo in the event pic above beind Unkrich and producer Daria K. Anderson. Here is the current official synopsis, which is inspired by the idea of meeting your deceased family members: “Coco is the celebration of a lifetime, where the discovery of a generations-old mystery leads to a most extraordinary and surprising family reunion.”

Finding Dory

Pixar’s sequel to the modern classic Finding Nemo has Ellen Degeneres returning to voice Dory as she embarks on a trans-Pacific trip to find her family in Monterey, California (her parents are voiced by Eugene Levy and Diane Keaton). Nemo and his dad, Marlin (Albert Brooks), are also back, while new characters include the octopus pictured above. His name is Hank and he’s voiced by Ed O’Neill. There’s also a beluga whale named Bailey voiced by Ty Burrell and a whale shark named Destiny voiced by Kaitlin Olson. Look for this one in theaters next summer, starting June 17, 2016.

Frozen 2

“We’re hard at work” is all we’re told at this point about the highly anticipated sequel, courtesy of Disney Chairman Alan Horn.

Gigantic

The newest of the new is this just-announced movie based on the Jack and the Beanstalk story. Sure, Disney has already had Mickey Mouse climb through this tale once, but that was a short made almost 70 years ago and this is a very exciting (and beautiful looking — see above) feature that will have songs from the Frozen Oscar-winning team of Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez. Nathan Greno (Tangled) is directing for a 2018 release. Here’s a plot synopsis:

Gigantic follows adventure-seeker Jack as he discovers a world of giants hidden within the clouds. He hatches a grand plan with Inma, a 60-foot-tall, 11-year-old girl, and agrees to help her find her way home. But he doesn’t account for her super-sized personality—and who knew giants were so down to earth?

The Good Dinosaur

We’ve seen a teaser for this upcoming Pixar feature, but we hadn’t know much about its plot until now. The original sotry sounds like it’s basically a Western focused on dinosaurs, one of whom gets a little human boy as a dog-like pet named Spot. Today we got a look at the antagonists, seen above, a T-rex trio consisting of a dad, voiced by Sam Elliott, and his son and daughter (AJ Buckley and Anna Paquin). Arlo, the main character, an Apatosaurus, is voiced by child actor Raymond Ochoa. This is coming up quick, hitting theater on November 25.

Moana

Ron Clements and John Musker (The Little Mermaid) direct this South Pacific story from Walt Disney Animation. Here’s the official synopsis for the feature, which arrives on November 23, 2016: “Moana introduces a spirited teenager who sails out on a daring mission to fulfill her ancestors’ unfinished quest. She meets the once-mighty demi-god Maui (voiced by Dwayne Johnson), and together, they traverse the open ocean on an action-packed voyage.” Here’s a new logo for the movie:

Riley’s First Date

We got our first look at a clip from this short follow-up to Inside Out yesterday. But now here are some extra images from the film, which will be available on the hit Pixar feature’s Blu-ray:

Toy Story 4

This other hot Pixar sequel has been revealed to be a romantic comedy centered on the romance of Woody (Tom Hanks, returning as the voice) and Bo Peep, who is lost and must be found (note: the image above is from a previous installment). It’s apparently a love story inspired by that John Lasseter, who is directing, and his wife. Tim Allen and Don Rickles are also set to reprise their roles for the feature, which was scripted by Rashida Jones and Will McCormack. It’s due in theaters June 16, 2017.

Zootopia

The latest announcement with this anthropomorphic animal feature from Walt Disney Animation is that Shakira has joined the cast as the voice of Gazelle, a pop star in the titular universe. She will also, of course, provide some new tunes for the movie’s soundtrack. She joins Jason Bateman and Ginnifer Goodwin as a fox and a bunny who team up in a buddy-cop scenario. Here’s what Shakira’s character looks like:

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Small Texas City Feels Pain Of Falling Crude Oil Prices

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This week, oil prices plunged, falling below $43 a barrel. A year ago, a barrel of West Texas crude oil was selling for more than twice that. Consumers in most of the country are reaping the benefits. But the downside of low prices means tough times for oil field workers. In a small Texas city, nearly everyone is feeling the pain of low oil prices.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Oil prices took another plunge this week, falling below $43 a barrel. That’s less than half last year’s price. Consumers in much of the country are benefiting, but not all, and we’ll get to that in a moment. The downside of low prices also means tough times for oil companies and their workers. Mose Buchele of member station KUT reports from a south Texas town where nearly everyone is feeling the pain of low oil prices.

MOSE BUCHELE, BYLINE: Carlos Garcia grew up in the south Texas oils fields in a small town called Alice, Texas. He was raised with the ups and downs of the oil business.

CARLOS GARCIA: My dad was a roughneck himself. He was a driller years back in the ’80s.

BUCHELE: That was during the last big Texas boom. The bus came to Alice around ’83. The reasons were the same as today. Oil wasn’t worth the cost of drilling for it.

GARCIA: And when it did hit rock-bottom back then, we lost out. My dad lost his home he had just built, and I lived through it.

BUCHELE: Eventually, things picked back up. Garcia followed in his dad’s footsteps. He worked on oil derricks and did well. But that was up until last year when prices dropped. He lost his job. He lost his truck. He says he’s going to lose his car next.

GARCIA: I’m looking for a little work. My wife is working a part-time job. It ain’t making the bill, you know?

BUCHELE: So he’s got to scrimp and save.

GARCIA: Pinch every penny we’ve got, and we’ll just eat here and eat at my mom’s.

BUCHELE: When he says eat here, he’s talking about the Alice Food Pantry, a local charity. It’s a busy operation off the old Main Street. Volunteers push creaky carts of canned goods, bread and tortillas from a small warehouse to cars waiting in the alley. Bonnie Whitley runs the place. She’s seeing more people like Garcia here – first-time visitors.

BONNIE WHITLEY: Men come in, which is very unusual. Usually the women come in.

BUCHELE: She thinks they need more than free food.

WHITLEY: A lot of people are in depression right now and in denial. They just – they can’t come to grips with what’s happened.

TANYA HINOJOSA: My name is Tanya Hinojosa, and I’m a waitress. I’ve been serving tables for the past 15 years.

BUCHELE: You remember Carlos Garcia said his family’s been eating in? So have a lot of families. Hinojosa used to pull in $65 to $100 a day in tips. Now, she’s sometimes clearing just 25 bucks, so she biked to the Pantry for some food.

HINOJOSA: I have never, ever made $25 in a day. It’s always been more than that.

BUCHELE: She and her kids have moved in with her mom, and she’s scrimping in other ways.

HINOJOSA: We try to buy $5 shirts for school, pants, minimum shoes – $30. No more $80 shoes. No more excessive spending.

BUCHELE: And that’s hurting people like Lidia Escobar. I met her at her family-owned children’s clothing store down the street.

LIDIA ESCOBAR: It feels like a ghost town. You can tell people are just – don’t have jobs right now and the extra money to spend on stuff.

BUCHELE: It was the same at a paint store and a car dealership. Able Perez owns a frozen yogurt shop. He wishes the town’s economy was more diversified, but…

ABLE PEREZ: Everybody here now is involved in the oil business whether we like it or not.

BUCHELE: So they keep tabs on oil prices and hope they go up again quickly. Back at the Food Pantry, Carlos Garcia, the unemployed roughneck, says it’s hard to believe how fast things seem to fall apart.

GARCIA: It was going good. Everybody was making money, and everybody was spoiling themselves, you know? And I can hear the cry all over town now. Everybody is suffering.

BUCHELE: He has advice for the town’s young people.

GARCIA: Stick to school. And like I’ve always said, we chose the industry. It didn’t choose us. And we’re just paying for it now.

BUCHELE: It’s just, in a place like Alice, there really weren’t a whole lot of other options. For NPR News, I’m Mose Buchele.

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Katrina's Emotional Legacy Includes Pain, Grief And Resilience

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Dyha Gresham (front, left), her older sister Briceshanay (in back) and Briceshanay’s daughter Uri stand in their New Orleans home with the family’s cat Sugar-Pepper and dog Selena. After Katrina, Briceshanay says, she relied on theater and the arts to help her “move through terrible and difficult times.” Edmund D. Fountain for NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Edmund D. Fountain for NPR

When hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005 most residents evacuated safely. But thousands lost homes, careers, and the lives they had known. Since then, many seem to have recovered emotionally from the trauma. But some have not.

A recent poll from NPR and the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that today some people who survived Katrina say they still have difficulty sleeping and controlling emotion. Others have suffered strains on their marriage or had trouble with drugs or alcohol. Many trace the lingering difficulties to their experiences during Katrina.

Ermence Parent, for example, is a self-assured outgoing New Orleans attorney, and mother of two grown daughters. But today, 10 years after the storm, she’s still grieving.

“I still have depression — major,” she says.

When Katrina came crashing into the city 10 years ago, Parent was frantic over the whereabouts of her 87-year-old mother. The nursing home where her mother lived had told her before the storm that they had an evacuation plan. But then communication went down.

“I found out on CNN that my mother’s nursing home had not evacuated,” Parent remembers. “Several did not. And at one all the residents drowned — and we didn’t know which one.”

She called officials from the city, state and nursing home to see if her mother had survived. There was no word. Days passed. Finally, she turned to the Red Cross, who told her, “they had some lady who fit my mother’s description — they didn’t know her name.”

The nursing home patients had been quickly transported with no identification documents, Parent learned.

“So they faxed me a photograph,” she says. “And it wasn’t my mother.”

Later that day, Parent learned that the nursing home hadn’t evacuated its residents after all, and 22 patients died. Her mother survived the immediate flooding; she’d been moved to the second floor to escape the water.

“They had been there all that week with no water,” Parent says. “No air conditioning, no electricity, no food, no medicine — the whole week.”

Eventually her mother was airlifted to a nursing home in Tennessee. When Parent and her siblings arrived at that facility, their mother’s condition shocked them. The older woman wasn’t speaking, and didn’t recognize any of them.

Briceshanay Gresham (center) takes her daughter Uri (right) and sister Dyha to their neighborhood playground in New Orleans. Briceshanay was in college during Katrina and escaped swirling, waist-high water with only the clothes she was wearing that day.

Briceshanay Gresham (center) takes her daughter Uri (right) and sister Dyha to their neighborhood playground in New Orleans. Briceshanay was in college during Katrina and escaped swirling, waist-high water with only the clothes she was wearing that day. Edmund D. Fountain for NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Edmund D. Fountain for NPR

“She just wasn’t there anymore — mentally or emotionally,’ Parent says. “She was just so frail.”

Parent’s mother never recovered, and died within months. When Parent returned to her own home — which had been flooded with nearly 8 feet of water — it was destroyed.

Her law office downtown was also ruined. She and her husband Israel struggled to get insurance claims paid and get loans to rebuild. But they had no luck.

For her husband, Parent says, the stress was huge. Just months after her mother died, Israel Parent died of a massive heart attack. He was just 58 years old.

Ermence Parent has struggled with depression and grief ever since.

“The problem with mental health issues is they don’t go away,” she says. “You can try to bury them if you like, but they only get worse.”

New Orleans health officials worry that the 10th anniversary, with all its media attention, will provoke terrible pain with the memories. So they’ve set up a city campaign of PSAs and hotlines to help residents find counseling. And therapists and psychologists, including Kim Vangeffen, are running workshops to help residents cope.

“My friends and I have been talking,” Vangeffen says. “How much do we really want to pay attention to the anniversary — watch the news shows or not? Do we want to do something totally unrelated to the hurricane?”

She sees in her patients, her friends and herself a desire to escape every aspect of the commemoration.

“Particularly when so many things can bring back feelings of panic and grief,” she says. Images, sounds — even smells.

“There’s a smell we call the ‘Katrina smell,’ that was related to mold and mildew that grew on things,” Vangeffen says. “I still have things in my garage that I have never fully gone through. And if I open those boxes you can still smell those smells — and it just brings you back to those times.”

Still, overall, according to federal statistics, mental health problems aren’t greater in New Orleans today than elsewhere in the country.

And the NPR-Kaiser poll of New Orleans residents includes some positive findings. Seventy-two percent of African American adults surveyed, and 79 percent of white adults, say they’re better able to cope with stress today because of their experiences with Katrina.

Briceshanay Gresham, a New Orleans elementary school teacher, considers herself someone who emerged from the storm even stronger.

Ten years ago, Gresham was a freshman at the University of New Orleans. With the city’s history of surviving hurricanes, she wasn’t worried about Katrina — until school officials forced Gresham and her fellow students to evacuate.

Gresham recalls walking with her roommate down the street as the water started rushing — first around her ankles, then her knees, then her waist.

“I had the shirt on my back and the shoes, pants on my body,” Gresham remembers. “That’s all I had.”

With help from her roommate’s father, Gresham enrolled at a college in the state of Washington that offered scholarships to students evacuated from New Orleans.

Once there, she focused on the arts, and wrote a one-woman play. Writing and performing it helped her work through what had happened, Gresham says.

In her play, every character had a different pair of shoes. Gresham would switch from character to character by stepping into the different shoes.

And when it came to the question of returning to New Orleans, every character had their say.

“I had lined all the shoes up,” Gresham says, “and the audience really didn’t know if each character was going to come back. And then, I finally said, ‘I am all these people — these are me, and these are my feelings. And I decided to come back because this is my city.’ “

Gresham says she returned to New Orleans because she wanted “to be the person that’s going to help rebuild, using the arts.”

Alongside her work as a teacher today, Gresham is also studying — music therapy.

Briceshanay Gresham laughs with her daughter Uri (wearing shorts) and sister Dyha. Ten years after escaping Katrina, Gresham teaches elementary school in New Orleans and is studying to become a music therapist.

Briceshanay Gresham laughs with her daughter Uri (wearing shorts) and sister Dyha. Ten years after escaping Katrina, Gresham teaches elementary school in New Orleans and is studying to become a music therapist. Edmund D. Fountain for NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Edmund D. Fountain for NPR

“I want to help kids to be able to do the same thing Katrina helped me to do,” she says. “To use the arts to move through terrible and difficult times — use the arts to heal.”

Recent research suggests that trauma can build strength. When Katrina hit, psychologist Jean Rhodes, at the University of Massachusetts and Harvard sociologist Mary Waters happened to be in the middle of a national study looking at social support and mental health issues among low-income single mothers.

The researchers were able to track down 334 of the study participants who had been living in New Orleans at the study’s start. They found that 10 years after the storm, more than 60 percent of the women in the study had bounced back emotionally to where they were before Katrina. And more than half of these survivors of the storm had gone on to experience significant emotional growth — making positive life changes.

Before Katrina, “many of them had never expected to leave New Orleans or the relationships they were in,” Rhodes says. But many did end up making those big changes after the storm — “because they lived through it,” she says.

“And because they were able to be strong for themselves, their mothers, their children — they have a greater sense of their own strength, heightened spirituality and a stronger sense of new possibilities,” says Rhodes. “An appreciation for life.”

In fact, Rhodes says, many of the women who faced the greatest amount of difficulty seemed to go on to develop the greatest amount of strength.

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