September 24, 2015

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The Last Sci-Fi Blog: 6 Fantastic Fest Sci-fi Movies You Can Watch Right Now

Fantastic Fest, that annual celebration of genre cinema from all over the world, is upon us once again (check out a list of our most anticipated movies here). This Austin, Texas-based film festival is nirvana for movie fans and a Mecca for horror, action, and science fiction buffs. It’s something else. It’s the most fun week of the year, even for those of us who go there to work.

And next week, we will bring you a report about the latest and greatest science fiction films to play the fest. We won’t leave you hanging, though. Because we want you to experience a little bit of Fantastic Fest this week, here are some of the best and most interesting science fiction movies that have played there in recent years.

More importantly, each of these is available to stream online. Enjoy!

Automata

Antonio Banderas plays an insurance agent. In the future. Who works for a robot company. And investigates rogue robots who are going beyond their programming and altering themselves. Naturally, his investigation takes him to some pretty dark places. Although his film features shades of Blade Runner and I, Robot (the book and the movie), director Gabe Ibáñez’s vision of the future is uniquely bleak. This isn’t just a stylish action movie about a robot uprising — it’s a stylish action movie about a robot uprising that takes place in the kind of future world that couldn’t look less appealing. We mean that in a good way. Why romanticize the post-apocalypse?

Currently streaming on Netflix.

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Coherence

The less you know about Coherence going in, the better. Trust us when we say that this is a movie that defies categorization. We’ll just say that it’s about a dinner party that just so happens to coincide with a… uh, cosmic event. Things don’t go well.

Although he’s working on a shoestring budget, writer/director James Ward Byrkit never reaches beyond his means, instead crafting a whip-smart science fiction tale jammed full of huge ideas that maintain their power even when they’re shot on the cheap. The resulting film doesn’t just feel like an episode of The Twilight Zone — it feels like one of the best episodes of The Twilight Zone. And that’s high praise.

Currently streaming on Amazon Prime.

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The Congress

This is a film bursting at the seams with big ideas, some of which fall completely flat. But who cares? For every concept that goes nowhere, The Congress has three that tickle and torture the imagination. Ari Folman’s messy but brilliant film casts Robin Wright as herself in the near future. With her career at a dead end, she sells out in the craziest way possible — she lets herself be “scanned,” selling the rights to her onscreen image to a movie studio so she can be recreated and reused in movies forever.

This wild idea opens the door to more wild ideas, and soon the movie jumps forward into a dystopian future, where drugs allow people to live in an animated world. It’s in this second, gorgeously animated half that The Congress evolves from an interesting movie into an astonishing one.

Currently streaming on Amazon Prime.

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Escape From Tomorrow

Everyone knows that Escape From Tomorrow is the movie that was shot guerilla-style at Walt Disney World and Disneyland and it’s fascinating for that aspect alone. Watching entire dramatic (and frequently pitch-dark) scenes take place at the “Happiest Place On Earth” is incredible.

However, Randy Moore’s genre-bending experiment in surrealism has more going for it than its insane behind-the-scenes story. It also features mad scientists and robots. It also features lurid sex and nightmarish imagery and scenes of such stark, Lynch-ian weirdness that they lodge themselves in your brain and don’t leave. It’s something else and every adventurous movie lover should give it a chance.

Currently streaming on Netflix

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The History of Future Folk

There are very few Fantastic Fest movies that can be described as “sweet” and “lovable” and “appropriate for the entire family,” but The History of Future Folk is all of those things. And it’s wonderful. The supposed origin story of the titular folk music duo (who have been performing in New York City for the past decade), the film tells the tale of an alien who arrives on Earth to kill the entire population to make room for his own people, who are searching for a new home.

Fortunately for us, he hears music for the first time and decides that the human race is worth saving. Naturally, the arrival of an assassin intended to finish the job complicates things, but not too much. This movie is less about world-ending alien antics and more about clever jokes and terrific musical numbers. It is very hard to not like this movie.

Currently streaming on Netflix

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Timecrimes

One of the best movies to ever play Fantastic Fest, Timecrimes is a gloriously weird time travel thriller that manages to feel epic and intimate in equal measure. The feature debut of director Nacho Vigalondo, the film follows one hapless man as he encounters a masked killer, flees into the woods, and literally stumbles into a time machine that sends him back in time one hour. From there, things start to get weird. And it’s funny and scary and totally unique, a mind-bender that plays like a darkly comic companion piece to Primer. You should make this one a priority.

Currently streaming on Amazon Prime.

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Assistant Coach, Accused Of Telling Players To Hit Ref, Resigns

John Jay High School head football coach Gary Gutierrez testifies before the University Interscholastic League State Executive Committee Thursday in Round Rock, Texas. The school's principal and Gutierrez told the UIL that they believe assistant coach Mack Breed told players to retaliate against an official in the closing minutes of a game earlier this month.

John Jay High School head football coach Gary Gutierrez testifies before the University Interscholastic League State Executive Committee Thursday in Round Rock, Texas. The school’s principal and Gutierrez told the UIL that they believe assistant coach Mack Breed told players to retaliate against an official in the closing minutes of a game earlier this month. Eric Gay/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Eric Gay/AP

In an incident caught on video, two John Jay High School football players blindsided a ref during a football game earlier this month in Texas. The footage went viral, the players were suspended, the referee was accused of using racial slurs against players and then two players said that assistant football coach Mack Breed told them to hit the ref.

Now, the fallout from the incident continues. Breed, who was placed on leave on Sept. 8, tendered his resignation today in a statement from his attorney, James Reeves.

According to the statement emailed to NPR, Reeves said Breed regrets how the situation unfolded.

“In hindsight, Mack feels he could have handled the situation better. For that reason, Mack has submitted his resignation and will move forward, taking responsibility for his role in the events that occurred. Mack never intended for the kids to hit or hurt the referee, but the result was the same.”

But according to the statement, Reeves says the accountability should not rest solely with Breed.

“Some people are unfairly blaming one man, Mack Breed, for everything that happened at that game. Mack Breed has spent three agonizing weeks contemplating his future since the fateful football game in which two players struck a referee. It has been a difficult road for Mack as he has stood silently watching the spectacle. He has replayed that game in his mind many times wondering how it all went wrong.”

Last week the two players, sophomore Victor Rojas, 15, and Michael Moreno, 17, said on Good Morning America that Breed had told them to take retaliatory action against the referee, Robert Watts, for using racial slurs. This is corroborated by a statement from John Jay’s principal, Robert Harris, first reported by ESPN’s Outside The Lines:

“I later met with Coach Breed at John Jay High School … in my office in the presence of Coach Gutierrez,” Harris wrote. “Coach Breed told me that he directed the students to make the referee pay for his racial comments and calls. He wanted to take full responsibility for his actions. Mr. Breed at one point during our conversation stated that he should have handled the referee himself.”

But in today’s statement, Breed’s attorney seems to put the blame on Moreno.

“During his media tour, Michael Moreno resorted to the historical defense of ‘I was just following orders.’ However, we are all responsible for our own actions, and his defense will fail in this situation as it has failed in the past,” Reeves said in the statement. “Moreno paints himself as a saint on television while withholding the truth that shows how out of control he was in that game. Moreno fails to mention that he was not ejected after striking the referee. He stood by while an innocent black player, Trenton Hobdy, was wrongfully ejected for Moreno’s hit on the referee. … His behavior is exactly what one would expect from a rogue player blaming a coach for the player’s actions.”

Watts has denied using any racial slurs and has called for criminal charges against the players and coach. Rojas and Moreno were suspended and sent to another school as the investigation continues. They are eligible to return to John Jay High School in the spring.

At a hearing today in front of the University Interscholastic League State Executive Committee, Thursday in Round Rock, Texas, it was announced that John Jay football head coach, Gary Gutierrez could also face punishment for the incident, according to the Associated Press.

Calls to Northside Independent School District for comment were not returned.

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The Next Phase In Migrant Crisis: Helping The Newly Settled Land Jobs

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Once European countries get Syrian refugees settled, they will need to help them get jobs. But that process might be easier than you think.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Syrian refugees who’ve made it to Europe want to work. Yet even with impressive credentials, this is not easy. Stacey Vanek Smith from our PLANET MONEY podcast reports.

STACEY VANEK SMITH, BYLINE: One month ago, Omran Kassar (ph) was taking his last final exam at Damascus University in Syria in macroeconomics.

OMRAN KASSAR: It was pretty difficult. Sometimes I had to just memorize the words without even understanding them (laughter). I just wanted to pass.

SMITH: He did pass and got his degree. But finishing college meant Kassar could no longer put off his mandatory military service in the Syrian Army, which meant fighting his fellow Syrians and ISIS. So the next day, Kassar’s parents and sister put him on a plane. He says the airport was full of young men who had just passed their last college exam.

KASSAR: It was obvious. It was obvious. Everybody who passed his last exam – the next day, the next week, you’ll find him out of Syria.

SMITH: So there are two ways you could look at Kassar. You could see him as one of those people you see on TV walking over country borders, taking a harrowing late-night boat trip, someone who needs food and shelter and help. And all of that is true, but there is another way to look at Kassar. He is an incredibly smart man with a college degree in economics who is ready to work. Ian Goldin is economist at Oxford. He says refugees like Kassar are an economic gift.

IAN GOLDIN: They’ve come across incredibly hazardous journeys to make it into Europe, so one should assume that these people are not lazy. They are certainly not scared of seizing opportunities, and those are exactly the sort of people you want in societies.

SMITH: Goldin says historically, the countries where refugees settle end up benefiting.

So why aren’t European countries, like, fighting each other over the refugees?

GOLDIN: Well, I think there’s a problem of short-term and long-term.

SMITH: Short-term, it costs a lot to get refugees settled – around $14,000 per person. But long-term, refugees contribute a lot more than they cost, often within just a few years. Dozens of companies in Europe have already figured this out.

RAINER HUNDSDORFER: My name is Rainer Hundsdorfer, and I’m the CEO of ebm-papst.

SMITH: Not Pabst the beer. Ebm-papst makes cooling systems in Germany, and it’s pushed itself to the front of the line and launched a program to hire Syrian refugees.

HUNDSDORFER: We intended to help those people but also help us finding good, qualified people amongst those refugees.

SMITH: Do you have a hard time finding workers to fill your jobs?

HUNDSDORFER: Yes.

SMITH: Hundsdorfer hopes to hire hundreds of Syrians in the next couple of years. For Omran Kassar, the economist refugee, things are looking up. The day he arrived in France, he was greeted by the president, Francois Hollande. It was a photo op, but Kassar says it made him optimistic. Stacey Vanek Smith, NPR News.

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Carly Fiorina Doubles Down On Opposition To Abortion In South Carolina

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Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina campaigned at a Christian pregnancy care center in South Carolina Thursday. Opposition to abortion has become a prominent message in her campaign recently.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

When a pregnant woman is getting an ultrasound, a partner might be in the room along with a medical technician. In an exam room in South Carolina today, there were also reporters and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina. The Republican presidential candidate has doubled down on her opposition to abortion and went to a place that’s becoming a popular campaign stop. NPR’s Sarah McCammon takes us there.

SARAH MCCAMMON, BYLINE: The Carolina Pregnancy Center is a Christian-run organization in Spartanburg, S.C., whose leaders oppose abortion. Thirty-one-year-old Lacey Thomas is expecting a baby boy next February. She was there today for an ultrasound, and Carly Fiorina stood by her side.

CARLY FIORINA: Look at that. Is this your first one?

LACEY THOMAS: This is my second. I had the girl the first time. This is the boy.

MCCAMMON: Thomas has agreed to let Dr. Mary Haddad demonstrate the procedure for Fiorina.

MARY HADDAD: So her baby looks great. Would anyone like to hear the heartbeat?

FIORINA: I would love to hear the heartbeat.

(HEART BEATING)

MCCAMMON: Around the corner, Fiorina praises the center’s work and tells a crowd it’s hypocritical for liberals to support environmental protections for wildlife while also supporting abortion rights.

FIORINA: They are perfectly prepared to destroy other people’s jobs and livelihoods and communities in order to protect fish and frogs and flies, but they do not think a 17-week-old, a 20-week-old, a 24-week-old is worth saving.

MCCAMMON: For Lacey Thomas, the expectant mom who let Fiorina watch her ultrasound, the campaign is mostly a lot of noise right now.

THOMAS: I don’t know much about her except that she’s a Republican candidate, and I looked that up yesterday.

MCCAMMON: Thomas meets monthly with her mentor here, volunteer Linda Earnhardt. The stay-at-home mother of five is following the campaign. Earnhardt was impressed by Fiorina’s recent debate performance where she had harsh words for Planned Parenthood, but Earnhardt has one misgiving.

LINDA EARNHARDT: I do think a man should be a leader – that’s me – but I see the men not standing up. And if she’s going to be the one that’s going to stand up and stand up and stick to her morals then by far I will give her my vote.

MCCAMMON: Gender is also a consideration for Carlotta Jackson, who came to see Fiorina today.

CARLOTTA JACKSON: As long as it’s not someone who’s trying to emasculate men and that it’s not just a power trip for them.

MCCAMMON: But others, like Pam Dean, are eager to see a woman front and center in the Republican Party.

PAM DEAN: I like it that she’s a strong woman, and that she held her own with all of those men and that women can lead.

MCCAMMON: And Fiorina has been working hard to earn the support of women. She’s at least the fifth GOP candidate to visit the Carolina Pregnancy Center this year. It’s a place to showcase a message that could play well in the Republican primaries, though in a general election, that message would be a harder sell with female voters. Sarah McCammon, NPR News, Spartanburg, S.C.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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