October 16, 2015

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Best of the Week: Hulk to Join Thor, Godzilla to Battle King Kong, Die Hard Gets a Prequel and More

The Important News

Marvel Madness: Hulk will be in Thor: Ragnarok. Ryan Coogler might direct Black Panther.

Franchise Fever: Godzilla vs. King Kong has been confirmed for 2020. D.J. Caruso will direct xXx 3. Steven Spielberg still says he’s making Indiana Jones 5 with Harrison Ford. Steve Zahn will play an ape in War of the Planet of the Apes. R.L. Stine’s Fear Street books are going to be a movie series. Kathleen Kennedy wants a woman to direct a Star Wars movie.

Prequelitis: Len Wiseman is directing the prequel Die Hard: Year One. Rebecca Ferguson might star in Alien: Paradise Lost.

Remake Report: Nick Cassavetes will direct the Road House remake. John Sayles is writing a new Django (non Tarantino version) movie. Lockout has officially been deemed a remake of Escape from New York.

Casting Net: Eve Hewson will play Maid Marian in Robin Hood: Origins. Warwick Davis will star in the crowdfunding project ShortFellas.

Ways of Seeing: The Hateful Eight will be longer for its first two weeks of release.

New Directors, New Films: Wes Anderson is making another stop-motion movie. Robert Rodriguez will direct Battle Angels Alita.

New Producers, New Films: Leonardo DiCaprio is making a movie about the Volkwagen emissions scandal.

Merchandising: A new Friday the 13th video game lets you play as Jason.

Box Office: More moviegoers went to Mars and Transylvania than Neverland last weekend.

T.V. Time: Two X-Men series are headed to television.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension, Love the Coopers, The Boy, Burnt and Race.

See: How Pixar created “abstract thought” in Inside Out.

Watch: A fake commercial for the Back to the Future Part II hoverboard. And the stars of Back to the Future reunited for a Honda commercial. And an analysis of the climactic scene of Back to the Future.

See: What the real people in Steve Jobs think of the movie.

Watch: The first three Indiana Jones movies in 90 seconds.

See: Prank production signs for fake movie sequels.

Watch: The version of Steve Jobs that Steve Jobs would have made.

See: How to find the edits in Birdman.

Watch: Deleted animated sequences from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

See: IMDb’s ranking of the top 25 movies of the last 25 years.

Watch: A surreal mashup of Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick movies.

See: A Thor hammer that only one fan can lift.

Watch: What Jurassic World would have looked like in the 1970s.

See: This week’s best new movie posters. And our premiere of the Dangerous Men poster.

Our Features

Comic Con Coverage: Highlights of New York Comic Con. And the best cosplay at New York Comic Con.

Movie Recommendations: 8 great seafaring movie explorers.

Movie Genre Guide: What you need to know about Gothic romance before seeing Crimson Peak.

Horror Movie Guide: Everything horror fans need to see this month.

Horror Movie Guide: Scary movies to show your kids.

Comic Book Movie Guide: http://www.movies.com/movie-news/best-movie-based-comics/193755 must-read movie-based comic books.

Spy Movie Guide: 6 fascinating facts about Bridge of Spies.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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U.S. Backs Away From Offshore Arctic Drilling

A Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay, Seattle, in May. Three weeks after Royal Dutch Shell announced it was walking away from exploratory drilling in U.S. Arctic waters, the Obama administration has taken steps to keep drill rigs out of Alaska's northern ocean for a decade or more.

A Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay, Seattle, in May. Three weeks after Royal Dutch Shell announced it was walking away from exploratory drilling in U.S. Arctic waters, the Obama administration has taken steps to keep drill rigs out of Alaska’s northern ocean for a decade or more. Elaine Thompson/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Elaine Thompson/AP

The U.S. government is backing away from Arctic offshore oil and gas drilling on two fronts.

On Friday, the Department of the Interior announced the cancellation of two potential lease sales off the Alaskan coast in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement also denied lease extension requests from two companies, Shell and Statoil, that were exploring the seas for fossil fuels.

The decisions to nix the lease sales, which the statement attributed to “current market conditions and low industry interest,” follows Shell’s announcement that it will stop exploration in the Chukchi Sea for “the foreseeable future.”

“In light of Shell’s announcement, the amount of acreage already under lease and current market conditions, it does not make sense to prepare for lease sales in the Arctic in the next year and a half,” said Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell.

Lois Epstein, an engineer for the environmental group The Wilderness Society, characterized the government’s decision as reasonable, according to a statement.

“Because of Shell’s failure to find significant oil in the Chukchi Sea, new Arctic Ocean lease sales — which require extensive government preparation and costs — would likely be unsuccessful,” Epstein said.

In explaining why Shell and Statoil were not given permission to retain their leases beyond 10 years, the Interior Department statement said that the companies “did not demonstrate a reasonable schedule of work for exploration and development.”

Epstein praised the move, saying, “We applaud Interior’s decision not to continue discussing extensions of their existing leases with Shell and other Arctic Ocean leaseholders.”

The existing leases in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas will expire in 2017 and 2020, respectively.

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Amid Industry Troubles, Nevada Treats Daily Fantasy Sports As Gambling

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NPR’s Audie Cornish talks with Chris Grove, editor of Legal Sports Report, about Nevada’s decision to treat daily fantasy sports as gambling and the industry’s ongoing legal troubles.

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N.Y. Takes Action Against Surprise Medical Bills From Urgent Care Clinics

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman asked 20 urgent care clinics for information about how they represent insurance coverage to customers. Now four companies have agreed to change their practices.

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman asked 20 urgent care clinics for information about how they represent insurance coverage to customers. Now four companies have agreed to change their practices. Andrew Burton/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Andrew Burton/Getty Images

Four companies running urgent care centers in New York have agreed to disclose more fully which insurance plans they accept, following an inquiry by the state’s attorney general that found unclear or incomplete information on their websites that could result in larger-than-expected bills for consumers.

The agreements mark the first enforcement action brought under New York’s new law that targets surprise medical bills, seen as one of the broadest in the nation. The law aims to reduce the number of consumers who get such bills when they unknowingly see providers who are not part of their insurance plan networks.

Although many consumers don’t realize it, visits to urgent care clinics can lead to such out-of-network bills.

In July, New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman sent strongly worded letters to about 20 urgent care clinics, asking for more information. Some of their websites, the letters noted, could be improperly listing which health plans they were part of, potentially a deceptive business practice. Similar concerns have been raised by advocates in other states, who note that urgent care centers often say they “work with” or “accept” insurance, but don’t clearly say whether they are part of particular insurers’ networks.

Such statements “may lead consumers to believe that an out-of-network urgent care center is … ‘in network’ with their health plan,” the July 2 letters said.

That’s important because consumers who go to clinics that aren’t part of their plans’ networks might owe the balance between clinic charges and what their insurers pay toward out-of-network visits, sometimes resulting in large bills.

Those bills, also known as balance bills, are part of the complex way that health care is paid for in the U.S. They occur because insurers form networks of doctors, hospitals and other providers who have agreed to negotiated rates, which are generally lower than their usual fees.

Patients who go outside the network for care — because they want to, don’t know or are seen by an out-of-network provider while at an in-network facility — are subject to balance billing.

Although such bills have long led to consumer complaints, relatively few states have addressed balance billing except for emergency room care.

After reviewing the responses to its July letters, the attorney general’s office determined the information from the four companies, which have more than a half-dozen facilities altogether, was unclear, incomplete or not specific enough.

Under the agreement announced Friday, those owners will specifically list all the health plans they contract with as in-network providers and stop using the terms “works with” or “accepts.” They must also clearly explain that if they are out of network, the consumer could incur higher charges.

New York’s law covering surprise bills law went into effect in March, imposing new requirements on hospitals, doctors and other medical providers. Among other things, the law requires that most health groups and facilities disclose in writing or on their websites the names of the health plans with whom they participate.

The urgent centers that signed agreements are: 181st Street Urgent Care in Manhattan; Brookdale Urgent Care, affiliated with Brookdale Hospital; New York Doctor’s Urgent Care with two locations in Manhattan; and Cure Urgent Care, with three locations in Manhattan and Long Island.

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