November 20, 2015

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Best of the Week: 'The Hunger Games,' 'Wonder Woman,' 'Alien' Prequels and 'Top Gun' Sequels

The Important News

First Looks: Chris Pine and Said Taghmaoui in Wonder Woman. “Constable Zuvio” in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Marvel Madness: Scott Adkins joined Doctor Strange.

Remake Report: Christopher Nolan’s Memento is going to be remade. Roar Uthaug will direct the Tomb Raider reboot.

Casting Net: Matthew McConaughey might star in The Dark Tower. Alexandra Daddario joined the Baywatch movie. Emma Stone will portray Billie Jean King in Battle of the Sexes.

Reunion Station: Julianne Moore will reunite with Todd Haynes for Wonderstruck. Joaquin Phoenix will reunite with Casey Affleck for Far Bright Star.

Sequelitis: Prometheus 2 is now titled Alien: Covenant. And its plot has been revealed. Val Killmer is returning for Top Gun 2. Christopher McQuarrie may return to helm Mission: Impossible 6.

Franchise Fever: The Fast and the Furious franchise may get spin-offs and prequels. The Merlin Saga will become a franchise via one of the Lord of the Rings writers. Universal revealed new info on its Monsters shared universe.

New Directors/New Films: Edgar Wright is directing an animated movie about shadows.

Box Office: SPECTRE was still the biggest movie in America last weekend.

Exhibition Mission: The Weinstein Company have been busy buying up 70mm projectors for The Hateful Eight.

Festival Fare: Richard Linklater’s Everybody Wants Some will open SXSW next year.

Stunt of the Century: Robert Rodriguez and John Malkovich made a movie that won’t be seen until 2115.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: The Huntsman: Winter’s War, Midnight Special, Zoolander 2, Now You See Me 2, A Monster Calls, How to Be Single, Gods of Egypt, Exposed, Son of Saul, The Boss, I Am Thor and The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun.

See: The new Gods of Egypt trailer mashed with Stargate.

Watch: What The Hunger Games would have looked like in 1992. And what it looks like starring a kitten. And what it looks like recapped with animation.

See: Katniss Everdeen of The Hunger Games in a rap battle versus Harry Potter‘s Hermione Granger.

Watch: A sweded trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens. And Harrison Ford’s surprising call to Star Wars fans.

See: How many people Luke Skywalker kills in the Star Wars movies. And an honest trailer for the first Star Wars.

Learn: Why George Lucas will never direct another Star Wars movie.

Watch: The alternate opening to Blade Runner, which will be in Blade Runner 2.

See: What Wonder Woman would have looked like in George Miller’s Justice League: Mortal.

Watch: A new Robert De Niro movie that debuted on Facebook.

Our Features

New Movie Guide: How The Hunger Games Smuggled Revolution Into Mainstream Cinema. And everything you need to know about The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2.

Holiday Movie Guide: Fun facts about Home Alone.

Marvel Movie Guide: All you need to know about Valkyrie, who may be in Thor: Ragnarok.

Comic Book Movie Guides: How Justice League Dark will fit into the DC Extended Universe. And can a Flash movie succed alongside the hit TV show?

Movie Flashback: Remembering the Supergirl movie.

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: The 2015 sci-fi movie state of the union.

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

and

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Sony CEO Reflects On Immobilizing Cyberattack 1 Year Later

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One year ago this month, Sony suffered a cyberattack perpetrated by North Korean hackers. NPR’s Ari Shapiro talks to Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton about how the company has recovered.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Even in a movie, this story would have sounded too over the top. North Korean hackers infiltrate one of the biggest studios in the world. They leak tawdry, gossipy emails about celebrities to a ravenous press. The hackers steal everything from employee’s Social Security numbers to unreleased movies. The alleged motive? A stoner buddy comedy about the assassination of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un. All of this actually happened to Sony Pictures one year ago. And the CEO who led the company through that period joins us now. Michael Lynton is the head of Sony Pictures Entertainment. Welcome back to the show.

MICHAEL LYNTON: Thank you for having me.

SHAPIRO: So here we are on the other side of one of the worst corporate cyberattacks in U.S. history. Was there a time in your darkest hour when you weren’t sure whether the studio would make it to the other side?

LYNTON: No, that actually didn’t ever occur to me. I think part of the reason was the resilience of all of the employees and all of my colleagues. The other reason was one of the best ways, I’ve found, to get through this kind of a process is to have not necessarily a false optimism but always have this sense that you are going to get through because if you do fall into the trap of doubting that, then it becomes truly perilous.

SHAPIRO: Last summer, you told the Harvard Business Review that the hackers didn’t just steal practically everything from the house. They actually burned the house down. What do you mean when you say they burned the house down?

LYNTON: So (laughter) they stole all the data. Then they wiped the data clean. Then they destroyed most of our servers and most of our PCs. So by the time it was done, we were immobilized.

SHAPIRO: And so were you functioning in, like, a 1970s manner, teletypes and Post-it notes?

LYNTON: Very much so. The only difference between then and the ’70s is we had cellphones. Though, first things first, we had to set up a communications method, which was texting trees. We did indeed use a lot of Post-it notes. In addition to that, we had to drag out of the basement the old payroll check-cutting machines.

SHAPIRO: Wow.

LYNTON: Happily, we never missed a single day’s payroll. And we did manage to keep the place going. We didn’t miss a single day’s production on any of the television shows or movies we had in production. And that’s really thanks to the incredible work of the folks at Sony Pictures.

SHAPIRO: I imagine you must have heard stories from people who were hit really personally by this, whether it’s somebody saying, you know, my child’s Social Security number is now public or I am no longer speaking to the person because we’ve seen each other’s salaries. And it’s – or some – I mean, this really hit home in a personal way.

LYNTON: Right, you know, there was a lot of that, as well. You know, all that I could say to them, first of all, on the email front was I never looked at any of the emails. And I really encouraged them to do the same. To this day, I’ve never looked at the emails. And I’d said that the rubbernecking doesn’t help anybody. On the personal information front, all you could do was be very sympathetic – I was put in exactly the same place that they were – and explain to them that we were doing everything in our power to make sure that their identity and their personal information was going to be protected going forward. And – which is what we did.

SHAPIRO: This was obviously hugely damaging. And the hack is something that nobody would ever have wished for. Is there anything good to have come out of it? I’m thinking, for example, there is a national conversation happening right now about gender in Hollywood that was spurred, to no small extent, by the information that came out in the hack. Do you think there is any positive upshot from this?

LYNTON: I would have a different – I mean, I’m not – I’ve heard that conversation. I think the conversation was going to be inevitable. Obviously, the people referred back to some emails. And by the way, when you keep referring back to these emails, so many of these emails are taken out of context that it’s not an accurate portrayal of what the conversation was. But leaving that aside, I do think that one of the positive things that came out of this was we are a relatively small but very loud canary in the coal mine. We’re a fairly large company but we’re nowhere near the size of the company of a General Electric or something like that or the National Grid. But we’re very loud because of the unfortunate fact that all these – a lot of these stolen emails were made public and a lot of them involved celebrities. So the good therein is that I do think people have bolstered their security. I do think people are a lot more tempered in what they’ve put in their email. Although I must say, a year later, I still get emails from colleagues and people outside of Sony that I’m stunned by sort of saying, like, wow, haven’t we learned something from all of this?

SHAPIRO: (Laughter) Do you write back to the person and say, have you forgotten what happened a year ago or do you just…?

LYNTON: No, I pick up the phone.

SHAPIRO: …Pick up the phone? You pick up the phone (laughter).

LYNTON: I pick up the phone. I pick up the phone and I say, (laughter) come on, we did not go through all of this to continue like this. There’s a lesson here, and we should all keep it in mind.

SHAPIRO: OK, so who’s going to make the movie about this?

LYNTON: (Laughter) I do not want to see the movie.

SHAPIRO: Oh, come on. You’re the CEO of a film studio.

LYNTON: I – no, this is one disaster film that I don’t think needs to be made. It’s always, by the way, very difficult to make movies, having made one or two, involving computers ’cause the trick is not to endlessly be seeing somebody just slapping away at a keyboard. That’s not exactly cinematic.

(LAUGHTER)

SHAPIRO: There was some other drama in there, too.

LYNTON: There was, in fairness, there was, yeah. No, that’s true. You could get away from the keyboard at some point. I’d just not – I’d just as soon not see that again.

SHAPIRO: That’s Michael Lynton, the CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment. Thanks for talking with us.

LYNTON: Thank you very much.

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When Drug Treatment For Narcotic Addiction Never Ends

Addiction counselor John Fisher says prescriptions for medicines to help people wean themselves from opioid drugs are part of the appeal of the clinic he operates in Blountville, Tenn.
7:22

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Addiction counselor John Fisher says prescriptions for medicines to help people wean themselves from opioid drugs are part of the appeal of the clinic he operates in Blountville, Tenn. Blake Farmer/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Blake Farmer/NPR

Opioids have a stranglehold on parts of the U.S. And where addictive pain medicines are the drug of choice, clinics for addiction treatment often follow.

Sometime these are doctor’s offices where patients can get painkiller-replacement drugs, such as Subutex and Suboxone.

These medicines, brand-name forms of buprenorphine, can ease withdrawal symptoms and cravings for opiates. They can be prescribed in an office setting, unlike methadone. And the drugs, also mild narcotics, can block the pleasurable effects of opioids if people fall off the wagon and take them, which can help reduce relapses.

The drugs are intended to be used as steppingstones to getting clean.

“I use the medication as fishing bait,” says John Fisher, a self-taught counselor who runs Addiction Recovery Center of East Tennessee in rural Blountville. The sign out front says the clinic specializes in “addictionology.”

“We bring them in and try to taper them over time,” Fisher says, adding that no one comes truly seeking treatment. They’re looking for legal access to drugs. “One hundred percent of them are,” he says. “No one comes to sit in a group and hear the ‘Kumbaya’ story. So that’s fine.”

Fisher’s clinic has arrangements with two doctors who are able to prescribe buprenorphine to the patients. The treatment center isn’t licensed like a typical outpatient rehab facility. The physicians in charge say they haven’t seen the need.

The clinic, located in a Civil War-era cabin on a winding highway in northeast Tennessee, has roughly 120 patients. They are charged $500 for five weeks — cash only. The office doesn’t accept insurance, citing the burdens of red tape and the fact that few patients have coverage anyway.

Clinic participants must attend weekly group meetings with Fisher, who is a recovered addict himself. He says two decades on drugs were all the training he needed to do this work.

Clients are told to get off any other illegal drugs, such as heroin or methamphetamine. The clients are tested for drug use during treatment and can be dismissed from the program if they regularly show signs of using something other than what they were prescribed.

Some patients stick around clinics for years. This one has just a handful of success stories in which addicts weaned themselves completely, says Dr. Mack Hicks, who writes many of the prescriptions.

The spotty results lead some to question how committed some of the clinics are to seeing people through to recovery.

“You get this relationship built with them where they’re just really legit drug dealers in a sense, in my eyes,” says Heather Williams of Johnson City, Tenn. She has been clean for 11 months, after going through a cold-turkey program at a licensed drug treatment facility. But she spent a year and a half and $300 a month at a clinic that wasn’t licensed.

Ironically, buprenorphine itself can become a drug of abuse. And the medicine has street value. To pay for treatments, Williams says many people sell half their buprenorphine pills to get the money for the next doctor’s visit.

Suboxone is an opioid-replacement drug that can reduce cravings and symptoms of withdrawal.

Suboxone is an opioid-replacement drug that can reduce cravings and symptoms of withdrawal. Brian Snyder/Reuters/Landov hide caption

toggle caption Brian Snyder/Reuters/Landov

She’s skeptical about the motives at some of the clinics. “The relationship that I had with my doctor, it’s just really a money racket for some of them,” Williams says. “I think somewhere they might have started out caring about your well-being and whether you’re getting better or not. But he would go on vacation numerous times and show us pictures of him being in the Caribbean Islands, and I’m sitting there thinking the whole time, ‘I’m helping fund this.’ “

The local district attorney wants these kinds of operations reined in, but there’s not much he can do without changing state law.

And the need for treatment is growing. “If someone wanted to shut them all down — all the Suboxone clinics … what do you think that would do in terms of all the people that are addicted? You know that’s not going to cure the problem,” Hicks says.

Hicks is a former pain pill user, too. He got clean in the mid-’90s by going to an expensive inpatient treatment program that stepped him down off drugs in just a matter of days, though counseling continued for months.

Most people in this part of Appalachia can’t afford to take that much time off from work and get that kind of care, though Hicks says that approach would be ideal.

“They’ve got to keep working some way,” Hicks says. “The only way to do that is by giving them a substitute like we do.”

Drug-replacement therapy is a standard course of treatment for people hooked on opioids.

But getting on Subutex or a similar drug isn’t a silver bullet for pregnant women trying to minimize the drug dependency of their unborn child.

In Tennessee, which has seen a spike in births of drug-dependent babies in recent years, nearly three-quarters of all cases this year involved a woman who had a legal prescription.

“The babies withdraw just like an adult would,” says Tiffany Hall of Jonesborough, who gave birth to drug-dependent twins this year.

Hall was a nurse who worked in the neonatal intensive care unit and took care of babies with neonatal abstinence syndrome, the technical name for drug withdrawals.

Hall knew better. But she had a drug problem herself. And the NICU is where her twins spent the first weeks of life this summer.

“You stand there and you watch your own child go through something you’re not willing or wanting to go through yourself, and you have to stand there and watch that, knowing that you did that to them,” she says. “It’s awful.”

Tennessee has a relatively new and controversial law that allows drug-using mothers to be prosecuted for giving birth to a drug-dependent child. But any mother who has a prescription for the drugs in her system is safe, no matter what kind of doctor prescribed the medication.

“I ended up going to a Subutex clinic, and I thought, I’m OK now. I have a legal prescription. If the babies withdraw, it’s all right because it’s legal,” Hall says. “Still wasn’t thinking about anybody but myself.”

Hall got into a fully licensed program run by the nonprofit Families Free, which is focused on helping mothers kick their drug addiction. She’s headed toward recovery and rebuilding her life, though she points out that there are less scrupulous clinics everywhere, including a stone’s throw from the Families Free office in Johnson City.

But she accepts the temptation those clinics represent, since that’s what every day will be like after treatment. “I like having it there,” Hall says. “For me, it’s accountability. Yes, it would be easy to go next door and come up with some kind of story to get whatever I may want, but I have to be able to hold myself accountable and say no. I’m done with that. I don’t want to do that anymore.”

This is the third and final story in a series that was produced by All Things Considered in collaboration with Nashville Public Radio reporter Blake Farmer.

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Macri's Ties To Soccer Boost His Chances In Argentina's Presidential Runoff

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The mayor of Buenos Aires is expected to win Sunday’s presidential runoff. In that soccer-mad country, front-runner Mauricio Macri gets points for having been team president for the Boca Juniors.

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

Next, we go to Argentina where the man expected to win this Sunday’s presidential election is getting some mileage out of his pre-political resume. In that soccer-mad country, the front-runner Mauricio Macri is famous for his connection to a wildly popular team, the Boca Juniors. John Otis has this report.

UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE: (Singing in Spanish).

JOHN OTIS, BYLINE: Boca Juniors zealots are jammed into a bar called Crazy for Soccer, watching their team play for the Argentina Cup.

At halftime, fan Dario Nairotti explains that for many Argentines, the connection to the team starts at birth.

DARIO NAIROTTI: (Speaking Spanish).

OTIS: “The first thing my father did was to buy me a Boca jersey and make me a Boca fan. And I did the same thing for my son,” he says.

The team is based in La Boca, a working-class barrio of Buenos Aires. It’s now one of the most successful soccer clubs in South America and has fans all over the world. The person most responsible for Boca Juniors mania is Mauricio Macri. A millionaire businessman and politician, he was team president from 1995 to 2007, when the team took home 16 national and international titles.

JUAN IGNACIO COSTA: If you want, you can come inside over here and take some pictures inside the fences.

OTIS: Tourists flock to the stadium as if it were the Roman Colosseum. Guide Juan Ignacio Costa says their devotion can go way overboard.

COSTA: For example, I don’t know, their grandfather passed away, and his dying wish was to come and take the ashes and throw them in the stadium.

OTIS: Die-hard fans can also be buried in caskets with the Boca Juniors logo carved on the lid. There’s a Boca Juniors museum and a theme hotel. The merchandising push was the brainchild of Team President Macri. The experience helped him jump into politics, says Enzo Pagani, who heads outreach programs for Boca Juniors.

ENZO PAGANI: (Speaking Spanish).

OTIS: “Macri became one of the two or three best-known people in Argentina, and he knew how to capitalize on his name recognition,” Pagani says. In 2007, Macri was elected mayor of Buenos Aires, a post he still holds. He’s won praise for improving public transport and police.

But Luis Sanchez, who sells souvenirs in La Boca, says Macri’s triumphs in soccer convinced him that he was presidential timber.

LUIS SANCHEZ: (Speaking Spanish).

OTIS: Polls show Macri leading Daniel Scioli, the candidate of the long-ruling Peronist party, in the run-up to Sunday’s election. Meanwhile, Macri’s old team keeps winning. Back at the bar, fans explode as Boca Juniors scores to win the national title. For NPR News, I’m John Otis, Buenos Aires.

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.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.