January 22, 2016

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Best of the Week: First 'Wonder Woman' Footage, Sundance Film Festival Guides and More

The Important News

First Looks: DC debuted the first footage of Wonder Woman. The Flash and Cyborg made their DC Extended Universe debut cool concept art.

More DC Delirium: Connie Nielsen will play Wonder Woman’s mother.

Marvel Madness: Benedict Wong will play sidekick Wong in Doctor Strange.

Star Wars Mania: Star Wars: Episode VIII was delayed until December 2017.

Box Office: Ride Along 2 overthrew Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Casting Net: Johnny Depp will star in Triple Frontier. Tina Fey and Ronda Rousey will star in a comedy together. Jennifer Lawrence will star in a movie about Fidel Castro’s lover/would-be assassin.

Remake Report: Tom Cruise is officially starring in The Mummy. Ilfenesh Hadera will play Dwayne Johnson’s love interest in Baywatch. McG might direct the He-Man reboot.

Franchise Fever: Tyler Perry is making a Madea Halloween movie. Jurassic World 2 is in search of a director.

Sequelitis: Avatar 2 was delayed again.

Title Time: Vin Diesel confirmed the title Fast 8 for the next part in the Fast and Furious franchise.

New Directors/New Films: Rob Cohen is making a movie about hackers fighting a hurricane. Adam McKay is making another comedy with Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly.

Awards: Spotlight was named Best Picture at the Critics’ Choice Awards. The Academy announced new rules to make Oscar nominations more diverse.

Ways of Seeing: Groundhog Day is playing at one cinema over and over on Groundhog Day.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Suicide Squad, Keanu, The Divergent Series: Allegiant, Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising, Pee-wee’s Big Holiday, Barbershop: The Next Cut, The Invitation, Term Life, The Wave and Forsaken.

Watch: A very weird version of the Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice trailer.

See: Adam Driver’s parody Star Wars: The Force Awakens on SNL. And an action figure inspired by that parody.

Watch: A mashup of Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Cast Away.

See: A Star Wars: The Force Awakens sequel comic featuring a villainous Jar Jar.

Buy: Luke Skywalker’s blaster prop from Star Wars is for sale.

Watch: Seth Meyers parody of Boston-set movies.

See: Why Michael B. Jordan is the true best actor of 2015.

Watch: The movies of 2015 recapped in Lego.

See: All the historical inaccuracies in Disney animated classics.

Watch: A brief history of swearing in the movies. And a supercut of actors acting opposite themselves.

See: This week’s best new movie posters. And a bunch of new Suicide Squad posters. And honest posters of Oscar nominees.

Our Features

Film Festival Guide: The movies people will be talking about at Sundance this year.

Film Festival Guide: Horror films at Sundance this year.

Horror Movie Guide: All the latest in horror news and trailers.

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: Jacob Gentry shares the five movies that influenced Synchronicity.

Comic Book Movie Guide: Breaking down the DC Movies TV special.

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

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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Bernie Sanders Revives Debate Over Single-Payer Health Care

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Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders has revived the debate over a single-payer health care system. NPR explores the arguments for and against it.

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IKEA Executive On Why The West Has Hit 'Peak Stuff'

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IKEA’s Chief Sustainability Officer Steve Howard tells NPR’s Ari Shapiro how his company plans to keep expanding even while he says many in the Western world have lost their appetite for more stuff.

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Skier, Olympic Gold Medalist Bill Johnson Dies At 55

In 1984, Bill Johnson won gold in the men's downhill competition in Sarajevo — the first Alpine gold medal for an American man.

In 1984, Bill Johnson won gold in the men’s downhill competition in Sarajevo — the first Alpine gold medal for an American man. Steve Powell/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Steve Powell/Getty Images

Bill Johnson, the skier who was the first American to win Olympic gold in a downhill event, has died, the U.S. ski team says. He was 55.

“His passing closed the final chapter in a tumultuous lifetime that saw him rise to the highest level in his sport,” the team said in a statement.

Johnson died in an assisted living facility in Oregon, after several years of deteriorating health following a stroke.

The Associated Press explains that the skier rose to fame with a series of victories that were unprecedented for an American male skier — and cemented his iconic status with a brash prediction. As the news service tells it:

“Johnson, who was born in Los Angeles, grew up racing at Bogus Basin, Idaho, and Mt. Hood, Oregon.

“Caught stealing cars as a teenager, the judge gave him a choice: Attend ski school or head to jail. So he went to Mission Ridge Ski Academy in Washington, where he developed his talent.

“Johnson established himself on the global scene when he won the Lauberhorn downhill in Wengen, Switzerland, in 1984 in his second year on the World Cup circuit.

“A month later, Johnson went to Sarajevo and cockily predicted that he would win, annoying his European rivals. He came through, beating silver medalist Peter Mueller of Switzerland by 0.27 seconds.

” ‘What he did that day was amazing at the time,’ said Bill Marolt, former president and CEO of the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association. ‘In retrospect, it’s still amazing.’ “

Johnson’s victory at Lauberhorn was the first American men’s downhill World Cup win of the modern era, the U.S ski team says. His gold at Sarajevo was the first time an American man had won gold in Alpine skiing.

Later, Johnson struggled with knee and back injuries, the AP says. He attempted a comeback in 2001, at age 40, but crashed while training and was critically injured.

“He sustained a traumatic brain injury that erased nearly a decade of memories,” the AP writes. “He had to learn how to walk, talk and eat again.”

Then, in 2010, Johnson suffered a stroke. The years that followed were difficult, as the AP’s Pat Graham reported in 2015:

“Most days are a struggle for American downhill great Bill Johnson as he rests in bed at an assisted living facility in Gresham, Ore., watching his favorite television shows.

“He can’t move his arms or legs anymore. He can’t really speak, either, in between bouts of coughing and choking fits. And lately, Johnson’s left leg has been going into painful spasms with no warning.

” ‘He’s deteriorating,’ D.B. Johnson said of her son’s health, which has been on the decline since a stroke nearly five years ago. ‘He’s frozen in himself.’ “

The American ski community, aware of Johnson’s ill health, celebrated his 55th birthday last year by sending him videos, notes and messages. On Friday, they marked Johnson’s death with an outpouring of remembrances, calling the champion a trailblazer, a pioneer and an inspiration and legend.

As it did on his birthday, the U.S. ski team shared a video of Johnson’s history-making Olympic run in 1984.

Bill Johnson – 1984 Sarajevo Olympics – Gold

The man, the myth, the legend. Ski in peace, Bill Johnson.

Posted by U.S. Ski Team on Friday, January 22, 2016

You can watch a legend born in real time.

“The youngster’s been cocky, he’s been calm, he’s been cool — and he has backed it all up right here,” announcer Frank Gifford says in awe.

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