March 11, 2016

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Best of the Week: Marvel's Spider-Man Finally Revealed, SXSW Film Festival Previewed and More

The Important News

Marvel Madness: The new MCU Spider-Man was finally revealed in the new Captain America: Civil War trailer. Zendaya will co-star in the next Spider-Man movie.

DC Delierium: J.K. Simmons will play Commissioner Gordon in the Justice League movies.

Star Wars Mania: J.J. Abrams admitted to a big mistake with Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Sequelitis: Assassin’s Creed 2 is already in the works. Arnold Schwarzenegger has had talks about the next Predator movie.

Remake Report: Jake Johnson and Annabelle Wallis are joining The Mummy. Daisy Ridley might star in the Tomb Raider reboot.

Adaptation Information: Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg are producing a Where’s Waldo movie. Aaron Paul might join The Dark Tower. Tom Taylor has joined The Dark Tower.

Casting Net: Adam Sandler and Ben Stiller will star in Noah Baumbach’s Yen Din Ka Kissa. Michael Keaton will star in American Assassin. Fionn Whitehead will star in Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk.

Box Office: Zootopia broke some records for Walt Disney Animation releases.

Awards Season: MTV Movie Award nominees include Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Deadpool.

Distribution Outlet: Netflix is looking to pick up David Ayer’s Bright.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Captain America: Civil War, Ghostbusters, Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping, High-Rise, Boo! A Madea Halloween, The Girl in the Photographs, I Am Wrath, Hardcore Henry and The Adderall Diaries.

Behind the Scenes: Daddy’s Home, Camino and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2.

See: New images from Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. And new images from Baywatch. And more images from Baywatch.

Watch: Kylo Ren infiltrates other movies. And a new Darth Maul fan film.

See: What J.K. Simmons might look like as Commissoner Gordon. And what Ice Cube would look like as J. Jonah Jameson.

Watch: 10 Cloverfield Lane trailer redone in Lego.

See: How Serbian movie fans are taking back a landmark movie theater.

Watch: Chloe Moretz on the South Korean SNL.

See: Creed as a 1990s movie on VHS.

Learn: How Superman’s heat vision works.

See: Gallery 1988’s art show paying tribute to sports movies.

Watch: A fake commercial for a Playmobil set for The Witch.

Our Features

Film Festival Guide: 2016 SXSW Film Festival preview.

Interview: Dan Trachtenberg on 10 Cloverfield Lane.

Marvel Movie Guide: What’s next for Fox after Deadpool.

Comic Book Movie Guide: All you need to know about the new Spider-Man.

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: Found-footage sci-fi worth a look.

Geek Movie Guide: Everything that geeks need to read and see this month.

List: 8 great sequels you can watch without seeing the original.

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

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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Clinton's Comments On Nancy Reagan And HIV/AIDS Cause An Uproar

Patti Davis (left) greets Rosalynn Carter as Hillary Clinton looks at the casket during the graveside service for Nancy Reagan at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on Friday in Simi Valley, Calif.

Patti Davis (left) greets Rosalynn Carter as Hillary Clinton looks at the casket during the graveside service for Nancy Reagan at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on Friday in Simi Valley, Calif. Chris Carlson/AP hide caption

toggle caption Chris Carlson/AP

Hillary Clinton apologized on Friday after she called the late Nancy Reagan a “very effective, low-key” advocate on HIV/AIDS awareness.

The Democratic presidential candidate now says she “misspoke” when she told MSNBC during Reagan’s funeral that the former first lady and her husband, President Ronald Reagan, pushed for recognition of the disease in the national community.

“It may be hard for your viewers to remember how difficult it was for people to talk about HIV-AIDS back in the 1980s. And because of both president and Mrs. Reagan — in particular Mrs. Reagan — we started a national conversation,” Clinton said.

“When before nobody would talk about it, nobody wanted to do anything about it, and that too is something that I really appreciate with her very effective, low-key advocacy, but it penetrated the public conscious, and people began to say, ‘Hey, we have to do something about this, too.'”

However, it wasn’t until 1987 that President Reagan gave his first speech on the topic, calling for more testing (but not making it mandatory). At that time, according to the New York Times, there had been nearly 36,000 cases of AIDS and nearly 21,000 deaths. Reagan has been roundly criticized for not doing enough to educate the public and draw attention to the growing HIV/AIDS epidemic during his administration.

Clinton released a statement hours later, apologizing for her remarks.

Hillary Clinton’s statement on her comments about the Reagans’ record on HIV and AIDS: pic.twitter.com/RtIs0zpJfk

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) March 11, 2016

Even Clinton supporters were up in arms over her ill-phrased comments.

Former Clinton White House aide and Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin, whose organization has endorsed Clinton, tweeted the former first lady was “no hero” on the issue.

While I respect her advocacy on issues like stem cell & Parkinson’s research, Nancy Reagan was, sadly, no hero in the fight against HIV/AIDS

— Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) March 11, 2016

Other LGBT activists, such as columnist Dan Savage, also pushed back on social media.

Reagans started a “national convo about AIDS” only if people screaming “WHY WON’T YOU TALK ABOUT AIDS?!?” at them counts. @HillaryClinton

— Dan Savage (@fakedansavage) March 11, 2016

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Here's What Obama Said At SXSW Festival

President Obama speaks during the South by Southwest Interactive conference in Austin, Texas, on Friday.

President Obama speaks during the South by Southwest Interactive conference in Austin, Texas, on Friday. Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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In his wide-ranging keynote interview at South by Southwest, the music, film and tech festival in Austin, Texas, President Obama focused on technology’s role in civic life.

Obama, who was interviewed by Evan Smith, editor of the Texas Tribune, cited low voter turnout as an area in which technology could improve citizens’ participation in government. He said it was “easier to order a pizza than to vote” and said we need to think about how to “redesign our systems so that we don’t have 50 percent or 55 percent voter participation in presidential elections.”

Calling on government and private companies to work together, Obama said it’s vital to “create systems that make government more responsive and make it work better.”

When asked about people who are ideologically anti-government, the president pointed to the collective good, saying someone checking the weather on a smart phone is benefiting from government services.

“When government does great things, we take it for granted and it’s not a story,” he said, citing roads, geosatellite systems, armed forces and other public benefits as evidence.

Smith also asked Obama about the “massive digital divide” in the U.S., pointing to the fact that minorities have significantly less access to the Internet, which makes it more difficult for them to be engaged citizens or even do their homework.

Obama responded by describing a program called the Opportunity Network, which installs Wi-Fi in low-income housing and rural areas. He acknowledged that this was only part of the answer, saying “I’m trying to solve every problem.”

But, Obama said, solving problems requires cooperation. He said the country needs to re-imagine the relationship between government and the private sector “so that we use technology data, social media in order to join forces around problems.”

If the U.S. does that, he said, “there’s no problem that we face in this country that’s not solvable.”

At the end of the interview, when asked about the ongoing legal battle between Apple and the FBI over accessing data on the iPhone of the San Bernardino shooters, Obama declined to comment specifically, but urged against “absolutist” views on either side of the issue.

The president said that while there must be some concessions to personal privacy (he cited airport security as one such existing concession) he said he was “way on the civil liberties side” of the debate. Obama said technology is evolving so rapidly that there are questions being asked now that have never been asked before.

“We’re going to have to make some decisions about how we balance these risks,” he said.

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Why Fastest U.S. College Mile Runner Won't Be Vying To Be NCAA Champ

Izaic Yorks, a senior at the University of Washington, recently ran a mile in 3:53 — the fastest mile of any American collegiate athlete. Here, he competes on Feb. 27 in Seattle.
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Izaic Yorks, a senior at the University of Washington, recently ran a mile in 3:53 — the fastest mile of any American collegiate athlete. Here, he competes on Feb. 27 in Seattle. Stephen Brashear/Red Box Pictures hide caption

toggle caption Stephen Brashear/Red Box Pictures

Last week, Izaic Yorks, a senior at the University of Washington, ran a mile in 3:53 — the fastest college mile ever by an American. The effort qualifies him for the Olympic trials this summer.

So why isn’t Yorks running in the mile at this weekend’s NCAA championships in Birmingham, Ala.?

Turns out, he had to make a decision: run that mile alone, or run with his team in the distance medley relay or DMR.

If he decided to run the mile race, he would have been required to run a preliminary round right before the DMR — compromising his team’s shot at a national title.

Yorks recalls when his coach, Greg Metcalf, pulls him aside to ask what he thinks about running the mile race.

“I was just, no way. I want to do the DMR,” Yorks replied. “That’s what I told these guys I would do. And I’m gonna stick to that word.”

Metcalf continues.

“I’m sitting in my office on Sunday, making our declarations,” Metcalf says. “And I hit the ‘scratch’ button next to Izaic’s name, next to 3:53, I think, ‘Am I the biggest idiot of all time?'”

Maybe. But in a sport that so often celebrates individual glory, Yorks is not only very fast, he’s also very loyal.

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Songs We Love: Chimurenga Renaissance, 'Girlz With Gunz'

Chimurenga Renaissance
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Chimurenga Renaissance Kelly O./Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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Girlz With Gunz (Glitterbeat Records 2016)

Girlz With Gunz (Glitterbeat Records 2016) Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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In the aftermath of an eventful Black History Month and in the midst Women’s History Month, Chimurenga Renaissance’s “Girlz With Gunz” feels incredibly appropriate for the time in which it was released. It’s the title cut from the experimental hip-hop duo’s recently released EP, a project inspired by and dedicated to “revolutionary African women.

And by “African,” vocalist/ multi-instrumentalist Tendai “Baba” Maraire (of Shabazz Palaces) and guitarist Hussein Kalonji mean both women from the continent and those who are part of the diaspora. Invoking names like Nehanda (Nehanda Charwe Nyakasikan) and Afeni (Afeni Shakur) they celebrate black women who have fought oppression throughout history — “chimurenga” is a Shona word meaning “struggle” and the name of 19th century revolt against British colonizers in what is now Zimbabwe.

There’s a Pan-Africanist through-line present in Chimurenga Renaissance’s creations that not only informs their lyrics, but the very music itself. Maraire and Kalonji are the American-born sons of lauded musicians from Zimbabwe and Congo respectively — and their own compositions bring together traditional instruments like the mbira, with the modern, synthesized sounds of the West. The result is a trans-Atlantic mélange of melodies, polyrhythms, glitches, and distortion.

On “Girlz With Gunz,” they use all these sounds to construct a song in praise of black women and a pledge of devotion. Keep their sonic spectrum broad, Maraire and Kalonji celebrate the black woman in her various incarnations from celebrity to soldier. A revolutionary African woman need not carry a pistol to make her presence felt and she certainly doesn’t have to be beholden to a patriarchal society’s standards in order to be respected or revered. One time, for the “girlz with gunz.”

Girlz With Gunz EP is out now on Glitterbeat.

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