June 10, 2016

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: Dory is a Fake, Horror Icons Play Baseball and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Fan Theory of the Day:

With Finding Dory arriving soon, The Film Theorists dare tackle the fan theory that Dory is faking her condition:

[embedded content]

GIF of the Day:

In honor of the release of his latest, Warcraft, here’s an 8-bit GIF of Duncan Jones’s Moon. See more movies done up similarly at One Perfect Shot.

Movie Promo Stunt of the Day:

In anticipation of the horror crossover Sadako vs. Kayoko, characters from The Grudge and The Ring faced off on the field at a Japanese baseball game (via Geekologie):

[embedded content]

Real Toy of the Day:

Is this a Toy Story 4 spoiler? The following is a new Voltron-like robot that combines characters from Toy Story into one massive figure (via Geek Tyrant):

Director-Approved Supercut of the Day:

Watch a six-year-old supercut paying tribute to Stanley Kubrick and Martin Scorsese followed by a new video of Scorsese giving thumbs up its creator (via The Playlist).

[embedded content]

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Judy Garland, who was born on this day in 1922, in her screen test for The Wizard of Oz in 1938:

Filmmaker in Focus:

For the Royal Ocean Film Society, Andrew Saladino looks at the playful cinema of Brad Bird, including a defense of the greatness of Tomorrowland (via Reddit):

[embedded content]

Cosplay of the Day:

Almost as great as mashup cosplay is the cosplay of obscure and unlikely movie characters, a la these Ferngully fans (via Fashionably Geek):

Fan Art of the Day:

The following Star Wars-inspired breakfast speaks for itself:

Chewbacon pic.twitter.com/fgfNwVjkkt

— Darth Vader (@DepressedDarth) June 9, 2016

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 30th anniversary of the release of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Watch the original trailer for John Hughes’s teen movie classic below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Safety Regulator Looks At Alleged Tesla Suspension Flaw

A Tesla Model S on display at the Frankfurt Auto Show in 2015. Safety regulators are looking into a report of a possible safety issue with the suspension on the Model S. Tesla denies that there is any safety problem.

A Tesla Model S on display at the Frankfurt Auto Show in 2015. Safety regulators are looking into a report of a possible safety issue with the suspension on the Model S. Tesla denies that there is any safety problem. Michael Probst/AP hide caption

toggle caption Michael Probst/AP

Tesla says its cars’ suspension systems have no safety problems, and the electric automaker calls an allegation that it has pressured customers not to report safety problems “preposterous.”

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says it is looking into reports of a suspension system failure on Tesla’s Model S vehicles. The New York Times reports that since October, NHTSA has received 33 complaints of suspension parts breaking.

One account of the problem came from a Tesla owner going by the name “gpcoraro” on a Tesla blog. He said he was driving slowly, about 5 mph, in his Model S:

The road was rough so my air ride was at it max lift. As I was proceeding down a steep hill I heard a snap and felt my steering wheel pull to the left. I stopped the car for further inspection only to discover that my left front hub assembly separated from the upper control arm. Needless to say the car was inoperable due to a loss of steering. Thank goodness I was not traveling at a high rate of speed. This could of been a tragic accident causing injury or even death.

Tesla said in a statement, “There is no safety defect with the suspensions in either the Model S or Model X.”

Tesla says since it operates all its own service facilities, it tracks potential safety issues very closely. And the carmaker suggested in its statement that this appeared to be a one-of-a-kind situation based on the treatment of the car by the customer:

The suspension ball joint experienced very abnormal rust. We haven’t seen this on any other car, suggesting a very unusual use case. The car had over 70,000 miles on it and its owner lives down such a long dirt road that it required two tow trucks to retrieve the car. (One to get the car to the highway and one to get it from the highway to the service center.) When we got the car, it was caked in dirt.

But whether or not there is a legitimate safety question to be examined here, another issue apparently is troubling to regulators: the allegation that Tesla has been trying to induce or pressure its customers to keep quiet about potential safety issues when they arise.

After the customer “gpcoraro” notified Tesla that his suspension snapped, he says Tesla told him the parts were not under warranty. But, he said in a blog post that Tesla offered to pay for half of the $3000 repair, but only if the customer signed an agreement.

The customer posted the agreement online that he says Tesla sent him, which included this prerequisite:

You agree to keep confidential our provision of the Goodwill, the terms of this agreement and the incidents or claims leading or related to our provision of the Goodwill.

The customer took that to mean basically, we’ll give you $1500 toward your car repair if you keep quiet about this problem you had.

Tesla counters in its statement that the agreement does not represent an attempt to keep customers from reporting safety problems. “Tesla has never and would never ask a customer to sign a document to prevent them from talking to NHTSA or any other government agency.” Tesla says that idea is “preposterous.”

Tesla says when it offers to pay for a repair that’s not covered by warranty, that the company sometimes asks customers to sign a “Goodwill Agreement.” Tesla says, “The basic point is to ensure that Tesla doesn’t do a good deed, only to have that used against us in court for further gain.”

For its part, the NHTSA says this in a statement:

NHTSA is examining the potential suspension issue on the Tesla Model S, and is seeking additional information from vehicle owners and the company.

An NHTSA spokesman Bryan Thomas said Tesla’s nondisclosure agreement is “troublesome.” His statement continues:

The agency immediately informed Tesla that any language implying that consumers should not contact the agency regarding safety concerns is unacceptable, and NHTSA expects Tesla to eliminate any such language. Tesla representatives told NHTSA that it was not their intention to dissuade consumers from contacting the agency. NHTSA always encourages vehicle owners concerned about potential safety defects to contact the agency by filing a vehicle safety complaint at SaferCar.gov.

Tesla says it meets regularly with safety regulators and in the past has performed voluntary recalls even when there is only a “slight” risk of a safety issue.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Bent: Bolivian Curls A Free Kick For An Amazing Score In Copa America Game

??? GOLAZO ALERT! ??? #CHIvBOL #MyCopaColors https://t.co/6tYt0CjTPR

— FOX Sports (@FOXSports) June 11, 2016

A tense game between Chile and Bolivia brought a moment of soccer glory Friday night: Just three minutes after entering the game, Jhasmani Campos arced a free kick over the wall and into the net, setting off cheers in Foxborough’s Gillette Stadium.

Campos used his left foot and just the right blend of spin and power to send the ball into the top corner of the far side of the goal, past Chile’s leaping goalkeeper. We’ll let you watch it for yourself, in this video posted by Fox Sports.

The goal tied the score at 1-1 in the second half — and buoyed the hopes of Bolivia, the lowest-ranked team in the Copa America tournament. Coming into Friday’s game, both Bolivia and Chile had lost their first games in the tourney.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

How A Team Of Elite Doctors Changed The Military's Stance On Brain Trauma

The Gray Team with Maj. Jennifer Bell (center), who ran a concussion clinic, seen in the Helmand province of Afghanistan in 2010: Col. Michael Jaffee (from left) , Capt. James Hancock, Col. Geoffrey Ling, Lt. Col. Shean Phelps and Col. Robert Saum.

The Gray Team with Maj. Jennifer Bell (center), who ran a concussion clinic, seen in the Helmand province of Afghanistan in 2010: Col. Michael Jaffee (from left) , Capt. James Hancock, Col. Geoffrey Ling, Lt. Col. Shean Phelps and Col. Robert Saum. Courtesy of Christian Macedonia hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Christian Macedonia

During the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. military did an about-face on detecting and treating brain injuries caused by explosions. After years of routinely sending blast-exposed troops back into combat, the military implemented a system that requires screening and treatment for traumatic brain injury.

The change came about in large part because of a remarkable campaign by an elite team of military officers who were also doctors and scientists. They worked for the highest-ranking officer in the armed forces. And they were known simply as the Gray Team.

The Gray Team began with a contentious job interview between the doctor who would lead the team and the man who would be his boss.

It was 2008 and Army surgeon Christian Macedonia had been told there was a high-level opening for a doctor who wanted to change the military’s approach to battlefield brain injuries. When Macedonia arrived for the interview, he found himself face to face with Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“And he looks at me and he goes, ‘Who are you and what are you doing in my office?’ ” Macedonia says.

Macedonia explained he was there about the job. Mullen replied that he had decided he didn’t need a doctor on his staff. “And I said, ‘Sir, I’m going to disagree with you,’ ” Macedonia recalls.

Macedonia, a lieutenant colonel, told the admiral that if he really wanted to do something about brain injuries, he did need a doctor. What’s more, he needed one with combat experience, strong scientific credentials and a high-level security clearance. “I said, ‘Sir, you really only have one person and that’s me.’ “

Mullen smiled. He had been looking for someone he might have to rein in, but would never have to push. “And Macedonia fit that model for me perfectly,” he says. “He’s very outspoken, very straightforward. We talk about out-of-the-box thinkers; he just lives outside the box.”

Assembling The Gray Team

Macedonia’s first assignment was to put together a team. He recruited four other military doctors with combat experience and impressive resumes.

They were called the Gray Team, after the brain’s gray matter, the gray issues surrounding traumatic brain injuries and the graying team members themselves.

Their mission was to challenge something military doctors had been taught about blast exposure since World War I:

Christian Macedonia led the Gray Teams. Now, he's a maternal and fetal health specialist at Lancaster General Health's Women and Babies Hospital in Lancaster, Pa.

Christian Macedonia led the Gray Teams. Now, he’s a maternal and fetal health specialist at Lancaster General Health’s Women and Babies Hospital in Lancaster, Pa. Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

“If you don’t have blood coming out of your head, if you don’t have a penetrating injury, you have not been injured,” Macedonia says. “Your job as a doctor at that point is to say, ‘You’re gonna be fine’ and basically minimize any of the symptoms.”

Macedonia himself believed that when he was deployed to Iraq in 2004, to serve as chief of a combat support hospital near Fallujah. He was seeing horrendous injures, so he didn’t have much time for people who looked OK, even if they’d been dangerously close to a blast.

Macedonia and other military doctors actually became suspicious of service members who suggested blast exposure was the cause of their headaches, fatigue or sleep problems. “The attitude was that these people were trying to get a Purple Heart or something like that,” he says. “In retrospect, it was just awful. It was really a bad thing to do to people.”

Macedonia’s conversion occurred one day in Iraq, when he got caught in a mortar attack.

“I was out with a young Marine. We were in the middle of the attack. And the mortar was probably about 50 meters away,” he says.

The blast wave shook them violently. But they were alive. And they weren’t bleeding. So Macedonia went back to the hospital. He did surgery until midnight. Then, he headed for bed.

“I had a shaving mirror hung up by my cot and I looked in that mirror and I didn’t recognize the person looking back at me,” he says. Macedonia realized that he couldn’t remember anything from the operating room that night.

And he recognized the vacant expression he saw in the mirror: “The same sort of strange look in the eye that I had seen in people who had been in IED blasts up and down the route near our base.”

Macedonia was pretty sure he wasn’t having a purely psychological reaction to combat. The blast had injured his brain.

The Brain Battle Begins

In early 2009, Mullen’s Gray Team headed for Iraq and Afghanistan. By this time, IEDs had become the weapon of choice for insurgents attacking coalition forces. Tens of thousands of soldiers were being exposed to bomb blasts. And many were experiencing memory loss, confusion and sleep problems.

But the military still wasn’t taking the problem seriously. “We would tolerate multiple blasts [in] deployment after deployment,” Mullen says. “And I was determined to see if I could do something about this.”

So he sent the Gray Team to the battlefield to have a close-up look at what was happening to troops exposed to bomb blasts. “Quite simply, the Gray Team was there to establish ground truth with respect to traumatic brain injury,” Macedonia says.

And the truth was pretty grim. Often, troops weren’t even being checked for TBIs.

The military relies on something called the MACE exam — Military Acute Concussion Evaluation — to assess service members who have sustained a TBI or concussion. And Macedonia had been told the MACE exam was being administered to pretty much every service member near an explosion.

How A Blast Wave Affects The Brain

The integrin protein (red) connects the outermost layers of a cell to the structures inside. The shock wave from a blast can cause the integrin to send unhealthy and sometimes fatal signals to the structures inside cells.

TBI GIF

Source: Harvard University

Credit: Katherine Du/NPR

“But then you would go out and you would talk to these young medics and corpsmen — who are great patriots and doing wonderful things — and you would say, ‘Hey, son, how often do you administer the MACE exam?’ And they would look at you and say, ‘Sir, I’m sorry, what’s a MACE exam?’ “

Because the military wasn’t doing much to look for TBIs, it was usually up to individual service members to report their own brain injuries.

“If you were in a blast, you basically had one of two choices,” Mullen says. “You either didn’t admit you had a problem, or if you admitted a problem we put you on a plane, sent you home.”

And Mullen knew from visiting hundreds of wounded troops that they didn’t want to get sent home. “The first thing they tell you is they want to get back in the fight,” he says. “So nobody would admit they had a problem.”

When the Gray Team got back to the U.S., they began suggesting reforms. Their ideas got a hostile reception in the Pentagon.

“I would literally have people behind closed doors say, ‘Who gave those people medical degrees?’ ” Macedonia says. It was a surprising allegation, considering the team members included people like Geoffrey Ling, an M.D.-Ph.D. considered the military’s leading expert on traumatic brain injury.

But many senior medical officers just couldn’t accept that there were real brain injuries you couldn’t see on MRI or CT scans, Macedonia says. “The organized military medical system was still trying to hold back the ocean and say: No big deal, most of these injuries are psychiatric and our job is basically to provide counseling centers and get these people over the shock of being at war.”

In the Pentagon, some medical officers feared that TBIs could become the next Gulf War syndrome — a poorly defined problem with no obvious cause and no good treatment.

Others had visions of the military medical system stateside being overwhelmed by newly diagnosed TBI patients. And more than a few just didn’t like having someone outside their chain of command telling them what do.

Macedonia says bureaucratic concerns often seemed to trump the growing scientific evidence that blast-induced TBIs were real. “I can’t tell you the number of times I walked out of rooms just being sorely disappointed at people who knew what the right thing to do was but chose to look the other way,” he says.

But Macedonia was equal parts tenacious and ferocious. “He was a dog on a bone,” Mullen says.

“Christian Macedonia doesn’t give a f*** what anybody thinks if he believes he’s on the right course,” says Kit Parker, a Harvard professor and Army lieutenant colonel who served on the Gray Team in 2011.

MRIs On The Battlefield

The conflict between the Gray Team and the military medical establishment reached a peak over the issue of MRI scanners.

Conventional scanners usually couldn’t detect the damage from a blast. But the Gray Team now included David Brody, a civilian scientist from Washington University in St. Louis, who was using a new MRI technique to study troops at the U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.

“We went out there to Landstuhl, started enrolling patients, and started discovering immediately all sorts of injuries that were completely invisible to the conventional scans,” Brody says.

Even though the Department of Defense was paying for Brody’s research, the military medical establishment wasn’t embracing the results. “There was a strong current in the military at that time that this was a problem that was going to go away if we ignored it,” he says.

Macedonia wanted to deploy the new technology to hospitals near the battlefield. So during a Gray Team trip to Iraq, he made a pitch to a group of senior medical staff.

“I said, ‘We’re very seriously considering putting MRI machines in theater, what say you?’ ” he recalls. The reaction was as if he had proposed “bringing in a pile of radioactive waste to drop in your hospital.”

Macedonia eventually got his MRIs, largely because his boss, Mullen, had clout. As chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Mullen was the highest-ranking officer in the armed forces. “But even the chairman can be ignored,” Mullen says.

To make sure that didn’t happen, Mullen, Macedonia and the Gray Team had been building a coalition that included Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the Army’s vice chief of staff, and Gen. James Amos, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps. The Gray Team’s allies simply outranked its opponents.

The team’s decisive victory came in 2010, when the Department of Defense issued a memo that transformed the system for managing battlefield brain injury. “I can still remember Macedonia coming into my office saying, ‘Chairman, we got it,’ ” Mullen says.

Geoffrey Ling and Christian Macedonia wore body armor with blast sensors.

Geoffrey Ling and Christian Macedonia wore body armor with blast sensors. Courtesy of Christian Macedonia hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Christian Macedonia

The memo requires evaluation and a 24-hour rest period for troops within 50 meters of a blast, and several other measures to ensure that TBIs are detected and treated. It also includes special provisions for service members who sustain multiple TBIs.

And the 2010 mandate was just the beginning. Today, combat troops often wear sensors that indicate when a bomb blast is strong enough to cause a brain injury. Military doctors are taught that blast waves really can cause physical brain injuries. And service members can get treatment for a TBI without being put on a plane and sent home.

The sweeping changes have brought solace to Macedonia, who still regrets that he once doubted blast waves could physically injure the brain.

“Doing the Gray Team’s missions was probably the most awesome healing process that could have ever happened for me,” says Macedonia, who has retired from the military. “It really was a way for me to make up for the lapses, the lack of understanding about TBI.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

A Music Documentary Is 'A Trojan Horse,' Says Oscar Winner Morgan Neville

Credit: NPR

Director Morgan Neville made one of the most memorable music documentaries in recent times. His 2013 film 20 Feet from Stardom, for which he won an Oscar and a Grammy, chronicled the paths of five undersung rock heroes: the backup singers who enlivened some of popular music’s biggest hits.

Neville has a long history of bridging sound and screen. His credits include Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story; Muddy Waters Can’t Be Satisfied and Johnny Cash’s America. He was also one of the directors of last year’s documentary Best of Enemies, which chronicled the William Buckley/Gore Vidal debates during the 1968 political conventions.

In Neville’s newest project, The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the director turns his lens from intensely American music stories to global ideas. Over the course of several years, he followed the artistic collective of master musicians and other artists from more than 20 countries, which was founded by the celebrated cellist Yo-Yo Ma in 2000.

Earlier this week, Ma and Neville joined me at HBO’s headquarters in New York for a special evening to mark the release, which included a brief but beautiful performance by the cellist, a screening of the film, and a live Q&A with the director in front of an intimate audience.

The Music of Strangers was a big project. Neville shot his subjects in six different languages, filming them in locations as far-flung as China, Turkey and Iran. The film is full of brilliant performances and sumptuous colors, but what’s more incisive are the segments in which Neville zeroes in on certain members of the ensemble. Among them are the Paris-born, American-raised Ma, of Chinese descent; the deeply soulful Iranian kamancheh virtuoso Kayhan Kalhor; the exuberant pipa master Wu Man, from China; the spirited Galician bagpipe player Cristina Pato; and the talented Syrian clarinetist Kinan Azmeh. (As it happens, NPR Music has showcased each of them individually in video performances we’ve produced.)

Neville gives each of them the space and time to let their personal stories — full of heartbreak and loss, as well as joy and achievement — unfold. And through those stories, The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble becomes a series of investigations and explorations into larger themes, like what it means to be an immigrant.

How do you define yourself when you lose the moorings of your culture and plunge into in a new one? How do you preserve tradition and yet make room for new ideas? How do you carve out your own trajectory when talent and fate have determined your career path from childhood onward? And how do you endure immense, unimaginable loss — such as losing your entire family and your closest friends to war — and find meaning and joy?

“The best thing about it for me as a filmmaker,” Neville said during our discussion, “is that not only do I get to indulge my musical love, but that music is, to me, the most amazing Trojan horse to tell any other kind of story. The best music films are not about music … Music is just the language we’re speaking to tell a story about culture.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)