January 4, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Tim Burton's 'Batman & Robin,' Darth Vader vs. Xenomorphs and More

Klingon Bird of Prey (redux)

Here’s everything you need to know about the last week in movie news:

Reimagined Movie of the Day:

What if Tim Burton stayed with the Batman franchise through the 1990s and directed Batman & Robin? Sam Ibrahim shows us in this reworked trailer:

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Mashup Art of the Day:

Artist Guillem H. Pongiluppi created a whole series of paintings where Darth Vader and Stormtroopers battle xenomorphs from the Alien movies. See more at Geek Tyrant.

Stormtroopers vs aliens season 2! (3/5) #StarWars #stormtrooper #alien pic.twitter.com/kw192P1Sez

— Guillem H.Pongiluppi (@guillemhp) December 23, 2016

Movie Parody of the Day:

The Korean version of Saturday Night Live did a very silly parody of Marvel’s Doctor Strange (via Twitter):

i know jack shit abt dr strange but i already know that this korean snl parody is better pic.twitter.com/SWe8ZxCA8B

— Z-01 ????????. (@LUPATIER) January 3, 2017

VFX Reel of the Day:

See why Arrival should be a contender for the visual effects Oscar in this breakdown of the work by Oblique FX (via /Film):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Harmony Korine, who turns 44 today, with Chloe Sevigny on the set of Kids in 1994:

Movie Food of the Day:

YouTube cooking show Binging with Babish shows us how to make our own Big Kahuna burger as seen in Pulp Fiction:

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Fan Build of the Day:

Not only did Trekkie Kevin J. Walter build a 250,000 piece Lego replica of the Klingon Bird of Prey ship from Star Trek, but he also made a nice slideshow album of the model in action (via Geekologie):

Video Essay of the Day:

You’ll never not notice when movie characters drink milk again after watching this Now You See It video about what the beverage means in films, particularly in Mad Max: Fury Road:

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Supercut of the Day:

In support of the social media hashtag #52FilmsbyWomen, Roman Holiday shares a montage of 52 films by women:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Speaking of movies directed by women, Underworld: Blood Wars hits theaters this weekend, so let’s look back at the original trailer for the first Underworld (which was directed by a man) released back in 2003:

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and

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FACT CHECK: Once Again, Lawmakers Are Stretching The Facts On Obamacare

Kesha Wilson holds her 1-year-old son, Kamiyan Cooper, while family nurse practitioner Terrance James makes notes as part of an examination, at a county health center in Portland, Ore., in 2012. Rick Bowmer/AP hide caption

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Rick Bowmer/AP

President Obama and Vice President-elect Mike Pence were both on Capitol Hill Wednesday, making competing cases for and against Obama’s signature health care law. Republicans have promised to make repeal of the Affordable Care Act their first order of business, once they control both Congress and the White House.

Obama is urging his fellow Democrats to do what they can to preserve the law. If that fails, Democrats plan to hold Republicans accountable for any disruption the repeal may trigger. Both sides are trying to position themselves as the protectors of Americans’ health care, while branding the other party as a dangerous threat.

As usual, the truth may be somewhere in between. Here we take a closer look at some of the claims being floated by both parties:


President-elect Trump got the ball rolling with a pre-dawn tweet, cautioning that “Republicans must be careful in that the Dems own the failed ObamaCare disaster, with its poor coverage and massive premium increases……”

Republicans must be careful in that the Dems own the failed ObamaCare disaster, with its poor coverage and massive premium increases……

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 4, 2017

Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan echoed Trump. “This law has failed,” Ryan told reporters. “We know that things are only getting worse under Obamacare. This is about people paying higher premiums every year and feeling powerless to stop it. It’s about families paying deductibles that are so high it doesn’t even feel like you have health insurance in the first place. And in so many parts of the country, as you’ve always heard, even if you want to look for better coverage, you’re stuck with one option. One choice is not a choice. It is a monopoly. The health care system has been ruined, dismantled under Obamacare.”

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CLAIM: Obamacare suffers from “massive premium increases”

FACT CHECK: True in some cases, but it’s also relative. Obamacare is also actually cheaper on average than the typical employer-provided plan.

Many people shopping for health insurance on the government-run exchanges set up by Obamacare have seen double-digit premium increases this year.

The average cost of a benchmark plan rose 25 percent nationwide, but there was considerable variation from state to state. Premiums in Arizona jumped an average of 116 percent, while premiums in Indiana and Massachusetts actually went down. Most people buying insurance on the exchanges receive a government subsidy, which helps defray the cost.

A study by the Urban Institute last year found that even without the subsidy, insurance policies sold on the exchanges cost about 10 percent less than the typical employer-provided plan. Exchange policies might seem more expensive, because part of the cost of workplace plans is typically paid by employers, and thus largely invisible to the employee.

CLAIM: “You’re stuck with one option” under Obamacare

FACT CHECK: Not true for the majority, but it has increasingly become the case.

Obamacare insurance exchanges have grown less competitive, as some insurance companies have lost money and left the market. One in five customers on the exchanges had just one insurance company to choose from this year (up from 2 percent in 2016). Nearly 6 in 10 customers have a choice of three or more companies. The lack of competition, which can lead to higher prices, tends to be worse in rural areas and the South.

Insurance companies have struggled, in part, because fewer young, healthy people have signed up for coverage than forecast. Backers of the Affordable Care Act say that could be remedied with more generous subsidies to encourage sign-ups or bigger penalties for those who fail to enroll. Obama also renewed the idea of a public insurance option to supplement private offerings.

CLAIM: “The health care system has been ruined, dismantled under Obamacare”

FACT CHECK: Prices were going up at faster rates before Obamacare.

Most Americans under age 65 still get health insurance through an employer, although the percentage has been slowly dropping. The cost of employer-provided coverage has gone up since passage of the ACA. But the annual price hikes were considerably larger in the decade before the law was passed. Some of the savings from slower premium growth have been offset by higher deductibles.


While Republicans highlight the shortcomings of the Affordable Care Act, Democrats warn that repeal would be much worse.

“Instead of working to further ensure affordable care for all Americans, [Republicans] seek to rip health care away from millions of Americans, creating chaos in our entire economy,” Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday. He and his fellow Democrats offered a mocking slogan for the GOP: “Make America Sick Again.”

Schumer also suggested that repealing Obamacare would hurt rural hospitals, “right in their heartlands. The minute they enact this repeal, [hospitals] are going to suffer dramatically,” he said.

CLAIM: ACA repeal would “rip health care away from millions”

FACT CHECK: True, if Republicans don’t protect them or replace ACA with something that provides coverage.

The Affordable Care Act has expanded health care coverage to some 20 million Americans through a combination of subsidized individual policies, expanded Medicaid, and allowing young adults to stay on their parents’ plans. The uninsured rate has fallen to an all-time low of around 10 percent. Coverage would be higher still if 19 states had not refused to expand Medicaid.

If the Republican-controlled Congress repeals the Affordable Care Act, many of those newly insured Americans would be at risk of losing coverage. In addition, millions more who buy individual insurance policies off the exchanges could be at risk, if that market is disrupted. The Urban Institute estimates as many as 30 million people in all could lose their health care coverage, doubling the uninsured rate.

Republicans have promised an orderly transition as they work toward a replacement for Obamacare, and it’s possible the effective date for any repeal could be delayed for a number of years. Insurance companies, however, may be reluctant to participate once it’s clear Obamacare’s individual market is being phased out.

CLAIM: Rural hospitals are going to suffer

FACT CHECK: True, if repealed outright, but it’s also because of the way the ACA was structured in the first place.

The concern for hospitals reflects a trade-off when the ACA was passed seven years ago. The government scaled back what it pays hospitals for treating Medicare patients and the indigent, with the expectation that would be offset by payments from millions of newly insured.

Hospitals worry that if repeal of the law cuts insurance coverage, but doesn’t restore other payments, they could be left with a mountain of unpaid bills. The American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals urged Congress and the incoming Trump administration to either protect insurance coverage or replace the hospital payments.

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Fires, Floods And Earthquakes: New Report Finds 2016 Was Particularly Disastrous

These houses in southwestern Haiti were damaged or destroyed by Hurricane Matthew in October. Matthew was the most serious natural catastrophe in North America in 2016. Rebecca Blackwell/AP hide caption

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Rebecca Blackwell/AP

Hurricane Matthew. The earthquake in Japan. Flooding in the Deep South, China and Europe. Wildfires in Canada.

Last year sometimes felt like one natural catastrophe after another. Now, new figures from reinsurer Munich Re suggest that it was indeed a particularly bad year.

Natural catastrophes caused the highest losses worldwide in the last four years, at $175 billion, Munich Re said. It recorded some 750 events globally, including “earthquakes, storms, floods, droughts and heatwaves.” The reinsurer added that about 30 percent of those losses were insured.

North America “experienced 160 loss events in 2016, the most since 1980,” the reinsurer added.

Globally, the costliest single event was the devastating earthquake on the Japanese island of Kyushu, at $31 billion. Here’s the breakdown of the five most costly disasters worldwide:

An infographic showing the five costliest natural catastrophes of 2016. Munich Re hide caption

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Munich Re

In North America, the most devastating disaster was Hurricane Matthew, which killed hundreds of people, mostly in Haiti. The catastrophe caused some $10.2 billion in damage, Munich Re said.

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The report described an “exceptional” number of flood events, such as swollen rivers and flash floods. Such disasters made up 34 percent of all losses, compared with an average of 21 percent over the past 10 years.

2016’s high numbers point to the dangers of “unchecked climate change,” Peter Hoppe, head of Munich Re’s Geo Risks Research Unit, said in a statement. He explained:

“Of course, individual events themselves can never be attributed directly to climate change. But there are now many indications that certain events — such as persistent weather systems or storms bringing torrential rains – are more likely to occur in certain regions as a result of climate change.”

However, the new report does contain some good news: While 2016 had a high number of distinct events, it had a lower than average number of lives lost because of natural catastrophes.

“Some 8,700 lives were sadly lost as a result of natural catastrophes, far fewer than in 2015 (25,400) and also below the ten-year-average (60,600),” Munich Re says.

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French Court Convicts English Soccer Fans Of 'Racist Violence'

Souleymane Sylla (right) with his lawyer in Paris on Tuesday during the trial of the four British men accused of racist violence towards him in February 2015. Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images

A French court has convicted four British men of racist violence for pushing a black man off the Paris metro as fans chanted, “We’re racist, we’re racist, and that’s the way we like it.”

The incident, which was caught on video by a bystander, happened in February 2015. In the video, a group of Chelsea football club supporters can be seen repeatedly shoving a black man off a crowded metro train as he tries to board.

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The video went viral, and as the Two-Way reported, prompted Chelsea to suspend the fans from attending games.

NPR’s Eleanor Beardsley reported that on Tuesday a French judge “convicted four men and handed down suspended prison sentences and fines.” She said, “Only two of the men showed up for their trial. They denied uttering racist slurs but said they had been drinking. The others were convicted in absentia.”

Eleanor reported that the victim, Souleyman Sylla, said on French radio that bringing the men to justice was important.

“They needed to know they hurt a family man and that this incident really traumatized my children,” he said. The Guardian reported that Sylla told the court “his life had been ‘shaken up’ by the violence” and that “he had had to stop work for different periods, did not use the metro for nine months and had been on medication.”

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The Guardian wrote that the four men were ordered to pay Sylla a total of €10,000 (about $10,500), adding: “The French state prosecutor said the trial was a defining moment in anti-racism cases and a ‘clear-cut example’ of racism: it was rare to have such an unabashed violently racist incident that was brazenly accompanied by the chanting seen in the video footage.”

The four men — Joshua Parsons, James Fairbairn, William Simpson and Richard Barklie — have all denied they were in any way racially motivated. Parsons, who admitted he pushed Sylla, said he had been drinking before Chelsea’s match against Paris Saint Germain but that the “we’re racist, we’re racist and that’s the way we like it” chant came from a different metro car, the Guardian wrote.

Chelsea has since issued lifetime bans for all four men.

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