January 5, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: The Best Superhero Movie Moments of 2016, The Most Cliche Action Heroine Move and More

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

Supercut of the Day:

We Got This Covered highlights the best comic book movie moments of 2016 in this super powered supercut:

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Movie Cliche of the Day:

For Fandor Keyframe, Dominick Nero highlights the ridiculous fight move that all action movie heroines use:

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Cosplay of the Day:

The literal catbus makes sense, but we’re not so sure about the cat dressed as a totoro in this adorable My Neighbor Totoro animal cosplay posted on the Studio Ghibli Facebook page:

Movie Science of the Day:

If you’ve always thought Godzilla’s atomic breath is just fire, see how much worse it is in this science lesson from Kyle Hill:

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Reworked Movie of the Day:

Speaking of Godzilla, CineFix reworked Honey I Blew Up the Kid so it plays like a Godzilla movie:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Diane Keaton, who turns 71 today, and Robert Duvall, who turns 86 today, share the frame in 1971’s The Godfather:

Filmmaker in Focus:

With Silence going wide this weekend, JoBlo.com spotlights the career of Martin Scorsese with emphasis on why he’s “kinda crazy”:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons why the Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg-penned Sausage Party is just an animated rehash of the Sth Rogen and Evan Goldberg-helmed This Is the End:

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Alternate Movie Posters of the Day:

Every day of 2016, artist Pete Majarich made a new alternate poster for a classic movie. Here’s a video he just made showcasing all of them:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

With further news this week of the musical Valley Girl remake, here’s the trailer for the original starring Nicolas Cage and Deborah Foreman:

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and

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U.S. Likely To Become Net Exporter Of Energy, Says Federal Forecast

Workers move equipment at a natural gas well site near Burlington, Pa., in 2010. A federal report said Thursday natural gas production is on track to make the U.S. a net exporter of energy by about 2030. Ralph Wilson/AP hide caption

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Ralph Wilson/AP

The U.S. could become a net exporter of energy in coming years, according to the federal government’s Annual Energy Outlook 2017. This continues a trend the Energy Information Administration has highlighted before in its annual report.

The EIA projects the country will continue to import oil through 2050, though at much lower levels than in the past. The main thing that will make the U.S. a net exporter of energy is natural gas.

Domestic natural gas production has risen by nearly 30 percent over the past decade, primarily because controversial technologies such as hydraulic fracturing have opened up new fields to drilling. Now companies are proposing and building natural gas export facilities around the country with the production boom expected to continue.

The EIA is quick to warn that there is a lot of uncertainty in projections like this. That’s why each year the agency considers a variety of factors and then develops multiple scenarios. It looks at things like production, demand, prices and technological advancements. Most of the agency’s seven scenarios show the country becoming a net exporter by 2030.

One scenario, in which crude oil prices rise sharply, projects the country would become a net energy exporter within just a few years. That’s unlikely to happen, though. The agency believes Brent crude oil prices this year will average around $51.66 a barrel — about half of what a barrel sold for in 2014.

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As part of its annual report the EIA also has projections for energy-related carbon emissions. EIA Administrator Adam Sieminski says emission levels will depend a lot on what happens with the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, which is tied up in the courts now. Considering President-elect Donald Trump’s stated desire to boost the coal industry, he could choose to stop defending the plan.

“We see the highest emissions without the Clean Power Plan because we’ll continue to use more coal, and coal has more carbon dioxide than the other fossil fuels,” says Sieminski.

The report shows Americans are using energy more efficiently, and the agency projects that will continue. Despite a growing population and a growing economy, consumption is expected to be relatively flat through 2050.

The EIA believes gasoline will remain the dominant fuel for transportation in the U.S. for decades. Still, the number of electric vehicles is expected to increase from 1 percent of the cars on the road today to 6 percent in 2040. That may not seem fast enough growth if you’re an electric-car advocate, but consider that there are about 250 million cars in the U.S. now. Sieminski says, “There’s a lot of gasoline and diesel-powered cars on the road that are not going to be retired immediately.”

The fact that natural gas is replacing coal for electricity generation has been widely reported. The EIA data show more power comes from gas than coal now. And the agency projects that renewable forms of electricity, such as wind and solar, could overtake coal by 2030.

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The Doctors Aren't In At Kenya's Public Hospitals

Health care workers stage a protest during the ongoing doctors’ strike in Kenya. Recep Canik/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images hide caption

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Recep Canik/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

The halls of the Kiambu County Hospital just outside Nairobi are empty. This is normally a bustling place but on Thursday entire wings are closed.

Only in the emergency room are there a scattering of patients. Moms with babies sit languidly on metal chairs. Men with broken bones and some with serious injuries are just hoping to be treated.

But they probably won’t be seen by doctors. A doctor’s strike that began last month in Kenya has now entered its second month. Physicians at public hospitals want more money and better medical equipment, but the government says it can’t afford to meet their demands.

The strike has left millions of Kenyans without proper health care and has also overwhelmed some of the country’s private hospitals.

The nurses at the public hospitals are not on strike, so they’re doing whatever they can. They’re the ones running the ER. But a patient who needs complicated care and can’t afford a private hospital is out of luck.

The only doctor I found at the Kiambu hospital is David Kariuki, who is on strike but showed up to perform his administrative duties.

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“The current strike is about better working conditions for doctors, especially those within the public health sector,” he said.

A doctor right out of school in Kenya makes about $10,000 a year in the public health system. To earn more money, many of them are lured abroad or into the private hospitals that many Kenyans can’t afford.

That means, Kariuki said, that “the public health care system continues to be strained, because you have fewer doctors to see a growing population, so everyone would get overworked” and more stressed out.

And it’s not like there were a lot of doctors on duty before the strike: 5,000 physicians in the public sector serve a population of nearly 50 million.

In the emergency room, I find Masa Mawili, who came to the hospital because of his foot. It was so swollen that it hardly fit in his sandal, and the swelling extended all the way to his calf. He doesn’t know what caused the swelling.

He said he had already seen the nurses but they couldn’t tell him what was wrong with his foot. So he sat and waited hours in the hope that a doctor would show up — some of them have been working despite the strike.

On Wednesday, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta met with the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union for hours. Late at night, his government put out an offer: Some doctors would get a more than 100 percent raise, others significantly less.

The doctors are supposed to respond by Friday, but they seem determined to hold out for the 300 percent raise that the government agreed to in a 2013 collective bargaining agreement but has since walked away from.

But it’s not just about the money.

“The CBA [collective bargaining agreement] once signed will make sure more doctors are trained to improve on service delivery,” the union tweeted.

At the hospital I visited, some patients sided with the doctors but others took the government’s side.

Paul Kagiri, whose college-age son was given the OK to go to college after a physical at the hospital, said that what the doctors are asking for is “very, very, very high.”

The government can’t afford to pay them. And there are reports of people who sought help at public hospitals and ended up dying. Right now, he said, it’s time to think about the wanjiku — the ordinary people.

“Only the wanjiku right now is suffering a lot,” Kagiri said. “And instead of wanjiku suffering why [don’t the doctors give back to the public?”

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U.S. Defeats Russia In Hockey World Junior Semifinal, Faces Canada For Gold

U.S. forward Troy Terry scores the game-winning goal against Russia in the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship semifinal in Montreal on Wednesday. Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images hide caption

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Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images

The United States hockey team bested Russia in a seven-round shootout Wednesday to secure a place in the IIHF World Junior Championship gold medal match on Thursday night.

It was the Americans’ first win over the Russians in an elimination round in the tournament’s history. They had been 0-7.

Tied at 3-3 at the end of regulation and through overtime, the game went to a dramatic penalty shootout that saw the crowning of a new American hockey hero: 19-year-old Troy Terry. The University of Denver sophomore and Anaheim Ducks prospect scored three goals, including the game-winner in the seventh round.

“If you would have told me before the game that I would be the guy going multiple times in a shootout I would not have believed you,” Terry said, per USA Today Sports.

According to International Ice Hockey Federation rules, a player can shoot again after all the players in the five-player shootout rotation have shot. In the initial five rounds, Terry and teammate Jeremy Bracco scored, and U.S. goalie Tyler Parsons made three saves. In the extra two rounds, Terry scored twice more.

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The feat earned comparisons to T.J. Oshie’s shootout performance in the 2014 Sochi Olympics when he scored on four of six attempts to beat Russia in group play. It also recalled Canadian Jonathan Toews’ three shootout goals in the 2007 World Junior Championship semifinal, which knocked the U.S. out of contention.

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And, of course, any time the U.S. tops Russia in hockey, there is inevitably a mention of the iconic Miracle on Ice game in which a young U.S. team downed the mighty Soviet Union squad in the 1980 Olympics. In the intervening years, the superpowers’ hockey rivalry has faded. As The Washington Post‘s Dave Sheinen wrote in 2014: “The hard edges of the U.S.-Russia rivalry have been softened by time, shifting geopolitical circumstances and the ubiquitous presence of Russians in the NHL, among other factors.”

In the 2017 tournament, developments in U.S.-Russia foreign relations — specifically U.S. intelligence concluding that the Russian government interfered in the presidential election — added a small but noticeable wrinkle to the rivalry, as some wryly pointed out on social media:

USA coaches surprised Russia by using Troy Terry 3 times in shootout, which means they probably never mentioned that plan on email. #WJC2017

— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) January 4, 2017

Man, that sucks for Russia, who will have to look for North American wins elsewhere

— Bruce Arthur (@bruce_arthur) January 4, 2017

In Thursday night’s gold medal match, the U.S. will face Canada, which beat Sweden 5-2 on Wednesday night. As the Associated Press reports, “The United States and Canada have met three times for the title, with Canada winning in 1997 and the Americans in 2004 and 2010. Canada won the last of its record 16 titles in 2015.” The U.S. beat Canada 3-1 earlier in the tournament.

The game starts at 8 p.m. ET and will be televised on the NHL Network.

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