Need a quick recap on the past week in movie news? Here are the highlights:
BIG NEWS
Quentin Tarantino has a surprising new project: Quentin Tarantino’s next movie will be about the Manson Family murders, and word has it he’s looking at Brad Pitt, Jennifer Lawrence, Samuel L. Jackson and Margot Robbie to star, the last as slain actress Sharon Tate. Read morehere.
GREAT NEWS
Joe Pesci joins Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman: Martin Scorsese’s next gangster movie, The Irishman, is turning out to be a Raging Bull–Goodfellas–Casino reunion as Joe Pesci has joined the cast, which already includes Robert De Niro. Meanwhile, Harvey Keitel, who starred with De Niro in Mean Streets and Taxi Driver, is in talks, as are Al Pacino, Bobby Cannavale and Ray Romano Read more here and here.
FIRST LOOKS
New photos from the most anticipated movies: Ahead of Comic-Con, a lot of movies have been sharing first look images and new photos with Entertainment Weekly, including Ready Player One, A Wrinkle in Time and Tomb Raider. See and read more here and here and here.
EXCLUSIVE SCOOP
Christopher Nolan on Steven Spielberg’s influence on Dunkirk: We talked to Christopher Nolan about his new movie Dunkirk and how he was loaned Steven Spielberg’s own print of Saving Private Ryan for initial inspiration. Read all about it here.
MUST-WATCH TRAILERS
Gary Oldman is Winston Churchill in Darkest Hour: If you’re hoping Gary Oldman gets an Oscar one day, you’ll want to see his good prospects on display in Darkest Hour, in which he nearly unrecognizably portrays iconic British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Watch it here:
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Gerard Butler is A Family Man: In the upcoming A Family Man, Gerard Butler plays an overworked guy who finally makes some time for his loved ones when his son becomes sick. Check out the trailer here:
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Pilgrimage shows a very different side of Tom Holland: Now that he’s a big star as Spider-Man, Tom Holland gets to show his more dramatic side in movies like Pilgrimage, which also stars Jon Bernthal and Richard Armitage. Watch its first trailer below.
Venus Williams and Spain’s Garbine Muguruza each compete in the 2017 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon, southwest London. Williams will face Muguruza in the women’s singles final on Saturday.
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Venus Williams is facing off with Garbine Muguruza of Spain in the Wimbledon Final on Saturday.
If Williams, 37, takes home the championship, she’ll become the oldest woman to win a Grand Slam title in the Open era — surpassing her sister Serena Williams for the honor.
Meanwhile, on the men’s side, Roger Federer will meet Marin Cilic of Croatia. If Federer, 35, wins, he’ll be the oldest Wimbledon champ (though not the oldest Grand Slam champ) of the era.
The Williams sisters and Federer, along with Rafael Nadal, have changed the face of tennis in a way that is “almost unheard of,” as FiveThirtyEight reported in January. Instead of fading away, they’re remaining dominant as the years tick by — raising the overall age of tennis champions as they go.
Venus Williams’ impressive performance comes after a battle with an auto-immune disease. And, as Reuters notes, she’s heading into the final “an almost unthinkable 17 years after her first” Wimbledon title.
NPR’s Bill Chappell offered a preview of Williams’ competition:
“Williams will face Garbiñe Muguruza, 23, who had little trouble dispatching Magdalena Rybarikova 6-1, 6-1, on the strength of a reliable first serve and profitable ventures to the net: Muguruza won 18 of the 24 points in which she approached the net.”
Williams is playing for her 6th Wimbledon title and 8th Grand Slam title. Muguruza has one title to her name, the 2016 French Open.
The Associated Press had this to say about Federer’s face-off with Cilic on Sunday:
“This is Federer’s second major final of 2017. After losing in the Wimbledon semifinals last year, he took the rest of 2016 off to let his surgically repaired left knee heal. He came back fit and refreshed and won the Australian Open in January for his record-extending 18th Grand Slam title and first anywhere in 4½ years. …
“[Cilic and Federer] met in the Wimbledon quarterfinals last year, when Cilic took the opening two sets and even held a match point before Federer came all the way back to win, improving to 6-1 head-to-head. …
” ‘I still know that it’s a big mountain to climb,’ Cilic said. ‘Roger is playing maybe (some) of his best tennis of his career at the moment.’ “
Federer has 18 Grand Slam titles, including seven at Wimbledon. Silic has one, the 2014 U.S. Open.
President Trump hinted this week that he may impose tariffs or quotas on imported steel. Economists warn that could spark a trade war.
KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:
President Trump is back in the U.S. after a quick trip to France, where he celebrated Bastille Day and a hundred years since the U.S. entered World War I. Along the way, the president hinted to reporters he is weighing new limits on imported steel. Critics are warning that could trigger a worldwide trade war, as NPR’s Scott Horsley reports.
SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: Steel has a special place in this president’s heart. Trump often spoke on the campaign trail about revitalizing steel mills and other heavy industries, a theme he picked up again at the Transportation Department last month.
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PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Watch new sparks light our factories as we forge metal from the furnaces of our Rust Belt and our beloved heartland which has been forgotten. It’s not forgotten anymore.
HORSLEY: The domestic steel industry has been struggling. Scott Paul is with the Alliance for American Manufacturing, which represents steelmakers and the Steelworkers union. He says over the last three years, the U.S. has lost some 15,000 steelmaking jobs.
SCOTT PAUL: It’s not because they don’t know how to make steel or they don’t know how to make it profitably. They certainly do. But they’ve been faced with a wave of imports, many of which have been dumped or subsidized by government-run steel industries.
HORSLEY: Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross puts much of the blame for that wave of cheap imports on China. That country operates far more steel mills than it needs to supply its own demand. Ross says the glut of excess Chinese steel depresses prices and idles mills all over the world.
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WILBUR ROSS: So it’s a very serious impact on the domestic industry. The domestic industry is only operating at about 71 percent of capacity.
HORSLEY: During his flight to Paris this week, Trump complained the U.S. has become a dumping ground for imported steel, and he vowed to put a stop to it by imposing quotas, tariffs or both. That would be a welcome move for the steelworkers that Scott Paul represents.
PAUL: If the president is true to his word, the relief will be robust.
HORSLEY: But that’s a big if. The president’s push for new limits on steel imports is reportedly being hotly debated within the White House itself.
DOUG HOLTZ-EAKIN: Any decision made by the president of the United States is a hard decision. The easy ones don’t get to the president.
HORSLEY: That’s Doug Holtz-Eakin, a former White House economist who now leads a conservative advocacy group called the American Action Forum. He drafted a letter to the president opposing a crackdown on imported steel, and he got 15 economists who served both Republican and Democratic presidents to sign on.
HOLTZ-EAKIN: People say economists can’t agree on anything. And this is a bipartisan agreement on a very simple question. So it was nice to see.
HORSLEY: Holtz-Eakin says while slapping tariffs or quotas on imported steel might help American steelmakers, it would hurt the U.S. companies that use steel and their customers. The import limits would hit not only China but other big suppliers such as Canada, Mexico and South Korea. And many other countries would likely retaliate with restrictions of their own on U.S. exports.
HOLTZ-EAKIN: Europeans have already singled out where they will retaliate, and people know about it. So there are already constituencies in the U.S. who are worried they’ll get caught in the crossfire of this decision.
HORSLEY: U.S. dairy products, orange juice and Kentucky bourbon could all be targets in such a trade war. But Scott Paul says there’s also a political calculation as the White House weighs how to deliver for the downtrodden workers who helped put Trump in the White House.
PAUL: We saw a lot of this pain borne out over the last election cycle in these small mill towns that dot our country’s landscape in states like Pennsylvania and Ohio. And it’s more than a steelworker’s job. It becomes about the community and the social fabric, and it had a direct bearing on our politics.
HORSLEY: Thus far, the president has talked more about protectionist measures than he’s actually done. His decision on steel imports when it comes will help show whether that’s changing. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
To help locals get the health care they need, the 14-bed Copper Queen Community Hospital in remote Bisbee, Ariz., has incorporated Mayo Clinic doctors into its practice — via telemedicine consultations.
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For Heather Gijanto, going to the doctor means taking a day off work and driving at least 60 miles round-trip from her home in McNeil, Ariz., to the town of Bisbee. And that’s assuming there’s a primary care doctor available in Bisbee to get her in.
“You select one doctor and then you find out a few months later that that doctor is no longer going to be available,” Gijanto says. “So then you have to start the whole process over again. And then you find that doctor and, for whatever reason, that doctor leaves as well.”
Gijanto is frustrated, and says she and her husband and their two young kids have had to change family doctors four times recently. Ideally, she says, the family would have one doctor who knew each member’s medical history, so “I didn’t have to explain my chart every single time, or have to go over medications all the time with each new physician.”
It’s long been hard to recruit new doctors to rural America. They can make a lot more money in metropolitan areas as specialists, and many choose to do that, especially if they’re saddled with mounting debt from student loans.
But the shortage, especially of primary care providers, has gotten steadily worse in recent years. According to the National Rural Health Association, rural areas could be short 45,000 doctors by 2020. And other trade groups warn those numbers of unfilled positions could loom even larger. Since 2010, more than 70 rural hospitals have closed.
The fallout is felt most acutely in small towns like Bisbee, which has a population of 5,400. The Victorian-era town has struggled since the 1970s, when the copper mines closed. Much of its economy now depends on tourists, who come to see the town’s well-preserved old West architecture and scenery, and to enjoy the local arts and music. But that income is largely seasonal. Bisbee’s full-time population has been steadily declining.
Today, says Mayor David Smith, a lot of Bisbee residents are uninsured, or rely on Medicaid. And this region has only about half the doctors it needs.
“Because of the lack of doctors, they actually end up using the emergency room for their normal needs,” Smith says. “They get a bad cold and they end up in the emergency room.”
Located in the mountains about 5 miles north of the border between the U.S. and Mexico, Bisbee is remote. Smith says they’ve worked hard to improve the town’s amenities. Among other things, this summer the public pool is finally reopening.
Still, there is no movie theater. There is only one grocery store left in town, no soccer fields. Little things like these can be a deal breaker when it comes to recruiting new doctors and other professionals.
And though the shortage of doctors all across rural America is a crisis affecting some 90 million Americans, the problem is not even part of the health care debate in Washington right now.
A mountain of mine tailings frame a Bisbee park — a legacy of the copper mines that once fueled the local economy.
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“Rural America is a forgotten America,” says Bisbee’s mayor, who believes the doctor shortage is just part of a broader story of rural neglect.
Smith points to the problem of student loan debt. Leaders in towns like this have long called for more generous debt-forgiveness programs for medical students, so that young doctors actually could afford to come out to underserved areas and work.
The mayor says there’s no sign this is being addressed by national politicians. They talk about rural America, he says, but when they get here they realize it’s complicated, and they leave and wait until the next election.
“Copper from Bisbee, Ariz., is what helped win World War I,” Smith says. “And yet, when we are in need, we are forgotten because it’s not convenient — and because it’s not a whole bunch of people here that are voters.”
Over at Bisbee’s Copper Queen Community Hospital, CEO James Dickson goes further.
He sees the doctor shortage as the latest example of why people in towns like this are feeling left behind, untouched by the economic booms in many American cities. It’s a likely contributor to the country’s growing economic and cultural divide, Dickson says.
“They’re starting to call the rural areas ‘the new inner city’ because we have the same shortages and lack of access to care,” he says.
How do you have a thriving economy if you don’t have access to health care?
“They can’t export a health care system like you all have in [Los Angeles] and other places,” Dickson says. “Doctors don’t come here. Doctors want a reasonable income, and I don’t blame them.”
Dickson’s 14-bed hospital and health clinic sit at the base of a mountain of old mine tailings — a legacy, if a somewhat bitter reminder, of better economic times. Copper Queen is often held up as a success for its low-cost model of high quality, especially when so many other rural hospitals are closing, or facing the threat of closure.
Rural hospitals have relied on foreign-born doctors who work in underserved towns in exchange for green cards, explains James Dickson, CEO of Bisbee’s hospital. But that’s changing. “They cap the number of visas and we can’t get doctors down here,” Dickson says.
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For now, Copper Queen has been able to get around the shortage of family doctors by incorporating telemedicine into its practice. Patients in need of specialty care or other emergency services can get consultations in real time from physicians at the Mayo Clinic. The hospital also has been able to hire more nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
But no one knows if these coping strategies are sustainable. Dickson thinks there’s another big problem, beyond the student loan issue, that’s being ignored: a shifting immigration policy that’s squeezing off the supply of young physicians from outside the U.S.
“They cap the number of visas and we can’t get doctors down here,” Dickson says.
Rural hospitals have relied heavily on foreign-born doctors who do residencies in underserved towns, in exchange for green cards. The cap means Dickson hasn’t been able to recruit a doctor to his hospital or clinic for 18 months.
No one is counting on a more liberal immigration policy under the Trump administration. And there’s a pervasive sense, in Bisbee anyway, that even if the national government weren’t divided, there’s only so much national leaders can do to solve the crisis.
Just as much of the responsibility lies within the local community, the mayor believes. Small towns like Bisbee that used to be wholly dependent on natural resources have struggled to reinvent themselves. Smith foresees some tough conversations.
“A lot of people still think that the mines are going to come back and resurrect this town. And of course that’s not going to happen,” he says. The mining industry has increasingly focused its business in South America. “Business practices have changed.”
It’s been hard for the economy to diversify, especially in a remote border region like this, Smith says. “And that hurts small towns with vision.”
Heather Gijanto, the mother of two who drives many miles to Bisbee for medical care, figures one of the solutions to breathing life into the region is to attract more private investment. She’s had the same job at a local Safeway for 14 years because she hasn’t been able to find much else.
“There’s not that much for people here,” Gijanto says. “There needs to be more options.”
More options, she says — and then maybe the doctors will come.