August 14, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Shrek' Meets 'Thor: Ragnarok,' New 'Captain America: Civil War' VFX Reel and More

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

Remade Trailer of the Day:

Darth Blender redid the latest Thor: Ragnarok trailer using footage from the Shrek movies:

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VFX Breakdown of the Day:

More than a year after its release, Gradient Filming shares a lengthy visual effects reel breaking down their work on Captain America: Civil War (via Heroic Hollywood):

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Poster Parody of the Day:

Sorry for the spoiler if you’re not caught up on Game of Thrones but this mashup poster parodying Suicide Squad is just too perfect not to share:

The internet is too fast. pic.twitter.com/SIkPDHMqIs

— ?Stephen M. Colbert (@smcolbert) August 14, 2017

Star Wars Parody of the Day:

Jabba the Hutt teaches a masterclass in stand-up comedy in this funny video from Bellpond Studios (via /Film):

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Cosplay of the Day:

This video shared by James Gunn might be a step away from “cosplay,” but it’s also not really Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 footage:

How dare they leak this footage from Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3?? https://t.co/LAJ9rUX2yy

— James Gunn (@JamesGunn) August 12, 2017

Vintage Image of the Day:

Steve Martin, who turns 72 today, takes a look behind the camera while making The Jerk in 1979:

Influences of the Day:

This video highlighting all the classic art references in Alien: Covenant might give you a new appreciation for the sequel (via io9):

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Soundtrack Album of the Day:

With Mondo’s new vinyl release of the Anomalisa score, you get a cool diorama based on the movie (via IndieWire):

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Bad Film Analysis of the Day:

Find out the “hidden meaning” of Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away from an alien in the future in the latest Earthling Cinema:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of No Way Out starring Kevin Costner and Gene Hackman. Watch the original trailer for the classic thriller below.

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and

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Trump Turns To 43-Year-Old 'America First' Trade Law To Pressure China

President Trump holds up a signed memorandum calling for a trade investigation of China at the White House on Monday.

Alex Brandon/AP

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Alex Brandon/AP

Updated at 10:35 p.m. ET

President Trump on Monday authorized his top trade official to look into whether China is guilty of intellectual property theft, a move that could eventually lead to trade sanctions.

Trump called his action “a very big move” against practices that cost our nation “millions of jobs and billions and billions of dollars each and every year.”

He cited not just the theft of intellectual property such as computer software, but also Beijing’s requirement that U.S. companies turn over proprietary technology as a condition of entering China’s markets.

“We will safeguard the copyrights, patents, trademarks, trade secrets and other intellectual property that is so vital to our security and to our prosperity,” Trump said at the White House. He was flanked by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and members of his economic team.

Monday’s steps were very preliminary, and analysts say that it could be a long time, if ever, before significant trade sanctions are imposed on China.

Eventually, it could lead the administration to initiate what’s called a Section 301 investigation, a sanctions mechanism that’s part of the Trade Act of 1974.

Section 301 was widely used in the 1980s under the Reagan administration. More recently US presidents have complied with a requirement to obtain World Trade Organization authorization before using Section 301.

But Trump has implied he may use Section 301 without WTO authorization. Bypassing the WTO would be quicker.

“It saves time,” says Matt Gold, a former deputy assistant US trade representative. A WTO case “would take a few years for us to bring it to a WTO panel, get a decision, then it will get appealed to the WTO appellate body. Then we get another decision. Then we have to go through another WTO process to get authorization for specific types of trade barriers. … So it can take a few years to get the WTO authorization.”

But Gold says using Section 301 without WTO authorization would leave the US government in conflict with its obligations under international law.

The White House move was applauded by technology groups, which have long complained about intellectual property theft. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation issued a statement saying “for too long China has flouted the spirit, if not always the letter of its commitments under the WTO and other agreements.”

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, said launching the investigation sends a strong signal to China that it will be held accountable if it doesn’t work with the United States to level the playing field. But he said the Trump administration needs to go further to address dumping of products such as steel. “We need to follow through with meaningful action and that means the president needs to get serious about trade enforcement, especially on steel,” Brown said.

But there are risks to the White House approach. Caroline Freund, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, says U.S. companies that try to do business with China could get hurt in several ways. “China is likely to retaliate with tariffs on their own of U.S. goods, and then U.S. companies will be further hurt in China,” she said. “It won’t lead to anything positive.”

In an editorial on Monday, the state-run newspaper China Daily said the investigation will “poison” relations.

But Freund also points out that for all of Trump’s rhetoric about China while on the campaign trail, the White House so far has been slow to take action against unfair trade practices. Trump backed off of labeling China a currency manipulator for instance, and a long promised report on steel dumping has been delayed.

She says that’s because it’s one thing to talk about steel tariffs, but imposing them hurts other U.S. manufacturers, such as automakers and appliance companies.

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Trump Administration Extends Deadline For Insurers To Decide On Obamacare Markets

President Trump at a listening session with health insurance executives at the White House earlier this year.

Aude Guerrucci/Bloomberg/Getty Images

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Aude Guerrucci/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The Trump administration is giving insurance companies an extra three weeks to decide whether to offer insurance plans through the Affordable Care Act markets, and how much to charge.

The extension comes as insurance companies wait for President Trump to decide whether he will continue to make payments to insurance companies that are called for under the Affordable Care Act but that some Republicans have opposed.

The payments — known as cost-sharing reduction payments — reimburse insurance companies for discounts on copayments and deductibles that they’re required by law to offer to low-income customers. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the payments this year would be about $7 billion.

Trump has said he may end the reimbursements, which he calls “bailouts,” and has been leaving insurers to wonder month to month about whether they will receive a check.

A White House spokesman says Trump is “working with his staff and his Cabinet to consider the issues raised by the CSR payments.”

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says it is offering the extra time so insurance companies can plan ahead in case the government decides to end the payments. In a memo Friday, the agency said many states are now requiring companies to file their rates for 2018 on the assumption that they won’t be reimbursed.

Several companies say that without the cost-sharing payments, their rates will see double-digit increases. For example, Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina says ending the payments would push its rates up 14.1 percent.

And Marc Harrison, CEO of Intermountain Healthcare, which covers 173,000 people on the ACA exchanges in Idaho and Utah, says premium increases could be “astonishing.”

Still, he says, his company will stick with the Obamacare markets. “These are our patients. We’re not going anywhere. We’re going to keep trying to figure this out.”

The HHS memo says “there have been no changes regarding HHS’s ability to make cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers.”

But it then says the agency intends to change the ACA’s risk adjustment program to compensate for the loss of cost-sharing payments.

The changes are technical and complex, but Timothy Jost, professor emeritus at Washington & Lee University’s law school, says in a Health Affairs blog that the memo just deepens the confusion.

“We still do not know if all of this is needed or not — the Trump administration has not made up its mind,” he says.

The cost-sharing payments have been at the center of a political battle over the Affordable Care Act since before President Trump took office.

House Republicans opposed to the health law sued then-President Barack Obama, saying the payments were illegal because Congress hadn’t appropriated money for them. A judge agreed but allowed the administration to continue making the payments during an appeal.

Now that Trump is in the White House, and Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act have failed, many Republicans are urging the president to continue the payments rather than undermine the health care markets.

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