November 24, 2017

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The Week in Movie News: 'Captain Marvel,' 'The Incredibles 2,' 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' and More

Need a quick recap on the past week in movie news? Here are the highlights:

BIG NEWS

Jude Law will play a classic Marvel superhero: Jude Law, who was once in line to play Superman, will finally put on a superhero costume as Mar-Vell, the former version of the titular character, opposite Brie Larson in Captain Marvel. In other big superhero casting news, Lizzy Caplan will play the female lead in the X-Men movie Gambit. Read more here and here.

GREAT NEWS

More Agatha Christie mysteries are on the way: While Murder on the Orient Express isn’t a huge hit here, its success overseas is paving the way for a sequel, which will based on Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile. In other great sequel news, the next Terminator is moving forward. Read more here and here.

WAYS TO WATCH

Coco is available in theaters in Spanish: Already one of the biggest movies of all time in Mexico, Pixar’s Coco can now be seen in the US with some showings in Spanish for Hispanic audiences. Read more here.

COOL CULTURE

Star Wars: The Last Jedi in Lego: In anticipation of next month’s new Star Wars movie, Huxley Berg Studios has redone the trailer for The Last Jedi in Lego. Watch it below and see new Star Wars: The Last Jedi TV spots here.

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EXCLUSIVE BUZZ

Guillermo del Toro confirmed his Star Wars dream movie: Speaking of Star Wars, we talked to The Shape of Water director Guillermo del Toro about the movie he’d love to make if welcomed into the franchise, and it involves Jabba the Hutt’s rise to power. Read what he had to say here.

MUST-WATCH TRAILERS

The Incredibles 2 teased the long-awaited sequel: The first teaser for Pixar’s The Incredibles 2 showcases Mr. Incredible reacting to baby Jack-Jack having powers. Watch it below.

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A Wrinkle in Time showcased a fantastic adventure: The first trailer for Ava DuVernay’s A Wrinkle in Time, based on the classic children’s book, shows off the fantastical sci-fi adventure featuring young kids and an alien Oprah. Check it out below:

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12 Strong looks intense: The second trailer for 12 Strong, which stars MCU actors Chris Hemsworth and Michael Peña, reflects the intensity of the War in Afghanistan just after 9/11. Watch it here:

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How One Pop-Up Restaurant Is Fighting Stigma Against HIV/AIDS

Worldwide there are more than 30 million people living with HIV/AIDs.

Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

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Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

This month diners in Toronto were treated to a four-course meal at a pop-up restaurant called June’s. The menu included Northern Thai leek and potato soup with a hint of curry, a pasta served with smoked arctic char followed by garlic rapini and flank steak. The entire meal was topped off with a boozy tiramisu for dessert.

In addition to a mouthwatering meal, the chefs at June’s also served a message which they wore on their shirts: “Break bread. Smash stigma.”

Worldwide there are more than 30 million people living with HIV/AIDs, including more than a million in the U.S. The two-day event was a fundraiser put on by Casey House, Canada’s only stand-alone hospital for HIV/AIDS treatment. Everyone in the kitchen was HIV-positive.

After running a survey in which 50 percent of Canadians said they wouldn’t eat a meal knowingly prepared by someone with HIV, the hospital decided to put on the project.

Casey House’s CEO Joanne Simons says the point of the project was to get people talking about the stigmas that still surrounds HIV/AIDS. June’s event was a success and Simons says they plan to do another run in Toronto. Simons says they’ve also had interest globally and are “starting to work on a plan to roll this out elsewhere.”

On how the experience was for the HIV-positive staff

There were 14 people who are HIV-positive. They were led by head chef Matt Basile, who is very popular in Toronto — owns a restaurant, has food trucks. And he worked with the chefs to co-create the menu. I think that they felt very empowered to be able to speak up and to be able to offer a meal that was absolutely divine.

On questions diners had about HIV/AIDS

We were receiving many questions about, “Well, can I get HIV through food? What happens if a chef cuts their finger in the kitchen?” I mean the answer is absolutely not. There is no way to contract HIV through the preparation of food and if a chef did cut themselves during the preparation of a meal we would treat it just like we would anybody whether they were HIV-positive or not. You obviously apply first aid, you sanitize the area, you throw out any food that may have had blood on it. And also the virus has a very limited lifespan outside of the body and with the heat and the light within a kitchen environment, the virus would not survive.

On how stigmas about HIV/AIDS have changed

Because the treatment and medication support over the past decade has become a lot more effective, people can live well with this disease and live into very ripe old age. But there’s still a lot of myth and education is required. Unfortunately, for our clients, who are some of the most vulnerable in the community, they experience stigma on a day-to-day basis from their friends, family, coworkers, other health care professionals, so it’s still a very real issue.

Thomas Lu produced the audio version of this story. Wynne Davis adapted it for Web.

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Trump Names His Budget Chief As Interim Head Of Consumer Protection Agency

Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management on Friday was named acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Before resigning as director of the CFPB earlier in the day, Richard Cordray named his own interim successor.

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Updated at 10:03 p.m. ET.

President Trump on Friday announced that Mick Mulvaney would become acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, hours after outgoing director Richard Cordray tapped his own interim successor.

Earlier Friday, the CFPB announced that Cordray had named Leandra English, the agency’s chief of staff, as deputy director to take over the bureau.

Cordray, who announced he would be stepping down by the end of November, officially tendered his resignation on Friday. “It has been one of the great joys of my life to have had the opportunity to serve as the first director of the Consumer Bureau for the past six years,” he wrote in a letter to Trump.

The White House said in a statement that Mulvaney, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, will serve as acting director until a permanent director is nominated and confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

“The President looks forward to seeing Director Mulvaney take a common sense approach to leading the CFPB’s dedicated staff, an approach that will empower consumers to make their own financial decisions and facilitate investment in our communities,” the White House said.

But Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who helped craete the CFPB, tweeted Friday night that under the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, the agency’s deputy director “becomes acting director. @realDonaldTrump can’t override that.”

The Dodd-Frank Act is clear: if there is a @CFPB Director vacancy, the Deputy Director becomes Acting Director. @realDonaldTrump can’t override that. pic.twitter.com/r949ccaJAb

— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) November 25, 2017

Cordray, who has been a tough regulator of banks and other financial institutions, has been a frequent target of Republican lawmakers. In April, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, called for Cordray to be fired.

The CFPB ordered Wells Fargo to pay $185 million in fines and penalties for secretly opening accounts that had not been authorized by customers.

“We have returned almost $12 billion to more than 30 million consumers who had been cheated or mistreated by banks or other large financial companies,” Cordray wrote in his resignation letter.

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