December 13, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Ralph McQuarrie's 'Star Wars' Art Comes to Life, the Dance Sequences of 2017 and More

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

Remade Trailer of the Day:

Just in time for the release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, here’s a sweded version of the movie’s trailer from CineFix:

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Remade Movie of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, here’s an impressively made look at how Star Wars would have looked had it followed Ralph McQuarrie’s concept art more closely (via Geek Tyrant):

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Cosplay of the Day:

Fans are getting ready for the new movie by posting photos of their Star Wars cosplay. Here’s a great Rey:

I turned the Arizona desert into my own personal Ahch To for this shot of my Rey cosplay! #starwars#cosplay 1 day left… pic.twitter.com/twDOtyDEn8

— Aicosu (@Aicosplays) December 13, 2017

Cover Tune of the Day:

While we’re on the subject of Star Wars, here’s the series’ theme performed by one person with five calculators (via Geekologie):

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Movie Food of the Day:

One more Star Wars item for now, here’s Nerdy Nummies with how to make your own portion bread like Rey eats in The Force Awakens:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Steve Buscemi, who turns 60 today, is highlighted in his color-specific character promo for 1992’s Reservoir Dogs:

Filmmaker in Focus:

BFI is doing an exhaustive Ingmar Bergman retrospective next year in honor of his centenary, and here’s their trailer for the event:

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End of the Year Recap of the Day:

Montage master Jacob T. Swinney compiled the many movie dance sequences of 2017 in this year-end mashup:

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Supercut of the Day:

The Uniballer chronicles the history of the line “that’s going to leave a mark” in movies in a supercut of all its movie and TV appearances [via Geekologie]:

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Classic Movie Clip of the Day:

This week marks the 25th anniversary of the release of A Few Good Men. Here’s an iconic scene from the classic courtroom drama:

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and

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Episode 812: High Rise, Low Returns

Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. stand before the rendering of the under-construction Trump SoHo Hotel Condominium in September 2007.

Jennifer Altman/Bloomberg

Trump SoHo is a high rise in lower Manhattan, part hotel, part condos; it’s 46 stories tall, all slick grey glass. Conflicts, from zoning battles to accusations of fraud, have followed the project since it was announced during a 2006 episode of The Apprentice.

According to reports by Bloomberg News, Trump SoHo has attracted the interest of Department of Justice special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating possible ties between Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and Russian officials.

To build Trump Soho, the Trump Organization worked with a company called Bayrock, founded by the wealthy Soviet-born financier Tevfik Arif, who, among other things, owned a chromium plant in Kazakhstan. Questions also surround another major player in the project, Felix Sater, who has a criminal history that includes stabbing a man during a bar fight, and pleading guilty to a securities fraud scheme that involved the mafia.

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HealthCare.gov Enrollment Ends Friday. Sign-Ups Likely To Trail Last Year's

Isabel Diaz Tinoco and Jose Luis Tinoco had some questions for the Miami insurance agent who helped guide them in signing up for a HealthCare.gov policy at the Mall of the Americas in November.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

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Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Friday is the last day to enroll in a health insurance plan through the federal government’s insurance exchange, HealthCare.gov.

And in a little office park in Northern Virginia, Brima Bob Deen is dealing with the rush.

He is the president of a church-sponsored job training center called Salvation Academy. But this time of year, he acts mostly as an enrollment counselor for Affordable Care Act health plans.

And this week, his calendar is full.

“Every year when you get close to the end, that’s when you have a lot of people come in,” he says.

Deen has stopped allowing people to stand in line outside his office and instead now requires them to make an appointment. That way, he says, he can give them his full attention, rather than being distracted by impatient people waiting.

As we sit to talk, a client calls with an update. The man had been rejected by the HealthCare.gov system because of issues with his email. He tells Deen that his son has helped him resolve the problem.

“Yesterday I have a client and she has difficulty in choosing a plan based on her tax credits and her qualifications,” Deen says. “She has this bunch of plans — there’s silver, there’s gold, and she’s just confused.”

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As of Sunday, about 4.7 million people had enrolled in a health plan and more than a million of them were new customers. That’s about 650,000 more than signed up in the first six weeks of last year, according to Lori Lodes, who ran outreach for HealthCare.gov during the Obama administration and is now leading an effort called Get America Covered.

“We are seeing record demand,” Lodes says. “People want to get health coverage, and people are finding affordable coverage when they actually shop and sign up.”

“The problem is that the enrollment period is cut in half,” she adds.

Friday is the deadline, at least for people buying insurance through the federal marketplace. Several states run their own exchanges and those enrollment periods usually last longer.

The Department of Health and Human Services earlier this year cut the enrollment period, arguing that the shortened period would likely reduce the number of people who buy insurance only when they get sick. And the agency also cut the budget for outreach and advertising for HealthCare.gov by 90 percent.

Trump administration officials declined requests for an interview on this year’s changes to enrollment. But a spokesman says the HealthCare.gov website and call centers are working smoothly and handling the final week’s volume.

Lodes’ group has been enlisting big names to help drum up awareness, including a YouTube video featuring West Wing actors Martin Sheen and Bradley Whitford.

“We are both here to remind you about the Affordable Care Act,” they say. “And here’s what you need to know. You gotta sign up!”

Former President Barack Obama has been on Twitter reminding people to enroll.

“It’s up to all of use to spread the word. Sign up through this Friday,” he tweeted.

Just got off a call to thank folks who are working hard to help more Americans across the country sign up for health coverage. But it’s up to all of us to help spread the word: Sign up through this Friday at https://t.co/ob1Ynoesod. https://t.co/8TYpLCestp

— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) December 11, 2017

And earlier this week, comedian Jimmy Kimmel gave HealthCare.gov a plug on his show.

“Obamacare is not dead,” he said, while holding his son, who recently underwent surgery, on his hip. “It’s very much alive. Millions of people qualify for a reduced rate or even totally free plans.”

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Remembering Bruce Brown, Whose Search For The Perfect Break Redefined Surfing

Bruce Brown, seen in 1963, attempts to balance a mounted camera on his board while catching a wave. The man behind the seminal 1966 surfing documentary The Endless Summer died Sunday at his home in Santa Barbara, Calif., at the age of 80.

Bob Bagley/Bruce Brown Films via AP

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Bob Bagley/Bruce Brown Films via AP

Updated at 5:48 p.m. ET

Writing on June 16, 1966, just one day after the film The Endless Summer finally got a wide release, The New York Times remarked on its creator’s “courage — some might say foolhardiness.” For years, he struggled to convince film distributors that even people who had never seen a beach before would want to see his surfing film.

And Bruce Brown was right.

On Sunday, more than half a century since The Endless Summer hit big screens across America, Brown died at the age of 80 in Santa Barbara, Calif. He leaves behind a film that defined surfing for a worldwide audience and, after a slew of earlier big-screen misrepresentations, finally did so on the sport’s own terms.

There had already been a surfing boom in Hollywood by the mid-1960s, to be sure, but the surfers they featured rarely failed to be flimsy depictions of no-goodniks or ninnies — and rarely failed to frustrate actual surfers. Then, Brown’s film came along.

“What Bruce did, and what nobody has done since, was to square the circle,” Matt Warshaw, author of The History of Surfing, told The New York Times. “He was able to present surfing as it really is, to non-surfers.”

Endless Summer is 50-something years old now,” Warshaw explained to Surfer magazine earlier this year, “and every year that goes by, it’s harder to remember the degree to which Bruce broke the laws of entertainment physics by managing to please and impress both his core audience and the general public.”

Bruce Brown readies his camera in this undated photo.

Bob Bagley/Bruce Brown Films via AP

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Bob Bagley/Bruce Brown Films via AP

The documentary, which featured two of Brown’s friends on a round-the-globe quest to find the perfect wave, was — as Ian Buckwalter wrote for NPR — “part surfing film, part travelogue, occasionally even anthropological study and wildlife film, but ultimately it visually taps into the wanderlust that sends us to far-flung beaches in search of an escape from life that we can’t find at home.”

It was shot on a shoestring budget of $50,000 and destined to earn more than $30 million. But it was by no means his first film.

“I started off when I was 14, with an 8-mm camera taking pictures of surfing to show my mom,” he told the skateboard company Dusters California in a 2014 interview.

He enlisted in the Navy after high school in the 1950s, drew a dream assignment aboard a submarine in Hawaiian and used his 8-mm camera to film home surfing movies in his down time. After his discharge, he would show the movies at small venues in Southern California for the price of a quarter, until a local surfboard manufacturer put up a few thousand dollars for him to produce a whole feature in Hawaii, Slippery When Wet.

What followed was a series of movies (one every year, in fact) that would get a limited release and were attended mostly by other surfers. But even these small-scale pictures made an impact. In fact, his 1961 film Surfing Hollow Days lays claim to its own corner of surfing history. It includes the first footage ever shot of surfers riding arguably the world’s most famous break, and even coined its name: the Banzai Pipeline off Oahu, Hawaii.

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But it was The Endless Summer that caught the world’s attention, at least eventually.

Prospective distributors were deeply skeptical about a beach film’s ability to draw audiences far from the beach. So Brown and his associates pursued a crazy idea to show the film about as far from the beach as they could get: Wichita, Kansas. The Inertia, an outdoors sports news site, sums up how the stunt “has become part of the movie’s lore”:

“Wichita was slammed with a huge snowstorm that winter and icicles dangled from the marquee of the Sunset Theater that bore the name of the film in February 1966. [Promoter R. Paul] Allen feared a flop, but beneath the frosty sign that first night stretched a long line of Kansans, hopping up and down to stay warm while waiting to watch the adventures of Robert August and Mike Hynson on the big screen. The movie sold out two straight weeks. Distributors in New York still weren’t impressed, but the movie’s success in the middle of winter, in the middle of America, convinced Brown and Allen to keep fighting, and they rented out a theater in Manhattan and finally got the buzz they needed to turn the film into a $30 million behemoth.”

“I put everything I had on the line,” Brown told the Los Angeles Times in 1991. “If it wouldn’t have worked, it would have been the ball game.”

The immortal film poster for The Endless Summer, which you may recognize from New York’s Museum of Modern Art, not to mention college dorm room walls across the country.

Monterey Media Inc.

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Monterey Media Inc.

But it did work. Shortly after the film hit the big screen on a wide scale, it became a cultural icon, one so recognizable that even its movie poster is now in the collection of New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Brown was eventually enshrined in surfing’s Hall of Fame, and his film was added to the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry, which selects works for their cultural and historic importance to the U.S.

Brown would go on to earn an Oscar nomination for his documentary on motorcycle riders, On a Sunday. And after a long retirement he even returned in the early ’90s to release a sequel to his seminal surfing film. That sequel was co-written with his son Dana, who went on to craft documentaries in his own right, such as 2003’s Step into Liquid.

Still, it is The Endless Summer that defines the elder Brown’s legacy as a filmmaker and an ambassador for the sport he loved. And as soon as news of his death surfaced publicly, emotional tributes flowed in from some of the surfing world’s living legends — all-time greats such as Kelly Slater and Stephanie Gilmore, neither of whom had even been alive when the movie hit theaters.

“Thank you for showing us the world as you saw it,” Slater said on Instagram. “We need more like you. On to the other side. I hope to bump into you again in some other place and time.”

Ultimately, Brown says it was less his work as a filmmaker than his love of surfing that defined him.

“I had no formal training,” he told Dusters. Before heading to Hawaii to film his first full-length feature, “I got in the plane with a book on how to make movies. It was a real thin book, too.

“I had no interest in cameras other than surfing,” he added. “I just wanted to take pictures of me and my buddies surfing — you know, just to show people.”

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