January 2, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Dunkirk' as a Silent Film, 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' as a 16-Bit Video Game and More

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

Reworked Movie of the Day:

Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk is such a marvel of visual storytelling that Like of Stories of Old reworked it so it’s a black and white silent film:

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Reworked Movie Scene of the Day:

Hopefully you’ve seen Star Wars: The Last Jedi already so now you can watch its climactic fight scene again in video game graphics form via Mr. Sunday Movies:

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Video Essay of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, Pop Culture Detective makes a case that Jedi teachings are problematic:

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End of Year Recap of the Day:

We’re into 2018 but there are still some great recaps of 2017 at the movies, such as this one for One Perfect Shot by Sleepy Skunk:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Cuba Gooding Jr., who turns 50 today, with co-star Ice Cube and writer/director John Singleton on the set of Boyz n the Hood in 1990:

Actor in the Spotlight:

Stan Lee, who just turned 95, isn’t an actor but he’s been in numerous movies. Here’s a montage of all his cameo appearances (via Geekologie):

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

One of the biggest hits for kids last year is also the one that will mess them up the most, according to this Honest Trailer for The Boss Baby:

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Bad Film Analysis of the Day:

Speaking of animated movies, here’s the “hidden meaning” of Pixar’s Up according to an alien in the future:

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Filmmaking Lesson of the Day:

This video essay from Film Radar shows how editing shapes story using Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind as an example:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This week marks the 40th anniversary of Michael Crichton’s Coma. Watch the original trailer for the classic thriller below.

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and

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Tax Changes Could Hurt Affordability At High End Of The Housing Market

The new tax law will have the biggest impact on the market for luxury homes such as this one in the Pacific Heights neighborhood of San Francisco.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

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Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Kari Pinto and her husband recently retired, and now they hope to trade Iowa — and its harsh winters — for a state with a milder climate.

But the tax bill President Trump signed into law last month has complicated their search for a new home.

“Now we just have another wrinkle in trying to determine where to go, and how much it’s going to cost us,” she says.

The new tax law is forcing a lot of people to reconsider whether they want to buy a home and how much they can pay, and that could affect housing prices, says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

By the summer of 2019, housing prices nationwide will be about 4 percent less than they otherwise would have been, Zandi predicts. Prices could actually decline for higher-priced homes in parts of the country such as the Northeast, South Florida and the West Coast, he says.

Homebuyers will take a hit in several ways.

Starting in 2018, homeowners can deduct interest on mortgages only up to $750,000. The previous cap was $1 million, with an additional $100,000 allowed for home equity loans. Interest on home equity loans and lines of credit will no longer be deductible.

Not many Americans have mortgages that large, so relatively few will be hurt, says Sam Chandan, associate dean and head of New York University’s Schack Institute of Real Estate.

The doubling of the standard deduction on federal income tax will be much more consequential, he says.

“That means that for a lot of people around the country, it just won’t make sense to itemize and take advantage of that mortgage interest deduction any longer. So that doesn’t really hurt housing directly, but it does take away one of the advantages” of homeownership, Chandan says.

For the first time, homeowners also will face a $10,000 cap on what they can deduct on their state and local taxes. Some 95 percent of homeowners fall below that amount, so the impact of the change will once again be minimal in most places, says Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors.

“We don’t anticipate too much change for the middle part of the country, where home values are fairly affordable,” Yun says.

But in high-tax states such as New York, Maryland, Connecticut and California, many more people will take a hit.

“The homeownership rate is falling in California, because of the unaffordable condition. Now, with the tax reform it will make it even more unaffordable than before,” Yun says.

In New York, 20 percent of homeowners pay more than $10,000 in property tax alone. In New Jersey, it’s 30 percent.

Capping the tax deduction will make housing more expensive to own at the upper end and could gradually drag down prices in that segment of the market in some places.

“My gut tells me that it’s going to have an impact at some level. That is, I think it’s probably going to be in the $450,000-plus range,” says Richard Wight, owner of Ward Wight Sotheby’s International Realty in Manasquan, N.J.

“It’s going to have an impact on the disposable income of some buyers, which will in fact impact their qualifications to bid higher than they otherwise might have bid,” he says.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, NYU’s Chandan notes.

Many economists have long argued that the generous mortgage-interest deductions given by the federal government amounted to an indirect subsidy to home purchases and have distorted housing prices.

“When we subsidize something, when we make it cheaper, we’re going to get more of it. And so we get more housing,” Chandan says. “That in itself has acted to increase house prices, increased the extent to which we consume housing, has directed resources in the economy into the housing sector and at least on the margin have crowded out investment in other areas.”

That means the reduction in mortgage interest and tax deductions may actually benefit the economy in the long run. But for now, some homeowners could see the value of their properties fall.

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WATCH: Hockey Player Tells Dad He Made The Olympic Team

Bobby Butler during hockey training camp when he played for the Florida Panthers in 2014.

Lynne Sladky/AP

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Lynne Sladky/AP

The U.S. unveiled its roster for the men’s Olympic hockey team on Monday.

And the joyful, emotional moment when forward Bobby Butler told his dad that he made the team was caught on video.

It shows Butler skating up to the side of the rink as his father walks in. The two men shake hands, then Butler breaks the news. His dad immediately throws his arms around him as his teammates cheer.

Watch, it will probably brighten your day:

TFW you tell your dad that you’ve made the US Olympic Team ??#TeamUSA ?? pic.twitter.com/ASoOYYXS4Z

— Milwaukee Admirals (@mkeadmirals) January 1, 2018

The 30-year-old Butler, who hails from Marlborough, Mass., skates for the American Hockey League’s Milwaukee Admirals.

Like 14 of his Olympic teammates, Butler has played on NHL teams. But this is the first Olympics in two decades that no U.S. team members are currently playing for the NHL.

That’s because the NHL announced last April that it wouldn’t pause its regular season to accommodate players who want to compete at the games in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The NHL stated that the “overwhelming majority of our clubs are adamantly opposed to disrupting the 2017-2018 NHL season.”

The decision was also about money, as NPR’s Camila Domonoske reported: “The International Olympic Committee has previously paid for players to travel to the Olympics and covered their insurance costs. But the IOC wasn’t planning to foot the bill for 2018.”

The players on the men’s final roster came from colleges, from Americans playing in Europe and from the American Hockey League. And, as SB Nation wrote, NHL stars are out and “in their place are a bunch of guys you’ve probably never heard of.”

In previous years, “USA Hockey got all its Olympic players from one league: the NHL,” according to SB Nation. “Without that option, management turned to a wide variety of sources, plucking players from leagues around the world to piece together a roster for Pyeongchang.”

The NHL’s decision created a unique opportunity for players who would not have been able to make the team otherwise. Just one member of the team, captain Brian Gionta, has played in the Olympics before.

“We really like our roster,” team general manager Jim Johannson said in a statement. “It’s a group that brings versatility and experience and includes players with a lot of passion about representing our country.”

The roster is perplexing to some hockey observers, such as Deadspin’s Barry Petchesky, who calls it “weird as hell” with little name recognition.

But it may be that the lack of prior fame makes moments like Butler’s all the more poignant.

“I know we’re a little down on the Olympics without the NHL, but these are the kinds of moments that make me so happy for the players selected,” writes ESPN hockey analyst Chris Peters. “You know they’ll battle every day for the crest on that jersey.”

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From Retirement To The Front Lines Of Hepatitis C Treatment

Dr. Ronald Cirillo helps Deborah Hatfield fill out paperwork at a Florida clinic, before running a test to see whether she has hepatitis C.

Daylina Miller/Health News Florida

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Daylina Miller/Health News Florida

When a hepatitis C treatment called Harvoni was released in 2014, Dr. Ronald Cirillo knew it was big.

“It’s the reason that dragged me out of retirement!” he says.

Cirillo specialized in treating hepatitis C for more than 30 years in Stamford, Conn., before retiring to Bradenton, Fla. During his time in Connecticut, the only available treatment for hepatitis C had terrible side effects and it didn’t work very well. It cured the viral infection less than half the time. But the newer drugs Harvoni and Solvaldi cure almost everybody, with few adverse reactions.

“In my lifetime I’ve seen it change from a horrible treatment to a manageable treatment,” Cirillo says.

His mission is finding the patients.

“The disease is out there,” he says. “My job is to get the disease in here so we can follow them and treat them.”

Cirillo joined the Turning Points free clinic last year. It’s in Bradenton, about an hour south of Tampa. The clinic primarily serves uninsured Floridians who fall into what many refer to as a coverage gap in states like Florida that chose not to expand Medicaid. Falling into this gap are people who make too much money to qualify for Medicaid in the non-expansion state, but can’t get subsidies to buy insurance on the Affordable Care Act exchanges; subsidies kick in when people make 100 percent of the poverty level — about $12,000.

Cirillo is trying to test every high-risk patient he encounters. Today, his assistant pricks a patient’s finger, and squeezes blood onto the end of a small plastic tube.

“And this little measuring tool goes into the blood and solution mix there,” Cirillo says. “We are going to time it — 20 minutes and that’s it. That’s the test.”

Nearly 30,000 people in Florida were found to have hepatitis C in 2016. It’s likely that many more are infected, because the virus can lie dormant for decades.

Cirillo spearheaded a partnership with Harvoni’s maker, Gilead Sciences, and that partnership has provided treatment to about 100 patients.

“We treat people without any insurance, that have no hope,” Cirillo says.”If you qualify to be a patient here, you’ll get tested.”

A 57-year-old patient named Patricia discovered she had hepatitis C a few months ago during a trip to the clinic. NPR is not using her last name because the virus is sometimes associated with illegal IV drug use. It can also spread via sex. Patricia says she’s not sure how she got it.

“So, just because of my age, I guess, they went ahead and tested me for it and it blew my mind that I actually had hep C,” she says. “And the levels ended up being really high.”

The virus had started to scar and inflame her liver. But she lacked insurance and a job; the $94,000 Harvoni treatment would have been out of reach if she hadn’t had financial help.

“I would never been able to afford that treatment,” she says. “Never.”

Staff at the clinic help patients fill out the complicated application from Gilead. Only patients who don’t have insurance, have been drug-free for at least six months, and who meet income requirements are eligible.

Patricia was able to get the treatment — one pill a day for 12 weeks — and will be tested again in three months to determine whether she is free from hepatitis C.

“Had they not discovered it, really, and gotten me onto the program — who knows?” she says.

The Bradenton clinic is just one of many free clinics across Florida. But it stands out in its success in treating people who have hepatitis C.

This story was produced with the USC Center For Health Journalism’s National FellowshipandKaiser Health News.

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