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Best of the Week: First Look at the New 'Harry Potter' Spinoff, Another 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Trailer and More

The Important News

First Look: The Harry Potter spinoff Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them dropped a whole bunch of pics.

Sequelitis: Dennis Kelly is now writing the World War Z sequel. Mark Waters will direct Bad Santa 2. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is finally sort of getting a sequel. The Lego Movie 2 will feature Doctor Who. Jurassic World 3 has been confirmed. Daniel Craig might do another James Bond movie.

Remake Report: French horror film Inside is getting an English-language remake. The Crow remake is happening again. Ricky Gervais will voice a character in the animated Blazing Saddles remake.

Casting Net: Nicole Kidman will co-star in Wonder Woman. Paul Rudd and Alexander Skarsgard will star in Duncan Jones’s Mute. Elizabeth Banks will star in Rita Hayworth With a Hand Grenade. Noomi Rapace will star in an Amy Winehouse biopic.

Video Game Movie Fever: StarCraft, Diablo and Call of Duty cinematic universes are in the works. The Witcher is headed for the big screen.

Amusement Park Plans: The Hunger Games rides are hitting theme parks starting next year.

New Directors, New Films: Damián Szifrón will direct Mark Wahlberg in The Six Billion Dollar Man.

Box Office: The Martian continues to be a huge hit in theaters.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Warcraft, In the Heart of the Sea, London Has Fallen, Alice Through the Looking Glass, The Hateful Eight, The Brothers Grimsby, Anomalisa, Concussion, Risen, Christmas Eve, 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi and Chi-Raq.

Watch: An honest trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Meet: The Star Wars fan who got to see the new movie early.

See: The best celebrity Halloween costumes.

Watch: A side-by-side comparison between Mad Max: Fury Road and the previous three movies.

See: The emotion designs that didn’t make it into Pixar’s Inside Out.

Learn: How hoverboards work.

Watch: An animated recap of the James Bond movies. And a supercut of every James Bond gadget. And some James Bond parodies.

See: Every James Bond movie statistic you need to know.

Learn: The four basics of a Paul Thomas Anderson movie.

See: This week’s best new movie posters. And new Star Wars: The Force Awakens character posters.

Watch: Iconic movie posters come to life.

Our Features

Montly Movie Guide: See our November movie calendar above.

New Movie Guide: Why you should see The Peanuts Movie.

In Memoriam: We remembered all the reel-important people we lost in October.

Comic Book Movie Guides: What other characters might we see in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2? Could we see Miles Morales’s Spider-Man on the big screen?

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: 5 reasons to love Moon.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week. And here’s our guide to all the new indie and international movies you need to see.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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Photos Emerge Of A Woman's Injuries, Allegedly Inflicted By Cowboys' Greg Hardy

Dallas Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy was arrested and charged with assaulting his former girlfriend Nicole Holder in May. He was found guilty but appealed, and then when Holder stopped cooperating, the case was dropped.

Dallas Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy was arrested and charged with assaulting his former girlfriend Nicole Holder in May. He was found guilty but appealed, and then when Holder stopped cooperating, the case was dropped. Brandon Wade/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Brandon Wade/AP

Today Deadspin published 47 graphic photos of a woman’s bruised body.

The body belongs to Nicole Holder, the site says. The man who allegedly left the bruises? Dallas Cowboys star pass rusher Greg Hardy.

The photos came to light Friday, a year and a half after Hardy was arrested and charged with assaulting Holder, his ex-girlfriend. He allegedly pushed her against a bathroom wall, threw her onto a couch containing several guns, and choked her. Hardy, who was then playing for the Carolina Panthers, was found guilty by bench trial last year, but he appealed and eventually the case was dropped when Holder stopped cooperating with the prosecutors. This week, a judge granted his request to have the incident expunged from his record.

All in all, Hardy missed the 2014 season on the NFL’s exempt list before signing a one-year, $11.3 million deal with the Cowboys in March of this year. The NFL suspended him for 10 games of the 2015 season, but the punishment was reduced to four games during arbitration.

Last month Cowboys owner Jerry Jones called Hardy a “real leader.”

There was contained outrage among some NFL fans and from talking heads like Terry Bradshaw and Katie Nolan about the fact that Hardy was back playing in the NFL, but his strength and speed on the field soon dominated the conversation.

Cue photos.

Black and blue, red and swollen, the photos of Holder’s battered body elicited a visceral reaction. Sports talk shows and social media exploded, shocked by the physical evidence. Shocked, but not surprised, because the previously known facts supported the conclusion Hardy had beaten Holder on that night in May last year. As the conversation progressed throughout the day, the same questions surfaced time and again: Why do we need these photos? If we knew Hardy had beaten Holder, what do these photos change? The answer, of course, is nothing. Nothing changes, and we shouldn’t need these photos to know that a crime was committed.

If it seems like this discussion has been had before, it’s because it has. In February 2014, Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice was arrested for assaulting his then-fiancee, Janay Palmer. He was shown on surveillance video dragging her unconscious body out of a hotel elevator. The public outrage flared up and then died down. Over the course of the summer, Rice applied to a diversionary program for first-time offenders, publicly apologized and accepted a two-game suspension from the league.

Cue video.

Released Sept. 8, 2014, the video from inside the elevator shows the strike that knocked Palmer out. The response was as swift as it was fierce. By the end of the day, Rice had been cut from the Ravens and indefinitely suspended from the league. Though his suspension was overturned, Rice will most likely never play in the NFL again. The video didn’t change our understanding of the situation, but it did change people’s reactions. Grantland’s Brian Phillips wrote this at the time:

“The Rice video transformed the public response to the assault, but it was able to do so only because we knew that it hadn’t transformed the assault itself. [NFL Commissioner] Roger Goodell, who extended Rice’s suspension indefinitely after the tape’s release, famously said that the video ‘changed everything,’ but it changed everything because it changed nothing. The tape was so powerful because it showed us that we shouldn’t have needed a tape in the first place.”

Now the question is: With photos published, will anything change for Greg Hardy? So far, it doesn’t look like it. He’s still on the team, and ESPN reports both Hardy and the Cowboys declined to comment on the release of the pictures.

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Confused Over How To Save For College? Here Are Answers

To pay for college, experts say it's impossible for most parents to save all the money they'll need. They say it's reasonable to tap a mix of resources: a 529 plan, some home equity and some student loans.
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To pay for college, experts say it’s impossible for most parents to save all the money they’ll need. They say it’s reasonable to tap a mix of resources: a 529 plan, some home equity and some student loans. ImageZoo/Corbis hide caption

itoggle caption ImageZoo/Corbis

Many American parents face a tug of war over trying to save enough for retirement and saving for college.

Some, like Lisa Carey, a 44-year-old high school history teacher in Tampa, Fla., and her husband, Peter, a minister, haven’t yet started saving for their three kids’ college education. (Carey joined NPR’s Your Money and Your Life Facebook group. If you’re on Facebook, you can join the group, too.)

“I find it a struggle to save really much at all. I think we’re doing decently well with retirement because I have a 403(b) through the school, and I’m good about contributing the maximum that they will match but we haven’t started saving for our kids’ college education, which sounds terrible,” she says.

But Carey is doing something right. If your employer offers to match money you put into your retirement plan, do that above all else.

“You should always contribute up to your match because that’s free money,” says Scott Weingold, a financial adviser who specializes in planning for college. Basically this is one of the best investments you could ever possibly make. You put thousands of dollars into your retirement account and immediately earn a 100 percent return on that investment because it’s a match. So it’s like burning free money not to take advantage of that.

FinAid, a guide to financial aid, including scholarships, loans, savings and military aid

Big Future, the College Board’s guide to affording college

College Savings, a guide to 529 college savings plans

But beyond that, are you better off putting everything you can afford into retirement savings or should a chunk of that money go into a 529 college savings plan? People wonder whether having money set aside for college hurts the family’s chance for financial aid.

“Oftentimes you hear conventional wisdom that you should save only for retirement and not save for college,” says Mark Kantrowitz, who writes books on how to pay for college. But he says for the vast majority of people, it’s good to save in a 529 plan.

“You will end up with more money for retirement if you save for college in addition to saving for retirement instead of just saving just for retirement,” Kantrowitz says.

That’s because unless you are very wealthy, if you don’t set aside money for college you or your kids will have to borrow more money. And the interest on that can get expensive — or you’ll have to pull money out of retirement savings, which is also costly.

And many people don’t understand this key point: Saving money in a 529 plan does mean colleges expect you to pay more for tuition but not very much more.

“You’re better off saving the money,” says Sandy Baum, a higher education economist with George Washington University. She says when it comes to the amount a college expects a family to pay for tuition, the parents’ income level counts up to eight times more than an asset like the money in a college savings plan.

“If you save the money, even if it’s considered as an asset, the amount that it would reduce your aid is minimal compared to the benefit you’ll get from having saved that money,” Baum says.

At the end of the day, many parents will have to use a mix of resources: a 529 plan, some home equity, some student loans. But the takeaway is it’s a good idea to sock away a bunch of money in a 529 plan.

Plus, if you have a 529 plan, you might get grandparents to chip in with extra money. There are websites to use with kids’ birthday parties so instead of getting plastic toys and junk, guests can make contributions to a college fund.

Two quick pitfalls to avoid: Make sure you put the 529 in the parents’ name, not in the grandparents’ name. The latter can hurt you in a significant way on financial aid eligibility in the following year. And watch out for big fees that gobble up your returns in a 529 or any kind of investment account.

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Supreme Court Will Hear More Religious Objections To Obamacare

The Supreme Court will hear another challenge to the Affordable Care Act about religious objections to providing contraception.

The Supreme Court will hear another challenge to the Affordable Care Act about religious objections to providing contraception. Jonathan Ernst/Reuters /Landov hide caption

itoggle caption Jonathan Ernst/Reuters /Landov

The U.S. Supreme Court justices said Friday they would hear a group of cases brought by religious hospitals, schools, and charities that object to the system devised under Obamacare to spare them from paying for birth control coverage for their employees and students.

NPR’s Nina Totenberg reports:

“To accommodate religious groups that object to contraception, the Obama administration promulgated regulations that allow religious non-profits to opt out of birth control coverage by notifying the Department of Health and Human Services of their religious objection. That in turn triggers an independent system of birth control coverage for those employees or students who want it. A variety of religious non-profits contend that the opt-out notification itself burdens their religious faith. The Obama administration counters that the refusal to notify would amount to a religious believer’s veto of the rights of others who do not hold the same beliefs.”

The decision to hear yet another challenge to the Affordable Care Act — the fourth since 2010 — follows a 2014 decision in the Hobby Lobby case, which allowed “closely held” companies to opt out of the Affordable Care Act’s provisions for no-cost prescription contraception in most health insurance if they have religious objections.

Hobby Lobby is an arts and crafts chain owned by the Green family, who are evangelical Christians. The Supreme Court validated their objection to the contraception mandate saying it violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

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Today in Movie Culture: The Real Story of 'SPECTRE,' Jar Jar's 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Character Posters and More

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

Movie Analysis of the Day:

The Onion’s review of SPECTRE argues that it’s a movie about an alcoholic named James Bond (Daniel Craig) and his sponsor, played by Christoph Waltz:

Movie Parody of the Day:

Speaking of James Bond, the character’s inability to not wreck beautiful cars he’s driving is satirized in the following sketch from Daniel Craig‘s recent appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (via /Film):

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Movie Influencer of the Day:

Mario Bava gets the spotlight in this video essay from The Film Theorists on how he influenced Guillermo del Toro‘s Crimson Peak:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Screenwriter Melissa Mathison, who died of cancer at age 65 yesterday, on the set of E.T. the Extra Terrestrial with Henry Thomas in 1981. R.I.P.

Movie Science of the Day:

For Nerdist’s Because Science, Kyle Hill explains how hoverboards (from Back to the Future Part II and now in real life) work:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Ryan Reynolds dressed as his own character, Deadpool, for Halloween and hilariously hung out with some kids dressed as X-Men characters (via Geek.com):

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Movie Poster Parodies of the Day:

Jar Jar Binks has already been thrown into the Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailers and the primary poster, so it’s essential he make his way into the new character posters, too (via The Playlist):

Filmmaker in Focus:

Jorge Luengo showases the voyeurism of Alfred Hitchock movies in his latest supercut:

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Movie Lover Fantasy of the Day:

This commercial for UK cable channel Sky Movies has us wishing we could wander into our favorite movies:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

With The Peanuts Movie opening this weekend, let’s take a look at the gang’s first full-length motion picture. Watch the original trailer for A Boy Named Charlie Brown below.

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U.S. And 11 Other Countries Sign Pact Promising To End Currency Manipulation

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew, speaking at a conference in Washington, D.C., last month, says the pact announced Thursday will hold countries that want to manipulate their currencies accountable.

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew, speaking at a conference in Washington, D.C., last month, says the pact announced Thursday will hold countries that want to manipulate their currencies accountable. Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

The United States and 11 other countries have signed an agreement aimed at discouraging currency manipulation, a practice critics say has widened the U.S. trade gap with countries such as China.

Under the agreement, countries promise to avoid “unfair currency practices and refrain from competitive devaluation.”

They also have to regularly release certain kinds of financial data, such as foreign exchange reserves and capital flows, and consult regularly about their policies.

The countries involved are the same ones included in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade pact that White House officials say will streamline regulations and eliminate tariffs throughout the Pacific Rim.

But it is not part of the TPP, largely because the other countries didn’t want it included. As a result, it’s not subject to the TPP’s enforcement provisions and critics say it’s essentially toothless.

In an e-mailed statement to NPR, Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, called the agreement “a glorified press release sent out jointly by the countries.”

But Jeffrey Schott, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told NPR the agreement gives U.S. officials new ways to combat currency manipulation, by requiring countries to be a lot more transparent about their exchange-rate policies:

“There are no guarantees in life, and this declaration is not subject to any of the dispute resolution procedures of the TPP, but it does provide a lot more information to help deal more effectively with concerns about currency manipulation.

“It’s essentially giving more tools and data for the Treasury Department to push its financial diplomacy with partner countries.”

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew told The Wall Street Journal the agreement would “work to hold parties accountable”:

“We have more tools with this joint declaration than we have under the pre-existing set of understandings.”

Currency manipulation occurs when countries artificially lower the value of their currencies, which makes their exports cheaper but hurts competitors in other countries.

China has long been accused of manipulation, although not as much in recent years, as the value of the yuan has risen. Among TPP signatories, Vietnam is sometimes accused of the practice.

Congress has made clear it sees currency manipulation as a big problem for U.S. exporters and pressed the Obama administration to address it as part of the TPP talks, as have some manufacturers, such as Ford Motor Company.

Currency manipulation has also become an issue in the presidential campaign, with Republicans such as Donald Trump vowing to take a tougher line against countries that practice it.

Democrat Hillary Clinton has said the TPP’s failure to adequately address currency manipulation was a factor in her decision to oppose it.

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Adidas Offers To Help U.S. High Schools Phase Out Native American Mascots

Adidas has pledged to help high school teams that want to change their mascots from Native American imagery. President Obama praised the effort, while the Washington football team shot back, calling the company's move hypocritical.

Adidas has pledged to help high school teams that want to change their mascots from Native American imagery. President Obama praised the effort, while the Washington football team shot back, calling the company’s move hypocritical. Christof Stache/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Christof Stache/AP

Sportswear giant Adidas announced Thursday that it would offer free design resources and financial assistance to any high schools that want to change their logo or mascot from Native American imagery or symbolism.

The company announced the initiative ahead of the Tribal Nations Conference at the White House, which Adidas executives attended.

“Sports have the power to change lives,” Adidas executive board member Eric Liedtke said in a statement. “Sports give young people limitless potential. Young athletes have hope, they have desire and they have a will to win. Importantly, sports must be inclusive. Today we are harnessing the influence of sports in our culture to lead change for our communities.”

Approximately 2,000 high schools in the U.S. use names that “cause concern for many tribal communities,” according to the company’s statement.

At the Tribal Nations Conference, Obama praised the effort by Adidas, and added that “a certain sports team in Washington might want to do that as well.”

Even before Obama’s remarks, the Washington football team had responded in an emailed statement that read:

“The hypocrisy of changing names at the high school level of play and continuing to profit off of professional like-named teams is absurd. Adidas make hundreds of millions of dollars selling uniforms to teams like the Chicago Blackhawks and the Golden State Warriors, while profiting off sales of fan apparel for the Cleveland Indians, Florida State Seminoles, Atlanta Braves and many other like-named teams. It seems safe to say that Adidas’ next targets will be the biggest sports teams in the country, which won’t be very popular with their shareholders, team fans, or partner schools and organizations.”

The team’s owner, Dan Snyder, has vowed never to change the team’s name.

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How One Woman Changed The Way People Die In Mongolia

Angie Wang for NPR

Angie Wang for NPR

Dr. Odontuya Davaasuren has one goal: to improve the way people die in Mongolia.

“My father died of lung cancer, my mother died, my mother-in-law died because of liver cancer,” she says. “Even though I was a doctor, I could do nothing.”

The feeling of helplessness, and the unnecessary pain her relatives suffered, is what Davaasuren has set out to fix. She has white hair because of it, says the family doctor and professor at the Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences in Ulaanbaatar. “It’s very hard work.”

Her efforts have earned her the title “the mother of palliative care in Mongolia.” And they’ve transformed the way people die.

In global rankings on quality of death released this fall by the Economist Intelligence Unit, Mongolia stood out. It’s number 28 on the list. “Some countries with lower income levels demonstrate the power of innovation and individual initiative,” the report noted, citing Mongolia for “rapid growth in hospice facilities and teaching programs.”

That’s no small feat, regardless of a country’s income level. Palliative care is a relatively new field. Funding tends to go toward combating infectious diseases, rather than towards easing the pain for those who have incurable illness. Hospitals might not want to consider offering hospice care, because it would simply increase the number of deaths that happen on their watch. And globally, doctors and law enforcement officers fear morphine, which happens to be one of the cheapest and most effective painkillers.

Dr. Odontuya Davaasuren, right, says that a good death is "being comfortable, being with loved people, listening to good words. Even an unconscious person listens, because hearing stops last."

Dr. Odontuya Davaasuren, right, says that a good death is “being comfortable, being with loved people, listening to good words. Even an unconscious person listens, because hearing stops last.” Courtesy Odontuya Davaasuren hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy Odontuya Davaasuren

Most Mongolians die from noncommunicable illnesses like heart disease, cancer, and diabetes. The country is huge and sparsely populated, so most people die at home. About a third of the population lives under the poverty line. The monthly salary of a nurse is around $100. But the progress on end-of-life care that Mongolia has made contrast sharply to the situation in neighboring Russia, a country with some of the most restrictive drug regulations, and where Human Rights Watch says the government has barred journalists from reporting on suicide committed by cancer patients in severe pain.

In Mongolia, as in many other countries, there used to be two options for terminally ill people on their deathbeds: stay at home or go to the intensive care unit, or ICU. A bad death, Davaasuren says, is to die in the ICU, connected to machines, alone, watching the white hospital ceiling, and getting lab tests every few hours. “In the intensive care unit, patients are swaddled by machines and tubes. It’s a stupid death. It’s a really bad death,” she says.

American surgeon and writer Dr. Atul Gawande agrees. Even in the U.S., he writes in his best-seller Being Mortal, “You don’t have to spend much time with the elderly or those with terminal illness to see how often medicine fails the people it is supposed to help. The waning days of our lives are given over to treatments that addle our brains and sap our bodies for a sliver’s chance of benefit. These days are spent in institutions — nursing homes and intensive-care units — where regimented, anonymous routines cut us off from all the things that matter to us in life.”

In the ICU, says Davaasuren, “even if all signs show that the patient will die,” all kinds of tests and treatments are given in the name of survival, even if it dims the quality of life. It used to be that the only alternative was to die at home, sometimes in pain. But a good death, says Davaasuren, is “being comfortable, being with loved people, listening to good words. Even an unconscious person listens, because hearing stops last.”

Davaasuren first learned about palliative care in Sweden in 2000.

Back then, she says, there wasn’t even terminology for palliative care in her country. She’s now the president of the Mongolian Palliative Care Society and has worked to change things.

After the conference in Sweden, she and her students visited patients with severe diagnoses and filmed their conversations. “During these visits I saw so much suffering, so many problems. Not just physical pain – psychological problems, financial problems, spiritual,” she says. A woman with two small children had such severe pain she asked to die. A man in his 30s committed suicide when he was left in unbearable pain after his allotted two-day supply of morphine was up. Families spent fortunes, she says, in search of alternative treatment and medication. “They went to Korea, went to China, looking for better treatment,” she says.

Davaasuren eventually spoke on national TV in the early 2000s about the lack of palliative care in Mongolia, saying that according to WHO recommendations Mongolia was in need of 150 palliative care beds. It had zero. “I had very strong words to the Ministry of Health,” she says.

“When I started to talk about it, many people in the Ministry of Health told me ‘What are you talking about? We have no money for living patients, why do you want to spend money for dying patients?” she says.

Bit by bit, she and her colleagues have managed to turn the tide. Davaasuren and her colleagues translated international publications on palliative care into Mongolian. A grant in 2004 from the Open Society Foundation helped them start courses for nurses and doctors. They worked to change prescription rules so that suffering patients could get cheap painkillers. She brought a hospice doctor from California and a hospice nurse from Virginia to train health workers on palliative care.

Now, poor families taking care of a terminally ill person can get about 36,000 tugrik [$18] each month from the government until the patient dies. “It’s very small but still supportive,” says Davaasuren.

“Before in Mongolia we had the wrong drug regulation,” she says. It used to be that only oncologists could prescribe morphine, and they could give a maximum of ten doses to a patient. Studies on cancer patients before 2000 found that they often died within a month after getting the painkillers – and the incorrect assumption was that the morphine killed them, says Davaasuren.

The country started importing oral morphine tablets in 2006. There is now one pharmacy in each of Mongolia’s 21 provinces with the right to distribute opioids. Before, there was only one. (Because of international regulations, the drugs have to be kept locked up and under security camera surveillance.) At least two people in each province – usually a family doctor and a nurse who are trained in palliative care – can prescribe opioids. “Now oncologists, family doctors have the right to prescribe opioids according to the patient’s needs, every seven days until death,” she says.

In 2000, writes Davaasuren, Mongolia as a whole only used two pounds of morphine a year. By 2004, it was 13 pounds. Last year, according to the Ministry of Health, the country imported a combined 48 pounds of opioid painkillers. A Mongolian company now produces morphine, codeine and pethidine and will this year start producing oxycodone.

There are about 60 beds designated for palliative care in the capital alone. Last month, the Ministry of Health signed off on plans to provide 596 palliative care beds across the country by 2017. The goal now, says Davaasuren, is to extend palliative care to non-cancer patients and to terminally ill children — and to redefine a good death as a success. “Hospitals don’t like to have palliative care patients because if patients die, it increases the death rate in their hospital,” she says. She’s working to get palliative care deaths registered outside of the hospital system.

Davaasuren continues to teach courses to medical students on topics like pain management and how to break bad news. Because sooner or later, she says, “each family will face this problem.”

“Mongolian people say we have one truth,” she adds. “If we are born on this earth, we will die one day.”

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Today in Movie Culture: Spotlight on James Bond Gadgets, the Four Rules of Paul Thomas Anderson and More

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

Supercut of the Day:

In honor of SPECTRE opening in the U.S. this weekend, here’s a compilation of every James Bond movie gadget. It takes more than 16 minutes to get through them all.

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

Think Casino Royale is the best James Bond movie? Well, here’s everything wrong with it:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Ewok babies are no longer the most adorable thing in the Star Wars Galaxy thanks to this corgi Stormtrooper (via Fashionably Geek):

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Fan-Made Poster of the Day:

Oscar Isaac‘s Poe Dameron didn’t get a Star Wars: The Force Awakens character poster today, so Vanity Fair’s Joanna Robinson made one for him, with some inspiration coming from Inside Llewelyn Davis:

Here you go, Oscar Isaac. You can play too. (I’m very good at Photoshop.) pic.twitter.com/o7qCmjKbAZ

— Joanna Robinson (@jowrotethis) November 4, 2015

Movie Analysis of the Day:

Rob Ager looks at John Carpenter‘s The Thing and argues that the alien represents spiritual evil:

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Video Essay of the Day:

For Press Play, Nelson Carvajal explores the isolated female figures of Todd Haynes movies:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Marilyn Monroe, Lauren Bacall, Humphrey Bogart and producer Nunnally Johnson attend the premiere of How to Marry a Millionaire on November 4, 1953:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Lanny Boyer, of the Fairview Film Club, breaks the genius of Paul Thomas Anderson‘s movies into four basic rules (via One Perfect Shot):

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Actor in the Spotlight:

Bryan Cranston talks about one of his favorite movies, On the Waterfront, and how it relates to his new movie, Trumbo:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

With the new James Bond movie hitting U.S. theaters this weekend, it’s time to look back at the movie that started the series. Watch the original trailer for 1962’s Dr. No, starring Sean Connery, below.

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Episode 661: The Less Deadly Catch

Alaskan fisherman David Fry and his baited hooks.
18:11

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Alaskan fisherman David Fry and his baited hooks. Jess Jiang/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Jess Jiang/NPR

Halibut fishermen in Alaska used to defy storms, exhaustion and good judgment. That’s because they could only fish in these handful of 24-hour periods. It was called the derby, and the derby made fishing the deadliest job in America.

Today on the show, the economic fix that made fishing safer. And why a lot of people hate it.

On the show we introduce you to David Fry, the owner of the Realist halibut boat.

Note: This episode contains explicit language.

Gutted halibut.

Gutted halibut. Jess Jiang/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Jess Jiang/NPR

David Fry holds a hook, hoping for some halibut.

David Fry holds a hook, hoping for some halibut. Jess Jiang/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Jess Jiang/NPR

Find us: Twitter/ Facebook/ Spotify/ Tumblr.

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