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Today in Movie Culture: 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice' Viral Video, 'Steve Jobs' Parody and More

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

Viral Video of the Day:

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice continues its early viral marketing tied to Jesse Eisenberg‘s Lex Luthor Jr. with the following video announcing LexCorp’s new operating system (via /Film):

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Movie-Related Medical Devices of the Day:

Yesterday, Open Bionics unveiled three new designs for its prosthetic arms for children. As you can see below, they’re all based on Disney properties, Iron Man, Frozen and Star Wars (via Josh Lincoln Dickey and Gizmag):

Movie Parody of the Day:

Steve Jobs isn’t so much the butt of the joke in the below movie spoof from Conan so much as it’s the inspiration for Dell Computers to be the butt of the joke (via /Film):

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

Just as we’re hearing news of the Ant-Man sequel (Ant-Man and the Wasp), here’s a look at how the first one should have begun and how it should have ended:

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 55th anniversary of the Looney Tunes animated short Hopalong Casualty, starring Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner and directed by Chuck Jones. Watch it in full below.

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Movie Science of the Day:

For Nerdist, Kyle Hill breaks down when we’ll make our first trip to Mars, so then people won’t be so dumb for thinking The Martian is based on a true story:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Quentin Tarantino‘s crash-zooms are all compiled in a very disorienting supercut by Jorge Luengo for One Perfect Shot. Click on the screenshot below to watch it.

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows us 24 reasons Toy Story and Small Soldiers are the same movie:

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Cosplay of the Day:

That Jack Sparrow on the left below looks like Johnny Depp, but it’s actually the same person as the woman on the right. See a video of her transformation here (via KamiKame).

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend marks the 60th anniversary of the release of the popular musical Oklahoma! Watch the original trailer below.

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'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Toy Reveal: Han Solo's New Look and More

Movies.com, the ultimate source for everything movies, is your destination for new movie trailers, reviews, photos, times, tickets + more! Stay in the know with the latest movie news and cast interviews at Movies.com.

Copyright © 2015 FANDANGO MOVIES.

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Today in Movie Culture: Honest 'Aladdin' Trailer, Make Your Own 'Star Wars' Kylo Ren Costume and More

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

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Getting a jump on its 25th anniversary (in two years), Honest Trailers wishes parodic harm Disney‘s Aladdin:

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

In honor of a new Robert Zemeckis movie (The Walk), here’s a bunch of trivia about Who Framed Roger Rabbit:

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Cosplay of the Day:

“Sithboy” is the inspired cosplay that mashes Darth Maul of Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace and the title hero of Hellboy (via Geek Tyrant):

Star Wars Fan Build of the Day:

CineFix shows us how to make our own Kylo Ren costume and lighsaber from Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Just in time for New York Comic-Con or Halloween or whatever.

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Back to the Future Fan Build of the Day:

This Back to the Future-inspired Delorean time machine golf cart would be great for when the McFlys are on the links and want a literal do-over (via Geek Tyrant):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Delphine Seyrig peels potatoes as the title character in the feminist film classic Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles. Director Chantal Akerman died yesterday, reportedly having committed suicide.

Filmmaker in Focus:

Watch a three-minute retrospective supercut of David Fincher‘s movies (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Super Duper Supercut of the Day:

Here’s a tough game: see how many of the movies you can name in this video of supposedly one million frames. It’s a collection of all the movies its editor has seen in his life (via Live for Films):

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Movie Trope of the Day:

Movie characters are very often interrupted when they’re about to kiss, especially if it’s for the first time. Here’s a collection of such moments, from Spider-Man 2, Shrek and more:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Meet the Parents. Watch the original trailer for the comedy, which stars Robert De Niro and Ben Stiller, below.

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A Body, Transformed

The image of former Guantanamo detainee Mohammed El Gharani is projected onto what Laurie Anderson calls a "film sculpture" in her multimedia work Habeas Corpus.

The image of former Guantanamo detainee Mohammed El Gharani is projected onto what Laurie Anderson calls a “film sculpture” in her multimedia work Habeas Corpus. James Ewing/Park Avenue Armory hide caption

itoggle caption James Ewing/Park Avenue Armory

The musician and multimedia artist Laurie Anderson has long made America one of her great themes; her panoptic, early ’80s magnum opus was titled United States, and her work has shown enduring fascination, and disquiet, with the way our national culture conducts itself. But Habeas Corpus, a multimedia work and concert presented at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City Friday, Oct. 2 through Sunday, Oct. 4, was remarkable even by her own standards. Created in collaboration with Mohammed El Gharani, a former Guantanamo prisoner released from the notorious facility in 2009, the piece interrogates our country’s questionable actions through the power of storytelling. It shows how stories told by governments, and those we tell ourselves, can imprison — but also how they can liberate.

El Gharani’s story, as presented in the piece (and explicated by Anderson in a recent essay) is roughly this: Born in Chad, he was captured in a Pakistani mosque at age 14, his apparent crime was being in the wrong place at the wrong time. He wound up in Guantanamo on charges that were later deemed to be based on dubious testimonies, and spent over seven years imprisoned there, subjected to torture, beatings and solitary confinement. Then the charges were suddenly dismissed and he was freed, with scant explanation and no apology. (The human rights organization Reprieve secured El Gharani’s release, and connected him with Anderson.)

In Habeas Corpus, El Gharani’s live video image was beamed from an unspecified location in West Africa into the Park Avenue Armory, where it was projected for roughly seven hours each day on a huge white “film sculpture,” as Anderson calls it, approximating the size and form of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. As the program text noted, the literal definition of habeas corpus, the legal term for a person’s protection against unlawful imprisonment, is “you shall have the body.” The installation does just that — albeit digitally.

Part of the piece’s subversive power is the fact that, as a former Guantanamo prisoner, El Gharani is barred from entering the U.S. regardless of his innocence. Encountering Mohammed’s image in the huge, vaulted space of the Armory’s Drill Hall, once the site of U.S. military exercises, is chilling. He sits silently, in a t-shirt, slacks and fresh Brooks running shoes, looking like any young man anywhere, largely motionless and expressionless but for the occasional smirk or idle motion – thumb-twiddling, or the shifting of hands from thighs to belly – conjuring something of what solitary confinement might feel like. His body floats in the darkness, glowing, the only other light coming from a massive disco ball, suggestive of various stilled celebrations, and in one corner (the piece’s sole uncertain gesture) a projection of what seemed to be cut-up fragments of El Gharani’s story.

Mohammed’s image breaks silence once each hour, when he goes off-camera in West Africa, and is replaced by his own pre-recorded mirror-image, recounting his tale in a remarkably matter-of-fact tone. The only other sounds in the hall come from another kind of sculpture: Six stationary electric guitars and amplifiers which belonged to Anderson’s late husband, Lou Reed, emit a generative, steadily-modulated drone (reminiscent of Reed’s notorious 1975 LP Metal Machine Music) controlled by sound artist Stewart Hurwood, sporadically broken by bursts of static and ambient elements, including wind and distorted surveillance audio. (At one point towards the end of Friday’s viewing hours, a lone trumpeter moved through the hall, issuing plaintive notes.) The soundtrack is menacing and majestic, somber and strong, furious yet beautiful – like anger transmogrified into a wary, scarred bliss.

Two side room exhibits were footnotes to the main piece. In one, El Gharani straightforwardly recounts the narrative of his ordeal on a standard video screen. In the second room, a doubled miniature version of the drill hall sculpture presents a video loop of Anderson and her dog seated side by side, as Anderson tells a story involving her memories of September 11, 2001 (her Manhattan studio is a short walk from the site of the twin towers). The scale felt like a playful comment on the artist’s effort to minimize her presence in El Gharani’s story. At the same time, the accounts connected the lives of the two collaborators in the world beyond artwork, where the events of September 11th continue to resonate.

Laurie Anderson and her ensemble perform during the concert portion of Habeas Corpus on Friday, Oct. 2.

Laurie Anderson and her ensemble perform during the concert portion of Habeas Corpus on Friday, Oct. 2. Stephanie Berger/Park Avenue Armory hide caption

itoggle caption Stephanie Berger/Park Avenue Armory

Anderson’s monologue is an excerpt from Heart Of A Dog, her breathtakingly poetic and elegiac film about death, love and loss to be released this month. After what appeared to be a period of low ebb before and after the death of her husband (a central figure in Heart Of A Dog, although his name is never spoken), Anderson is experiencing a remarkable creative surge. Habeas Corpus, Heart Of A Dog, with its forthcoming soundtrack recording and Landfall, her recent multimedia piece with the Kronos Quartet, are among the most potent works of her career. There’s a hard new clarity in her vision, and maybe a new impatience, with flickers of anger and sorrow where there was once an arched eyebrow. Credit the wisdom of age and experience, or the demands of the historical moment.

All of these were on display during Friday night’s evening concert and “dance party.” Anderson is best known as a musician, and in addition to an extended abstract piece with collaborators Merrill Garbus (of the avant-pop project tUnE-yArDs), and Shazad Ismaily, she performed “O Superman,” the unlikely semi-hit single that, back in 1981, ushered her from the galleries and lofts of the art scene into the pop world. A haunting song whose electronic arrangement and processed vocals still sound futuristic, its lyrics have taken on new resonance since the World Trade Center attacks. Intoning the lines “here come the planes / they’re American planes” from behind a small sound console, imploring a mother to hold her in her “military arms,” there was less wryness, more world-weariness to her tone. As Anderson has said of the song, it was not predicting the future, merely describing the present. Sadly, that remains the case.

To cap the evening, Anderson’s ensemble segued seamlessly from a freeform section into a beat-driven set by the Syrian electro-pop artist Omar Souleyman. It was, however, an awkward mood shift, with Souleyman, speaking little English, hoping to spur the audience to dance, to shift their attention from head to body. You couldn’t fault the impulse: What, after all, signifies freedom and the resilience of the human spirit more profoundly than dancing? Eventually the crowd thinned, and the music had its desired effect on the holdouts, who swiveled hips and clapped along in the shadow of Anderson’s towering sculpted screen, which, sans video projection, loomed like a huge ghost.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Jaws 19' Trailer, Tom Hiddleston Does His De Niro For De Niro and More

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

Fake Trailer of the Day:

Along with all the other ways fans and brands are celebrating the 30th anniversary of Back to the Future combined with the actual date Doc, Marty and Jennifer travel to in 2015 in Back to the Future Part II, Universal created a fake teaser trailer for Jaws 19 (via Screen Crush):

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Celebrity Impressions of the Day:

While appearing on The Graham Norton Show with, among others, Robert De Niro, Tom Hiddleston did his impressions of Christopher Walken, Al Pacino and, yes, De Niro — the latter two in a one-man redo of scenes from Heat (via Variety):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

Check out the ultimate Disneyfied version of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, featuring characters from Peter Pan, Robin Hood, Aladdin, The Lion King, Frozen, Pinocchio and more (via Geek Tyrant):

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Speaking of Disney cartoons, today is the 80th anniversary of the release of the animated short Music Land, a classic of Walt Disney‘s Silly Symphonies series. Watch it in full below.

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Cosplay of the Day:

Watch a video of the best Hulkbuster-armored Iron Man cosplay ever, featuring working lights and lasers. See another video on its making at Fashionably Geek.

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Do you recognize the young woman pictured below? That’s a very young Kate Winslet, who celebrates her 40th birthday today, in her first screen role, on the 1991 BBC series Dark Season.

Video Essay of the Day:

Looking at films from the dawn of cinema up through this year’s Inside Out, this essay illustrates the importance of color in storytelling (via Live for Films):

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Supercut of the Day:

In honor of the release of The Martian, here’s a supercut of movie characters getting their asses to Mars:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Also in honor of The Martian, here’s an in-depth half-hour interview with Ridley Scott (via Filmmaker IQ):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of the release of Philip Kaufman‘s Henry & June, which marked the debut of the NC-17 rating. Watch the original trailer for the biopic, which would go on to earn an Oscar nomination for its cinematography, below. And notice that it doesn’t feature any mention of the MPAA’s new creation.

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Best of the Week: New 'Back to the Future' Film Teaser, Fantastic Fest Reviews and More

The Important News

Franchise Fever: Christopher Lloyd stars in a new Back to the Future short. Trainspotting 2 will shoot next year. Lionsgate wants a Cabin in the Woods sequel. The Enchanted sequel will be titled Disenchanted. Watchmen might become a TV series. Sony is making an animated Ghostbusters movie.

Marvel Madness: Kevin Feige gave updates on Captain America, Spider-Man and more. And an update on Captain Marvel.

Casting Net: John Goodman joined Kong: Skull Island. Ellar Coltrane joined The Circle. Nat Wolff will star in Death Note.

New Directors/New Films: Matthew Vaughn will direct the spy movie I Am Pilgrim. Guillermo del Toro is making a small movie next.

Remake Report: Paramount is remaking The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.

First Looks: Matthew McConaughey in Gold.

Box Office: Adam Sandler is box office gold in animated form.

Distribution Deals: Drafthouse will re-release the previously obscure movie Dangerous Men.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: The Revenant, Spectre, The Assassin, The Forest, The Choice, Love, Doc Brown Saves the World and Burnt.

Watch: An Avengers: Age of Ultron deleted scene. And an Avengers: Age of Ultron gag reel and honest trailer. And Avengers: Age of Ultron summed up with Lego.

See: Chris Evans and Hayley Atwell star in a couple’s marriage proposal.

Watch: Hours of NASA video answering questions about The Martian.

See: What a Spider-Gwen movie starring Emma Stone would look like.

Watch: A Nancy Meyers movie parody starring Jason Mitchell.

See: Matt Damon recreate his movie career in eight minutes.

Watch: The first and last shots of movies side by side.

See: Every Jean-Claude Van Damme kill through his movie career.

Watch: A video showing how film scores affect our brains.

See: A bold new Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 poster. And classic horror movie posters come to life.

Our Features

Fantastic Fest Reviews: The Wave, Man Vs. Snake, Green Room and Tom Hiddleston in Crimson Peak and High-Rise.

Monthly Movie Release Guide: See everything arriving in theaters, VOD and more in October.

Interview: Drew Goddard on The Martian.

Virtual Reality Guide: The Walk VR experience is the best we’ve seen yet.

Upcoming Movie Guide: All you need to know about Revenant.

Horror Movie Guide: All the latest horror news and trailers.

Comic Book Movie Guide: What the DC movies could learn from the Batman: Arkham video games.

R.I.P.: Remembering the reel-important people we lost in September.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week. And here’s our guide to everything new streaming on Netflix this month. And here’s our guide to everything new to HBO Now.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' Summed Up in Lego, the Medieval Justice League and More

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

Movie Summary of the Day:

You could buy Avengers: Age of Ultron on Blu-ray this week, or you could just watch the sequel summed up in two minutes in Lego form:

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Murderous Montage of the Day:

See every kill made by a Jean-Claude Van Damme character in this career-spanning supercut (via Geek Tyrant):

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Custom Toys of the Day:

Hopefully Warner Bros. has room in its busy release schedule to produce a movie based on these custom action figures of medieval Dungeons and Dragons-like versions of the Justice League (Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Flash and Green Lantern) by artist Sillof (via Geek Tyrant):

Cocktail of the Day:

Drunk Disney Libation Studios shows us how to make a custom cocktail themed to The Little Mermaid:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Julie Andrews, who turns 80 years young today, with the real Maria von Trapp on the set of The Sound of Music.

Movie Science of the Day:

In a synergetic promotion of the Nerdist-presented horror movie The Hive, Kyle Hill explains the science of collective intelligence, aka “the hive mind”:

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 60th anniversary of the classic Merrie Melodies animated short Knight-Mare Hare, directed by Chuck Jones and starring Bugs Bunny as a “New York wabbit in King Arthur’s Court.” Watch the cartoon in full below.

Cosplay of the Day:

Is that Animal from The Muppets riding a motorcycle or the best cosplay-like helmet of all time (via You Had One Job)?

Supercut of the Day:

Considering how long people had to make do with listening to fights on the radio, this supercut of reaction shots to a boxing match we can’t see is still a step up (via Live for Films):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 35th anniversary of David Lynch‘s The Elephant Man. Watch the original trailer below.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'RoboCop' Meets 'Paul Blart Mall Cop,' a 'Twin Peaks' Video Game and More

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

Video Essay of the Day:

Jacob T. Swinney is back with another showcase of first and last shots from movies, including recent releases like Mad Max: Fury Road and Ex-Machina, placed side by side:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Quentin Tarantino’s foot fetish is addressed in this supercut of shots of feet from his movies (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

James Dean wearing glasses and showing off his lasso skills on the set of Giant, which was still in production when the actor died in a car crash on this day 60 years ago.

Movie Viewing Method of the Day:

Without actually acknowledging the slang term “Netflix and chill,” which doesn’t quite involve watching a movie through the service, Netflix has basically supported the concept with this DIY video for how to build “The Netflix Switch,” which is meant to help you in your uninterrupted “movie watching” (via /Film):

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Movie Parody of the Day:

When you cross RoboCop and Paul Blart Mall Cop it sort of ends up just being Chopping Mall, which is fine by us (via Geek Tyrant):

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 80th anniversary of the classic Ub Iwerks animated short Balloon Land, aka Mr. Pincushion Man. Watch the brilliant cartoon in full below.

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Fan Art of the Day:

This drawing of Edward Scissorhands would make a great special release poster or Blu-ray artwork someday (via Fan Art):

Star Wars of the Day:

This is literal bathroom humor, but this toilet paper dispenser that sounds like Chewbacca is actually pretty funny (via You Had One Job):

Use the force. (Via http://t.co/qqFdHl8S0S) pic.twitter.com/omyG7Rdbkx

— You had one job (@_youhadonejob) September 30, 2015

Video Game of the Day:

In tribute to actress Catherine E. Coulson, who passed away this week, Dangerous Minds reminds us of the Twin Peaks dance video game, “Fire Dance With Me,” a screen cap of which you can see below. Play it here.

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 10th anniversary of the theatrical release of Serenity, which hoped to carry the canceled show Firefly into a movie franchise. Here’s the original trailer for the sci-fi cult favorite:

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' Gag Reel and Honest Trailer and More

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

Bloopers of the Day:

With the superhero sequel hitting DVD and Blu-ray this week, Marvel released another gag reel from the making of Avengers: Age of Ultron (via /Film):

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

Also in anticipation of its home video release, Honest Trailers smashes Avengers: Age of Ultron:

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Movie Science of the Day:

In anticipation of The Martian, here’s a video featuring everything wrong with Christopher Nolan‘s Interstellar, and it features Neil deGrasse Tyson so it’s legit in its science:

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Celebrity Activism Triumph of the Day:

Actually, it’s not the triumph we’d like to showcase so much as the reaction to the triumph. Congratulations on your awesome victory dance, Emma Thompson!

One hell of a victory dance… Emma Thompson reacts to Shell abandoning its Alaska Arctic drilling @GreenpeaceUK pic.twitter.com/lhbU4TDURv

— Jack Leather (@jleather) September 29, 2015

Fan Build of the Day:

For anyone who has ever wanted an ooze canister like the ones in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze, the DIY Pro Shop shows you how to make one:

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Filmmaking Lesson of the Day:

For RocketJump Film School, Joey Scoma employs clips from Dr. Strangelove, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and more movies to demonstrate how to create an “oh f**k!” moment using editing:

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Supercut of the Day:

Camera movement can also create a similar exclamation through the use of a push in on a close-up, especially with a hero or villain as in these collected moments:

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Star Wars of the Day:

Mashable parodies fan theories in this silly uninformed analysis of the Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailer:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, here’s some great sexy Ewok cosplay to help usher in Halloween time, which for many is really just about dressing up as sexy versions of things (via Hot ‘N Geeky):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the initial limited release of Christopher Guest‘s Best in Show. Watch the original trailer for the hilarious mockumentary below.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Spider-Gwen' Movie Trailer, Jason Mitchell Stars in a Nancy Meyers Parody and More

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

Dream Movie of the Day:

Vulture imagines what a Spider-Gwen movie would look like, with Emma Stone reprising her role of Gwen Stacy from the Amazing Spider-Man movies and some voiceover borrowed from Easy A.

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Filmmaker Parody of the Day:

Funny or Die inserted Straight Outta Compton‘s Jason Mitchell into the trailer for The Intern for a parody of Nancy Meyers movies:

Fan Art of the Day:

The below portrait of old and young Al Pacino are part of artist Fulvio Obregon’s series “Me & My Other Me.” See more at Design Taxi.

Mash-ups of the Day:

Artist Butcher Billy imagines Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman from American Psycho as a bunch of other pop culture characters. The Batman one seems pretty familiar. See them all individually and bigger at Design Taxi.

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 80th anniversary of the release of Walt Disney‘s animated short On Ice, starring Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Donald (hardly recognizable today) and Pluto. Watch it in full below.

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Cosplay of the Day:

We’ve seen mash-ups in the past of Mad Max: Fury Road and Mario Kart, so logically now here’s a cosplay mash of Furiosa and Princess Peach (via Fashionably Geek):

Star Wars of the Day:

Artist Daniel Morales Olvera mashed up Star Wars and The Walking Dead to give us zombie Stormtroopers (via Live for Films):

Supercut of the Day:

With The Walk opening in limited release this week, we have been reminded of this great supercut of the Twin Towers in movies:

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Movie Retitling of the Day:

Buzzfeed retitled Disney animated classics to be “more accurate and badass” and designed new posters for these sassy versions. Below is one of the safer for work examples, for Sleeping Beauty:

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Yesterday was the 30th anniversary of the U.S. premiere of Ran, Akira Kurosawa‘s Oscar-winning samurai film adaptation of William Shakespeare‘s King Lear. Watch the original American trailer for the epic feature below.

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