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Today in Movie Culture: Steven Spielberg's Universal Studios Tour, 'Fantastic Four' Franchise Parody and More

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

Studio Tour of the Day:

Steven Spielberg guides us on a fascinating tour of the Universal Studios backlot, with focus on his history there and the remaining sets from his movies (via /Film):

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Superhero Franchise Parody of the Day:

The Fantastic Four face their greatest nemesis, the Fox studio executive, in this sad animated parody from Dorkly:

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Experiment of the Day:

Vanity Fair had people describe criminal characters from Pulp Fiction, Heat, and Pineapple Express to a forensic sketch artist to see how well he’d draw them:

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Casting Interpretation of the Day:

With Kellan Lutz rumored to be up for He-Man in Masters of the Universe, here’s BossLogic’s depiction of what that could look like from a few months ago (via Twitter):

Fan Art of the Day:

Did you love the otters in Finding Dory? Then you’ll love the papercraft tribute to the adorable characters shown being made here:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Ruth Warrick, who was born on this date 100 years ago, shares the frame with Orson Welles for a publicity still from Citizen Kane:

Industry Craftsman of the Day:

In the latest Academy Originals showcase, meet makeup effects artist Howard Berger, who won an Oscar for The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Jorge Luengo put together a supercut of Martin Scorsese’s close-up shots and it’s a collage of time, money, drugs, guns, religion, and art:

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Production Company Celebration of the Day:

Kartemquin Pictures, one of the most notable producers of documentaries in America (including Hoop Dreams) turned 50 this year. Here’s a great anniversary highlight reel (via Indiewire):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the releaes of Spielberg’s A.I. Artificial Intelligence. Watch the first teaser for the sci-fi film below.

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Art House Theater Day: It's Like Free Comic Book Day, But for Movies

For movie fans, every Friday is like a holiday focused on celebrating cinema. And some Wednesdays. And Thursday nights. Tuesdays are also special occasions because that’s when films release on DVD, Blu-ray, and digital platfforms. Then there’s Oscar night, any film festival opening, and plenty more moments for our thing to be the biggest thing. But we’ll still take another more specific opportunity to acknowledge and champion our beloved pasttime of moviegoing and viewing.

This fall, such a time, and with it such an event, is going to happen, with the inaugural Art House Theater Day is scheduled for Saturday, September 24. As Birth.Movies.Death notes, it’s basically the cinephile’s equivalent of Free Comic Book Day and Record Store Day. And like those annual occasions, it’s also about small businesses and honoring them and their wares with essential patronage. There will, of course, be giveaways and featured attractions, including exclusive screenings, and more.

Details are forthcoming regarding what you’ll find at which locations — and there should be more participating locations announced in the next couple months — but at the moment there are 160 indie/arthouse theaters involved, including all of the Alamo Drafthouse locations. One thing you can look forward to at all participating cinemas is an advance preview screening of the new documentary Danny Says, about music industry legend Danny Fields. The doc doesn’t officially open until September 30.

For now, you can find a map and list of the cinemas on the Art House Theater Day website, where there will also be other goodies and more info posted throughout the lead-up to the event.

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Today in Movie Culture: Deadpool Hijacks 'X-Men' Trailer, Realistic 'Independence Day' Aftermath and More

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

Movie Promo of the Day:

Watch this Japanese trailer for X-Men: Apocalypse all the way through for a special bonus bit starring Deadpool, crashing the spot to promote his own movie’s release (via The Wrap):

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Real-Life Superhero of the Day:

Speaking of X-Men, we recently saw a guy who turned himself into a real-life Iceman. Now check out a guy trying to be a real-life Cyclops (via Geekologie):

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Weird Movie Tribute of the Day:

1980s movies The NeverEnding Story, The Karate Kid, and The Goonies get a strange homage set to the tune of 1990s one-hit wonder Crash Test Dummies in this catchy video (via Geek Tyrant):

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Casting Depiction of the Day:

Not that Henry Cavill has just been cast as Superman, but rumor has it the character will have long hair in Justice League so here’s BossLogic’s depiction of what that could look like (via Twitter):

Alternate Ending of the Day:

Independence Day: Resurgence shows us one 20-year aftermath of the events of Independence Day. Here’s a lenghty theory of what would really have happened after aliens wiped out most of the planet (via Reddit):

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

In honor of Michael Bay’s The Rock turning 20 this summer, here are some things you may not know about the action movie classic:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

J.J. Abrams, who turns 50 today, shares a scene with Harrison Ford in 1991’s Regarding Henry, one of the first movies he wrote:

Trilogy Tribute of the day:

See recurrences in Richard Linklater’s three Before films in this triptych of scenes played side by side (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Alternate Movie Poster of the Day:

Add some color to your Die Hard shrine with this comic-art poster by Chris Weston (via Live for Films):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of Jim Henson’s Labyrinth. Watch the original trailer for the movie, which stars David Bowie and a bunch of Muppets, below.

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Why Was A Prominent Muslim Musician Gunned Down In Pakistan?

Relatives comfort Mujjudid Sabri (front, center), son of Pakistani singer Amjad Sabri, who was killed Wednesday in an attack by gunmen in Karachi.

Relatives comfort Mujjudid Sabri (front, center), son of Pakistani singer Amjad Sabri, who was killed Wednesday in an attack by gunmen in Karachi. Rizwan Tabassum/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Rizwan Tabassum/AFP/Getty Images

One of Pakistan’s best-known singers, Amjad Sabri, was gunned down Wednesday in the city of Karachi, in what police are calling a targeted killing.

The attack occurred when the 45-year-old Sabri was on his way to a television station, where he was scheduled to give a performance to mark the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The TTP Hakimullah Mehsud group — aka the Pakistani Taliban — has claimed responsibility for Sabri’s death, saying that they carried out the assassination “for blasphemy.” If members of the Pakistani Taliban did carry out Sabri’s assassination, it would be the latest in a string of high-profile attacks; the group has also been accused of being the force behind the assassination of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, in 2007, as well as the infamous shooting of schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai in 2012.

According to reports in the Pakistani press, two men riding a motorcycle fired shots at Sabri’s car. The singer was shot five times, including in the head. On Thursday, thousands of people gathered in Karachi, to throw rose petals at the ambulance that contained the singer’s coffin and to cluster near his home.

There are also reports that Amjad Sabri’s brother was in the car with him, and was wounded in the attack.

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The richly baritoned Sabri was part of one of South Asia’s most celebrated singing families. His late father, Ghulam Farid Sabri, and late uncle, Maqbool Sabri, were known together as The Sabri Brothers. The family specializes in the art of qawwali — an important Muslim devotional tradition. Like his ancestors, Amjad Sabri spent his life singing praises to God and the Prophet Muhammad.

Qawwali is a tradition that has lasted about 700 years in South Asia — home to about a third of the world’s Muslim population — going from Persia into what is now India and Pakistan. It is, for its performers and audiences, a conduit for experiencing the divine.

In South Asia, qawwali is also one of the most popular and relatable expressions of Islam and of Sufism — the hugely diverse, mystical branch of Islam that emphasizes having a personal connection to God, as well as embracing tolerance, peace and equality.

In many areas of the world, local forms of Sufism incorporate other religious philosophies and practices as well as regional cultural references. For example, Sufi shrines in South Asia regularly draw not just Muslim devotees, but Hindus, Christians, Sikhs and others — which has in recent years made them a particular target for terrorist violence. Some qawwali songs explicitly reference religious pluralism and tolerance. That’s worlds away from the ideological goals of the TTP and their allies.

As journalist Murtaza Hussain said in a piece by Haroon Moghul published yesterday by the Washington Post, qawwali was “distinctively Pakistani and was our own unique expression of Islam. That’s why this killing really strikes at the heart and soul of Pakistan.”

Some qawwali songs praise God directly, or the prophet Muhammad, or Ali (who became the first imam of the Shiite branch of Islam), or one of the Sufi saints. Other songs describe the poet’s longing for God — very often expressed in what seems, on the surface, to be a secular love song.

Qawwali draws upon North Indian classical music — a musical style that evolved within an expressly Hindu context — but is also uniquely its own, with call-and-response choruses as well as handclaps and drumbeats that are meant to evoke the human heartbeat. The songs build slowly in speed and intensity, swelling up to ecstatic heights. Listeners are swept up in that lyrical and musical potency, dancing, clapping and singing along. Qawwali is very much a communal experience that can last for hours.

Historically, the qawwali tradition is passed down by male family members from one generation to the next; Amjad Sabri was the only one among his siblings to lead his family’s party, or group.

Mindful of that legacy, Sabri sought to preserve his family’s traditions in his work. He was particularly renowned for performing a song associated with his father and uncle called “Bhar Do Jholi Meri” (“Fill My Bag”):

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But his elders were also well-known for experimenting and updating tradition. In the mid-1990s, The Sabri Brothers released “Ya Mustapha,” on the American label Xenophile, which paired this qawwali party’s soulful singing with saxophones. The young Amjad Sabri sings in the chorus of this recording.

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Sabri also reached out to audiences through the big screen. He appeared in the 2008 Bollywood drama Halla Bol (“Raise Your Voice”).

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The Sabri family’s own history in qawwali goes back centuries. The family claims (though it has been contested) that they are descended from Mian Tansen, a legendary court musician in the service of the Mughal emperor Akbar the Great, who spread his empire across almost all of the Indian subcontinent in the late 16th century, and whose patronage of the arts and literature were at the heart of a unique Mughal culture.

Great qawwals, or singers who specialize in qawwali, are beloved across the South Asian subcontinent and across the globe by fans from all kinds of religious and secular backgrounds. Like the internationally known titan of qawwali, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, the Sabri Brothers recorded for Peter Gabriel’s Real World label. (I’ve been listening to and writing about qawwali, and interviewing prominent qawwals, for more than two decades; the Sabri family has long been a fixture in my own insatiable qawwali obsession.)

In 2014, Amjad Sabri was named in a blasphemy case in Pakistan, after he had gone on a morning talk show to sing; the qawwali he had chosen to perform reportedly referenced members of the prophet Muhammad’s family. The television channel and the show’s anchors, along with the song’s lyricist, were also named in the suit.

Asghari Begum, Amjad Sabri’s mother, told Al Jazeera that approximately six months ago, three men burst open the front door of the family’s residence, then left after realizing that the singer was not at home.

According to the Pakistani newspaper Dawn, Sabri leaves behind a widow and five children; his oldest boy is 12 years old. Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif announced on Thursday that the government would grant Sabri’s immediate family 10 million rupees (about $95,000) of financial support, along with covering the children’s educational expenses. In his statement, Sharif said that Sabri’s death came “at the hands of coward terrorists.”

Sabri’s assassination has apparently left other Muslim artists in Pakistan vulnerable. On Thursday, Farhan Ali Waris — who specializes in Shiite religious recitations and was a friend of Amjad Sabri — says that he was shot at in a nearby neighborhood, a few hours after Sabri was attacked.

And among the outpourings of grief and tributes to Amjad Sabri online was this Facebook note from the brothers Mehr Ali and Sher Ali, another great qawwali brother duo: “Hands are shivering.”

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Best of the Week: 'Justice League' Buzz, 'Rogue One: A Star Wars Story' Details and More

The Important News

DC Delirium: Justice League set reports revealed the new Batmobile, a full synopsis, villain info, and more.

Marvel Madness: Hannibal Buress joined Spider-Man: Homecoming. Bob Persichetti is directing the animated Spider-Man movie.

Star Wars Mania: Darth Vader was confirmed to be in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. And James Earl Jones was confirmed to voice him again. Details on the main characters from Rogue One were revealed. And more Rogue One photos were released.

Sequelitis: Multiple Paddington sequels are in the works. Noomi Rapace is returning for Alien: Covenant. Miranda Otto and Stephanie Sigman will star in Annabelle 2.

Franchise Fever: Disney has plans for more Indiana Jones movies without Harrison Ford. Dwayne Johnson is rumored to be the Wolf Man in the Universal Monsters franchise.

Remake Report: Another The Saint movie is in the works. Eli Roth is directing the Death Wish remake. The King Kong in Kong: Skull Island will be different. Ron Howard is involved in the Splash remake.

Casting Net: Bryan Cranston will play Zordon in Power Rangers. Vera Farmiga will star in Jaume Collet-Serra’s The Commuter. Kate Winslet will star in the next Woody Allen movie.

Box Office: Finding Dory had the best opening ever for an animated feature.

R.I.P.: Anton Yelchin died in an accident.

Reel TV: A new Ghostbusters cartoon series is in the works. Channing Tatum is turning Step Up into a TV series.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Inferno, The Birth of a Nation, Ouija: Origin of Evil, American Pastoral, All Eyez on Me, The Legend of Tarzan, Mechanic: Resurrection, Disorder, The Girl with All the Gifts, War on Everyone and the HBO series Westworld.

Watch: An exclusive deleted scene from Everybody Wants Some!!

See: What Bryan Cranston could look like in Power Rangers.

Watch: An anti drunk driving PSA starring Han Solo. And Star Wars presented in Suicide Squad fashion.

See: What Luke Skywalker was doing up until the end of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Listen: The new Ghostbusters theme song is a cover and a mashup of artists.

See: What Finding Dory would look like written by George R.R. Martin.

Watch: Jeff Goldblum reads from a children’s book version of Independence Day.

See: The subject of the hit new documentary Tickled confronts the filmmakers at a screening.

Watch: A history of horror cinema.

See: Many classic sci-fi movies mashed together for a new short film.

Watch: Music video for “Heathens” off the Suicide Squad soundtrack.

Learn: Why an actress in Suicide Squad was scared on set.

See: The original character design for Apocalypse in X-Men: Apocalypse.

Our Features

Interview: Taika Waititi on Hunt for the Wilderpeople.

Classic Movie Guide: An obsessive look back at Jaws.

Geek Movie Guide: 5 video game movies worth another look.

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

Marvel Movie Guide: Does Marvel care about the MCU TV series?

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

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Mashrou' Leila: Tiny Desk Concert

June 24, 20169:00 AM ET

When we invited the band Mashrou’ Leila to come play at the Tiny Desk, we couldn’t have foreseen the timing.

The group arrived at our office the morning after the horrific June 12 shootings in Orlando at the gay nightclub Pulse. We were all collectively reeling from the news, and for this rock band from Beirut, Lebanon, the attack hung very heavily.

Mashrou’ Leila is fronted by singer and lyricist Hamed Sinno, along with violinist Haig Papazian, keyboardist and guitarist Firas Abou Fakher, Ibrahim Badr on bass and drummer Carl Gerges: five young Beirutis whose family backgrounds reflect Lebanon’s religious diversity.

Sinno is openly gay, and Mashrou’ Leila is well acquainted with the targeting of LGBT people. The band has faced condemnation, bans and threats in its home region, including some from both Christian and Muslim sources, for what it calls “our political and religious beliefs and endorsement of gender equality and sexual freedom.” And yet, when Mashrou’ Leila performs in the U.S., its members are often tasked with representing the Middle East as a whole, being still one of the few Arab rock bands to book a North American tour.

After the attack on Pulse, the members of Mashrou’ Leila decided to open their Tiny Desk set with “Maghawir” (Commandos), a song Sinno wrote in response to two nightclub shootings in Beirut — a tragic parallel to what happened in Orlando. In the Beirut incidents, which took place within a week of each other, two of the young victims were out celebrating their respective birthdays. “Maghawir” is a checklist of sorts about how to spend a birthday clubbing in the band’s home city, but also a running commentary about machismo and the idea that big guns make big men.

“All the boys become men / Soldiers in the capital of the night,” Sinno sings. “Shoop, shoop, shot you down … We were just all together, painting the town / Where’d you disappear?” It was a terrible, and terribly fitting, response to the Florida shootings.

In all of its songs, Mashrou’ Leila creates densely knotted wordplay; even the band’s name has layers of meaning and resonance. The most common translation of “Mashrou’ Leila” is “The Night Project,” which tips to the group’s beginnings back in 2008 in sessions at the American University of Beirut. But Leila is also the name of the protagonist in one of Arabic literature’s most famous tales, the tragic love story of Leila and Majnun, a couple somewhat akin to Romeo and Juliet. Considering Mashrou’ Leila’s hyper-literary bent, it’s hard not to hear that evocation.

In the second song, “Kalaam” (S/He), Sinno dives deep into the relationships between language and gender, and how language shapes perception and identity: “They wrote the country’s borders upon my body, upon your body / In flesh-ligatured word / My word upon your word, as my body upon your body / Flesh-conjugated words.” (The band has posted its own full English translations of these songs online.)

The title of the third song in Mashrou’ Leila’s set, “Djin,” is a perfect distillation of that linguistic playfulness. In pre-Islamic Arabia and later in Islamic theology and texts, a djin (or jinn) is a supernatural creature; but here, Sinno also means gin, as in the alcoholic drink. “Liver baptized in gin,” Sinno sings, “I dance to ward off the djin.”

But you don’t have to speak a word of Arabic, or get Mashrou’ Leila’s cerebral references, to appreciate its songs: deeply layered, darkly textured and sonically innovative. And sometimes, as Sinno says, the band’s songs “are just about getting really messed up at a bar.”

Ibn El Leil (Son Of The Night) is available now. (iTunes) (Amazon)

Set List

  • “Maghawir” (Commandos)
  • “Kalaam” (S/He)
  • “Djin”

Credits

Producers: Anastasia Tsioulcas, Niki Walker; Audio Engineer: Josh Rogosin; Videographers: Niki Walker, Claire Hannah Collins, Kara Frame; Production Assistant: Sophie Kemp; Photo: Ruby Wallau/NPR.

For more Tiny Desk concerts, subscribe to our podcast.

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Today in Movie Culture: Jeff Goldblum's 'Independence Day' For Kids, 'Suicide Squad' Music Video and More

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

Adaptation of the Day:

To catch kids up with what happened in the first Independence Day before the sequel arrives, Jeff Goldblum reads from his own rhyming children’s book version of the 1996 “documentary”:

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If Movies Were Real:

Speaking of Independence Day, College Humor shows us what it would be like if President Whitmore gave his famous speech in real life now with the media and internet what it is today:

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Funny Movie Review of the Day:

Independence Day: Resurgence didn’t screen for critics, but somehow the Onion was able to review the sequel, humorously:

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Music Video of the Day:

See new Suicide Squad footage in the official music video for the soundtrack tune “Heathens” by Twenty One Pilots:

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DIY Superhero of the Day:

Watch as a guy turns himself into a real-life Iceman from X-Men in this DIY video:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Frances McDormand, who turns 59 today, directed by husband Joel Coen on the set of Fargo in 1995:

Filmmaking Tip of the Day:

RocketJump Film School showcases the use of off-screen sound when telling stories in the visual medium of movies:

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Film History Lesson of the Day:

For Fandor Keyframe, Jacob T. Swinney chronicles the history of Oscar nominations for actors playing LGBTQ characters, noting which of those actors are themselves LGBTQ:

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Supercut of the Day:

Phil Parma spotlights movies evoking an atmosphere of menace in the following supercut:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 40th anniversary of Logan’s Run. Watch the original trailer for the sci-fi classic below.

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Today in Movie Culture: Luke Skywalker's Secret Back Story, Bryan Cranston as Zordon and More

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

Character Back Story of the Day:

Find out what Luke Skywalker was doing all alone on that island for years before Rey arrived in this animated Star Wars parody (via Geek Tyrant):

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Casting Rendering of the Day:

With Bryan Cranston cast as Zordon in Power Rangers, Boss Logic shows us what that might look like (via Twitter):

Film Studies Lesson of the Day:

With Independence Day: Resurgence out this week, the script for the original Independence Day is examined and appreciated by Lessons From the Screenplay:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Speaking of Independence Day, here is Couch Tomato with 24 reasons Pacific Rim is the same movie:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Billy Wilder, who was born on this day in 1906, directs Marilyn Monroe in her iconic pose from 1955’s The Seven Year Itch:

Film History Lesson of the Day:

The Glowing Screen spotlights Die Hard‘s place in the history of cinema and how it changed Hollywood:

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 70th anniversary of the Merrie Melodies animated short Hollywood Daffy. Watch the movie fan’s delight in full below.

Make-Up Transformation of the Day:

What you see here is animation on a person’s body and face, in tribute to Hayao Miyazaki’s My Neighbor Totoro. See more and a making-of video at Fashionably Geek.

Filmmaker in Focus:

Room 237 presents a supercut of scenes in Christopher Nolan films featuring characters in backlight (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 50th anniversary of the release of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Watch the original trailer for the movie, which stars famous couple Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, below.

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Today in Movie Culture: Ghostbusters vs. Luke Skywalker, Honest 'Pixels' Trailer and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

In Luc Bergeron’s Space Story 2: Suicide Mission, all your favorite space movies are remixed together for a melancholy sci-fi short:

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Movie Merchandise of the Day:

If your kids are too young to see the new Ghostbusters this summer, you can always get them this Little Golden Book edition. Also check out the new children’s book version of the original Ghostbusters at /Film.

Movie Character Fight of the Day:

Speaking of the original Ghostbusters, who would win in a battle between them and Luke Skywalker? Your answer:

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Cosplay of the Day:

This woman cosplaying as Rey from Star Wars: The Force Awakens better be getting something nice out of having to pull this guy cosplaying as BB-8 (via Fashionably Geek):

Fan Theory of the Day:

Who is the main protagonist of the Star Wars movies? Slate shows why C-3PO is the real hero of the saga:

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

In case you didn’t dislike Pixels enough already, Honest Trailers reminds you how bad it is:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Chris Pratt, who turns 37 today, on the set of his first movie, Rae Dawn Chong’s 2000 short Cursed 3:

Bad Film Analysis of the Day:

Did you get the true meaning of Disney’s Zootopia? Here’s an alien from the future to tell you what he thinks it’s about:

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Video Essay of the Day:

The following video by Lidia Mtz-Seara beautifully showcases what colors mean in cinema (via Geek Tyrant):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of The Rocketeer. Watch the original trailer for the Disney comic book adaptation below.

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Today in Movie Culture: History of Horror Movies, Chewbacca Mom Action Figures and More

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

Film History of the Day:

Diego Carrera presents a history of horror cinema with one movie per year from 1895 through 2016 (via Geek Tyrant):

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Film Analysis of the Day:

Darren Foley of Must See Films explores the depiction of fame in Martin Scorsese’s The King of Comedy:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Two-time Oscar nominee Stephen Frears, who turns 75 today, directs a young Gary Oldman and Alfred Molina on the set of the 1987 film Prick Up Your Ears:

Supercut of the Day:

Speaking of Prick Up Your Ears, here’s a supercut of actors portraying real writers by Jonathan Kiefer for Fandor Keyframe:

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Custom Toy of the Day:

“Chewbacca Mom” Candace Payne got her very own talking Star Wars action figure from Hasbro (via Geek Tyrant):

Mashup of the Day:

It would probably make more sense for Rogue One, but here’s a mashup of the original Star Wars movies presented in a fun Suicide Squad type trailer:

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Star Wars Art of the Day:

Check out a new Star Wars Celebration Europe poster parallelling the original trilogy characters with Force Awakens counterparts below. You can see more art made for the big event over at /Film.

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 75th anniversary of the release of Disney’s The Nifty Nineties, a vaudeville tribute starring Mickey and Minnie, which you can watch in full here:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Casey Renee aimed for historical accuracy in her cosplay of Belle from Disney’s Beauty and the Beast to better represent the Rococo style of the time period (via Fashionably Geek):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This week marks the 20th anniversary of the release of Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Watch the original trailer for the animated feature including voice recording shots and unfinished scenes below.

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