Saturday, February 18, 2017

Logan Review


Logan | Official Trailer [HD] | 20th Century FOX

With each passing year, the number of superhero stories flooding into theaters seems to quintuple. There are more team-up movies, crossover television events, and just an excess of all around masked altruism. Its reaching the point where one can feel as if theyre being buried alive under six feet of capes and computer generated rubble. Luckily, Logan is not one of those movies. Despite featuring the rugged grimace that started this 21st century genre craze, or maybe because of it, Hugh Jackmans swan song to the claws is a stripped down and bitter affair.

How marvelous.

It turns out that like the quieter, more deconstructionist Westerns that heralded a reflective temperament following the indulgences of 1950s Oaters, Logan seeks to carve out a fairly intimate character study about an aged do-gooder in a country for no old mutants. And the film wildly succeeds at its goals with b****y verve. Seriously, there is so much blood. More miraculous still, though, is that Logan is also without question the best superhero movie in years, and certainly the most ambitious one since Christopher Nolan hung up the cape.

The film makes no illusions about its Western influences. Taking a page out of Clint Eastwoods Unforgiven, as well as perhaps Sam Peckinpahs own story of American legends aging gracelessly in ignominious gore in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, Logan opens on a grim and sparse future. Its the year 2029, and even though there is still no wall built along the Mexican border, things remain fairly apocalyptic for mutantkind.

There have been no new mutants born in the last 25 years, causing a graying and bearded Logan to suggest maybe they were just Gods mistake. Worse, his mentor and hero Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart) has developed dementia, which forces him to go into hiding since the U.S. government has classified his deteriorating brain as a WMD. Xavier wastes away waiting to dieand angrily dropping F-bombs like its a David Mamet playin a capsized water tower south of the border. Logan meanwhile works part-time as a limousine driver, hoping to save enough money to buy himself and Xavier a boat so they can spend their remaining days at sea.

Yep, after 200 years, Logans mutant genes are also failing him. He can still heal from gunshots or stab wounds, but it takes a very long (and painful) time. Thus two old men waiting to expire will suddenly see their lives turned upside down when a Mexico City nurse (Elizabeth Rodriguez) smuggles a young girl across the border. That girl is named Laura Kinney (Dafne Keen), and its fair to say shes a blood relation to Logan. After all, she shares his healing factor, adamantium claws, and a mighty prickly disposition.

Shes also the first new mutant Charles or Logan have seen in decades. Hence, like Children of Men, she is the future they must protect. But theyd best hurry, because government bad men led by a cheerfully malicious Boyd Holbrook, a bounty hunter with a mechanical hand, want her head something fierce.

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The more utilitarian and economical Logan is in its American frontier simplicity, the more subtly impressive director James Mangolds film reveals itself. Mangold and co-writers Michael Green and Scott Frank wallow in an affinity for Western iconography. But it is more than the sub-genre trappings that play in the films favor. Rather, unlike so many recent blockbusters that put on a small polish of espionage or mystical fantasy sheen to an otherwise turgid formula, logan escapes most of its clichs while basking in practical stunts, old fashioned photography, and a kind of defiantly over-the-top grit.

Indeed, Logan is incredibly violent. Almost excessively so in moments where either the titular anti-hero or his pint-sized protgferociously maul their enemies like theyre Leonardo DiCaprio on a bear hunt. But while the picture relishes its R-rating too much at times, it also marks a refreshing re-think of superhero action. These are legends whose lives have been glamorized in comic books, just as the dime novel turned Congressman David Crockett into a raccoon-capped Davy. Still, the twinkle of myth remains here; you can see it in Hugh Jackmans eye.

As an actor whos played a superhero longer than any performer, Jackman continues to hold onto a passion that has long left most of his contemporaries. And unlike other haphazard X-Men movies from the past, Logan meets that commitment in its better moments, such as when a hero called the Wolverine must say some words of sorrow, and they just will not come. But its all there on Jackmans marred face.

Stewart is also well utilized; he and Jackman started this franchise together nearly 20 years ago. And in what will likely be the last installment for each, there is a palpable camaraderie, like two grizzled stage actors whove been sharing and fighting for the spotlight over their entire careers. Stewart has played Charles Xavier so many times that he can elicit boundless empathy in his sleep. But getting to play that same sweetness in a dying mind that cannot remember which of his friends are alive or dead, or where he is, brings a renewed poignancy to his final bow.

Dafne Keen is where much of the films lightness comes from. Undoubtedly destined to be the crowd-pleasing favorite when the movie opens, her Laura is often quiet and remote, but she is every bit as feral and cantankerous as the old man, adding the right amount of youthful counterbalance. She also holds her own against Jackman while swearing in Spanish, which is its own kind of achievement.

Still, Logan is not flawless. While Holbrook is fairly fun as a slimy bad man who seems like a slightly more exaggerated, comic book version of Ben Fosters fiend in Mangolds straight ahead Western, 3:10 to Yuma, Holbrooks Donald Pierce is never actually that intimidating. And Richard E. Grant, always a welcome presence, is primarily wasted as the films other villain, the mad scientist who created Laura and who is decidedly Britishand did I mention mad?

Their third act secret weapon also represents more of a need for a physical threat as opposed to the ingenious storytelling twist one imagines the filmmakers were attempting. Nevertheless, even in these later missteps, the film still features some of its best elements, such as images of contracted government players chasing the half-Mexican Laura across woodlands like shes one of the supposed boogeymen that ICE is currently being unleashed on. Just as Bryan Singer used the fears stoked during the Bush years against members of the LBTQ community as parables in his early X-Men films, Logan is a compelling update of those undergirding themes, leading to splendidly uncomfortable results.

In the end, Logan achieves its goal of saying goodbye to Hugh Jackmans Wolverine in a brutally earnest way. By the closing credits, audiences will feel like theyve lost something. And yet, what they have gained is a superhero movie worth remembering.

Loganis in theaters on Friday, March 3.

Source: http://www.denofgeek.com/us/movies/logan/262190/logan-review

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This Is Us" Chris Sullivan Wears a Fat Suit to Play Toby


Chris Sullivan Shows Off His Polished Toes

Lookin" good, Toby! The popular character recently woke up from a coma on This Is Us, but the actor who plays him, Chris Sullivan, might appear to regular viewers of the NBC drama as though he"s been very active for the past few months. Fans who have noticed a slimmed-down Sullivan on red carpets during this awards season may have wondered if his physique is part of an upcoming story line, and Us Weekly has the scoop!

PHOTOS: Celebrity Fat Suits

Costar Susan Kelechi Watson (Beth) revealed to Us at a press event that the actor, 36, actually wears a fat suit while filming his scenes. So while its still possible that weight loss is in the future for toby, sullivan hasn"t had to make any major lifestyle changes lately.

Side by side of Chris Sullivan at the People"s Choice Awards and Chris Sullivan as Toby in "This is US" Ron Batzdorff/NBC

Body image is a prominent theme for Toby and on-off girlfriend Kate (Chrissy Metz), as the two characters met at a weight-loss support group and bonded over their calorie-counting lifestyles. He suffered a heart attack in last month"s winter finale but returned to his typically upbeat self in last week"s episode, even accepting an apparent marriage proposal from his main squeeze.

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Metz previously said in an interview that she is contractually obligated to lose weight for her role, as Kate makes a concerted effort to trim her figure. The actress later clarified the remarks on a December visit to the Ellen DeGeneres Show, explaining that she is not feeling pressure from the show"s team to shed pounds.

PHOTOS: 10 Most Devastating TV Deaths of 2016

"I was kind of like, "I hope I get to lose weight." Thats a win-win for me motivated in a different way this time," Metz, 36, told Ellen DeGeneres. "It wasn"t mandated. It wasn"t like, "You have to do this." But if this is the story line, naturally you would lose weight. So Im excited if that should happen."

PHOTOS: Celebrities" Weight Loss and Transformations: Before and After Pictures

This Is Us airs on NBC Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET.

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Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/entertainment/news/this-is-us-chris-sullivan-wears-a-fat-suit-to-play-toby-w461990

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Senate Confirms Scott Pruitt To Lead Environmental Protection Agency


Senate confirms Scott Pruitt to lead the EPA

Scott Pruitt is promising an aggressive rollback of regulations at the Environmental Protection Agency. NPR takes a look at what he"s likely to target and the challenges he will face.

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Scott Pruitt has been sworn in as the new head of the Environmental Protection Agency. Democrats pushed hard against Pruitt"s nomination and staged an all-night debate last night. They had called him unfit for the job. as oklahoma"s attorney general, pruitt sued the EPA more than a dozen times, and he promises to aggressively roll back what he calls the agency"s activist agenda. NPR"s Nathan Rott is with us now to talk about this. Hey, Nate.

NATHAN ROTT, BYLINE: Hey, Kelly.

MCEVERS: So what is Scott Pruitt likely to do?

ROTT: Well, it"s hard to say with any certainty. There have been hints of budget and staff cuts, but those have mostly come from people in the agency"s transition team so far who don"t speak for Mr. Pruitt himself. In his confirmation hearings, Pruitt did say that he wants to restore balance to the EPA, which can be read a few ways. He believes that the EPA and environmental regulation had been picking winners and losers in the last few years, especially under President Obama, the losers mostly being farmers, ranchers, oil and gas, industry basically. So I think it"s fair to say that he"s going to try to ease regulations for those groups.

I asked that question, though. What can he do to a lot of former EPA officials and administrators? Here"s the answer I got from Tracey Woodruff, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who worked at the EPA under Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

TRACEY WOODRUFF: They could defund certain programs that they don"t like. They could try and identify things that they think are not useful, go after staff that they think are in - working in areas that they don"t agree with.

ROTT: And her list keeps going and going and going, so really there"s a lot of things.

MCEVERS: I mean, so will Pruitt be able to eliminate entire programs at the EPA? I mean, President Trump in the past has even talked about getting rid of the agency altogether.

ROTT: Yeah, he did. And he - I mean, he backed off of that claim later in the campaign, but that"s been a big concern for people. And I think really that"s the question we can answer with the most certainty. It"s very, very unlikely that the Trump administration can or would even want to get rid of the EPA. It"s just too complex of an agency. Here"s Christine Todd Whitman, administrator of the EPA under President George W. Bush.

CHRISTINE TODD WHITMAN: This is an agency that"s established by law. There are a number of pieces of legislation that have been passed to frame it. It"s not something that you can just wave a wand and do away with, nor do we want to.

ROTT: And really the same is true to an extent for a lot of the country"s bigger environmental regulations - the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act. One former administrator of the EPA put it to me this way. Deregulation takes just as much time as regulation. Which is a very D.C. way of saying it takes a really, really long time, possibly years, and there could be complications, like lawsuits.

MCEVERS: There already has been some tension at the EPA since Trump"s inauguration. You reported on a clamp down on communications and concerns about how scientists" work would be vetted. How will Pruitt be received by the agency?

ROTT: I think that"s going to be one of the most interesting things to watch in the coming days and weeks. I mean, you"ve got nearly 800 former EPA employees who signed a letter saying that Pruitt is unfit for the office. You"ve got current employees leaking memos and participating in rallies against him. Christine Todd Whitman, that former administrator we heard from earlier, said that this is unprecedented. She"s never seen this level of animosity between existing staff and an incoming EPA head.

And we could see that flare in the next week. An Oklahoma judge yesterday ruled that Pruitt has to turn over thousands of emails and other documents between himself and fossil fuel companies by next Tuesday. And so if that shows a disregard for science or closer ties to industry, it could get a really big backlash.

MCEVERS: NPR"s Nathan Rott, thank you very much.

ROTT: Thank you, Kelly.

Copyright 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2017/02/17/515841090/senate-confirms-scott-pruitt-to-lead-environmental-protection-agency

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Rush Limbaugh: Trump"s Presser Was Effective Because His Supporters Really "Needed It"


The Rush Limbaugh Show Podcast - 02.17.2017 (February 2017)

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While President Trumps media-bashing press conference yesterday was pilloried by the mainstream press, a lot of conservative media figures loved it, especially Rush Limbaughwho called it particularly effective.

He elaborated on those remarks today on his radio show, explaining that the heated presser was effective in rallying his voters, effective in rallying his supporters, cause they needed it.

Trump supporters, Trump voters have been watching this past month go by with these incessant, endless allegations of incompetence, Limbaugh said, and Trump had been tweeting and reacting to it. But they needed this, and thats why I referred to it as effective because it clearly, clearly was, and they were discombobulated by it, flabbergasted by it.

limbaugh also said he thinks that the media will never be on the same stage as Trump because they live in a completely separate world. He also said they have no desire to learn anything about his voters outside of their preconceived notions.

Limbaughs praise of the press conference led to President Trump tweeting this out:

You can listen above, via The Rush Limbaugh Show.

[h/t Daily Rushbo][image via screengrab]

Follow Josh Feldman on Twitter: @feldmaniac

Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/online/rush-limbaugh-trumps-presser-was-so-effective-because-his-supporters-really-needed-it/

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Rush Limbaugh: Trump"s Presser Was Effective Because His Supporters Really "Needed It"


Rush Limbaugh Podcast 2/17/17 | Obama Deep-State Operatives Are Leaking to Undermine Trump

Please enable Javascript to watch.

While President Trumps media-bashing press conference yesterday was pilloried by the mainstream press, a lot of conservative media figures loved it, especially Rush Limbaughwho called it particularly effective.

He elaborated on those remarks today on his radio show, explaining that the heated presser was effective in rallying his voters, effective in rallying his supporters, cause they needed it.

Trump supporters, Trump voters have been watching this past month go by with these incessant, endless allegations of incompetence, Limbaugh said, and Trump had been tweeting and reacting to it. But they needed this, and thats why I referred to it as effective because it clearly, clearly was, and they were discombobulated by it, flabbergasted by it.

Limbaugh also said he thinks that the media will never be on the same stage as Trump because they live in a completely separate world. He also said they have no desire to learn anything about his voters outside of their preconceived notions.

Limbaughs praise of the press conference led to President Trump tweeting this out:

You can listen above, via the rush limbaugh show.

[h/t daily Rushbo][image via screengrab]

Follow Josh Feldman on Twitter: @feldmaniac

Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/online/rush-limbaugh-trumps-presser-was-so-effective-because-his-supporters-really-needed-it/

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WATCH: Trevor Noah Rips Apart Trump"s Response To Anti-Semitism


The GOP Weasels Out of Questions About Michael Flynn: The Daily Show

We had a really nice show planned for you, Trevor Noah began last nights The Daily Show. Very civil, very calm. And then, in the middle of the day, Hurricane Trump happened.

The hurricane in question took place at The White House press conference on Thursday, when the president had a particularly volatile response to an ultra-Orthodox reporters question.

Jake Turx, a journalist with Ami Magazine, asked Trump how he planned to combat the uptick in anti-Semitism in the United States, but only after carefully telling the President that nobody believes he is personally anti-Semitic. Instead of responding, Trump slammed Turx for asking him a difficult question, while also clarifying that he is the least anti-Semitic person you have ever seen in your entire life.

Noahs problem was not with Trumps response. Instead, he criticized the President for complaining that Turx had asked him a question that was, according to him, neither simple nor fair.

Whats even more striking in that interaction is you have a president of a democracy who thinks press is only valid when they ask him easy questions, questions that he likes, noah said. in fact, in his mind, he deserves it.

Besides, The Daily Show host noted, the answer was handed to the President on a silver platter.

Its an easy question, Noah said. What are you going to do about anti-Semitism? Were going to stamp it out. Done. Thats all you have to say. That was the softest ball possible. A matzo ball, if you will.

The segment starts at 3:37, but the whole clip is worth watching.

The Forward"s independent journalism depends on donations from readers like you.

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Source: http://forward.com/schmooze/363501/watch-trevor-noah-rips-apart-trumps-response-to-anti-semitism/

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Oroville Dam: State said emergency spillway was "safe and stable"


Oroville Dam update: Spillway releases curbed, small Earthquakes near #OrovilleDam

As authorities raced to reduce the level of Lake Oroville before the next storm, new evidence emerged on Monday that more than a decade ago state water officials insisted that the emergency spillway that forced the evacuation of nearly 200,000 residents this week was a safe and stable structure founded on solid bedrock that will not erode.

The revelations in a May 26, 2006, filing fromthe state Department of Water Resources to federal officials underscored how state officials rejected calls 11 years ago fromthree environmental groups to require that concrete be used to armor the emergency spillway at the nations tallest dam.

The department went on to say in its document to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that its geology division had closely evaluated the emergency spillway at Oroville, the tallest dam in the United States. Environmentalists concerns that the spillway a 1,730-foot concrete lip along the reservoirs edge, with only a tree-lined, earthen hillside below could fail, triggering a catastrophe, were overblown, department officials said at the time.

There are only one to four feet of erodable topsoil in the downstream area, and that erosion would not compromise the stability of the emergency spillway, Michael A. Swiger, an attorney for the Department of Water Resources, wrote in the filing.

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Eventually, the federal commission agreed, and did not require the state to reinforce the emergency spillway. On Saturday, after water only about 1 foot deep flowed over it for the first time since the dams construction was finished in 1968, erosion carved in the hillside below so violently that the Department of Water Resources said the spillway could collapse within an hour, forcing Butte Countys sheriff to order a mass evacuation from what could have been one of the worst dam failures in U.S. history.

Monday, with state and federal dam operators trying desperately to lower the level of Lake Oroville through its damaged main concrete spillway before new storms come in on Wednesday night, Bill Croyle, acting director of the Department of Water Resources, said he was not ready to discuss earlier positions taken by his department.

I, myself, in this incident command post, working with my partner agencies, have focused on addressing the challenges that we have at this very time, he said at a mid-day news conference.

Were going to get into recommendations and concerns that were voiced in the past, but right now were focused on public safety, he said, adding:Before I answer a question like that, we need to do the homework and then we can have a better conversation on that.

Those who raised the alarm 12 years ago said they were surprised at the time by the position of the Department of Water Resources, which was then under the administration of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

All you have to do is look at theso-called emergency spillway and think about what you have witnessed in your backyard when you run a hose over a mound of dirt. It creates erosion. Thats what we said 12 years ago, said Kathryn Phillips, executive director of Sierra Club California.

The Sierra Club, Friends of the River and the South Yuba Citizens League filed motions with the federal government in 2005 urging the that emergency spillway be reinforced because in a very wet winter, erosion might become so severe that the reservoir would suffer a loss of crest control, meaning the top would wash away, sending billions of gallons of water raging to Oroville, Marysville and other towns below.

They just patted us on our little heads all the way along, she said. Its beside me why they would think it wouldnt erode. It seems they just didnt want to spend the money.

Not only were the state and federal officialsopposed to armoring the spillway, the major water agencies that likely would have had to pay the costs were, too. In 2006, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which provides water to 19 million people in Los Angeles, San Diego and other cities, along with the State Water Contractors, a collection of 27 water agencies that buy state water, filed a motion urging the federal government not to require a concrete emergency spillway.

On Monday, the two organizations said they didnt take the stand over cost concerns, but contended they were simply following the recommendations of the state and federal agencies.

I dont recall seeing any cost estimates of it, said Terry Erlewine, general manager of the State Water Contractors. We just deferred to the appropriate agencies, the Corps of Engineers, FERC and DWR. We just deferred to them.

Asked if he would support armoring the emergency spillway now, Jeff Kightlinger, general manager of the Metropolitan Water District, sidestepped the issue.

I would defer to DWR working with the Army Corps to what is the appropriate safety standard, and then well worry about the costs later, he said, adding:Flood control is a public benefit that is usually paid for by the state.

Ron Stork, a policy analyst with Friends of the River, said the emergency spillway needs an upgrade a job that likely would cost tens, if not hundreds, of millions of dollars for public safety, and the costs should be paid by the Metropolitan Water District and the State Water Contractors, a group that includes the Santa Clara Valley Water District, Kern County Water Agency and Alameda County Water District.

They never put it in writing, but it was common knowledge among the water community 12 years ago DWR, local water agencies, consultants that they didnt want to pay the cost, Stork said. Its easy to say it wasnt needed because the experts said it wasnt needed. If I was them, Id own up.

Holding his first news conference since the mass evacuations, Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday said he didnt know about the past concerns from environmentalists about the spillway. But heassured citizens that the state was doing everything it could to make sure we have a safe dam up there and all the other places where we have these kind of potential threats.

The governor also on Monday sent a letter to the White House requesting direct federal assistance for some 10,000 evacuees from Butte, Sutter and Yuba counties.

We live in a world of risk, Brown said, referencing the collapse of the Bay Bridge after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. Stuff happens, and we respond.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea stressed Monday that evacuation orders remain in place, with no set time for nearly 200,000 people in Butte County and neighboring areas to return home.

We are working on a re-population plan that will get people back to their homes as soon as possible, as long as we can preserve public safety, Honea said.

Meanwhile,state officials continued to race to lower the lake level, releasing 100,000 cubic feet per second of water down the main concrete spillway, as about 35,000 cubic feet per second naturally flowed into the lake. As a result, by nightfall, it was five feet below the top, and water was no longer running over the emergency spillway.

The danger, however, was that not only is a new storm forecast for Wednesday night, but the main spillway partially collapsed last week when a huge hole wore through the concrete. State water officialsslowed releases through that spillway after the water, looking like Niagara Falls, carved a section of hillside away toward the main face of the 770-foot-tall Oroville Dam. If the main concrete spillway continues to crumble upstream, they may have to close off all releases or risk its collapse at the lakes edge. Shutting off the water would send the lake level rising again. Croyle said his department is trying to lower the lake by 50 feet as quickly as possible.

Meanwhile, FERC ordered the Department of Water Resources to convene a five-member independent board of dam experts to review the condition of Orovilles emergency spillway and the damaged regular concrete spillway, and to make recommendations about how to improve safety during the emergency and over the long term.

Trucks and helicopters Monday afternoon began dropping rocks on the compromised hillside behind the emergency spillway to slow the erosion.

The next Lake Orville area rain is projected to bring up to 8 inches of rain to the region from Wednesday night to Monday. While not as strong as the previous wet weather, officials are concerned.

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Staff writers Malaika Fraley, Katy Murphy and Mark Gomez contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/02/13/oroville-dam-update-evacuations-remain-in-place/

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