Monday, November 14, 2016

Worse than a whitewash: has Ghost in the Shell been Hollywoodised?


Ghost in the Shell Official Trailer 1 (2017) - Scarlett Johansson Movie

When science fiction is no longer looking forward, does it lose all meaning? That was my first thought after viewing the first full trailer for Ghost in the Shell.

Ive always thought of sci-fi as territory for inquiring minds, for those who long for a glimpse of the next step in human perhaps even machine evolution. Which is why its deeply unsettling, to say the least, that Rupert Sanders upcoming remake of Mamoru Oshiis seminal anime seems to be relying on tried and test Hollywood tropes to sell itself to us.

Most readers will already be aware of the controversies surrounding the new version. Johanssons casting as the Major (Major Motoko Kusanagi in the original anime and preceding mangas) has drawn criticism from Asian-American actors who wondered why it was necessary to cast a non-Asian actor in such a quintessentially Japanese role. A counter-argument goes that Kusanagi has blue-violet eyes that feature no epicanthic fold, so it is perfectly acceptable for her to be played by Johansson a point that rather ignores the fact that most females in anime have a similar appearance.

Ghost in the Shell: trailer for Scarlett Johansson anime adaptation

Whats notable from the trailer is that Sanders and his team have also surrounded Johansson with a mostly white supporting cast. The intention may be to avoid drawing attention to the American actors ethnicity, but it only serves to create a bizarre whitewashed vision of the land of the rising sun. I was reminded of David Finchers remake of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, featuring a mostly English cast but somehow still set in Sweden. That movie just about worked because Fincher perfectly captured the icy Nordic noir of the novels.

The same trick does not appear to be working for Ghost in the Shell, where every glimpse of cyborg geisha girls in the trailer just makes us wonder why everyone in this Japanese anti-cybercrime division (with the exception of Takeshi Kitanos Chief Daisuke Aramaki) seems to be white.

And yet Sanders appears to have committed an even more devious crime with the remake. The original Ghost in the Shell was a complex treatise on the nature of sentience, imagining a future in which humans have become so much like machines that we may have more in common with them than each other. In its scope and intellectual ambition, the film dwarfs more recent offerings such as Ex-Machina (on the big screen) and Westworld and Humans (on TV) precisely because it is prepared to leave the comfortable boundaries of human experience behind and imagine a world where consciousness is shifting into multifarious forms, and societys interconnectedness is sweeping away concepts such as human individuality and ushering in something new and unknown.

The original film doesnt just examine the next stage of evolution the one we can easily get our heads around it looks beyond the curve of the horizon to the stage beyond that, to the unsettling, darkling reality of our own fusion with technology. Meanwhile, the Hollywood remake appears to be looking in the opposite direction.

We can only hope that the final movie offers more ambition, because the trailer seems to be trying to convince us that Ghost in the Shell is (conveniently) a lot like a fair few other Hollywood movies that we might have seen and liked. From Paul Verhoevens RoboCop the screenwriters have swiped the idea that the Major had another, perhaps more human, existence before she was stolen to be transformed into a hot but terrifying superpowered cybercop. This sense of a mysterious past waiting to be discovered is present in scores of hit Hollywood movies, from the Jason Bourne series to The Matrix, which of course was also partially inspired by Ghost in the Shell. The network has come full circle.

The trailer is visually splendid as an ex-commercials director, Sanders has a fabulous eye for striking imagery. But the original Ghost in the Shell wasnt about who the Major once was; it was about who she is going to become. So theres a sense that the film-makers have not just whitewashed Oshiis film, but Hollywoodised it too. Im not sure which is the greater crime.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGNlNLoTCRE2INfZQKEJdl8-_H9rQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779266585947&ei=R_spWKioCpfQ3QHMuoXgBQ&url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/filmblog/2016/nov/14/whitewash-ghost-in-the-shell-hollywoodised-mamoru-oshii-rupert-sanders-scarlett-johansson

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Watch John Oliver Become Nauseous Over Trump, Say "F--k...


Opioids: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

John Oliver closed the final Last Week Tonight of 2016 by stating the obvious: "[It"s] been an uncommonly s****y year" from the Syrian refugee crisis to the draining election cycle. He capped off the episode by blowing up a giant "2016" sign, as celebrities like "Weird Al" Yankovic, Jeffrey Tambor and Larry Wilmore flipped the bird to the depressing past 12 months.

"f**k 2016," grumbled Larry David in trademark style, p****d off over mayonnaise on his sandwich. "Go punch yourself in the d**k," offered Megan Mullally. Between the celebrity spots, ordinary Americans vented about tragedies both massive (the Flint water crisis) and small (being denied a selfie with Bruce Willis).

Oliver spent most of the episode processing the presidential election of Donald Trump. "Instead of showing our daughters that they could some day be president, America proved that no grandpa is too racist to become leader of the free world," he cracked, admitting he"s suffered "wave after wave of nausea all week."

The host vented his fears of a Trump presidency and cautioned against blind optimism. "Optimism is nice if you can swing it, but you"ve got to be careful because it can feed into the normalization of Donald Trump," he said. "And he"s not normal. He"s abnormal. He"s a human "What is wrong with this picture?" He sticks out like a sore thumb, and, frankly, he even looks like a sore thumb.

"Maybe you"ve tried to make yourself feel better, fantasizing that he might Google "How much does the president get paid?" get depressed and then resign," he continued. "But that is when you remember Mike f*****g Pence, who might be even worse because he looks like he"s from the 1950s, but he thinks like he"s from the 1960s."

Mostly, though, Oliver focused on where we go from here. He encouraged viewers to vote, buy newspaper subscriptions and donate to "organizations that need help under a Trump administration," includingPlanned Parenthood, Center for Reproductive Rights, Natural Resources Defense Council, International Refugee Assistance Project, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Trevor Project and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

"Keep reminding yourself, "This is not normal," he said. "Because a Klan-backed, misogynist Internet troll is going to be delivering the next State of the Union address, and that is not normal. It"s f****d up."

Several factors may have contributed to Donald Trump winning the presidency. Watch here.

Source: http://www.rollingstone.com/tv/news/see-john-oliver-jeffrey-tambor-larry-david-say-f-ck-2016-w450234

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Falcons safety Neal on hit: "I"m not a dirty player"


Philadelphia Eagles vs Atlanta Falcons Highlights & Recap

PHILADELPHIA -- Atlanta Falcons rookie strong safety Keanu Neal said he did nothing wrong on a controversial fourth-quarter hit against Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver Jordan Matthews -- a play that did not draw a penalty for helmet-to-helmet contact in the Eagles" 24-15 victory.

"I"m not trying to hit the guy in the head,"" Neal said. "That"s not me. Never in the game of football will I ever try to do that. I"m not a dirty player like that. But I went for the strike zone. I lowered my shoulder. And I felt like I hit him in the sternum. I don"t think I had any head-to-head contact."

Matthews, naturally, disagreed.

"Yes, I definitely think it was a penalty,"" Matthews said. "My helmet was bent. I had to get a new face mask. I had to change out my face mask and my visor. I don"t know what they saw, but at the end of the day, we got the win. So I will take a b****y lip if we get a win.""

  • The Atlanta Falcons entered Sunday"s game boasting the league"s top offense, but Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Leodis McKelvin felt there was a weakness to exploit.

  • The real reason theFalcons falteredSundayagainst the Eagles was the way they got pushed around on both sides of the ball.

  • The Eagles shook off a non-call early in the fourth quarter, rallying on both sides of the ball to take the lead and end their two-game losing streak.

2 Related

Video replay appeared to show Neal leading with his helmet. Matthews remained on the ground for a moment grabbing at his face mask after taking the hit across the middle. The unsuccessful third-down play led to the Eagles attempting 55-yard field goal, which Caleb Sturgis missed. A penalty, of course, would have kept the Eagles" drive alive.

Falcons coach Dan Quinn didn"t want to dig too deep into the play but stood behind his player.

"Yeah, I don"t have any thoughts on it other than just the way he"s taught in the strike zone is we"re going to try and hit someone as hard as humanly possible,"" Quinn said. "And if there"s a hit to the head, then we didn"t lower our strike zone low enough. But I"ll go back and look, but I didn"t get a chance to see. ... But I can tell you [Neal] is clearly becoming a very physical safety, in the box, out.

"By no means is he taught to go up high or do anything that"s out of whack. The leverage tackling that we do, we want to absolutely throw fast b***s in that strike zone. And if that target is on point, I"ll applaud that hit as loud as I can.""

Eagles coach Doug Pederson was asked if he got an explanation on the no-call.

"No,"" Pederson said.

Neal could be subject to a fine this week. But he maintained his innocence.

"Never do I attempt to hit someone in the head,"" Neal said. "That"s just not the type of player I am. I"m not there to play like that. [Coach Quinn] always talks about the strike zone. You guys know I"m a physical player, but I"m not trying to hit the dude in the head. They didn"t call a flag. ... I don"t think I hit him in the head, but I didn"t attempt to hit him in the head.""

Source: http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/18042445/keanu-neal-atlanta-falcons-hit-not-dirty-player

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Cowboys vs. Packers: Score and Twitter Reaction from 2016 Regular Season


Russell Wilson Finds Fred Jackson for the Score! | Seahawks vs. Packers | NFL

Hannah Foslien/Getty Images

Everyone has said the right things. When Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo returns from his back injury, the starting quarterback job is his. There is no quarterback controversy.

Except once again Sunday, Dak Prescott proved there is.

Prescott threw three touchdown passes in another strong performance without wide receiver Dez Bryant, leading the Cowboys to a 30-16 win over the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field.

The Cowboys head into their bye 5-1 and winners of five straight. Prescott has been at the helm for all six games, going his first 176 NFL passes without throwing an interception. He threw his first career pick and lost his second fumble against Green Bay, but it did little to quell the enthusiasm about his budding stardom.

Shea Serrano of The Ringer is ready for Prescott"s Hall of Fame induction ceremony:

The rookie fourth-round pick completed 18 of his 27 passes for 247 yards. He has completed at least two-thirds of his passes in each of the Cowboys" five wins. Their offensive struggles from Week 1"s loss to the New York Giants have been nowhere to be found in recent weeks.

Taking equal credit is Ezekiel Elliott, who recorded his fourth straight 100-yard rushing game. The former Ohio State standout racked up 157 yards on his 28 carries, marking his third consecutive contest in which he"s averaged more than five yards per attempt.

ESPN"s Kirk Herbstreit is impressed with Dallas" two stud rookies:

This is the third straight game Dallas has won without Bryant, who was inactive despite making progress with his knee injury. Cole Beasley hauled in two Prescott touchdown passes, and Terrance Williams finished with 75 yards on four catches.

Josh Eberley of Hoop magazine noted the fantasy implications of Beasley"s big day:

On the other sideline, the Packers continue to search for answers amid the surprising regression of their offense. Aaron Rodgers failed to throw for 300 yards for the 14th straight game (including playoffs) Sunday, finishing with 294. His performance was mired in visible frustrationand a whole lot of uncharacteristic mistakes.

Rodgers threw an interception, lost a fumble at the Cowboys" 1-yard line and was again left to d**k-and-dunk his way around the field. He did not complete a pass longer than 25 yards.

Aside from a nearly perfect game against the Detroit Lions in Week 3, Rodgers and the Green Bay passing game have been a frustrating mess for almost a full calendar year. The Detroit game is the only time Rodgers has thrown for more than two touchdowns in his last 15 games.

Most thought Jordy Nelson"s absence because of a torn ACL played a large part in the Packers" struggles down the stretch in 2015. With Nelson back in the fold, it"s clear now that something is amiss schematically.

Rodgers" struggles were perhaps the top discussion topic during the game:

Continuing the Packers" commitment to the complete befuddling of fantasy owners, Ty Montgomery emerged from nowhere as their top receiver. Montgomery, who didn"t have a single catch through Green Bay"s first four games, led all players with 10 receptions and 98 yards.

Bill Jones of CBS 11 noted this was a homecoming for Montgomery:

Nelson added five receptions for 68 yards, and Randall Cobb hauled in seven passes for 53 yards and Green Bay"s lone touchdown. The Packers lost Davante Adams in the second half to a potential concussion. Adams left the game and did not return after an evaluation.

Eddie Lacy briefly breathed life into the running game with an early 25-yard scamper, but Dallas held him in check the rest of the way. He finished with 65 yards on 17 carries, marking the ninth straight game in which Lacy"s had fewer than 20 touches.

On the other hand, we did get this, via the NFL"s official Twitter account:

The Packers won"t have much time to fix their sputtering offense, as the Chicago Bears are headed to Lambeau for Thursday Night Football. At 3-2, Green Bay is two games behind the undefeated Minnesota Vikings for first place in the NFC North and is part of a massive contingent vying for a wild-card spot.

The Cowboys are one game clear of second-place Washington in the NFC East heading into their bye. They"ll return with a Sunday night home game against the Philadelphia Eagles on Oct. 30, which will either be the first matchup between Prescott and No. 2 overall pick Carson Wentz or one of the highest-pressure starts of Romo"s career.

Either way, the world will be watching.

Ed Werder of ESPN relayed Cowboys owner Jerry Jones" thoughts on the quarterback situation:

Jones also discussed Romo"s health, per Werder:

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2669987-cowboys-vs-packers-score-and-twitter-reaction-from-2016-regular-season

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Steve Bannon: the alt-right media baron who has the ear of the President-elect


Donald Trump’s Appointing Steve Bannon As Chief Strategist Courts Controversy | TODAY

Steve Bannon, the Breitbart boss and Trump campaign CEO, runs a website that filters so-called alt-right, white nationalist views into the mainstream. He has been accused of racism and anti-Semitism. And now, as the newly appointed chief strategist and senior counselor to the President-elect, his opinions will be whispered into the ear of the leader of the free world.

A former US Navy officer, Harvard business school graduate, Goldman Sachs investment banker and Hollywood producer, Mr Bannon started his fourth or fifth career as a right-wing provocateur by releasing a handful of polemic documentaries. He became executive chairman of Breitbart News in 2012, a job he will quit to take up his new post in the Trump White House.

The ultra-conservative site is known for such liberal-baiting headlines as Would you rather your child had feminism or cancer? and Birth control makes women unattractive and crazy. It has described the confederate flag as a symbol of a glorious heritage and accused President Obama of crying phony fascist tears over the children killed in a mass shooting.

In 1996, Mr Bannon was charged with misdemeanor domestic violence and battery after an incident involving his ex-wife. The case was dismissed when prosecutors were unable to contact her. A decade later, in a 2007 court filing, the same ex-wife accused him of making anti-Semitic comments about a private school to which the couple planned to send their daughters.

As they discussed the Archer School for Girls in Los Angeles, she claimed, Mr Bannon went on to say the biggest problem he had with Archer is the number of Jews that attend. He said that he doesnt like Jews and that he doesnt like the way they raise their kids to be whiny brats and that he didnt want the girls going to school with Jews.

Mr Bannon pleaded not guilty to the domestic violence charges. The couple ultimately did send their daughters to Archer, and, after the court documents emerged this year, he denied the whiny brats conversation had ever taken place. Many, however, have found some of his on-the-record remarks plenty offensive enough.

John Weaver, the chief strategist for Mr Trump"s former Republican primary rival, Ohio Governor John Kasich, was among those who expressed dismay and revulsion at Mr Bannon"s appointment to a White House role, describing him in a tweet as a "racist" and "anti-Semite".

In 2010, in an interview to promote a film about right-wing female firebrands such as Sarah Palin and Ann Coulter, Mr Bannon said their success undermined the progressive narrative, explaining: Thats one of the unintended consequences of the womens liberation movement that, in fact, the women that would lead this country would be feminine, they would be pro-family, they would have husbands, they would love their children. They wouldn"t be a bunch of dykes.

Now 62, Mr Bannon has made a habit of antagonising the Republican establishment as much as he does the liberal left. At a conservative gathering in 2013, he reportedly called for a populist uprising within the GOP. Its going to be an insurgent, centre-right populist movement that is virulently anti-establishment, and its going to continue to hammer both the progressive left and the institutional Republican Party, he said.

He was, it now appears, describing the Trump campaign. It is perhaps no coincidence that Mr Trump has also been accused of anti-Semitism. In the final days of the election, the Trump campaign released an ad that contained several arguably anti-Semitic tropes, including claims of a global conspiracy and images of the Jewish financiers George Soros and Lloyd Blankfein. In a 60 minutes interview aired on Sunday evening, Trump called on his supporters to "stop" harassing minorities, saying "don"t do it. That"s terrible." But the news of Mr Bannon"s appointment, which broke on the same night, will do little to calm fears.

In a recent profile of Mr Bannon for The Atlantic, Conor Freidersdorf compared Mr Bannon to a Jacobin, the most ruthless and radical group involved in the French Revolution. Trump is not his idea of a good president of the United States, Mr Freidersdorf wrote. Trump is his guillotine.

Speaking to Bloomberg on Thursday, Mr Bannon resisted such a comparison. This is not the French Revolution, he said. They destroyed the basic institutions of society and changed their form of government. What Trump represents is a restoration a restoration of true American capitalism. The president-elect, he added, is the leader of a populist uprising.

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Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-elections/steve-bannon-donald-trump-breitbart-alt-right-president-elect-a7415556.html

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This New Zealand Radio Presenter Stayed on Air During an Earthquake


7.5 M earthquake strikes New Zealand just outside Christchurch NOV. 13, 2016
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Source: http://time.com/4569511/new-zealand-radio-earthquake/

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Leon Russell, Hit Maker and Musicians" Musician, Dies at 74


Leon Russell dead at 74

The music Mr. Russell made on his own put a scruffy, casual surface on rich musical hybrids, interweaving soul, country, blues, jazz, gospel, pop and classical music. Like Willie Nelson, who collaborated with him, and Ray Charles, whose 1993 recording of A Song for You won a Grammy Award, Mr. Russell made a broad, sophisticated palette of American music sound down-home and natural.

Photo The cover of Mr. Russells 1973 album Leon Live.

After his popularity had peaked in the 1970s, he shied away from self-promotion and largely set aside rock, though he kept performing. But he was prized as a musicians musician, collaborating with Elvis Costello and Elton John, among others. In 2011, after making a duet album with Mr. John, The Union, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the ceremony, Mr. John called him the master of space and time and added, He sang, he wrote and he played just how I wanted to do it.

Leon Russell was born Claude Russell Bridges in Lawton, Okla., on April 2, 1942. An injury to his upper vertebrae at birth caused a slight paralysis on his right side that would shape his music: A resulting delayed reaction time in his right hand forced him to think ahead about what it would play. It gave me a very strong sense of duality, he said last year in a Public Radio International interview.

He started classical piano lessons when he was 4, played baritone horn in his high school marching band and also learned trumpet. At 14 he started gigging in Oklahoma; since it was a dry state at the time, he could play clubs without being old enough to drink. Soon after he graduated from high school, Jerry Lee Lewis hired him and his band to back him on tour for two months.

He moved to Los Angeles in the late 1950s and found club work and then studio work; he learned to play guitar, and he began calling himself Leon Russell, taking the name Leon from a friend who had lent him an ID so he could play California club dates while underage.

His music-making drew on both his classical training and his Southern roots, and he played everything from standards to surf-rock, from million-sellers to pop throwaways. He was glimpsed on television as a member of the Shindogs, the house band for the prime-time rock show Shindig! in the mid-1960s, and was in the house band for the 1964 concert film, The T.A.M.I. Show.

In 1967, he built a home studio and began working with the guitarist Marc Benno as the Asylum Choir, which released its debut album in 1968. He also started a record label, Shelter, in 1969 with the producer Denny Cordell. Mr. Russell drew more recognition as a co-producer, arranger and musician on Mr. Cockers second album, Joe Cocker!, which included Mr. Russells song Delta Lady.

When Mr. Cockers Grease Band fell apart days before an American tour, Mr. Russell assembled Mad Dogs & Englishmen, a big, boisterous band that included three drummers and a 10-member choir. Its 1970 double live album and a tour film became a showcase for Mr. Russell as well as for Mr. Cocker; the album reached No. 2 on the Billboard album chart.

Photo Leon Russell performing in 2010 in New York. Credit Chad Batka for The New York Times

Mr. Russell also released his first solo album in 1970; it included A Song for You and had studio appearances from Mr. Cocker, Eric Clapton, two members of the Beatles and three from the Rolling Stones. But Mr. Russells second album, Leon Russell and the Shelter People, fared better commercially: It reached No. 17 on the Billboard chart.

Mr. Russell had his widest visibility as the 1970s began. He played the Concert for Bangladesh at Madison Square Garden with Mr. Harrison, Bob Dylan and Mr. Clapton; he produced and played on Mr. Dylans songs When I Paint My Masterpiece and Watching the River Flow. He toured with the Rolling Stones and with his own band.

His third album, Carney, went to No. 2 with the hit Tight Rope; it also featured his own version of This Masquerade. In 1973, his Leon Live album reached the Top 10, and he recorded his first album of country songs under the pseudonym Hank Wilson. The fledgling Gap Band, also from Oklahoma, backed Mr. Russell in 1974 on his album Stop All That Jazz. His 1975 album Will o the Wisp included what would be his last Top 20 pop hit, Lady Blue.

But he continued to work. He made duet albums with his wife at the time, Mary Russell (formerly Mary McCreary). And he collaborated with Mr. Nelson in 1979 on One for the Road, a double LP of pop and country standards. It sold half a million copies.

That same year he married Janet Lee Constantine, who survives him, as do six children: Blue, Teddy Jack, Tina Rose, Sugaree, Honey and Coco.

Mr. Russell delved into various idioms over the next decades, mostly recording for independent labels. He toured and recorded with the New Grass Revival, adding his piano and voice to their string-band lineup. He made more country albums as Hank Wilson. He recorded blues, Christmas songs, gospel songs and instrumentals.

In 1992, the songwriter and pianist Bruce Hornsby, who had long cited Mr. Russells influence, sought to rejuvenate Mr. Russells rock career by producing the album Anything Can Happen, but it drew little notice. Mr. Russell continued to tour for die-hard fans, who called themselves Leon Lifers.

A call in 2009 from Mr. John, whom Mr. Russell had supported in the early 1970s, led to the making of The Union which also had guest appearances by Neil Young and Brian Wilson and a 10-date tour together in 2010. Mr. Russell also sat in on Mr. Costellos 2010 album, National Ransom. Then he bought a new bus and returned to the road, on his own.

Correction: November 13, 2016

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this obituary misstated the day Mr. Russell died. It was Sunday, not Saturday. It also misstated the year of his birth. It is 1942, not 1941.

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Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/14/arts/music/leon-russell-hit-maker-and-musicians-musician-dies-at-74.html?_r%3D0

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