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Review ‘Sesame Street’: Teaches Us All That Inclusiveness And Autism Go Together

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On Monday, ‘Sesame Street’ introduced, Julia, a little girl Muppet with autism and in doing so continued a long tradition of inclusiveness.

While breaking new ground isn’t anything new for ‘Sesame Street’, this is the first time the show struck a nerve with me. Two months ago, my son, Charles was diagnosed with autism. What stood out about the episode is that it didn’t seek to answer what autism was. However, it did attempt to eliminate any stigma associated with the diagnosis.

Sesame Street

Summary

In this episode, we see Alan (Alan Muraoka) supervising Elmo, Abby, and Julia as they all try finger painting. Big Bird happens to walk up and asks what they are doing. He gets typical responses from his buddies (Elmo and Abby) but nothing out Julia. She just keeps finger painting completely ignoring his overtures of friendship. Big Bird immediately thinks that she is either shy or just doesn’t like him. Alan explains there’s much more to Julia than whether or not she’s shy or not and that she, in fact, has autism.

What Worked

The writers didn’t attempt to project any aspect of autism as being remotely simple. At one point in the episode, Big Bird asks Alan about autism and he’s initially stymied by the question. His response seemed all too real as there are times it’s hard to articulate what autism is. However, Alan’s eventual response to Big Bird’s question was perfect. He explained that Julia just handles things in a different way. Just phrasing things in that matter promotes a message of inclusion and positivity.

The episode didn’t just paint a rosy perception of autism. For example, many children with Autism have sensory issues and don’t like how things feel or different sounds. In this episode we see Julia struggling with using finger paints because she doesn’t like how they feel on her hand. She’s able to work around it by using a long paint brush. We also witness her being overwhelmed when the police siren goes off because of a sensitivity to sound. The other muppets are puzzled by this and Julia has to go to her happy place to calm down and feel better.

Julia’s speech patterns and mannerisms were extremely accurate as well. Julia repeated phrases multiple times and would move her arms up and down repeatedly when she was excited.

There is a scene where Big Bird tells Elmo and Abby that he’s never had a friend that was different like Julia. Elmo and Abby respond on how they are all different, and they’ve managed to stay friends. Such a powerful moment! It shows children that all kids are different, not just children with autism.

Overall

This episode didn’t seek to define children with autism by their diagnosis but by their actions. While Julia didn’t finger paint in the same manner that the other kids did, when she was done, she had wonderfully drawn a picture of her favorite stuffed Bunny. It’s what we do that makes us amazing! What a great message for everyone.

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Action-Packed New Trailer For ‘Atomic Blonde’ Released

If you like James Bonde, badass female characters, and some jaw-dropping action sequences we present Atomic Blonde. The second official trailer for Charlize Theron’s upcoming spy thriller has been released and might even be better than the first trailer Universal Pictures gifted us with a few month’s ago.

The new trailer does a great job of teasing the epic, R-Rated action that the film will contain. Thankfully the teaser doesn’t give too many plot points away, instead, it just shows us what we want to see, which is always Charlize Theron kicking ass!

Atomic Blonde is directed by David Leitch and premiered earlier this year at SXSW film festival. The film is already receiving a lot of early buzz, so this is definitely a project to keep your eye on.

Agent Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) is equal parts spycraft, sensuality and savagery, willing to deploy any of her skills to stay alive on an impossible mission. Sent alone into Berlin to retrieve a priceless dossier from within the destabilized city, she partners with embedded station chief David Percival (James McAvoy) to navigate her way through a deadly game of spies.

Atomic Blonde will land in theaters on July 28, 2017!

 

 

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2017 Movies: Why I’m Most Worried For ‘Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle’

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Growing up in the nineties, one of my favorite movies was 1995’s Jumanji. Starring Robin Williams as Alan Parrish, a man who got sucked into and trapped within a magical board game as a child only to be freed years later as an adult by two kids who began playing the game where he left off, the movie was a huge financial hit despite the mixed reviews. It was so popular, in fact, that it spawned an animated television series, video games, and a board game. I was such a huge fan of the film that I can still remember the most famous clue offered up by the magical game within the movie: “In the jungle you must wait, until the dice read five or eight.” (It was actually this clue that sucked young Alan Parrish into the game to begin with, and instilled an irrational fear within me that prevented me from playing the board game based upon the movie that Hasbro released.) Because of all of this, it pains me to say that the movie being released this year that I’m most worried about is the long-awaited sequel, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.

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Thankfully, It’s Cool to Like Anne Hathaway Again

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There was a time in the not-too-distant past when Anne Hathaway seemed to be, for ridiculous reasons, wholly dismissed and disliked by The Internet Dot Com. Thankfully, it seems that silly time has passed.

The confusing backlash against Hathaway may have reached its zenith in late 2012, going into 2013, when she took home her Oscar for Les Miserables and managed to just sorta rub people the wrong way. The Internets deemed, with unwavering certainty, that Anne Hathaway was a phony, trying to fool us all with false modesty and pearl clutching gasps with every award she racked up during the season.

If you back up another two years, however, Hathaway’s 2011 team up with James Franco to host the Oscars was a tire fire simulcast across the world. This was probably where the court of public opinion began to make their early assessments of the young up-and-coming star. Never mind the fact that Hathaway had probably the hardest job in show business that night: overcompensating for a profoundly disinterested James Franco.

For the years following her Oscar win, Anne Hathaway has been slotted. She’s a phony out-of-touch Hollywood actress, or whatever. She’s overrated, or something. She’s annoying! All of these descriptors courtesy of the message-board hive mind of the most bitter patrons of The Internet. The disdain for Hathaway reached a fevered pitch, noticeable enough for her to be asked about it more than once. And she answered these questions, even a week ago, with grace:

“It’s not that I’ve gotten a rhino skin to it, but I sort of see all of that for what it is. … How the world feels about me has nothing to do with me. How other people treat me has nothing to do with me. But if anything that anybody said resonated with me as something I’d like to work on for myself, I took it in like that. And to that extent, I feel like I got to shortcut a lot of my growth. To that extent, even though I wouldn’t have chosen to go through it, I still found a way to be grateful to it.”

Even when Hathaway popped up in 2012, a few months before Les Mis, as Selina Kyle/Catwoman for The Dark Knight Rises, it was met with a shrug, some fanboy grumblings, and a few eye rolls from those who got on the hater train early. Even though she was probably the best part of a disjointed third entry into Nolan’s Batman world. And you know it’s true.

Now, though, Anne Hathaway has infiltrated the virginal basement-dwelling geekdom with Colossal, a sci-fi comedy mashup getting terrific reviews and being lauded for its uniqueness. The great performances in Brokeback Mountain and Rachel Getting Married were snooty and art house enough for the message board warriors to just ignore. But not now. Colossal is the sort of quirky little monster film the nerd embraces, and for most respectable nerds out there they would think nothing of Anne Hathaway being front and center.

But for some, it’s an about face for them to embrace Hathaway’s performance in Colossal. And it’s being praised as a great performance, with rumblings that this is some sort of comeback for an actress who consistently delivers quality. A comeback? Sure, she’s had her fair share of Bride Wars, but overall Anne Hathaway is an actress who never deserved the sort of derision she received just because the masses needed a villain at the time. She is talented, and beyond all that, she seems cool. She’s done nothing any other actress hasn’t done somewhere along the way, but inexplicably it was her who had to absorb the keyboard jury’s wrath.

Anne Hathaway isn’t in anyone’s face. She isn’t in every other movie. She isn’t draped across the tabloids weekly. And yet she had to wear the label of Most Hated Actress because somebody’s gotta. And now, it’s cool for some to like her again; personally, I’ve been over here liking her all along.

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Director Marc Webb Is Proud Of His ‘Amazing Spider-Man’ Films

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Collider recently spoke to director Marc Webb, and included in the interview was a question related to the controversial Amazing Spider-Man films. Webb is proud of the movies he made, and doesn’t agree with the criticism they get.

“It’s hard for me to think about it, in terms of regrets. There are so many things that I’m proud of. There was an ambition with the second movie, in particular. The idea that it’s a superhero that can’t save everybody is something that I’m really proud of. I’m really proud of the ambition of that because it’s an important message, and I believe in that. I believe in what we were after. They’re really, really difficult movies to make. They’re complex in ways that people don’t fully understand. They weren’t disasters. But in terms of regrets, I don’t think of it in those terms. I felt really, really fortunate to have that opportunity. That’s a whole other long, in-depth conversation that I probably shouldn’t have publicly. I loved everybody involved. I really did. I didn’t have an adversarial relationship with the studio, at all. There were a lot of very smart people. These are just incredibly complicated movies to make. I am proud of them, in many ways, and I stand by them. I’m certainly not a victim, in that situation.”

In many ways, I agree with the director. The Amazing Spider-Man is my favorite Spidey flick of all time, with TASM2 being my 3rd favorite. Andrew Garfield was an incredible lead, and the relationship between him and Emma Stone’s Gwen Stacy was very well put together. The writing was shaky, but other aspects made up for that weakness.

How do you feel about The Amazing Spider-Man series? Was it as atrocious as the internet claims? Comment below, let us know!

The next Spider-Man movie takes place in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and is directed by Jon Watts. Tom Holland is portraying Peter Parker.

Spider-Man: Homecoming swings into theaters on July 7.

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Dwayne Johnson Teases “Surprises” In Upcoming DC Films

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While promoting Fate of the Furious, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson talked about DC’s slate of upcoming movies.

“We’ve had great discussions with Geoff Johns over at DC. This is a really fun, cool time for DC right now because they’re world-building. We’re seeing that with Wonder Woman and Aquaman. We have a few surprises down the line.”

He then went into a bit more detail regarding his character, Black Adam, and Shazam.

So what we decided to do was to create a scenario where Black Adam has his stand-alone movie, and Captain Marvel, Shazam, has his stand-alone movie. We’re building our world that way, and then we can come together at some point.”

What surprises could Johnson be referring to? When will we actually see his character in a DC Extended Universe film? Speculate in the comments section below.

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‘The Lost City of Z’ Review: A Grand, Classical Historical Drama

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The Lost City of Z is a lavish epic about the explorer and British army officer Percy Fawcett that had huge ambitions but did not quite live up to them.

In 1905 Fawcett (Charlie Hunnam) is a major based in Cork, Ireland and longs for distinction and awards from his superiors and peers. His chance comes when the Royal Geographic Society ask Fawcett to survey the Amazon region on the Bolivia/Brazil border. With his colleagues Henry Costin (Robert Pattinson) and Arthur Manley (Edward Ashley) they discover evidence of a civilization that use to exist in the rainforest and, over the next 20 years, continues to find what Fawcett has dubbed ‘The Lost City of Z’.

The Lost City of Z is a film with a great scale, not just because of a long period of time it is set in but also due to the big adventure. It is an old-fashioned style of exploration film that isn’t really made anymore. Like Werner Herzog’s classic 1972 film Aguirre, the Wrath of God: The Lost City of Z is set in the jungles of South America and has themes of exploring the unknown to the point of obsession -although Fawcett at least has some levels of sanity, while like The Revenant, The Lost City of Z is a survival tale in the wilderness. Scenes, where the indigenous people fire arrows at the explorers, are also similar to the attacks the Native Americans mounted against the fur trappers. The action in the jungle and the trenches are brief but intense because they are seen through Fawcett and his colleague’s perspective: they don’t know what’s on the other side. I would love to see more of this approach for a war film.

The Lost of Z also has the spender of Stanley Kubrick’s costume drama Barry Lyndon: both films have terrific costumes and cinematography. Writer/director James Gray and his cinematographer Darius Khondji followed Kubrick’s approach to use natural lighting – interior scenes are filmed in dark rooms only lit by candles, lamps, and sunlight from the windows, while exterior are wonderfully varied – from the sunlit meadows of Devon, the damp, green atmosphere of the Amazon and the gray and brown desolation of the trenches at the Somme. It’s similar to what the 2014 World War One drama Testament of Youth did, juxtaposing a bright, sunlit look for events before the war and having a drabber look when the war commences.

Also, like Barry Lyndon classical musical plays an important part of the storytelling. The movie does open with a terrific sequence, where Army officers are hunting a deer while bagpipes play in the background. It’s a striking opening and the music continues in this vein – like a native to the area playing the pan flute, classical music playing in ballrooms and the slightly surreal experience of the explorers entering a small mining colony as an opera is being performed. It is only Christopher Spelman’s second time as a composer and he shows he is a talent to watch out for. However, at times the sound mixing was off: when a character shouted it pierced through my ears even though that would not be the intent. But, I am willing to give the film the benefit, that it could have been a problem with the cinema’s sound system.

Besides from borrowing some of Barry Lyndon filmmaking techniques Fawcett’s character motivations are similar to the title character in the Kubrick film. Early in The Lost City of Z one of Fawcett’s superiors described him as having ‘an unfortunate choice of ancestors’ and he longs to regain his family status and glory. Yet Fawcett’s own personal ambitions end up running parallel to his newly found respect for the indigenous people of South America: he speaks out against their mistreatment by the Brazilian and Bolivian governments and states that they are much more sophisticated than they appear. Although the indigenous people live almost naked in huts they still have legends about the lost city and still have knowledge on how to farm in the rainforest: something the white man has not been able to manage. He is seen as a maverick by his contemporaries because of his views about the indigenous people: as they put “it’s one thing to sympathize with Indians, another to elevate them.”

There is a lot for history enthusiasts and people who are interested in anthropology to enjoy. There is a great attention to detail with the costumes and Northern Ireland made a great substitution for the scenes set in England. Even the language felt authentic for the time – something to be appreciated considering many historical films and TV series modernize speech despite the historical setting.

The Lost City of Z also attached a solid cast – possibly attracted because of Gray’s reputation as a filmmaker. Hunnam is an actor that I have never been that impressed by – he failed to do accents in films like Green Street and Pacific Rim, yet in The Lost City of Z he gave a solid and convincing performance as a man ahead of his time. Sienna Miller was unrecognizable as Fawcett’s wife – the woman who willingly supports his endeavors: raising their children and helping in his research – yet not allowed to go on the adventures herself. Pattinson has been ridiculed for his role in the Twilight series yet he made efforts to be seen as a serious dramatic actor, and for The Lost City of Z dons a beard and a pair of period spectacles: he gave a more understated performance to Hunnam’s who was much more combative.

The Lost City of Z was aiming for awards attention – which it never received – and yet there was so much material that the book it was based upon could have been adapted as a mini-series. James Gray’s talent shines through in making a solid period drama.


Are you excited for this film? Comment below.

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Production Wraps On Marvel’s ‘Punisher’ Netflix Series

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Production on season one of Marvel’s Punisher Netflix series has officially wrapped, according to @jonbernthalorg on Twitter.

https://twitter.com/jonbernthalorg/status/851133706836348929

Not much is known about this Punisher series. Through leaked behind the scenes photos, we can confirm that Deborah Ann Woll is returning as Karen Paige. Other cast members include Ben Barnes, Jason R. Moore, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Jamie Ray Newman.

The season is reportedly hitting Netflix at some point in 2017. Given that The Defenders has an August release, Punisher will likely be released in November or December.

Are you looking forward to Marvel’s Punisher series? Comment below, let us know!

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Watch: ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2’ TV Spot Highlights Nebula & Gamora

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We Got This Covered has dropped the latest Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 TV Spot. It highlights the dynamic between Gamora and Nebula.

“Set to the backdrop of ‘Awesome Mixtape #2,’ Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 continues the team’s adventures as they traverse the outer reaches of the cosmos. The Guardians must fight to keep their newfound family together as they unravel the mysteries of Peter Quill’s true parentage. Old foes become new allies and fan-favorite characters from the classic comics will come to our heroes’ aid as the Marvel cinematic universe continues to expand.”

Guardians Vol. 2 stars Chris Pratt as Star-Lord/Peter Quill, Zoe Saldana as Gamora, Bradley Cooper as the voice of Rocket Raccoon, Vin Diesel as the voice of Groot, Michael Rooker as Yondu, Kurt Russel as Ego The  Living Planet, Karen Gillian as Nebula, Dave Bautista as Drax, Pom Klementieff as Mantis, Sean Gunn as Kraglin, and Sylvester Stallone in a currently unknown role. The film is directed by James Gunn.

The film is slated for a theatrical release starting May 5.

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FilmKind Podcast Episode 9: ‘Thor: Ragnarok’ Trailer Review

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Marvel Studios just released the first trailer for Thor: Ragnarok and the FilmKind Podcast is here to review and discuss everything nerdy about the official teaser. What did FilmKind host Kieran McLean think of Hela? Does the tone of the movie suit Thor’s character? Listen to the episode and find out!

Also Read: FilmKind Podcast Episode 8: Top 5 Movie Trilogies

FilmKind is an awesome new show discussing the latest movies and movie related content. With amazing weekly episodes and detailed reviews!

Listen To The FilmKind Podcast’s Review Of The Thor: Ragnarok Trailer Below!

Imprisoned on the other side of the universe, the mighty Thor (Chris Hemsworth) finds himself in a deadly gladiatorial contest that pits him against the Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), his former ally and fellow Avenger. Thor’s quest for survival leads him in a race against time to prevent the all-powerful Hela (Cate Blanchett) from destroying his home world and the Asgardian civilization.

Thor: Ragnarok stars Chris Hemsworth as the God of Thunder, Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner/The Incredible Hulk. The cast also features Tom Hiddleston as Loki, Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie, Cate Blanchett as Hela, Jeff Goldblum as Grandmaster, Benedict Cumberbatch as Doctor Strange, Anthony Hopkins as Odin, Idris Elba as Heimdall, and Karl Urban as Executioner.

Thor: Ragnarok will land in theaters on November 3, 2017!

 

 

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