Tag Archives: directs

New Helldivers 2 Major Order directs players to Heeth and Angel’s Venture to kill even more bugs after liberating Veld [UPDATED] – Windows Central

  1. New Helldivers 2 Major Order directs players to Heeth and Angel’s Venture to kill even more bugs after liberating Veld [UPDATED] Windows Central
  2. Over 180000 Helldivers 2 players are storming a single planet and are on track to liberate it in under 24 hours—unless Arrowhead’s devious DM gets mean again (Update: He did) PC Gamer
  3. How to complete the Helldivers 2 Liberate Veld Major Order Gamesradar
  4. Helldivers 2 Players Losing It Over The Fall of Malevelon Creek Kotaku
  5. Helldivers 2 players invigorated by “huge” new Major Order rewards Dexerto

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‘The Boys in the Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs His Best Film in a While, a ’30s Rowing Saga That’s an Old-Fashioned Movie Daydream – Variety

  1. ‘The Boys in the Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs His Best Film in a While, a ’30s Rowing Saga That’s an Old-Fashioned Movie Daydream Variety
  2. ‘The Boys in the Boat’ review: George Clooney delivers a sweet adaptation The Seattle Times
  3. ‘The Boys In The Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs Winning Story Of 1936 U Of Washington Rowing Team That Shocked The World And Hitler At 1936 Olympics Deadline
  4. The Boys in the Boat review – George Clooney sports drama goes for patriotic boosterism The Guardian
  5. ‘Boys in the Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs Cheesy Sports Flick The Daily Beast

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‘The Boys In The Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs Winning Story Of 1936 U Of Washington Rowing Team That Shocked The World And Hitler At 1936 Olympics – Deadline

  1. ‘The Boys In The Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs Winning Story Of 1936 U Of Washington Rowing Team That Shocked The World And Hitler At 1936 Olympics Deadline
  2. ‘The Boys in the Boat’ review: George Clooney delivers a sweet adaptation The Seattle Times
  3. ‘The Boys in the Boat’ Review: Joel Edgerton in George Clooney’s Tribute to Old-Fashioned Can-Do Spirit Hollywood Reporter
  4. The Boys in the Boat review – George Clooney sports drama goes for patriotic boosterism The Guardian
  5. ‘Boys in the Boat’ Review: George Clooney Directs Cheesy Sports Flick The Daily Beast

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Sonia Gandhi prompts Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury to list her achievements in Parliament, directs him to ‘carry on’ after he stops abruptly – OpIndia

  1. Sonia Gandhi prompts Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury to list her achievements in Parliament, directs him to ‘carry on’ after he stops abruptly OpIndia
  2. Special Session | ‘Will You Send People to Pakistan if They Don’t Vote For You?’: Manoj Kumar Jha The Quint
  3. ‘This is true, bolne do’: Sonia gets angry as BJP MPs try to disrupt Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury’s speech Times of India
  4. Watch Cong MP Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury Speaks In Lok Sabha At The Beginning Of Parl Special Session India Today
  5. Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury flags ‘stark disparities’, bats for job creation to emerge as developed nation The Hindu
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Wildcat review – Ethan Hawke directs daughter in mediocre literary biopic – The Guardian

  1. Wildcat review – Ethan Hawke directs daughter in mediocre literary biopic The Guardian
  2. Maya Hawke Reveals Best Compliment Her Dad Gave Her While Working Together On ‘Wildcat’ ET Canada
  3. Ethan Hawke travelled in bus to attend premiere of his film Wildcat at TIFF Hindustan Times
  4. Maya Hawke Shared Advice For Young Actors At TIFF & What A Day Off In Toronto Would Look Like Narcity Canada
  5. TIFF 2023 | Ethan Hawke and daughter Maya tap Flannery O’Connor’s fiction to tell her story in ‘Wildcat’ The Hindu
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Air’ Review: Ben Affleck Directs An A-List Ensemble In His Latest Film About How Air Jordans Sneakers Were Made And Popularized – SXSW – Deadline

  1. ‘Air’ Review: Ben Affleck Directs An A-List Ensemble In His Latest Film About How Air Jordans Sneakers Were Made And Popularized – SXSW Deadline
  2. Ben Affleck on the Demands Michael Jordan Made Before He Directed ‘Air’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. ‘Air’ Review: Ben Affleck Turns Nike’s Quest to Sign Michael Jordan Into This Generation’s ‘Jerry Maguire’ Variety
  4. ‘Air’ Review: Ben Affleck’s Ode to Michael Jordan Is Affectionate and Involving, Even When It Fails to Convince Hollywood Reporter
  5. “They’ve taken away some of the value”: Batman Star Ben Affleck Unhappy with Streaming Giants for Muddling Real Viewership Data to Underpay Actors and Directors FandomWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Takashi Miike Directs Anime of Onimusha Game Series – News

The Netflix Tudum Japan event on Sunday revealed that CAPCOM‘s Onimusha game franchise is getting an anime adaptation that will stream on Netflix.

Famed director Takashi Miike (live-action Ichi the Killer, Blade of the Immortal, Crows Zero, JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable, Terraformars) will serve as the chief director of the series at Sublimation. Shin’ya Sugai (Dragon’s Dogma, Shikizakura) is directing the series.

The series will use the late prolific actor Toshirō Mifune (Rashomon, Seven Samurai) as a model for the character Miyamoto Musashi.

CAPCOM debuted the Onimusha Sengoku-era survival action game series in 2001. The games in the series retell stories from the Sengoku era but with supernatural elements. The latest game in the series, a remaster of Onimusha: Warlords, released in January 2019.

The game series previously inspired the Onimusha: Dawn of Dreams CG film in 2006. The film compiles the CG-animated footage from CAPCOM‘s Onimusha: Dawn of Dreams PlayStation 2 video game and also adds extra animated scenes.

Images via Comic Natalie


Source: Neftflix Tudum Japan livestream

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Abbott Laboratories directs employees to dispose of rapid COVID-19 test materials

Employees at Abbott Laboratories, which makes rapid COVID-19 tests, were instructed in June and July to start destroying BinaxNOW test materials amid declining sales, The New York Times reported.

The BinaxNOW antigen test, which can provide COVID-19 results within 15 minutes, was popular earlier in the pandemic as a way for people to quickly learn whether they had the coronavirus, and Abbott once partnered with the White House under former President TrumpDonald TrumpOvernight Defense: Afghan flights restart as Biden vows to complete evacuation Trump says he ‘single-handedly’ picked Alabama for Space Command, contradicting Pentagon Overnight Health Care: Battle over masks in Florida escalates as two school districts given 48 hours to comply MORE.

The antigen tests are less reliable than the PCR tests, which tend to provide results within a few days.

The Times reported that sales for the rapid test fell in the spring as cases started to decline amid a nationwide vaccine rollout.

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announcement issued in May that vaccinated people did not need to continue being tested even if they had been exposed to COVID-19 added to the trouble, with fewer people needing tests.

“The numbers are going down,” a site manager, Andy Wilkinson, reportedly told employees who were ultimately laid off, regarding testing demands. “This is all about money.”

As a result, hundreds of thousands of test cards used for the rapid tests were disposed of, according to a few employees who spoke on condition of anonymity to the Times.

However, now Abbott has a new problem: being able to keep up with a renewed demand for the rapid tests as the delta variant spreads through vulnerable and unvaccinated communities, creating a new surge of COVID-19 cases. 

The Times reported that thousands of companies were reportedly told by Abbott that it would not be able to supply them with rapid tests immediately while it struggles to rehire workers it had previously let go.

Aly Morici, director of public affairs at Abbott, told the Times in an emailed statement that it was  “difficult to scale up on a dime, but we’re doing so again” and anticipated there would be some “supply constraints” over the next couple of weeks.

However, there are still questions regarding why test cards were eliminated. 

Abbott CEO and President Robert Ford told the Times in an interview that test cards were being disposed of because of their shelf life, though the news outlet reported that photos they had of test cards being thrown away in June and July showed they were not set to expire for at least seven months.

In a statement after the Times story was published, Abbott issued a statement maintaining that the company had not “destroyed any finished BinaxNOW product, nor have we destroyed any usable test components needed by the market that could have been donated.”

The company argued that it had also chosen to store some of its materials for future use “in the event that we needed to scale back up, which is exactly what’s happening now.”



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Back in Cannes, Sean Penn directs again, with daughter Dylan

CANNES, France (AP) — Sean Penn has been to the Cannes Film Festival about a dozen times — from bumming around with Robert De Niro in 1984 to presiding over the jury.

But his last visit was rocky. Penn’s film, 2016’s “The Last Face,” flopped with critics in way that would make some filmmakers gun shy about returning.

Penn, though, didn’t hesitate. On Saturday night, he premiered in Cannes his latest film, “Flag Day,” in which he also co-stars.

A few hours before walking down the red carpet, Penn sat comfortably in a hotel bar, excited to be back. The festival is the greatest in the world, he said. “Everyone knows it’s the big game.”

And it’s a game Penn welcomes. Cannes is worth it, even if he takes a few lumps.

“The bad stuff, these days, I’ve been on such extreme ends on that. It’s like: whatever,” says Penn. “The thing is: I am confident that I know as much — more –about acting than almost any of these critics. And I’m very confident in the performance I’m most concerned about.”

With that, Penn raises his hand and points toward where his daughter, Dylan Penn, is sitting. Dylan, 30, is the star of “Flag Day.” She has dabbled before in acting but it’s easily her biggest role yet. In the film, adapted from Jennifer Vogel’s 2005 memoir “Flim-Flam Man: The True Story of My Father’s Counterfeit Life,” she plays Jennifer Vogel, the journalist daughter of a swindler and counterfeiter (played by Penn).

Her father’s confidence isn’t misplaced. Dylan is natural, poised and captivating. She looks a veteran, already, which might be expected of the child of Penn and Robin Wright. And those critics? Variety said the film “reveals Dylan Penn to be a major actor.”

But for a long time, Dylan never wanted the spotlight.

“Growing up, being surrounded by actors and being on set, it was really something that didn’t interest me at all,” Dylan says. “I always thought, and still think, my passion lies in working behind the camera. But as soon as I expressed wanting to do that kind of thing, both of my parents said separately: You won’t be a good director if you don’t know what it’s like to be in the actor’s shoes.”

Dylan is stepping forward in movies the same time her father is withdrawing. Penn, 60, is in the midst of shooting Sam Esmail’s Watergate series for Starz, with Julia Roberts. But he has recently pulled further away from Hollywood. Penn devotes more time to Community Organized Relief Effort (CORE), the nonprofit he started after the 2010 earthquake to help Haitians. Haiti has this week again plunged into crisis after the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, a situation Penn calls heartbreaking.

“These people have been working so hard to bring their country up and this kind of horrible violence, cynicism — whatever my suspicions the motivation was,” he says. “I’m glad that our teams are safe for the moment, but it’s horrible.”

During the pandemic, CORE has erected testing and vaccination sites, including one at Los Angeles’ Dodger Stadium, and dispensed millions of shots. In movies, Penn still has a pair of upcoming roles he says he promised to do years earlier. But beyond that?

“Then I just don’t know. I’d be very surprised. I don’t think I would start a movie without knowing if it was going to be a movie. And I don’t think I’d direct something that wasn’t a movie unless it was on the Broadway stage,” he says, and then smiles. “There’s a simpler way of saying that: I’m not interested in directing for the small screen.”

Penn is increasingly at odds with Hollywood’s dominant priorities. He’s never made a franchise film. He laments Marvel movies and “how much it’s taken up the space and claimed so much time in the careers of so many talented people.” He misses cinema that isn’t “just razzle-dazzle, Cirque de Soleil movies.”

So-called “cancel culture,” he has issues with, too. Arguing that today he wouldn’t be allowed to play gay icon Harvey Milk (2018’s “Milk”), Penn recently said that soon only Danish princes will play Hamlet.

But his biggest gripe may be with the onset of direct-to-streaming film releases. “The way I’ve always put it is: It’s not the girl I fell in love with,” Penn says.

MGM will release “Flag Day” theatrically Aug. 13; Penn considers himself “lucky to have a movie that’s going to be a movie.” But it took years to reach this stage. Dylan first read the book when her father optioned it when she was 15. Many possible iterations followed — Penn didn’t initially plan to direct — but the prospect of doing the film with Dylan was appealing.

“I have always thought if she wanted to do it, I’d encourage it,” Penn says.

For Dylan, the father-daughter relationship of “Flag Day” — Jennifer tries to help and stabilize her scamming father but also inherits some of his more destructive, conman habits — is a half-reflection of their own bond together.

“She always strived to have this really honest, transparent relationship with her father which she never got it in return,” Dylan Penn says. “I’ve tried to have that with my dad and got it in return.”

“It made us a lot closer than we’ve ever been,” she adds. “Of course, there were times when I talked back or had an attitude, but it was like: You can’t. This is your boss. This is work. This is not your dad right now.”

Dylan grants the experience was so satisfying that she’d like to continue acting. Her dad, she feels, may be “passing the torch a little bit,” she says. Hopper Jack Penn, her younger brother, also co-stars in the film. The rest of the cast is more veteran, including Josh Brolin and Regina King. Original songs by Cat Power, Eddie Vedder and Glen Hansard contribute to the score.

But the most vibrant parts of “Flag Day” are the scenes between Dylan and her dad.

“Dylan is — and I can say this in equal parts for my feeling about her as a person and as an actress — as uncontrived as it gets,” Penn says. “That’s a great quality to play off of.”

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP



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Joe Biden executive order directs possible rules for airline fees

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s administration is pursuing new rules to crack down on fees enforced by airlines that travelers have long complained are costly tack-ons for sometimes lackluster service. 

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Friday his department will propose new rules requiring the refund of fees when baggage is delayed or when services such as the plane’s Wi-Fi or in-flight entertainment system are malfunctioning or not provided. 

The move acts on a directive from Biden, who also ordered the department to consider rules that would require airlines to clearly disclose baggage, change and cancellation fees for consumers.

“Consumers deserve to receive the services they pay for or to get their money back when they don’t,” Buttigieg said. 

Biden’s crackdown on airline fees came in a sweeping executive order that he signed Friday afternoon taking aim at monopolies in industries that also include agriculture, technology, health care, banking and shipping. The order includes 72 initiatives, regulations and directives involving more than a dozen federal departments to promote greater economic competition. 

“Let me be very clear: Capitalism without competition isn’t capitalism,” Biden said before signing the order in the White House State Dining Room. “It’s exploitation.”

Luggage didn’t make it? US plans to make airlines refund fees if bags are delayed

Summer travel: American, Southwest airlines surge in flight delays could hint at hard summer for travelers

Prescription drug prices, non-compete agreements targeted 

Existing federal law says passengers are entitled to a fee if their checked bags are lost. The Transportation Department’s proposal would also require airlines to refund checked bags when delays go beyond 12 hours for domestic flights and 25 hours for international flights.

Another proposed rule would require airlines to “promptly provide” a refund when ancillary services such as Wi-Fi aren’t provided.

If approved after a lengthy regulation-writing process, the new policies could go into effect next year.

Other directives in Biden’s order seek to reduce the price of prescription drugs. That includes directing the Food and Drug Administration to work with states to safely import prescription drugs from Canada and new rules that would allow hearing aids to be sold over the counter at drug stores.

The president also encouraged the Federal Trade Commission to eliminate certain employee licensing requirements – often burdensome to workers – and to ban or limit companies from forcing employees to sign non-compete agreements that prevent them from exploring other employment. 

“At least one in three businesses require their workers to sign a non-compete agreement,” Biden said, arguing it’s done “for one reason” – to keep wages low. “Let workers choose who they want to work for.”

The U.S. airline industry is dominated by four companies: American, Southwest, Delta and United. 

“Reduced competition contributes to increasing fees like baggage and cancellation fees,” the White House said in a statement. “These fees are often raised in lockstep, demonstrating a lack of meaningful competitive pressure, and are often hidden from consumers at the point of purchase.”

Fact check: Airlines are not banning vaccinated people from flying

The top 10 airlines collected $35.2 billion in fees in 2018, according to the White House, a massive increase from the $1.2 billion collected in 2007.

A lack of competition in the airline industry “reduces incentives to provide good service,” the White House said, noting airlines were late delivering 2.3 million checked bags in 2019, according to data from the Transportation Department. 

Airlines push back, arguing competition is ‘robust’ 

Travel Fairness Now, a consumer advocacy group, said Biden’s executive order will help curb airlines’ appetite for “pricing chicanery and surprise fees.’’

“After years of the powerful airline industry getting everything it wants at the expense of consumers, the administration and DOT’s actions are a long-awaited breath of fresh air for the flying public,’’ Kurt Ebenhoch, the group’s executive director, said in a statement. “The airline industry is less competitive than at any time since deregulation and these commonsense consumer protections will start us down the path of restoring fairness for travelers.’’

Airlines pushed back at the White House’s characterization that the airline industry gives consumers few options.

Airlines for America, which represents seven major U.S. airlines, including Southwest, Delta, American and United, called competition in the airline industry “robust’’ and said few industries offer consumers so many choices. It noted that two new airlines, budget carriers Avelo Airlines and Breeze Airways, debuted in a pandemic this year.

“Robust competition in the U.S. airline industry has generated unprecedented levels of affordability and accessibility, benefitting the customer at every level,’’ spokeswoman Katherine Estep said in a statement.

The trade group said airline competition has created “historically low airfares,’’ with inflation adjusted ticket prices down 24% over the past decade.

Contributing: Staff writer Dawn Gilbertson; Associated Press.

Reach Joey Garrison on Twitter @joeygarrison.

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