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Hollywood movie studios are concerned they are being short-changed on box office sales from China

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China movie theater box office Reuters final

Hollywood has long been suspicious that the box office receipts they receive from the movies they release in China have been underreported, and now they are taking action. 

The Motion Picture Association of America, which represents the six major movie studios in the US, have hired an accounting firm to audit the box office sales of select titles that have been released in China, according to Bloomberg News.

The audit comes on the heels of ticket sales growth slowing last year to less than 3.7% in China after a 35% average growth the previous five years.

China is one of the fastest growing movie markets in the world and has been the savior of numerous big budget releases that flopped in the US, including recent releases like "The Mummy" and "Transformers: The Last Knight." So studios have recently been giving more attention to what returns they are getting out of the region.

And the studios have reason for concern.

The Mummy Universal final.JPGIn March, China’s State Administration of Press, Publication Radio, Film and Television penalized more than 300 theaters in March for under-reporting ticket sales, Bloomberg reports. The biggest penalties were 90-day suspensions for exhibitors that understated revenue by more than 1 million yuan ($146,000). And this is after China approved new fines for falsifying box-office sales in November. Some are five times the illegal gains. 

The results of the audit may come as soon as the third quarter of this year, according to Bloomberg. That's ahead of the deadline for the US to renegotiate its film-trade deal with China. Under the current deal, US studios receive 25% of box office sales. The studios export the movies to the county on a flat fee.

A representative for the MPAA did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

SEE ALSO: The 15 best '80s songs from Netflix's new show "GLOW"

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NOW WATCH: Terry Crews explains how intermittent fasting keeps him in shape


An artist recreated the trailer for 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' using a 33-year-old Apple computer

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star wars: the last jedi

The folks over at Lucasfilm are masters at creating anticipation for their films. Information leaks are few and far between, and trailers are even scarcer. This has left the denizens of the internet to scrounge for any new morsel of information about the galactic saga. 

Luckily, Wahyu Ichwandardi has taken it upon himself to help ease the wait until the film hits theaters on December 16. The New York-based artist has recreated the most recent "Star Wars: The Last Jedi" trailer with a retro aesthetic. 

Ichwandardi used an Apple IIc, which was released in 1984, along with a KoalaPad+. Check out the making-of below:

SEE ALSO: An explanation of everything in the first trailer for 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi'

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NOW WATCH: Tesla will reveal the finished Model 3 in July — here's everything you need to know about the car

THEN AND NOW: What the 'Harry Potter' actors look like today compared to the first movie

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Harry Potter premiere Daniel Radcliffe Emma Watson

16 years have passed since Daniel Radcliffe appeared in "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" with that lightning bolt-shaped scar on his forehead.

Since then, he's grown up, defeated Voldemort, and gone on to act in a bunch of other different movies.

The child actors in the "Harry Potter" movies have all transformed. Some of their acting careershave taken off after the series, and others are still trying to figure it out. There's no question though that the eight movies that came out between 2001 and 2011 have changed their lives forever.

Here's what the main child actors looked like when they were first introduced in the "Harry Potter" movie series, and what they look like now.

Daniel Radcliffe was just 11 years old when he started filming 2001's "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone."



Since finishing the series, he's had an eclectic career, playing everything from a morose doctor in "The Young Doctor's Notebook" to a flatulent corpse in "Swiss Army Man."



In the early "Harry Potter" movies, filmmakers gave Emma Watson Hermione Granger's famously "bushy" hair.



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Michelle Rodriguez says she might leave the 'Fast & Furious' franchise if there aren't better roles for women

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Michelle Rodriguez Fast and Furious

In the wake of the critical and commercial success of "Wonder Woman," women in the film industry are openly talking about needing better roles.

Actress Michelle Rodriguez has appeared as Letty Ortiz in five of the eight "Fast and Furious" films since the franchise started in 2001. Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and Jason Statham have all had starring roles in the franchise while the women, including Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, Gal Gadot, and Nathalie Emmanuel, have usually taken a backseat. 

In an Instagram post on Tuesday, Rodriguez expressed her frustration with the limited roles women have in the franchise. 

"'F8' is out digitally today," she wrote. "I hope they decide to show some love to the women of the franchise on the next one. Or I just might have to say goodbye to a loved franchise."

Charlize Theron had a major role in "The Fate of the Furious" as the primary villain and Helen Mirren had a small role, which could mean the franchise is taking its female cast seriously moving forward.   

 

SEE ALSO: How the 'Wonder Woman' box office gross compares to other superhero movies

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NOW WATCH: Terry Crews explains how intermittent fasting keeps him in shape

16 actors you probably didn't realize were in the 'Harry Potter' movies

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divination ron harry and hermione

When it comes to "Harry Potter," everybody knows the film's leading trifecta: Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson. 

But what about the dozens of other witches, wizards, and muggles who graced the screen throughout the series? While you were watching Harry and his friends fight dragons and hunt horcruxes, these performances from veteran actors and youngsters just beginning their careers might have totally passed you by.

From cameo appearances from the cast of "Dancing with the Stars" to a member of the band Radiohead, here are 16 actors you might have missed in "Harry Potter":

Alfred Enoch has come a long way since his days playing Dean Thomas in "Harry Potter." Today, you can spot him as law student Wes Gibbins on "How to Get Away with Murder."



Scarlett Byrne kept company with fellow Slytherin Draco Malfoy as the sour Pansy Parkinson. Since then, she's starred in a different magical world as Nora Hildegard on "The Vampire Diaries," and can now be seen playing Lacey on "Mary + Jane."



Verne Troyer was the first of two actors to play Griphook the goblin in "Harry Potter," but you probably recognize him from his most famous role as Mini-Me in "Austin Powers."



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Netflix just released a stunning original movie that fans of 'E.T.' will love

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okja

Warning: Minor spoilers ahead for Netflix's film "Okja."

Netflix's new movie "Okja" is about a young girl named Mija who raises a genetically engineered "super pig" named Okja. The multinational conglomerate that developed Okja wants her back to turn into food, so Mija flees from South Korea to New York to try to rescue her. 

Why should you care:

"Okja" is the first great narrative film from the company's movie studio. It's a fantasy epic in the vein of Steven Spielberg's "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" and Hayao Miyazaki's "Princess Mononoke," and carries a strong moral message opposing to animal abuse.

The movie — with it's $50 million budget — is also a blank check for director Bong Joon-ho. His last movie, "Snowpiercer," was a similarly excellent high-concept moral-minded sci-fi movie, but had problems with directorial autonomy (not that "Okja" didn't have its own controversies). He's also responsible for pitch-black comedy "Mother," horror cult classic "The Host," and the "Zodiac"-like "Memories of Murder."

What's hot:

Bong Joon-ho gets to let his freak flag fly. The plot is ludicrous on its surface: A young girl who goes from a farm in the South Korean mountains to the United States in pursuit of a genetically engineered giant animal she's friends with. But it totally works.

The performances are a big part of it. The 13-year-old actress who plays Mija, Ahn Seo-hyun, is a tough young woman yet portrays a convincing connection with a CGI animal. Tilda Swinton is perfect as the CEO of the Mirando Corporation, which owns Okja. She's kind of like "Harry Potter's" Dolores Umbridge with daddy issues. Jake Gyllenhaal plays Dr. Johnny Wilcox, a Steve Irwin-like mascot of the Mirando corporation, with a manic energy usually used to describe Nicolas Cage. And Paul Dano is great as the head of the Animal Liberation Front, an extremist organization that wants to take down Mirando.

What's not:

Okja, as a CGI creature, isn't always quite so convincing, even if she does the job. And toward the end of the film, the movie's anti-meat-farming messaging gets a bit too heavy-handed.

The bottom-line:

With great performances, a unique storyline, and a satisfying message, "Okja" is one of the best movies of the year so far. Definitely watch it.

Grade:

A

"Okja" is currently streaming on Netflix.

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NOW WATCH: JIM ROGERS: The worst crash in our lifetime is coming

'Baby Driver' is the fun summer action movie that you've been waiting for

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baby driver ansel elgort

"Baby Driver" is an action-comedy heist film with a lot of car chases. It stars Ansel Elgort as Baby, a prodigious getaway driver who's constantly listening to music. He needs to do one last job before he can leave his life of crime and live with his new girlfriend. But Kevin Spacey, who plays a crime boss, isn't so eager to let him go.

Why should you care:

Director Edgar Wright left the production of the Marvel movie "Ant-Man" in the middle of filming, and "Baby Driver" is his follow-up. It's a new original work from the guy behind "Shaun of the Dead,""At World's End," and "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World."

Plus, it's a fun summer movie.

What's hot:

Have you ever walked down the street while listening to music and pretended that you're living in a music video? Pretty much the whole movie is like that. When he's not driving cars, Baby makes mixtapes, and the movie uses well-timed music a lot like "Guardians of the Galaxy." And it's all set to the same manic energy you might recognize from Wright's other movies.

A lot of the secondary performances are also great. Kevin Spacey gets to do that Kevin Spacey thing where he angrily yells and it's really funny. Jamie Foxx is great as a ruthless, amoral criminal, and Jon Hamm gets a lot of screen time as another member of the criminal gang.

What's not:

Ansel Elgort is not a good actor. His character is a lot like Ryan Gosling's in "Drive" in two ways: (1) He's a driver who wants to leave a criminal life and live with a girl, and (2) he doesn't need to do much more than run, turn a steering wheel, and stare in the distance when people are talking to him. But when he does need to emote, Elgort falls flat. He's out-acted by CJ Jones, who's deaf and wheelchair-bound and plays his foster father.

The female characters in the movie — Lily James, who plays Baby's love interest, and Eiza González, another one of the criminals — have little characteristics of their own and mostly exist to move the plot forward.

What I love about Edgar Wright is that he can pack a bunch of witty lines and visual jokes in each frame. "Scott Pilgrim" is the best example of this. There are a few scenes where he does this in "Baby Driver"— most prominently in a great long tracking shot at the introduction where Baby fetches a few cups of coffee for his criminal friends. But for the most part, Wright's signature is lost in the action.

The bottom-line:

"Baby Driver" is a thrilling, fun, and funny car chase movie that's better than most Hollywood products. It's held back by Elgort's lifeless performance and by its laziness in building its female characters.

Grade:

B+

"Baby Driver" is currently in theaters.

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5 things you didn't know about 'Baby Driver' star Ansel Elgort

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ansel elgort

Ansel Elgort is trying to be Hollywood's new young star.

He's in "Baby Driver" as a getaway driver trying to escape a life of crime, so he can go on a road trip with a girl he just met. And you might also know him from his roles co-starring with Shailene Woodley in "The Fault in Our Stars" and the "Divergent" series. If his profile gets high enough, he can join the constellation of young male actors like Robert Pattinson and Liam Hemsworth as teen heartthrobs who also hold some box office clout.

In any case, you're probably going to be hearing Ansel Elgort's name a lot more now, so you should know more about him.

Here are five things you probably didn't know about the "Baby Driver" star.

His father was a Vogue photographer for 30 years.

Ansel's dad, Arthur Elgort, is a world-renown photographer. His work is in galleries all over the world, and he's frequently published in Vogue.

Years ago, Arthur would take his son on photo shoots.

"My dad would throw me in the picture if they needed an extra. From an early age, I understood the concept that, if you’re not the star, then your job is to not pull attention away from the star,"Ansel told Vogue. "Picture-taking is an ensemble art-like theater."



Elgort makes EDM music under the stage name "Ansølo."

It's... interesting. His highest-profile song to date is the single "Thief." He also worked with Logic and has a Bar Mitzvah-themed EDM anthem called "To Life." His "Baby Driver" character has a similar love for music; he makes mixtapes.



His grandmother survived a Nazi concentration camp

Elgort's father is of Russian and Jewish descent, and his maternal grandmother had a personal experience with the Holocaust. She worked in the Norwegian resistance during the Nazi occupation of Norway and smuggled Norwegian-Jewish children to safety in Sweden, according to a New York Times obituary. The Nazis found out and sent her to a Norwegian concentration camp.

She got out after 18 months, escaped to Sweden, then England, and then finally settled in New York after World War II.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'The Fate of the Furious' director responds to Michelle Rodriguez's threat to leave unless future films 'show some love to the women'

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On Tuesday night actress Michelle Rodriguez posted a photo to Instagram to promote the digital release of "The Fate of the Furious," the latest movie in the profitable "Fast and the Furious" franchise, which she's starred in five of the eight movies.

By Wednesday morning it grabbed headlines due to a line of text she put in the post:

"I hope they decide to show some love to the women of the franchise on the next one. Or I just might have to say goodbye to a loved franchise," Rodriguez wrote.

Business Insider spoke to "Fate of the Furious" director F. Gary Gray on Wednesday, who was promoting the Blu-ray/DVD release of the movie (out July 11), and he responded to Rodriguez's comment. 

"Here's the thing, I'm the new guy and I thought with 'The Fate of the Furious,' as it relates to women, I thought there was a strong representation of women in the movie when you bring on what I thought was one of the strongest antagonists in Charlize Theron. And then you have Helen Mirren, who has a cameo that's strong," Gray told Business Insider. "I can't speak for Michelle, she has a very specific point of view and I can't take anything away from that, but I would like to think that with 'The Fate of the Furious' specifically, I can't speak to the other films, I thought the combination of female characters was pretty strong."

Michelle Rodriguez Fast and FuriousThough there have been numerous female characters in the franchise — from Jordana Brewster to Wonder Woman herself, Gal Gadot — the "Fast and the Furious" movies have always been focused on the male characters, which consist of Vin Diesel, the late Paul Walker, Dwayne "The Rock Johnson, and Jason Statham. Perhaps Gray's movie, the first time he's directed for the "Fast and Furious" franchise, is the start of stronger female roles in the franchise (outside of Rodriguez's Letty character).

The pressure is on whoever takes on the next movie, which could be Gray, though he's keeping things close to the vest.

"I'm very proud of the movie, I love all those guys," Gray said. "As a matter of fact, I just got off the phone with Vin 10 minutes ago. The door's open. Who knows what the future brings."

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Comedian Hannibal Buress paid a look-alike $500 to take his place at the 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' premiere — and nobody noticed

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hannibal double

Premieres can be a drag. All that aimless red carpet wandering and answering of inane questions from showbiz reporters.

Hannibal Buress plays Coach Wilson in "Spider-Man: Homecoming" so naturally was required to attend the film's LA one on Wednesday, but came up with an ingenious method of ducking out of it.

"LA. I need a lookalike with solid comedic timing for an event tonight," he tweeted.

"Pays $500. Email pics to hanniballookalike3@gmail.com. And yes, hanniballookalike1 and hanniballookalike2 were taken and I think it's weird."

hannibal buress twitter

Despite looking nothing like Hannibal, LA local Joe Carroll stepped up, Instagramming his VIP treatment en route to the premiere.

The premiere was live-streamed and Carroll was interviewed as Hannibal without any raised eyebrows.

The real Hannibal posted a screen grab of the hilarious moment, writing: "I'm out here at the @SpiderManMovie premiere. In theatres July 8th."

Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios had no comment on the stunt to Entertainment Weekly, and it's hard to believe they were in on it.

SEE ALSO: ‘Baby Driver’ is a summer movie that finally lives up to the hype

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NOW WATCH: Scientists overlooked a major problem with going to Mars — and they fear it could be a suicide mission

RANKED: The 11 best movies of 2017 so far

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Fate of the Furious Universal final

As we delve deeper into the summer-movie season, it seems like a good time to look back on the year so far in movies and highlight the most memorable ones. 

Box-office performance doesn't always dictate if a movie is good. Some of the titles below didn't make a huge killing at the multiplex, but there's a good chance that you'll be talking about them long after this year is over. And the early part of 2017 has had some surprising bright spots.

From studio giants like "The Fate of the Furious" and "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2," to indies including "Colossal" and "T2: Trainspotting," here are the 11 best movies of the year... so far:

SEE ALSO: 35 movies coming out this summer that you need to see

11. “Colossal”

Writer-director Nacho Vigalondo's unique mix of comedy, social commentary, and sci-fi is given its biggest exposure yet thanks to the casting of stars Anne Hathaway and Jason Sudeikis for his latest movie. "Colossal" explores the dangers of alcoholism as Vigalondo puts Hathaway front and center playing a party girl who suddenly realizes she's controlling a giant that's destroying Seoul. Sudeikis is her old friend who is also her evil enabler. If you're seeking something different from a movie, this is it.



10. “T2: Trainspotting”

I know what you're thinking: Why the hell would anyone make a sequel to "Trainspotting"? But give this a chance if you haven't yet. Director Danny Boyle along with Ewan McGregor and the rest of the original cast from the landmark first movie deliver an impressive sequel that offers a new story but still celebrates the things we loved about the first one.



9. “The Lego Batman Movie”

Filled with the clever fun that made 2014's "The Lego Movie" a hit, this one has the added bonus of throwing in great Batman jokes as well. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A 'Jumanji' reboot is coming this December with the Rock — here's the first trailer

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jumanji reboot the rock

Another "Jumanji" movie is coming this winter starring the Rock, Jack Black, Kevin Hart, and Karen Gillan ("Guardians of the Galaxy").

If the idea of another Jumanji movie already has you rolling your eyes, Sony's reboot of the 1995 classic featuring Robin Williams has a bit of a twist. Instead of the game's jungle setting coming to life in the real world, this time four players are getting sucked into the game — much like Williams' character was at the start of the original film. 

And it's not the Rock, Jack Black, and crew who are getting sucked into the game. Four high schoolers get sucked into "Jumanji"— which is now a video game — and are put into the bodies of their avatars. That's where the four main actors come into play as the teens try and figure their way out of the jungle.

"Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle" will be in theaters December 20.

Check out the trailer below:

 

 

SEE ALSO: The Rock checks in from 'deep in the jungle' on the set of 'Jumanji'

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NOW WATCH: Science says lasting relationships come down to 3 basic traits

The best movies and TV shows coming to Amazon, HBO, Hulu and more in July

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Game of Thrones

There are a lot of great titles coming to your favorite streaming services in July.

You can decide for yourselves if the critics were wrong and titles like “Ghost in the Shell” and “Snatched” are any good. And there are a bunch of “Star Trek” movies coming to Amazon and Hulu to help fill the void until "Star Trek: Discovery" arrives in October.

But let’s face it, you all are waiting to start season 7 of HBO’s “Game of Thrones,” which will kick off July 16. Thankfully, the wait is almost over.

Here's everything coming to your favorite streaming platforms in June. We've highlighted some standouts in bold:

SEE ALSO: The 15 best '80s songs from Netflix's new show "GLOW"

iTunes

Available July 4

“The Boss Baby”
“Free Fire”
“The Promise”

Available July 11

“Ghost in the Shell”
“Gifted”
“Going in Style”

Available July 18

“Colossal”
“The Circle”
“Slight”

Available July 25

“Snatched”
“The Lovers”
“King Arthur”



Amazon Prime

Available July 1

“1 Dead Party”
“14 Women”
“18 Swirling Riders”
“The 28th Day: Wrath of Steph”
“48 Hrs.”
“8 Heads in a Duffel Bag”
“Abolition”
“Agent Cody Banks”
“Air: The Musical”
“All American Zombie Drugs”
“Amnesiac”
“Another 48 Hrs.”
“Appetite”
“Area 51”
“The Artworks”
“Assassin of the Tsar”
“Bandits”
“Big Foot Wars”
“Blind Heat”
“Blood Moon Rising”
“Blood Reaper”
“Boomerang”
“Boricua”
“Braveheart”
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s”
“Bull Durham”
“Bumblef**k, USA”
“Bunnyman Massacre”
“Carne: The Taco Maker”
“Carnies”
“Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” (2005)
“Clear and Present Danger”
“Cold Mountain” 
“The Corrupted”
“Crystal River”
“Cutthroat Island”
“Day We Met”
“Dead Evidence”
“Death Wish IV: The Crackdown”
“Destination Vegas”
“Dilemma”
“Dirt Merchant”
“Dragonblade”
“Dream a Little Dream”
“Drunk Wedding”
“The Eagle and the Hawk”
“Eight Men Out”
“Elephant”
“The First Wives Club”
“Flashdance”
“Flipping”
“Fly Me to the Moon”
“Foreign Fields”
“Frankenstein Reborn”
“Free Money”
“Frozen Kiss”
“G Men from Hell”
“Gene-Fusion”
“The General”
“Get Well Soon”
“Ghost Bride”
“Godsend”
“The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”
“Gunshy”
“Hazard Jack”
“Hobgoblins”
“House Of The Dead”
“House of the Dead 2”
“The Hunt For Red October” 
“Intimate Affairs”
“Into the Fire”
“Jack in the Box”
“Jezebeth”
“Jingles the Clown”
“John Grisham's The Rainmaker”
“Johnny Guitar”
“Killing Ariel”
“Killing Zoe”
“Kingpin”
“The Last Word”
“Lazarus: Day of the Living Dead”
“The Letter”
“The Little Kidnappers”
“Little Red Devil”
“Lost in Siberia”
“Lovin Molly”
“The Lucky Ones” 
“Manhattan”
“Married to the Mob”
“The Matrix Reloaded”
“The Matrix Revolutions”
“Meeting Spencer”
“Metamorphosis”
“The Midnight Meat Train”
“Model Behaviour”
“Morning Glory”
“Mortem”
“Moscow Heat”
“My Bloody Wedding”
“Nerve”
“New Order”
“Paradise Lost”
“Payback”
“The Peacemaker” 
“Pi”
“Pootie Tang”
“Postmortem”
“Rescue Dawn”
“Rosemary's Baby”
“Scrooged”
“Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan”
“Star Trek III: The Search for Spock”
“Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home”
“Star Trek IX: Insurrection”
“Star Trek V: The Final Frontier”
“Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country”
“Star Trek VIII: First Contact”
“Star Trek Vll: Generations”
“Star Trek: The Motion Picture”
“Suicide Kings”
“Up in the Air”
“Wild Wild West”
 
Available July 4

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”

Available July 5

“Snowfall” (Season 1)
“Suits” (Season 7)

Available July 6

“The Assignment”
“The Salesman” (Amazon Original)
“Under the Gun”
 
Available July 7

“Begum Jaan”
 
Available July 8

“Our Kind of Traitor”
“Sliding Doors”
 
Available July 9

“Its Gawd!”

Available July 13

“Mr. Robot” (Season 2)
 
Available July 14

“Antarctica: Ice & Sky”

Available July 16

“Game of Thrones” (Season 7)
“Salvation” (Season 1)

Available July 17

“The Strain” (Season 4)
 
Available July 19

“Miss Sloane”

Available July 21

“Niko and the Sword of Light” (Season 1, Amazon Original)

Available July 23

“Insecure” (Season 2)
“Ballers” (Season 3)

Available July 28

“The Last Tycoon” (Season 1, Amazon Original)
“Chef”
“The Living Dead” (Season 1)
 
Available July 31

“Jeepers Creepers”



Hulu

Available July 1

“48 Hours”
“8 Heads in a Duffel Bag”
“Altered States”
“Another 48 Hours”
“Area 51”
“As I Am: The Life and Times of DJ AM”
“Bandits”
“Beverly Hills Ninja”
“The Blob”
“Boomerang”
“Braveheart”
“Bull Durham”
“Cat O’Nine Tails”
“Clear and Present Danger”
“Click”
“Coma”
“Dark City”
“Dead Calm”
“Death Wish IV: The Crackdown”
“The Devil’s Advocate”
“Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood”
“Dream a Little Dream”
“Drunk Wedding”
“The Eagle and the Hawk”
“Eight Men Out”
“Encino Man”
“The Fan”
“The First Wives Club”
“A Fistful of Dynamite”
“Flashdance”
“Fly Me to the Moon”
“Free Money”
“The Furies”
“Get Well Soon”
“Godsend”
“The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”
“House of the Dead”
“House of the Dead 2”
“Hudson Hawk”
“The Hunt for Red October”
“John Carpenter’s Vampires”
“John Grisham’s The Rainmaker”
“Johnny Guitar”
“The Juror”
“Killing Zoe”
“Kingpin”
“Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV”
“Kit Kittredge: An American Girl”
“La Bamba”
“Les Miserables”
“The Letter”
“Lost Souls”
“The Lucky Ones”
“A Man Alone”
“The Mangler”
“Manhattan”
“Married to the Mob”
“The Mask”
“The Midnight Meat Train”
“Misery”
“My Dog Skip”
“Needful Things”
“Nerve”
“Payback”
“The Peacemaker”
“A Perfect Murder”
“Pootie Tang”
“The Presidio”
“The Professional”
“Reasonable Doubt”
“Rescue Dawn”
“Riding in Cars with Boys”
“Road House”
“Rosemary’s Baby”
“Rustler’s Rhapsody”
“Sacred Ground”
“Santee”
“School Daze”
“Scrooged”
“Sense and Sensibility”
“Sniper”
“Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan”
“Star Trek III: The Search for Spock”
“Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home”
“Star Trek IX: Insurrection”
“Star Trek V: The Final Frontier”
“Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country”
“Star Trek VIII: First Contact”
“Star Trek VII: Generations”
“Star Trek: The Motion Picture”
“Suicide Kings (1997)”
“Syriana”
“The Tall Stranger”
“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles”
“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2”
“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3”
“The Pursuit of Happiness”
“The Water Horse”
“To the Arctic”
“Top Dog”
“Top of the Food Chain”
“Up in the Air”
“Walking Tall”
“The Witches”
“Wolfen”

Available July 4

“Jonah: A Veggie Tales Movie”

Available July 5

“The Eric Andre Show” (Season 4)
“Prince Avalanche”
“The Sorcerer and the White Snake”

Available July 6

“Under the Gun”

Available July 7

“Pure” (Season 1)

Available July 8

“Our Kind of Traitor”

Available July 9

“Sliding Doors”

Available July 10

“Blood, Sand & Gold”

Available July 12

“The Bold Type” (Series Premiere)
“Humpday”
“Melancholia”
“Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby”

Available July 14

“Uncle Grandpa” (Season 4)
“Da Sweet Blood of Jesus”

Available July 16

“Inside Job”

Available July 19

“John Dies at the End”

Available July 20

“Tagged” (Season 1)

Available July 23

“Touch of Light”

Available July 24

“Guardians of Oz”
“Touch of the Light”

Available July 25

“Midnight, Texas” (Series Premiere)
“Somewhere Between” (Series Premiere)

Available July 26

“Good Ol’ Frieda”
“Oxford Murders”

Available July 28

“Betch” (Season 2)

Available July 30

“96 Souls”

Available July 31

“Jeepers Creepers”



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Gina Gershon really wanted a bald head for her final scene in ‘Face/Off’

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face off Paramount

Just when you thought John Woo’s classic 1997 action movie “Face/Off” couldn’t have gotten any stranger, imagine if Gina Gershon suddenly showed up at the end with a bald head?

The actress, who played Sasha Hassler in the movie, revealed during a Facebook Live chat with Business Insider on Wednesday that when she was notified that the script was being rewritten so her character would be added into a scene at the end of the movie, she went to Woo and tried to convince him to let her do the dramatic change to her look.

“They were like, ‘We’re going to bring you back after your brother dies,’” Gershon said. “Then I got this brilliant idea, or I thought it was a brilliant idea, I said, 'When I come back, since my brother died' — and it’s Nick and he’s got the shaved head — 'I want to come back and I want my head to be shaved.'”

For those who are not “Face/Off” fanatics, or haven’t seen the movie in years, here’s a refresher.

face off 2 paramountGershon’s Sasha Hassler character is the ex-girlfriend of terrorist Castro Troy (Nicolas Cage) and the brother of Dietrich Hassler (played by Nick Cassavetes), who supplies bombs to Troy. Following one of the bloody shootouts toward the end of the movie, Dietrich is killed. So Gershon felt the best way for her character to pay tribute to her fallen brother, who had a bald head, was to sport her own when she dramatically returns in the movie.

John Woo wasn't into it.

“I came in and I’m so excited and I said, ‘So John, I come out, and you don’t know who it is, and all of a sudden my head’s bald. Like Cassavetes.’ And he went ‘No, no, no.’ Right away. His face had this look like I was insane,” Gershon said.

This is how the scene ended up. Now just imagine all of this with Gershon's head shaved:

Celebrating its 20th anniversary earlier this week, “Face/Off” was a major hit, earning over $245 million worldwide. But what has built its fandom over the last two decades is the movie’s insane gun fights — which Woo had featured in his Hong Kong movies and finally was allowed to do in a Hollywood movie — and outlandish performances by stars John Travolta and Nicolas Cage, who play two men who undergo facial transplant surgery. It seems Gershon really wanted to get in on the crazy.

“Everyone shot me down and to this day I still think it’s a good idea,” she said of the bald head.

But would she have used a cap or gone method and shaved her head?

“I probably would have done a cap,” Gershon said. “But I don’t know, I didn’t care at that point. If they said, ‘Yes, but only if you shave your head,’ I would have said, ‘Great, do it.’”

Watch our entire chat with Gershon below, who was visiting to promote her latest movie, “Inconceivable":

 

SEE ALSO: 32 actors who should get nominated for Emmys — but probably won't

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Here's what the cast of 'Despicable Me 3' looks like in real life

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Steve Carell Gru Despicable Me 3

The iconic Minions are back for the new "Despicable Me 3" movie, premiering on June 30. Gru and his new wife Lucy, along with their three adopted girls, will have to face off with villain Balthazar Blatt while also dealing with Gru's twin brother Dru. 

Though you may know Steve Carell as the voice of Gru, other famous actors and actresses have lent their talents to the newest installment in the "Despicable Me" franchise.

Here's a  look at the cast of "Despicable Me 3."

SEE ALSO: Gru and the minions are back in the hysterical 'Despicable Me 3' trailer

Everyone's favorite bad-guy-turned-great-dad, Gru, is back for the third installment.



Comedian extraordinaire Steve Carell is back to voice the role of Gru, but this time there's a twist.



Gru has a twin brother, named Dru! Carell also voices Dru, keeping the brothers truly identical.



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The 'Despicable Me' stars are baffled by the bizarre ways people are using Minions to express themselves

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minions meme

The INSIDER Summary:

  • The Minions from "Despicable Me" are a widely used internet meme.
  • The voice actors from the movies just discovered them.
  • They seem very confused and horrified by the internet phenomenon.


Minions are one of the strangest internet memes. And the stars of "Despicable Me"— the movies that Minions come from — are absolutely puzzled by them.

Until recently, the "Despicable Me 3" stars — Steve Carrell, Kristen Wiig, and Miranda Cosgrove — didn't know that Minion memes existed. Screen Junkies interviewed them had had them react.

"Wait, this is real?!" Wiig asked. "That is very strange."

Minions originate from the "Despicable Me" and "Minions" movies, as short yellow henchmen who wear overalls and goggles, sometimes have only one eye, and speak in gibberish. In the films, they generally work for Gru, the supervillain voiced by Steve Carrell who's at the center of the franchise. And according to the "Minions" movie, they have existed since the beginning of life on Earth.

As a meme, they don't seem to have any sort of distinct identity, and have been used as sort of emojis of graphic tees, absorbing whatever emotion or meaning the meme creator thrusts upon them. Minion memes have been used to oppose vaccination for children, express poorly conceived puns, and remind people not to take the lord's name in vain. The meme is so despised that the subreddit r/MinionHate has nearly 35,000 subscribers.

"What's going on?" Carrell asked.

Watch their reactions below:

One of the memes Screen Junkies showed them was of "Minion Mike," where the Minions are portrayed as buff stripper characters from "Magic Mike."

minions meme

"The one on the right is really doing it," Wiig said.

"I've never seen them like that," Cosgrove said.

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10 big movies everyone should see in July

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The INSIDER Summary: 

  • July is packed with potential summer blockbusters.
  • Some of the most anticipated include "Spider-Man: Homecoming,""War for the Planet of the Apes," and "The Emoji Movie." 

As June winds down at the box office, the second half of 2017 is looming, ready to jump out and grab us. Which means there's another month of movie viewing fun heading to screens all over, and its name just happens to be July. Yes folks, it's time to break out your schedules and make room for 10 big time products of cinema, as the following films are ready to potentially earn your money, as well as your respect.

SEE ALSO: RANKED: The 11 best movies of 2017 so far

Spider-Man: Homecoming

Yeah, it hasn't been that long since Peter Parker was swinging around on his web on our screens, but "Spider-Man: Homecoming" marks a rebirth of the famed web-slinger nonetheless. With "The Amazing Spider-Man" duology now firmly in the rear view, it's time to get excited about New York's friendly neighborhood arachnid-human hybrid. The advanced buzz is only heightening the anticipation, as people seem to really dig Tom Holland's first solo effort as the kid who would be the man who would be the Spider-Man. If it's even just more of the same spidey stuff we saw in "Captain America: Civil War," we're already souped.

Opening: Friday, July 7



A Ghost Story

Grief is a theme that can be explored in so many ways, especially when it pertains to the death of a loved one. Yet "A Ghost Story" seems to go about its examination of what we leave behind in the wake of our departure in a way we rarely see: we're going to follow the ghost's point of view. With Casey Affleck as the titular ghost and Rooney Mara as the woman grieving for his passing, it looks we're going to see far past the point one would normally see in such a story. But from what we're hearing, it's probably a good idea for you to avoid the trailers if you're even slightly hyped about the latest from A24.

Opening: Friday, July 7



War for the Planet of the Apes

As if the recent tide of critical buzz wasn't enough to entice us into getting ready to experience "War for the Planet of the Apes," the fact that the movie just looks so damned good was enough to draw us closer to this revolutionary finale. With the "Apes" trilogy already delivering some solid base hits with "Rise" and "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes," it looks like "War for the Planet of the Apes" could be the home run the series has been aiming to deliver.

Opening: Friday, July 14



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'The Big Sick' is the best romantic comedy since 'Knocked Up'

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The Big Sick Amazon Lionsgate

It’s hard to believe, but it’s been ten years since Judd Apatow’s “Knocked Up,” which came out June 1, 2007.

“Knocked Up” paved the way for explicit comedy that tells emotional human stories. It's a laugh-out-loud vulgar comedy, but at its heart it's a love story about growing up.

Director, writer, and producer Judd Apatow started a trend with the movie (one that technically started with “The 40-Year Old Virgin" a few years prior), and his style paved the way for many comedies over the past decade, from “Forgetting Sarah Marshall" to “Bridesmaids."

“The Big Sick" premiered to critical acclaim at Sundance Film Festival back in January, and came out in theaters in LA and New York City last weekend — it gets it wide release on July 14. In its first weekend on limited release, “The Big Sick"became 2017’s highest opening weekend per-theater-average — in five theaters, it grossed $435,000.

It helped to have Apatow involved in “The Big Sick"— he was a producer, and his touch is evident. The script, based on a true story that happened to stand-up comic and “Silicon Valley" star Kumail Nanjiani and his wife, producer/writer Emily Gordon, was written by the husband-wife duo. Michael Showalter of “Wet Hot American Summer” fame directed the movie, and it was released by Amazon Studios/Lionsgate.

The premise feels so ripped from a soap opera that it’s hard to believe it actually happened to Nanjiani and Gordon. In the film, Kumail (played by Nanjiani) meets Emily (Zoe Kazan) when she heckles him at a comedy club in Chicago. They go home together, and despite the fact that Kumail knows he has to marry a Muslim woman (he keeps a box of photos of the women his mom introduces him to) or he will shame the family, he continues to date her — without telling Emily about any of it. Things go very well for Kumail and Emily at first.

The dialogue and both leads accurately capture the awkward and magical progression of a blossoming relationship. There is a scene where Emily tries to leave Kumail's apartment in the middle of the night to poop somewhere else, which goes in a sweet direction instead of the expected gross one. But eventually Emily finds out about the women in the box and they break up. 

Then Kumail gets a call and finds out Emily is in the hospital. He visits her, and a doctor tells him that they need to put her in a medically-induced coma. While Emily is in a coma, Kumail sticks around despite their bitter break-up, which at first annoys Emily’s parents, played by the superbly cast and incredibly funny Holly Hunter and Ray Romano.

Better than any other movie in recent memory, “The Big Sick“ finds the light in the dark. A movie about a girlfriend in a coma — and a man risking cutting ties from his family to be with her — brought some of the biggest laughs I’ve had in years. The longer Kumail sticks around at the hospital, the more Emily’s parents warm up to him. One night, Emily’s parents attend one of his stand-up shows, and Emily’s mom defends Kumail against a heckler who tells him to “go back to ISIS." In another scene later on in the film, Emily’s dad opens up to Kumail about a time that he cheated on his wife. It’s heartbreaking content, but the chemistry and the delivery from Nanjiani and Romano (who is seriously peaking right now) make it one of the sweetest and funniest parts of the movie.

Ten years ago, "Knocked Up" had similar moments, but not on as dramatic a scale. "Knocked Up" also has a hundred dick jokes to "The Big Sick's" two or three (maybe less). That's because "The Big Sick" was written completely from the heart. Nanjiani and Gordon knew they had a story worth sharing, and they didn't sacrifice any time just for the laughs. All of the jokes are natural, and there aren't any scenes (besides scenes that take place at a comedy club) that were written to just be joke-delivery scenes.

This tragic story with a happy ending and a lot of happy moments throughout the journey is one of the best romantic comedies in years. And, just like "Knocked Up" shaped the next wave of comedies, "The Big Sick" will hopefully do so as well — which is a good sign for the future of rom coms, and Nanjiani and Gordon's careers as a screenwriting duo. 

SEE ALSO: The 10 biggest box-office bombs of 2017 so far

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'Despicable Me 3' powers a strong 4th of July weekend at the box office

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Despicable Me 3 Universal

The animation studio Illumination ("Minions,""Sing,""The Secret Life of Pets") proved once again that it can hang with the likes of Pixar and Disney Animation Studios when it comes to box office coin.

Its latest title, "Despicable Me 3," won the Fourth of July weekend with an estimated $75 million, according to Exhibitor Relations.

The successful franchise, led by the voice talents of Steve Carell, easily ran away with the box office win, as its closest competition, Edgar Wright's latest hit "Baby Driver," came in second with $21 million.

Though it doesn't look like the "Despicable Me" franchise is going to end anytime soon, "Me 3" didn't surpass 2013's "Despicable Me 2" opening weekend of $83.5 million.

Wright's heist/car chase movie, which is a critical darling with a 97% ranking on Rotten Tomatoes, opened on Wednesday and has a five-day total of $30 million (the movie was made for around $34 million).

the house warner brosBut there's nothing positive to say about the Will Ferrell and Amy Poehler comedy "The House." Released by Warner Bros., the title only took in $9 million on over 3,000 screens.

That's one of the worst openings ever for Ferrell — even worse than 1998's "A Night at the Roxbury" ($9.6 million). With its litany of big-name stars, "The House" cost an estimated $40 million to make.

The three main wide releases this weekend (but mostly "Despicable Me") helped Hollywood rebound from a dismal Independence Day at the movies last year, which saw lackluster openings from "The Legend of Tarzan" ($38.5 million), "The Purge: Election Year" ($31.5 million), and "The BFG" ($18.7 million).

SEE ALSO: 32 actors who should get nominated for Emmys — but probably won't

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Why our obsession with disaster films reveals something positive about humanity

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twister oklahoma

Every blockbuster wants to destroy the world. We explore where that impulse comes from.

Human beings are funny creatures. Summer after summer, year after year, we fork over countless dollars to catch the latest iteration of an ancient story: the sky is falling; the Earth is dying; bring on the end of the world. It’s the season of the disaster film.

Of course, all fiction thrives on conflict and calamity, in part because storytelling allows us to live out our nightmares without cost or consequence. But there’s something undeniably odd about the impulse toward apocalypse that characterizes so much of our popular cinema. We should expect alien visitors, were they not so frequently featured in such films, to be deeply puzzled at this peculiar human ritual.

The oddity is compounded by the fact that, in recent years, the trappings of the disaster film have overtaken other genres as well. None of this summer’s major blockbusters is a disaster film in the classical sense, but The Mummy, Wonder Woman, War for the Planet of the Apes, and Transformers: The Last Knight all feature collapsing buildings and existential stakes.

Wonder WomanIt often seems that, against the backdrop of the 24-hour news cycle, only extinction events feel consequential enough to propel blockbuster drama. Exceptions exist, of course, including James Mangold’s admirably humble Logan and Christopher Nolan’s Gotham-centric Dark Knight trilogy. But for the most part, a blockbuster that doesn’t put the world on the line is no blockbuster at all.

Certain obvious explanations for this trend present themselves. The imperatives of the international box office drive all big-budget films toward bigger, clearer narratives, and it’s easy to see why a global threat might have broader appeal than a provincial one. The subtleties of language and gesture that make up a small-scale drama are far harder to translate than a meteor demolishing a skyscraper.

Plus there’s the fact that disaster spectacles remain, for the time being, unique to the big screen. Promise to level an entire city and fewer viewers will want to wait for the streaming release.

But in our rush to turn every conceivable conflict into a colossal one, we’ve forgotten what disaster films, at their best, can offer. The purpose of the disaster film is not to make small conflicts bigger but to make big ones smaller – to reduce unthinkable catastrophes to a human scale.

Our indifference to genocides and natural disasters the world over suggests that we are poorly equipped to care about massive tragedies. It is only when these tragedies are expressed through individuals that we are able to empathize. We don’t care about the people because of the disaster; we care about the disaster because of the people.

Andrei Tarkovsky once wrote that the meaning of cinema was “relating a person to the whole world.” And though it’s difficult to imagine Tarkovsky lining up for a Roland Emmerich film, his aphorism describes the potential toward which great disaster films can aspire.

For all the ethical abandon with which some disaster films kill off their characters, the perspective they can afford is accurate. Most of the dramas we tend to care about are, in the scheme of things, insignificant – and so they would seem, were we faced with impending doom. We are apes on a rock tearing through a void. It’s about time we stuck together.

Twister

twister oklahoma

Widely maligned by critics upon its release, Twister holds a special place in the heart of many a millennial, thanks in part to the popular ride at Universal Studios. The film’s plot is laughable on its face: a retired storm-chaser returns home to get his divorce papers signed, only to be wrapped up in a quest to study an F5 tornado.

Silly though it may sound, the film is executed with such flare and infectious enthusiasm that it’s difficult not to get swept up (pun intended). Led by the charming Bill Paxton and the always-stellar Helen Hunt, with supporting performances by Philip Seymour Hoffman and Cary Elwes, the film transcends its hokey storyline to become a first-rate entertainment.

The Core

There’s a profound satisfaction to be found in loving a film that others find ridiculous. I have loved many such films — The Village, Across the Universe, Airheads– but none of my favorites is so broadly hated as The Core. The film, which concerns a ragtag team’s attempt to restore the spinning of the earth’s core, could easily be relabeled “generic disaster movie.” Its trailer is full of lines like “everybody’s dead in a year” and “we killed the planet.”

Aaron Eckhart stars in a role that failed to establish him as a leading man, but he admirably holds together a cast that includes Hilary Swank and Stanley Tucci. At the very least, The Core is instructive for laying the conventions of its genre so blatantly bare. 

The Day After Tomorrow

the day after tomorrow 20th Century Fox

Disaster films nearly always contain some not-so-subtle commentary on our mistreatment of the environment, but this one was so topical upon its release that it could have been shown as a double-feature with An Inconvenient Truth. Directed by disaster filmmaker extraordinaire Roland Emmerich, The Day After Tomorrow tells the story of a paleoclimatologist played by Jake Gyllenhaal who’s forced to lead a group of survivors when a superstorm floods, then freezes, New York City.

It is a hamfisted cautionary tale about global warming (which, via the film’s scientific hand-waving, produces an ice age), but it also functions as a powerful 9/11 allegory, celebrating the ability of New Yorkers to unify in the face of tragedy.

Independence Day

Independence Day set the stage for the modern disaster film, lending new levels of visual spectacle (the film picked up an Oscar for visual effects) and global appeal to the genre. There is something refreshing about the film’s eschewal of any subtlety in its treatment of alien invasion: they’re here to kill us, we’re told, so we have to kill them first.

It is in reaction to a film like Independence Day, which features a mad-dog Randy Quaid blowing up an alien ship kamikaze-style, that a film like Arrival gets made, which features a somber Amy Adams writing messages on a whiteboard. I, for one, am glad that the cinematic ecosystem can bear both.

Armageddon

Armageddon

No list of disaster films would be complete without some Bayhem. Armageddon, like The Core, is positively ludicrous from a narrative perspective: a group of oil-drillers are sent to space to stop an asteroid from destroying the planet.

But as an exercise in style and genre, the film stands up – if only because Michael Bay’s shameless, sweeping, dynamic style has been so influential in Hollywood since. Even the Criterion Collection, those great arbiters of cinematic taste and distinction, saw fit to recognize the film with a laserdisc. Perhaps in fifty years time, we’ll be reevaluating Bay’s work the way French critics reevaluated Hitchcock. That is, if an asteroid doesn’t wipe us out first.

SEE ALSO: The 15 smartest sci-fi movies of all time

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