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Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts

Game of Thrones Causes This Ancient City To Be So Popular Resulting In Tourists Being Turn Away

It was only two years ago when Game of Thrones fans watched Cersei Lannister march through the busy streets of King’s Landing for her walk of atonement as Septa Unella rung a bell, yelling, “Shame! Shame! Shame!” But those streets featured in HBO’s mega-hit are now similarly crowded in real life. A tourist boom has hit Dubrovnik, Croatia — so much so that the city is now trying to combat overcrowding.
Game of Thrones Causes This Ancient City To Be So Popular Resulting In Tourists Being Turn Away


Dubrovnik has been heavily featured throughout the show’s seven seasons, serving as the setting of King’s Landing, the capital city where the titular Iron Throne sits. The popularity of Game of Thrones was responsible for 10% of the annual growth in tourism in Dubrovnik, the city’s mayor told Bloomberg in 2015. As Quartz pointed out, Thrones-inspired tourism helped pull Croatia out of a tough recession that lasted from 2009 to 2014, though its economy is still 7% smaller than it was in 2008.







“We became too popular in the last couple of years, we became a victim to our own success,” Ivan Vukovic, who has led tours in the ancient city for 12 years, told MONEY.

It’s easy to see why people are flocking to Dubrovnik: beautiful weather most of the year, a stunning coastline along the Adriatic Sea and, of course, the Thronesappeal.

“So many more Americans and Canadians come here because of the show,” Vukovic said. “It is easier to learn history if you connect it to some scenes from the show as it has a lot of medieval history in common.”

Circled by stone walls built in the 16th century, the pedestrian-only Old Town in Dubrovnik is one of the most popular spots for tourists. Designated a World Heritage site by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1979, Dubrovnik — known as the Pearl of the Adriatic — has increasingly seen hotels pop up and cruise lines make stops in the scenic city. Cruises bring hoards of visitors to the small city every year, particularly in the summer months of July and August. In 2016, 799,916 people came to the city from 539 cruises, according to statistics from the Dubrovnik Port Authority. That’s more than the 475 ships and 463 ships that docked at Dubrovnik in 2015 and 2014, respectively. (Though, in 2013, 553 cruise chips stopped at Dubrovnik, bringing in close to 1 million visitors.)

But while the growth in tourism may be good for the country’s economy, Dubrovnik has been dealing with heavy crowds in recent years. UNESCO cites the impacts of tourism — especially cruise ship tourism — as factors putting the city at risk of losing its World Heritage status. The city’s new mayor, Mato Franković, told the Telegraph he plans to cap the number of visitors to its ancient city to 4,000 per day — half of its current limit of 8,000 allowed by UNESCO — in the next two years.

Franković acknowledged that cutting down tourism will likely hurt the city’s economy. “We will lose money in the next two years — a million euros maybe by cutting the number of tourists — but in the future, we will gain much more,” he told the Telegraph. “We deserve to be a top-quality destination.”

“I am not here to make people happy, but to make the quality of life [in this city] better,” he added. “Some of the cruise lines will disagree with what I’m saying, but my main goal is to ensure quality for tourists and I cannot do it by the keeping the situation as it is.”

While some are against Franković’s plan, he has support from some unexpected circles, including from Vukovic, whose business has flourished in recent years because of the tourist boom. The walled-in city gets packed easily, Vukovic said, and he believes limiting the number of people who come there will be beneficial for the city as a whole.

But Vukovic doesn’t think tourists should be completely banned, just dispersed out from the city center and into attractions outside of the gates — like the nearby Peljesac wine region or Elaphiti Islands.

For tourists looking to help the city’s overcrowding problem or come when it’s simply less busy, Vukovic suggests visiting during the fall or winter — which, in Croatia, is still a mild season with nice weather.

But interested travelers hoping to visit the city this year better do so soon. Winter is coming.

This article originally appeared on Time.com














11 Acts Of Gilmore Girl That Will Really Make You Wince Now


The Gilmore Girls revival, Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, debuted on Netflix in November 2016, and it was cute and fun and didn't do much to satisfy fans' appetite for clean character resolutions. The revival was written just like the original TV show was—for better and for worse. Better, because Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino stuffed the four 90-minute episodes with pop culture references and emotional moments galore—basically, the reasons why we love this show so much. But it wasn't all great: They kept in the same type of culturally insensitive "jokes" that permeated the show during its seven-year run.






Don't know what we're talking about? It's understandable: You probably watched Gilmore Girls as a child or teen, and its problematic elements flew over your head. That, or you didn't even notice them given the racist, homophobic, and fat-shaming TV landscape of the early 2000s. This was the norm, which is exactly why the humor in Friends rings much differently for me now than it did in high school. The same goes for Gilmore Girls. When you look back on the show with the "woke" culture of 2017, it makes the blind spots glaringly apparent. These 10 offenses are particularly cringeworthy.

The way Mrs. Kim, Lane's mother, is portrayed

At the start of Gilmore Girls, the Palladinos reduced Mrs. Kim to an incredibly strict "Tiger Mom" stereotype who speaks with a heavy accent. She evolves slightly throughout the show, but not enough to think the showrunners gave her as much thought as they did to Rory, Lorelai, or even Christopher.

And Michel too, for that matter

Gilmore Girls had a real opportunity to showcase a complex, diverse gay character with Michel. Instead, they keep him in the closet and riddle his dialogue with stereotypes and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy–brand snark. They do finally confirm his sexuality in the revival—a step forward, at least—but that was basically it. We never meet his partner, and his story plays second fiddle to Lorelai's and Rory's champagne problems, as per usual.

When Lorelai shames Sookie for not being in a relationship (???)



PHOTO: WARNER BROS./THE CW
Just one of many times Lorelai was the worst to Sookie.

Emily's interchangeable maids

With few deviations, Emily's maids in Gilmore Girls are women of color, non-English speakers, and—as the show portrays them—interchangeable. Emily's rude treatment (and subsequent firing) of her many maids became a point of "humor" on the show. But there isn't anything funny about a spoiled white person disposing of women working in her home like they aren't human beings.

When Rory fat-shames a ballerina in her Yale Daily News article

Rory confirms that she is a terrible journalist in a season-four episode of Gilmore Girlstitled "Die, Jerk." The "jerk" in question is Rory, who spends the majority of her ballet review for the Yale Daily News fat-shaming one of the dancers instead of, ya know, critiquing the actual performance. (If you recall, she calls this ballerina a "hippo" and points out the "roll of fat around her bra strap." Yikes.) "Jerk" is putting it lightly, to be honest.

The fact that Paris gets rejected from Harvard, but Rory gets in

Just like Blair Waldorf deserved to get into Yale more than the ridiculous Serena van der Woodsen did, the hardworking Paris deserved to get into Harvard way more than Rory. Where is the justice? It especially feels problematic when you remember that Paris doesn't get in after she loses her virginity. Rory, however, is still a virgin—or as Lorelai puts it, "the good kid"—so this somehow makes her more deserving?

When Emily essentially says that fat people shouldn't go to parties

During the season-five episode titled "The Party's Over," Emily is agonizing over how far apart to place the rows of chairs in her living room for a soirée. She wants them far apart enough so that people can "navigate around them comfortably," but not too far. When Emily's workers push the chairs a little wider than her liking, she barks, "Good lord! If someone needs that much room to get around a chair, they shouldn't be at a party. They should be on a treadmill." Yes, Emily literally suggested that plus-size people shouldn't go to parties because they need to be exercising. I'm done.

When Luke says Kirk's bag is "gay"


Because calling inanimate objects "gay" was still a thing in the early 2000s. Hilary Duff put an end to that once and for all with this PSA.

The time Lorelai implies that two people of the same sex kissing would look "funny"

I believe the exact quote was, "We need to leave the country and have extensive plastic surgery. And sex changes! Both of us! So, you know, we can kiss and not look funny.” Ha. Gay people are so weird!

And perhaps the worst of all: this line



PHOTO: WARNER BROS./THE CW

BECAUSE PEOPLE SAID THIS WORD BACK THEN AND DIDN'T BLINK AN EYE. Wow.







Watch Harry Styles' First Acting In the First Trailer for WWII Drama Dunkirk


Director Christopher Nolan has done the impossible: He managed to get Harry Styles to cut his hair. Oh, but that's not all! Nolan also was able to somehow find an audience based on the cross-section of One Direction fans and World War II history buffs. Impressive.





In Nolan's latest film, Dunkirk, Styles fans can see why the singer had stepped momentarily out of the music spotlight to focus on his burgeoning acting career. The two-minute trailer, which dropped on Wednesday, December 14, paints the picture of the "Dunkirk Evacuation," in which more than 300,000 Allied British, French, and Belgian soldiers were able to escape the German Army—a pivotal moment in World War II for the Allies. Harry Styles can be seen in an army uniform as he sits on a beach alongside his fellow soldiers. Later in the trailer, he's seen struggling under water.

The film, which also stars Tom Hardy, Kenneth Branagh, Cillian Murphy, and Mark Rylance, will be released on July 21, 2017. So, we'll see you at the theater this summer, 1D fans.

See the epic trailer, below:











Another Episode Of Tears From 'This Is Us' : Big Moments From Mandy Moore's Show to Make You Ugly Cry


Another week, another bucket full of tears. This Is Us' Tuesday, November 29, episode proved yet again that our tear reservoirs are bottomless pits when it comes to the Pearson family and their never-ending drama.
Here are eight moments from this week's episode that made us ugly cry all over ourselves. 






Randall Made a List of His Mom's Betrayals
Randall’s making a list, he’s checking it twice, and it’s very sad! The episode kicked off with a furious Randall (Sterling K. Brown) making a list of all the ways he was betrayed by mother Rebecca (Mandy Moore). He then confronted his biological father, William (Ron Cephas Jones), saying, “You acted like you didn’t remember abandoning me.” Ouch.
Little Randall Wanted to Know His Biological Parents
The episode then jumped back in time to the '80s, where we saw a young Randall desperately asking other African-American people in his town if they could also roll their tongues — a genetic trait. Explaining to his parents, the desperate kiddo said, “If I can find people who can roll their tongues, they could be my birth parents.” When Rebecca pretended that she had no idea who his biological parents were, it made us want to scream!
Olivia Brought Her Ex-Boyfriend to Kevin's Family Cabin
Randall, Kevin (Justin Hartley) and Kate (Chrissy Metz) then decided to escape the Thanksgiving chaos and head to their family cabin for one last trip before it's sold. This heartwarming moment lasted for all of 10 seconds when Justin’s new flame, Olivia (Janet Montgomery), arrived with two friends in tow — one of them being her ex-boyfriend. We agreed with Kate when she scoffed and said to Olivia, "Who are you right now?"
Randall Took Magic Mushrooms and Talked to His Dead Dad
The best part of the episode had to be when Randall accidentally drank Olivia's ex-boyfriend Ash's magic-mushroom-filled smoothie. The usually uptight Randall spent his shroom trip talking to a hallucination of his father, Jack (Milo Ventimiglia). This beautiful sequence of events led to a confrontation between the father and son duo. Randall said, "You never wanted me either. I was a replacement for your dead baby. That’s all I’ve ever been."
Our tear ducts exploded when Jack said, “The moment I saw you, I knew you were my boy. You weren’t a choice, Randall. You were a fact. You were never a replacement son.” Jack eventually led Randall to discover that his mom sacrificed a lot for him and only ever wanted to protect them.


Kevin Bared His Soul to Olivia — and She Ran Away
We were shocked to see Olivia rudely snuggling up to her ex while watching old videos with Kevin and the rest of the gang. Kevin immediately called her out and said, “That kiss that we had yesterday. … Those feelings were real, and I know you know that. … I’m not sure you’ve experienced anything real your entire life." He then accused his British costar and co-kisser of having an "empty human shell." Olivia stormed out with Ash, and Kevin made what may possibly be the best joke of this entire series when he said, "It was a Brexit." Tears — sometimes tears of laughter, but still tears.
Jack Did Push-Ups With Randall on His Back
Back in the '80s, we saw as Jack and Rebecca attempted to introduce strong black male role models into their adopted son's life. In a great speech, Randall’s new karate teacher, Ray, explained, “The world isn’t always a kind place, especially to men like us. … We are your community. When things get hard, we are going to be the ones that hold each other up.” Ray then asked Jack to do push-ups with little Randall on his back to prove he would always be there for his son. We wonder if that includes being there in mushroom-hallucination form — either way, we had ourselves the ugliest of ugly cries at this father-son bonding moment.


We Found Out the Reason for Rebecca's Letter to William
In a series of flashbacks throughout the episode, Rebecca visited William following Randall’s insistence at finding his biological parents. We saw a young, clean-cut William explain he’s “been clean for over five years.” William then revealed that he’s been wanting to get in touch about Randall but didn’t know where to find Rebecca.
She explained, “He’s been asking about you. He really wants to meet his father, and so that’s why I’m here.” William got so excited that he jumped out of his chair. Rebecca then became overwhelmed and rushed home to Jack, where she admitted why she can’t “try” to find Randall’s parents. She said, “What if they’re great? What if they regret abandoning him. … I cannot lose my son.” She then sent William a letter explaining why he couldn’t be in Randall’s life, saying, “This is for the best for him because he has an extraordinary father who gives him everything he needs. I hope you take comfort in knowing just how loved Randall is.” When William placed the letter inside of a manuscript called “Poems for My Son,” we completely lost it. The tears! The inconsolable heartbreak!
Randall Sort of Forgave His Mom…for Now
Back at the house and after some mushroom-fueled closure, it seemed that Randall might finally be able to forgive his mother for her betrayal. Randall coldly opened the door and said to his mom, "You kept that secret for 36 years. That must have been incredibly lonely." Rebecca instantly started sobbing and reaching for her son, who recoiled and said “Not yet. I'll see you at Christmas.” When will the drama end?!
We could probably name 3,000 more ugly cries that this episode gave Us, but there literally aren’t enough hours in the day to recount them. Like, when Toby (Chris Sullivan) told Kate to stop calling him? And when we saw the kids’ names carved into a tree?! What city does this show take place in? Oh yeah, tear city. Tear City: Population Us.
Comment on IPRESSTV: Will Randall ever completely forgive Rebecca?
This Is Us airs on NBC Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET









Maiden Official View of the Live-Action Beauty and the Beast's Beast (UPDATED)




We’ve seen leaked images before, but now you can get your first proper look at Dan Stevens in action as Disney’s titular Beast in the live-action Beauty and the Beast remake.





Revealed for Entertainment Weekly’s new cover story, the shot—of Beast dancing with Belle in her yellow dress—is similar to images that made their way online at the end of September. But even then, it’s still impressive just how closely this new movie is trying to match the animated classic.

There’s not much else new from the film yet—although an accompanying video about the feature over at EW features some (very blurry) new images of Lumiere and Cogsworth, and of Belle in her blue and white dress from the film’s opening, but it looks like Disney is just about ready to start lifting the lid on its latest live-action remake. So far, at least, it looks pretty spot-on, doesn’t it?



Beauty and the Beast is set to hit theaters March 17th, 2017.

Update: EW just released even more images, including our first look at several of the non-human characters. Check them out, and head there for more.















Watch The Girl On The Train Volcanic Trailer


The Girl On The Train:
Thrilled to get a hand on the official trailer for the movie adaptation of the book,#TheGirlOnTheTrain! I can't wait to see Emily Blunt Official star as Rachel on the big screen - coming this October!
WATCH THE EXPLOSIVE TRAILER BELOW:









Black-and-White Edition of 'Mad Max Fury Road’ Finally Has a Release Date


George Miller revealed in an interview last year that his original intent for Mad Max: Fury Road was to release it in black and white. While that never happened, he revealed a black-and-white cut for the film would be available on a later home release. For fans who’ve been waiting ever so patiently for that day to finally come, we have good news for you.
Warner Bros. Home Entertainment announced that the Mad Max High Octane Collection will be arriving on December 6. Among all the special features are all fourMad Max films — from the 1979 original up to Fury Road — as well as the “Fury Road Black and Chrome Edition,” which, yes, is the black-and-white version.
Better still, if you want this version but don’t want to drop $79.99 for the Blu-ray or $54.97 for the DVD, the Mad Max: Fury Road Black & Chrome Edition will also be released separately on Blu-ray for $29.98 in a two-film collection with the theatrical version and special introduction from Miller.






mad-max-fury-road-high-octane-collectionJust for kicks, though, here are the details on the High Octane Collection:
Fury Road “Black & Chrome” Edition – Witness the surreal black and white version of mastermind George Miller’s Fury Road.

George Miller Introduction to the Mad Max Fury Road: Black and Chrome Edition – Special introductory piece by George Miller describing his vision.

Road War – In 1982, the world was blindsided by George Miller’s masterpiece of apocalyptic destruction: The Road Warrior. For the first time ever George Miller, Terry Hayes and star Mel Gibson tell the story of the car-crushing production that redefined action cinema forever.

Madness of Max – The previously released Mad Max (1979) documentary is a feature-length documentary on the making of arguably the most influential movie of the past thirty years. With over forty cast-and-crew interviews, hundreds of behind-the-scenes photographs and never-before-seen film footage of the shoot, this is, without a doubt, the last word on Mad Max (1979). Interviews include: George Miller, Byron Kennedy, Mel Gibson, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Steve Bisley, Roger Ward, Joanne Samuel, David Eggby, Jon Dowding and many more. From the Producers to the Bike Designers to the Traffic Stoppers, this is the story of how Mad Max was made.

mad-max-fury-road-image-charlize-theron-the-war-rig
Image via Warner Bros.
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Image via Warner Bros.
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Image via Warner Bros.
mad-max-fury-road-black-and-chrome-edition

New Movie Trailer For ‘All Eyez On Me’ on Anniversary of Tupac Shakur’s Death (VIDEO)


A new teaser for Tupac Shakur’s upcoming biopic, All Eyez On Me, has been released on the 20th anniversary of his death.






The riveting clip — which has a ton of NSFW language, BTW — details many facets of the highly-anticipated movie, from the iconic rapper’s incarceration and political activism to his relationship with the Notorious B.I.G. and tragic shooting.
The trailer opens up with Pac — who is being portrayed by actor Demetrius Shipp, Jr. — addressing a crowd of fans about a topic eerily similar to the happenings of today, as he passionately expresses his stance on police brutality in the black community.
"Cops kill innocent black folk everyday and Quayle's coming after me? But I'm used to people coming at me … This s–t been happening my whole life," he exclaims.
Today marks the day that the legendary rapper would succumb to his wounds, six days after being gunned down on the Las Vegas strip in September of 1996.

At just 25, Tupac Amaru Shakur left behind a legacy that continues to grow at an exponential rate.
While All Eyez Me still does not have an official release date, the film is most certainly going to be epic, to say the least.
Along with Demetrius Shipp, Jr., the cast will also feature Danai Gurira as Afeni Shakur, Dominic L. Santana as Suge Knight, Annie Ilonzeh as Kidada Jones, Jamal Woolard as the Notorious B.I.G. and Kat Graham as Jada Pinkett-Smith.

Watch the trailer for 'American Pastoral' Movie Here

SCROLL DOWN TO WATCH THE VIDEO

The movie is based on a novel titled American Pastoral'.   It is a Philip Roth novel published in 1997 concerning Seymour "Swede" Levov, a successful Jewish American businessman and former high school star athlete from Newark, New Jersey. Levov's happy and conventional upper middle class life is ruined by the domestic social and political turmoil of the 1960s during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson, which in the novel is described as a manifestation of the "indigenous American berserk." The novel won the Pulitzer Prize in 1998 and was included in Time's "All-TIME 100 Greatest Novels." The film rights to it were later optioned by Paramount Pictures. In 2006, it was one of the runners-up in the "What is the Greatest Work of American Fiction in the Last 25 Years?" contest held by the New York Times Book Review.





The framing device in American Pastoral is a 45th high school reunion attended by frequent Roth alter ego Nathan Zuckerman, who is the narrator. At the reunion, in 1995, Zuckerman meets former classmate Jerry Levov who describes to him the tragic derailment of the life of his recently deceased older brother, Seymour "Swede" Levov, who succumbed to metastatic prostate cancer at age 68. After Seymour's teenage daughter Merry, in 1968, set off a bomb in protest against American involvement in the Vietnam War, killing a bystander, and subsequently went into hiding, Seymour Levov remained traumatized for the rest of his life. The rest of the novel consists of Zuckerman's posthumous recreation of Seymour Levov's life, based on Jerry's revelation, a few newspaper clippings, and Zuckerman's own impressions after two brief run-ins with "the Swede," in 1985 and shortly before Seymour's death from prostate cancer, at age 68, in 1995. In these encounters, which take place early in the novel, Zuckerman learns that Seymour has remarried and has three young sons, but Seymour's daughter Merry is never mentioned. In Zuckerman's reimagining of Seymour's life, this second marriage has no part; it ends in 1973 with Watergate unraveling on TV while the previous lives of the protagonists completely disintegrate.

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