"Mortal Engines,” a steampunk fantasy adventure, is also an epic flop.
With a budget of just over $100 million and tens of millions in global marketing costs, executives at rival studios estimate that the movie will lose upwards of $100 million. Some even project that number could float to more than $125 million. “Mortal Engines” has so far made a paltry $42 million globally. The sci-fi epic came into a crowded marketplace at a competitive time of year, opening against the well-reviewed “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” and “The Mule,” a Clint Eastwood thriller that had a better start than expected. “Mortal Engines,” on the other hand, launched below estimates, generating just $7.5 million when it debuted in North America.
“This is a true Christmas disaster and a lump of coal for Universal,” said Jeff Bock, an analyst with Exhibitor Relations.
Good.
I'm sick of these dystopian fantasies. I'm sick of it. Can we get some hope and some fun? I'll see SECOND ACT when it comes out (Jennifer Lopez) but I'm not paying for this garbage.
"What's that?'
"It's London!"
And now the cities and countries are mobile because the world is over as we know it!!!!
I don't want to see that crap. Life, real life, is hard enough.
And we've already set through THE HUNGER GAMES, ENDER'S GAME, THE 5TH WAVE, DIVERGENT, THE GIVER . . .
I'm sick of it.
I don't go to the movies to be depressed. I want to be entertained.
Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Monday, December 17, 2018.
First off, GirlBye or whatever her name is. In Friday's snapshot, we called her out for a piece she put her name to at DINAR DAILY. Guess what? She didn't write it. That may actually be worse. A stupid person could write something like that and be too close to it to grasp how stupid it was. (Saying that Basra protesters should just learn to wait on their demands -- which includes drinking water that won't leave them hospitalized -- is the epitome of stupidity.) Equally true, posting writing without crediting the writer sounds like plagiarism. The article was actually written by propagandist Hussain Abdul-Hussain who wrote it for ASIA TIMES and it's nice that he's found somewhere else to work besides US propaganda outlets (ALHURRA).
This morning, HURRIYET DAILY NEWS reports:
Turkey has conducted a new wave of airstrikes in northern Iraq.
"7 separatist terrorists who were in preparation to assault our bases were neutralized in northern Iraqi regions of Gara and Hakurk as a result of airstrikes on Dec. 16," Turkey's National Defense Ministry said in a statement on Dec. 17, referring to the illegal PKK.
The PKK? Aaron Hess (INTERNATIONAL SOCIALIST REVIEW) described the PKK in 2008, "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at risk."
Today's bombing is thought to be the first bombing since Iraq's Foreign Affairs Ministry released a statement last week:
Despite the clearly worded statement, the government of Turkey shows no indication that it will respect Iraq's sovereignty or the security of its citizens.
Self-appointed 'leader' Nadia Murad Tweeted over the weekend the following.
Met w/minister @MevlutCavusoglu to dicuss the recent Turkish airstrikes in Sinjar. Turkey & Iraq must work together to find a solution to prevent any further bombings in Sinjar. We want to rebuild what ISIS destroyed & help Yazidis return home.
And here's the Tweet from the Turkish official she met with.
Discussed w/ #Yezidi activist and 2018 #Nobel Peace Prize winner @NadiaMuradBasee the situation of Yezidis. PKK/PYD/YPG continues to oppress everyone in Iraq & Syria, including Yezidis, Assyrians and Kurds.
Though they both use the same photo, they don't both mention Turkey bombing Sinjar. Did she actually bring the topic up? Maybe, maybe not. If she did, he didn't find it worth mentioning.
The press (western press) seldom finds it worth mentioning that these strikes kill a lot of civilians -- terrorists, not so much.
First off, GirlBye or whatever her name is. In Friday's snapshot, we called her out for a piece she put her name to at DINAR DAILY. Guess what? She didn't write it. That may actually be worse. A stupid person could write something like that and be too close to it to grasp how stupid it was. (Saying that Basra protesters should just learn to wait on their demands -- which includes drinking water that won't leave them hospitalized -- is the epitome of stupidity.) Equally true, posting writing without crediting the writer sounds like plagiarism. The article was actually written by propagandist Hussain Abdul-Hussain who wrote it for ASIA TIMES and it's nice that he's found somewhere else to work besides US propaganda outlets (ALHURRA).
This morning, HURRIYET DAILY NEWS reports:
Turkey has conducted a new wave of airstrikes in northern Iraq.
"7 separatist terrorists who were in preparation to assault our bases were neutralized in northern Iraqi regions of Gara and Hakurk as a result of airstrikes on Dec. 16," Turkey's National Defense Ministry said in a statement on Dec. 17, referring to the illegal PKK.
The PKK? Aaron Hess (INTERNATIONAL SOCIALIST REVIEW) described the PKK in 2008, "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at risk."
Today's bombing is thought to be the first bombing since Iraq's Foreign Affairs Ministry released a statement last week:
14.12.2018
Statement
The Foreign Ministry summoned the Turkish Ambassador to Baghdad Mr. Fatih Yildiz and handed him a letter of protest over the repeated air violations by Turkey. The Ministry denounces the actions of Turkish aircraft that violate the Iraqi airspace and target several sites in the areas of Mount Sinjar and Makhmour in northern Iraq, which caused loss of life and property.
Such acts violate Iraq's sovereignty and security of citizens and are unacceptable on all levels, contrary to the principles of good-neighborliness that bring together the two countries. The Foreign Ministry also reiterates its refusal to use Iraqi territory as a base or a corridor to carry out acts that effect the security of neighboring countries , and calls on the Turkish side to abide by this in order to maintain the friendly relations between the two countries.
Media Office
Iraqi Foreign Ministry
14/12/2018
The Foreign Ministry summoned the Turkish Ambassador to Baghdad Mr. Fatih Yildiz and handed him a letter of protest over the repeated air violations by Turkey. The Ministry denounces the actions of Turkish aircraft that violate the Iraqi airspace and target several sites in the areas of Mount Sinjar and Makhmour in northern Iraq, which caused loss of life and property.
Such acts violate Iraq's sovereignty and security of citizens and are unacceptable on all levels, contrary to the principles of good-neighborliness that bring together the two countries. The Foreign Ministry also reiterates its refusal to use Iraqi territory as a base or a corridor to carry out acts that effect the security of neighboring countries , and calls on the Turkish side to abide by this in order to maintain the friendly relations between the two countries.
Media Office
Iraqi Foreign Ministry
14/12/2018
Despite the clearly worded statement, the government of Turkey shows no indication that it will respect Iraq's sovereignty or the security of its citizens.
Self-appointed 'leader' Nadia Murad Tweeted over the weekend the following.
Met w/minister @MevlutCavusoglu to dicuss the recent Turkish airstrikes in Sinjar. Turkey & Iraq must work together to find a solution to prevent any further bombings in Sinjar. We want to rebuild what ISIS destroyed & help Yazidis return home.
And here's the Tweet from the Turkish official she met with.
Discussed w/ #Yezidi activist and 2018 #Nobel Peace Prize winner @NadiaMuradBasee the situation of Yezidis. PKK/PYD/YPG continues to oppress everyone in Iraq & Syria, including Yezidis, Assyrians and Kurds.
Though they both use the same photo, they don't both mention Turkey bombing Sinjar. Did she actually bring the topic up? Maybe, maybe not. If she did, he didn't find it worth mentioning.
The press (western press) seldom finds it worth mentioning that these strikes kill a lot of civilians -- terrorists, not so much.
Among those killed in Turkish airstrikes in Iraq last night were a 73 year old woman and a 14 year old teen, Rudaw reports.
This may explain the strong Iraqi government protest against Turkey today
The Iraqi government's strong protest against Turkey on Friday for "violating its sovereignty" did not deter Turkey who continued its airstrikes in northern Iraq on Sunday
Okay, we need to talk about another topic war related before I get another phone call from a friend. At THIRD, Ava and I cover the media and, in a perfect world, this topic would have been addressed there. But we wrote two pieces for this week's edition and didn't have time for a third. MURPHY BROWN. The CBS sitcom has been a nightmare in its revival. I loved the original MURPHY BROWN and consider the episode "And So She Goes" from season one to be a TV classic. The revival has been awful. One of the main reasons, as Ava and I noted after viewing the first episodes, was because no one had a life -- twenty years later, the show re-emerges and no one's become a parent, no one's got married, no one's had any professional accomplishment, nothing happened. And instead of developing characters, we got preaching and screaming. My friend with the reboot is about to hit the roof, I'm sure. There's a "but" coming. But on the Thanksgiving episode, things finally came together. Whether you agreed with the POV of the episode (I did) or not, it was an actual episode, not a lecture.
Another topic? Last week's episode of MURPHY BROWN found Murphy noting that no one paid attention to the Afghanistan War (it ended with Avery heading off to Afghanistan to report). The war kept going on year after year and where was the media, Murphy, Corky and Frank wondered? They talked about Vietnam, about how reporters were there and reporting what was actually going on.
If we had written about it at THIRD, we would have included this TWEET that posted on Friday:
Aaron Maté Retweeted
This US soldier who was just killed in Afghanistan was just a year old when the war began in 2001
The Iraq War and the Afghanistan War need to end -- all wars need to end (especially those that never should have started). MURPHY BROWN wanted to be political but it didn't offer anything you couldn't already find everywhere else. It did, on the Thanksgiving episode, leave the preaching to actually humanize the immigration issue (good job). But with last Thursday's episode, it demonstrated that the revival was worth it for that episode alone. No one is talking about Iraq or Afghanistan. The media's not interested. The politicians certainly aren't. MURPHY BROWN offered a strong episode (written by Gary Dontzig and Steven Peterman). It was nice to see them step away from easy targets and 'hot topics' to address something that actually matters and to do so with humor and care.
Let's bring this over to THE NATION. An issue in POLLY'S BREW (community newsletter) is the lack of coverage in THE PROGRESSIVE and THE NATION of the Iraq War (or the Afghanistan War). A number of community members have e-mailed about that on Saturday and Sunday. I'd love to see coverage from both but let's face a few realities.
Ruth Conniff is now in charge of THE PROGRESSIVE. It never did much on Iraq under Matthew Rothschild's leadership (he made many promises -- such as that he would cover the Iraq Veterans Against The War's public hearings -- and he never kept them). The only thing worse than Matthew was Ruth. As most of you will remember -- because it was so horrific -- Ruth went on KPFA and asked about the Iraq War blathered on in her airhead way that no one she knew had gone to Iraq -- thereby explaining that in the gated-community of her mind, the war just didn't matter.
Ruth Conniff has led the magazine from one disaster to another. Supposedly, the circulation of the monthly magazine has dropped below 25,000 (it's highest was when it was covering Iraq in 2004, 65,000) so she's got that 'success' to claim. There's also her 2014 failure (when she oversaw the merger of THE PROGRESSIVE and The Center for Media and Democracy -- a merger that didn't even last a year and left both sides wounded). She's a failure and that's all she'll ever be.
But neither rag is going to cover Iraq. They only do what the Democratic Party officials want them to do. That's why Ruth Conniff attacked Ralph Nader in 2004, for example. It's why she attacked Hillary in 2008 (with some really disgusting writing) and then turned around in 2016 and pretended like Hillary was her personal fave and always had been. She's a whore, that's what Ruth is. She needs the money from the Democratic Party and won't buck the establishment of the party. THE NATION is a little better, not much. Katrina could have led on the Russiagate nonsense. And she should have -- it's her field of expertise. Also it's her husband's field of expertise (and he did lead on it). Katrina did allow some important pieces by Aaron Mate to be published. But she always knew that stupid b.s. was b.s. Russia did not impact the 2016 election in any significant way. No Democratic presidential campaign ever spent more on advertising so less than $20,000 in FACEBOOK ads is really laughable. Greed, that's all we see these days. Remember, it was Barack Obama who walked away from public financing of presidential elections.
So stop counting on them to cover issues that the Democratic Party establishment does not want them to cover. The Democrats blew it on ending the Iraq War, they don't want voters reminded of that and both THE PROGRESSIVE and THE NATION depend on donors -- big money donors -- to stay in business. Their circulation is laughable and they wouldn't be in business without big money donations backing them. (It's why Katrina killed the report on Dianne Feinstein's lack of ethics.)
THE WEEKLY STANDARD, thankfully, just died. And that could easily happen to THE NATION and THE PROGRESSIVE (and maybe should).
.@RealDonaldTrump is right on The Weekly Standard’s deserved demise (“pathetic and dishonest”). If the articles targeting me were redacted until only truth remained, there would not be much left to read.
THE WEEKLY STANDARD walked away from the Republican Party as they flocked around their fellow neo-con Hillary in 2016. As a result, they lost the money (donations) that kept the rag alive. It never made it on circulation, these opinion journals never do.
Read @amconmag founding editor @ScottMcConnell9's obit of The Weekly Standard: theamericanconservative.com/articles/what-…
By me:
The 10 most appalling articles in the Weekly Standard’s short and dreadful life
Fox viewers like to be lied to with short, simple words, while the readers of the Weekly Standard preferred to be deceived with multisyllabic lies interc.pt/2A0Ddgt
I can't urge you strongly enough to read this 2003 article by David Brooks in the now-deceased Weekly Standard. You will never find anything else that better illustrates the degree to which US elites had totally gone off the mental rails. interc.pt/2A0Ddgt
THE WEEKLY STANDARD sold the Iraq War, it's good that it's dead. And let's note Oliver Willis because I always pick on him here but I do like his writing.
It’s Good The Weekly Standard Is Dead.
Read Oliver Willis' piece on the failure of THE WEEKLY STANDARD here. And if THE PROGRESSIVE and THE NATION fail next, good. Their silence on the ongoing wars is selling the wars. Shame on them.
Now books.
Ballots are due December 20th for the books that spoke to you in 2018. Community wide, these are the reviews (I'm swiping from THIRD):
"EXIT STAGE LEFT: THE SNAGGLEPUSS CHRONICLES" -- Isaiah.
"Tina Turner's love story" -- Betty.
"Iraq snapshot" -- C.I. reviews Michelle Obama's BECOMING (pair it with Ava and C.I.'s "TV: The Selfie").
"The Women’s Suffrage Movement is an awful (and rac..." and "Penguin's embarrassing and racist book on feminism" -- Ann and Elaine.
"Alice Isn't Dead" -- Marcia.
THE MAKING OF A SOUL MUSIC MASTERPIECE" -- Elaine.
"The Third Hotel by Laura Van Den Berg" -- Trina.
"CLEOPATRA: HISTORIES, DREAMS AND DISTORTIONS" -- Mike.
"THE SAME RIVER TWICE (Alice Walker)" -- Isaiah.
"Dancing with Demons: The Authorized Biography of Dusty Springfield" -- Marcia.
"Good for Jimmy Stewart, bad for readers" -- Stan.
"Good for Jimmy Stewart, bad for readers" -- Stan.
"Conversations with Toni Morrison" -- Marcia.
Remember that those books can be voted on, books from the newsletters can be voted on, books not mentioned anywhere can be voted on. The whole point of the above is to boost book coverage, yes, but also to underline that if a book spoke to you this year and it was published in 1902, vote for it.
New content at THIRD:
- Truest statement of the week
- Truest statement of the week II
- A note to our readers
- Editorial: The deeply stupid
- TV: YOUNG SHELDON old and stale
- Tweet of the Week
- ObamaCare -- the s**t burger Congress expects you ...
- Springsteen exposes himself (Ava and C.I.)
- Radio moment of the week
- Read a book?
- Stop the anti-Semitism, Debra Messing
- Such acts violate Iraq's sovereignty . . .
- William Blum
- This edition's playlist
- Senator Baldwin to Pfizer: Why Does $11 Billion in...
- Amazon whistle-blower Shannon Allen: “In order to ...
- Highlights
No comments:
Post a Comment