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Lady Gaga will voice Betty Boop in upcoming film reboot

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Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga will voice cartoon flapper Betty Boop in Simon Cowell's upcoming Betty Boop feature-film project, according to a series of leaked emails from the Sony Pictures hack published by Wikileaks.

Gaga will also contribute music to the film.

In an email sent by Sony Pictures Entertainment and Columbia Pictures vice president of production Lauren Abrahams on October 10th, 2014, Abrahams writes to then Sony Pictures co-chairmen Amy Pascal and Motion Pictures Group President Doug Belgrad that "I wanted to make sure Syco/Animal Logic’s Betty Boop project is on your radar. Lady Gaga is attached to voice Betty Boop & do some of the music."

Abrahams then mentions that "Neither of us thinks we should do it, and we’ve also run the brand by marketing who aren’t inclined either," and questions the appeal of the film because "it feels weirdly sexualized yet childlike (esp with Gaga) and not sure really who it’s for in a big mainstream way."

Belgrad replies that "It sounds kind of weird to me to be honest. I don't mind if we don't chase it."

Abrahams then says she agrees, and mentions that "MGM is going to buy it."

Betty Boop is being developed with Fleischer Studios, who own the rights to Betty Boop, and will be produced by Simon Cowell's Syco Entertainment and Animal Logic Entertainment.

The film does not yet have a release date.

Business Insider has reached out to Sony for comment and will update this post if we hear back.

SEE ALSO: Khloe Kardashian is working on a new messaging app that helps friends plan their nights out

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NOW WATCH: Here's the first trailer for George Clooney's new movie 'Tomorrowland'









Leaked Sony emails reveal 'Peter Rabbit' feature film is in the works

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Peter Rabbit

Sony Pictures is making a "Peter Rabbit" feature film, Business Insider has exclusively learned.

The film, which will be a mixture of animation and live-action, will be based on Beatrix Potter's children's book character Peter Rabbit. The antagonists of the film will be the human McGregor family.

Business Insider discovered Sony's plans to make "Peter Rabbit" in a series of leaked emails from the Sony Pictures hack published by Wikileaks, which revealed Sony was able to "make a deal" for the film back in November 2013.

In an email written by Columbia Pictures president of production Hannah Minghella on November 14th, 2013, Minghella tells then Sony Pictures co-chairmen Amy Pascal and Motion Pictures Group President Doug Belgrad that "I'm excited to report that in a flurry of activity late last night and early this morning we were able to swoop in and make a deal for Will Gluck to produce a live action hybrid version of Peter Rabbit with Animal Logic."

Minghella writes that the film "could be really special and a great family film target for us," mentioning that the "writer most recently wrote that great Alexander And The Terrible Bad Day movie for Disney which did a great job of taking a very young story and making it tonally appealing to the whole family."

The story of the film, according to Minghella, will examine "the relationship between Peter Rabbit and the other animals and their human antagonists the McGregors."amy pascal michael lynton brad pittOn March 19th, 2014, then Sony Pictures co-chairmen Amy Pascal wrote an email to Belgrad and another Sony executive where she referred to "Peter Rabbit" as one of Sony's "Tent Pole" films.

To date, the Peter Rabbit book series has sold more than 151 million copies and has been translated into 35 languages.

Business Insider has reached out to Sony Pictures for comment and will update this post if we hear back.

SEE ALSO: Lady Gaga will voice Betty Boop in upcoming film reboot

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NOW WATCH: Disney just dropped another 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' trailer — and it's the best one yet








Leaked Sony emails reveal Sony is working with Simon Cowell on a new animated film called 'Finn'

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Simon Cowell

Sony Pictures is working with Simon Cowell on a new animated feature film called "Finn," Business Insider has exclusively learned.

The film is "officially a project" at Sony Pictures as of June 2014, according to a series of leaked Sony emails published online by Wikileaks.

In an email written by Syco Entertainment senior vice president Adam Milano to then Sony Pictures co-chairwoman Amy Pascal on June 6th, 2014, Milano writes "Sorry I missed you. I was just calling to say we are VERY excited that Finn is officially a project with you guys."

Milano also writes that "Simon [is] extremely happy" and that "we’re going to go turn this into Happy Feet," referencing the smash 2006 animated film about a penguin, which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.

In an email dated September 23rd, 2014 labeled "Note from Simon" sent by Syco Entertainment executive assistant Olivia Newhouse to Amy Pascal, Newhouse relays a thank-you note written by Cowell.

"We love the writers and I think what they have done is really clever. Momentum seems the key now because this is such a good original and timely idea ... I can make these ideas work with your support. I did it with music and then TV and now I believe films."

While the film's name "Finn" and Milano's comparison to "Happy Feet" suggests the movie could involve a bird or penguin of some sort, no further details about the plot or characters of the project have been revealed.

Business Insider has reached out to Sony Pictures for comment and will update this post when we hear back.

SEE ALSO: Lady Gaga will voice Betty Boop in upcoming film reboot

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NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








Warner Bros. releases the full official 'Batman V Superman' teaser trailer

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A day after the first teaser trailer for the "Batman V Superman" movie leaked online, director Zack Snyder took to Twitter to unveil the HD version of the trailer. 

 

Warner Bros. planned to reveal the first "Batman V Superman" teaser Monday night at special Imax screenings across the country.

According to Snyder, those screenings will still feature altered content from what's seen in the trailer above.

Henry Cavill returns as the Man of Steel while Ben Affleck joins the cast as an older version of the Caped Crusader. 

ben affleck batman

"Batman V Superman" is in theaters March 25, 2016.

SEE ALSO: It looks like "Batman V Superman" will address the big problem many people had with "Man of Steel"

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George Lucas has not seen the new 'Star Wars' trailer

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george lucas stephen colbert tribeca film festival

The new "Star Wars" trailer has been viewed well over 23 million times alone on YouTube since its release Thursday at "Star Wars Celebration," but not one of those views belongs to creator George Lucas.

During a Tribeca Film Festival panel Friday afternoon where Lucas was interviewed by Stephen Colbert, the 70-year-old director said he has yet to see the new trailer for "The Force Awakens."

When asked by Colbert if he's seen the teasers, Lucas didn't even seem to be aware that it came out Thursday.

"I have seen the first one," Lucas said. He told the audience he hadn't had a chance to see "the one that came out today. I just saw it was on CBS."

"I want to see that on the big screen," he added as Colbert was prepping to take out his phone to have Lucas watch it on his own device.

While taking questions from the audience, a young man asked Lucas his "hope for the new 'Star Wars' movies going forward."

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" will be the first film in a new trilogy to be released under Disney in December. Lucas previously sold the rights to the films, along with his studio Lucasfilm, to the company back in 2012 for $4 billion.

"I hope they do a great job," said Lucas who noted that the first six films in the series followed the legacy of three generations of Skywalkers, including the books. "I'm hoping they'll take it in a different direction. I'm excited to see [it] ... I have no idea what they're doing."

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" is in theaters December 18, 2015.

If you missed the trailer out yesterday, you can check it out below. It's incredible.

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NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








The 'Batman V Superman' trailer hints at a major villain

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"Batman V Superman" director Zack Snyder revealed the official teaser trailer for the film late Friday afternoon.

Eagle-eyed fans watching the trailer may have noticed a familiar symbol hinting at a very popular Batman villain hiding in plain site.

At the 1:20 mark, while the focus is on the Batman over to the right of the screen, pay attention to the column on the left and you'll notice a question mark.

batman v superman riddler question markBatfans instantly recognize that as a possible nod to one of the Dark Knight's biggest foes, the Riddler, who is known for leaving question marks with riddles around for the super sleuth to solve. 

the riddler batman arkham cityHere's how the Riddler's question mark has looked in versions of Batman video game "Arkham Knight":

riddler question mark arkham Now, this could mean nothing.

Currently, the Riddler isn't set to be in the film.

A while back, there was a time when Leonardo DiCaprio's name was thrown around to play The Riddler in "The Dark Knight Rises." That never came to fruition.

It could just be a fun addition thrown in for DC fans. 

After all, the "Batman V Superman" movie is already getting pretty jam-packed with the addition of Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot, "Fast and the Furious" franchise), Superman villain Lex Luthor (Jesse Eisenberg), and an appearance from Aquaman (Jason Momoa).

 

We wouldn't count on seeing The Riddler anytime soon. However, it would be a nice tease, laying the groundwork for future films.

"Batman V Superman" is in theaters March 25, 2016.

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NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








George Lucas asked Stephen Colbert why he wouldn't want to host 'The Daily Show' and his response was great

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Stephen Colbert

Stephen Colbert has a simple reason why he wouldn't want to replace Jon Stewart on "The Daily Show": he wouldn't have a good time.

During a Tribeca Film Festival panel between Colbert and George Lucas on Friday, Lucas turned the tables on the former "The Colbert Report" host (who is currently sporting a grey beard) and flatly asked him why he didn't want "The Daily Show" job.

To be clear, Colbert announced he was leaving his show and taking over CBS' "Late Show" before Stewart announced he was leaving "The Daily Show." Regardless, we applaud Lucas' curiosity.

Colbert looked a little surprised that Lucas brought it up, but the comedian went with it.

"I don't want to be the guy to take over for Jon Stewart," Colbert told Lucas and the audience at the Tribeca Performance Arts Center in Lower Manhattan. "I worked for Jon Stewart on that show, my memories will always be of him being the most keenest, most intelligent, most beautifully deconstructive mind, clearest thinker I have ever worked with or for."

george lucas stephen colbert tribeca film festival
Colbert ended his nine-year stint as host of "The Colbert Report" on Comedy Central in December, and before that worked as a correspondent on "The Daily Show" for eight years. He is currently preparing to replace David Letterman on the "Late Show" after the legendary host exits the show on May 20.

Stewart announced in February that he'd end his hosting duties on "The Daily Show" before the year is over.

Just over a month later, Trevor Noah was announced as Stewart's replacement.

"I'll never, however successful I be, get underneath [Stewart's] shadow," said Colbert. "Someone who doesn't know him as well, and maybe doesn't love him as much, might have a better time on that show than I ever would."

Colbert begins hosting "Late Show" on September 8.

SEE ALSO: The first time George Lucas understood "Star Wars" was a hit, he was vacationing in Hawaii with Steven Spielberg

AND: George Lucas has not seen the new "Star Wars" trailer

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NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








George Lucas was convinced 'Star Wars' would be a disaster until this phone call in 1977

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george lucas stephen colbert tribeca film festival

When "Star Wars" first debuted, it was an instant hit.

In its limited release May 25, 1977, "Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope" made $1.5 million in theaters, a number that was unheard of at the time.

The film went on to make more than $775 million worldwide.

Perhaps no one was more stunned by the film's success than creator George Lucas himself.

During a Tribeca Film Festival panel Friday hosted by Stephen Colbert, Lucas recalled how no one thought the movie was going to be a hit — not himself, not 20th Century Fox, and not even his closest friends.

"I didn't think the film was going to be successful," Lucas said.

Colbert didn't accept that. 

"You must have thought at a certain point," Colbert insisted. "At what point did you say to yourself, 'I really got something here'?"

Lucas immediately responded, "No."

"I showed it to all of my friends early on, but it was mostly [filled with] stock footage of old war movies, and all kinds of stuff," he said. "They saw it and [said] 'Poor George.' 'What were you thinking?'"

According to Lucas, the only one who said "Star Wars" was going to be a hit was his close friend Steven Spielberg. 

steven spielberg george lucas"Steven had jumped up, and said, 'This is going to be the biggest movie of all time,'" recalled Lucas. "Everybody in the room looked up at Steven and [said], 'Poor Steven.'"

Lucas said his filmmaker friends helped him fix up "Star Wars" even though "they didn't have any faith in it."

They weren't the only ones.

"The studio, the board [at Fox] didn't have any faith in it," he continued. "Even when we showed it at [an] 'American Graffiti' screening and everybody loved it."

When "Star Wars" was preparing to debut May 1977, Lucas was prepping to head to Hawaii. 

Lucas explained that's just what he does when his films are coming out at theaters.

"I don't read the reviews," he said. "I just go, lay on a beach. Steven [Spielberg] was there."

Before he was able to leave, Lucas said he received a call from Alan Ladd Jr., the then president of 20th Century Fox who was one of the few believers in the film. Ladd, who Lucas refers to as Laddie, was telling him, "It's a fantastic hit! Every single paper! There are lines around the block. You can't believe this!"

star wars linesLucas couldn't.

"Laddie, calm down," said Lucas. "It's a science fiction film. Science fiction films get a good old group of sci-fi fans. They'll go to anything the first week. Wait for a couple weeks, and you'll see what it's really gonna do."

For Lucas, it sounded a bit frustrating. 

"[Originally] Nobody liked it [at the studio]. It hadn't been shown to the real audience," he explained to Colbert. "And then they called and said, 'Oh, it's a big hit.' I said, 'Well, look, let's not get too excited here.'"

What finally convinced Lucas "Star Wars" was a phenomenon? A phone call while he was off vacationing in Hawaii. 

"I got a call from Laddie after the first weekend. It was really like in the middle of the week," recalled Lucas. "He called and said, 'George, turn on the news.' I said, 'What?' He said, 'Turn on CBS. Turn on the news. Walter Cronkite.' You gotta see it.'"

"So I said, 'What is it now?' I turned on the news, and they had this huge story on the sensation of 'Star Wars,' and lines around the block. Everybody was going berserk about it," said Lucas. "That was the first time I understood that it was a big hit." 

The six films in the "Star Wars" franchise have gone on to make over $4.3 billion combined worldwide, according to figures from BoxOfficeMojo.

The entire franchise is estimated to be worth more than $30 billion.

The seventh film in the saga, "The Force Awakens," which Lucas won't have a hand in, will be released in theaters December 18, 2015.

SEE ALSO: George Lucas asked Stephen Colbert why he wouldn't want to host "The Daily Show," and his response was great

AND: Lucas: If you want to watch movies on a phone 'fine by me'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible









70 people were injured while filming this movie with 100 untamed lions

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Warning: This video contains blood and gore. 

Noel Marshall, Tippi Hedren, and their family lived with 140 untrained animals, including 100 untamed lions, in what is called "the most dangerous movie ever made". The idea for "Roar" was conceived after the couple toured several safari wildlife preserves and was struck by the scene of an abandoned plantation house overrun by lions.

The entire Marshall family moved along with their pride of 100 lions to a ranch property 40 miles north of Los Angeles and began shooting.  They were forced to film documentary style after they realized that they could rarely get through a scene without the lions attacking.

The cast suffered serious injuries over the 11 years the movie was filmed. Tippi Hedren endured a fractured leg and deep scalp wounds. Noel Marshall was gored so many times that he was eventually hospitalized with gangrene. And their daughter, Melanie Griffith, was mauled by a lion, resulting in over 100 stitches and reconstructive surgery. Her real-life mauling is on display in the final cut of the film.

The film was originally released in 1981 and will have a limited theatrical release this spring. It will be available on Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand platforms later this summer.

Video courtesy of Drafthouse Films

Visit drafthousefilms.com for more information on the film.

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This guy has the best, or worst, job in show business — he has to be Larry David

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Larry David's Broadway debut, "Fish in the Dark," was a smash hit before the first curtain even rose. The play broke the all-time record for advanced ticket sales, with a reported $13.5 million haul ahead of its premiere.

Audiences are paying big money to see Larry David, creator of "Curb Your Enthusiasm" and cocreator of "Seinfeld," perform in person.  However, there's always a chance that he won't be able to perform. Having an understudy waiting in the wings is a long-standing tradition in the theater. David's understudy is Richard Topol, a veteran actor who also plays a small role in the play.

Topol has an impressive résumé when it comes to both stage and screen. He also teaches acting at ESPA, which is the school associated with the Primary Stages theater company.

We talked to Topol about his role as Larry David's understudy in "Fish in the Dark," and the unlikely story that led to getting the job.

Produced by Graham Flanagan.Additional camera by Jason Gaines and Justin Gmoser.

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Neil deGrasse Tyson strives to live his life by these 3 rules

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Neil deGrasse Tyson 1

Astrophysicists probe the nature of our universe — a place too vast and grand for a single human mind to fully comprehend — and while that might make some feel small, Neil deGrasse Tyson has said time and again that the knowledge he's acquired over the years as an astrophysicist makes him feel not small, but big.

To deGrasse Tyson, knowledge is essential to leading a prosperous, meaningful life.

Even after publishing nearly a dozen books, narrating the hit series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, and directing the Hayden Planetarium in New York, deGrasse Tyson still tries to learn something new every day, he recently told 60 Minutes correspondent Charlie Rose.

Here are some of the few, but fundamentally important, life lessons that he says are his constant sources of inspiration.

"One of them is every day try to lessen the suffering of others by however amount," he told Rose.

The way deGrasse Tyson does this is through his role as a science educator.

As host of the widely-popular podcast StarTalk Radio and Cosmos star, deGrasse Tyson strives to make the wonders of the universe accessible to all.

If you understand your connection to the universe — that we are all made of the same stuff as the tens of billions of stars in our galaxy — then that knowledge gives you a sense of relevance and connection that you might never feel otherwise. And, according to deGrasse Tyson, feeling relevant in the world is what we, as a species, look for in life.

"Also I try to learn something today that I did not know yesterday," he told Rose. "Why not? There's so much to learn."

This is good advice for us all. In fact, experts say learning something new everyday will make you smarter overall and protect your brain from some of the negative aspects of normal aging.

Learning new things isn't just important for the brain, however. Several studies have found that people who regularly experience awe in their lives generally feel less stressed, more humble, and more satisfied too. So it's in our best interest to seek out those special quirks that awe and inspire us as we learn more about life and the universe.

Last, but not least, deGrasse Tyson tries to live his life by following the advice of a 19th Century American politician and educator, Horace Mann: "Be ashamed to die until you've scored some victory for humanity."

DeGrasse Tyson reiterated Mann's words with his own.

"You want the world to be a slightly better place for you having lived in it," he told Rose. "If you have the power and the influence to make it a slightly better place and you don't, what kind of life is that?"

When deGrasse Tyson saw Mann's quote for the first time, he decided that he would strive to one day deserve those words as his epitaph.

We think he's doing a pretty good job so far.

LEARN MORE: You'll never guess what Neil deGrasse Tyson's favorite equation of Einstein's is

CHECK OUT: Neil deGrasse Tyson's 'most astounding fact about the universe' may bring you to tears

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NOW WATCH: Neil deGrasse Tyson: Here are the nerdiest things I've ever done








George Lucas: If you want to watch movies on a phone 'fine by me'

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george lucas stephen colbert tribeca film festival

The way we consume media has changed immensely.

If you want to watch a movie, you're not just limited to the cinema and a TV screen anymore.

You can also stream it on your laptop, tablet, or phone.

How does George Lucas, the man behind one of the most successful movie franchises of all time, feel about that?

Pretty positively.

While discussing the next "Star Wars" film during a Tribeca Film Festival panel Friday, Stephen Colbert asked Lucas how he feels about people watching movies on small phones.

"I make movies for the big screen. That's what I do," said Lucas. "If you want the full experience, see it in a good theater with a good sound system, a lot of people, and it works the best. If you want to see it on a small phone, fine with me."

"You can't sort of tell people where to watch movies, especially in the future," he continued. "So you just have to accept the fact people are going to look at it."

"If you want to see it really well, and have a full experience, you've got to see it in a theater, but you can buy the DVD," Lucas added. "You can do it that way. That's fine. It's just not the same."

At this point, Colbert interjected to say that Lucas has "certainly put out enough versions."

SEE ALSO: The first time George Lucas was told "Star Wars" was a big hit, he didn't believe it

AND: George Lucas asked Colbert why he wouldn't want to host "The Daily Show" and his response was great

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








After 'Star Wars' became a big hit, George Lucas demanded 5 minutes be put back in 'American Graffiti'

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george lucas tribeca film festival

If you're a "Star Wars" fan you know that over the decades George Lucas as altered all the movies from the sage with enhancements, including new computer-generated special effects in the original trilogy.

But in a conversation with Stephen Colbert at the Tribeca Film Festival on Friday, Lucas told a sold-out crowd that he actually went back and updated the previous films he made before "Star Wars" as well.

Lucas' first two feature films, the experimental sci-fi cult hit "THX 1138" and successful comedy "American Graffiti," were released in the early '70s and both studios that released them took out five minutes of the films, to Lucas' displeasure.

So when "Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope" became a box-office sensation, Lucas went back to have the films corrected.

"After 'Star Wars,' I went back to Warner Bros. and Universal and said, 'You put that five minutes back in,'" Lucas told Colbert. "They redid it and put it back in, and it was the way I wanted it to be. Now the only versions that are out there are the ones that are fixed ... the way I wanted them to be in the first place."

thx 1138Lucas says the experience of working with Hollywood studios on those earlier films was not a pleasant one. So with the success of "A New Hope" Lucas reworked the contract for its sequel, "The Empire Strikes Back," so he would never have to deal with the interference by studio heads again.

"I wanted to have sequel rights, not because I thought ["Empire Strikes Back"] was going to be successful, I thought it would be unsuccessful, but I wanted to finance my own movies so I'm the only one who controls them."

That is not only why Lucas could go back and enhance the "Star Wars" films decades later to his liking when the technology evolved but, as he said at the chat, "That's how I got rich."  

SEE ALSO: George Lucas asked Stephen Colbert why he wouldn't want to host 'The Daily Show' and his response was great

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








'Unfriended' is a brilliant horror movie in spite of its lame story

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Unfriended

It would be easy to write off "Unfriended" as a modernized rip-off of a number of earlier horror films, because that very much is the case. In spite of this, the film’s familiar story meshes so well with its central gimmick that it’s engaging, entertaining, and impossible to take your eyes off of.

The premise can easily be summed up in a sentence — a year after a teenage girl commits suicide, her ghost cyber stalks a group of high school friends that may have had something to do with her death.

The twist?

The entire movie unfolds in real time and takes place on one character’s computer screen over Skype.  

The movie never attempts to reach beyond its gimmick, and because of that, it succeeds. It’s a brilliant example of how truly great, unique form can trump a relatively lame story.  The filmmakers mine the format for all its worth and cleverly use it as a vehicle for revealing information. Some of the exposition is definitely cheap, for instance a random forum post dictates the rules of the haunting, but nitpicking aside, the commitment to one-screen is impeccably handled. 

Take the opening scene, for example. We open on a computer screen with a YouTube video of Laura Barns’ suicide playing. Whoever’s watching this video then clicks on a related link that may show why Laura killed herself, but this is interrupted by a Skype call, and now we are introduced to all the characters and waste zero time before the mysterious “ghost” appears and begins to terrorize them. 

UnfriendedWe all know this story is nothing new — it’s literally just"I Know What You Did Last Summer" confined to a computer screen. Even this digitized angle isn’t completely original — "Modern Family" did the exact same thing for an entire episode this season and there’s a not-so-great indie horror flick starring Elijah Wood that does, too. "Unfriended" stands out because it absolutely nails the internet culture that its steeped in.  

People that consider themselves "internet obsessed" will get the most out of "Unfriended." It’s the minor details that really make it that much more engaging — the sheer panic Blaire feels when Mitch doesn’t instantly reply to her, or the fact that she will type one thing, delete it, and say something entirely different. For those that grew up “connected,” or even those that became heavily committed later in life, these subtle moments add a whole other level of relatability that renders the film incredibly effective. 

"Unfriended" is definitely not for everyone — if you don’t automatically look at the top right of the screen every time a notification noise goes off, it’s probably not for you.

If you can't stop texting, tweeting, and posting to even watch this movie, chances are you'll really enjoy it provided you can disconnect.

Watch the trailer below.

"Unfriended" is now playing nationwide. 

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NOW WATCH: There's a 'Poltergeist' remake out this summer and the first trailer is absolutely terrifying








The famous cantina bar from 'Star Wars: Episode IV' was recreated in real life for fans

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star wars celebration cantina

Thursday marked the beginning of "Star Wars" Celebration in Anaheim. 

The four-day event kicked off with the release of the latest trailer for "Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens."

Of all the memorabilia and costumes on display, perhaps the most eye-catching is an exact recreation of the Mos Eisley Cantina from "Episode IV - A New Hope." The bar is located on Tatooine and is best remembered for hosting the much-debated duel between Han Solo and Greedo.

Fans finally got a chance to see the Cantina in person. Here are some great photos captured at the event:

Cantina Star WarsStar Wars Cantina

The bar seemed to be heavily guarded by Stormtroopers.

Here's a closeup of the bar itself:

Cantina

Unfortunately, the bar didn't actually serve any drinks. However, "The Force Awakens" director J.J. Abrams and Chewbacca brought snacks.

This recreation was so incredibly detailed that it even provided a window to look out at the desolate desert planet.

Tatooine Cantina
There were even some familiar faces.

star wars celebration cantinaThe place may not have been too packed, but at least a few other characters from another beloved Disney-owned franchise were able to stop by:

 

SEE ALSO: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible

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NOW WATCH: Someone has already recreated the 'Star Wars' trailer with Legos — and it's awesome









How a sponge company became the biggest 'Shark Tank' success story

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lori greiner scrub daddy

"Shark Tank" investor Lori Greiner aggressively nabbed a deal with Scrub Daddy founder Aaron Krause in the show's fourth season in 2012. She sweetened her offer to $200,000 for 20% equity and promised to make Krause a millionaire within a year.

Krause had charmed the Sharks with an energetic live demonstration of his smiley-faced sponge, a scrubbing tool that he says cleans better and is more hygienic than a traditional sponge. Investor Daymond John told Business Insider last year that it was his favorite pitch in six seasons, and that it was like watching a live infomercial.

Two and a half years since Krause's "Shark Tank" pitch premiered, Scrub Daddy has sold more than 10 million units and made over $50 million in sales. The product makes regular QVC appearances and is sold in Bed Bath & Beyond, Walmart, Target, and Staples locations across the US. It's by far the most successful company that secured a deal on the show.

Krause, a Cherry Hill, New Jersey, resident and automotive industry veteran, stumbled into the home cleaning supplies business.

He designed the original Scrub Daddy sponge — sans smiley face — in 2006 when he was running a car detail service and product development company, Dedication To Detail. One of the products his company made was a urethane foam buffing pad, and on a whim he asked the German manufacturer to produce a pad that was as rough as possible, with "eye sockets" to clean fingers and "hair" ridges to clean underneath fingernails.

He hoped this prototype of Scrub Daddy could be a more comfortable replacement for pumice Lava Soap that autoworkers used to wipe their hands clean of grime and oil. He thought the product the German company made was great, but he shelved the idea after selling his foam business to 3M in 2008.

Krause said that in 2011 he needed to clean his lawn furniture and decided to break out the scrubbers he had set aside. They did the job so well that he tried them on his dishes. He added a "smile" to accommodate the curve of utensils, and the current version of the Scrub Daddy was born.

He put $75,000 into designing new packaging and producing an initial batch, and secured a patent.

His close friend owned five ShopRite grocery stores in New Jersey and let him display his products. When they didn't sell, Krause tried doing live demos in the store. He quickly took to the performances and customer interactions.

By April 2012, Krause had obtained a weekend front-page business feature in the Philadelphia Inquirer and two QVC appearances; on the second appearance, he sold 4,000 sets of Scrub Daddies in eight minutes.

scrub daddy shark tankHe said that he remembers sitting with his wife watching his favorite show, "Shark Tank," and thinking, "I could go on this and kill it." He sent in a submission and eventually landed a spot on the show a couple months later.

"The Scrub Daddy to me was a perfect product," Greiner told Business Insider. "It was clever and unique. It was different. It was something that people need and want." And it was a consumable, meaning that customers would need to continue buying it.

Greiner — who has created more than 400 inventions, holds more than 120 patents, and has sold well over $500 million worth of products on QVC — likes to classify retail products as either heroes or zeroes. She said she could instantly tell Scrub Daddy was a hero.

She also thought Krause's pitch would play well in an infomercial and told him she'd quickly get him one if they made a deal.

After they signed a contract, however, Krause told her that he didn't want to go the infomercial route. He not only had reservations that an infomercial might cheapen the image of his product, but he did not want to give away significant control of his company to the infomercial production and distribution team and chance having his product forgotten like the Snuggie or ShamWow.

Instead, he wanted his Scrub Daddy to be sold alongside the US's most popular cleaning products.

Krause remembers Greiner warning him, "If you want to compete with the big guys, you're going to have to be in it for the long haul." He'd have to work tirelessly at building the brand for years to come if he wanted to forego the infomercial circuit.

He was in for the long haul, just not the infomercial route, he told Greiner. She replied that she would be, too.

scrub daddy

Before his "Shark Tank" appearance, Krause had done around $100,000 in sales from QVC, ecommerce, and his friend's five ShopRite locations. After the show premiered, he got calls from Bed Bath & Beyond and ShopRite's corporate headquarters.

He signed deals with those outlets, and Greiner secured deals with Target, Ace Hardware, and Staples. Krause said Greiner is working on some other major distribution deals to accelerate Scrub Daddy's growth.

Greiner has also helped Krause develop new products like Scrub Daddy in colors, a lemon-scented sponge, and several new items that will be released this year.

Scrub Daddy now has 50 employees and its own 40,000 square-foot factory in Folcroft, Pennsylvania.

Krause said that Greiner is available at any time of day to discuss new ideas. "She's not human!" he said. "I'll send her an email at 2 in the morning, and she'll reply. I have to say, 'That was actually meant for you to see tomorrow!'"

Krause committed himself full-time to Scrub Daddy last May, but continues to work on inventions that fall outside of the company. He said that his and Greiner's shared passion for inventing has allowed them to understand how the other works.

She also respects that he's run a factory for the past 20 years and that he's comfortable working a QVC spot alone (although working alongside Greiner doubles or triples sales). "She doesn't babysit," Krause said.

They're now working toward Krause's long-term goal of making Scrub Daddy a household name, like Brillo or Lysol.

"Breaking into the retail world is almost impossible unless you're a company like 3M," or have a business partner like Greiner, Krause said.

"Once you've got her on your team, the sky's the limit."

SEE ALSO: 'Shark Tank' investor Daymond John explains the harsh reality of getting your product into a major retailer

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Here's the real, forgotten meaning of 'The Wizard Of Oz'

Mark Hamill didn't know the name of 'Star Wars: Episode VII' until he saw it online

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When we learned the name of the next "Star Wars" movie back in November, star Mark Hamill heard it for the first time along with the rest of us.

Hamill, who reprises his role as Luke Skywalker in "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," admitted he first saw the title online during a panel Saturday at "Star Wars Celebration," an annual celebration of everything about a galaxy far, far away.

The 63-year-old actor said he had to check whether that was even the real name of the movie.

"When I read the title ... first of all I said, 'Is this real?' You have to confirm that it's actually true because I heard about it like you did on the internet," Hamill told a surprised audience.

"I went to the website [presumably StarWars.com] to make sure it was really the title," he continued.

Disney, which will be distributing the new "Star Wars" film, has been keeping anything "Episode VII" closely guarded in the Disney vault. Actor Oscar Isaac said he had to read his script for the film in a room with cameras. 

And, while there have been a few images and supposed plot lines leaked online for the film, everyone has stayed tight-lipped when it comes to revealing information.

Hamill mentioned at the panel that he only went in last week to record a voiceover for the new teaser that was unveiled April 16.

mark hamill star wars"They're so secretive these days," he mentioned at the start of the panel. "Back when we were doing the original films, you didn't have that instant media, Twitter, and everybody having a cell phone and so forth. Of course, when we did the first one, no one cared."

"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" will be in theaters December 18, 2015.

SEE ALSO: George Lucas told Mark Hamill about 'Star Wars: Episode VII' in the 1980s

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NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








Here's the concept art that inspired the robot from the year's best sci-fi movie

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Artificial Intelligence has become a popular topic in movies recently, ranging as far in themes from gun-toting Chappie to the lovable Baymax in "Big Hero 6."

But "Ex Machina," opening in limited release Friday, features an AI so realistic that you'll be thinking about it long after the credits roll.

“Ex Machina” is the directorial debut of Alex Garland (best known for writing "28 Days Later" and "Dredd") and follows young programmer Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson) who is invited to stay with Nathan (Oscar Isaac), a reclusive Steve Jobs-like CEO of the company he works for. Once there, Caleb learns that Nathan has created one of the most sophisticated AIs and wants Caleb to test it to see how human it can be.

ExMachina2The AI, named Ava (played by newcomer Alicia Vikander), speaks and acts as any human being, but physically there's no mistaking that she's a robot.

This distinction was one Garland was adamant about.

We reached out to Mark Simpson, who previously worked with Garland on "Dredd," to learn more about the physical evolution of Ava. Simpson, who's known in the art world as Jock, was responsible for Ava's concept art — the drawings and designs the production uses as a starting point in the creation of the characters and sets. 

Jock shared six of his concept images for "Ex Machina" with Business Insider; taking us through his process for the creation of Ava.

Ex Machina Jock 1.PNG

To get Ava right, Garland and Jock spent a lot of time talking about what the movie's AI should not look like.

"We went through so many variations in the early stages of designing Ava. I started out with a figure much closer to human, with internal lights and a few subtle oddities in the joints, but Alex really pushed for a far more robotic look; and of course his instincts were right. To present something that is entirely mechanical, and then ask how the viewer feels about it, that's a really interesting question. These variations are somewhere in between those two initial ideas."

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Here we see the evolution of Ava. 

"This image was one that got us closer to the final design. The breakthrough with Ava came when Alex came up with the idea of the mesh that would cover her entire body. In certain light, she'd look entirely mechanical, with her midriff and limbs missing — almost a typical 'robot' — but the light would catch the mesh as she turned, or in certain light would reveal a beautiful female form. I think it works incredibly well in the film — she looks completely seductive but entirely mechanical. This is obviously underpinned by Alicia's amazing performance and Double Negative's entirely convincing VFX."

Ex Machina Jock 2.PNG

Though most of the movie is inside Nathan's underground compound, Jock didn't know that when he was creating his concepts. This gave him the freedom to place Ava in any world he wanted.

"Very early concept work is completely free from the constraints of budget, location, and sets — or at least when I work with Alex he encourages that mind set. The practicalities of getting it on film are a problem to overcome later, and he's always keen for me to be free of any constraints in the conceptual stage. This image was obviously before production found the stunning Norway location where the exteriors were eventually shot, so it shows a different feel to the landscape."

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But sometimes the concept art can inspire the way shots come together when filming takes place.

"This proved a popular image in production, and you can see this shot in varying degrees in the final film. There are smoked glass doors all over Nathan's mansion, providing glimpses of figures as they enter or leave. The metaphors are fairly obvious here, with Ava appearing slightly unseen and enigmatic."

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Concepts also help express the kind of tone the film should have.

"This is probably my favorite image, but perhaps not the most obvious. For me it sums up, tonally, what the film is about; It's explicit, but has beauty. It's very naturalistic, but we also see the inner workings of the robot, giving a mechanical quality to the figure. I like that juxtaposition."

Ex Machina Jock 6.JPG

At the end of the day, the goal of the concept art is to be the first step of a character's life and their world — sometimes, even, the world they dream of.

"Another thematic idea, rather than a specific shot from the script; 'What would this robot look like in a natural environment?' 'What would it be looking for, once it was outside?' More often than not the more successful images come from a simple feeling rather than trying to manufacture a look. And this was one of those, produced very quickly."

Here's a finished look of Ava as she appears on the poster for "Ex Machina":ExMachina_Payoff_hires2_rgb

"Ex Machina" is currently in limited release and goes wide theatrically April 24.

SEE ALSO: Top scientists have an ominous warning about artificial intelligence

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








Here's what the first 'Star Wars' spinoff movie will be about

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We finally know what the first "Star Wars" spinoff film, "Rogue One," will be about.

On the final day of "Star Wars Celebration," an annual gathering for "Star Wars" fans, director Gareth Edwards took the stage at a panel to reveal the plot of the 2016 film.

"A band of resistance fighters unite for a daring mission to steal the Death Star plans in Star Wars anthology film, Rogue One."

According to Variety, the film will take place before "Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope."

Edwards also showed a brief teaser for the film along with concept art, which you can see below.

It sounds like it's the same concept art Disney CEO Bob Iger recently showed off at a shareholder meeting.

  

Here's how Variety described the teaser shown:

The teaser took on war movie visuals, showing a TIE fighter flying above a forest planet before revealing the Death Star. The footage also featured shots of soldiers running through darkness.

“The Jedi Knights were the guardians of peace and justice in the Old Republic, before the dark times, before the Empire,” says a voiceover in the teaser.

And, here's the logo for the new film via /film editor Peter Sciretta:
  
According to the panel, the "Star Wars" spinoff films will be referred to as anthology movies.
 
The teaser shown at "Star Wars Celebration" has since leaked online. If you want to look it up, feel free to, but I'm going to wait until there's a full HD version released.

"Rogue One" will star Felicity Jones and will be in theaters December 16, 2016.

SEE ALSO: George Lucas was convinced "Star Wars" would be a disaster until a phone call in 1977

AND: Mark Hamill found out the name of "The Force Awakens" online

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Disney just released a new 'Star Wars: Episode VII' trailer and it's incredible








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