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Does Netflix’s Hustle mark the return of sports movies?

“Look at the hops on this guy, there was nobody like him,” an enthusiastic Stanley Sugerman, played by Adam Sandler in Netflix’s newly released Hustle, exclaims.

Sugerman’s excitement is in reaction to a video of former basketball player Julius Erving throwing down slam dunks at 63. The scene is an ode to a man who was one of the best at his craft. A call to the past. 

That idea is also central to where some experts say the sports film finds itself today. Once a titan of industry, churning out classics like Rocky, Rudy or The Sandlot, the genre is now a grizzled veteran among a new class of content. 

Audiences have long connected with the themes involved in a sports film, says Lorna Schultz Nicholson, a former university rowing coach and sports writer based in Edmonton.

“Sports are fast and furious and have highs and lows,” she said. 

WATCH | Author explains why we’re attracted to sports stories: Author Lorna Schultz Nicholson says the ‘highs and lows’ of sports are what make them great stories and attract such wide audiences.

Vish Khanna, who hosts the podcast Kreative Kontent and is an assistant editor with Exclaim! magazine, similarly points to the tension and arcs of sports as storytelling techniques that he says audiences are inherently drawn to. 

Despite this, Hustle is just one of a handful of major sports-related releases to come out this year, along with Home Team, Into the Wind and Jersey. (Compare that to 2000, a year featuring classics such as Remember the Titans and The Replacements that saw eight major sports movies released.)

Hernangomez as Bo Cruz and Sandler as Stanley Sugerman in Hustle. (Scott Yamano/Netflix)

The film follows Sugerman, a player scout for the Philadelphia 76ers. Sugerman, who’s tired of travelling on the road, aspires to become a coach so he can spend more time with his family. While scouting in Spain, Sugerman comes across Bo Cruz, an unknown phenom, who Sugerman thinks could be his team’s ticket to a championship. 

So, why are we seeing this decline of audience-favourite sport films? 

New world, new rules

Khanna attributes this change, in part, to the rise of social media. He says sports movies were once used as a way to tell stories about athletes, giving the average audience member an entry point into their lives.

But now, we’re living in a “remarkable time to get to know athletes,” he said, where the audience already has direct access to their favourite athletes’ lives.

WATCH | Podcast host discusses athletes using social media as a way to speak out: Podcast host Vish Khanna discusses how professional athletes use social media to speak out on topics they’re passionate about, and says we’re living in a ‘remarkable time’ for people to connect with athletes.

Jonathan Filipovic, a professor in the faculty of humanities and social sciences at Sheridan College in Oakville, Ont., who has examined the role of sports in film and literature in some of his classes, agrees that we’re in the midst of an unprecedented time when it comes to connecting with athletes. 

“We know everything about where the athlete came from and what they had to overcome,” he said. “It really becomes a challenge to dramatize that.” 

But, it’s more than just social media at play here, says Khanna. The advancement of technology has also changed the way we watch and engage with sports. Khanna says real sporting events are shown to us in a way that simply wasn’t around in decades past. 

“The way they broadcast the games are so realistic, I feel like they actually borrow from filmmaking.”

Khanna says this can be seen in the current NHL playoffs, where the use of techniques such as multiple camera angles and the incorporation of drones make us feel closer than ever to the sport and its athletes. 

This can also be found in Hustle. The use of close-up camera shots and humanizing of real athletes through things like training sequences are what make the film work, he adds.

Vish Khanna says realistic training sequences, like this scene from Hustle, allow audiences to feel closer to athletes in films. (Scott Yamano/Netflix)

But Filipovic says a saturation of content, albeit through social media, countless streaming services and even movies from other genres has left the themes and stories of sports movies feeling too familiar for audiences to care as much as they once may have.

He says tropes that were once specific to the sports film have been appropriated by other genres. 

WATCH | Professor explains why sports movie tropes are no longer unique: Communications professor Jonathan Filipovic says tropes that were once specific to a sports story are now being used in all kinds of genres.

“If you wanted the underdog story, you used to go and watch a sports film, and now you can get that in a lot of different contexts and in a much more popular package at the moment.”

He cites superhero movies — especially Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy and Captain Marvel — as filling that niche today.

The intersection between sports and culture 

These developments have led to a blending of sports and culture in real life, says Filipovic. With a greater access to these athletes, he said, “popular culture and sports has kind of intersected.” 

That’s left us with storylines that we can follow in real-time, rather than just looking at fictional representations in a movies, says Filipovic. 

“For a long time athletes were restricted … they play the sports, they do endorsements. And occasionally you might have someone appear in a in a film, but it was really rare.”

Now, athletes are increasingly appearing in films, says Filipovic, who points to Hustle and another recent Adam Sandler movie, Uncut Gems, which features former NBA star Kevin Garnett.

Hustle features multiple NBA stars, including Hernangomez, left, and Anthony Edwards, pictured here. (Scott Yamano/Netflix)

Hustle, too, features dozens of current and former NBA players. Some play themselves, while others appear as fictional characters.

Khanna says the way these stories are told is likely going to continue to change — and we’re already seeing that happen. 

The Ted Lasso playbook?

When it comes to telling sports stories, Khanna says studios are likely looking at trends to decide what to put out. He points to the success of Apple TV+ streaming hit Ted Lasso. 

The series follows the story of an American football coach, hired to coach an English soccer team despite knowing nothing about the sport. He uses his relentless optimism to try to make up for his lack of knowledge.

“It’s an excellent example of telling a story based around a sport, but really it’s about relationships,” Khanna said.

Schultz Nicholson also thinks streaming services will put out more sports-related content in the future. She says there’s an opportunity for these services to engage with an audience that’s been less active in recent years due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“COVID has [led to] kids not being physical anymore and I think we need to get them back into being physical and sports is one way to do that.” 

Given all these factors, is there still a demand for sports stories? 

Khanna says yes, even though the formula we know could change, the demand for sports movies will always be there. 

“You relate to them [athletes] through their skill and how they persevere,” he said. 

“If films can continue to find the human element … I think they’ll do well.”

Sony is reportedly eying District 9’s director for a Gran Turismo movie

A movie adaptation of Sony’s Gran Turismo series is reportedly in the very early stages of development.

That’s according to Deadline, which claims Sony is eyeing Neill Blomkamp, the director of films including District 9, Elysium and Chappie, to helm the movie.

During a business briefing on Thursday, Sony Pictures Entertainment reportedly confirmed that the company was working on TV adaptations of God of War with Amazon, Horizon with Netflix, and Gran Turismo.

However, Deadline claims the Gran Turismo project is actually a movie adaptation based on the long-running racing series, which is developed by Polyphony Digital.

The franchise, which launched for PSOne in 1997, has sold over 85 million copies to date. The most recent series entry, Gran Turismo 7, was released in March for PS4 and PS5.

Deadline first reported in March that Sony Pictures Television and PlayStation Productions were developing a live-action God of War TV series.

It said the iconic action-adventure franchise was being adapted for TV by The Expanse creators/executive producers Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby and The Wheel of Time executive producer/showrunner Rafe Judkins.

PlayStation Productions is a studio formed in 2019 by Sony Interactive Entertainment to adapt its original game properties for film and TV in partnership with Sony Pictures.

January’s Uncharted movie was the first major PlayStation Productions project to be released. Starring Tom Holland, the film had a $120 million budget and grossed over $400 million at the global box office.

The studio is also working on a The Last of Us HBO TV series co-written by Chernobyl creator Mazin, a live-action Ghost of Tsushima movie helmed by John Wick director Chad Stahelski, a Twisted Metal TV series from Deadpool’s writers, and a Jak and Daxter adaptation from Uncharted movie director Ruben Fleischer, among other projects.

James Caan, Oscar-nominated actor of ‘The Godfather,’ ‘Misery’ and ‘Elf,’ dies at 82

Updated 5:43 PM ET, Thu July 7, 2022

The Silent Hill movie’s director says he’s written a script for a third film | VGC

The director of the 2006 Silent Hill movie says he’s written a script for another one.

Speaking to Jeux Video, director Christophe Gans revealed that he wrote the script during the Covid-19 lockdown, and that the film is unrelated to the 2006 and 2012 Silent Hill films.

“I’m working on it now,” he said (translated by VGC). “There were the Covid-19 years which finally forced us to stay home.

“I took the opportunity to write two scripts, [including] the script for a new Silent Hill movie that is totally independent from the two previous movies made and respects the way Silent Hill has evolved.”

“Most of the time, these are stand-alone stories. Silent Hill is a bit like The Twilight Zone, the fourth dimension, a place where anything and everything can happen.

“I worked on a new Silent Hill which is a Silent Hill of the year 2023 – because the film would be released next year – and not a Silent Hill as I imagined it in 2006. It is a Silent Hill for today’s audiences while being ultra respectful of the saga.

It’s not entirely clear from the interview whether Gans is confirming that the film will indeed be released in 2023, or whether he simply wrote the script with a 2023 release in mind.

“I’m aware that Silent Hill is a very big video game franchise, and a work of art in the noble sense of the word,” he added. “The people who thought up Silent Hill put a lot of their guts into it. If I know them well, they are people of great integrity.

“For me, it was important to design a Silent Hill for today’s audience. It’s clear that today’s horror movies don’t look like the horror movies of 2006, and so much the better. Not that the horror films of 2007 weren’t good, but every genre goes through an evolution.

The Silent Hill movie’s director says he’s written a script for a third film
Gans directed the first Silent Hill movie

“I’m trying to take into account what I’ve seen recently, what’s most original and amazing in horror films, and see if Silent Hill has the seeds, or even the expression of that. Silent Hill has always been an unusual game and ahead of its time.”

Gans directed the first Silent Hill film in 2006. A second film, Silent Hill: Revelation, was released in 2012 and directed by M.J. Bassett.

Multiple Silent Hill projects are currently in development at studios around the world, sources have told VGC, and could include a remake, a full sequel and a story-focused episodic series.

Last month a collection of leaked concept images appeared to confirm that a new Silent Hill is or was in development. This followed a VGC story from last February, in which we reported that Konami was planning to revive the long-dormant horror game series.

The leaked images are understood to be related to a PT-style teaser game, codenamed ‘Sakura’, which is intended to be released as a free digital title to build anticipation for the larger projects.

VGC first reported on Konami’s plans to ramp up its premium game development last year, with new instalments and remakes for its biggest franchises, including Metal Gear, Castlevania and Silent Hill.

HRDS will protect Swapna Suresh, says RSS loyalist KG Venugopal endorsing her claims

Kochi: Amid the heated debate over the gold smuggling case accused Swapna Suresh’s allegations against CM and others, KG Venugopal, RSS loyalist and the vice president of HRDS INDIA—the NGO with which Swapna Suresh works, has endorsed her claims.

Watch a New Trailer for Jordan Peele’s New Movie Nope

A new trailer for Jordan Peele’s new film Nope is out now. It’s his latest horror movie, following 2017’s Get Out and 2019’s Us. Nope will star Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer as ranch owners in a desolate part of inland California who discover what may be extraterrestrial life and are determined to get proof. The movie was written and directed by Jordan Peele, and the co-stars include Steven Yeun, Michael Wincott, and Brandon Perea. Universal Pictures will release the film on July 22. Check out the trailer below.

In the time between Us and Nope, Jordan Peele has produced a number of television shows, including the Twilight Zone reboot and Lovecraft Country, as well as the film Candyman.

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RSS feared farmers agitation was impacting social cohesion

While the Sangh has never openly opposed the farm laws in totality nor supported the idea of their repeal, for almost a year, it has been hinting to the government about its discomfort with Centre’s inability to resolve the issue.

In a February interview to The Indian Express, then RSS General Secretary Suresh Bhaiyyaji Joshi made it very clear that the Sangh was worried about the impact the protests were having on social cohesion.

“Any agitation running for long is not beneficial. No one should have a problem with an agitation taking place. But a middle ground must be found. An agitation does not just affect people associated with it, but also impacts society, directly or indirectly. It is not good for the health of society for any agitation to run for too long. So a middle ground must be found and both sides must work to find a solution,” Joshi said even as he underlined that laws such as these are not repealed in any country.

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Notably, RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat, who had supported the farm laws in his October, 2020 Vijaydashmi speech, steered clear of the issue in his 2021 speech. The RSS chief’s Vijaydashmi speech is considered a policy signal to the government. Even the resolutions of the Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha and the Akhil Bharatiya Karyakarini Mandal–both top decision making bodies of the RSS–did not speak on the subject this year.

The BPS Annual Report – 2021 released in March this year, however, did broach the subject. While highlighting that anti-national and anti-social forces were not letting a solution come through, the report said, “It is not in anyone’s interest for any kind of agitation to be prolonged for a long time. Discussions are a must, but with a view to finding a solution. It is possible that not all issues are agreed upon, but it is essential that some agreements must be reached upon.”

Even in his 2020 Vijaydashmi speech, Bhagwat had laid stress on “self-reliance” in agriculture.

“In self-reliance, dependence on self is intended …the newer policies should aim to make our farmer aware of modern agricultural science and also enable him to blend that knowledge with time-tested, contextually relevant traditional knowledge. The policies should be such that a farmer should be able to use these research findings and sell his produce without getting trapped, either in the profit aimed interpretations of those findings or sponsored research by the corporate sector or under the pressure of the market forces and middlemen, only then such a policy will be compatible with the Bharatiya view and be a truly Swadeshi agrarian policy,” Bhagwat had said.

Sources in the RSS said that the continued agitations, resulting in deaths of several farmers and precipitating the Lakhimpur Kheri incident, had now begun to worry the BJP politically as well. “The feedback from the ground was that at least in 20 constituencies in western UP, where there is a sizable population of Sikhs and Jaats, there was going to be negative impact of the farmers’ agitations and the Lakhimpur Kheri incident. During our meetings with workers and leaders, we had told them to not use any harsh words for Sikhs and Jaats during election campaigns,” a senior RSS functionary said.

The Sangh, however, has been more worried about long-term implications of the dispute between the government and the Sikhs over the farm laws. “The Sangh is worried about the sense of alienation that Sikhs have begun to feel in the past one year. We are working on reviving the Rashtriya Sikh Sangat, which was formed in the wake of developments in Punjab in the 1980s. The division between Hindus and Sikhs had grown wider at that time and the Sangat had done a lot of work to bridge it,” another senior RSS functionary said.

Notably, the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh, RSS-affiliate organisation dealing with issues of farmers, had always supported the farm laws, but never in totality. In September last year, ahead of two key Bills related to farmers’ produce and price assurance being taken up by Rajya Sabha for passage, BKS had said the Bills in their current form were not acceptable.

The main thrust of the BKS suggestions then was that all traders must buy farmers’ produce at not less than the Minimum Support Price (MSP). BKS had even asked for the Bills to be sent to Standing Committee for adequate discussion. It had asked the government to either incorporate assured MSP in the Bills or bring another law. However, both the Bills were passed without incorporation of its suggestions.

In its letters addressed to Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, the BKS had then said it doubted whether the ordinance brought by the government would fulfil the objective of providing farmers the right price for their produce.

On Friday, following PM’s announcement of the laws being repealed, BKS said, “The decision of the government to repeal the three farm laws is a good step in the direction of deferring an unnecessary controversy. Due to the stubborn attitude of so-called farmers, this is going to harm the farmers in the long term. Small and medium farmers would have benefitted if these laws had been amended.”

BKS also reiterated its demand to guarantee MSP under law.

Creative freedom is tradition but religious sentiments must not be hurt: RSS on Kaali row

The Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) on Saturday spoke up on the controversy over a movie poster that depicts Goddess Kali smoking a cigarette.

Addressing the media during the ongoing three-day Akhil Bharatiya Prant Pracharaks meet in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu, the right-wing outfit said that no one should hurt anyone’s religious sentiments.

“Creative freedom has been a tradition in India. But no one should hurt anyone’s religious sentiments. Everyone should be careful about that,” Sunil Ambekar, Akhil Bhartiya Prachar Pramukh of RSS, said.

The remarks came against the backdrop of a blazing row over filmmaker Leena Manimekalai’s documentary film ‘Kaali’, whose poster shows the Hindu goddess smoking, while holding the LGBTQ+ community’s pride flag in hand. Multiple FIRs have been filed against Manimekalai for allegedly hurting religious sentiments.

The controversy was fuelled further when Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra, while responding to a question about the contentious poster, said she has every right as “an individual to imagine Goddess Kali as a meat-eating and alcohol-accepting goddess”. Now Moitra is also facing several police complaints for her controversial statement.

ON UDAIPUR BEHEADING

The RSS also spoke against the beheading of a tailor in Hindu, saying that there is anger among Hindus over the ghastly murder and also exhorted Muslims to speak up against it as well.

“Any amount of condemnation is less on Udaipur killing … Muslim society should also come forward and speak against Udaipur killing,” Ambekar said.

“For some days, it has been going on that threats have been issued to people. If you do not agree with someone, there are ways of protesting peacefully. No one has the right to kill someone,” he further said.

At the annual Prant Pracharak meeting of the RSS, discussions have been going on about the organisation’s expansion plans in the run up to its centenary in 2025.

“RSS will be completing its 100 years. Its centenary year will be celebrated in 2025. We have set targets for expansion of RSS in the run up to the ‘Shatabdi Varsh’,” Ambekar said.

Several top RSS leaders including RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat, key RSS functionaries including Manmohan Vaid, Arun Kumar, Dr Krishan Gopal and CR Mukund are present at the three-day meeting.

VHP BACKS NUPUR SHARMA

On the other hand, Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s executive president Alok Kumar has endorsed suspended BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma’s remarks on Prophet Muhammad, which sparked a massive row at home and abroad.

“Nupur Sharma did not say anything wrong, we heard what she said. This country runs on the Constitution, not by Sharia. The Supreme Court has to decide whether she said something wrong or not. Nupur Sharma is innocent until court gives its verdict,” said Alok Kumar.

Minions: Cinemas ban teens in suits over #gentleminions trend

The Minions movie franchise, which began with 2010’s Despicable Me, follows reformed supervillain Gru and his army of small, yellow henchmen, who quickly became the subject of endless online memes.

Student bodies may be anti-establishment, but must not divide society: RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale

“Every student organisation will be anti-establishment. There is no doubt about it. Every generation has raised its voice against established power. Lekin wo desh ke tukde tukde karne wala to nahi hona chahiye (But that should not be shaped by the idea of balkanising the country). It can’t be with the objective of spreading hate in society. It can’t be about speaking of the country’s culture with disgust. Is it there for creating anarchy? Is it for shedding blood in the country in the name of revolution? Will there be any revolution by killing your own people?” Hosabale said, while addressing a gathering of ABVP workers at an event to release a book, Dhyeyay Yatra, that chronicles the student organisation’s journey.

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Former Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora was the special invitee at the event.

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Hosabale said ABVP workers had sacrificed their life to “stop those in universities who want to bring revolution through the barrel of the gun. In Kerala, in Andhra, in Telangana.”

His statements come at a time when there have been clashes in JNU over non-vegetarian food during Navratra and if a havan could be performed. The statements make a veiled reference to alleged slogans of “Bharat tere tukde honge” on JNU campus in 2015.

“Student movements have contributed greatly to the world. They have contributed in the freedom struggle of many countries, in social and political change, even on issues such as environment, social equality, human rights, disarmament… But today some forces wanting to divide the country are raising voices. They look at this society and its culture with disgust and are working against the country,” he said.

Hosabale said that even the ABVP wants change and that every student community wants it. “But what is the form of that change, what is the way? So, with a creative and positive attitude, we will determine what we need to do personally and also advise those sitting in power. That is the kind of organization that ABVP has created in the last 75 years,” he said.

Hosabale said the ABVP had been following what Left stalwart EMS Namboodiripad had said in an interview. “He said that the decision to turn student organisations into an attache of party politics was wrong. The second thing he said was students must also contribute in nation building and not just making demands,” Hosabale said.

The RSS general secretary said the ABVP was bringing two volumes of the book recording its history as those who wrote student movement history were unfair to the organisation.

“Among the reasons to record history is that the books written on student organisations and movements in India have not done justice to the ABVP… In the last one month, I have gone through more than 100 articles. This has happened because the history has been written through the prism of a certain ideology. In this, the work of ABVP has not been projected appropriately,” he said, adding that the organisation had worked on the ground to strengthen democracy.

“Election is one identity of democracy. It is not the only one. ABVP has worked on the ground to strengthen democracy. In these two books is the story of those who have sacrificed everything for the nation. We are not those who write history, we are those who make history. ABVP has worked to prepare generations. The objective behind these books is inspiration to next generation and to have a reference point for work in future,” he said.

Hosabale said having more than 35 lakh members was an achievement but not a contribution. “Its contribution is reflected in producing people like Milind Kamble who started Dalit Chamber of Commerce so that people from the Dalit community don’t just seek jobs but become industrialists. ABVP understood that organisation is not just for articulating demands of students, but also to connect the students with the country, its culture and its glorious history. This is not student politics, but student activism,” he said.

Hosabale said ABVP had participated in many student movements beginning from a 1970 demand for voting rights at 18 years and then starting a public movement against Article 370 in 1981.

“Be it movements in Kashmir, movement against illegal immigrants in Assam, the JP movement, we actively participated in all,” he said.

He narrated how Marathwada University’s name was changed to Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar University by consistent but persuasive movement of the ABVP and achieved without any bloodshed. “Later, even Sharad Pawar and Ramdas Athawale said this was done smoothly because of ABVP’s efforts,” he added.

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