Ghostbusters Star Dan Aykroyd Reveals His Vote For Best Picture This Year

Actor Dan Aykroyd is a member of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and that means he gets to vote for what he thinks are the best movies of a given year. Now, the Ghostbusters writer and star has revealed which movie he plans to nominate for Best Picture this year.

Appearing on the Joe Rogan Experience, Aykroyd said he plans to vote for Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time In Hollywood for overall Best Picture, at least based on what he’s seen so far.

“This is going to win Best Picture. I’m a member of the Academy. I can tell you right now, and I’m going to get in trouble for this; that’s my vote for Best Picture right now. How great are those two guys in that film? How great was that cast? Just superb filmmaking.”

Speaking about the two leads, Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio, Aykroyd said they are “masters.”

“I love to watch them work,” he said.

The Oscar nominations for 2019 will be announced in January 2020 before the awards broadcast takes place in February.

If Once Upon A Time In Hollywood wins the Best Picture Oscar, it will be Tarantino’s third Academy Award. He previously won writing awards for Django Unchained and Pulp Fiction. None of his movies have ever won Best Picture.

Pitt told Entertainment Weekly that he doesn’t plan to campaign himself for an acting Oscar this year, despite turning in some of his most acclaimed performances ever with Once Upon A Time In Hollywood and Ad Astra. “Oh, man. I’m gonna abstain,” he said. “I mean, you never know, and it’s really nice when your number comes up. But the goal is for the film to land, to speak to someone whether it’s now or a decade from now. I find chasing it actually a disservice to the purity of your telling a story, and a shackling thing to focus on.”

Borderlands 3 Shift Codes: Every Active Shift Code So Far And What They Get You

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If you’ve been playing Borderlands 3, you’ve probably been hearing a lot of talk about Shift Codes. These are limited-time codes you can use to potentially earn Golden Keys that unlock the Golden Chest in Sanctuary for high-tier loot. They can also net you unique cosmetics for your character.

Shift Codes are often distributed via Gearbox’s newsletters or social media accounts. During the game’s launch weekend, Gearbox’s Randy Pitchford shared a Shift Code on Twitter. This code has since expired, but there are still several active Shift codes making the rounds.

Below you can find a list of every working Shift Code so far and its respective prize. We recommend redeeming them as soon as possible, as they’re likely to expire sooner than later. Be sure to check back often as we’ll be updating this feature with even more Shift Codes.

Shift Codes

  • ZFKJ3-TT3BB-JTBJT-T3JJT-JWX9H (3 Golden Keys)
  • HXKBT-XJ6FR-WBRKJ-J3TTB-RSBHR (1 Golden Key)
  • ZFKJ3-TT6FF-KTFKT-T3JJT-JWX36 (1 Golden Key)
  • Z65B3-JCXX6-5JXW3-3B33J-9SWT6 (1 Golden Key)
  • 9XCBT-WBXFR-5TRWJ-JJJ33-TX53Z (1 Golden Key)
  • ZRWBJ-ST6XR-CBFKT-JT3J3-FRXJ5 (1 Golden Key)

To redeem a code, go to input it in the Shift Codes section in the game’s social menu. You can also login to the Borderlands VIP site to redeem Shift Codes. You can then acquire what you’ve unlocked from your mailbox one tab over. While it’s not easy to predict when Gearbox will share new Shift Codes, we’ll likely get more soon during the upcoming free Halloween-themed Bloody Harvest event scheduled for this October.

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For more Borderlands 3, be sure to check out our Borderlands 3 beginner’s guide and our gallery of the best Legendary, Very Rare, and Rare guns we’ve found. We’ve also prepared a useful guide on which character you should choose before starting the game. But for everything else, read our roundup of all things Borderlands 3.

In our Borderlands 3 review, author Jordan Ramee gave the game an 8/10 and said, “Borderlands 3 has a few stumbling blocks when it comes to bosses, but these fights are overshadowed by the game’s rewarding gunplay and over-the-top humor. The game’s character-driven narrative acts as a satisfying finale for the loot-shooter franchise, and the new mechanics and features–especially the reworked skill trees and weapon manufacturer effects–give you plenty of agency in how you want to play through it. If you’ve never been a fan of the franchise, it’s unlikely Borderlands 3 does enough things differently to change your mind, as the game best excels at continuing what the series has always done: deliver a humorous tall tale of misfits looting and shooting their way to heroism.”

Death Stranding Inspired By War Letters And Cabins On Mt. Fuji, Says Kojima

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Every time Hideo Kojima takes a moment to describe Death Stranding, the theme of connection comes into play. After watching a pair of gameplay demos at Tokyo Game Show last week, the mechanics involved seems fairly straightforward: you can leave items behind for other weary players to pick up, and build structures to make their journey a little less arduous. These concepts seem easy enough to understand, but it’s not the sort of stuff that feels as impactful as Kojima makes Death Stranding out to be. Is there more to it?

Chatting to Kojima last week, we got the sense that, more than the specific mechanics at play, the sentiment behind them is what he believes will resonate with players and inspire them to pay favors forward. Kojima’s insight came after we asked for his opinion of the current state of interactions online. “I don’t think it’s real communication,” he told us. Platforms like Twitter allow people to be simultaneously cruel and anonymous, and he wants to combat that by injecting Death Stranding with the spirit of “omoiyari,” a Japanese word that loosely aligns with the concept of empathy.

Looking back a century, Kojima pointed to letters sent from soldiers during wartime to help illustrate the concept. “There’s a soldier in the war field back then who writes a letter to his wife. So he gives it to the military, it’s sent by ship, it takes like four months, and then his wife opens the letter. This is what was written four months ago and maybe he’s dead on the other side of the world [by then]. It’s not real time, there’s such a big lapse. The wife has to think about what the husband was thinking about four months ago, in this situation, and this is the omoiyari feeling–caring about others.”

Employing acts of generosity is one thing, but to truly understand what Kojima is aiming for, you’ll also have to consider what it’s like to receive acts of kindness as well. In a more direct nod to what you’ll experience in Death Stranding, he points to Mt. Fuji–more specifically, a location that is purpose-built to provide assistance to weary travelers. “If you climb mount Fuji,” he says “it’s really rough. There’s a cabin in between when you’re climbing. Of course it’s very easy if there’s a path, but sometimes there’s no path. And I always feel very thankful for the path and the cabin. I’m always grateful to the first person who makes it, and if I can drink coffee in that log cabin I am so happy about it. So I think if someone feels that way, they can then give that to other people as well. That’s my hope for the game. It’s not the main theme, but that’s the hope.”

The cabin pictured above isn’t the one Kojima is specifically referring to, but it certainly gives off the same energy he’s describing.

Knowing that not everyone has the best intentions online, we asked Kojima if we suspects some players will try to hinder, rather than help, other players. In his experience, this is unlikely: “I pretty much feel that there won’t be much intentional evil.”

“We do a lot of playtests in the office. So sometimes there’s a bridge that crosses a deep river, and people feel grateful, but it only goes to the middle of the river. Of course you don’t give that bridge a thumbs up, but it probably wasn’t intentional. I pretty much feel that there won’t be much intentional evil. I want people to think about that as well if they fall [off that bridge]…’I won’t do that to someone.'”

If Death Stranding can bring a renewed sense of community to the gaming space, we’re all for it. Kojima’s optimism is definitely infectious in person, but the history of multiplayer griefing–both in game and in the real world–is too consistent to ignore. Time will tell; everyone will get to put his new Social Strand System to the test when Death Stranding releases in just a few weeks, on Nov. 8.

Fight To The Beat In No Straight Roads | PAX West 2019

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Check Out What’s New to Amazon Prime This October

Amazon Prime Video is dropping seven original series in the month of October, including the third season of Billy Bob Thorton’s Goliath, and newcomer Modern Love — a romantic anthology series based on the long-running New York Times column of the same name, starring Anne Hathaway, Tina Fey, Dev Patel, Caitlin McGee, John Slattery, Brandon Victor Dixon, and Catherine Keener.

On the movie front, Amazon is adding Robert Pattison’s sci-fi film High Life, and the Tiffany Haddish rom-com Nobody’s Fool.

If you’re not a Prime member, you can sign up for a free 30-day Amazon Prime trial and reap all the benefits, including streaming Amazon Video. That means you have the opportunity to check out every new video this month without having to pay for it.

Continue reading…

Nintendo Switch’s SNES Controller Is Now Available

It’s been a couple of weeks since SNES games made their way to Nintendo Switch‘s online subscription service, and now Nintendo has released its official wireless SNES controller. You can now order the pad from its website as long as you’re subscribed to Nintendo Switch Online.

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SNES Controller for Nintendo Switch

$30

See it at Nintendo

The SNES controller features everything the original did, with the addition of small ZL and ZR buttons, as well as a USB-C port for charging. A USB cable is provided, but you’ll also be able to charge the controller with your Nintendo Switch AC adapter.

If you’re looking for another option, 8Bitdo makes excellent controllers based on classic pads including the SNES. You can check them out, including its own version of the SNES controller, in our article on the best Nintendo Switch controllers we’ve tried so far.

The SNES Online library is a bonus provided by Nintendo to Switch Online subscribers. There are currently 20 SNES games available to play, and while Nintendo previously released NES games monthly, the company’s future retro additions “will not adhere to a regular schedule.” You can see every SNES and NES game available to subscribers here.

CoD: Black Ops 4 Operation Dark Divide Comes To PS4 Soon

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Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 will receive new content in advance of Modern Warfare‘s October launch on PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. Treyarch’s latest entry in the Black Ops series adds a new Operation later this month on PS4.

The official Call of Duty Twitter account announced that Black Ops 4’s next DLC Operation, Dark Divide, arrives on PS4 this Monday, September 23. Operation Dark Divide has no release date on PC and Xbox One, but it has been confirmed the other platforms will see Dark Divide sometime later.

Operation Dark Divide’s contents have yet to be revealed, but it’s said to feature a new Zombies map and more multiplayer locations. Black Ops 4’s last Operation, Grand Heist, introduced new characters, outfits, maps, and a whole lot more. Operation Spectre Rising, which launched in April, brought in a new Specialist called Spectre, who wields a sharp katana and can see the outlines of enemies through their smoke grenades.

Blackout, Black Ops 4’s battle royale mode, recently added Avenged Sevenfold singer M. Shadows as a playable character. Further, actor Danny Trejo is presumably a playable character in Blackout as well. Though previously hinted at by developer Infinity Ward, the studio confirmed that Modern Warfare won’t feature a battle royale mode.

Gears 5 Sets Xbox Studios Record For This Generation

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Gears 5 has set a record as Microsoft’s biggest launch week for a first-party game this generation. The company announced that Gears 5 hit 3 million players on opening week. That gave it the highest first-week player count of any game since Halo 4 launched in 2012. Notably, that first-week figure included the four-day early access period that began on Friday, September 6, which only included Ultimate Edition purchasers and Game Pass Ultimate subscribers.

The player count than doubled the prior game in the series, Gears of War 4. On PC the game was an even bigger improvement over its predecessor, tripling Gears 4’s PC debut. It also marks Xbox Game Studios’ biggest launch on Steam ever.

That early access happened to coincide with a brief Xbox Live outage and some launch hiccups for the Coalition’s latest game. The game has also been praised for its accessibility options, following Microsoft’s push for increased accessibility with its adaptive controller.

“Gears 5 is very much a return of those best elements of Gears of War, but with a focus on making the game feel somewhat more adaptive to your particular ways of playing,” Phil Hornshaw wrote in GameSpot’s Gears 5 review. “Whether you want campaign or co-op, Competitive or Quickplay, there’s an option for you in Gears 5, and plenty of stuff to reward you for time spent and skill gained. Gears 5 might suffer from some of the same storytelling missteps as its predecessors, and it might not venture far out of the past, but the new ideas it brings to the series are all good reasons for fans to return.”

Jojo Rabbit Review: The Movie About Nazis We Need Right Now

Think of a movie about how a cruel and unforgiving society can turn even the most good-hearted individual into a hateful and extremist person with dangerous ideals, a movie that hits too close to home in 2019. No, not Joker–we’re talking about the latest film from Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi. It’s Jojo Rabbit, this generation’s definitive political satire starring an imaginary Hitler.

Meet Jojo Betzler (Roman Griffin Davis), a young German kid toward the end of WWII. Germany is losing and morale is low, but this little Nazi refuses to accept reality. In a hilarious opening credits sequence set to the German version of the Beatles’ “I Wanna Hold Your Hand,” we see Jojo jumping with glee, running through his town saying “Heil Hitler” to everyone he sees as he makes his way toward Nazi summer camp. Jojo is a Nazi superfan, with posters of Adolf Hitler decorating his bedroom like he was a rockstar, something Waititi plays with as the credits sequence is cut with actual footage of German citizens losing their minds and screaming in joy at the sight of Hitler in a weird reflection of Beatlemania.

Oh, and Jojo–like many kids–has an imaginary friend, only his is a way funnier and kinda likeable version of the Führer played by Waititi himself, who gives Jojo pep-talks, but still remains a psychotic dictator.

The first act of the movie deals with Jojo going to Hitler Youth camp, where he will learn valuable and fun lessons like how to throw grenades, stab people, and shoot guns. Waititi knows this is a very difficult movie to pull off, but he manages to make the whole thing absolutely hilarious, and also kind of adorable, through its irreverence and absurdity. Sure, the instructors, who include a scene-stealing Rebel Wilson playing a laid back but very evil administrator, and Sam Rockwell as yet another racist with power who may be hiding a good person somewhere inside, are still Nazi sadists who laugh at the millions dying in the war. But the kids are played as adorable and innocent fools who joke about killing people because it’s what their indoctrinated ideology tells them to do. They don’t know any better.

Mihai Malaimare Jr.’s symmetrical cinematography and Michael Giacchino’s gleeful score work together to establish a Wes Anderson-esque atmosphere of childlike wonder that brings to mind The Grand Budapest Hotel. Though he doesn’t shy away from showing the horrors of the war, Waititi isn’t interested in exploring the Holocaust or any actual WWII battles. For the most part, the Nazis in the movie are simply buffoons. This movie doesn’t feel the need to explain that Nazis are bad; we know that already. Instead, it shows the inherent stupidity of violent and radical ideologies, and how they can bring out the worst in people, and even corrupt the good at heart.

That’s why, when Jojo discovers that his mom (Scarlett Johansson) is hiding a young Jewish girl named Elsa (Thomasin McKenzie) in his attic, his little swastika-loving world gets turned upside down. At first, he’s understandably terrified–what if she has psychic powers and wants to drink his blood like a vampire, as imaginary Hitler suggests? The problems arise when Jojo begins to realize he likes Elsa, much to Hitler’s dismay. Herein lies the core of Jojo Rabbit, as its titular character slowly starts to realize that his worship of Nazi ideology may have been misplaced. Waititi is not interested in showing the appeal of hate and violence or how easily it spreads, but how silly and small it is compared to love and understanding. This is a movie not about fighting what we hate, but about saving what we love.

Waititi keeps proving he knows how to find the best young actors in the business, with Roman Griffin Davis joining Julian Dennison (Deadpool 2, Hunt for the Wilderpeople) and James Rolleston (Boy, The Breaker Upperers) as great, untested talent making big impressions. Davis perfectly shows the character’s innocence, cheerfulness, and pain. He and Waititi play off each other wonderfully, creating some of the best scenes in the movie–especially once Jojo starts to question whether Hitler is actually a nice person. Johansson gives one of the best performances of her career, always carrying a smile that hides a deep and undeniable sadness caused by a world in ruins.

McKenzie was already one of the big standouts last year thanks to Debra Granik’s drama Leave No Trace, and her performance as Elsa shows why you should be paying attention to her career. Though Jojo Rabbit relies on bringing 2019 humor to ’40s politics for its comedy, McKenzie’s Elsa doesn’t feel like a girl from 2019 living in the ’40s. Elsa is rightly scared out of her mind at the prospect of the swastika-loving boy telling on her, but she is not above calling Jojo out for his misguided beliefs or mocking his foolish investigation into the evil powers Jewish people supposedly have.

Jojo Rabbit could have easily been a disaster, but Taika Waititi’s ability to mix satire with emotion makes it all work. In a time when hate is everywhere and violent ideologies are spreading like wildfire, Jojo Rabbit shows that opening our hearts to love and hope can shine a light on even the darkest moments.

What’s New This Week To Hulu, Amazon Prime, And Shudder? Movies, TV, And Originals

It’s a brand-new week, and that means new content is headed to Hulu and Shudder this week. Considering it’s the middle of the month, this week’s release list is a bit light. It’s so light, in fact, that Amazon Prime Video has nothing coming out at all. So, let’s check out what’s headed to Hulu and the horror-themed Shudder.

Over on Hulu, there is a sci-fi movie that may be worth checking out. On Thursday, Aniara arrives. In this movie, Earth becomes uninhabitable and humans flock to Mars for a new life. Many head onto the ship, Aniara, for the three-week journey; however, the ship gets knocked off course, and it–along with the passengers–floats through space. People aboard start getting a bit weird, and the order on the ship breaks down. The first trailer for the film looks exceptionally haunting.

Over on Shudder, the third and final movie in the Hell House, LLC series arrives on Thursday. The faux-documentary follows a Halloween haunted house where 15 people died, which led investigators to a hotel in the second movie. The third installment sees the Abaddon Hotel reopened to the public, and all hell is breaking loose, once again. Check out the trailer below.

Below, you’ll find everything coming out on Hulu and Shudder this week. If you’re looking for more streaming service news, check out what’s new to Netflix this week.

What’s new to Hulu and Shudder this week?

Monday, September 16

Hulu

  • The Powerpuff Girls: Complete Season 3B (Cartoon Network)
  • Curious George (2006)

Shudder

  • Hands of the Ripper (Director: Peter Sasdy)

Tuesday, September 17

Hulu

  • Dancing with the Stars: Season 28 Premiere (ABC)

Thursday, September 19

Hulu

  • Aniara (2019)
  • Crypto (2019)

Shudder

  • Hell House LLC III: Lake of Fire

Friday, September 20

Hulu

  • Afterlost: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED) (Funimation)

Saturday, September 21

Hulu

  • Dream Corp LLC.: Complete Season 2 (Adult Swim)
  • Robihachi: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED) (Funimation)