Tuesday, July 14, 2026

‘Ready Player One’: A Closer Look at the ’80s-Packed Trailer

July 23, 2017 by  
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He came, he saw, he conquered Comic-Con. Steven Spielberg brought Ready Player One to Hall H — and pumped up the crowd and helped assuage  doubts about whether the beloved Ernie Cline novel could be properly adapted for the big screen.

Heat Vision‘s Aaron Couch and Mia Galuppo and contributor Chris Hartwell are taking closer look at the footage from San Diego, which shows a ’80s-obsessed teen Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) dive into the virtual world of OASIS in the year 2043.

Chris Hartwell: Spielberg, over the decades, has undeniably evolved as a filmmaker — a  metamorphosis that has allowed him to make films ranging from Jaws to Schindler’s List to Catch me if you Can. Most recently, with films like LincolnBridge of Spies, it seems as if he’s entered his most contemplative and quietly crafted stage yet. It’s interesting that watching the new trailer for Ready Player One, and finding within it a level of energy, fun, and even silliness that marked his earlier work such as ET and Raiders of the lost Ark.

Mia Galuppo: My biggest fear about Ready Player One was that it was going to be Steven Spielberg making a movie about Steven Spielberg movies. The book clearly showed a lot of love to a decade that the director was a huge part of but Spielberg quelled fears in the panel. Ready Player One may be nostalgia porn, but at least it won’t be narcissistic nostalgia porn and that’s something!

Aaron Couch: Spielberg noted at the panel that he actually had to pull the throttle back on the number of references to his own work in the movie. He was the ’80s in a lot of ways, but to be too self-referential risked making him look self-obsessed. He’s very wisely walking the line (but hey, who can resist a DeLorean?). 

Couch I’m one of the few in the Hall H crowd, seemingly, who hasn’t seen Iron Giant. (I know, I know.) But everyone went crazy for the reveal that he will be a big part of the movie. How excited should I be?

Galuppo: EXCITED. Iron Giant was the feature debut of Incredibles director Brad Bird. It was very Speilbergian in that it was a about a thing that came from space and befriends a kid with a single mother and then ultimately went back to space. Sound familiar? The thing that I thought was weird about the reveal was that the Iron Giant was from 1999, whereas everything else was obviously and intentionally from the 80s. It would be like here is Marty McFly chilling eating at a sidewalk cafe with the Clueless‘ Cher Horowitz, which honestly sounds like a cute couple.

Couch: I’m digging the look of OASIS. It feels like how I imagined it in the book, and this will likely be the rare movie that needs to be seen in 3D. But I do wonder if the stakes of those car-chases will feel high enough? Without getting into spoilers for the book, there are life and death stakes, but not necessarily from the daring that takes place in OASIS.

Hartwell: Even while it makes sense that those icons and the world that they exist in would be crafted in a computer and presented as CGI creations — a la Tintin and The Polar Express — it will be interesting seeing how satisfying that choice will ultimately be in the finished film. Beautifully controlled and production designed though it clearly is, that creative decision can sometimes reduce the sense of danger and peril especially when intercut with footage shot in the real world.

Ready Player One opens March 30, 218.

Ready Player One

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McCain’s primary challenger asks him to step aside after diagnosis

July 23, 2017 by  
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A former political opponent of Sen. John McCainJohn McCainManchin bashes GOP candidate for pushing McCain to resign McCain’s primary challenger asks him to step aside after diagnosis Sen. McCain goes on hike after cancer diagnosis MORE (R-Ariz.) urged him to step down from his office one day after he was diagnosed with brain cancer. 

Kelli Ward — who lost to McCain last year in Arizona’s Republican primary and is now running to challenge Sen. Jeff FlakeJeff FlakeMcCain’s primary challenger asks him to step aside after diagnosis Sen. Flake’s GOP challenger: McCain should resign Senators who have felt McCain’s wrath talk of their respect for him MORE (R-Ariz.) — said this week that “the medical reality of [McCain's] diagnosis is grim,” and he should consider stepping down and having her take his place.

“Senator McCain has an aggressive brain cancer that is both devastating and debilitating. When the time comes that Senator McCain can no longer perform his duties in the Senate at full capacity, he owes it to the people of Arizona to step aside,” Ward said in an interview with an Indiana radio station this week.

Ward continued, saying that if McCain does leave office, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey would be required to appoint a replacement senator to serve until the 2018 midterm election. When asked if her name was being considered as a replacement, Ward responded: “I certainly hope so.”

“Because, you know, I have a proven track record from years in the state Senate of being extremely effective and of listening to the voice of the people that I represent,” she said.

Her comment came after McCain’s office announced Wednesday that the 80-year-old senator had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer. 

McCain has said he will be back soon and thanked people for the outpouring of well-wishes he has received since the diagnosis.

Ward previously suggested in a Politico interview last year that McCain was likely to die in office and is too old for the job.  

Ward has faced backlash following the comments this week, including Sen. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinManchin bashes GOP candidate for pushing McCain to resign McCain’s primary challenger asks him to step aside after diagnosis Governors-turned-senators meet to talk healthcare MORE (D-W.Va.) who said she lacked integrity and honor.

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