Monday, October 27, 2025

News from October 15, 2025

78 articles found

Tron Franchise Future Gets Disappointing Update After Jared Leto's Ares Flops
Technology

Tron Franchise Future Gets Disappointing Update After Jared Leto's Ares Flops

Leto proved to be a great actor earlier in his career and even won an Academy Award at one point. The industry may have considered him an A-list talent, but "Morbius" being a disaster on all fronts, coupled with the actor's sexual misconduct allegations, proved his goodwill has just about faded among contemporary audiences (via AirMail). He's nowhere near the same kind of draw he used to be. "Ares" just about deflates like a balloon whenever he's onscreen opposite more compelling actors like Greta Lee, Jodie Turner-Smith, and Jeff Bridges. Leto had been attached to headline and produce the "Tron" threequel since 2017, which meant he was locked into its development long before his most recent box office flops and public persona backlash. Of course, some industry folks claim that "Ares" would've still faltered with a more bankable name like Ryan Gosling at the helm instead of Leto. "If you say, ”Tron: Ares' is good, we just needed a different actor,' you're deluding yourself," one insider told THR. The truth of why "Ares" flopped lies somewhere in the middle. Another "Tron" film was always going to be a hard sell for those who aren't already entrenched in the property's techno-visuals and bio-digital jazz, man. Switching up composer duties with Daft Punk for NIN was like a consolation prize for Leto's involvement, rather than an additional aspect of the film to look forward to. A better marquee name could've slightly boosted its chances. As is, though, "Ares" is far from the franchise reinvention that Disney was hoping for, especially with a mid-credits scene destined to join the long list of similar stingers teasing sequels unlikely to ever see the light of day. "Tron: Ares" is currently playing in theaters.

Variety’s 2025 Artisans to Watch Include ‘K-Pop Demon Hunters’ Songwriter, ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ Assistant Art Director and More
The breathtaking beauty and bathing luxury of Oita’s Gettouan【Photos】
Technology

The breathtaking beauty and bathing luxury of Oita’s Gettouan【Photos】

Yufuin is often thought of as Oita’s “other” hot spring town, but this ryokan plays second fiddle to nowhere. Oita has more hot springs than any other prefecture in Japan, and no city in Oita has more hot springs than Beppu. However, some onsen (hot spring) enthusiasts will say that the best bathing in Oita is to be found in Yufuin (a district of the city of Yufu) which has a reputation not only for excellent water but also a refined, elegant atmosphere that differentiates it from the more mass-marketed Beppu. Which of the two to spend the night in is ultimately a matter of personal taste, but making a strong case for Yufuin is the ryokan (traditional inn) Gettouan. We recently paid a visit to Gettouan as part of a press tour organized by travel agency Skyscanner. The inn is located about 10 minutes by taxi from Yufuin Station, nestled in the mountains such that it feels like its own little world. Stepping into the lobby to check in, you’re actually inside a nearly 400-year-old village headman’s manor, which originally stood in Yamanashi Prefecture before being disassembled, transported to Yufuin, and put back together and given periodic renovations. ▼ The irori (hearth) in the sitting area is a nice classical touch. However, there aren’t any guestrooms in this building. Gettouan is what’s called a hanare, or “detached,” style of ryokan, meaning that the guestrooms housed in their own separate structures, scattered around the grounds. As such, we knew we’d have a bit of a walk to our room, but what we weren’t expecting was for that walk to take us across a bridge in a breathtakingly beautiful forest, which passes over a stream that flows off from the nearby Shirataki River. Once on the other side, the path is lined with villas which contain individual guestrooms, as well as a common-use lounge and communal baths. There’s also an open-air private bath that can be rented out by couples or families, located next to the stream. Gettouan has a variety of room types, which can be perused on the hotel’s website here, and we were booked in one of the Standard rooms. However, “standard” is a relative term, and as you can see from these interior photos from the inn’s website, the Standard rooms are still very luxuriously appointed. Our room even included its own open-air bath with genuine hot spring water filling it. Gettouan’s meals are in keeping with its beautiful aesthetics and high-class atmosphere as well. Everything was delicious, but that was especially so for the sukiyaki made with locally raised Bungo beef and shiitake mushrooms. Gettouan even has its own exclusive sake, produced by Oita brewer Kuge Honten. Also called “Gettouan,” the sake has a gentle sweetness to it, making it pair nicely with pretty much anything you might be dining on. And if you’ve got a sweet tooth, back in the lobby building there’s a store… …and in the store is a refrigerator… …and in the refrigerator are the matcha green tea ice cream and kabosu citrus fruit sorbet made specially for the inn. Gettouan is in what feels like an ideal location for a hot spring inn getaway. It’s located close enough to a train station to be easily accessible, but far enough away from the city center to feel tranquilly secluded, rustically enchanting while still giving you all the amenities you need to relax and de-stress. It’s the kind of place where you probably can’t help but feel a little bittersweet when it’s time to go home, but at least you get one last trip across that beautiful bridge on your way to check out. Hotel information Gettouan / 月燈庵 Address: Oita-ken, Yufu-shi, Yufuin-cho, Kawakami 295-2 大分県由布市湯布院町川上295−2 Standard room interior photos: Gettouan All other photos ©SoraNews24 ● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter! [ Read in Japanese ]

Why The Aliens Crew Made James Cameron's Life Hell While Shooting The Acclaimed Sequel
Technology

Why The Aliens Crew Made James Cameron's Life Hell While Shooting The Acclaimed Sequel

To have an inkling that the movies of director James Cameron are difficult to make, one only needs to watch them. After all, it's still astonishing that the filmmaker was able to bring to life a liquid metal man in "Terminator 2," to re-enact the sinking of the Titanic with stunning accuracy in "Titanic," and to create an entire alien world from scratch in the "Avatar" series. Compared to these feats, it would seem that his 1986 sequel "Aliens" might've been a walk in the park, relatively. It's the sort of film that someone like Cameron, who graduated from the unofficial school of Roger Corman's genre-focused studio, New World Pictures, was destined to make after working on pictures like "Battle Beyond the Stars" and "Galaxy of Terror." By all accounts, "Aliens" had as trying a production as "The Abyss" or "Titanic," only it wasn't the elements or logistics that made shooting a burden. Instead, it was the extremely tenuous relationship between Cameron, producer Gale Anne Hurd, and the mostly English crew. Although the play-by-play of the issues between Cameron, his then-wife Hurd, and the crew have been litigated over the years in various interviews, books, DVD special features and the like, a recent appearance by star Sigourney Weaver on a panel at New York Comic Con celebrating the film's upcoming 40th anniversary shed a little more light on the matter, at least from her perspective. According to Weaver, a major bone of contention that the crew had against the then-unknown Cameron was that he was making a sequel to a Ridley Scott film (1979's "Alien," naturally) and Scott was not involved (something which also upset the actual man, as well). This made the crew trepidatious toward Cameron, and thus, they made his life hell while shooting an already complex sequel.

Street Fighter is coming to McDonald’s Japan
Technology

Street Fighter is coming to McDonald’s Japan

Guile, as usual, is waiting. As the cultural anthropologists who make up SoraNews24’s readership are well aware, autumn is tsukimi/moon-viewing burger season in Japan, when the nation’s hamburger providers serve up sandwiches topped with fried eggs that resemble a beautiful full moon. However, it’s specifically early autumn that’s moon-viewing season, coinciding with the timing for the moon-viewing parties which courtly nobles use to hold. That means, sadly, that it’ll soon be time to say goodbye to this year’s tsukimi burgers, as the official McDonald’s Japan Twitter account reminded us on Tuesday. ▼ “It’s almost time for them to go back to the moon.” そろそろ月に帰ります。 pic.twitter.com/CtXBBSWbZR— マクドナルド (@McDonaldsJapan) October 14, 2025 It’s a bittersweet moment, to be sure, but the very next day McDonald’s Japan gave us something new to get excited about. ▼ “Waiting for something…” 何かを待っている…。 pic.twitter.com/802TOIfDSi— マクドナルド (@McDonaldsJapan) October 15, 2025 So just what’s being waited for, and who, for that matter, is the shadowy figure doing the waiting? The first clue is the detailed pixel-art aesthetic, evoking memories of a pre-polygon era of video games, but not so far back as to be taking inspiration from the earliest days of the medium. But the more telling clue? Well, they say that one mark of good character design is when you can recognize who the character is from their silhouette alone, and that silhouette clearly belongs to Guile, from the Street Fighter franchise. ▼ You might think Guile’s hair is the most “could only work in a video game” thing about him, but that distinction actually goes to his crouching block, as we painfully found out. And it doesn’t look like Guile is the only one getting set for a round at the Golden Arches, as the McDonald’s Japan Twitter account then posted another teaser featuring even more members of the Street Fighter cast, along with the name of series developer Capcom. 明日発表、やつらが会いにくる。 pic.twitter.com/cT0kcD69zL— マクドナルド (@McDonaldsJapan) October 15, 2025 The Street Fighter franchise spans nearly 40 years, with six mainline numbered entries and dozens of spinoffs and semi-sequels. For this collaboration with McDonald’s Japan, though, the focus looks to be on Street Fighter II, as the silhouettes in the tweets are all exact matches to poses the characters strike in its entries (though the second tweet’s use of the original 12 Street Fighter II characters suggests that the new challengers added for Super Street Fighter II and Super Street Fighter II Turbo won’t be part of the festivities). The second tweet also includes the message “They are coming to meet you,” a play on Street Fighter II’s tagline in Japan, “I’m off to go meet someone stronger than myself.” As to what exactly the team-up is going to entail, a Street Fighter Happy Meal would seem like the most obvious choice, but McDonald’s Japan has been running into some problems with its high-profile Happy Meal collaborations as of late, so we might be getting special Street Fighter sandwiches like McDonald’s made for Godzilla, or they could be releasing sold-separately merch like the McDonald’s Evangelions. More info is expected to be announced later this week. Source: Twitter/@McDonaldsJapan Top image: Twitter/@McDonaldsJapan Insert image: SoraNews24 ● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

Slow Horses' Most Spineless Character Finally Stands Up For Himself In Season 5
Technology

Slow Horses' Most Spineless Character Finally Stands Up For Himself In Season 5

This article contains spoilers for "Slow Horses" season 5, episode 4, "Missiles." Nobody does bumbling characters better than "Slow Horses." This is, after all, a show about burnout spies who've managed to mess things up so badly they've been permanently banished to a shoddy office in the middle of London. But that doesn't mean the staff at MI5 headquarters, aka The Park, know what they're doing, as exemplified by the brilliantly slimy Claude Whelan (James Callis, who previously portrayed one of the best characters on "Battlestar Galactica" in Gaius Baltar). In "Missiles," however, Whelan suddenly displays some uncharacteristic competence when he threatens blackmailers by using the resources of the intelligence service to fight his way out of a bind. Back in season 4, Whelan was appointed as the new Director General of MI5, replacing Ingrid Tearney (Sophie Okonedo) — much to Diana Taverner's (Kristin Scott Thomas) chagrin. Clearly unsuitable for the role, Claude quickly reveals himself to be in over his head, relying on Taverner to help guide him through a position he has no business occupying. Whelan has been depicted as a bit of a weasel ever since, but in "Missiles," we see a more ruthless side to the character that suggests he might finally be getting the hang of this whole spook thing ... or setting himself up for an even bigger disaster down the road. In the episode, Whelan is blackmailed by Conservative MP and London mayor hopeful Dennis Gimball (Christopher Villiers) and his wife, gossip columnist Dodie Gimball (Victoria Hamilton). The Gimballs unearthed compromising photos of Whelan meeting with a sex worker, and use the images to blackmail the MI5 chief. But just when the walls seem to finally be closing in on Whelan, he fights his way out in a storyline that doesn't bode all that well for Taverner's hopes of finally taking the top spot at the intelligence service.