logo
Action-packed ‘Fountain of Youth' has everything — except a soul

Action-packed ‘Fountain of Youth' has everything — except a soul

Washington Post23-05-2025

When Hollywood finally masters artificial intelligence — assuming the technology hasn't destroyed us all by then — you can expect a lot of results like 'Fountain of Youth,' a movie that's acceptably entertaining and completely soulless.
There are actual humans behind this globe-trotting action-adventure, an Apple Original appearing only on Apple TV+, among them director Guy Ritchie ('Snatch,' 'Sherlock Holmes,' 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E.'), screenwriter James Vanderbilt ('Zodiac') and stars John Krasinski and Natalie Portman. 'Fountain of Youth' looks good and moves well; it's nothing if not a professional piece of work. But it's also what you would get if you fed the following prompts into the movie version of ChatGPT: 'National Treasure,' 'The Da Vinci Code,' 'Romancing the Stone,' that Tom Cruise 'Mummy' movie and all five installments of the Indiana Jones franchise.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vooglam Brings Immersive Eyewear Experience to Electric Forest with Cult Vision Collection
Vooglam Brings Immersive Eyewear Experience to Electric Forest with Cult Vision Collection

Associated Press

time14 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Vooglam Brings Immersive Eyewear Experience to Electric Forest with Cult Vision Collection

AUSTIN, Texas, June 22, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Eyewear brand Vooglam will elevate festival style to new heights at Electric Forest, taking place from June 19 to 22, 2025 in Rothbury, Michigan, with the debut of an interactive booth experience that merges music culture with the brand's signature fashion-forward and subculturally inspired eyewear designs. The activation is a part of Vooglam's Cult Vision, a digital magazine dedicated to cultural explorations. The inaugural issue's theme is Music Festivals, connecting the brand's products to music genres and festival aesthetics. The center of Vooglam 's Electric Forest activation is a holistic and immersive user experience booth designed to allow users to enter Vooglam's worldbuilding and showcase how eyewear enhances festival culture. The installation features three distinctive activations: the 'Your Frame, Your Vision' infinity mirror selfie station, where festival-goers can capture their style moments in an endless reflection complete with supporting visuals and social media filters; a mini DJ booth bringing beats directly to the brand experience, and a comprehensive try-on area with point of sale, for festival goers to explore and purchase from the curated Cult Vision collection. The Cult Vision collection is a thoughtfully selected curation from four of Vooglam 's product collections. Rave Culture takes center stage here with styles for EDM enthusiasts and is supported by Retro Radio for Rock and Indieheads, Boho-Chic for country aficionados, and Pan Africa for hip-hop heritage. Every frame in the assortment serves both a functional purpose for attendees and an aesthetic example of festival identity that can be incorporated into their everyday style. Crucially for Vooglam this isn't just another festival booth or brand activation, it's an authentic cultural moment, underlining the brand's radical approach to offline events. By creating installations that invite participation and self-expression, Vooglam positions itself as more than an eyewear provider but as a cultural thought leader, understanding the intersection of music, fashion, and personal identity. Vooglam at Electric Forest showcases Vooglam's dedication to meeting music fans where they congregate, providing style solutions that resonate with specific subcultures while remaining accessible to casuals. The brand recognizes that festival culture extends beyond physical attendance, designing pieces that capture festival aesthetics for both fans and those celebrating from home. Festival-goers can explore all of Vooglam's event coverage and discover their festival style at About Vooglam Established in 2017, Vooglam creates high-quality designer eyewear inspired by today's style tribes, transforming the functional into tools for self-expression. With a catalog of almost 2,000 unique frame designs available in over 170 countries, serving more than one million customers, Vooglam delivers eyewear for every look and need. The brand combines functional vision solutions with meticulously researched and authentic subcultural design elements, offering fully customizable eyewear that includes prescription lenses and lens types. Organized into seven distinctive product lines, Vooglam's offerings range from the audacious to the subtly creative. Through cutting-edge manufacturing techniques, premium materials, and rigorous quality control, Vooglam continues to transform how consumers express themselves through eyewear. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Vooglam

Tommy Fleetwood's Interaction With Wife After PGA Tour Loss Turns Heads
Tommy Fleetwood's Interaction With Wife After PGA Tour Loss Turns Heads

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tommy Fleetwood's Interaction With Wife After PGA Tour Loss Turns Heads

Tommy Fleetwood's Interaction With Wife After PGA Tour Loss Turns Heads originally appeared on Athlon Sports. It was an exciting weekend at TPC River Highlands in Connecticut, as the Travelers Championship came down to the wire. Keegan Bradley closed with a final-round 68 to secure a one-shot victory. Advertisement Bradley finished one stroke ahead of both Tommy Fleetwood and Russell Henley. Jason Day and Harris English rounded out the top five, finishing two shots back. Fleetwood held the lead going into Sunday after an impressive stretch of rounds: 66, 65 and 63, but faltered with a 72 in the final round. Bradley's win marked a major bounce-back after inconsistent play earlier in the season, giving him momentum as the PGA Tour heads into the summer stretch. After the tournament, the PGA Tour shared a heartfelt moment with fans, captioned: "Family is always there. Win or lose." The video showed Fleetwood embracing his family after the event. His wife Clare and stepsons, Oscar and Murray, were there to support him. The interaction had fans turning heads: Advertisement This fan says: "Class guy! Feel for him." Another fan chimed in, "….Tommy is a class act. I know he will win soon and get on a winning streak. He deserves it." "@TommyFleetwood1 I know you want to win but keep in mind your one of the greatest golfers In The world regardless…also that family right there is what really matters! Keep grinding! It will come," added this fan. "I respect his play and his family leadership @TommyFleetwood1," mentioned someone else. This fan says here: "Class act. He will definitely win one soon." Another here: "THIS is what matters. More than any win. Someone in your corner." Tommy Fleetwood on the 15th hole at the Travelers ChampionshipBill Streicher-Imagn Images Fleetwood remains in search of his first PGA Tour victory. Though he has 10 professional wins, all have come on the European Tour, Sunshine Tour or Challenge Tour. Advertisement His best finishes at majors include runner-up spots at the 2018 U.S. Open and the 2019 Open Championship. The 34-year-old recently missed the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open, snapping a streak of two straight cuts made at majors. He tied for 41st at the PGA Championship and finished just outside the top 20 at the Masters. Next up on the major calendar is the Open Championship, scheduled for July 17–20 at Royal Portrush. Xander Schauffele enters as the defending champion. Related: Scottie Scheffler Earns New Nickname After 16th PGA Tour Win Related: Caitlin Clark Sends Strong Rory Mcllroy Message Amid Masters This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 23, 2025, where it first appeared.

Thousands of asteroids and millions of galaxies shine in first images from the largest camera ever built
Thousands of asteroids and millions of galaxies shine in first images from the largest camera ever built

CNN

time27 minutes ago

  • CNN

Thousands of asteroids and millions of galaxies shine in first images from the largest camera ever built

The first test images from a groundbreaking observatory named for trailblazing astronomer Vera Rubin have captured the light from millions of distant stars and galaxies on an unprecedented scale — and are expected to reveal thousands of previously unseen asteroids. While the National Science Foundation has so far released only a couple of images and a brief video clip of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's first imagery, more images and videos taken using the largest camera ever built are expected to be shared at 11:30 a.m. ET Monday on the agency's YouTube channel. The facility is jointly funded by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy's Office of Science. The new images represent just over 10 hours of test observations, offering a brief preview of the observatory's decade-long mission to explore the mysteries of the universe like never before. 'NSF-DOE Rubin Observatory will capture more information about our universe than all optical telescopes throughout history combined,' said National Science Foundation Chief of Staff Brian Stone, who is currently performing the duties of the NSF director (as the position is currently vacant). Among the observatory's initial accomplishments was the discovery of 2,104 asteroids, including seven near-Earth asteroids, that have never been seen before in our solar system. None of the newly found near-Earth asteroids pose a risk to our planet, according to scientists at the observatory. Imagery of the asteroids is expected to be shared later Monday. While ground- and space-based telescopes spot about 20,000 asteroids each year, Rubin Observatory is expected to uncover millions of the space rocks within its first two years, according to the National Science Foundation. The telescope is also considered the most effective way to spot any interstellar comets or asteroids that may travel through our solar system. The observatory's mirror design, sensitive camera and telescope speed are all the first of its kind, enabling Rubin to spot tiny, faint objects such as asteroids. The observatory will also constantly take thousands of images every night, cataloging changes in brightness to reveal otherwise hidden space rocks like near-Earth asteroids that could be on a collision course with our planet, according to the foundation. A sneak peek shared Monday includes a video made from over 1,100 images captured by the observatory that begins with a detailed look at two galaxies. The video then zooms out to showcase about 10 million galaxies spotted by the camera's wide view — roughly 0.05% of the 20 billion galaxies Rubin will observe over 10 years. The observatory team also released a mosaic of the Trifid and Lagoon nebulae, which are star-forming regions that resemble clouds located in the Sagittarius constellation. The mosaic, made up of 678 separate images taken over just seven hours, captured faint and previously invisible details such as clouds of gas and dust in the nebulae, which are several thousand light-years away from Earth. The initial images were selected to showcase the telescope's enormous field of view, which enables detailed glimpses of interacting galaxies as well as broad views of millions of galaxies, said Dr. Yusra AlSayyad, deputy associate director of the data management subsystem for the Rubin Observatory. 'It has such a wide field of view and such a rapid cadence that you do have that movielike aspect to the night sky,' said Dr. Sandrine Thomas, telescope project scientist for the Rubin Observatory. The observatory, located in the Andes on the top of Cerro Pachón in Chile, is nearly complete after about two decades of work. The facility is set to achieve 'first light,' or make the first scientific observations of the Southern Hemisphere's sky using its 8.4-meter (27.5-foot) Simonyi Survey Telescope, on July 4. The telescope's location in the Southern Hemisphere allows for a great view of the Milky Way's galactic center, said Edward Ajhar, Rubin Observatory's program officer. The region in central Chile has also been home to other ground-based observatories and is favored for astronomical observations because it affords dry air and dark skies. The observatory's main objective is the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, an ultrawide and ultra-high-definition movie of the universe made by scanning the entire sky every few nights over 10 years to capture a time-lapse compilation of whizzing asteroids and comets, exploding stars, and distant galaxies as they change. The survey is expected to begin between four to seven months after first light. '(Rubin) will enable us to explore galaxies, stars in the Milky Way, objects in the solar system, and all in a truly new way. Since we take images of the night sky so quickly and so often, (it) will detect millions of changing objects literally every night,' said Dr. Aaron Roodman, professor of particle physics and astrophysics at Stanford University's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California. Roodman was responsible for the assembly and testing of Rubin Observatory's camera. Rubin's capabilities to spot interesting phenomena will also enable it to be a 'discovery machine' that can identify interesting areas of focus for other telescopes, Roodman said. The observatory could also enable the detection of previously unknown types of celestial objects. The telescope's namesake, considered to be one of the most influential women astronomers, provided some of the first evidence that dark matter existed. In Rubin's honor, the telescope is expected to continue her pioneering work. 'Through this remarkable scientific facility, we will explore many cosmic mysteries, including the dark matter and dark energy that permeate the universe,' Stone said. Dark matter is an enigmatic substance that shapes the cosmos, while dark energy is a force that accelerates the expansion rate of the universe, according to NASA. Though they are thought to make up most of the cosmos, both are impossible to directly observe but can be detected due to their gravitational effects. 'Rubin has enormous potential to help us learn what dark energy really is and how the universe's expansion is accelerating here, too,' Roodman said. 'Rubin's unique ability to see billions of galaxies and to image them repeatedly over 10 years will literally enable us to see the universe in a new way.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store