Saturday, 23 August 2008

Superman Reboot To Have Darker Tone, Thanks To Batman's Success





In o'er 70 old age of shared comic story they've existed mostly as reluctant friends, memorably orgasm to blows on several occasions. The bottom personal credit line is that Superman doesn't really like Batman at all, so it's charles Frederick Worth wondering how he'd feel now that he's been saved by him.


Flush with the success of "The Dark Knight," Warner Bros. has proclaimed an challenging slate of upcoming movies based on its DC Comics properties to be released inside the next three years � notably a third Batman pic and a Superman bring up, according to The Wall Street Journal.


Announcement of the reboot � a complete reimagining along the lines of this year's "The Incredible Hulk" � comes two long time after manager Bryan Singer failed to capture populace imagination with a conflicted take on the Big Blue Boy Scout, and nearly deuce months after the gamey, nihilistic "The Dark Knight" opened to record-breaking numbers.


So how will Warner Bros. turn Superman around? By making him even darker, Warner Bros. Pictures Group President Jeff Robinov told the newspaper.


" 'Superman' didn't quite work as a film in the way that we wanted it to," Robinov said of Singer's pic, which made just $215 million domestically. "It didn't position the character the way he needed to be positioned," he continued. "Had 'Superman' worked in 2006, we would have had a movie for Christmas of this year or 2009, but now the

Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Participation In Connecticut Charter Oak Health Plan Off To Slow Start


Fewer than 3,000 primary tending physicians and one hospital are presently participating in Connecticut's Charter Oak Health Plan for uninsured adults, which began accepting applications in July, the Hartford Courant reports. The platform is expected to at long last serve 19,000 hoi polloi. So far, 16,000 people have called the state's hotline and 5,351 have applied for coverage. Twenty-four residents began coverage on Thursday (AP/Hartford Courant, 7/31). Under the plan, department of State residents ages 19 to 65 wHO do non qualify for existing state health insurance programs and are not insured through an employer are eligible for insurance coverage, as well as those paying high premiums through private insurance, such as COBRA. Residents also must be uninsured for at least six-spot months to qualify for the plan.

Monthly premiums will be 'tween $75 and $259, with subsidies available for residents who let incomes down the stairs 300% of the federal poverty level. Copayments volition be $25 for principal care office staff visits and $35 for specialist visits. Preventive concern visits volition be fully covered by the department of State, and deductibles for inpatient hospital treatment, outpatient surgical and inmate rehabilitation and skilled nursing will range from $150 to $900 for an individual. Beneficiaries also will be required to contribute 10% of hospital bills, and annual coverage volition be capped at $100,000. No dental or vision coverage is included (Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, 7/2).

Participation
The Hospital of St. Raphael in New Haven is the only medical eye to mark a contract with one of the insurers operational the program for the state. Stephen Frayne, senior vice chief Executive of the Connecticut Hospital Association, aforementioned reimbursement rates are the reason most hospitals are not participating. He aforesaid, "The question is: How do you make it work for everybody?" Cheryl Lescarbeau of ProHealth Physicians Group aforesaid, "Our physicians aren't sure they can take on a flood of new patients under the rates being offered."

Lawmakers and advocates also are concerned that the 320,000 children and adults enrolled in HUSKY, Connecticut's version of SCHIP, will have less access to physicians when beneficiaries of that programme are switched to unitary of trine plans offered under Charter Oak on Sept. 1. State Sen. Jonathan Harris (D) said, "This platform was supposed to be a safety net for people; it's shaping up to be more like a sift" (Somma, Hartford Courant, 7/31).


Reprinted with kind permission from hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can thought the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, lookup the archives, or sign up for email delivery at hTTP://www.kaisernetwork.