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You'll Need 20/20 Vision To Find These Hidden Things

You'll Need 20/20 Vision To Find These Hidden Things

Buzz Feed2 days ago
These quizzes will all test your vision and attention to detail. The first few questions in each one will seem super easy, but before long, you'll feel your eyes focusing harder and harder to find everything we've hidden.
Sorry, But Only People With Perfect Eyesight Will Be Able To Find The Hidden Things In These Pictures
^^This image is just a sample! It's not the actual quiz. Everything is hidden in plain sight, but veeeeeery expertly camouflaged. Take the quiz here.
Your Eyes Are Very Sensitive To Textures If You Get 12/15 On This Zoomed-In Quiz
All the items in this quiz are things you've seen a million times before, but that doesn't mean you'll be able to recognize them from super close. Take the quiz here.
If You Can Correctly Answer These Questions, Your Eyes Are Super Sensitive To Color Changes
The shades in each question of this quiz are so similar, you'll need your screen at full brightness for any hope of success. Take the quiz here.
If You Can See All 15 Of These Hidden Numbers, Your Eyesight Is Dang Near Perfect
Don't let this teaser of the first question fool you — these will get progressively more difficult. Take the quiz here.
People With Bad Color Vision Can't See These Disney Characters — Can You?
This is it. We finally made a Disney quiz that will actually stump you. Prepare to be humbled. Take the quiz here.
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Filmmaker George Lucas makes San Diego Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art
Filmmaker George Lucas makes San Diego Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art

South China Morning Post

time18 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Filmmaker George Lucas makes San Diego Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art

Excited fans waved glowing Star Wars lightsabers on Sunday at the San Diego Comic-Con panel for George Lucas' latest project, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. Along with Lucas, the panel included director Guillermo del Toro and Taiwan-born Doug Chiang, vice-president of Disney's Lucasfilm, with Queen Latifah moderating at the San Diego Convention Centre. Attendees shouted 'Lucas! Lucas! Lucas!' and clapped their hands in anticipation of the Star Wars creator's arrival, and gave the 81-year-old a standing ovation as he took his seat. 'Opening in 2026, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is a first-of-its-kind institution dedicated to illustrated storytelling across time, cultures, and media,' a press release from the museum said. The 11-acre grounds, in Exposition Park in Los Angeles, will include a green space and a 300,000-square-foot building with galleries, two theatres, a library, restaurant, cafe, and retail and community spaces. Some of its collection will include art from comic book artist Jack Kirby, painter Norman Rockwell and illustrator Kadir Nelson, as well as a Lucas archive with models, props, concept art and costumes. 'I love all art, no matter what it is,' Lucas said after showing a video that gave a sneak peek at the museum. The video included renderings of the museum interior and exterior, as well as the museum's broad range of art ranging from more traditional fine art and comic book strips to Star Wars sculptures and installations.

‘Fantastic Four' wins battle of heroes at North American box office
‘Fantastic Four' wins battle of heroes at North American box office

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

‘Fantastic Four' wins battle of heroes at North American box office

[LOS ANGELES] The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Disney's hotly anticipated reboot of the Marvel Comics superhero franchise, conquered the North American weekend box office, earning US$118 million and sidelining Superman, industry estimates showed on Sunday. Fantastic Four - starring actor-of-the-moment Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Emmy winner Ebon Moss-Bachrach and Joseph Quinn (Stranger Things) - tells the story of a team of heroes trying to save a retro-futuristic world from the evil Galactus. 'This is an outstanding opening,' said David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research. 'Fantastic Four was a modest and struggling superhero series; it just caught up with the biggest and the best.' Superman, the latest big-budget action film featuring the iconic superhero from Warner Bros. and DC Studios, slipped to second place at US$24.9 million, Exhibitor Relations said. That puts the global take of the film, starring David Corenswet as the Man of Steel, over the US$500 million mark. Jurassic World: Rebirth - the latest installment in the blockbuster dinosaur saga - finished in third place at US$13 million. Its worldwide total stands at US$672.5 million. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 2 pm Lifestyle Our picks of the latest dining, travel and leisure options to treat yourself. Sign Up Sign Up The Universal film, starring Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey and Mahershala Ali, takes viewers to an abandoned island research facility, where secrets - and genetically mutated dinosaurs - are lurking. F1: The Movie, the Apple and Warner Bros flick starring Brad Pitt as a washed-up Formula One driver who gets one last shot at redemption, moved up to fourth place at US$6.2 million. Smurfs, the latest film featuring the adorable blue creatures and starring Rihanna as Smurfette, slipped to fifth place in only its second week in theatres with US$5.4 million in North American ticket sales. 'The box office is on an excellent run that started two weeks ago,' Gross said. 'These are not the good old days, but Fantastic Four and Superman are performing extremely well. Superheroes are showing some swagger, and it's good news for the industry.' Rounding out the top 10 were: I Know What You Did Last Summer (US$5.1 million) How to Train Your Dragon (US$2.8 million) Eddington (US$1.7 million) Saiyaara (US$1.3 million) Oh, Hi! (US$1.1 million). AFP

George Lucas makes Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art
George Lucas makes Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

George Lucas makes Comic-Con debut for Lucas Museum of Narrative Art

SAN DIEGO, July 27 (Reuters) - Excited fans waved glowing "Star Wars" lightsabers on Sunday at the San Diego Comic-Con panel for George Lucas' latest project, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. Along with Lucas, the panel included director Guillermo del Toro and Doug Chiang, vice president of Disney's (DIS.N), opens new tab Lucasfilm, with Queen Latifah moderating at the San Diego Convention Center. Attendees shouted "Lucas! Lucas! Lucas!" and clapped their hands in anticipation of the "Star Wars" creator's arrival, and gave the 81-year-old Lucas a standing ovation as he took his seat. "Opening in 2026, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is a first-of-its-kind institution dedicated to illustrated storytelling across time, cultures, and media," a press release from the museum said. The 11-acre campus, in Exposition Park in Los Angeles, will include a green space and a 300,000-square-foot building with galleries, two theaters, a library, restaurant, café, and retail and community spaces. Some of its collection will include art from comic book artist Jack Kirby, painter Norman Rockwell and illustrator Kadir Nelson, as well as a Lucas archive with models, props, concept art and costumes. "I love all art, no matter what it is," Lucas said after showing a video that gave a sneak peek at the museum. The video included renderings of the museum interior and exterior, as well as the museum's broad range of art ranging from more traditional fine art and comic book strips to "Star Wars" sculptures and installations. Lucas began the panel recalling his days as a college student struggling to pursue his dream of becoming an art collector due to the steep cost of fine art. But the filmmaker found an affordable exception with comic books, sold cheaply in "underground" markets. Now, rather than selling art he collected over around 50 years, Lucas said he prefers to create what he calls a "temple to the people's art." Lucas kept the conversation focused on the museum and did not discuss "Star Wars" or "Indiana Jones." For del Toro, the museum offers a visual past that belongs to everyone" and can't be erased, noting that he may move some of his personal art collection to the Lucas Museum. Part of the liberation that comes with narrative art for the "Pan's Labyrinth" director also means that art can't be made with a computer app, as it lacks "personality and knowledge."

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