James and Sam have been friends and collaborators for over 20 years. They’ve worked on films and TV shows and commercials together and have written numerous scripts that lie unproduced in their shared Dropbox folder.But James has a secret: he hasn’t actually seen that many movies. And Sam, who’s a bit of a film snob, has been giving him a hard time about it for years. As James enters undeniable middle age, he has finally promised to catch up on some of the films he’s missed.Every week or so, while Sam has to move his Subaru from one side of a Brooklyn street to the other (to appease the street-cleaning gods), they chat about a classic movie that James has somehow managed to avoid until now.One film from each year of James’s life so far: 1973 to 2023…
We close out Season Two of the podcast with Martin Brest's drama Scent of a Woman, starring Al Pacino and Chris O'Donnell.Plus: Alexander Payne's The Holdovers, and an encounter with a rude traffic warden.LINKS:Trailer for Scent of a WomanTrailer for The HoldoversTrailer for People I Know
This week week we're taking a bite out of Jonathan Demme's classic serial-killer thriller The Silence of the Lambs, starring Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins.Plus: James comes out of film-scoring retirement.LINKS:Trailer for The Silence of the Lambs"Lotion" by GreenskeepersAustin Pendleton as a lawyer in My Cousin Vinny
This week we discuss the journey of author Janet Frame in Jane Campion's biographical drama An Angel at My Table, starring Alexia Keogh, Karen Fergusson, and Kerry Fox.Plus: Season Two of The Jinx, and the time Stanley Tucci took James to a Yankees game.LINKS:Trailer for An Angel at My TableTrailer for season two of The JinxDr McCoy treats a patient in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
This week we explore Spike Lee's comedy-drama Do the Right Thing, starring Spike Lee, Danny Aiello, John Turturro and Rosie Perez.Plus: James eats a $35 salad, Don Mischer's “Go balloons”, and 1990 as the year of sequels.LINKS:Trailer for Do the Right ThingTrailer for Thea Sharrock's Wicked Little LettersDon Mischer at the 2004 Democratic National ConventionAn incredible use of film score in In the Mood for Love
This week we discuss Stephen Frears's film-adapted-from-a-play-adapted-from-a-novel Dangerous Liaisons, starring Glenn Close, John Malkovich, and Michelle Pfeiffer.Plus: James finally visits the Vanguard!LINKS:Trailer for Dangerous LiaisonsMalkovich and Sinise in True WestJohn Candy in Uncle Buck: "unbreakable"
This week we take a stab at Adrian Lyne's classic romantic thriller Fatal Attraction, starring Glenn Close and Michael Douglas.Plus: the two faces of Harrison Ford, and James's habit of talking to the television.LINKS:Trailer for Fatal AttractionThe original ending of Fatal AttractionTrailer for Running on Empty
It's a double-feature this week as we riff on two movies about musicians: Bertrand Tavernier's Round Midnight and Alex Cox's Sid and Nancy.Plus: burned-out cars, slow television, and the unhelpful advice Robert Redford used to get.LINKS:Trailer for Sid & NancyTrailer for Round MidnightSiskel & Ebert on Round Midnight"Slow Television": the train in Norway
This week we survey the expanses of Ran, Akira Kurosawa's epic adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear.Plus: beds in cinemas, Werner Herzog on psychotherapy, and Sam's aversion to movies set on ships.LINKS:Trailer for Ran"VIP Beds" in UK cinemasHow an 18th-Century Sailing Warship WorksWerner Herzog on psychology as a “catastrophe”
This week we tackle the Coen Brothers' gritty debut feature, Blood Simple, starring Frances McDormand, John Getz, and M. Emmet Walsh.Plus: Wayne Shorter, rock climbing, and our experiences with first-time directors.LINKS:Trailer for Blood SimpleTrailer for Wayne Shorter: Zero GravityLet's go to court: a scene from The Insider
This week we discuss Nicolas Roeg's period drama Eureka, starring Gene Hackman, Theresa Russell, and Rutger Hauer.Plus: Wynton Marsalis, washroom attendants, and James's recent trip to London.LINKS:Trailer for EurekaWynton Marsalis does Louis ArmstrongThe WolseleyClimax of The Natural (Randy Newman)
It's a special holiday episode! We're deviating from our usual chronology to talk about Jon Favreau's 2003 Christmas classic, Elf, starring Will Ferrell, Zooey Deschanel, and James Caan. And it turns out that neither of us had ever seen this movie before this week. Plus: Ferris Bueller, overripe fruit, and “cross-hatched” dreams.LINKS:Trailer for ElfWill Ferrell takes a dart to the neck in Old SchoolWill Ferrell imitates a cat in his SNL auditionM. Ward sings Bowie's "Let's Dance"
This week we close out Season One of the podcast with a conversation about Ingmar Bergman's family epic Fanny and Alexander, starring Bertil Guve, Ewa Fröling, and Jan Malmsjö.Plus: wind chimes, bookstore etiquette, and Gloomhaven.LINKS:Trailer for Fanny and AlexanderArt Garfunkel in the studioChevy Chase can't get left, from European Vacation
This week we discuss Michael Mann's gritty debut feature, Thief, starring James Caan and Tuesday Weld.Plus: spa treatments, house cats, and Pink Floyd knockoffs.LINKS:Trailer for ThiefThe VEMI treatmentSteve Martin makes coffee in Dead Men Don't Wear PlaidThe end of Pink Floyd's “Comfortably Numb” (starting at 4:20)“Confrontation”, the final music cue in Thief (starting at 0:40)
This week we explore David Lynch's black-and-white period drama The Elephant Man, starring Anthony Hopkins, John Hurt, and Anne Bancroft.Plus: Just how bad was James's first screenplay?LINKS:Trailer for The Elephant ManMichael Jackson bids for Merrick's bonesThree pages from The Mourning Cloak (1999)
This week we tackle two movies. Hal Ashby's American satire Being There, starring Peter Sellers; and Terry Jones's biblical spoof Monty Python's Life of Brian, starring the Pythons.Plus: blooper reels, the death of Black Panther, and the apparently ambiguous ending of Planet of the Apes.LINKS:Trailer for Being ThereTrailer for Monty Python's Life of BrianJames's mother's eyes in Twelve MonkeysTrailer for Not the Messiah (with glimpse of James, in back row, at 0:48)
This week we discuss Terence Malick's luminous period drama Days of Heaven, starring Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, and Sam Shepard.Plus: Virgil's Eclogues, group dynamics, and the Identified Patient.LINKS:Trailer for Days of HeavenSteve Coogan's impression of Richard Gere (from The Trip)The "identified patient"
This week we discuss Werner Herzog's black comedy Stroszek, starring Bruno S, Eva Mattes, and Clemens Scheitz.Plus: Sam has a martini with Dianne Wiest.LINKS:Trailer for StroszekThieves stealing the "cat"Afternoon tea at Fortnum & MasonThe afternoon tea menu
This week we discuss John Avildsen's rousing and immortal Rocky, starring Sylvester Stallone and Talia Shire.Plus: Real tennis, a dead car battery, and the time Sam's parents met Mike Tyson.LINKS:Trailer for RockyThe LOKITHOR car chargerCharlie Chaplin boxing in City LightsReal tennis
This week we talk about Michelangelo Antonioni's existentialist thriller The Passenger, starring Jack Nicholson and Maria Schneider.Plus: What George Plimpton found at the top of the Brooklyn Bridge.LINKS:Trailer for The PassengerThe Weather Channel explains "wintry mix"Trailer for Flesh Gordon (1974; NSFW)
This week we talk about Hal Ashby's road movie The Last Detail, starring Jack Nicholson, Otis Young, and Randy Quaid. Plus: James shares a bedroom with Sam's parents.LINKS:Trailer for The Last Detail"The Man Who Never Heard of Frank Sinatra"Trailer for Flash Gordon (1980)
At Sam's suggestion, James starts his journey with Nicolas Roeg's 1973 horror-thriller Don't Look Now, starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. Plus, penalty kicks, second sight, and why not to keep loaded guns in the house.LINKS:Trailer for Don't Look NowHarry Kane misses World-Cup penaltyMarquinhos's reaction after he misses his penalty
James accepts that it's time to overcome his fears and watch some movies, but he'll need some guidance. Sam, stuck in his car thanks to New York's alternate-side-parking regulations, is only too happy to oblige.LINKS:NYC alternate side parking rulesMartin Scorsese's thoughts on Tár