Cinephiles Shaun Nolan and Verity Bennett are wondering: what is the best movie ever made? Every other Thursday, they're going to try to find out. This is the eternal hunt for the ultimate cinematic masterpiece, based on empirical and conclusive evidence (and in Shaun and Verity's humble opinions).…
The Vietnam War of the 1970s was the first war to show real footage of terror on television. It's the war that shocked the World, which obviously intrigued legendary director Francis Ford Copolla as he created a movie about it only a matter of years later. Apocalypse Now met mixed reviews at opening (like it does with Verity and Shaun here), but has gone on to be hailed as one of the greatest movies of all-time. Establishing tropes that war movies still incorporate today, its impact is widespread. One noteable example is this year's Oscar-contending war movies of choice 1917 - released 40 years to the year after Copolla's movie - which works on a very similar level. But which do we prefer; which is better? And perhaps more importantly: how has cinema changed and evolved over the past 40 years? A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: The video from Insider on 1917: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMBnvz-dEXw Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
In 1966, Planet Earth got to see the first ever set of photos from deep space, proving that our home is a sphere and making humans face their purpose in the Solar System for the first time. Three years later, Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon. But between these two events came Stanley Kubrick and his landmark cinematic event "2001: A Space Odyssey", a picture that would change cinema - and the World - forever. At the heart of the story is HAL9000, an early pre-cursor to artificial intelligence that we know to exist today. But as the story progresses, HAL becomes more than he initially seemed to be... This theme (of AI having a consience like you or I) has been explored in much media over the years, but the best recent example has to be Alex Garland's "Ex Machina". Today, we discuss them both. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: "Space Odyssey: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke, and the Making of a Masterpiece" by Michael Benson: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1501163930?pf_rd_p=f20e70b1-67f9-48d1-8c78-ba616030b420&pf_rd_r=MZJ3S2AGZ4D4RRQDG8KH Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
Christopher Nolan turned the Batman franchise into serious awards fare with his Gotham trilogy 15 years ago, even helping helping Heath Ledger win a posthumous Oscar in 2009 for his performance as The Joker. But it was Todd Phillips in 2019 who managed to turn The Joker into something even more, with the serious potential for leading another actor to an Oscar for playing the villain: this time, Joaquin Phoenix. For many - especially Verity - Joker resonated, but for some - Shaun in particular - it did not. For Shaun, his pick of the year is Marriage Story, a tender tale of love and divorce, told beautifully by Noah Baumbach. Verity enjoyed this film too, so there's a heck of a lot to discuss in the first episode of 2020. Don't forget to stay to the end to hear Shaun and Verity's picks for their other favourite films of 2019. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
It's 5am, Verity and Shaun are about to pass out they're so tired, but they've just seen a midnight screening of Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker and they're here to chat it out and break it all down with you! A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
When Verity gets severe tonsilitis over the Christmas period, what's Shaun meant to do? He ropes in his buddy Rukaya, of course! With Christmas under two weeks away, it's time to compare two of Shaun's festive favourites: Richard Curtis's "Love Actually" and Debbie Issit's "Nativity!" We aren't doing our normal scoring system this week, but we're still trying to figure out which is the better offering... which one will it be? A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all next Thursday for our super special Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker BONUS spoiler discussion episode! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Emma Thompson's "Movies That Made Me" with Ali Plumb: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rb6jXyeWL98 Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Rukaya on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RukayaC_ Follow Rukaya on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rukayacesar/ Follow Rukaya's "NewInMT" on Twitter: https://twitter.com/NewInMT
When Edgar Howard Wright was 21, he wrote a treatment for a film idea that came to him while listening to "Orange", an album by the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. With no producer attached, he started to work on other projects, including music videos where he road tested parts of this high-speed car chase concept. His work on these videos led to him creating Shaun of the Dead with Simon Pegg, and his work on that feature got him recognised by Hollywood, who attached him to the film adaptation of the Scott Pilgrim books by Bryan Lee O'Malley. It was at this point in his career that his treatment from 1995 started to get buzz and a team attached, with Wright finally developing the story and then the screenplay. Seven years after the release of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, the little treatment that could was finally released as a big-budget Hollywood motion picture. It was called Baby Driver. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
The original Forbes expose of Jordan Belfort - printed under the headline "Steaks, stocks - what's the difference?" by Roula Khalaf - sounds like the kind of thing that Shaun would offer as recommended reading at the end of an episode of NPMIAO, but it made its way to director Martin Scorsese first, acting as a piece of the puzzle that ended up becoming "The Wolf of Wall Street", the premier example of the financial crime biopic sub-genre. Flash-forward six years, the latest entry in the canon - Steven Soderbergh's "The Laundromat" - offers similar shades, making it ripe for comparison. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: "What Statistics Can and Can't Tell Us About Ourselves" by Hannah Fry, from The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/09/09/what-statistics-can-and-cant-tell-us-about-ourselves "Bordeaux wine fired into space to test ageing" by Chris Mercer, from Decanter: https://www.decanter.com/wine-news/bordeaux-wine-space-experiment-427143/ Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
26 years ago, Bette Midler took a break from her busy music schedule to put a spell on us in Disney's "Hocus Pocus", a family Halloween classic that'd been in development for almost a decade. The focus? The Sanderson Sisters, a group of wickedly funny witches. Decades later, Robert Eggers made his feature film debut with "The Witch" and won Sundance's Best Director prize. The focus of that film? Witches, and the conspiracies that surround them. This Hallows' Eve, we thought we'd pit the two movies against one another to see how they hold up. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: "Is This Our Final Century?" TEDTalk: https://www.ted.com/talks/martin_rees_asks_is_this_our_final_century "Can You Really Be Addicted to Video Games?" by Ferris Jabr for the NYT Mag: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/22/magazine/can-you-really-be-addicted-to-video-games.html Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
Benj Pasek and Justin Paul found initial success off-Broadway with their musical 'Dogfight', inspired by a film of the same name that tells a twisted story of love and devotion through the eyes of an American serviceman and a waitress. By the mid-2010s, they were finding success with stage musicals like 'Dear Evan Hansen', as well as two movie musicals: 'La La Land', for which they wrote lyrics to accompany Justin Hurwitz's score, and 'The Greatest Showman', an original score composed entirely by them. Between the two films, they were nominated for the Best Original Song Academy Award three times, winning once. But are either of these films as good as they're heralded as being? A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: La La Land choreography video from Vanity Fair: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GocPFyyPGLQ La La Land movie references video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iI5BPRrj554 The Greatest Showman YouTube video essay that Verity saw: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGackPzUqxk Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
At the 82nd Academy Awards, James Cameron lost the Best Director prize to his ex-wife Kathryn Bigelow. The film he was nominated for? 'Avatar', the juggernaut box office success that sat at the top of the highest grossing worldwide list until a matter of weeks ago when it was overtaken by 'Avengers: Endgame'. Adjusted for inflation, it's still the second-highest grossing film of all-time, but the picture that sits leaps and bounds ahead of it? 'Gone With The Wind', a four-hour romantic epic, released in 1939 and winner of the 12th Best Picture prize. Today, in our first ever episode, we pit the two iconic movies head-to-head. A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of all of our music. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all in two weeks! LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Featurette video for Sam Mendes' '1917': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oq4t3f6LmDA&t=0s The Tab British crisps quiz: https://thetab.com/uk/2018/05/01/can-you-guess-the-iconic-british-crisp-just-by-looking-at-its-shape-65004 "How Ryan Murphy Built a $300 Million Netflix Empire" by Sam Lansky for TIME: https://time.com/5667752/ryan-murphy-netflix/ "How Ryan Murphy Became The Most Powerful Man In TV" by Emily Nussbaum for The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/14/how-ryan-murphy-became-the-most-powerful-man-in-tv Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Shaun on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/shaunycat/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/ Follow Verity on Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/veritee/
Hello listener! Our names are Shaun and Verity and welcome to our new podcast 'Nobody Puts Movies In An Order', an eternal hunt for the ultimate cinematic masterpiece based on empirical and conclusive evidence (in our humble opinions, of course). Every other week, we'll sit down and compare two films based on the same theme. They might be similar, they might not... that's the fun of the game. We'll each give them some points based on pre-determined categories, and throw them up onto our leaderboard as we search for the best film of all time. Is art this subjective? We don't know and we don't actually care... because we're going to try it anyway! We start with episode one on Thursday October 3rd on the theme "the highest grossing pictures of all-time, adjusted for inflation", so it's Gone With The Wind (1939) vs. Avatar (2009). May the best film win! A massive thank you goes to Emma Thorpe, the composer and producer of our theme music! We'd like to apologise for our technical difficulties that you can hear on Shaun's end in this introductory episode. We hope to have fixed the issues by our first episode on Thursday October 3rd. Shaun Nolan used to be the host and producer of the podcast 'Opening Doors', as well as the co-host and producer of 'Home or Away? with Abbie and Shaun' and 'Our Noughties Diary'. From 2017 - 2019, he created, wrote and produced the web series 'Pickle' on YouTube and in the Summer of 2017, he took his political farce 'Paper Dolls' to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Shaun is also a television and film columnist for the online magazine Miro Magazine, and the theatre columnist for print magazine Vale Life. Verity Bennett studies Physics and Computer Sciences at the University of Lancaster (with a focus on astrophysics and cosmology), but film is a passionate hobby of hers. She is very interested in music and is the conductor of ULMS's choir. Verity is also president of her University's natural sciences society, and is mother to 26 indoor plants. Don't forget to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and we look forward to seeing you all on Thursday! Follow the podcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/moviesinanorder Visit the website: https://shaunnolan.com/portfolio/nobody-puts-movies-in-an-order/ Email us at moviesinanorder@gmail.com Follow Shaun on Twitter: https://twitter.com/shaunycat Follow Shaun on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shaunynolan/ Follow Verity on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veriT_REX Follow Verity on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queen_veritea/