American film director
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This week, we are comparing Lady and the Tramp (1955) and Lady and the Tramp (2019) - two Disney films about dogs finding themselves and what home means to them.-----The Movies:Lady and the Tramp (1955)Directed by Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Luske & Jack CuttingWritten by Erdman Penner, Joe Rinaldi, Ralph Wright & Don DaGradi Based on the story by Ward GreeneiMDb Rating: 7.3Lady and the Tramp (2019)Directed by Charlie BeanWritten by Andrew Bujalski & Kari Granlund Based on the story by Ward GreeneiMDB Rating: 6.2-----Find us on:Discord - https://discord.gg/dxgmcfj552Tumblr - @ItTakesTwoPodInstagram - @ItTakesTwo_podFacebook - @ItTakesTwoPodYoutube - @ittakestwonzBluesky - @ittakestwoOur website - ItTakesTwo.co.nz-----Content Warning: Mentions of animal death
Sam Bodrojan joins us for Andrew Bujalski's overlooked comedy with RESULTS! Together, we look at the career of the three leads, the state of mumblecore at the time, and how little success the movie had portraying such uncinematic relationships --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/exitingthroughthe2010s/support
Did you ever work a soul-crushing service job that sometimes sent you to the bathroom crying? Then we have the episode for you! Andrew Bujalski's SUPPORT THE GIRLS (2018) is a lovely and loving film which follows a restaurant manager and her all-female staff as they try to make it through the day. We talk about its authentic approach to solidarity, the dynamic ensemble of characters, our own hellish work experiences, and the significance of the film's male writer-director. Email your own musings and questions to tellmeimsorry@gmail.com Follow us: The podcast's Instagram: @tellmeimsorry Maggie's Instagram: @_saint_margaret_ Marin's Letterboxd: @marinharrington Secondary texts referenced: Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974) dir. Martin Scorsese “Grip” by Joy Castro (from Island of Bones)
We talk about Andrew Bujalski's 2013 film Computer Chess, where none of the people in the movie actually play chess. Check and mate, nerds
Writer / Director Andrew Bujalski is actually in the room for this one and we talk about everything from playing the waiting game with actors' agents and the hopeful offers you make, to shooting a film during a global pandemic where no two actors are in the same room. Sometimes you just gotta take that boat and push it all the way out. “One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.” - Andre Gide
The Pacific Northwest Insurance Corporation Moviefilm Podcast
Matty and Corbsy talk about COMPUTER CHESS, American Director Andrew Bujalski's fable about AI, shitty hotels, flirting, free will and the Mysterious Man of Myth, Michael Papageorge.
Sam Clements is curating a fictional film festival. He'll accept almost anything, but the movie must not be longer than 90 minutes. This is the 90 Minutes Or Less Film Fest podcast. In episode 105 Sam is joined by Celine Song, writer and director of Past Lives. Celine has chosen Andrew Bujalski's Computer Chess (90 minutes) from 2013. The film is set over the course of a weekend tournament for chess software programmers thirty-some years ago. It's an American independent comedy, filmed on a ‘80s black and white video camera and presented as a documentary. Sam and Celine discuss the origins of Past Lives and Sharon Van Etten's end credits song, as well as the subject of AI and how Andrew Bujalski's work on Computer Chess is increasingly more relevant today. Past Lives is in cinemas now, released by Studio Canal in the UK and A24 in the USA. Thank you for downloading. We'll be back in a couple of weeks! Rate and subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/90minfilm If you enjoy the show, please subscribe, rate, review and share with your friends. We're an independent podcast and every recommendation helps - thank you! You can also show your support for the podcast by buying us a coffee at our Ko-fi page: https://ko-fi.com/90minfilmfest Website: 90minfilmfest.com Tweet: @90MinFilmFest Instagram: @90MinFilmFest We are a proud member of the Stripped Media Network. Hosted and produced by @sam_clements. Edited and produced by Louise Owen. Guest star Celine Song (@helloellephanta). Additional editing and sound mixing by @lukemakestweets. Music by @martinaustwick. Artwork by @samgilbey. Bonus link: The original Computer Chess website is still live and full of interesting further reading!
Director Andrew Bujalski joins us on the podcast to discuss his career in independent filmmaking his latest movie There There (2022) and we go deep into the making of his masterpiece Computer Chess (2013)
"I always want to make a film that I feel like no one else is going to make." Andrew Bujalski More on this special livestream interview from your host, Mitch Hampton: There are so many wondrous things to say about our livestream guest Andrew Bujalski. The first that comes to mind is how long I have known him. Having met him on his first feature, the groundbreaking Funny HaHa wayback in 2002, no less, and been blessed to have my music as part of his score in his previous Support The Girls in 2018, I think it is a rare thing to watch a single and singular artist grow and evolve over such a length of time. His newest feature, "There there", while not directly about the Covid Pandemic in plot, drew upon the Pandemic in its formal properties. In "There there" he essentially created a new way of filming characters as well as environment: no two actors are in the same location and the photographic technology scanned great geographical distances. "There, there" is a dense, humanistic work about human relationships and love, at once a critical document of our current moment and a continuation of the themes that have most concerned Andrew over the entire 00s to today, including some sweetness and heart alongside the struggles of his characters. I can think of no better decision by Magnolia than to release it on this Valentines Day. It was a treat to speak in depth with Andrew as we discussed many things - all in keeping with the overall artistic and cultural interests of our podcast. Andrew Buljalski's Biography Andrew Bujalski was born in Boston in 1977 and studied film at Harvard's Department of Visual and Environmental Studies. He wrote and directed the films FUNNY HA HA (2002), MUTUAL APPRECIATION (2005). His first films all appeared on the New York Times's “Best of the Year” lists. Bujalski wrote both screenplays, and appears as an actor, playing a major role in both films. BEESWAX (2009) and COMPUTER CHESS (2013), Bujalski's third and fourth independent films, were filmed in Austin, where the director lives now. COMPUTER CHESS is a period film set at a computer programming tournament in 1980, premiered at the Sundance FF and won the Alfred Sloan Feature Film Prize. His film RESULTS (2015), premiered at Sundance FF. SUPPORT THE GIRLS (2018) had its world premiere at SXSW and will be released by Magnolia Pictures. More about his new film "There, there": A lover's doubt in the cold light of morning leads a chain of uneasy intimacies--counselors, disruptors, peacemakers and fire-starters--every one looking to have a little faith rewarded. Link to watch Andrew's Film, "There there": https://www.magpictures.com/therethere/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mitch-hampton/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mitch-hampton/support
Andrew Bujalski has a new movie out. Were you aware? Having premiered quietly at Tribeca and then coming out even move quietly on VOD, THERE THERE is ambitious both structurally and in its production, and we are here to talk about it since it seems no one else will! We pair it with it's structural sibling, Max Ophüls' LA RONDE. Jesse talks Improv! Andy talks about acting duets! It's a goofy delight! Our twitter is @CannesIKickIt Our instagram is @CIKIPod Our letterboxd is CIKIPod Enjoying the show? Feel free to send a few bucks our way on Ko-fi. Thanks to Tree Related for our theme song Our hosts are @andytgerm @clatchley @imlaughalone @jcpglickwebber
In THERE THERE acclaimed filmmaker Andrew Bujalski (Support the Girls, Computer Chess) explores the precarious nature of human connection in a round robin of emotional two-character vignettes in which seven people reach out and bond momentarily, setting the scene for the next encounter. A pair of new lovers, an alcoholic and her AA sponsor, a teacher and a parent, a lawyer and his client, and more move from scene to scene, revealing intimate details as they forge connections. Via a groundbreaking shooting process, Bujalski plays with ideas of isolation and perception by filming each actor individually in separate locations, only joining them to their partner's performance in the edit. An extraordinary cast including Jason Schwartzman, Lennie James, Lili Taylor and Molly Gordon sensitively captures the humor and heartbreaking fragility of life and love in the 2020s. Director Andrew Bujalski (Beeswax, Support the Girls, Results, Funny Ha Ha) stops by for a conversation on how the daunting challenge of making a film in the age of COVID that mirrored the unstable zeitgeist of a film about seven people rattling through life trying to re-connect with a recognizable humanity. For more go to: magpictures.com/therethere
Tim Sutton ("Memphis") returns to discuss his latest feature film about an emotionally embattled rock star played by Colson Baker aka Machine Gun Kelly. Also actors Jason Schwartzman and Lili Taylor star in Andrew Bujalski's latest film, "There There". Both films open Friday, November 11th.
Jamison and Blake talk about their world travels as well as getting as far away from each other as possible. They finally decide on their podcast name and then the sentient internet decides to give us technical difficulties before we jump into our discussion of Jamison's film pick from 2013 entitled Computer Chess by Andrew Bujalski. The film takes the conversation into far flung worlds of sentient chatbots, elephants, humans acting like robots, robots acting like humans, and, of course, breaking a seven-year-old's finger. Then Blake unleashes his next film pick and starts the podcast down a trajectory of which Jamison finds unfortunate. References: "Do Elephants Have Souls?" - The New Atlantis "Google AI researcher explains why the technology may be 'sentient'" - NPR "No Minds Without Other Minds" - Justin E. H. Smith's Hinternet "Chess Robot Goes Rogue, Breaks Seven-Year-Old Player's Finger - Newsweek "Google fires engineer Blake Lemoine who contended its AI technology was sentient" - CNN --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/flybyfilms/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/flybyfilms/support
This week, Lo & Mo attempt to navigate the surreal humor and horrors of Andrew Bujalski's 2013 film, COMPUTER CHESS. In a podcast first, we consider revisiting the film after the season ends in order to dig deeper. SUPPORT: https://www.patreon.com/LoMoMedia --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lomomedia/message
Give me the SNIFF boys and free my soul I wanna get LOST in some ROCKY ROAD and piss away! Woah! What the hell was that??? I'll tell you what it is, it's fun! Fun in the sun! Just like this weeks episode! The first of a handful of backlogged episodes as Noah drives around the country, we've brought back a fan favorite, Rocky Pajarito, to talk about indie filmmaker Andrew Bujalski, and the divisive subgenre, Mumblecore! We also fuck around for 30 minutes at the beginning talking about 90s action comedy NOTHING TO LOSE, Jimmy Neutron, and Rocky's inability to make it to the record on time! We also debut a new segment that creates so much chaos! Wow! Unreal! Everything Now Show: https://www.twitch.tv/everythingnowshow Everything Now Twitter: https://twitter.com/everything_now_ Everything Now Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingnowshow/ Rocky's Virtual Business Card: https://rockypajarito.carrd.co/ Rocky's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RockyPajarito Rocky's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelawnwrangler/ Rocky's Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/roncky/ My Favorite Podcast Linktree: https://linktr.ee/MyFavoritePodcast Noah's Personal Linktree: linktr.ee/NoahMarger
Contains spoilers
THE LITTLE THINGS (2021, dir. John Lee Hancock) MALCOLM AND MARIE (dir. Sam Levinson, Netflix, 2021) PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN (dir. Emerald Fennell, 2020) RUN (dir. Aneesh Chaganty, 2020) SUPPORT THE GIRLS (dir. Andrew Bujalski, 2019... The post Extra Features Podcast Episode 264 appeared first on Extra Features .
On this podcast, we welcome the husband and wife filmmaking team behind THE RABBI GOES WEST. Gerry Peary should be familiar to Wisconsin Film Festival audiences. In recent years he has been a guest of the festival twice, in 2013 as a cast member of Andrew Bujalski’s COMPUTER CHESS, and in 2016 to present his documentary feature, ARCHIE’S BETTY. Gerry received a Ph.D. in Communications from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1977 and in addition to being a filmmaker has had a long career in film criticism and journalism with his work appearing in The Boston Globe, the LA Times and many other publications. Amy Geller’s award-winning productions [PBS's THE WAR THAT MADE AMERICA (2005), FOR THE LOVE OF MOVIES (2009), and THE GUYS NEXT DOOR (2016), which she co-directed], have been broadcast and screened at prestigious film festivals around the world. She served as the Artistic Director of the Boston Jewish Film Festival and teaches production courses at Boston University.
We are donning the Lycra and the leg warmers because it’s time to get physical this week on Bottom of the Stream as we talk about gym based rom-com, Results, a 2015 indie movie starring Guy Pearce; Cobie Smulders and Kevin Corrigan. Directed by Andrew Bujalski, this one is a distinct change of pace compared to the last couple of movies that we have watched. Listen on to find out if we thought Results was well fit or a sweaty mess! We have a slew of Netflix news to talk about, including the unbelievable cast that has been put together for upcoming sci-fi movie, Don’t Look Up. We also talk about what we have been watching at the top of the stream and run through the Netflix top ten. Stay safe! As always there are SPOILERS ahead so if that sort of thing bothers you please watch the film before you listen. Bottom of the stream is a weekly podcast, hosted by film lovers Adam and Nick, exploring the parts of Netflix that most people don't go to in a bid to find out what hidden gems are lurking down there Every week we rank the films we watch against each other and place them in what we like to call THE STREAM TABLE which can be found on our BRAND NEW website www.bottomofthestream.com Follow us on Twitter and instagram @bots_podcast Please consider supporting the show on Patreon, If you do we will give you lots of bonus content including early access to the episodes. Check it out over at www.patreon.com/bottomofthestream We also now have a discord so join us to hang out https://discord.gg/wJ3Bfqt
This week Randy & Will stumble into the mumblecore genre and look at Andrew Bujalski's Computer Chess. Released in 2013, the film is set at a hotel where a computer chess tournament is being held in one of the ballrooms. The film follows a cast of characters both during and after each day's competition with comedic and dramatic vignettes that touch on success, ego, and the limits of human intelligence.Computer Chess is available on Amazon Prime Video and Kanopy.---Find Cathode Ray Mission on Letterboxd at crmpodOr on Instagram at cathoderaymissionpodEmails us at cathoderaymissionpodcast@gmail.comFind Randy & Will on Letterboxd at Raygun Busch & Wolf DakotaOr on Instagram @raygun_busch and @will.scovill
Kyle Amato (Boston Hassle, Hawke Cast) returns to talk Andrew Bujalski's dramedy. Together we tackle what is mumblecore, if Regina Hall delivers one of the best comedic performances of the decade and what the movies of 2018 tell us about making it in America --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/exitingthroughthe2010s/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/exitingthroughthe2010s/support
A member of the BVK (German Society of Cinematographers), Matthias was born in Austria and worked as a camera assistant in Austria and Germany before attending AFI in Los Angeles. Matthias' film projects include Andrew Bujalski's debut feature Funny Ha Ha, and the acclaimed Computer Chess, as well as Nights and Weekends, for Greta Gerwig and Joe Swanberg. More recently, he shot the feature Support the Girls, again for Andrew Bujalski, Saints Rest, and the television historical drama Defiance. Three Women and the Vote.
A comprehensive look at the career of filmmaker Andrew Bujalski, including detailed discussion of how his films up to now were made, especially the originality of their style, his educational background at Harvard with Chantal Akerman, working with both professional and nonprofessional actors, issues of reception and distribution, films both of us have loved, and much more. Inside the Episode with Mitch Hampton “Back in the period around 2001 or thereabouts I was fortunate to have been an early viewer of Andrew Bujalski's Funny HaHa. This low budget character centered comedy of manners set in the Boston area was destined to change the course of American cinema forever. In a very real sense, though Bujalksi being ever humble among other qualities would not give assent to this, had Bujalski not made that first feature, you could argue there might not have ever been Lena Dunham's Girls. Bujalksi made it okay for filmmakers to make extremely awkward and naturalistic movies primarily about relationships but completely outside of all of the conventions of studio filmmaking. Bujalski's films are as complex emotionally as anything from Harold Pinter, and by design they use ellipsis to keep viewers on the edges of their seat as to what is going on between the characters. I actually did not know at the time that he was or had been ensconced at Harvard and had studied with the likes of Chantal Akerman. I also had not idea that his work would have the large effect that it has. At the time it was extraordinarily divisive and I could count among my friends both those who hated the films, considering them meandering and plots or overtly consumed with the whining of relatively privileged characters, as well as those like myself who though that Bujalksi was one of the precious few people expressing what was actually going on in human relationships in the contemporary world, warts and all. Bujalski, like most good filmmakers, knows his cinema history and our conversation proved wide ranging as we talked about everything from Francois Truffaut to the Rocky movie franchise all off which made for a one of a kind conversation, as one of a kind as his movies. His latest Support The Girls should be seen wherever you can.” Andrew’s Bio "Andrew Bujalski has written and directed six feature films. He types 89 wpm." Some website links to his works: Support the Girls | Magnolia Pictures RESULTS: http://www.magpictures.com/results/ Computer Chess: http://www.computerchessmovie.com Beeswax: http://www.cinemaguild.com/theatrical/beeswax.html FunnyHaHa : http://www.funnyhahafilm.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mitch-hampton/message
Originally from East Texas, Colin earned a BFA in Costume Design from Cal Arts, designing performance art, theater, opera, puppetry, and music videos, before moving into film in 2009. Some of Colin's notable projects include the films Computer Chess, Results and Support The Girls, for director Andrew Bujalski, as well as more recently Little Woods and Palm Springs.
¡Bienvenidos al tercer programa de Cinéfagos!. En esta emisión os acercamos el subgénero de cine independiente nacido a principios de siglo "Mumblecore" y la figura del que, por todos, es considerado el pionero y creador del género, Andrew Bujalski, a través de sus tres obras pilares: - Funny Ha Ha, 2002 - Mutual Appreciation, 2005 - Beeswax, 2009 Esperamos que disfrutéis de este audio y que nos comentéis a través de nuestras vías de contacto que os ha parecido el programa, nos enviéis sugerencias para el futuro, nos deis consejos para mejorar o simplemente comentéis que os han parecido estas películas recomendadas: * @cinefagoscast (Twitter) * cinefagos_podcast (Instagram) * cinefagospodcast@gmail.com (E-Mail) * Cajón de comentarios de Ivoox ¡Ansia viva por el cine! ¡Nos escuchamos en futuras emisiones, sed felices!
JOSEPH TRAPANESE is best known for his sleek score work for blockbuster films like TRON: LEGACY, STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON, THE GREATEST SHOWMAN, OBLIVION and THE RAID series. As a composer, arranger, and producer for film, television, theater and video game music, he has collaborated with a number of mainstream musical acts such as Daft Punk, M83, Mike Shinoda, and Dr. Dre. His solo work also includes: Stuber, Arctic, Robin Hood, Only the Brave, Earth to Echo and two installments of the Divergent series. Now, a new live-action, "Lady and the Tramp," one of his latest works, was just released on the new streaming service, Disney+.The 2019 “Lady and the Tramp,” a timeless retelling of the 1955 animated classic of a pampered house dog and a tough but lovable stray, who embark on an unexpected adventure and, despite their differences, grow closer and come to understand the value of home. The film is directed by Charlie Bean and written by Andrew Bujalski and Kari Granlund, produced by Walt Disney Pictures and was released on November 12, 2019.In this episode, composer Joe Trapanese shares how he embraced the famous "Bella Notte" from the original "Lady and the Tramp" from 1955, while also writing his own original music and themes for this newest version. He reveals how he incorporated the original "Bella Notte," as well as creating his own, new arrangments of the unforgettably, romantic song. Trapanese also details a number of the key, original themes he wrote for the film and names a number of the talented musicians who performed them.ANNOTATED TRACKS / SEGMENTS02:40 - Main Title (Bella Notte)04:57 - The Tramp07:59 - Welcome to the Family10:53 - Getting on the Boat12:47 - Bella NotteSOUNDTRACKThe original score for Lady and the Tramp was released by Walt Disney Records on November 12, 2019, and can be purchased at Amazon.com, iTunes, or streaming on Spotify and Apple MORE ABOUT THE COMPOSERYou can find out more and hear more music by Joseph Trapanese at his official site, https://www.joecomposer.com/ or you can follow him on Twitter @joecomposer.ABOUT THE ANNOTATORThis podcast is produced by Christopher Coleman (@ccoleman) and you can Find more episodes at THEANNOTATOR.NET or you can subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher Radio or wherever you find quality podcasts.SUBSCRIBEiTunesSpotifyStitcher RadioRadioPublicGoogle PodcastsRSS Feed
The Duran Duran of Horror Return to the Overlook Hotel (oh, go on! It's got nice carpets!), with Mike Flanagan's "Doctor Sleep", which this week falls under the unforgiving Kubrick stares of Sarah and Rob. Prepare to find out the Cagney & Lacey/Stephen King connection you never knew existed! Off the Shelf looks at the work of two cult 2010s directors, with Graham accepting Karyn Kusama's "The Invitation" - out on Blu-Ray from Second Sight, and Sarah learning a new word - a baleful, dispiriting new word - as she checks out Andrew Bujalski's "Support The Girls", from Bulldog. If you like the podcast, send some support by visiting our PATREON (http://www%2Cpatreon.com/thegeekshow) . Alternatively, Give us 5-star rating and/or review wherever you get your podcasts from, it helps other people find our podcast. The more feedback we have, the more people can enjoy our movie chatter. #Podcast #Movies #Films #Reviews #CinemaEclectica #Cinema #Eclectica #TGS #TheGeekShow #Patreon #CultMovies #TheShining #DoctorSleep #StephenKing #KarynKusama #TheInvitation #SupportTheGirls #AndrewBujalski // www.thegeekshow.co.uk (Http://www.thegeekshow.co.uk)
On this episode not satisfied with his tope bag that says "nevertheless she persisted" on it and his subscription to Bust magazine, Danny takes another step to prove how much of a woke bae he is by seeing Support the Girls, the brilliant new film by Andrew Bujalski all about female solidarity and the emotional toil of work, two topics he knows nothing about.Then not satisfied with his Dario Argento boxset and his comic by Alejandro Jodorowksy, Danny takes another step to prove how cool and au fait with weird cinema he is by seeing In Fabric, the brilliant new film by Peter Strickland all about shopping and dresses, two topics he knows nothing about.and finally yesterday all our troubles seemed so far away because we hadn't seen the film Yesterday which FYI is terrible.We also find time to discuss the new mind bending film from Pixar and spend too much time sharpening our knives for the latest film in The Kingsman franchise. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Support the Girls is a one-bad-day film following Lisa (Regina Hall), the manager of a sports breastaurant called Double Whammies. This movie explores the worker-manager-owner relationship, the intersections of race, class, and gender in the workplace, and the cathartic nature of friendship and solidarity. We are joined by our friend and honored guest, Christee, an artist and worker in the food service industry. Thanks to Christee for recommending this film and for bringing her insight and experience to this episode! She puts it best: "Waiting tables in the United States is a performance art." This episode was recorded May 2019.
Welcome to Who Is She? A Bechdel Test Fest podcast. In each episode the Bechdel Test Fest team (Beth Webb, Corrina Antrobus, Caitlin Quinlan and Stephanie Watts), explore the legacy of an extraordinary woman in film and how she has changed the landscape of cinema for the better. In our second episode, we discuss the mighty Regina Hall, as she makes a splash as the leading lady in the award-winning, film festival darling Support The Girls directed by Andrew Bujalski. As well as charting Regina's life, times and steady rise to becoming the first black woman to win the NYT Film Critics' Circle award for Best Actress, team BTF discuss the wider politics of women in comedy and the truth in the jest of women on film. Support The Girls in UK cinemas June 28, 2019 as released by Bulldog Film. Follow Bechdel Test Fest on all social media platforms @BechdelTestFest Sign up to our newsletter bechdeltestfest.com/ Email us at bechdeltestfest@gmail.com The team on Twitter: @BethKWebb @corrinacorrina @_stephwatts @csaquinlan Who Is She? A Bechdel Test Fest Podcast is a Bechdel Test Fest production. It was written and hosted by Beth Webb and produced by Stephanie Watts, Corrina Antrobus and Caitlin Quinlan. Our music was written and produced by Zoe Mead, check out her band Wyldest on all major streaming platforms.
Annie and Shannon discuss Support the Girls written & directed by Andrew Bujalski, starring: Regina Hall, Junglepussy, AJ Michalka and Haley Lu Richardson #femmefilmschool Email: girlsinterruptedpod@gmail.com IG: instagram.com/girlsinterruptedpod Tumblr: girlsinterruptedpod.tumblr.com/ Facebook: facebook.com/grlsinterruptd Support the show: paypal.me/girlsinterrupted Your Hosts: Shannon: IG/Twitter @prickwolf Annie: IG @annie.rives Twitter @anniecrives Get $5 off your first Uber trip with our code 8xb0f
Check out this film's posts @ MovieJeff.com here » https://themoviereviewshow.blogspot.com/2018/08/support-girls.html Support the Girls is a 2018 American comedy film written and directed by Andrew Bujalski. It stars Regina Hall, Haley Lu Richardson, James LeGros, Shayna McHayle, Dylan Gelula, AJ Michalka, Brooklyn Decker and more as workers at a sorta Hooters-ish sports bar. It's a movie. Follow the show... @ Twitter https://twitter.com/MOVIEREVIEWSH0W @ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpONT6Yp423GzUrHDDqBL3g @ LetterBoxd https://letterboxd.com/jeffmovie AND, FOR AS LITTLE AS $1/MONTH » https://patreon.com/dad SUPPORT THIS SHOW AND OTHER VENTURES FROM HTTPS://WWW.MYAMERI.CA INDUSTRIES • THANK YOU --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-movie-review-show/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-movie-review-show/support
The gang dives in to the latest film by Andrew Bujalski. Episode includes a talk about mumblecore, favorite scene discussions and struggles to pronounce the director's last name.
Regina Hall has proven she’s one of today’s shrewdest and funniest on-screen performers, from her early days pounding the pavement using Backstage, to her work in films like “Love & Basketball,” the “Scary Movie” franchise, and the biggest comedy of last year, “Girls Trip.” She’s now starring in the hilarious new Showtime series “Black Monday,” created by Jordan Cahan and David Caspe, and is proving to be a master at quietly breaking audiences’ hearts, as she does in Andrew Bujalski’s Magnolia Pictures indie “Support the Girls,” a performance that’s earned her a Film Independent Spirit Award nomination and NYFCC Award for leading actress. For over 50 years, Backstage has been the most trusted place for actors to find jobs and career advice, and for casting professionals to find the right performers for their projects. “In the Envelope: An Awards Podcast” features interviews with some of the most exciting actors and storytellers working today. Check out more here: https://bit.ly/2OMryWQ SUBSCRIBE and listen to ""In the Envelope"" on: - iTunes: https://apple.co/2rs0llz - Google Play: https://bit.ly/2DHkPwt - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2QNmu6C - Stitcher: https://bit.ly/2DJv6bD - Overcast: https://bit.ly/2OJvWGk - SoundCloud: https://bit.ly/2jUpnnw Follow Backstage and ""In the Envelope"" on social media: - https://www.facebook.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/intheenvelope - https://www.instagram.com/backstagecast Special thanks to... - Host: Jack Smart - Producer: Jamie Muffett - Editor-in-Chief: Rawaan Alkhatib - Social Media: Francis Ramos and Lauren Routt - Design: Mark Stinson and Caitlin Watkins - Additional Support: Kasey Howe
This we are talking about the breastaurant-focused, service industry comedy "Support The Girls" (now available on Hulu)! The movie stars literal angel Regina Hall as a literal angel and is directed by the OG of mumblecore, Andrew Bujalski. Hear the first half of our thoughts on this indie darling filled with extremely supportive women and extremely supportive bras. Thoughts on the movie? Email us at onlygirlspod@gmail.com or leave a voicemail at 903.35.GIRLS. Don't forget to rate and subscribe on iTunes! instagram.com/onlygirlspod
Andrew Bujalski's first feature film, Funny Ha Ha, was called one of the most influential films of the '00s by New York Times critic A.O. Scott. He has also written and directed the films Mutual Appreciation, Beeswax, Computer Chess, and Results, which have played festivals worldwide including Sundance, Berlin, and the 2014 Whitney Biennial. The Boston Globe describes him as "unerringly polite and somewhat disheveled." His latest film, Support the Girls, premiered at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival.
What does Steve McQueen's new heist thriller Widows – Sight & Sound's November 2018 cover film and gala opener of this year's London Film Festival – tell us about race and class? Philip Concannon, Nick James, Isabel Stevens and Kelli Weston discuss this, Chinese auteur Jia Zhang-ke's new crime drama Ash Is Purest White, plus three more picks from this year's festival: Sudabeh Mortezai's Joy, Andrew Bujalski's Support the Girls and Bi Gan's Long Day's Journey into Night. Read about our November issue: bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/november-2018-issue See all our London Film Festival 2018 online coverage: bfi.org.uk/sight-sound-magazine/london-film-festival-2018
“Very rare are the movie depictions of restaurant work that evoke the mental and emotional dissonance required to get through an eight-hour shift,” April Wolfe wrote in her Film Comment review of Support the Girls. “Andrew Bujalski's Support the Girls—which takes place predominantly within a topsy-turvy 24-hour period, as the manager of a T&A sports bar juggles the concerns of every needy patron and employee—portrays precisely that odd mix of knowing self-abjection and bubbling, flirtatious confidence present in real-life restaurant workers.” The portrayal of work on screen is a practically inexhaustible topic for study, but recently we dipped a toe into the discussion, with a little help. A few weeks before the fall festival glut, I joined filmmaker/critic Sierra Pettengill, author of the Chick Strand feature in our September/October issue, for an interview/discussion with Bujalski concerning Support the Girls and the challenges of depicting work on screen.
In episode forty-nine of movies imo., Ben, Brandon, and Daniel (tele-conferencing from quarantine) yell over each other about mumblecore maestro Andrew Bujalski's slyly incisive SUPPORT THE GIRLS before going on to discuss his first film FUNNY HA HA and his recent physical fitness romcom RESULTS. Ben refuses to buy Bujalski's brand but adores Junglepussy's breakout performance, Daniel stans for the brilliant smelting in Regina Hall's star turn, and Brandon single-handedly beats the drum for Haley Lu Richardson in Kogonada's COLUMBUS. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Josh is joined by recurring guest Hannah Couture to discuss two indie movies that are holding us over until Oscar season, Andrew Bujalski's Support the Girls (Beginning-33:56) and Juliet, Naked (33:57-End).
Welcome, one and all, to the latest installment of The Film Stage Show! Today, Michael Snydel, Bill Graham, and I are joined by Nathan Smith to talk about Andrew Bujalski's workplace-set comedy-drama Support the Girls (now available to stream) and what's under its crowd-pleasing surface. Enter our giveaways, get access to our private Slack channel, and support new episodes by becoming a Patreon contributor. The Film Stage is supported by MUBI, a curated online cinema streaming a selection of exceptional independent, classic, and award-winning films from around the world. Each day, MUBI hand-picks a new gem and you have one month to watch it. Try it for free at mubi.com/filmstage.
Siblo and Whalen begin a month immersed in Seijun Suzuki's esoteric crime films with 1963's Youth of the Beast (30:40). In Rad Ticket, your Carpeteers wrestle with the puerile pleasures and harsh critical reception of Brian Henson's The Happytime Murders (4:25) while Siblo dishes quick takes on Andrew Bujalski's latest, Support the Girls (22:20).
Christopher Cross and Dylan Schwan decide to take a detour from Kin to Support the Girls, the new Andrew Bujalski film. Do they find it funny, crowdpleasing, and thought provoking? With such a great cast, do they fulfil the promise of their talent and then some? Find out right here. Once again we're a little too busy for any new movies aside from the main review this week so we talk about what we're excited for now that festival season is upon us. Hear us speculate on Suspiria, A Star Is Born, The Favourite, First Man, etc. Next week, Chris and Dylan look to the past before we hit the future with the 1987 classic, Predator. Believe it or not, Chris actually hasn't seen Predator so we thought it would be a good time to talk about it just before Shane Black's entry into the franchise. Will Chris do us dirty with a bad take on Predator? Let's hope not! You can find Film Fallout every week on iTunes, Soundcloud, Facebook, and Instagram, as well as anything else that pulls an RSS Feed. The podcast (@filmfalloutcast), Chris (@HammerkopCross), and Dylan (@DreaminDylanS) are also on Twitter. You can also find Chris' film writing at goombastomp.com. Please feel free to share the podcast with anyone who may enjoy it, and rate and subscribe on iTunes to help spread the word as much as possible! Intro & Outro Music: Waiting Room by Fugazi
It's time to tackle whitewashing, the glut of streaming services, and toxic fandom head-on (but in a lighthearted way)! As we applaud the success of Crazy Rich Asians, we raise an eyebrow to the DC Universe debut and reflect upon the uproar surrounding the Battlestar Galactica reboot and an entitled audience. Other stories this month include a look at the premise of NBC's Manifest, speculation on what the Monument Valley animated movie in development will look like, and the often-overlooked but visionary work by Alfred Hitchcock, Rope. Our bonus item is an interview with Andrew Bujalski, screenwriter and director of Support the Girls. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Writer-director Andrew Bujalski discusses learning guerrilla filmmaking at Harvard, making his first film Funny, Ha Ha and the tricky tone of his latest film Support the Girls which takes place in a sexist sports bar. Support the Girls is about the general manager (Regina Hall) of a "sports bar with curves" who manages to have optimism and faith in her staff and customers throughout the course of a very challenging day. Don’t forget to subscribe to the Write On Podcast on iTunes!
In Andrew Bujalski’s comedy Lisa (Regina Hall) is the last person you'd expect to find in a highway-side "sports bar with curves,"-- but as general manager at Double Whammies, she's come to love the place, and its customers. An instinctive den mother, she nurtures and protects her ‘girls’ on the staff fiercely -- but over the course of one trying day, her optimism is battered from every direction... Double Whammies sells a big, weird American fantasy, but what happens when reality pokes a bunch of holes in it? Director Andrew Bujalski's Statement - It seems like just about the simplest business concept you could imagine -- "What if all the waitresses in this restaurant wore tight, cleavage-y halter tops?"-- but I couldn't get over how bizarre it ultimately was. No culture besides present-day America would ever produce mass-scale demand for such a place, a business that seems about 10% strip club and 90% TGI Friday's / Applebee's / Chili's / Cracker Barrel. Strippers are supposed to make men feel like badass transgressors. But these women are just supposed to make you feel normal -- the proverbial "red-blooded American male." You don't see many stories set in this slice of Americana, and with good reason. It does not lend itself to grand dramatic arcs, or, really, to gut-busting comedy. But it certainly is full of contradictions, and incredibly fertile with opportunities for subtle spiritual conflicts. I couldn't pretend to untangle these from an insider's perspective, so I dreamed up a kind of outsider character, Lisa the general manager, to walk in there with a spirit of openness and love -- and plenty of her own pathologies--to see what she might discover in there. While it is a very specific story in many ways, I hope that anyone who's ever worked for a living will relate. Most of us have to buy/sell one crazy "concept" or another to pay our bills, and some days, you're not sure if your humor and dignity will survive to the end of the shift… Director and writer Andrew Bujalski (Beeswax, Computer Chess, Results) joins us to talk about his insightful “girl power” comedic drama with a ground-level take on masculine hurly-burly in a vanishing American paradigm. For news and updates go to: supportthegirlsfilm.com
Here at AFS, we're big fans of Austin-based filmmaker and so-called "Godfather of Mumblecore" Andrew Bujalski. Later this month, Bujalski's newest film SUPPORT THE GIRLS opens around the country, including at AFS Cinema. Our Lead Programmer Lars Nilsen recently sat down with the filmmaker for a conversation about living and working in Austin, his thoughts on Hollywood movies and whether or not we would ever direct a Marvel picture, what he makes of the word "mumblecore" now, and why he will still drop everything to see a 35mm print in theaters.
Capítulo 194 - Torneos y competencias Conducción: Diego Cirulo Invitado: Nicolás Aponte El juego, como elemento central en las sociedades, posee diversas aristas que pueden pasar desde lo sencillamente lúdico y recreativo, hasta la consolidación de complejas construcciones relacionadas con estadísticas, sistemas y poder. Es así como seleccionamos cuatro películas: "A league of their own" (Penny Marshal, 1992), "The gladiators" (Gladiatorerna, Peter Watkins, 1969), "Computer chess" (Andrew Bujalski, 2013), y "Moneyball" (Bennett Miller, 2011). A jugar. Producción general: Diego Cirulo, Fabio Villalba. Locución: Daniela Jorquera Música original: Bahía Blanca
Capítulo 194 - Torneos y competencias Conducción: Diego Cirulo Invitado: Nicolás Aponte El juego, como elemento central en las sociedades, posee diversas aristas que pueden pasar desde lo sencillamente lúdico y recreativo, hasta la consolidación de complejas construcciones relacionadas con estadísticas, sistemas y poder. Es así como seleccionamos cuatro películas: "A league of their own" (Penny Marshal, 1992), "The gladiators" (Gladiatorerna, Peter Watkins, 1969), "Computer chess" (Andrew Bujalski, 2013), y "Moneyball" (Bennett Miller, 2011). A jugar. Producción general: Diego Cirulo, Fabio Villalba. Locución: Daniela Jorquera Música original: Bahía Blanca
Directorial Debuts Theme - Nate Parker's controversial Birth of a Nation, Andrew Bujalski's mumblecore-founding Funny Haha and QT's Reservoir Dogs
Hailed as one of the rising stars of the DIY/indie film scene at the turn of the 21st century -- including a "favorite filmmaker" designation by perennial bellwether critic Amy Taubin and a "Someone To Watch" Award given by the Independent Spirit Awards -- Andrew Bujalski, rather unwittingly, has been called the pioneer of the so-called "Mumblecore" movement in cinema. Perhaps the most recent alternative film ethos (or maybe just a marketing catchall by lazy journalists -- you decide), Mumblecore has boasted such "graduates" as Greta Gerwig, the Duplass Bros., Lynn Shelton and Joe Swanberg, amongst many others. And it all started -- for good or ill -- with Bujalski, whose films include Funny Ha Ha, Mutual Appreciation and Computer Chess. As the Mumblecore gang has grown up, with Bujalski himself having had recent mainstream success with his Support the Girls and screenplay for Disney's upcoming live-action Lady and the Tramp, we can now ask: What happens when film nerds and geeks become major movie stars and big-time directors? Find out on the this episode of NERTZ when Bujalski does far more than merely ... ahem ... MUMBLE his own thoughts on the answer.
Awkward Celebrity Encounters: Andrew Bujalski by Caveh Zahedi
Il film di cui parliamo questa settimana è "Joy", terzo capitolo della collaborazione tra David O. Russel e Jennifer Lawrence (e Bradley Cooper e Robert De Niro, ma meno rispetto a "Il lato positivo"). È un film che non sa bene dove vuole andare a parare, e si perde: peccato, perché sfrutta male una brava attrice e fa girare a vuoto un bravo regista.Per quelli di voi interessati, http://www.truestoriesforfilm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/screenplay-joy.pdf qui trovate la sceneggiatura originale di Joy, scritta da Anna Mumolo, prima che Russel ci mettesse mano.Nel frattempo Matteo ha visto una sfilza di film, nelle ultime settimane, e quelli su cui si sofferma di più sono "Results", una commedia indipendente di Andrew Bujalski, con Cobie Smulders, Guy Pearce e Kevin Corrigan (non è un film perfetto: ma ha un sacco di pregi), e "A Royal Weekend", con Bill Murray e Laura Linney (etereo, forse troppo).
On this episode we talk about one of our favorite films of the year, Andrew Bujalski’s RESULTS. This film is about two personal trainers played by Guy Pearce and Cobie Smulders whose lives are altered when a rich client arrives seeking to improve himself but finding the trainers themselves to be searching for something as well. This inspires a conversation on benefactors in film, and we start with the grandaddy of them all in Charles Dickens' GREAT EXPECTATIONS. It goes up against James Gray’s latest love triangle set in a world of crime, with Joaquin Phoenix and Jeremy Renner both promising a better life for Marion Cotillard in THE IMMIGRANT. We also debate the effect that crickets and a computer fan can have on the sound quality of a podcast.
Writer-director Andrew Bujalski and actors Guy Pearce and Kevin Corrigan discuss their offbeat comedy, Results.
Your move, listeners. What's that? No, you can't castle your king a second time! Dammit, you don't know the rules of chess! That's okay, because now there are computers who can play the game for us! This phenomenon dates back to the 1980's, which is the setting for Andrew Bujalski's one-of-a-kind comedy, "Computer Chess." This indie film was shot using a black and white Sony videocamera from 1968, lending the film a highly authentic look and feel. Perfect casting, costumes and production design also give this mumblecore flick a disarming naturalness. But what's happening onscreen is often weird and hilarious. A computer chess tournament is the premise, but this film explores issues of artificial intelligence, organic emotions vs. programmed technology, and lots of long-haired cats roaming around in elevators and hotel hallways. There is also an inexplicable scene that is in vivid color. Bonus points to any listener who can explain the purpose of that. Jeff, a return listener, makes this film his third recommendation for "In the Queue." Glad to have you back, Jeff! Tune in to hear Phil and Andrew's opinions on "Computer Chess", a film the likes of which you have never seen!You can download the podcast here by right-clicking on the hypertext link and choosing "save as", or you can use the convenient player located below:If you cannot see the audio controls, listen/download the audio file here
On this edition of the podcast Robert Davis and J. Robert Parks talk about Spike Jonze's HER and Andrew Bujalski's COMPUTER CHESS.
¡Bienvenidos al decimocuarto programa de nuestra tercera temporada (o el 93 contando todos)! Hola amiguitos. Esta semana, como siempre, empezamos con la "Semana en Serie", donde hablaremos los primeros episodios de Betas [Amazon] y Äkta människor (Real Humans) [SVT], todo sin spoilers. Después nos vamos a la "Cata de pelis" donde esta semana os hablamos de la película Computer Chess [Andrew Bujalski, 2013] que no nos ha convencido mucho. Si queréis saber qué películas y documentales vamos viendo, podéis verlo en nuestro perfil de Letterboxd. Luego nos vamos "A la Cocina" donde Valen os cuenta cómo se hace la lactonesa y también una escalivada, dos recetas sencillas y que valen para muchas cosas. Para acabar, vamos a la "Sobremesa", donde comentamos nuestra vida, nuestro trabajo, cantamos, vuestros mensajes de Twitter y el blog... Muchísimas gracias a todos por vuestro apoyo y vuestros mensajes de ánimo. Seguid así, preguntando, comentando, reseñando en iTunes y todo lo que queráis. Si queréis comentar libremente detalles de las tramas de las series de las que hablamos, podéis hacerlo escribiendo entre las etiquetas de spoiler el texto que queráis ocultar, tal como muestra la imagen: Por si os da pereza escuchar todo el podcast (o tenéis que saltaros cosas por los spoilers), aquí os dejamos los tiempos para que vayáis directamente a lo que más os interese, esperamos que os guste mucho y que, si no os gusta, nos digáis por qué, para que podamos mejorar: 0:00'00 PRESENTACIÓN 0:03'15 SEMANA EN SERIE: 0:03'45 - Betas (Piloto, Amazon). 0:11'47 - Äkta Människor (Piloto). 0:29'43 CATA DE PELIS: 0:30'34 - Computer Chess (Andrew Bujalski, 2013). 0:50'44 LA COCINA: 0:51'10 - Receta: Lactonesa. 0:56'15 -Receta: Escalivada. 1:00'20 PROMO: Infrapodcast. 1:01'29 LA SOBREMESA 1:22'15 DISCLAIMER. La música que se puede escuchar durante el podcast la hemos sacado de Jamendo y los temas son, por orden de aparición: Mai en l'oblit (Clepton/Seguint el joc), FunkyYeahYeah (Rod/You Are The One), Alien Rampage (Marc Teichert/The Founder), Comedy & Drama Demo (Cesc Vilà/Drama & Comedy Demo), Not in service (Freeze/Freeze - Volume 2), VoxyClavi (Rod/Yoy Are The One) y À la légère (Chriss Onac/Resonance). También nos podéis escuchar en iVoox y en iTunes.
This week Sean and Mike shut out the rest of the world and get lost in their own infinite loops as they tackle Andrew Bujalski's 2013 film Computer Chess and Satyajit Ray's 1977 The Chess Players. They also run-down their plans for list-making season, make fun of the Independent Spirit Awards and talk about how great Terrence Malick is on the occasion of his 70th birthday.
Montages ser to Xavier Dolans siste film «Tom à la ferme» og den meget spesielle «Computer Chess» fra regissør Andrew Bujalski.
This week's episode of Beginnings is an oldie (as in a month and half old) but a goodie (as in the guests were super-fun). Earlier in the summer, I was invited to host a live Beginnings down in Austin, Texas right before Labor Day weekend as part of the Out of Bounds comedy festival. While the venue - the corner of a coffeeshop - was perhaps not the best place to record a podcast, we had some amazing guests that brought their A-game. Along with my lovely fiancee, stand-up Naomi Ekperigin, I was joined by film directors Todd Rohal (The Catechism Cataclysm, Nature Calls) and Andrew Bujalski (Funny Ha Ha, Computer Chess) and stand-up Joe DeRosa (Return of the Son of Depression Auction, Opie and Anthony), and we had a wide-ranging discussion about angry childhood experiences, the best start to a fight ever, Prince, telepathic spiders, high school rap dreams, horrifying tales of summer camp, and Little Caesars. And in the second half of the show, I talk to improviser and actor Dan Fox about bullying and being bullied at school. Thanks for listening!Check out the website for Beginnings, subscribe on iTunes, and follow me on Twitter!
This week: pioneering indie filmmaker Andrew Bujalski plays “Computer Chess” and speaks up about mumblecore… SCTV alum and Tony-winner Andrea Martin gets car-jacked, politely… Debut novelist Gabriel Roth debuts a list of debuts… “Blackfish” director Gabriela Cowperthwaite plunges into controversy… and NYC’s Russ & Daughters celebrate herring season by teaching Brendan to eat like a marine […]
An in depth chat with Andrew Bujalski, writer-director of such films as Funny Ha-Ha (forerunner of the so-called mumblecore movement), Mutual Appreciation, Beeswax, and the upcoming Computer Chess. Recorded June 7, 2012.
Cyrus is the latest film from Jay and Mark Duplass, a is a comedy-drama about a lonely divorcee (John C. Reilly) who finally meets the woman of his dreams (Marisa Tomei), only to discover that she has an over-protective son (Jonah Hill). After breaking through on the US festival scene with low-budget films such as The Puffy Chair (2005) and Baghead (2008), the Duplass Brothers quickly became associated with the term ‘mumblecore’. It was a loose phrase used to describe a certain kind of US indie movie, often focusing on introspective twenty-somethings and shot on tiny budgets using documentary-style techniques. Directors such as Andrew Bujalski, Lynn Shelton, Aaron Katz and Joe Swanberg all had the label applied to their films, which stood out from the increasingly expensive indie scene of the early and mid-2000s. Since then, the genre has arguably been absorbed into the mainstream with Greenberg – the Ben Stiller comedy featuring mumblecore regular Greta Gerwig – and now Cyrus, which sees the Duplass Brothers take their style of filmmaking to the division of a major studio (Fox Searchlight). I recently spoke with Jay Duplass in London about the new film, what the term mumblecore means to him now and the transition from ultra-low budget indies to the studio system.File Download (0:00 min / 7 MB)
Colin Marshall talks to Andrew Bujalski, the young director of the films Funny Ha Ha, Mutual Appreciation and Beeswax, which is newly available on DVD. Though Bujalski’s funny, realistic movies are often considered by critics to be of a similar genius to other independently-produced pictures of the 2000s focusing on the personal relationships of twentysomethings, they possess an intellect and an aesthetic all their own.