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This week on Peanuts and Popcorn, we start with the popcorn with our reviews of two more Best Picture nominees, Leo's pick, Bradley Cooper's Maestro, and Tom's pick, Poor Things with Emma Stone. In Peanuts, we open the bag with great hope and anticipation as Spring Training has begun in Arizona and Florida. Players in both sites are having difficulties with the Nike's special Spring Training uniforms. An arrest is made in the vandalization of a Jackie Robinson statue, and we will talk about “The Black Aces”, a handful of African-American pitchers who have each won 20 games in the Majors. Next Show: Leo's Pick: American Fiction (2023) Tom's Pick: Anatomy of a Fall (2023)
In our 90th episode we conduct two more reviews with a trip back in time; Bradley Cooper's Maestro, his stylish biopic of about the legendary composer Leonard Bernstein, and 'About Time', Richard Curtis' time travelling fantasy comedy drama. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In part 5 of our Oscar's catch up series, we take a look at Bradley Cooper's Maestro! A Biopic that contains both the best and worst the genre has to offer. Then: Matt and Scott each select 5 of their most anticipated films of 2024. Support us on Patreon Follow us on Twitter: @doofmedia See all of our podcasts, writing, and more at doofmedia.com! Show Notes: 2:06 - Maestro 1:02:07 - Our Top 5 most anticipated films
This month we're joined by writer, critic, and editor Nicholas Russell to chat about Bradley Cooper's Maestro (2023). We get into: what makes a Bradley Cooper Film (thanks Fran), when weird voices work, that epigraph, tension as structure and provocation, what's going on with the ending, getting moved by Mahler, and more. -- The Bright Wall/Dark Room Podcast is co-hosted by Veronica Fitzpatrick and Chad Perman, and produced & edited by Eli Sands. Our theme music is composed by Chad. You can find every single issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room, including our January issue on The Best of 2023, at brightwalldarkroom.com. We really, really appreciate your ratings & reviews. We're on Twitter @BWDR and @TheBWDRPodcast, and welcome feedback and inquiries at podcast@brightwalldarkroom.com. And, to the best of our knowledge, we have never once abandoned Snoopy in the vestibule. -- This episode is sponsored by Galerie, a new kind of film club. This month's featured curator is writer/director James Gray. BW/DR readers & listeners can sign up for two free months of access here.
Today we have a double feature of a review as Glenn and Joe dive into two very different films: Bradley Cooper's Maestro and Miyazaki's swan song, The Boy and the Heron.
Wesley Morris has served as critic at large at The New York Times since 2015, covering film, politics, and pop culture. He joins this week to discuss this year's Academy Award nominations. At the top, we discuss the omission of Greta Gerwig from the Best Director category (6:07), former Secretary Clinton on Barbie-gate (10:12), the ‘perversely effective' nature of Killers of the Flower Moon (16:30), and the ways in which Bradley Cooper's Maestro upends the traditional biopic (21:45). Wesley then reflects on his early adventures in moviegoing (30:43), the indie film boom of the late ‘90s (35:15), the rise of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (36:23) what the Best Picture nominations of 1988 can tell us about 2023's slate (38:05), and the erosion of the ‘middle' across film and culture (41:02). On the back-half: Todd Haynes' beguiling new film May December (44:10), Ava DuVernay's Origin (45:53), the Academy's fraught relationship to diversity (53:05), the function of Wesley's work in 2024 (1:05:58) and a reading of his moving, personal review about Alexander Payne's The Holdovers (1:10:54). For questions, comments, or to join our mailing list, reach me at sf@talkeasypod.com. This conversation was recorded at Spotify Studios.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bradley Cooper's Maestro is the focus of this episode. Also, Jared and Joe recommend two December releases, Michael eliminates some older blind spots, and together they discuss the demise of the cool movie star.
It's January and in the world of film and entertainment that means awards season is in full swing. Lisa Hrabluk tells us about one of this year's favourites, Bradley Cooper's Maestro, a biopic about American composer and conductor, Leonard Bernstein
This episode we're back with our first 2024 show. We cover Bradley Cooper's “Maestro” and Dave Chappelle's “The Dreamer”. Also, we delve into sex in movies and the mental toll comedy can take on someone. Comedy is dangerous. If you join our patreon you'll get bonus episodes and a free copy of my CD “Lou Diamond Phillips?” which was voted one of the the Top 10 Comedy Albums the year it came out alongside Louis CK and Mitch Hedberg. Thank you. https://patreon.com/LE2B?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link
Can two Oscar-bait biopics occupy the same point of space at the same moment in awards season? We dive into history with Bradley Cooper's Maestro and Michael Mann's Ferrari alongside soon-to-be-no-more Ingenious Brewing and a new Texas brewery find, Frankenboltzzzz Brewing. One of them is a golden stout, so you know there's plenty to talk about.
This episode has a bit of everything: a spoiler-free review of Yorgos Lanthimos' “Poor Things,” threats to The Academy, answers to some frequently asked mailbag questions, a spoiler-filled review of Bradley Cooper's “Maestro,” and a breathtaking note from a fan.Follow @WAYW_Podcast on Twitter and Instagram and Letterboxd.Watch Alex's films at http://alexwithrow.com/Watch Nick's films at https://www.nicholasdostal.com/Send us mailbag questions at whatareyouwatchingpodcast@gmail.com
T.J. Holmes and Amy Robach discussed how they each handle arguments. You might think ‘The Crown' would have used Prince Harry's best-selling memoir as source material, but apparently it didn't make the cut. The former “View” cohost went off on awards season movies after admitting she struggled to get through Bradley Cooper's new film. Don't forget to vote in today's poll on Twitter at @naughtynicerob or in our Facebook group.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bradley Cooper's Maestro is our last movie-menswear movie bonus pod of the year! We discuss the film and how it stacks up to Tár in terms of portraying a conductor/composer. We also dive into the style of both IRL and Film Lenny Bernstein, who dressed with ease in what seems to be EVERY possible facet of menswear. It seems that Summer needs to sing in you not just to make music, but to get a fit off. This is just the first few minutes of the bonus pod, so you'll have to subscribe on Patreon for the full listen! Ethan's Essay: https://alittlebitofrest.com/2023/12/26/the-menswear-of-leonard-bernstein-maestro-2023/ Subscribe on patreon for the full episode as well as access to our Discord! https://www.patreon.com/styleanddirection/ Follow us on Instagram! @StyleandDirection @EthanMWong @SpencerDSO Podcast is produced by MJ Kintanar
Full Hour | In today's second hour, Dom leads off the Dom Giordano Program by offering updates on marijuana legalization in New Jersey, discussing with Dan whether the State is seeing the predicted benefit of heightened tax revenues. Then, Dom recaps the year of the show, thanking listeners and taking calls, and playing back some of his favorite drops from the year. Then, Dom welcomes in media critic Scott Cronick, who tells of his disappointment in Bradley Cooper's Maestro, and tells what's worth checking out over the weekend, both at home and in theaters. (Photo by Getty Images)
Today on Art of the Cut, we're talking with Emmy and ACE Eddie winning editor, Michelle Tesoro, ACE about editing Bradley Cooper's Maestro. Michelle won an Emmy and an ACE Eddie for editing Queen's Gambit. She also edited the feature films Flag Day and On the Basis of Sex. And TV series including Fringe, House of Cards, When They See Us, and Ballers.
This week, it's our bumper Christmas episode! Amon speaks to Lee Child about bringing his hero back to the small screen for REACHER season two (5:49), and CHICKEN RUN: DAWN OF THE NUGGET director Sam Fell about the return of Aardman Animation's pluckiest fowls (1:48:23). Meanwhile, we travel to a galaxy far, far away for Zack Snyder's REBEL MOON – PART ONE: A CHILD OF FIRE (27:37), the concert hall for Bradley Cooper's MAESTRO (57:22), and the shores of Japan for Hayao Miyazaki's THE BOY AND THE HERON (1:18:56) and Takashi Yamazaki's GODZILLA MINUS ONE (1:34:25). Plus, in our HOT TAKE (2:04:42), we debate the best non-Christmas movies to watch at Christmas. If you would like to donate towards humanitarian aid in Gaza please visit https://www.map.org.uk/ https://www.unicef.org/emergencies/children-gaza-desperate-need-lifesaving-support If you'd like to join the conversation or suggest a Hot Take for the gang to discuss tweet us at @FadeToBlackPod Follow us: @amonwarmann, @clarisselou, @hannaflint If you like the show do subscribe, leave a review and rate us too!
Netflix revealed their most-watched content from the year…. Plus, a very special red carpet debut took place at Bradley Cooper's “Maestro” movie premiere.
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Tuesday December 12, 2023 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In their final episode of 2023, Rebecca and Jason celebrate the holidays with four crushingly dark and frequently depraved awards contenders: Todd Haynes' MAY DECEMBER, Emerald Fennell's SALTBURN, William Oldroyd's EILEEN, and Bradley Cooper's MAESTRO.
Caroline Frost chats to Kelly-Anne Taylor about the best things coming up on the box this week Follow our hosts on Twitter (@KA1_Taylor and @FrostReporter) and Instagram (@kellyannect and @frostreporter) You can get in touch with our hosts on either their soicial media, or via email (podcast@radiotimes.com) and Spotify users can write in directly using the Q&A box at the bottom of the episode. SHOW NOTES: TV: Vigil S2, BBC1 The Crown, Netflix Jamie's Christmas Shortcuts, C4 The Dog House at Christmas, C4 FILM: Wonka, in cinemas from 8 December Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two, ITV THE ARCHIVE: The Crown, Netflix Happy Viewing! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week Izzy and Murtada discuss Emerald Fennell's Saltburn and Bradley Cooper's Maestro, two films they are largely less than enthusiastic about. They analyze Saltburn's odd politics and character motivations (or lack thereof), while digging into Cooper's motivations for turning Maestro from a conventional biopic into a portrait of a marriage (of all things). Follow the show on Twitter and Instagram: @IMPictureShow.To hear more from Izzy and Murtada check them out on social media: Izzy (Twitter: @bkrewind, IG: @bk_rewind); Murtada (Twitter: @ME_Says, IG: murtada_e).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Daniel, Shahbaz, & Anthony review Bradley Cooper's MAESTRO. The film is written by Bradley Cooper from a screenplay co-written with Josh Singer. It was produced by Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Cooper, among others. The film stars Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein alongside Carey Mulligan as Montealegre; Matt Bomer, Maya Hawke, and Sarah Silverman appear in supporting roles. Maestro plays in select theatres beginning December 1, 2023, followed by a worldwide release on Netflix December 20, 2023. Watch and listen to The Movie Podcast now on all podcast feeds, YouTube, and TheMoviePodcast.ca Get a whole month of great cinema FREE on MUBI: mubi.com/themoviepodcast Contact: hello@themoviepodcast.ca FOLLOW US Daniel on X, Instagram, Rotten Tomatoes, and Letterboxd Shahbaz on X, Instagram, Rotten Tomatoes, and Letterboxd Anthony on X, Instagram, Rotten Tomatoes, and Letterboxd The Movie Podcast on YouTube, X, Instagram, TikTok, Discord, and Rotten Tomatoes Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's another jam-packed episode of the Empire Podcast this week, folks. First, Chris Hewitt sits down on Zoom with ace composer and musician, Jon Batiste, and Matthew Heineman, about their new documentary, American Symphony; then he battles an uncooperative microphone stand and emerges with an enormously fun interview with Napoleon stars, Joaquin Phoenix and Vanessa Kirby; and lastly two walking Disney encyclopaedias meet, as our Ben Travis sits down with Jennifer Lee, the writer of this week's Wish and Chief Creative Officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios. On either side of all of those is a fun episode in which Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara and James Dyer to discuss the actor whose back catalogue they would choose to watch for the rest of their lives; natter about the week's movie news; and review Napoleon, Bradley Cooper's Maestro, George C. Wolfe's Rustin, and Wish. And yes, Chris does know he misquoted Dodgeball. First the Attack of the Clones review, now this: Film Twitter will find his resignation on their desk first thing tomorrow. As for this episode: enjoy. RUNNING ORDER (all timings approx.)INTRO/LISTENERS QUESTION: 0:00.00 - 20:13.00JON BATISTEMOVIE NEWS: 38:33.00 - 1:01:14.00JOAQUIN PHOENIX & VANESSA KIRBYREVIEWS: 1:19:03.00 - 1:43:45.00JENNIFER LEE & OUTRO
On episode 206 of The AwardsWatch Podcast, Executive Editor Ryan McQuade is joined by AwardsWatch contributor Sophia Ciminello recap the AFI FEST 2023. Before they get into their final festival experience of the year, the 2023 Gotham Awards were announced last week, giving us the first nominations of the upcoming Oscar season. Voted on by a jury system of selected critics, the films listed comprised of some of the best indie films of the year, including Past Lives, Passages, Showing Up, A Thousand and One, All of Us Strangers and more. This year, the organization removed the budget cap requirements, which limited the film's that could be considered for consideration to anything made for less than $35 million. Once they were done discussing that, Ryan and Sophia moved on to briefly talk about a big release that debuted in theaters while the podcast was off last week, Killers of the Flower Moon, and why it is one of the best films of the year, in their opinion. After they were done talking about Scorsese's latest, they moved on to the AFI FEST, that saw the world premieres of films like Leave the World Behind and Freud's Last Session and closed with Bradley Cooper's Maestro. Ryan and Sophia talk about those films, as well as their thoughts on Perfect Days, La Chimera, American Fiction, and two highlights, A Matter of Life and Death and All That Jazz, from Greta Gerwig's special Guest Director section, showcasing five big screen classics. You can listen to The AwardsWatch Podcast wherever you stream podcasts, from iTunes, iHeartRadio, Soundcloud, Stitcher, Spotify, Audible, Amazon Music and more. This podcast runs 1h27m. We will be back next week to talk about a really fun topic, our Top 5 Modern Movie Stars. Till then, let's get into it. Music: “Modern Fashion” from AShamaleuvmusic (intro), “B-3” from BoxCat Games Nameless: The Hackers RPG Soundtrack (outro)
The 61st New York Film Festival closed up shop last weekend, which means that it was once again time for Film Comment's Festival Report, our annual live overview of the NYFF that was. FC co-deputy editors Devika Girish and Clinton Krute convened an all-star team of critics—Molly Haskell, Adam Nayman, and Kelli Weston—for a spirited wrap-up discussion about the highlights and lowlights from the NYFF60 lineup. In front of a lively audience, the panel discuss and debate Todd Haynes's May December, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi's Evil Does Not Exist, Jonathan Glazer's The Zone of Interest, Bradley Cooper's Maestro, Bertrand Bonello's The Beast, Sofia Coppola's Priscilla, Thien An Pham's Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell, Yorgos Lanthimos's Poor Things, and and many other noteworthy selections. Find all of our coverage of NYFF61 here: https://www.filmcomment.com/blog/category/festivals/nyff/nyff-2023/
Want to ask a question to address in a future episode? Send us your question in an email to 'lowkeygeek.network@gmail.com' with the subject line: "MovieTime Question" and we may feature it in next week's episode! In this week's episode of MovieTime: - Rene recovers from NYFF - Is Stop Making Sense the best concet film ever made? - Maestro movie review & discussion - Reviewing critic responses to Maestro - What are Maestro's awards chances? How to support the SAG-AFTRA Strike: Entertainment Community Fund - Film & TV Workers: https://tinyurl.com/3huvwcum Entertainment Community Fund - Support Staff Relief Fund: https://tinyurl.com/ykhmwvca SAG-AFTRA Foundation: https://members.sagfoundation.org/donate List of other ways to support: https://tinyurl.com/24w89uy5 NEW MERCH SHOP Proud to announce the new opening of popcouture.shop where you can find channel merch but also pop culture related merch. If you're a fan of movies, tv, video games, etc...this will be the place for you! Use the special code below to get yourself 15% OFF your entire purchase! Check out the shop for geeks who are chic! Code: LOWKEYGEEK Link: https://www.popcouture.shop ► The gear we use on this channel: https://amzn.to/3L79c1Y ► Sign up for Surfshark VPN and get 85% OFF + 2 Free Months: https://bit.ly/3ZLU5Cn ► Bulletproof Coffee - 20% Off with code LOWKEYGEEK20: https://tinyurl.com/4t3utz47 ► Get 3 months of UNLIMITED DATA for only $15/mo with Mint Mobile: https://mint-mobile.58dp.net/LOWKEYGEEK Follow Us --------------------------------------------------- Twitter: https://twitter.com/the_lowkey_geek Instagram: http://instagram.com/the_lowkey_geek Threads: https://www.threads.net/@the_lowkey_geek Follow the Team on Letterboxd ----------------- Blake Wolf: https://letterboxd.com/lastnamewolf/ Rene A. Zelada: https://letterboxd.com/TheLowkeyGeek/ #movies #film #cinema #nyff #nyff61 #stopmakingsense #a24 #maestro #maestromovie #bradleycooper #careymulligan #movietime #podcast #moviereview #filmreview --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lowkeygeek/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lowkeygeek/support
On this week's broadcast, the guys are going over the weekend box office, checking out the trailer for John Woo's Silent Night, chatting about The Exorcist: Believer, Pet Sematary: Bloodlines, and more films from our continuing coverage of the 61st New York Film Festival, including Harmony Korine's AGGRO DR1FT, Bradley Cooper's Maestro, Sofia Coppola's Priscilla, and more! Get your tickets for our Spooktacular Worldwide Digital Experience on 10/26 where we're talking Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter! This is of course the audio-only edition of On-Screen Live, if you want the full experience, check out the show on our YouTube channel. Watch live Mondays at 12pm/et or catch the replay whenever. While you're there, be sure to like this episode and subscribe to the channel! Set up notifications so you don't miss a moment of new content from us! Want more WHM? Join our Patreon fam today and instantly unlock hours and hours of exclusive bonus content, starting as low as $2 a month—with the all-new AD-FREE We Hate Movies starting at the $8 level! Be sure to get in early and get your tickets for the WHM Holiday Extravaganza where we're talking The Santa Clause! Check out the WHM Merch Store featuring new Polish Decoy, Forrest the Universal Soldier, and 'Jack Kirby' designs!
We were thrilled to have screenwriter Josh Singer, producer Kristie Macosko Krieger, Leonard Bernstein's daughter Jamie Bernstein, makeup designer Kazu Hiro, costume designer Mark Bridges, production designer Kevin Thompson, production sound mixer Steve Morrow, and Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the conducting consultant and conductor for new recordings and Music Director of The Metropolitan Opera, discuss their work on Bradley Cooper's Maestro, the Spotlight Gala selection of NYFF61, with NYFF Main Slate committee member Justin Chang. In his directorial follow-up to A Star Is Born, Bradley Cooper dramatizes the public and private lives of legendary musician Leonard Bernstein with sensitivity, visual ingenuity, and symphonic splendor. Coasting on the boundless energy of its subject's runaway genius, Maestro transports the viewer back to a vividly re-created postwar New York, when Bernstein (Cooper) began his stratospheric rise to international fame as both a conductor and composer, and also when he first met Felicia (Carey Mulligan), the actress whom he would marry and spend his life with. Maestro is a tender, often intensely emotional film about the different faces one wears when living in the public eye, depicting the complicated yet devoted decades-spanning relationship between Leonard and Felicia. Fueled by Cooper and Mulligan's perfectly matched duet of towering performances, Matthew Libatique's balletic cinematography, and, of course, Bernstein's thrilling music, Maestro is a tour de force for its director. A Netflix release. Don't forget to mark your calendars: Maestro opens in theaters on November 22 and on Netflix December 20. Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
Welcome back to another week of movie news!Rob, Dave and Triz (The Oues) scour the web for everything happening in the movie and TV biz so you don't have to!Listen in as we break down:Streaming News- What is Bradley Cooper's "Maestro"?- Warner/Discovery plans have been confirmed!- Netflix changes release strategy!Film News- Magnolia acquires "King's Land" with Mads Mikkelsen!- Mortal Kombat director taking on "Omega" for Sony!Entertainment News- RIP Bo Hopkins- Robert Eggers talks "The Northman" box office fallout!- Kathleen Kennedy and Jon Favreau talk the future of Star Wars!Our Thoughts on:- We Own This City Finale- Under The Banner of Heaven Finale- The Offer E07- Obi-Wan Kenobi E03- The Boys E1-3
On this episode, Maddy and Lara discuss the political and sartorial choices in Sidney Lumet's 1973 corrupt cop drama Serpico. Digressions include Bradley Cooper's Maestro, the 1974 Oscars, the 2021 Oscars (this episode was recorded in December so there's a lot of conjecture happening here), TikTok recasting, ghosts, Robert De Niro, Solo: A Star Wars Story, and Jeremy Strong. Francis Ford Coppola in conversation with Bilge Ebiri in Vulture Get in touch via Twitter / Instagram / Email