POPULARITY
Join us on this hot, sweaty afternoon for a thorough discussion of Al Pacino's gripping performance in Sidney Lumet's classic hostage thriller Dog Day Afternoon (1975).
"DIOS BENDIGA A AMÉRICA." Entre el Caos y la Cámara: John Cazale, la Ruleta Rusa y la Guerra de Vietnam en Podcastwood, tu Podcast de Cine Clásico EL CAZADOR (1978) de Michael Cimino En la espesura de los bosques de Vietnam, donde la vida pendía de un hilo, se gestó una obra maestra del cine que trascendió la pantalla. "El Cazador", de Michael Cimino, es más que una película de guerra; es un estudio psicológico profundo, una reflexión sobre la condición humana y una crítica a los horrores de la guerra. Nuestro podcast de cine clásico te sumerge en un análisis exhaustivo de esta obra, desvelando los secretos detrás de su creación y explorando los temas más controvertidos que la rodean. ¿Sabías que la producción de "El Cazador" estuvo marcada por innumerables desafíos? Desde problemas de financiación hasta cambios constantes en el guion, Cimino y su equipo se enfrentaron a una serie de obstáculos que podrían haber hundido el proyecto. Sin embargo, su pasión y visión lograron llevar a cabo una película que marcaría un antes y un después en la historia del cine. En nuestro podcast, desentrañamos las dificultades que se encontraron en el camino y cómo estas influyeron en el resultado final. La trágica muerte de John Cazale, quien interpretó a Stanley, uno de los protagonistas de la película, ensombreció su legado. Su actuación, marcada por una vulnerabilidad y una humanidad conmovedoras, es considerada una de las mejores de su carrera. Exploraremos la figura de Cazale, su impacto en la película y cómo su fallecimiento prematuro dejó una huella imborrable en el cine. Una de las escenas más controvertidas de "El Cazador" es la de la ruleta rusa. ¿Hasta qué punto esta secuencia es fiel a la realidad? ¿Cuál fue la intención de Cimino al incluirla en la película? Analizaremos esta escena desde diferentes perspectivas, examinando su significado simbólico y las reacciones que generó tanto en el público como en la crítica. El personaje de Michael, interpretado por Robert De Niro, es complejo y ambiguo. ¿La guerra lo transformó en un hombre más fuerte o lo destruyó por dentro? ¿Es posible encontrar redención después de haber vivido experiencias tan traumáticas? Debatiremos sobre la evolución de Michael a lo largo de la película y sobre la pregunta que ha intrigado a los espectadores durante décadas: ¿Convierte la guerra en mejor persona a Michael? "El Cazador" está repleta de simbolismos y metáforas que enriquecen su significado. Desde la cacería como representación de la guerra hasta la naturaleza como símbolo de la vida y la muerte, cada elemento de la película está cargado de intención. En nuestro podcast, desvelaremos los códigos ocultos de Cimino y te ayudaremos a comprender mejor la profundidad de esta obra maestra. Si eres amante del cine clásico y te apasionan las películas que te hacen reflexionar, este podcast es para ti. Sumérgete en el universo de "El Cazador" y descubre los secretos que se esconden detrás de una de las películas más icónicas de todos los tiempos. Si eres un apasionado del cine clásico, si te intriga el género negro o si simplemente buscas una película que te haga pensar y sentir, este podcast es para ti. Acompáñanos en este viaje a través del tiempo y descubre por qué "Laura" sigue siendo una referencia imprescindible en la historia del cine. ️ SECCIONES ▪️ Los problemas en la creación y el rodaje ▪️ La figura de John Cazale ▪️ La polémica de la Ruleta Rusa ▪️ ¿Convierte la guerra en mejor persona a Michael? ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ Disfruta de toda la música pinchada en nuestros programas con nuestra lista de reproducción en Spotify: PODCASTWOOD JUKEBOX https://acortar.link/podcastwoodjukebox Durante el podcast, citamos y recomendamos una gran variedad de películas que no te puedes perder. ¡Olvídate de tomar notas!. Accede fácilmente a toda la información en nuestros listados publicados en Letterboxd: LISTAS DE PELÍCULAS CITADAS Y RECOMENDADAS https://letterboxd.com/podcastwood/list/3x03-podcastwood-el-cazador/ ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ ¡CONVIÉRTETE EN MECENAS Y ÚNETE A NUESTRA COMUNIDAD DE PERSONAS APASIONADAS POR EL CINE CLÁSICO! ¿Te apasiona el séptimo arte? ¿Quieres compartir tu amor por las películas clásicas con otros cinéfilos?. ¿Te gustaría profundizar en contenidos únicos en torno al cine clásico?. ¡Únete a nuestra comunidad de Podcastwood! ¿POR QUÉ SER MECENAS? Al apoyar a Podcastwood, no solo estarás contribuyendo a la creación de contenido de calidad, sino que también formarás parte de un grupo selecto de amantes del cine. Te ofrecemos: »»»»» Acceso exclusivo a nuestro grupo de Telegram: Conviértete en parte de una comunidad de cinéfilos donde podrás: ▪️ Debatir sobre tus películas favoritas ▪️ Hacer preguntas a nuestros presentadores, Fran Maestra, Gonzalo Cuélliga y Juanlu Uno ▪️ Descubrir nuevas joyas cinematográficas gracias a las recomendaciones de otros miembros ▪️ Sentirte como en casa rodeado de personas que comparten tu pasión »»»»» Contenido exclusivo en ivoox: Disfruta de episodios especiales, monográficos, críticas, análisis personales y debates emitidos en exclusiva para nuestra comunidad. »»»»» Influencia en la programación: ¡Tu opinión cuenta! Ayúdanos a elegir cada mes los temas y las películas que te gustaría que tratáramos en nuestros programas exclusivos. Tendrás la capacidad de proponer tantos temas como quieras y sacarlos a votación para que toda la comunidad podáis disfrutar del contenido que deseáis que materialicemos en un programa especial y dedicado para todos vosotros. Además, ¿Imaginas compartir tu pasión por el cine con Fran, Gonzalo y Juanlu? Ahora es posible. Al convertirte en mecenas, tendrás la oportunidad de interactuar con ellos de forma más cercana y de sentirte parte de un proyecto único. ¡Únete a la familia Podcastwood! ⭐ ¿CÓMO HACERLO? Es muy sencillo, solo tienes que activar el botón azul de "APOYAR" en nuestro perfil de ivoox. ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ SÍGUENOS EN ✘ (TWITTER): @podcastwood | https://x.com/podcastwood @fran_maestra | https://x.com/fran_maestra @gcuelliga | https://x.com/gcuelliga @Juanlu_Uno | https://x.com/Juanlu_Uno LETTERBOXD: Podcastwood | https://letterboxd.com/podcastwood/ Fran Maestra | https://letterboxd.com/fran_maestra/ Gonzalo Cuélliga | https://letterboxd.com/gcuelliga/ Juanlu Uno | https://letterboxd.com/rockatanskyy/ INSTAGRAM: podcastwood | https://www.instagram.com/podcastwood/ ✉ CONTÁCTANOS EN: podcastwoodmail@gmail.com ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ CREW ▪️ Producción: Fran Maestra ▪️ Redacción: Juanlu Uno ▪️ Sonido y grafismo: Fran Maestra ▪️ Entorno digital: Fran Maestra ▪️ Conducción: Juanlu Uno y Fran Maestra ▪️ Locución: Marta Navas ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ Podcastwood | 2024
Lisa Cohen back next week and thereafter, Alana Fishberg, US Open, Donald Viscardi, Please join us on Milo Time, @milotimepodcast, Run in Prospect Park in Milo's honor Sunday, November 10, meet at Milo's tree at 9am sharp, Join us for brunch at our house after you finish, The Conversation at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, 4:40pm, Sunday September 15, Gene Hackman, Robert Duvall, Teri Garr, Harrison Ford, Cindy Williams, John Cazale, Cazale in five movies, all nominated for Best Picture, JetsCast Inspired by Milo Time, Mitch Epner, Please join us on the podcast, Dropping by Wednesday at midnight each week, Plymouth Gin Water, Icy cold water without ice cubes, The Plymouth Gin bottle has been with us for about 12 years, Milo and I must have filled the bottle thousands of times, Milo didn't like having fruit in the water, Milo would often rank the water at a restaurant, Park Slope Diner on 5th Avenue between 8th and 9th Street, Coco Rocco, New Bleu Cafe, Milo's indifference to food, but treating water as important (with his tongue in his cheek), What do we do with the items that were important to Milo?, Invitation to consider Milo while drinking from a repurposed bottle
Shout "Attica! Attica!" as the latest episode of NostalgiaCast '70s Palooza is taken captive by DOG DAY AFTERNOON, directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Al Pacino and John Cazale. Film critic Tom O'Keefe of the Reel Spoilers podcast joins Jonny and Darin to discuss the claustrophobic direction, progressive(?) storytelling, and magical eye acting of this classic crime drama.
Many great films came out in 1978 ... several because Hollywood began to tell stories of what soldiers experienced both during the Vietnam war that had just ended a few years before, and also how they dealt with coming home. The Deer Hunter was one of those films. Director and screenwriter Michael Cimino created a layered, powerful, and very raw film about three men dealing with this situation. The performances are incredible and it's incredible technically. However, looking back, did The Deer Hunter deserve the Oscar for Best Picture? Listen to film critic Jack Ferdman's take on it as he analyzes everything about The Deer Hunter as well as many other films from that year, and hear which film he gives his Rewatch Oscar of 1978 to.Download, listen, and share ALL Rewatching Oscar episodes.SUBSCRIBE and FOLLOW Rewatching Oscar:Website: https://rewatchingoscar.buzzsprout.comApple Podcasts/iTunesSpotifyGoogle PodcastsiHear RadioPodchaserPodcast AddictTuneInAlexaAmazon Overcasts Podcast Addict Player FMRSS Feed: https://feeds.buzzsprout.com/1815964.rssWebsite: https://rewatchingoscar.buzzsprout.comSocial Media Links: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, InstagramShare your thoughts and suggestions with us through:Facebook Messanger or email us atjack@rewatchingoscar.comMusic by TurpacShow Producer: Jack FerdmanPodcast Logo Design: Jack FerdmanMovie (audio) trailer courtesy of MovieClips Classic TrailersMovie (audio) clips courtesy of YouTubeSupport us by downloading, sharing, and giving us a 5-star Rating. It helps our podcast continue to reach many people and make it available to share more episodes with everyone.Tags: OscarsAcademy AwardsBest PicturewinnermoviesfilmreviewRewatching Oscarpodcast
For Wesley Snipes, his fifth movie has him going up against the... King of New York Christopher Walken gets out of prison and becomes the King of New York. He rounds up a crew and takes over the drug trade. Why? To fund a hospital. What? Snipes is one of a cop pile that wants him in jail and then dead. I really wanna talk Jules into just doing every movie Abel Ferrara has made. I've only seen two, and both times I was like this movie sucks and then watched them a decade later and said "Holy heck, these things are amazing". Catch up on Snipes, Crudup, Liotta, Mitchell, Gordon, Cazale and Longstreet in our back catalog. Please do rate and review us on Apple podcasts and pick a movie for us to cover.
"ATTICA! ATTICA! REMEMBER ATTICA?" For Episode 313, Brandon and Thomas jump into their True Crime series with DOG DAY AFTERNOON. Listen to find out why Pacino kept dropping out of the movie, how Lumet prepared the actors during their rehearsal process, and how the movie portrayed the true story in the most realistic way possible. Also, don't forget to join our Patreon for more exclusive content: Opening Banter (00:00:10) Intro to True Crime Month (00:06:43) Intro to Dog Day Afternoon (00:15:02) How Dog Day Afternoon Got to Production (00:22:50) Favorite Scenes (00:35:01) On Set Life - (00:55:27) Aftermath: Release and Legacy (01:10:40) What Worked and What Didn't (01:19:47) Film Facts (01:25:28) Awards (01:26:51) Final Questions (01:32:34) Preview for Next Episode (01:40:15) Contact Us: Facebook: @cinenation Instagram: @cinenationpodcast Twitter/X: @CineNationPod TikTok: @cinenation Letterboxd: CineNation Podcast E-mail: cinenationpodcast@gmail.com
To wrap up their cycle on "Unique Best Picture Winners," Julian, Emilio, and Madeline take a deep dive into the life and work of the great actor John Cazale. Best known as Fredo Corleone in "The Godfather" Parts I and II, Cazale appeared in only five feature films in the 1970s before his untimely passing. However, all five of those films became iconic, both in and beyond his lifetime, and made Cazale a mainstay of the Best Picture Oscar category in the process. On top of the first two "Godfather" films, Cazale also starred in Francis Ford Coppola's "The Conversation" (1974), Sidney Lumet's "Dog Day Afternoon" (1975), and made his final appearance in Michael Cimino's "The Deer Hunter" (1978). The trio touch on all five films, focusing in depth on three of them, to appreciate the immense quality of Cazale's acting in the limited quantity of his career, and make external connections and speculations of what Cazale may have gone on to do had he lived longer. If you enjoy our podcast, please consider writing us a positive review on your podcast platform of choice. It really helps us be shared and enjoyed by others!Follow us on IG and TikTok! @sleeplesscinematicpodSend us an email at sleeplesscinematicpod@gmail.com!On Letterboxd? Follow Julian @julian_barthold and Madeline @patronessofcats
"Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer." For Episode 303, Brandon and Thomas close out Mob Month with one of the greatest movies of all time. Listen as the duo discuss the making of THE GODFATHER PART II. Find out why Paramount was worried about the title, what Robert De Niro did to prep for the role, and why Al Pacino said it was one of the most difficult movies of his career. Opening Banter (00:00:10) Recap of the Mobster Genre (00:03:26) Intro to The Godfather Part II (00:010:23) How The Godfather Part II Got to Production (00:19:51) Favorite Scenes (00:43:34) On Set Life - (01:07:18) Aftermath: Release and Legacy (01:16:41) What Worked and What Didn't (01:22:51) Film Facts (01:27:38) Awards (01:31:51) Final Questions (01:36:33) Final Genre Questions (01:42:32) Preview for Next Week (01:49:28) Contact Us: Facebook: @cinenation Instagram: @cinenationpodcast Twitter/X: @CineNationPod TikTok: @cinenation Letterboxd: CineNation Podcast E-mail: cinenationpodcast@gmail.com
Here it is, the 6th and final John Cazale episode. We're covering "The Deer Hunter" and our dude is sick during the filming and died the year it came out. How is the movie? Well, one of the taglines is it's the most important movie ever made. Cazale is super funny at times. Walken is young, handsome and not creepy/weird at all. What about Bobby d? Tune in. Hear our differing opinions! One of us is ready to watch it all over again. Rate, review, subscribe, call, email and get on that back catalog where we go through Billy Crudup, Ray Liotta, Keith Gordon, Robert Longstreet and Radha Mitchell. If you review us on Apple or whatever, let us know and you can pick a movie for us to cover. Click the link in the bio or copy/paste/memorize http://linktr.ee/wedoingfilmographies
The fifth John Cazale episode is here! It's about dogs! A day of dogs! Actually just the afternoon. Would you pet them? Cazale is scary in this. Chris Sarandon is fantastic?! A robbery for a sex change operation goes wrong and this is the one with the "Attica! Attica!" chant. You've seen it, right? Well, listen to us march through it beat by beat RIGHT NOW. Rate, review, subscribe, call, email and get on that back catalog where we go through Billy Crudup, Ray Liotta, Keith Gordon, Robert Longstreet and Radha Mitchell. If you review us on Apple or whatever, let us know and you can pick a movie for us to cover. http://linktr.ee/wedoingfilmographies
Third Cazale episode? THE CONVERSATION. So is this like My Dinner With Andre? It's just a nice, long talk? They converse? Is it Hackman and Cazale just talking about life??????? The Hack man! The Cazale man! The Harrison Ford man? A movie about surveilance and paranoia. You like this one? What do we think about it? Is that Cazale embodying different people in each of these projects (except that sequel... which, you know, that character has grown a bit since the first)? Tune in to this episode and? JOIN THE CONVERSATION! Rate, review, subscribe, call us, text us, email us. Find bad scene recreations and links to all the stuffs in link in bio or http://linktr.ee/wedoingfilmographies
Will anyone ever have as legendary of a run as John Cazale? No. No way. Not a chance. Cazale made an art film and was in an episode of NYPD long before he played that donkey brained Fredo in The Godfather. Is the short good? Is the TV show good? Tune in to find out! Also, Martin Sheen plays a peepers. A peepers with a temper! Rate, review, subscribe, call us, text us, email us, sing to us. Find bad scene recreations and links to all the stuffs in link in bio or http://linktr.ee/wedoingfilmographies
Sidney Lumet directs another classic to the club. 75's "Dog Day Afternoon" Teh rish Critic is here to discuss it with Host & Comic Steve Mazan who she introduced this film to at a very young age. Is Lumet still underrated? Was Pacino ever the same? Was this film decades ahead of it's time? Is truth stranger than fiction? How much Cazale did we miss? Was the real story even crazier? All these questions and more get answered on this week's Mazan Movie Club Podcast. "Dog Day Afternoon" on IMDb Home of the Mazan Movie Club Steve Mazan on Instagram Home of Corporate Comedian Steve Mazan
“The Deer Hunter” is the only movie Alex and Nick share in their top 10 films of all time. In this episode, the guys discuss Michael Cimino, blue-collar towns, the wedding scene, post-Vietnam America, responding to active trauma, fractured masculinity, Vilmos Zsigmond, De Niro, Walken, Cazale, Streep, and much more.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
Marcus and John discuss The Deer Hunter (1978) and see if it is deserving of a place in The Script Department vaults.Subscribe and ring the notification bell for daily screenwriting videos.Subscribe to our channel so you don't miss anything from our network of podcasts: https://youtube.com/c/TheScriptDepartmentVisit our website: https://www.thescriptdepartment.netFollow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/thescriptdepartmentFollow us on Instagram: http://instagram.com/thescriptdepartmentFollow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thescriptdepartmentListen to our podcasts on your favourite podcast service:The Script Department Podcast Network: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/channel/the-script-department/id6442503874Buy us a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheScriptDept
THE GODFATHER turns 50 years old this year, so celebrate its MOVIEVERSARY with host Bo Nicholson and guest Dan Rice (Motion Director - Breeder). Host / Editor Bo Nicholson (@Bo_pioneer) His other work: https://linktr.ee/BoNicholson Guest Dan Rice Check out his work. https://linktr.ee/danrice Executive Producer Tony Black (@ajblackwriter) Support the We Made This podcast network on Patreon: www.patreon.com/wemadethis We Made This on Twitter: @wmt_network wemadethisnetwork.com Title music: Bulls (c) Mary Riddle via epidemicsound.com
It was supposed to take 30 minutes but ended up taking 14 hours. . . the heist that is not this episode of the podcast. This week Lolo shows Patrick the highly acclaimed film based on a true story - Dog Day Afternoon. They discus the prolific director behind this film Sidney Lumet, the amazing cinematography of this film, the many impactful themes of this film and so much more including “whether or not Dustin Hoffman or Al Pacino are good looking?” New episodes of First Timers Movie Club come out every other Friday so click SUBSCRIBE and rate us five stars to make sure you don't miss our next episode!Have a favorite (or least favorite) famous movie that you think we should've seen? Reach out to IX Film Productions on Twitter, Instagram or email and we'll add it to our list!Follow IX Film Productions for podcast updates, stand up comedy, original web shorts and comedy feature films at:Facebook: www.facebook.com/ixfilmproductionsTwitter: www.twitter.com/ixproductionsInstagram: @IXProductionsYouTube: www.youtube.com/ixfp"First Timers Movie Club" is brought to you by IX Film Productions."Making the World a Funnier Place one Film at a Time"MusicThe Curtain Rises by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5007-the-curtain-risesLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Marcus and John discuss The Deer Hunter (1978) and see if it is deserving of a place in The Script Department vaults.Subscribe and ring the notification bell for daily screenwriting videos.Subscribe to our channel so you don't miss anything from our network of podcasts: https://youtube.com/c/TheScriptDepartmentVisit our website: https://www.thescriptdepartment.netFollow us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/thescriptdepartmentFollow us on Instagram: http://instagram.com/thescriptdepartmentFollow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thescriptdepartmentListen to our podcasts on your favourite podcast service:The Script Department Podcast Network: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/channel/the-script-department/id6442503874Buy us a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheScriptDeptBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-script-department-screenwriting-discussion--3123141/support.
We're talking all things "The Godfather", "The Godfather, Part 2", and (briefly) "The Godfather, Part 3". Is "The Godfather" the greatest movie ever made? Is "The Godfather, Part 2" better? Who gave the best performance in those movies? What is the best scene in the movie? What's behind the universal appeal of these movies? We talk the main themes of the movies, the actors and artists who made them great, and the various storylines of these landmark films. THIS IS THE FINAL WORD ON THESE MOVIES!! Tune in now!
We take a break from our A-Z series to talk about Francis Ford Coppola's "The Conversation (1974)" a film buried between the releases of the first two "Godfather" films, but a masterpiece in its own way. "The Conversation" stars Gene Hackman and John Cazale-- and that's why we' re here actually. Johnny Duarte returns to talk about a fourth (out of 5) Cazale film on the show this week. Dial F for Film is a podcast about the love of movies and host's -- J. Carlos Menjivar -- attempt to watch 1001 movies before he dies. A lover of lists and film, Carlos is a firm believer that all film lists should be tackled with one goal in mind: completion. Steven Jay Schneider's "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die" is the subject of this podcast. Each episode features one guest and five movies from the massive list, compiled into themed lists by the host. Guests each week will select one category without any prior knowledge as to what films are included. Once a category is chosen, Carlos reveals the five films and the viewing begins. The guests then come on Dial F for Film via Zoom and the discussion begins.
We're talking all about The Godfather as the movie celebrates its 50th anniversary. Francis Ford Coppola created one of the greatest movies of all time with a legendary cast including Pacino, Caan, Duvall, Cazale, Shire, and of course Marlon Brando. From its authenticity regarding organized crime, its impact on pop culture and movies that came after it, to its overall story and performances, we had a blast diving into The Godfather, one of the best films ever made. Subscribe to the podcast free on your preferred app and please tell a friend who loves movies about the show, just tell em to look up "Just Like the Movies" on any podcast app! Thank you for listening and as always remember to be kind, rewind, relax, and enjoy the show.
Nil Pereira Ribeiro Cardoso is a singer/songwriter/producer born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Surrounded by music his entire childhood, Nil spent a lot of time observing his dad, a professional bass player and successful songwriter. It didn't take long for Nil to figure out what he wanted to do for a living. At the age of 16, two years after moving to the United States with his family, Nil joined his first of many local bands, playing Emo/Post Hardcore/Punk Rock music. For the next 6 years, he gained a lot of experience performing live and establishing himself in the south Florida music scene. In 2007, Nil enrolled at Broward College as a Music Performance major, gaining the knowledge necessary to grow as a professional. In 2009, at the age of 21, Nil fell in love with the studio life after spending a week recording at Carrington House, a studio in Atlanta, GA owned by RnB artist Ne-Yo. From that moment on, Nil spent several years learning the crafts of Pop songwriting and production, collaborating with different writers and artists. In 2020, he decided to give birth to his new solo project, Nil Cazale. In that same year, Nil was invited by certified Platinum DJ Bruno Martini to feature on his album “Original”, out now. The album also includes artists such as Timbaland, Iza, Luísa Sonza, Becky Hill, and Zeeba. With almost 2 decades of experience under his belt, and 2 singles released under his new name, the sky is the limit for Nil Cazale.
Here we are a week and a day later. World still standing, and we are still talking. China seems poised to create rules allowing their current leader to rule for life, no one can seem to agree still on social media, and here we are wanting to laugh at it all and ourselves. Join us for a fun filled time of taking life a little less serious for a moment and enjoying honest discussions without the need to always agree.If you like the music check out the artist here: theearthonfireIntro song links: Spotify Apple MusicPlease subscribe to us on YouTube and Rumble to watch videos after they are published.Follow us on Instagram for random funny picsFollow us on Facebook to get notified of LIVE! episode recordings and to join the chat!Links discussed in episode:Governor Gavin Newsom's Office Responds After He Hasn't Been Seen Publicly In DaysJUST IN - Communist party leader and China's President Xi Jinping set to unveil new doctrine that could let him rule for life.Xi Set to Unveil New Doctrine That Could Let Him Rule for LifeTim Cook says he owns cryptocurrency, Apple ‘looking' at it for Apple PayMeta-analysis suggests that emotional intelligence is declining among college studentsWhat the physics of crowds can tell us about the tragic deaths at AstroworldCardano's Big Plans for Africa – CryptoModeTIL:TIL Robert De Niro requested a live cartridge in the revolver for the scene in The Deer Hunter in which he subjects John Cazale's character to an impromptu game of Russian roulette. Cazale obsessively rechecked the gun before each take to make sure that the live round wasn't next in the chamber.TIL, WWII code breaker and father of the Turing test, Alan Turing, died by eating a poisoned appleTIL that Russia is one-ninth of the world's land mass and it has 11 time zones.TIL, the term Wi-Fi was the invention of a brand-consulting firm and has no technical meaning.Shower Thoughts:There is a chance that someone you know will use your death as an excuse to get out of a social obligation they don't want to go to.Stories usually put horns on evil or scary creatures, but in nature only herbivores have hornsIf you find a $100 bill on the ground and it takes you a second to pick it up, for that brief moment you are making $360,000 per hour.As data showing the effects of sugar on the human body become more well known, future generations will look back with horror on our practice of sending children out to trick-or-treat.Gyms are a place where the customer works harder than the employeeThe little holes in bread are yeast farts.
The Haitian village of Cazale was named as a contraction for kay Zalewski (home of Zalewski); Zalewski was a common Polish surname. You see, the Poles, brought to Haiti as a foreign legion for the French, turned on the French and supported the Haitian Revolution. 00:48 efficient conversation 4:55 a polish champion 8:31 a history lesson 24:45 scotus 30:29 Are the Libs Okay: A Reading 36:12 my man lanlan 42:49 florida conversations 44:12 stealth camping 48:04 kpop is out of ideas 53:44 animation our patreon (https://www.patreon.com/DumbandAwful)
No programa de hoje vamos falar sobre John Cazale, o ator secundário mais carismático de Hollywood. Steve Cazale recebeu uma ligação. Do outro lado, uma mulher de voz trêmula lhe comunicava que seu irmão, o ator John Cazale, acabava de morrer. Tinha apenas 42 anos. A voz era simplesmente de Meryl Streep, a grande dama do cinema e namorada de John Cazale, um ator único, um anti-James Dean que, como ele, mal apareceu em um punhado de filmes e ainda assim mudou a história da interpretação. Rodou apenas cinco filmes, mas todos juntos obtiveram 40 indicações (entre Oscar, Globo de Ouro etc.) e estão entre o que há de melhor na história do cinema norte-americano. ( Ruben Santos- EL País- 10/02/2018) A história inspiradora e inspirada de Cazale está no documentário "I knew it was you: redescovering Jhon Cazale", de Richard Shepard. Vamos também em breve disponibilizar uma boa conversa sobre o filme "The Godfather" para analisar a atuação de Cazale no filme. Você poderá assistir essa e várias outras conversas no canal do Youtube do Ricardo Napoleão Informações sobre cursos e palestras no site Bem vindos às melhores cenas!
Screenwriter, producer and director Larry Karaszewski talks with Manuela about John Cazale, the actor who sadly only appeared in 5 films but all of which were nominated for Best Picture. Larry discusses Cazale's ability to play characters who "no one" wants to play and make them both memorable and real – from Fredo in The Godfather to Stan in The Deer Hunter – and he also shares insights about his own journey through cinema with his writing partner Scott Alexander, penning acclaimed "anti-biopics" like Ed Wood, The People vs O.J. Simpson and Dolemite is My Name.
For this our hundredth 1970s episode, Kieran and I return to the work of Francis Ford Coppola with a conversation about his film... 'The Conversation'. Expect talk about 'Mad Men', 'Blow Up', introverts, the career of John Cazale and much more.
In this solo episode I break down Michael Ciminio's three hour Vietnam war drama 'The Deer Hunter'... in under ten minutes. And if you're a superfan, please be aware I am quite critical of this film. I mean, there's plenty to like about the film but, for me at least, the film doesn't live up to the promise of it's superb first hour even with some ridiculously iconic Russian roulette and a straight up incredible cast (De Niro! Walken! Streep! Cazale!).
Recorded on a wet and boozy winter evening, Paul and I celebrate reaching episode 75 of our 1970s series with a discussion an all-time classic- Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather: Part II. And remember, if you want to support the show AND get exclusive episodes of the podcast (including two Godfather specials) go to www.patreon.com/ERRP.
This week it's true-crime time, as we discuss Sidney Lumet's 'Dog Day Afternoon', the New York set bank-heist film starring Al Pachino and John Cazale. We also find time to discuss a tonne of other things from a classic Only Fools and Horses episode, misunderstanding Michael Collins, casting The Terminator, comparing modern-day Pachino to DeNiro and much more.
Entrega 210 de La Gran Evasión, esta noche os realizamos una oferta que no podéis rechazar, El Padrino, Francis Ford Coppola, 1972. “I Believe in America…” empieza diciendo Bonasera, el funerario, cree en America pero acude a Don Vito Corleone pidiendo justicia….se abre el plano, poco a poco retrocede la cámara y nos encontramos con la figura del Don, Marlon Brando, en uno de sus papeles más portentosos, en la penumbra del despacho de Vito Corleone se piden favores y se rinden pleitesías, fuera, la Luz ilumina la boda de su hija Connie, un despliego de maestría y montaje por parte de Coppola para un arranque excepcional, en la fiesta nos presenta a los personajes de ese mundo que gira entorno al poder. Vemos a Sonny el impetuoso hijo mayor, increíble James Caan, Fredo el más débil, vaya aura que crea Cazale, Tom, el hijo adoptivo de origen irlandés, no acaba de pertenecer, aun siendo Consigliere, no es siciliano, está dentro de la familia pero sigue sin estarlo completamente, magnífico Duvall, hasta llegar a Michael, un imponente y joven Al Pacino, que despliega todo su talento para encarnar al hijo pequeño de Vito Corleone, el más inteligente, al que le tenía reservado un futuro lejos de los gánsters, pero el destino, como siempre, persigue su presa sin piedad, y a Michael le reserva una oscura travesía… La película que salvo Hollywood, que devolvió la gente a los cines en masas, un proyecto de la Paramount, con un joven director, un Best Seller y un presupuesto mediocre, pero Coppola tenia otra cosa en mente, desde su amor al cine clásico elevó su propuesta a otro nivel, se rodeó de auténticos genios, Gordon Willis en la fotografía, Tavoularis en el diseño de Producción, Nino Rota en la banda sonora y sobre todo, de un elenco de actores formidable, los citados Brando, Pacino, Caan, Duvall y una pléyade de desconocidos que dotan de vida a sus personajes, Tesio (Abe Vigoda), Clemenza (Castellano), Sollozzo (Al Lettieri), viejas glorias como Sterling Hayden y su inolvidable Capitan McCluskey, etc. En conclusión, estamos ante una absoluta obra maestra, que atravesó dificultades y vicisitudes hasta convertirse en una leyenda. Sin olvidar uno de los puntos más importantes, la escena entre Al Pacino y Marlon Brando, rodada meses después y que dotaba de alma a la historia, ese traspaso de sabiduría y consejos que tuvo que escribir Robert Towne, al solicitarle ayuda Coppola, una escena formidable, el jardín, un padre y un hijo, hablando del futuro, de la experiencia, un episodio que completa el puzzle. El Padrino es un ensayo sobre el poder, sobre los conflictos morales de la familia, sobre la soledad, la traición, las conspiraciones, en fin, Shakespeare, la Antigua Roma, el Viejo Testamento….la esencia de los hombres. Esta noche, en la tiniebla del estudio de Radiopolis, besamos la mano de Francis Ford Coppola, Manuel Broullón, Raúl Gallego y Gervi Navío. Gervasio Navío Flores.
This week, we watch the best picture winning film that made a huge positive shift in the public opinion towards Vietnam Veterans in the US. This film takes something that didn't occur once in the written history of the Vietnam war (Russian roulette), center's itself around it, and makes a grand, metaphorical statement about the random violence of war. The Deer Hunter (1978), directed by Michael Cimino.
Artist Joanna Malinowska talks about Halka/Haiti, the panoramic film project she and her partner CT Jasper produced for the Polish Pavilion at the 56th Venice Art Bienniale. Inspired by a little known chapter in Polish history and Werner Herzog's film Fitzcarraldo, they brought the Polish national opera company to the mountain village of Cazale, in Haiti. With Polish performers, and local musicians and dancers, they presented Poland's national opera Halka to the town's Polish descendants. The film of the performance on view in the biennial effectively brings Haiti to Venice.
The crime sage continues in our 88th edition of the T100P. Al Pacino and John Cazale are outstanding, although the rest of the cast kills it too. Francis Coppola's second-most worshipped film also features De Niro aping Brando as young Vito. Is this the equal of Part I...or even better? Our long chat about a long movie requires your rapt attention!
Al Pacino robs a bank. The end. Wait, there’s more. The 7th edition of the Not 100 Project somehow missed AFI’s cut, even though it’s got Pacino & director Sidney Lumet in great form. With all the summertime heat, the pre-op sex-change patients and the frenzied crowd, this hostage drama is one of the best in its genre. Hear us!
Warren chats with Richard Shepard at the Seattle house in park City, UT regarding his short documentary, what makes a god character actor, and the legacy of John Cazale. http://www.thewarrenreport.com