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Here it is! The final chapter of our Dark Knight trilogy! Please join Dylan Jay and myself as we discuss the final film in Christopher Nolans Batman film trilogy! Enjoy Dylans Bane accent. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/afterthecreditstj/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/afterthecreditstj/support
Vi rundar av Christopher Nolans Batman-trilogi med The Dark Knight Rises. I vanlig ordning råder det vitt skilda åsikter angående det mesta med filmen! Är den bra? Är Bane en bra skurk? Vilken skådis sänker betyget på den här filmen? I det här avsnittet får ni flera svar på alla dessa frågor! Handlingen: Efter att ha påtagit sig skulden för distriktsåklagare Harvey Dents död försvann den vanhedrade Batman på mystiskt vis. Men när en slug inbrottstjuv och en hänsynslös galning Bane dyker upp tvingas Bruce Wayne lämna sin självvalda exil och ge sig in i den slutgiltiga striden för Gotham Citys överlevnad... och hans egen. Superlänk till alla plattformar: http://linktr.ee/filmsmakarna
WARNING: This podcast contains copious amounts of a bad Bane impression. We are back with another long ago recorded drunk commentary. This time on the docket The Dark Knight Rises. The culmination of Christopher Nolans Batman trilogy. Admittedly I don't remember recording this because I was quite intoxicated. Come laugh with us! Follow me @bigbarry63 on IG
Join me in Episode 35 of the PORB Podcast as I discuss my thoughts on Christopher Nolans Batman opus, The Dark Knight. Previously I reviewed Batman Begins and proved beyond a shadow of a doubt... that it in fact is not good! Will The Dark Knight suffer the same fate???LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, SHARE, COMMENT & REVIEW iTunesWATCH, LIKE, & SUBSCRIBEYouTubeFOLLOW ME on SOCIALTwitterInstagram TikTok WebsiteGREY HOUSEBandcampiTunes/Apple MusicSpotifySoundcloudYouTube
This morning was all about The Last Of Us on HBO, news about super hero shows (Black Lightning, Titans, Ironheart, Nick Fury, and more!), and Christopher Nolans Batman comments! The Nightly Morning Show streams at 10 est, Monday-Friday, on the Nerdy Nightly Twitch Channel! Follow Nerdy Nightly everywhere through www.linktr.ee/nerdynightly Arrielle can be found @arrielleace on Instagram or ClarusDracarys on Twitch David can be found @deardavidwebb across the web "Nerdy Nightly Theme" by Alex Levitt - @alevitt1990 on Instagram --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Christopher Nolan's Batman operates within the state in a very strange way. Nolan believes that his trilogy of movies are actually each in their own genre. Batman Begins is a classic origin story broken down in three parts. The Dark Knight exists as a crime movie with the Joker as a terrorist who seeks chaos. The Dark Knight Rises is an epic film with a militaristic enemy.How are the Joker and Bane different? How do the villains in Nolan's Batman trilogy enhance the movies? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Every week hosts Johnny, Kyle, Matt, and Andrew gather around to review and discuss movies in a movie franchise. On this first episode, the boys are reviewing and discussing Christopher Nolan's critically acclaimed, Batman Begins. Stick around to hear what the boys have to say about this movie and check back next week! Make sure to like, comment, and share with your friends! Love, BBLB --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/babbleongaming/support
For its tenth birthday Kelly & Justin discuss The Dark Knight, Christopher Nolan's Batman masterpiece, still the greatest superhero movie of all time (probably forever). But it's so much more. The Dark Knight is a Faust-esque Shakespearean tragedy about two opposing forces battling for the soul of Gotham city, in the person of Harvey Dent. Heath Ledger's Oscar-winning performance is still the stuff of legend, but Christian Bale, Gary Oldman, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and especially Aaron Eckhart also deliver wonderful performances in this Shakespeare-worthy tragedy.... You can view the video-enhanced version of this episode at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvWda72B4cg&t=12s #Batman #TheDarkKnight #TheDarkKnightTrilogy #ChristianBale #TheBatman #HeathLedger #HeathLedgerJoker --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Adam and Kurckland sit down for a watch along and discuss the second film in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, The Dark Knight, which is widely considered the best superhero movie ever made. We focus on Heath Ledger's iconic performance as the Joker, as well as phenomenal performances by Christian Bale, Aaron Eckhart, and Gary Oldman. We also compare Ledger's performance to Juaqin Pheonix's portrayal of the same character in 2019's Joker. If you like what you hear please like/share/follow/sub on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, and Facebook @dtbpod, and on Instagram, Twitter, and Youtube @dtbpod and @quitterrant. You can reach us on any of our social media channels and via email dtbpod@gmail.com, and check out our website dtbpod.podbean.com.
In this episode, Leon and Josh discuss failures big and small, and how our religious/moral/ethical traditions inform the "opportunities" for failure that life in IT presents us with almost daily. Transcript: Leon: 00:00 Welcome to our podcast where we talk about the interesting, frustrating and inspiring experiences we have as people with strongly held religious views working in corporate it. We're not here to preach or teach you our religion. We're here to explore ways we make our career as IT professionals mesh, or at least not conflict with our religious life. This is technically religious. Josh: 00:21 Hey Leon, did I ever tell you about the time I was wrong? Josh: 00:24 No Josh: 00:26 It's okay. I was only mistaken. Leon: 00:29 Oh, seriously?!? Josh: 00:32 You know, dad jokes are a fantastic thing, Leon. And uh, sometimes my delivery is great and sometimes it's an epic fail, which is good. It's okay. Because I think today I want to talk about failures in it. Leon: 00:47 Like when the SAN fails? Josh: 00:50 No. How about when we fail the SAN, Not when the SAN fails us. Leon: 00:54 Oh, you mean like the time I took the entire backup path down, but I forgot about it. And later on I did a fail over and the entire storage array went down because there was nothing to backup to. Josh: 01:03 Uh, yeah, exactly that. Leon: 01:05 Oh God. Okay. All right. Once again, our religious, moral, ethical outlook I think helps us with those failures. First of all, I should say that the opportunity to fail presents itself almost every nanosecond in IT. I think there's lots of things to fail at. Um, but uh, as, as some people say, failure isn't an option, it's actually built into the primary features of the product a lot of times. So I think our religious outlook helps us to either adapt to failure or fail better. What do you think? Josh: 01:40 Well, um, so I, you know, I don't have a great answer for that yet. I'm going to flip back to my ideas of, of religion based on scripture. Okay. So, in the scripture, in the New Testament says, "be ye therefore perfect even as your father in heaven is perfect." And to me that's always been a very weighty thing because I view God as perfect. You know, he's all knowing, all loving. He's, he's the perfect father and holy cow, how do I ever live up to that? And I, I've spent a lot of time in my religious life and even my post-Mormon life thinking about this mandate we've been given of being perfect. And you know in IT I'm, I'm nowhere near perfect. I am so far from it, but man, uh, I spent a lot of time in my religious upbringing trying to look, sound, act, be perfect. And I didn't do a very good job to be frank. Leon: 02:50 So it's interesting because, uh, at least in in Judaism, yes, God is perfect, omnipotent, you know, uh, infinite, all of those things. But, but the mandate to be perfect is... That's, that's a hard pill to swallow. Um, the, the language that I've always heard is that you should, you should try to perfect yourself. So it's more a message of constant self improvement. Knowing that, that there's always something about yourself that you can improve upon rather than say that you're trying to attain this goal of perfection. I think that that's, to be very honest, you know, impossible. But I also think that that idea pairs nicely with IT life because in IT, I think that we, the, the people who are most successful in IT typically are committed to being lifelong learners and to knowing that they're going to spend their whole life perfecting a set of skills - whether it's networking skills or their knowledge of IOS commands or, their ability to create good, useful powershell scripts or whatever it is - that nobody sits back on their laurels and says that "I'm the everything about active directory. I've got it all down." I mean, they may be comfortable with it, but there's always a recognition that you could do more with it. Um, so yeah, I think that's an easier thing to, to get to then perfection. Josh: 04:22 Agreed. Agreed. Yeah. And you know, some may argue that you've arrived at a state of perfection when you realize that you have to be constantly learning. And it was that old adage. The more I know, the more I realized how much I don't actually know. And I think that that's very true both in life as well as an it an interesting story to share real quick. I've got younger brothers, and my youngest brother, uh, I usually introduce him to people when I'm, when I'm telling a story like this, I say "my little brother is an overachiever" and they look at me like, "oh, I see." Yeah, he dropped out of high school twice. And people that they kind of give me this odd look like, "are you just being snarky?" And then I go on to tell them about how my youngest brother is the most magnificent carpenter I've ever met. Although he is a high school dropout, twice, because he went back and decided, nope, this definitely is not for me, which is okay, right? He then went on to work for another master carpenter, worked like a dog. Fortunately he lives out here kind of near me. He is head-hunted on the regular by some of the top architects in the region. He builds the most insanely complex things. And he just SEES them. And I think to myself, "wow, he would have totally wasted away sitting in a classroom some place." In fact, I had that exact discussion with my son today who's trying to figure out where he wants to go to. And I asked him, I said, "Noah, would you be happy sitting in a classroom for the next four years?" And he said, "I would be miserable." And it's true. He would be absolutely miserable. And so, you know, this idea that, that perfection requires you to go sit in a classroom, or for my youngest brother to, you know, graduate from High School is, you know, that's, it's null and void in those cases, that is not their idea of perfection, you know. So sometimes when we talk about learning, we look and we say, "hey, you know, um, Leon, you only learned, uh, you know, these skills. And Leon is the perfect it engineer because he knows x, y, and Z." Leon: 06:43 Okay. Getting a little deep here! Josh: 06:46 Hold on, hold on. Okay. But then we look at other people who have a completely different skillset that is very relevant to what they need to accomplish. And for them, they are that perfect engineer, right? It's the whole idea of, you know, hey, I can script in powershell or I could script in python, but if you are an AIX admin, perl's gonna help you, but you probably need to have some other skills, and that powershell isn't going to be very useful for you. Cause I don't think AIX runs powershell. Leon: 07:18 Right? Not, not presently, but you never know in the future, or powershell may run in AIX anyway. Um, we can dream can't we? So, um, yeah, I think, I think what are the things you're getting at is, is that self improvement and perfecting ourself is actually a process of repeated failure. Josh: 07:42 Amen Leon: 07:42 As, as hard as it is to sometimes accept that on a daily basis. It's hard to live that experience. I often, Josh: 07:53 You only fail once a day? Leon: 07:54 No, no. A constant state of failure. I like to tell people that, that working in IT sometimes feels like a huge stretches of soul crushing depression, punctuated by brief moments of insane euphoria, before returning back to the long stretch of soul crushing depression again. You know, like, I'm working on this problem. "I don't know what it is. I can't figure it out. I've tried everything. Let me try this one. Yeah. OH MY GOSH IT WORKS THIS IS BRILLIANT!! This is incredible. I love it... Okay, next problem." All right. Josh: 08:31 That's accurate, isn't it? I, I, that's my life. I don't know how I didn't know any different. Leon: 08:37 So the, so the idea of failure, really is just, I think framing an experience incorrectly because it's just, you know, working, you know? It's finding out all the things that don't work. And I think that our religious, moral, ethical outlook, those of us who, who feel strongly about those, I think that it allows us to embrace that experience, to be more flexible about failure. Then somebody who, who may not have that outlook. Not that people who, you know, don't, you know, who aren't religious CAN'T do that obviously. But I think that that a religious framework helps us to see it in a particular light. Um... Josh: 09:26 Why do you think that is? What, what is it about having a view of yourself, not as isolated from the world, but having, uh, an understanding that you are relative to, you know - whether it's God, whether it's, you know, the universe, whether, you know, whether it's the... what is it about that view that allows us to embrace both failure and an evolution toward perfection? Leon: 09:54 I think part of it is that in, in many religions, there is actually a habituation of repentance. And what I mean by that is that there is a period of time or a day or even a moment during daily prayers when you ask for forgiveness. When you recognize that you've somehow fallen short of a goal that you could have reached but didn't, and you apologize for that. Now at least in the Jewish tradition that is, you know, failures, things that you have missed between you and God. So, you know, "I'm expected to do certain things and I fell short and I'm so sorry and I'm going to work on that..." And so on and so forth. That's sort of the subtext of the prayer. But I think that asking for forgivenes, apologizing is a habit, is a technique, and you have to practice it before it feels natural. And I also think that knowing that you can apologize and be forgiven is something that you have to practice a few times before you can become comfortable with it. And because religions tend to have that built in - that repentance, apology, forgiveness cycle - that we and IT who make mistakes that do affect other people are perhaps finding an easier time saying, like, I joked earlier in this talk, you know, "I took the backup circuit down, I forgot to bring it back up again. I did a fail over a week later. I am so sorry. I know that caused an outage. I will, you know, here are the things I'm going to do to make sure that doesn't happen again." I'm not, quote-unquote "a failure" for having allowed that to happen. I failed, I made a mistake. But my, my Jewish experience with the repentance cycle allows me to admit that without feeling like I have to give up some part of my soul in order to do so. I, you know, I apologize all the time. I apologize, honestly, every day during prayers, There's a particular times of year when apology figures prominently. And the act of showing up and doing that allows me to turn to my coworkers and apologize and know that forgiveness can be given without fear. And I think, and I think that's it. I think that fear really gets in the way of a lot of people, you know, in that case, I don't know what you think about that. Josh: 12:37 Yeah. You know what, I 100% agree. I, I saw, I can't tell you how many times in my life I've been afraid. Um, funny story growing up, we lived in a small house that had one of those dirt basements. You know the kind I'm talking about. And I was horrified of that basement. Absolutely horrified. And so when you turn the lights on in the main basement, there was a back basement that was like completely, uh, didn't have any lights. And every so often my parents would say, "hey, can you go down to the cellar and get something?" And I would just start panicking Leon: 13:17 That is nightmare fuel! Josh: 13:19 Right? It is totally nightmare fuel. And I can remember like just screaming up the stairs as fast as I could because I was so afraid of the thing I could not see. So yeah, I am not Kevin McCallister. I cannot stand with, you know, a triumph in front of my furnace, in my basement and you know, you know, you know, scream from my front step, you know, "I am not afraid anymore." I also don't have a next door neighbor who I think is an ax murderer. Um, that's another thing too. Leon: 13:51 That's a plus. Josh: 13:51 That's definitely a plus. Every tell you about my first, my very first fail? Actually, did I ever tell you about how I got started in IT? That's probably better. Leon: 14:00 Tell everyone. Josh: 14:01 Okay. So let me tell you and everyone who's listening. Um, thanks mom. Uh, I want it to be a lawyer. I remember the exact moment in my life when I decided I want it to be a lawyer. I was in seventh grade and we were doing a mock trial in seventh grade and the smartest girl in class, um, and I were head to head and I eviscerated her. It was hands down the... the entire class was the jury. And it was, it was, it was epic, "Of epic proportions." Wonderful. That moment I realized I actually want to be a lawyer. Yeah, no, no. I'm not a lawyer. Leon: 14:44 As a parent, I can tell you every child is a lawyer. Josh: 14:47 That it, that is very true. That is very true. That's all that. And so I battled for a very long time about whether or not I should embrace this whole idea of being in IT. I also remember the exact moment that my wife and I decided that I should pursue a career in IT. Um, it was mostly out of desperation. I was young, I was married, I had a family and needed to, um, you know, make money. Here I am 20 odd years in and I realized that I did not fail by not becoming a lawyer. In fact, I succeeded by recognizing that being a lawyer was not the path I should walk. Leon: 15:21 Right. So, you know, when I was little, I wanted he marine biologist. Josh: 15:27 You and George Constanza. By that way, Leon: 15:28 I really, you know, Jacques Cousteau, like the whole thing I really wanted... So naturally I went into university to study theater. That makes perfect sense. Then I discovered the universe did not need another short Jewish nebbishy looking actor. Uh, and so of course I went into IT. I mean, that's true. Yeah, it was. Yeah. And now I'll do the same thing. "You know, I was young, I did it for the money." Um, so yeah, it's, you know, there, there's several inventors who said that, "I might have failed a thousand times, but you know, that taught me a thousand things that didn't work." Josh: 16:06 Absolutely. Also also known as a week in the life of Josh. Leon: 16:10 Right, right. That's, you know, and, and I, again, I think that IT really is... So we're talking about two different things though: When you try something and it doesn't work, that's a personal, that's, that's a failure on a very personal level. I tried this, I tried that, and I tried that. And I think that most of us who work in IT are used to that. You know, you've got to try a few things before it's going to work. But then there's the other failures, like the one we joked about at the top of the episode where I took the backup circuit down or I accidentally shut off the VAX because I thought it was a mini fridge. Um, I did that. Josh: 16:43 I do want to know that story someday. Leon: 16:45 Yeah. You know, or whatever. Those are failures that impact other people. Those are the ones that go back to that repentance, apology, forgiveness cycle where you have to go outside of yourself and say "I did fail. I did fall short of the mark and I need to do better." And I think that both of those experiences, those personal ones of trying things and it not working, and the big ones where you have to go in front of other people and apologize and ask for forgiveness. I think both of those things our religious lives prepare us for, because they, it inculcates in us the fact that this is part of life, this is part of the normal experience. And therefore I think our frustration level with that as a normal part of our day is lessened. Because we don't feel like "This is incredible. How do people live like this, with things breaking all the time, and things not working?!? I can't stand it!" Like, no, that's, this is life. This is the way it works. Josh: 17:49 I often said, and I still say, and one of my maybe crowning moments was when someone quoted me saying, this is, "it doesn't matter how close or how far along number..." Sorry, let me say my famous quote one more time. "It does not matter how far along the road to perfection you are when you die. It only matters the direction you're facing." And I think that that's a very important principle. Whether you're talking about your life and your pursuit of this ideal of perfection, or you're talking about your career, we're all going to fail. But when you fail, fail forward, and we've heard that from business leaders, "Hey, if you're going to fail, fail forward, don't feel backwards." But that is, if we embrace that, we recognize that, you know, some people may fail faster and get up and move forward, but every single one of us needs to, when we fail, fail in the direction of progress. And when we do that, we, when we look up, we still realize that we're on the path. It's when we fail and we fail completely off, or, you know, maybe there's no trust and support in our lives or in our business. You know, there, there are cases where I failed and I became the immediate butt of blame. Uh, you know, people, yeah, "Josh screwed up," and that those are really hard to recover from. One of my managers, well actually our common manager for a very brief period of time... Um, yeah, it's a story for another day, right? Leon: 19:23 Apology, forgiveness. We're back in that cycle again. Josh: 19:27 So Andy said, "Nobody will be faulted for trying and failing, only for failing to try." Leon: 19:35 I liked it every time he said it. Just going back to what you said about your famous quote, your, you're remarkably close to a beloved ancient rabbi, Rabbi Tarfon, who, in Pirkei Avot, said, "It's not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world, but you're not free to desist from it either." Josh: 19:55 Oh, I liked that one. Leon: 19:56 Yeah. So you, you are standing on solid ground with your famous quote. So just to wrap up the episode, I think something that Andy and I both saw and you were just a little bit short before you got there to see it, was that idea of "you won't be blamed for failing" is, it also depends so much on what you do about the failure. When I was back at where you're working, where I used to work, I saw something within a period of a week: two major outages that were caused by somebody making a change outside of change control. In the first case the person immediately called folks and said, "hey, the system down. I really didn't think that what I was changing was going to have this kind of impact. I thought it was a minor configuration file. I didn't know it had this sort of wide ranging impact. What can I do to fix it?" And they were told "there's nothing you can do to fix it. It's beyond your skill set." But that person stayed on the phone for hours while the repairs, the backups and restores and everything went, you know, and said, "I just want to be here to see what I need to know for next time." And nothing more was said about it. And if I hadn't known this person, I probably wouldn't have known that much of it. A week later there was another major outage. Not with the same system, a similar system, similar magnitude. This person tried to cover their tracks. They actually tried to bury it under the rug. "What, what? It's down? I had no idea!" And as we all know, there's log files for everything. And so it came out pretty quickly that, you know, what had happened. This person had made a change without a change control. Nobody knew it was happening. This person tried to bury it under the rug and, without another comment, that person was simply escorted to the door. That was it, it was over. It wasn't about the failure, it was about how they handled it. It was about how they owned or didn't own up to it. And I think that's when we think about failure in IT. And also what does a religion, religious, moral, ethical outlook give us? I think it's, it's that it gives us the ability to recognize that failure is a normal, natural part of our experience as people moving around the world. And that, you know, it's not some sort of huge character flaw to have failed and, and how to have the moral fortitude to own up to it and to say, you know, uh, to apologize and to say, what can I do to make restitution and to make sure that it doesn't happen again. I think that's really more than anything else. What, what our outlook, our religious outlook on life gives us. Josh 1: 22:56 Yeah. And that's really interesting. I love the the Pixar movies. My family loves to Pixar movies. My son, my oldest son, really loves the Pixar movies. And in Toy Story, Buzz attempts to fly, you remember the scene right? And so to paraphrase Buzz, "When you fail, fail with style." And of course, that's what Buzz says. He thinks he's flying and it takes him the entire story. And then, you know, uh, what he's looking up and he's like, "Oh my goodness, you know, Buzz, you're flying". And the Buzz acknowledges, "No, you know, we're, this is falling with style." And I think that, right? I think that's really the essence of it, right? If you're going to fail, fail with style, fail with purpose and intent, recognize that as you move forward, that's, that is the essence of life. That is the essence of life in IT, life at home, life as an individual, life with your relationship with God. You're going to make mistakes, as you've so wonderfully said, you're going to make mistakes. When you make those mistakes, recognize them, admit to them, and try really hard not to make them again. That that is the evolution of humanity. Roddie: 24:15 Thank you for making time for us this week to hear more of technically religious. Visit our website at technicallyreligious.com where you can find our other episodes, leave us ideas for future discussions or connect with us on social media. Leon: 24:28 So as we learned from Alfred and Christopher Nolan's "Batman begins." Alfred: 24:31 Why do we fall, sir? So that we can learn to pick ourselves up.
As storied creatures, humans search for meaning and purpose in their life and the world through stories. In many ways, modern cinema has replaced traditional religious institutions as the primary location people go to in order to find stories that will help them make sense of their lives. Some of the great movies of our time are deeply embedded with profound theological and philosophical ideas. In this series, we'll explore the deep ideas and questions embedded in popular films. First up, is Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, which as we will explore, is filled existential themes and questions borrowed from the likes of Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Camus, and Soren Kierkegaard. To subscribe on iTunes instead go to: Itunes:https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/deep-talks-exploring-theology-and-meaning-making/id1401730159?mt=2 or your preferred Podcast platform of choice. Click here to watch on Youtube
We dive into our first film series starting with Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy. That's right Batman Begins! Show Notes REFERENCED: The Dark Knight Trilogy Collection Christopher Nolan Batman- Dark Knight Rises Banes Original Voice- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZW5qyc2g6U The Lego Batman- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lego_Batman_Movie SEND YOUR QUESTIONS: onthesubjectpodcast@gmail.com OR Follow us on: Twitter: @onthesubject1 Instagram: @onthesubject Website: http://www.geeksrising.com LOGAN NAUGLE Twitter: @thatlogan Instagram: @thatlogan website: thatlogan.com ZACHARY ROSS JACKSON Twitter: @BossRossJackson Instagram: @boss_ross_jackson MALCOLM RUSSEL-NELSON Twitter: @capnmalcolm
The Triple Bill Title Word for Episode 048 is DARK and we're joined by Leslie Pitt from the Fatal Attractions Podcast to discuss Katheryn Bigelow's vampire Western, Alex Proyas' mind bending cult classic and Christopher Nolan's Batman sequel starring Christian Bale and Heath Ledger. 00:57 - Near Dark 37:00 - Dark City 1:05:24 - The Dark Knight Please review us over on Apple Podcasts. Got comments or suggestions for new episodes? Email: sddpod@gmail.com. Seek us out via Twitter and Instagram @ sddfilmpodcast Support our Patreon for $3 a month and get access to our exclusive show, Sudden Double Deep Cuts where we talk about our favourite movie soundtracks, scores and theme songs! You can find Leslie on Twitter @Afrofilmviewer and @FatalAttractPod. https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/fatal-attractions/id1229261184 Episode 049 - BLUE launches on 17th May where we'll be joined by Amélie Thomas (also) from the Fatal Attractions Podcast.
On this month's wildcard episode, Jordan and Phil throw out opinions on tough movie related either/or questions! This is part one of many in the This or That series. Hit us up on our social media accounts and let us know your answers and give us additional questions for the future! 3:05: Tom Hardy or Leonardo DiCaprio? 7:00: Christopher Nolan's Batman series or The Russo Brothers' Captain America series? 11:50: Predator or Terminator? 15:00: Jaws or Jurassic Park? 18:20: Bree Larson or Jennifer Lawrence or Emma Stone? 22:30: Ryan Gosling or Ryan Reynolds? 26:45: Sarah Connor or Ellen Ripley? 28:55: Titanic or Avatar? 32:00: Prime Adam Sandler or Prime Will Ferrell? 35:20: Alien or Aliens? How to contact/listen: Twitter: @mildmanneredpod ; @4M_Phil Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mildmanneredpod Podbean: http://www.mildmanneredmoviemen.podbean.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/mild-mannered-movie-men/id1236455805 E-Mail: mildmanneredmoviemen@gmail.com
By popular demand, we finally get to discuss some general thoughts on Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, with help from our resident Batman expert Shane.
It's the first anniversary of Ian Hates Movies! Ian, Kelly, and special guest Mandy, are celebrating by talking about some movies that they've teased on the show, almost from the beginning! That's right...Forest Gump...No, no, no...that's coming sometime later, haha. No, this time they're talking about the Christopher Nolan Batman Trilogy! That includes: Batman: Begins Batman: The Dark Knight Batman: The Dark Knight Rises Wow, can you believe it?!?! That also doesn't include some anniversary chatter and the trademark tangents you've come to know and love! Enough typing and reading, just listen! Does Ian Hate Batman... Don't forget to support Ian Hates Movies! Subscribe, rate, and share Ian Hates Music on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, and any of your favorite podcast listening apps! Links below: http://www.ianhates.com/ https://www.facebook.com/ianhates/ https://twitter.com/ianhatespodcast https://www.instagram.com/ianhatespodcast/ https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ian-hates-movies/ http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/ian-hates-movies All sound bites or film clips are exclusive property of their respective owners and are in no way affiliated with Ian Hates Podcast or its' sponsors. They are used here for entertainment purposes only. Enjoy! Long days and pleasant nights.
This season on "Talk Amongst Yourselves", we move through the best and worst villains in modern comic book film history. We continue our journey dissecting the Villains Hollywood has given us over the last few decades and grade each of the heavy hitters in the Comic Book movie industry, starting with the DC Cinematic Universe. We reveled in Christopher Nolan's Batman universe and gave a pass to Parallax in Green Lantern! Now, we dive deeper into Man of Steel all the way to Zack Snyder's anti-hero film, Suicide Squad! So, at the end of it all, where does DC rank in its quality structure? Follow the Roundtable: Brian Walters: @propsofprophecy Joe Machado: @diamondjab --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/s1radio/support
This week, we briefly go over some gaming, Age of Adeline, and conclude our look at Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy with The Dark Knight Rises.
Det ligger en hund begravd i denna veckas podcastavsnitt, vi jämför även den kommande Jönssonligan filmen med Christopher Nolans Batman triologi. Vi pratar skönhet och om man ska umgås med snygga människor eller inte. Det blir en hejdundrande fest för dina öron luta dig tillbaka så kör vi.
With Christopher Nolan's Batman films Warner Bros. set the gold standard for superhero films. The Dark Knight was a box office hit, a fan favorite, and even won an Academy Award for acting. Yet the year after Batman Begins the other World's Finest superhero, Superman, failed to take flight. So when Dark Knight writer David Goyer pitched a new, bold take on Superman Warner Bros. agreed. Watchmen director Zack Snyder was brought in to direct, and the result was Man of Steel. Its opening weekend broke records, but both critics and fans are sharply divided over the quality of the film. Now Arnie, Stuart, and Jakob bring their Superman retrospective series to a close with their review of Man of Steel. Can Man of Steel leap tall buildings in a single bound, or should it be stopped with a speeding bullet? Listen to find out!
With Christopher Nolan's Batman films Warner Bros. set the gold standard for superhero films. The Dark Knight was a box office hit, a fan favorite, and even won an Academy Award for acting. Yet the year after Batman Begins the other World's Finest superhero, Superman, failed to take flight. So when Dark Knight writer David Goyer pitched a new, bold take on Superman Warner Bros. agreed. Watchmen director Zack Snyder was brought in to direct, and the result was Man of Steel. Its opening weekend broke records, but both critics and fans are sharply divided over the quality of the film. Now Arnie, Stuart, and Jakob bring their Superman retrospective series to a close with their review of Man of Steel. Can Man of Steel leap tall buildings in a single bound, or should it be stopped with a speeding bullet? Listen to find out!
With Christopher Nolan's Batman films Warner Bros. set the gold standard for superhero films. The Dark Knight was a box office hit, a fan favorite, and even won an Academy Award for acting. Yet the year after Batman Begins the other World's Finest superhero, Superman, failed to take flight. So when Dark Knight writer David Goyer pitched a new, bold take on Superman Warner Bros. agreed. Watchmen director Zack Snyder was brought in to direct, and the result was Man of Steel. Its opening weekend broke records, but both critics and fans are sharply divided over the quality of the film. Now Arnie, Stuart, and Jakob bring their Superman retrospective series to a close with their review of Man of Steel. Can Man of Steel leap tall buildings in a single bound, or should it be stopped with a speeding bullet? Listen to find out!
With Christopher Nolan's Batman films Warner Bros. set the gold standard for superhero films. The Dark Knight was a box office hit, a fan favorite, and even won an Academy Award for acting. Yet the year after Batman Begins the other World's Finest superhero, Superman, failed to take flight. So when Dark Knight writer David Goyer pitched a new, bold take on Superman Warner Bros. agreed. Watchmen director Zack Snyder was brought in to direct, and the result was Man of Steel. Its opening weekend broke records, but both critics and fans are sharply divided over the quality of the film. Now Arnie, Stuart, and Jakob bring their Superman retrospective series to a close with their review of Man of Steel. Can Man of Steel leap tall buildings in a single bound, or should it be stopped with a speeding bullet? Listen to find out!
With Christopher Nolan's Batman films Warner Bros. set the gold standard for superhero films. The Dark Knight was a box office hit, a fan favorite, and even won an Academy Award for acting. Yet the year after Batman Begins the other World's Finest superhero, Superman, failed to take flight. So when Dark Knight writer David Goyer pitched a new, bold take on Superman Warner Bros. agreed. Watchmen director Zack Snyder was brought in to direct, and the result was Man of Steel. Its opening weekend broke records, but both critics and fans are sharply divided over the quality of the film. Now Arnie, Stuart, and Jakob bring their Superman retrospective series to a close with their review of Man of Steel. Can Man of Steel leap tall buildings in a single bound, or should it be stopped with a speeding bullet? Listen to find out!
In this week's pod, Spen and Kieran talk about what went wrong for the Broncos, how the Falcons continue to get lucky, Kieran's history with catfish, and what the best Super Bowl match up would be. Later, Spen instructs Kieran on how to get back in to hockey now that it's starting back up. To finish up the pod, they guys rank Christopher Nolan's Batman movies (see, we don't just talk about football)!Mourning the Broncos Defeat
Subject: The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Observers: John Pavlich, Tysto Record Date: December 15, 2012, 05:04 PM Plot Summary: Eight years after the death of Harvey Dent, Bruce Wayne comes out of hiding to stop Bane, a masked madman bent on destroying Gotham and shattering the legend of Batman. Note: Concluding our commentaries on Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, Tysto returns to talk about character through-lines, sexism in Nolan's work and defending against plot holes. Remember to listen for the preemptive countdown before starting the film on your DVD.
I avsnitt 83 kastar vi oss in i Christopher Nolans Batman-trilogi. Vi betar av filmerna, snackar realism, psykologi och spårar The Dark Knights serietidningsarv.
Hey ATA Listeners, this week's podcast is titled “Slow Ride” as the writers of our favorite TV shows took it easy on story development with the set of episodes we reviewed to give us what Nico and I called a slow week of television. I don't know if it was Person of Interest being preempted due to the presidential election but many of the shows we watched this week were lacking action as character development and overarching stories stayed in place. In fact, Bones as you'll hear in our Airwaves Rundown section was downright boring this week! Now, this philosophy didn't apply to all the shows that aired this week as the sitcoms (Go On, The Big Bang Theory and two episodes of Modern Family) all had solid outings that delivered big laughs. In addition, Once upon a Time and Supernatural made huge strides in making up for the shortcomings their shows had during the previous season but this still did not save this week from being deemed as slow. We even thought we could make up for this issue by filling in the place Person of Interest left open in our schedule with a full review of the week's Alphas episode but that turned out to be slow as well with things needing to be ramped up into the Season Finale. However, where Alphas needed to ramp up the new CW show Arrow hit the ground running with one of the best new pilots of the Fall 2012 TV Season, right up there with ABCs Last Resort. I personally thought Arrow was better but Nico and others might disagree with me on that one because I'm kind of biased when it comes to superheroes and I really miss watching Smallville on a weekly basis. Anyway, I do agree with Nico's review on the pilot for Arrow given in our Rundown sections where he raves about the new series calling it an action show that looks nothing like a CW teenybopper show but something more reminiscent of Christopher Nolan's Batman or the Bourne Movies. I also piggyback onto Nico's positive reviews with my comic book based theories on how the series next five seasons are going to play out but for my full review on the pilot itself you're going to have to check out my section on Michael and Woo's new show Longbow Hunters, the ATA podcast slowly dedicated to just reviewing episodes of Arrow. So from here what you listeners need to do is check out this podcast episode to stay updated on TV Shows that act as your old favorites and then check out Longbow Hunters to hear about Arrow, the new show that all of you should be watching especially if you are having Smallville or DC Nation withdrawals.
The Atomic Geeks’ very own Cosmic Viking, Christian Nielsen, joins CT and Pax for a blockbuster sized discussion of Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy. We cover all the bases from plot to casting to Batman’s throaty voice to "giant, black phallic symbols". Listen to find out what we liked, what bones we have to pick, and what Nolan could have learned from the Rocky movies. This week’s Nerd To-Dos feature the yin and yang of the Morning Glories comic book and the Six Million Dollar Man TV show.
After a very long halt to the series, the two Faisals have a very laid back conversation about Christopher Nolan's Batman movies and all things related (but mostly all things unrelated).
Und aus den Boxen Hüsker Düs "New Day Rising": Wie schön das gewesen ist, als auf einmal alles vorbei gewesen ist und die Fahnen überall verschwunden, man wieder atmen konnte. So fragil, bitte nicht zerbrechen. Haben ja alle überall so laut geschrien, ihren Scheiss zu verkaufen, neu angemalt und jeder stolz in seinem Shirt und danach gerne auch ohne, unendlich unangenehm. Nun endlich wieder reden und/über Regen. Und dann, da an der Ampel an der Kreuzung mit dem grossen Supermarkt, durch die regennasse Windschutzscheibe an der Litfaßsäule, ein Versprechen. Ein Versprechen, welches genauso japanische SUV, finnische Mobiltelefone und globale Engery Drinks verkaufen muss und eines, das vom Ende des Glücks kündet, zwingende Voraussetzung eines jeden Sequels. Christopher Nolans Batman kehrt zurück und mit ihm die Flimmerfreunde. Gedreht auf 65mm Negativ-Film, in 2D erscheint Nolans dritter Batman Film wie ein Anachronismus, und auch sonst hat der Film wenig gemein mit dem durchschnittlichen 20 Minuten Prämisse + 100 Geballer Superheldenfilm des Sommers. Nolans Film ist ansatzweise komplex und ambivalent, hat auf ganzer Länge mehr zu tun mit DOCTOR ZHIVAGO als anderen phrasendreschenden Rächern. Bernd, Ben und Kay über Christopher Nolans Batman Filme und insbesondere den dritten, letzten THE DARK KNIGHT RISES.
Hva kan vel passe bedre enn å feire jubileumsepisoden vår med finalen til Christopher Nolans Batman-trilogi?
Welcome the newest episode of Dark Discussions, your place for the discussion of horror film, fiction, and all that’s fantastic. In 2000, producers took notice of a little film entitled Memento directed by Christopher Nolan. With alternative cinema taking audiences imaginations to new heights, Nolan was being mentioned in the same breath as such contemporaries as Quentin Tarantino, Doug Liman, Guy Richie, and David Fincher who were molding the path of cinema in a direction that hadn’t been seen since the likes of Martin Scorsese, Paul Schrader, John Cassavetes, and William Friedkin. After establishing himself in 2002 with both actors and producers alike with the highly acclaimed dark crime drama Insomnia, Nolan was given the reins to a reboot of the mysterious vigilante comic book character, Batman. The character was as ambiguous as his many adaptations. From the campy 1960’s Adam West television adaption to the Tim Burton version, the character had seemed to run its course and reverted back to its public perception as quaint. However, with his alternative cinema roots and the various dark and brooding story lines of some of the character’s comic arcs, Christopher Nolan created a Batman that was about an individual filled with demons that haunted him more than the psychopathic villains he seemed to face. This version of Batman was not a child’s silly live action cartoon but an intricate tale that encompassed weighty topics seen only in “important” cinema. Dark Discussions begins a retrospective on Nolan’s Batman and the films that have swept the imaginations of film audiences world wide. As always we welcome your comments: darkdiscussions@aol.com (written email or attached mp3 files) WWW.DARKDISCUSSIONS.COM
Well this week's show is exactly what it says on the tin. Our resident comic-book expert, great friend of the show and fantastic writer, blogger and vlogger in his own right Sir. David DeMoss joins me to discuss, dissect, pick apart, ransack and often praise Chistopher Nolan's Batman Trilogy!Batman BeginsThe Dark KnightThe Dark Knight RisesThe conversation may not always go in directions you expect and we leave no turn unstoned in this epic coverage of one of the most talked about trilogies of our generation!You can find David over at www.aytiws.comYou can now SHOP The After Movie Diner http://www.cafepress.com/aftermoviediner LOTS of original and unique designs available on a variety of clothing styles for all ages, office & home supplies and gifts for all the family! AND Check out our sister show Dr.Action and the Kick Ass Kid Commentaries: WATCH OUT! This Podcast EXPLODES!!! http://dractionkickass.blogspot.com/ You can e-mail us: aftermoviediner@gmail.com You can follow us on Twitter: @aftermoviediner Search for us on Facebook - The Podcast from the After Movie Diner and please comment, leave feedback, rate and review us on www.talkshoe.com and iTunes We are also on www.podbean.com and www.podcastpickle.com The After Movie Diner Podcast is part of THE 2ND UNIT PODCAST NETWORK! Our ALL NEW website http://2upn.blogspot.com/
Holy batcast! Alan and Chris discuss the final installment of Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy with "The Dark Knight Rises". The review is fairly spoiler-free, but if you have seen the film or don't mind being "spoiled", stick around after the closing to hear them talk about the ending and all of the surprises the film had in store.
On this episode, we unpack the final installment in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy. We give a lengthy review, as well as discuss fan reactions, where the franchise could go in the future, and the current climate of the superhero genre. Just a heads up there are some instances of static in the middle of the podcast (from about the 36 minute mark until the 49 minute mark). If it gets too annoying, you can always fast forward... but be warned, that's when we get into spoilers. Intro music- Batman (1966 theme) Outro music- Wesley Willis "I Whupped Batman's Ass"
What better way to celebrate our 150th episode than with the movie event of the year? This week we'll be looking at the epic conclusion to Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, 'The Dark Knight Rises!' Can it possibly live up to the hype? We'll try to keep it spoiler-free folks, but the question "How does Anne Hathaway look in spandex?" will be answered! We'll also take a look back at the entire trilogy and assess its place in history.We want to know your thoughts, so join us in the chat room or call in to let your voice be heard.
Here it is! The most intensive breakdown and discussion of 'The Dark Knight Rises'! Massively opinionated Batman expert Ian Kerner joins me in a heated debate on why 'The Dark Knight Rises' is a massively flawed masterpiece! Is it a satisfying conclusion to Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy? Does it improve on what came before? What does it mean to the future of the DC film universe? What worked amazingly well and what really, really didn't? It's all here so strap yourselves in for the full Geekscape 'The Dark Knight Rises' Breakdown!
The Sketchy crew has an in-depth discussion of 2010's "Batman: Under The Red Hood." Later, the guys discuss Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, predictions for "The Dark Knight Rises," and play a Batman-themed "Name Game" at the end. Enjoy! Follow Sketchy: SketchyPodcast.com facebook.com/SketchyPodcast twitter.com/SketchyPodcast SketchyPodcast@gmail.com
Wherein we discuss Batman vs. politics, the Daily Planet vs. reality, the coolness of smoking, the old Batman '60s series, Christopher Nolan's Batman movies, movie props, Indiana Jones, The Dark Knight Rises, Richard Donner's Superman movies, Marvel's upcoming superhero movies, Doctor Strange, Ready Player One, and the Deadpool video game. Starring Ryan Scott, Adam Fitch, Ryan Higgins, and Chris Noyes.
With Mark Lawson. The Dark Knight Rises is the third of director Christopher Nolan's Batman films. Christian Bale stars as Bruce Wayne, with Tom Hardy as an evil terrorist, and Anne Hathaway as Catwoman. Writer Naomi Alderman reviews. The first phase of Tate Modern's extension programme is unveiled this week with the opening of The Tanks, two enormous chambers in former oil tanks, which will show art in live form - performance, installations and film. Mark meets architect Jacques Herzog and artist Sung Hwan Kim. Director Asif Kapadia, whose motor-racing documentary Senna won considerable acclaim, discusses his film Odyssey, a portrait of London since it won the bid to host the Olympic games. Starting on 6 July 2005, the film shows the euphoria of winning the bid, the devastation of the 7/7 terrorist attacks, the impact of the credit crunch and the 2011 riots. Birger Larsen, the director behind the Danish crime series The Killing, reveals that the now-famous jumper worn by the show's main character Sarah Lund was an after-thought - and that the original costume paid tribute to a big-screen gunslinger. Producer Jerome Weatherald.
TEGNEFILMPODCASTEN lægger op til den sidste film i Christopher Nolans Batman-trilogi, The Dark Knight Rises der har dansk premiere d. 20. juli. Jeg har set nærmere på antologitegnefilmen Batman — Gotham Knight, der er animeret af primært japanske animationsstudier. Overordnet set er den produceret af Warner Bros. og med Emma Thomas — Christopher Nolans kone — som executive producer. Måske netop derfor matcher de seks korte tegnefilms storyline og mood så fint med Nolans Batman-film — de danner faktisk bro mellem Batman Begins (2005) og The Dark Knight (2008). Det er ikke alle seks Batman-kortfilm der står sig lige godt, men ideen med at lave en fusion mellem japansk anime og Batman-universet er til gengæld rigtig god. Den lykkes bedst i Shojiro Nishimis "Have I Got a Story For You" (fra Studio 4°C) og Yasuhiro Aokis "In Darkness Dwells" (fra Madhouse). TEGNEFILMPODCASTEN episode 28 byder derfor på følgende segmenter: 00:00 Intro + tak til Karsten Nielsen fra Gaga the Movies og Jan for at skrive søde ting om TEGNEFILMPODCASTEN 06:41 Karakteristik af Batman + anmeldelse af Batman — Gotham Knight 12:11 "Have I Got a Story For You" (manus. Josh Olson, inst. Shojiro Nishimi) 20:34 "In Darkness Dwells" (manus. David Goyer, inst. Yasuhiro Aoki) 27:20 Ekstramateriale på blu-rayen 31:15 Outro + næste episode //Tegnefilm som du aldrig har hørt dem før
Great Scott, ATA Listeners! It's time for another podcast and on this episode there's no roads where were going because this edition of Across the Airwaves has a Back to the Future theme due to us reviewing Christopher Lloyd's guest appearance on the mid season premiere of Fringe as well as the Mid Season Premieres of Bones and Chuck. Highlights from the episode include Nico fearing that Hannah has caused Bones to jump the shark, a discussion of some huge casting news on Christopher Nolan's Batman sequel, The Dark Night Rises and Doc Brown himself joining us for our discussion on this week's episode of Fringe. Also I would like to acknowledge Michael J. Petty's editing debut on this episode and thank him for the great work that he performed on the Chuck section of this episode featuring Jeffster's greatest hits. By the way, thanks to all of you who sent us your favorite Chloe memories but please keep them coming and remember to join us on February 4th around 9:15/8:15c at this web site: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/across-the-airwaves-live for ChloeFest, a live show that is now going to review the episode Collateral, along with celebrating the life of Chloe Sullivan.