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Hoy hablamos de estrenos como “Soltera, casada, viuda, divorciada”, “Decision to Leave” y “Huesera”, así como de películas del Festival Al Este como “Saint Omer”, “EO” y “Compartment No. 6”. También contamos sobre novedades en cartelera alternativa.
Discussed this epsiode: Knock at the Cabin, Women Talking, Last of Us, Call Me Miss Cleo, Extraordinary, Tar, Reservation Dogs, M3gan, Causeway, Till, Compartment No 6, Eternal Daughter, The People We Hate at the Wedding, Lockwood and Co. The Menu, White Lotus, Avatar, Reboot, Traitors, Violent Night, This is Going to Hurt, Orphan: First Kill, Mayfair Witches, Will Trent , Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, Watchful Eye, Gossip Girl, Documentary Now, The Good Fight
Hans Petrovic and guests review three films currently showing in Christchurch
Si hay que viajar solo hay una forma de hacerlo: nosotros lo tenemos claro y parece que los protagonistas de las películas de esta semana también. El vagón-restaurante permanecerá abierto. Disfruten del trayecto. PODIO (por orden cronológico): 1. Runaway train (1985) 2. Compartment No. 6 (2021) 3. Bullet train (2022) Intervienen: Pablo González, Pablo Escobedo, Álex De la Vela. ¡¡¡Estrenamos Instagram!!! https://www.instagram.com/tipos_oscuros/?hl=es https://www.facebook.com/tipososcuros/ @CineHeroico
People come to Screen Watching for the reviews and this week we have them: Thor: Love and Thunder (It's in cinemas now) Black Bird (it's on Apple TV+) The Undeclared War (in the UK it was on Channel 4. In Australia we're watching it on Stan) Compartment No 6 (Available to buy or rent online) But Screen Watching offers more than just reviews. Inspired by the fan interaction of young folks wearing suits to see the latest Minions movie, we discuss fan interaction films. We briefly discuss all the expected titles: The Room, Rocky Horror, etc. But then we suggest some alternatives. What in this conversation leads Dan to suggest a horse should be murdered live in the cinema? You'll have to listen to find out. Oh, and we take a look at the week ahead.
This week on the Movie Squad pod, Simon Miraudo is joined once again by Cecilia Allen to look at the weird and wonderful releases in cinemas. And they're joined by special guest Brekky host Emma Lucia! First up, Simon runs through the highlights of the [Revelation Film Festival](https://www.revelationfilmfest.org/program/) program, including the special [Movie Squad-hosted screening of ](https://www.facebook.com/events/luna-leederville/rev22-qa-flux-gourmet/1724275364592604/)Flux Gourmet, featuring a Q&A with director Peter Strickland. Also reviewed: Australian horror-satire Sissy, the fascinating theatre adaptation Shadow and American screwball comedy 18 1/2. Then, Cecilia reviews the Cannes Film Festival favourite Compartment No. 6, in which a Finnish student forms a friendship with a prickly Russian on a lengthy train ride from Moscow to Murmansk. The Revelation Film Festival is now screening in WA, and Compartment No. 6 is now in select Australian cinemas.
For NAIDOC Week we're joined by Warren H. Williams, co-creator & star of a unique and stunningly shot new crime series, True Colours, NITV's first foray into longform drama, and filmmaker Larissa Behrendt, who talks about Warriors on the Field, a celebration of Indigenous Australia and its long-standing history and connection with Australian football. Two exciting directors from Finland will also be along.....Juho Kuosmanen and Mikko Myllylahti, for a conversation about Finnish storytelling and their new films, the Cannes winning Compartment No. 6 (Juho Kuosmanen), and The Woodcutter Story (Mikko Myllylahti), both set to screen in Australia. Plus, Sunil and a very special guest are on the red carpet for the premiere of Thor: Love and Thunder and put some questions to Taika Waititi and Chris Hemsworth.
Finnish director Juho Kuosmanen's film "Compartment No. 6" is now screenings in Australian cinemas. Filmed in Russia, the movie won the grand prix of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival last year. This is a Russian language content. - 7 июля в австралийских кинотеатрах стартуют показы фильма финнского режиссера Юхо Куосманена "Купе номер 6". Снятая в России картина взяла гран-при жюри Каннского кинофестиваля в прошлом году и была номинирована на Золотую пальмовую ветвь.
Teaser Text: CJ says that Compartment No. 6 is up there with the best films of the year and Sundown is a fantastic little gem.
It's a Finnephiles special in celebration of the Scandi Film Festival! Lisa Kovacevic talks to Finnish directors Juho Kuosmanen, about his film COMPARTMENT NO.6, and Mikko Myllylahti about his new release THE WOODCUTTER STORY. Lisa then chats to Australian filmmaker Adrian Francis about his documentary PAPER CITY, which is screening at the Melbourne Documentary Film FestivalFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/primalscreenshow/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/primal_screen_show/Twitter: https://twitter.com/primal_screen
With the help of Aaron Brooks (@AaronJayBrooks), we debate the 5 best movies of 2022 so far (aka, all the movies with titles that are very long or start with "The") -- and the movies you can skip. Plus Sammy shares his list of the best 90s comedies you (or at least, he) never saw. Movies discussed include: The Batman, The Northman, Everything Everywhere All At Once, The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (aka, the "Nic Cage Movie"), Vortex, Turning Red, Kimi, After Yang, Ambulance, RRR, Great Freedom, Compartment No. 6, Doctor Strange 2. NO spoilers in this episode. Outre: "This is a Life" (2022), Son Lux
In the April edition of the show, Cinetopia founder Amanda Rogers is joined by Garry Arnot to review Robert Eggers's Viking epic, The Northman, the new adventure rom-com, The Lost City, and the new Finnish film, Compartment No. 6 directed by Juho Kuosmanen. Amanda also talked to Laura Wadha, director of the short documentary Born in Damascus, which recently won the Crystal Bear at the Berlinale Film Festival for best short film. All that plus a little Oscar chat (of course) on this month's episode of the Cinetopia show. ------------------------ -----------------------
I talk to Finnish director Juho Kuosmanen about his Cannes-winning Russian train romcom Compartment No 6; and I meet director John Madden at The Chiswick Cinema to discuss Operation Mincemeat, war films and working with Colin Firth for the first time in over 20 years. Plus I review Viking epic The Northman and lesbian nun movie Benedetta.Music by Lee Rosevere. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Reviews of the films Julia, The Outfit, The Lost City & Compartment No. 6. Reviews of the streaming films Leading Ladies & Forgotten Roads.DIRECT LINK
This week… Clarisse geeks out over 10th-century chamber burials and Viking bowl cuts with The Northman director, Robert Eggers (16:49), plus we chat about Amazon's new spy thriller All the Old Knives (31:57) and the train-based meet cute in Compartment No. 6 (45:58). Plus, in this week's Hot Take (01:01:05), you may have noticed that we're not covering Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore on the Fade to Black pod. We talk about why. 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!
Ellen E Jones and Mark Kermode jump on board to explore the role of trains on our screens. This week sees the release of Compartment No 6 - a strange and touching romance set on the Trans-Siberian Railway. Trains have played a recurring role in film, right from the inception of the genre. Mark is joined by silent film specialist Bryony Dixon and composer Neil Brand to talk about the appeal of the railway for the pioneers of cinema. And Ellen talks to Compartment No 6 director Juho Kuosmanen and critic Anna Smith about the cinematic opportunities for connection, contemplation and romance while riding the rails. Screenshot is Radio 4's guide through the ever-expanding universe of the moving image. Every episode, Ellen E Jones and Mark Kermode journey through the main streets and back roads connecting film, television and streaming over the last hundred years. Producer: Freya Hellier A Prospect Street production for BBC Radio 4
Please have your tickets ready for inspection - this week, host Michael Leader, Lwlies' David Jenkins and film critic Laura Venning pile into a carriage to discuss train-set Finnish drama Compartment No. 6, and in Film Club, the train theme keeps chugging along with David Lean's classic, Brief Encounter. Plus, Antoneta Alamat Kusijanović's Camera d'Or-winning debut, Murina.Truth & Movies is the podcast from the film experts at Little White Lies, where along with selected colleagues and friends, they discuss the latest movie releases. Truth & Movies has all your film needs covered, reviewing the latest releases big and small, keeping you across important industry news, and reassessing great films from days gone by with the Truth & Movies Film Club.Email: truthandmovies@tcolondon.comTwitter and Instagram: @LWLiesProduced by Little Dot Studios See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
OAF 60 is out now and for the first time ever we've made a podcast that is exactly half an hour. This week Dan highlights new music from Harry Styles, and Flume featuring Caroline Polachek. New films include one of the best indie films of 2022 so far, a big blockbuster and some films to watch at home. Spotify playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6BOVLLad2duA31cP98rcQy?si=02228a9c45bf43d5The Long Goodbye (short film): https://youtu.be/Lzz50xENH4gTrailers:Compartment No. 6: https://youtu.be/m3nK8lOa3HcThe Outfit: https://youtu.be/3UgJL23HxyUFantastic Beasts: The Secrets Of Dumbledore: https://youtu.be/DaM_wL1ZOM4Charli XCX: Alone Together: https://youtu.be/YV6B3CoP2kMMurina: https://youtu.be/fC2sUO6xhOAThe Bubble: https://youtu.be/ZBD8X5zLG4UThanks for listening, as always. Please like, subscribe, rate, review and say nice things about and to us.
Total Film 00.00– 5.30 Intro 05.35 – 22.30 Review of Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets Of Dumbledore 23.35 – 36.00 Review of The Lost City 36.05 – 37.00 Alternative line reading 37.05 – 45.00 Review of The Outfit 45.05 – 54.30 Review of All The Old Knives 54.35 – 1.01.00 Review of Compartment Number 6 1.01.05 – 1.05.00 Reader's question followed by Outro
This week, we hit the rails to discuss Juho Kuosmanen's new film Compartment No. 6 (11:25), try to get to the bottom of what makes trains so cinematic/ talk about some noir classics and the mighty Snowpiercer (24:10), and *checks notes* discuss The Academy Awards (43:00). Choo-choo! The Cineskinny is off on another fun journey, powered by the chaotic energy you only get thanks to the awesome power of Remote Recording... Liked the episode? Wonderful! Leave us a five-star review, tell your pals, follow the team on @ptrsmpsn @anahitrooz and @jamiedunnesq, or email us at cineskinny@theskinny.co.uk Music: Too Cool by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4534-too-cool) License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Actual nominations are in bold font, nominations I think should have been made are in standard font.BEST FILMWho Will WinThe Power Of The DogWho Should WinBelfastMy Personal WinnerBelfastMy Personal NominationsBelfast, Don't Look Up, Drive My Car, Flee, The Last Duel, Licorice Pizza, The Lost Daughter, Nightmare Alley, Passing, The Power Of The DogBEST ANIMATED FILMWho Will WinEncantoWho Should WinFleeMy Personal WinnerFleeMy Personal NominationsEncanto, Flee, The Mitchells vs. The Machines, Pompo: The Cinéphile, Poupelle Of Chimney TownBEST DOCUMENTARYWho Will WinSummer Of Soul (...Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)Who Should WinSummer Of Soul (...Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)My Personal WinnerSummer Of Soul (...Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised)My Personal NominationsFlee, In The Same Breath, Procession, Summer Of Soul (...Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised), Writing With FireBEST FOREIGN FILMWho Will WinDrive My Car [Japan]Who Should WinFlee [Denmark]My Personal WinnerFlee [Denmark]My Personal NominationsCompartment No. 6 [Finland], Drive My Car [Japan], Flee [Denmark], A Hero [Iran], The Worst Person In The World [Norway]BEST DIRECTORWho Will WinJane Campion (The Power Of The Dog)Who Should WinKenneth Branagh (Belfast)My Personal WinnerJoel Coen (The Tragedy Of Macbeth)My Personal NominationsPaul Thomas Anderson (Licorice Pizza), Kenneth Branagh (Belfast), Jane Campion (The Power Of The Dog), Joel Coen (The Tragedy Of Macbeth), Rebecca Hall (Passing)BEST ACTORWho Will WinWill Smith (King Richard)Who Should WinBenedict Cumberbatch (The Power Of The Dog)My Personal WinnerBenedict Cumberbatch (The Power Of The Dog)My Personal NominationsBenedict Cumberbatch (The Power Of The Dog), Andrew Garfield (tick, tick...BOOM!), Michael Greyeyes (Wild Indian), Oscar Isaac (The Card Counter), Denzel Washington (The Tragedy Of Macbeth)BEST ACTRESSWho Will WinOlivia Colman (The Lost Daughter)Who Should WinJessica Chastain (The Eyes Of Tammy Faye)My Personal WinnerJessica Chastain (The Eyes Of Tammy Faye)My Personal NominationsJessica Chastain (The Eyes Of Tammy Faye), Olivia Colman (The Lost Daughter), Jodie Comer (The Last Duel), Isabelle Fuhrman (The Novice), Kristen Stewart (Spencer)BEST SUPPORTING ACTORWho Will WinTroy Kotsur (CODA)Who Should WinKodi Smmit-McPhee (The Power Of The Dog)My Personal WinnerKodi Smmit-McPhee (The Power Of The Dog)My Personal NominationsRobin de Jesús (tick, tick...BOOM!), Andrew Garfield (The Eyes Of Tammy Faye), Jason Isaacs (Mass), J.K. Simmons (Being The Ricardos), Kodi Smmit-McPhee (The Power Of The Dog)BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESSWho Will WinAriana DeBose (West Side Story)Who Should WinKirsten Dunst (The Power Of The Dog)My Personal WinnerRuth Negga (Passing)My Personal NominationsJessie Buckley (The Lost Daughter), Judy Davis (Nitram), Ariana DeBose (West Side Story), Kirsten Dunst (The Power Of The Dog), Ruth Negga (Passing)BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAYWho Will WinPaul Thomas Anderson (Licorice Pizza)Who Should WinKenneth Branagh (Belfast)My Personal WinnerKenneth Branagh (Belfast)My Personal NominationsKenneth Branagh (Belfast), Adam McKay (Don't Look Up), Paul Thomas Anderson (Licorice Pizza), Emma Seligman (Shiva Baby), Joachim Trier & Eskil Vogt (The Worst Person In The World)BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAYWho Will WinJane Campion (The Power Of The Dog)Who Should WinMaggie Gyllenhaal (The Lost Daughter)My Personal WinnerNicole Holofcener, Ben Affleck & Matt Damon (The Last Duel)My Personal NominationsRyūsuke Hamaguchi & Takamasa Oe (Drive My Car), Nicole Holofcener, Ben Affleck & Matt Damon (The Last Duel), Maggie Gyllenhaal (The Lost Daughter), Rebecca Hall (Passing), Jane Campion (The Power Of The Dog)DIRECT LINK
Join Hope and George to run down this week's new flicks and pick some Oscar winners for Sunday night!
Day 79 Compartment No. 6 Newburyport Screening Room (Newburyport, MA) Day 80 Man Of God Regal Fox Run (Newington, NH) Alice Shattuck from the Burn Barrell podcast joins the show to talk about Man Of God, religon in movies, the success of movies reaching out to specific audiences and more. Thanks to the sponsors: Popped! Gourmet Popcorn www.poppedstores.com Promo Code: MOVIESWITHCHRIS Thomas Treshock - C&A Financial Group 732-403-7747 thomas.treshock@ca-strategy.com www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-treshock KL Jack kljack.com Promo Code: Tim10
This week Lynn & Carltalk with Mary McCreight President of Arts For Life and draw for the Bon Jovi tickets. Then they talk new releases: Rescued By Ruby, Deep Water, Compartment No. 6 , Cheaper By the Dozen and Lynn is still loving Winning Time & The Thing About Pam. Plus the Super Awards were announced Thursday.
Como ser um empreendedor em 1973? Licorice Pizza mostra-nos um pouco dessa realidade, sem esquecer o marido de Barbra Streisand. Neste episódio falamos de notícias, o que andamos a ver e terminamos com a review de 'Licorice Pizza'. NOTÍCIAS Erick fala sobre os prémios SAG (URL). O QUE ANDAMOS A VER? Lázaro The Batman (2022) Close (2019) Man on Fire (2004) Luis The Batman (2022) Locke & Key (2ª Temporada) The AfterParty (1ª Temporada) No One Gets Out Alive (2021) The Weekend Away (2022) Erick The Batman (2022) Tabu Designated Survivor (1ª Temporada) I Want you Back (2022) Marry Me (2022) Compartment No. 6 (2021) A Hero (2021) Para a semana vamos fazer a review do filme 'Drive My Car'. Até lá, bons filmes. ** Música Original produzida por António Capelo (https://capelo.me) Sigam-nos em: https://twitter.com/peliculapodcast https://instagram.com/peliculapodcast https://facebook.com/peliculapodcast
Filmpodcast 733 Woche 09 2022 – Kino im Kopf – mit Michael Sennhauser. Ann Mayer hat «Ouistreham» mit Juliette Binoche gesehen, Georges Wyrsch den neuen «Cyrano» mit Peter Dinklage. Und ich habe mit Juho Kuosmanen über seinen grossartigen Zugfilm «Compartment No 6» geredet. Dazu wie immer Kurztipps und Tonspur.
Dennis is joined film lovers Glenn Gaylord (Senior Critic at the Queen Review) and actor-writer Drew Droege for Part 2 of their year-end look back at the Movies of 2021. Films discussed include: House of Gucci, Summer of Soul, No Time To Die, Licorice Pizza, The Sparks Brothers, Drive My Car, Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar, Nightmare Alley, The Lost Daughter, The Power of the Dog, Cruella, Nicole Kidman's AMC commercial, Being the Ricardos, Belfast, Parallel Mothers, Compartment No. 6, Wild Indian, Test Pattern, Last Night in Soho, Spencer, King Richard, Passing, A Hero, Encanto, Luca, The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Tik...Tik...Boom! and the movies we're looking forward to in 2022.
Eis Kritiker Michel Delage, Martine Reuter an Thierry Besseling beschwätzen: "Death on the Nile" (Kenneth Branagh), "Compartment No. 6" (Juho Kusomanen) a "L'Ennemi" (Stephan Streker).
The weekly movie reviews return to the podcast with Erik Childress and Steve Prokopy talking about eight new movies and the 4K restoration of Dennis Hopper's 1980 film, Out of the Blue. Flash-forward to 1984 for the new documentary about David Lynch's sci-fi adaptation (The Sleeper Must Awaken: Making Dune) or back to post-Civil War for a little western horror (Ghosts of the Ozarks). Steve tells you where you can see baby animals (The Wolf and the Lion) or take a train for one of this year's Best Foreign Language Film contenders (Compartment No. 6). Tim Roth takes an extended vacation from his family (Sundown) and Charlie Hunnam plays detective to try to clear Mel Gibson's name. From murder (Last Looks). Then we have the latest film from jackass – Roland Emmerich – where he tries to kill the planet with the moon (Moonfall). Finally, of course, we have an actual Jackass movie and the title could not be more apropos (Jackass Forever). 0:00 - Intro 1:51 - Out of the Blue 7:49 - Ghost of the Ozarks 13:50 – The Wolf and the Lion 20:25 – The Sleeper Must Awaken: Making Dune 25:59 - Compartment No. 6 31:40 – Last Looks 46:40 – Sundown 57:17 – Moonfall 1:08:48 – Jackass Forever 1:31:52 - Outro
In this slow-burn character study by award winning director Juho Kuosmanen, COMPARTMENT No. 6 follows the trek of a young Finnish, Laura woman (Seidi Haarla) as she escapes an enigmatic love affair in Moscow by boarding a train to the arctic port of Murmansk in search of ancient petroglyphs. Forced to share the long ride and a tiny sleeping car with a loutish Russian miner, Ljoha (Yuriy Borisov) the unexpected encounter leads the occupants of Compartment No. 6 to face the truth about their own yearning for human connection. The film is based on Rosa Liksom's 2011 novel of the same name. COMPARTMENT No. 6 was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival as well as the Finnish entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 94th Academy Awards. The film was recently shortlisted for Best International Feature Film. Director / co-writer Juho Kuosmanen (The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki) joins us for a conversation on his inspiration for this muted love story, the logistical challenges of filming in Arctic-like weather, and the stellar performances from his brilliant lead performers. For news and updates go to sonyclassics.com/film/compartmentno6 For more go to: totem-films.com/compartment-n6 Independent Spirit Award for Best International Film. Compartment No. 6 is short listed for the Academy Award in the International Feature Film category
Two people thrown together by chance in a tiny compartment on a Russian train traveling from Moscow to Murmansk, in the arctic north. That may not sound like a combustible formula for a plot, but "Compartment No. 6," from the Finnish filmmaker Juho Kuosmanen, is greatly rewarding and improbably beautiful.
David Sterritt is a film critic, author, teacher and scholar. He is most notable for his work on Alfred Hitchcock and Jean-Luc Godard, and his many years as the Film Critic for The Christian Science Monitor, where, from 1968 until his retirement in 2005, he championed avant garde cinema, theater and music. He has a PhD in Cinema Studies from New York University and was, until 2105, Chairman of the National Society of Film Critics. Sterritt is known for his intelligent discussions of controversial films and his lively, accessible style
Princeton African American Studies professor Imani Perry says the South can be seen as an "origin point" for the way the nation operates. Her book, South to America, reflects on the region's history and traces the steps of an enslaved ancestor. "The South in some ways becomes the repository for the nation's sins, right?" she says. "And then it allows the rest of the country to conceive of itself as relatively pristine."Also, Justin Chang reviews the Finnish film Compartment No. 6.
Princeton African American Studies professor Imani Perry says the South can be seen as an "origin point" for the way the nation operates. Her book, South to America, reflects on the region's history and traces the steps of an enslaved ancestor. "The South in some ways becomes the repository for the nation's sins, right?" she says. "And then it allows the rest of the country to conceive of itself as relatively pristine."Also, Justin Chang reviews the Finnish film Compartment No. 6.
Larry Mantle and KPCC film critics Wade Major and Claudia Puig review this weekend's new movie releases on streaming and on demand platforms. FilmWeek: ‘Lunana: A Yak in The Classroom,' ‘Compartment No. 6,' ‘Salt In My Soul' And More (1:02) Previewing This Year's Sundance Film Festival As The Events Go Virtual Amid Omicron Surge (32:05) Sian Heder On ‘CODA' Following Record Breaking Premiere At Last Year's Sundance Film Festival (41:40)
Our final Sydney Film Festival in cinema roundup, featuring thoughts on The French Dispatch, Undine, Titane, Drive My Car, Limbo, Four Seasons in a Day, Bad Luck Banging or Looney Porn, Parallel Mothers, The Hand of God, The Swordsman, A Hero, Compartment No. 6, One Second, Come Here, The Dog Who Wouldn't Be Quiet, Paris 13th District and Great Freedom. Movies movies movies!
As the London Film Festival draws to a close for another year, host Michael is joined by Little White Lies' own Hannah Strong and Critic's Mentorship Programme participant Jojo Ajisafe, to talk about the festival films that have stuck with them, including First Feature Competition winner Playground, Sunderland Award jury recommendation Small Body, and Finnish drama Compartment No.6. Truth & Movies is the podcast from the film experts at Little White Lies, where along with selected colleagues and friends, they discuss the latest movie releases. Truth & Movies has all your film needs covered, reviewing the latest releases big and small, keeping you across important industry news, and reassessing great films from days gone by with the Truth & Movies Film Club.Email: truthandmovies@tcolondon.comTwitter and Instagram: @LWLiesProduced by Little Dot Studios See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After a Cannes-less 2020, we were glad to welcome back cinema's grandest event. Film Comment followed the festival's stellar lineup with the help of an on-the-Croisette crew of contributors. On today's podcast—the first of an epic two-parter—Film Comment editors Devika Girish and Clinton Krute welcomed FC contributing editor Jonathan Romney and critic and programmer Miriam Bale to dish on some of their festival viewing. They talked about Julia Ducournau's Palme d'Or -winner Titane, Bruno Dumont's France, Paul Verhoeven's Benedetta, Compartment No. 6, Red Rocket, La Fracture, Lingui, the Sacred Bonds, and more. Stay tuned for part two of the conversation, covering Annette, Memoria, The Souvenir Part II, and many more.
We react to Cannes 2021! The awards and their presentation, the red carpets and their memes, the films and their receptions, ovations, reviews, clips & trailers - my god, do we react to Cannes. What Is This Episode? - Top of Show . CANNES GIVES OUT ITS AWARDS: Spike Screwed Up - 1:36 Titane Wins Palme d'Or - 3:13 Cannes to Oscars Stats - 10:38 A Hero Wins the Grand Prix - 13:25 Tilda Swinton Gets Gold - 16:47 Leos Carax Best Director - 20:44 Other Big Wins - 23:28 . PITCHING OURSELVES TO THE CANNES POWERS - 32:22 (aka Make MMO The Official Standing Ovation Time-Keepers) . CANNES FILMS W/ POSITIVE RECEPTIONS: The French Dispatch - 38:10 Red Rocket - 42:02 Bergman Island, Compartment No 6; Mothering Sunday - 47:00 Where Is Anne Frank; After Yang - 51:01 . “” “” W/ TEPID RECEPTIONS: Blue Bayou - 54:20 Flag Day; Stillwater; Benedetta - 55:28 . NEW RELEASE ROUNDUP: Space Jam 2 - 56:20 Pig - 59:20 . CANNES HISTORY - 1:01:00 . . Where To Find Our Work/LEAVE US 5* REVIEWS! - 1:02:57 Words of Wisdom/What's Coming Next - 1:04:00 We discuss the awards, Spike Lee's gaffe, and we go through most of the winners one by one. Then we reveal some light research on the Oscar history of the Palme d'Or, standing ovations throughout this and previous festivals, and some cool facts from the internet about this year's Cannes slate. Then we react to the receptions of 11 more Cannes films of interest to us and our search for future Oscar winners. This particular episode is a shameless act of aggregation as we did not attend the festival. But it's still a lot of fun to gather all of the critical and audience reception numbers and quotes and tweets and red carpet memes and acquisition news and then react to it all through an Oscars lens. Soooo… sorry, we're not sorry, especially when we can trust a few friends of the show throughout this presentation. Sorry for some audio tics in this episode. AM's microphone reverted to an older setting, and we have to fix it, hopefully for the next show. But other than a few little dips & raises in volume, hopefully it doesn't mess with you too much. Otherwise, we did end the episode with a few quickie reviews to Space Jam: A New Legacy and Pig. We'll be returning to our own movie reviewing again soon as we head into late July and August, including some upcoming releases stateside from the Cannes film festival. So do stay tuned for more Oscar Profiles. We'll also be on the lookout for the fall film festival announcements from Venice, TIFF, and New York, the latter of which we attend regularly each year. So go back to our reviews from the spring festivals of Tribeca and AFI DOCS and look forward to our coverage of NY, etc this fall on upcoming episodes of Oscar Race Checkpoint. As always, we want to hear your thoughts. We're at MMandOscar on Twitter, and we are at Mike, Mike, and Oscar on Instagram, Facebook, Reddit, and Gmail. You can subscribe / rate / review / like / share / & hear us on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Stitcher, Google Play, Tune In, Spotify, and just about wherever you might listen. We're Mike, Mike, & Oscar, and we're making awards season year round, without the stuffiness. Thank you! And do stay safe, everybody.
Welcome to The Last Thing I Saw, with your host, Nicolas Rapold. By happenstance, we still have some of the biggest titles at Cannes to discuss, and I couldn't be happier to talk about them with the critic Mark Asch, a longtime colleague who I've worked with as both an editor and a writer over the past decade and change. Mark brings a lot of goodies to the program, including Wes Anderson's The French Dispatch; Sean Baker's Red Rocket; Titane, the sophomore feature from Julia Ducournau, who directed Raw; and a couple of picks that haven't been screaming from the Cannes headlines. Plus: JFK Revisited, which Oliver Stone teased on this very podcast about a month ago. You can support this podcast and read show notes with links at: rapold.substack.com Opening music: “Monserrate” by The Minarets Photo by Steve Snodgrass
È stato presentato in concorso al Festival di Cannes Hytti Nro 6 (Compartment No. 6), il film di Juho Kuosmanen con Seidi Haarla, Jurij Borisov, Adattamento cinematografico del romanzo Scompartimento n. 6 di Rosa Liksom.
Mit "Bergman Island" von Mia Hansen-Løve und "Flag Day" von Sean Penn gibt es für Christian die ersten beiden Gurken im Programm. Er klagt Joachim Kurz (Gründer & Herausgeber von Kino-Zeit) sein Leid. Außerdem reden sie über: "Drive My Car" von Ryusuke Hamaguchi, "Three Floors" von Nanni Moretti, "Stillwater" von Tom McCarthy, "Compartment No. 6" von Juho Kuosmanen, "Întregalde" von Radu Muntean, "The Worst Person in the World" von Joachim Trier & "Benedetta" von Paul Verhoeven.
After some culotte adorned rest and relaxation, James & Kevin return -- recording in person! -- to review trailers, figuring things probably wouldn't be too crazy while they were gone. QUITE THE CONTRARY. They hit the ground running, Courtesy Honking enough to sound like a car alarm, passing out free thoughts on Free Guy, getting down on one knee for Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, winking at The Eyes of Tammy Faye, blow up Tick Tick Boom's spot, decide if Halloween Kills is where they wanna be, fall off of a Clifford the Big Red Dog trailer, be enchanted by Encanto, and try to figure out if the big exit sign has anything to do with getting out of Escape Room 2. Which is quite a bit! So the boys decide to take a breather-- QUITE THE CONTRARY. They hop on a plane and head to Cannes, eager to check out this year's crop of movies from around the world, and dunk on any film that had the audacity to show up without a trailer (not even a clip, Sean Penn?! CHRIST.) Who will win the coveted Palm Door from Trailer Hitch this year? Will Wes Anderson take offense if the boys tell him his movie was better when it was a two and a half minute montage? Have they gotten any closer to figuring out what the hell is going on in Annette, or why it absolutely slaps? Join them in France to find out! Free Guy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cttnRmcr_ME Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YjFbMbfXaQ The Eyes of Tammy Faye https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMMLRnXPPJk Tick Tick Boom https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAJXFRshQfw Halloween Kills https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hL6R3HmQfPc Clifford the Big Red Dog https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zH5iYM4wJo Encanto https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxc6y2ZVfCU Escape Room 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01FpO0UuULY Annette https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=On4v1gNJkrE The Story of My Wife https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AahXwZsKJdM Benedetta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-31QJXV3iA Drive My Car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cv6OzqeyaDs Ahed's Knee https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/films/haberech Casablanca Beats (we watched 'Extract 1') https://www.festival-cannes.com/en/festival/films/haut-et-fort-1 Compartment No. 6 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rzI7QQAqCo Lingui, The Sacred Bonds https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j60xS_NbvNc Nitram https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sysEtM7q8I Petrov's Flu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxNSCrVS8j8 The French Dispatch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcPk2p0Zaw4 Titane https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5_w2W5G9OM Three Floors https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBFMUsl6K8s Everything Went Fine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mvldw3D9Pt4