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The tenth episode of our season on the awesome movie year of 1987 features a special Halloween selection, Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys. Directed by Joel Schumacher and starring Jason Patric, Corey Haim, Kiefer Sutherland, Dianne Wiest, Jami Gertz and Corey Feldman, The Lost Boys had a major influence on the development of the vampire genre.The contemporary reviews quoted in this episode come from Roger Ebert (https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-lost-boys-1987), Caryn James in The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/1987/07/31/movies/film-the-lost-boys.html), and Michael Wilmington in the Los Angeles Times (https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-07-31-ca-188-story.html).Visit https://www.awesomemovieyear.com for more info about the show.Make sure to like Awesome Movie Year on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/awesomemovieyear and follow us on Twitter @AwesomemoviepodYou can find Jason online at http://goforjason.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JHarrisComedy/, on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jasonharriscomedy/ and on Twitter @JHarrisComedyYou can find Josh online at http://joshbellhateseverything.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/joshbellhateseverything/ and on Twitter @signalbleedYou can find our producer David Rosen's Piecing It Together Podcast at https://www.piecingpod.com, on Twitter at @piecingpod and the Popcorn & Puzzle Pieces Facebook Group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/piecingpod.You can also follow us all on Letterboxd to keep up with what we've been watching at goforjason, signalbleed and bydavidrosen.Subscribe on Patreon to support the show and get access to exclusive content from Awesome Movie Year, plus fellow podcasts Piecing It Together and All Rice No Beans, and music by David Rosen: https://www.patreon.com/bydavidrosenAll of the music in the episode is by David Rosen. Find more of his music at https://www.bydavidrosen.comPlease like, share, rate and comment on the show and this episode, and tune in for the next 1987 installment, featuring the Academy Awards Best Picture winner, Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor.
The ninth episode of our season on the awesome movie year of 1987 features a Sundance Film Festival award winner, Lizzie Borden's Working Girls. Directed and co-written by Lizzie Borden and starring Louise Smith, Ellen McElduff, Amanda Goodwin and Marusia Zach, Working Girls premiered in the Directors' Fortnight at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival and won Special Jury Recognition at Sundance in 1987.The contemporary reviews quoted in this episode comes from Roger Ebert (https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/working-girls-1987), Vincent Canby in The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/1987/02/27/movies/film-working-girls.html), and Sheila Benson in the Los Angeles Times (https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-03-27-ca-291-story.html).Visit https://www.awesomemovieyear.com for more info about the show.Make sure to like Awesome Movie Year on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/awesomemovieyear and follow us on Twitter @AwesomemoviepodYou can find Jason online at http://goforjason.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JHarrisComedy/, on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jasonharriscomedy/ and on Twitter @JHarrisComedyYou can find Josh online at http://joshbellhateseverything.com/, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/joshbellhateseverything/ and on Twitter @signalbleedYou can find our producer David Rosen's Piecing It Together Podcast at https://www.piecingpod.com, on Twitter at @piecingpod and the Popcorn & Puzzle Pieces Facebook Group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/piecingpod.You can also follow us all on Letterboxd to keep up with what we've been watching at goforjason, signalbleed and bydavidrosen.Subscribe on Patreon to support the show and get access to exclusive content from Awesome Movie Year, plus fellow podcasts Piecing It Together and All Rice No Beans, and music by David Rosen: https://www.patreon.com/bydavidrosenAll of the music in the episode is by David Rosen. Find more of his music at https://www.bydavidrosen.comPlease like, share, rate and comment on the show and this episode, and tune in for the next 1987 installment, featuring a special Halloween selection, Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys.
Hey there, Cassettes! Welcome to another episode of the BOO Case Diaries!! This week, we forced Adam to watch an 80s classic he had never seen, and we discussed the history behind Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys! Did you grow up with this vampire film? Let us know! We're on Instagram as @blackcasediariespodcast. Show notes and sources are available on our website at https://www.blackcasediaries.com/ Thanks for listening!
A group of boys set out to find a dead body and become men, but a group of vampires kidnap them and draw the attention of their wealthy father and his military contacts. These are some of the ideas Joe and Andrew had when asked to guess what Joel Schumacher's THE LOST BOYS was going to be about. How completely right were they? Completely. Support the podcast with 5-star ratings and reviews on Apple Podcasts: tinyurl.com/y8t8k5ag If you want to support the show by sending us a few bucks, you can become a Patron, which also earns you access to exclusive content! www.patreon.com/wordsalad If you're looking for other ways to support the show, recommend us to a friend! Any support is greatly appreciated. You guys keep us going! Check out the Word Salad Radioheads Facebook group: www.facebook.com/groups/WordSalad Follow Word Salad Radio on Twitter: www.twitter.com/WordSaladRadio Follow Joe on Letterboxd: www.letterboxd.com/ketchujo Intro composed by Andrew Kroepel Cover Art created by Joe Ketchum Episode edited by Joe Ketchum Other shows featured on Word Salad Radio: Dick Picks: Where host and guest choose terrible movies to subject the other to and try to defend them. Doc n Roll: An examination of documentary films. The Fami Commune: Co-hosts play random video games from a Chinese import Nintendo system and apply the lessons within to their everyday lives. Fic/off: Competitors are given 2 fictional characters to mashup into original short stories. Ghost of Oscar Past: An annual Oscar retrospective looking at winners/nominees from 20 years ago to see if they still hold up. High Five: Host and guest compile top five lists that are related but don't overlap. Lightning Round: A movie trivia game show! The List of Shame: One person tries to guess what a classic film they've never seen is about and then tries to convince the other person they were right after watching it for the first time. The Mooby Awards: An annual show where co-hosts rip apart a movie they agree is overrated. Page Turners: A show all about the art of adaptation. Purgastory: A show speculating about all the movies that almost happened. Quote Unquote Guilty: All about guilty pleasure movies, tv shows, music, scientific principles, etc. Stranger Themes: Co-hosts force each other to make weird analyses of different movies and defend their argument with evidence from the text. Test Pilots: A show about failed TV pilots and where they might've gone from here. War Salad: Co-hosts debate a film one of them likes and the other does not. You-Turn: A podcast dedicated to Word Salad fans! Patrons of the show star in original fan fiction short stories. © 2016-2023 Joe Ketchum
This episode contains spoilers for the movie we are discussing! We're diving into one of the most 80s movies of all time with Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys from 1987. Forget Gen Z and their desire to bring back the early 2000s fashion (You really don't want to experience jeans so long they covered your shoes and were immediately reduced to tatters), bring back the hair teasing and crop tops of the sugariest decade! Oh. And there's vampires in here. It's an allegory maybe. Grandpa is a weirdo. PODCAST! 00:00:23 - Introduction No movie news - Movie News 00:08:30 - Movie for the week 12:46 - Trailer 00:14:26 - Movie Discussion incl Scariest part of the movie 01:02:05 - Ratings/Something to Cheer Credits Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your reviews and ratings help more people find us and help us continue to make more episodes. You can support the show but heading over to our Patreon found at Patreon.com/nothingtofear. Donation is on a pay what you can scale but we are suggesting a minimum of $1. For just One CANADIAN Dollar, you can help us keep the show going, help us rent movies and help us grow by getting things like episode transcriptions, upgrades to recording equipment and more things that we have planned. Consider supporting the show. We'll love you forever and ever. If you would buy a piece of NtF merch, you can follow the link.tree link in our Instagram and navigate to the Teepublic shop from there. Is it easy? No. Is it the best we could do? Also no. But I'm still busy and I have it on my to do list. Twitch.tv/Thetransverse is the place where you can watch me play Pathfinder once a month! Subscribe now and watch the live action play through of a Pathfinder campaign starring yours truly, Billie! (Seriously though. This actually pays me based on the number of views so put it on in the background and help me achieve my dream of online content creation/eventual therapist being my full-time job.) You can also get more Luke content by checking out his show with Other Alex using this link here Full Spectrum Cinema https://www.mixcloud.com/lexacorm/ You can follow us on Instagram - @nothingtofearpodcast, @wansongaday, @DesignBillie Email - nothingtofearpodcast@gmail.com Let us know how you're doing and tell us what you're cheering using the hashtag #SomethingToCheer --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nothingtofear/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
Andrew Tiede and CatBusRuss investigate what maybe the spiritual sequel to "The Goonies", Joel Schumacher's "The Lost Boys". With this rewatch, our host was actually intrigued by ThePoeticCritic's opinion that this feature is nothing more than rose...should we say...blood-tinted nostalgia. Thankfully, this week's guest reminded CatBus the national treasure that is Timmy Cappello. These two eighties kids always have a ball watching this vampire feature, and throw in their parallel paths to their forties, we get some fun Cubs and wrestling themed tangents to accompany the blood sucking fun.
Continuing this month's theme of Sibling Rivalries, we journey to the murder capital of the world to discuss oily saxophone players, taxidermied beavers, and the Coreys in Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys. Email: WeeklyPodcastMassacre@gmail.com Twitter: @WeeklyMassacre Instagram: @WeeklyMassacre Music by Dora the Destroyer. New album out now! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/weeklypodcastmassacre/message
Scare-a-Thon 2022 is here! Join your favorite creature-feature critics for a ripping round-table review of Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys!This 1987 vampire action flick sold a billion cans of hair spray, solidified the Two Coreys as pop icons, and made gods of shirtless saxophonists. It's also an incredibly entertaining and inventive entry into the undead bloodsucker genre! In this free-flowing discussion, Ian, AC, and Blake talk about what made The Lost Boys so groundbreaking and cool; how it carried on a legacy of vampire-movie conventions by reinventing them; and what sets it apart from most modern takes on creatures of the night.All this, plus tales of celebrity encounters, wild speculation about vampire anatomy, and a look at Blake's incredible new Kickstarter campaign--a feature-length documentary continuation of his Scored to Death books, in which he interviews the horror genre's top composers!We'll be going live every Friday throughout October with special anniversary discussions of classic horror films--all benefiting the Women's Reproductive Rights Assistance Project (WRRAP), a non-partisan, nonprofit organization assisting women who are financially unable to pay for safe, legal abortions or emergency contraceptives.Show LinksWatch the Lost Boys trailer.Support WRRAP via our Scare-a-Thon donation link on Plumfund.Also: Blake is making a documentary! Yes, the author of Scored to Death Volume I & II is making a feature film with interviews from top horror composers. You can help make it happen by contributing to his Kickstarter campaign.Keep up with our rotating panel of guests from "Accademia Giallo"--plus more to be announced!Get professorial with Aaron Christensen at Horror101 with Dr. AC!Follow Jon down into Kitley's Krypt!And listen to his great podcast, Discover the Horror!Check out Bryan Martinez's YouTube show, The Giallo Room!And follow The Giallo Room on Instagram for your daily gialli fix!Buy Blake's "Scored to Death" Volume I and II on Amazon.…And catch up with classic episodes of his Saturday Night Movie Sleepovers podcast!Subscribe to, like, and comment on the Kicking the Seat YouTube channel!
David, Kurt and Jack dive into Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys (1987). Every month, they'll take a comprehensive look at 80s horror and break down the hits, misses, and guilty pleasures that defined the decade.
Sal, Rance, Wazza, Joe, Jimbo and Steve are back! Except without Rance, Joe and Jimbo! The good ones turned up though and we talked about Steve's first choice for CUTS: the legendary 1987 sexy teen vampire black comedy horror music video, Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys. Join us as we try, with limited success, to remember what the night was like.
In our final week of Listener Request Month, we're discussing your top choice: Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys! We discuss how the big twist of this movie doesn't make sense, talk about how we'd absolutely suck as Lost Boys, and ponder the mystery of Sexual Sax Man. This episodes brought to you in part by MasterClass. MasterClass offers classes on a wide variety of topics, all taught by world class masters at the top of their fields. Each class is broken out into individual video lessons, usually around 10 minutes long. Members can explore at their own pace, and each class is supported by downloadable materials, lessons, recipes, or more. This holiday, give one annual membership and get one free just by going to www.masterclass.com/love This episode is brought to you by Quip, an electric toothbrush designed by dentists with a built-in two minute timer that pulses every 30 seconds to remind you when to switch sides, helping guide a full and even clean. Go to www.GETQUIP.com/LoveIt and get your first refill FREE. This episode brought to you in part by NordVPN. They provide secure and private access to the Internet that protects all your devices. For a Cyber Month deal go to www.NordVPN.com/loveit or use promo code LOVEIT to get 73% off plus a bonus gift. Be quick because this offer is for a limited time only. The episode brought to you in part by The Prisoner Wine Company. Twenty years ago they decided to combine some of California's best and most unusual grape varieties to make a bold and complex blend, aka their namesake wine The Prisoner Red Blend. Go to www.theprisonerwine.com/hateit for 20% off plus shipping included on your first purchase - get it in time for the Holidays. Offer valid on first time online orders only for U.S. residents of legal drinking age through 12/31/2021. Other exclusions may apply. Please enjoy wines responsibly. Edited by Andrew Ivimey and produced for the From Superheroes network. Visit www.FromSuperheroes.com for more podcasts, YouTube series, web comics, and more. IHIBILI Logo by Cubbyhole Studio www.cubbyhole.studio
Grab your leather jackets and shape up your mullet because we're celebrating our 150th episode with a seminal queer vampire text in Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys (1987)! Joining us for the discussion is Marisa Mirabal, a co-host of the Black Magic Coven podcast!After taking a look at the historical context of the film's release (height of the Reagan era, AIDS crisis, the Moral Majority), we'll go all-in on this time capsule of the '80s, which originated as a sort of "Goonies Go Vampire" before Schumacher stepped in and sexified everything up.Plus, "Cry Little Sister" (a lot), vampirism as a metaphor for oral sex, Kiefer Sutherland's "dance bars," a late-in-the-episode discussion of the film's two sequels and an anecdote about how The Lost Boys tricked Trace into reading Mormon propaganda.References:Vrai Kaiser. "Boys Beware (of Vampire Punks): Queerness in The Lost Boys". Fashionable Tinfoil Accessories.Alex Godfrey. "The Lost Boys: Joel Schumacher On Making The Coolest Vampire Movie Of All Time". Empire.Questions? Comments? Snark? Connect with the boys on Twitter, Instagram, Youtube, Letterboxd and/or Facebook, or join the Facebook Group to get in touch with other listeners> Trace: @tracedthurman> Joe: @bstolemyremote> Marisa: @Marisa_Mirabal / @BlackMagicCovenBe sure to support the boys on Patreon! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
As Tina Turner toured and performed, she introduced us to a golden gem of a saxophone player by the name of Tim… Timmy to his friends. From there Tim went on to Miami Vice, Hearts of Fire, Tap, all types of opportunities to perform and act. But one decision defined him for generations to come. In 1987 Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys gave the world it's first broad taste of the greased up shirtless muscular saxophone player known to all of us as sexy sax man. Often imitated never duplicated Tim Cappello set the stage for what would be an ongoing persona of what a saxophone player is and what a saxophone player should be. Lisa Simpson, Kenny G, Bill Clinton all did their best. But when we think of saxophone, we only think of one man. Today on Buzzn The Tower we are honored to have the opportunity to sit down with the man, the myth, the legend himself, Tim Cappello, and talk everything from Tina Turner to the time he was almost in Point Break! I'm Mo Shapiro and joining me for the first time, the Rockstar to my boardwalk beach bonfire, Tim Cappello. And with that, oh and I guess Max Sanders is here to, I STILL BELIEVE!
Join us MICHAEL! This week's Summer Getaway is to the sunny "Murder Capital of the World" in Santa Carla! We venture to the boardwalk to talk all things sexy-goth-vamp boys in Joel Schumacher's "The Lost Boys" from 1987! The Carpenter Queens talk peak 80s fashion and music, excellently sleek SPFX, wonderful one-liners, and the whole cast that could step on us. Come on down to TCQ Video and talk some maggot eating good times! Music by @whitebataudio https://www.youtube.com/whitebataudio Follow the Queens: INSTA- https://www.instagram.com/thecarpenterqueens/ TWITTER - https://twitter.com/carpenterqueens --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-carpenter-queens/message
Time to get totally righteous dudes and dudettes because we're back for another 80s Party featuring Santa Clara's best (oily saxophone) and worst (those $*@ vampires) as we invite Dave Courtney, Ian Olson, and Jackson Harper onto the show to discuss Joel Schumacher's THE LOST BOYS on this installment of #thoseFoGgin80s. After another brief stopover in Hawkins again for episodes 3 & 4 of STRANGER THINGS Season 3, we dive right in to this stylish vampire classic of the 80s, have a lot of laughs, and also find the time to observe how easy it can be to normalize yourself to some pretty dangerously abnormal things.It's a wild ride on the special shelf of the fridge this week. We had a lot of fun recording it and we hope you have a lot of fun listening to it.4:58 - Business Time (#whatsavesus AND a new contest!)11:25 - STRANGER THINGS Season 3, Episodes 3 & 4 #tvguideposts39:18 - THE LOST BOYS
On this episode of The Beauty of Horror, Chandler sits down with award winning writer and director of The Last Ones (2012), Borderland (2016), and the current festival darling, The Empty Space (2020), Andrew Jara to discuss the beauty of Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys (1987). We discuss filmic beauty vs physical beauty, sexy vampires, consent, Sam's amazing fashion sense, and, of course, aesthetics! Want to connect more with the podcast and its guests? Checking out the info below! Twitter: Chandler - @_Shockaholic Beauty of Horror - @BeautyHorrorPod Andrew Jara - @Jara_Films Links: Andrew's Linktree Music by Karl Casey (White Bat Audio) Cover Art designed by JRGDrawing Edited by Aviva Dassen If you enjoyed this episode please be sure to rate and subscribe! For more wonderful podcasts like this be sure to check out anatamoyofascream.com and follow the network on Twitter and Instagram @aoas_xx!
Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film: Reading the Symptom (Routledge, 2018) proposes a way of constructing hidden psychological narratives of popular film and novels. Instead of offering interpretations of classic films, Trevor C. Pederson recognizes that the psychoanalytic tradition began with making sense of the seemingly inconsequential. Here he turns his attention to popular films like Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys (1987). While masterworks like Psycho (1960) are not the object of interpretation, Hitchcock's film is used as a skeleton key. The revelation that Norman Bates' character had been his mother all along, suggests a framework of reading a film as having symptom characters who are excised to create a latent plot. The symptom character's behavior or inter-relations are then transcribed to an ego character. This is a shift in the tradition of literary doubling from hermeneutic intuition to a formal methodology that generates data for the unconscious. Pederson continues the project of unifying competing schools into a single model of mind and offers clinical examples from his own practice for all its terms. Psychodynamic techniques that emphasize the importance of working with the body, the id, and the ubiquity of repetition are introduced. A return to Freud's structural theory, in which complexes are anchored in the stages of superego development, is used to carefully plot and explain the social nature of the superego and its relation to authority in society (secondary narcissism) and the otherworldly (primary narcissism). Discrete phases of superego development and their ties to both the social and the id revive the grand promises of classical psychoanalysis to link with every field in the humanities. Psychoanalysis and Hidden Narrative in Film will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists as well as scholars of film studies and literature interested in using a psychoanalytic approach and ideas in their work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychoanalysis
In this episode, Andy and Stephanie discuss boardwalks and babe vampires as they review Joel Schumacher's THE LOST BOYS. Andy hates on the Coreys, Stephanie swoons over baby Edward Hermann as GrandDaddy, and they both want to visit a comic shop by the end. Reading Recommendations: BLADE THE VAMPIRE HUNTER, by Ian Edginton and Doug Wheatley THE MIGHTY AVENGERS by Al Ewing
Matt & Paula take another stab at vampire films with Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys. Between the sexy sax guy, great soundtrack & an excellent take on vampire lore, our duo find plenty to discuss. Also discussed are Paula's family photos & Matt's Record Store Day adventure.
Spooky ahoy! In honor of Halloween and our ongoing plan to keep introducing each other to films we love, we're slowing it down with Joel Schumacher's "The Lost Boys!" It's one of Eric's all-timers and Griffin's never seen it. Plus, Eric preps to head to Disney World and we're talking fave horror movies, cuz 'tis the season! Twitter | Instagram | @griffinzane | @scoutboy121 | Griffin's Letterboxd | Eric's Letterboxd
THE FILM & WATER PODCAST Episode 113: THE LOST BOYS Rob welcomes his longtime pal and movie journalist April Snellings to discuss one of her favorite horror movies, Joel Schumacher's THE LOST BOYS! Have a question or comment? Looking for more great content? APRIL SNELLINGS - http://www.aprilsnellings.com/ E-MAIL: firewaterpodcast@comcast.net Follow THE FILM & WATER PODCAST on Twitter: @FilmAndWaterPod Subscribe via iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-film-and-water-podcast/id1077572484 This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER – https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page – https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts Thanks for listening! That's A Wrap!