Podcast appearances and mentions of karel reisz

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Best podcasts about karel reisz

Latest podcast episodes about karel reisz

Entrez sans frapper
Spéciale Ken Loach, le réalisateur britannique à la double Palme d'Or pour "Le vent se lève" et "Moi, Daniel Blake"

Entrez sans frapper

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 22:55


Spéciale Ken Loach à l'occasion de la rétrospective à la Cinematek à Bruxelles en avril et mai. On en parle avec Dick Tomasovic, chargé de cours en histoire et esthétique du cinéma et des arts du spectacle à l'ULg. Le cinéma anglais a connu, à l'image de la Nouvelle Vague française, un tournant radical qui entendait dynamiter un cinéma sclérosé en traitant les sujets critiques de l'époque par un engagement social qui ramenait le cinéma au plus proche du peuple. Les Angry Young Men, emmenés par Lindsay Anderson et Karel Reisz, ont laissé un héritage dont Ken Loach en particulier s'est saisi à la fin de la décennie, pour à son tour porter un regard sur la réalité mû par le même souci d'engagement social que ses prédécesseurs. Merci pour votre écoute Entrez sans Frapper c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 16h à 17h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez l'ensemble des épisodes et les émission en version intégrale (avec la musique donc) de Entrez sans Frapper sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/8521 Abonnez-vous également à la partie "Bagarre dans la discothèque" en suivant ce lien: https://audmns.com/HSfAmLDEt si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Vous pourriez également apprécier ces autres podcasts issus de notre large catalogue: Le voyage du Stradivarius Feuermann : https://audmns.com/rxPHqEENoir Jaune Rouge - Belgian Crime Story : https://feeds.audiomeans.fr/feed/6e3f3e0e-6d9e-4da7-99d5-f8c0833912c5.xmlLes Petits Papiers : https://audmns.com/tHQpfAm Des rencontres inspirantes avec des artistes de tous horizons. Galaxie BD: https://audmns.com/nyJXESu Notre podcast hebdomadaire autour du 9ème art.Nom: Van Hamme, Profession: Scénariste : https://audmns.com/ZAoAJZF Notre série à propos du créateur de XII et Thorgal. Franquin par Franquin : https://audmns.com/NjMxxMg Ecoutez la voix du créateur de Gaston (et de tant d'autres...) Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Movie Wave
Everybody Wins (1990, R)

Movie Wave

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 123:10


“Every one knows. Everyone's guilty. No one pays.”   “Everybody Wins is a 1990 mystery thriller film directed by Karel Reisz, starring Debra Winger and Nick Nolte.”   Show Links Trailer: https://youtu.be/tbSzvvT056Q?si=jSC0LhRfMzL-69yJ   Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everybody_Wins_(1990_film)   Just Watch: https://www.justwatch.com/us/movie/everybody-wins   Socials Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/@moviewavepod   Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/moviewavepod   Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/moviewavepod/   Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/user/moviewavepod   TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@moviewavepod   Twitter (X): https://twitter.com/moviewavepod   Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/moviewavepod   Intro/Outro Sample Credits “Aiwa CX-930 VHS VCR Video Cassette Recorder.wav” by Pixabay “Underwater Ambience” by Pixabay “waves crashing into shore parkdale beach” by Pixabay   Movie Wave is a part of Pie Hat Productions.

SEEING FACES IN MOVIES
The Gambler (Karel Reisz 1974) w/ Vinny Tucceri

SEEING FACES IN MOVIES

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2024 60:47


It's bonus episode time. In today's Special Features episode Felicia is joined once again by Vinny Tucceri (listen to our episode on Agnès Varda's Cléo From 5 to 7) to discuss one of the 70s most underrated films about addiction, The Gambler (Karel Reisz 1974). We discuss the topic of addiction, how it comes in many forms, and the way James Caan's layered performance allows the audience the both sympathize and feel disappointment for this character's decisions. Send us your thoughts on the episode - what is your favourite James Caan role? Let us know by sending us a message on any of our social platforms or by email: seeingfacesinmovies@gmail.com Follow Vinny here: Twitter: @vinnybutbetter Letterboxd: @vinnyboombots88 Sources: The Gambler: How the Original Showcases Addiction Without Glamorizing It (collider.com) Karel Reisz, "The Gambler" | Interviews | Roger Ebert OUTRO MUSIC: Symphony No. 1 in D by Gustav Mahler FILMS MENTIONED: Cléo from 5 to 7 (Agnès Varda 1962) Hot For June (Ralph Thomas 1964) A Very Curious Girl (Nelly Kaplan 1969) Marvin and Tige (Eric Weston 1983) 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick 1968) Blade Runner (Ridley Scott 1982) The Swimmer (Frank Perry 1968) Mean Streets (Martin Scorsese 1973) California Split (Robert Altman 1974) The Pope of Greenwich Village (Stuart Rosenberg 1984) Saturday Night, Sunday Morning (Karel Reisz 1960) Morgan – A Suitable Case for Treatment (Karel Reisz 1966) Who'll Stop the Rain (Karel Reisz 1978) Dog Day Afternoon (Sidney Lumet 1975) Mikey and Nicky (Elaine May 1976) The Friends of Eddie Coyle (Peter Yates 1973) Jingle All the Way (Brian Levant 1996) The Godfather (Franics Ford Coppola 1972) Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston 1967) Isadora (Karel Reisz 1968) Let it Ride (Joe Pytka 1989) Under the Volcano (John Huston 1984) Looking for Mr. Goodbar (Richard Brooks 1977) Atlantic City (Louis Malle 1980) Simon Killer (Antonio Campos 2012)

friends reflections pope saturday night gambler agn james caan special features varda jingle all karel reisz blade runner ridley scott space odyssey stanley kubrick
A Breath Of Fresh Movie
Major Virgin Energy: The French Lieutenant's Woman with Greg Kleinschmidt and Jackie Postajian

A Breath Of Fresh Movie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 94:54


If  this movie had been just a little more camp, or been a little more parodic, or a little more self aware, we could have gotten there. This week, we're joined by SCENE AND HEARD's hosts Jackie Postajian and Greg Kleinschmidt, to pick apart this much-lauded vehicle for Meryl Streep.Follow us on Letterboxd!Greg: https://letterboxd.com/gkleinschmidt/Jackie: https://letterboxd.com/jacpostaj/Victoria: https://letterboxd.com/vicrohar/Chelsea: https://letterboxd.com/chelseathepope/ Theme Music "A Movie I'd Like to See" by Al Harley. Show Art: Cecily Brown Follow the Show @freshmoviepod YouTube Channel abreathoffreshmovie@gmail.com Shop the Store: http://tee.pub/lic/bvHvK3HNFhk

The 80s Movies Podcast
Vestron Pictures - Part One

The 80s Movies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 47:30


The first of a two-part series on the short-lived 80s American distribution company responsible for Dirty Dancing. ----more---- The movies covered on this episode: Alpine (1987, Fredi M. Murer) Anna (1987, Yurek Bogayevicz) Billy Galvin (1986, John Grey) Blood Diner (1987, Jackie Kong) China Girl (1987, Abel Ferrera) The Dead (1987, John Huston) Dirty Dancing (1987, Emile Ardolino) Malcolm (1986, Nadia Tess) Personal Services (1987, Terry Jones) Slaughter High (1986, Mark Ezra and Peter Litten and George Dugdale) Steel Dawn (1987, Lance Hook) Street Trash (1987, Jim Muro)   TRANSCRIPT From Los Angeles, California, the Entertainment Capital of the World, it's The 80s Movies Podcast. I am your host, Edward Havens. Thank you for listening today.   Have you ever thought “I should do this thing” but then you never get around to it, until something completely random happens that reminds you that you were going to do this thing a long time ago?   For this week's episode, that kick in the keister was a post on Twitter from someone I don't follow being retweeted by the great film critic and essayist Walter Chaw, someone I do follow, that showed a Blu-ray cover of the 1987 Walter Hill film Extreme Prejudice. You see, Walter Chaw has recently released a book about the life and career of Walter Hill, and this other person was showing off their new purchase. That in and of itself wasn't the kick in the butt.   That was the logo of the disc's distributor.   Vestron Video.   A company that went out of business more than thirty years before, that unbeknownst to me had been resurrected by the current owner of the trademark, Lionsgate Films, as a specialty label for a certain kind of film like Ken Russell's Gothic, Beyond Re-Animator, CHUD 2, and, for some reason, Walter Hill's Neo-Western featuring Nick Nolte, Powers Boothe and Rip Torn. For those of you from the 80s, you remember at least one of Vestron Pictures' movies. I guarantee it.   But before we get there, we, as always, must go back a little further back in time.   The year is 1981. Time Magazine is amongst the most popular magazines in the world, while their sister publication, Life, was renowned for their stunning photographs printed on glossy color paper of a larger size than most magazines. In the late 1970s, Time-Life added a video production and distribution company to ever-growing media empire that also included television stations, cable channels, book clubs, and compilation record box sets. But Time Life Home Video didn't quite take off the way the company had expected, and they decided to concentrate its lucrative cable businesses like HBO. The company would move Austin Furst, an executive from HBO, over to dismantle the assets of Time-Life Films. And while Furst would sell off the production and distribution parts of the company to Fox, and the television department to Columbia Pictures, he couldn't find a party interested in the home video department. Recognizing that home video was an emerging market that would need a visionary like himself willing to take big risks for the chance to have big rewards, Furst purchased the home video rights to the film and video library for himself, starting up his home entertainment company.   But what to call the company?   It would be his daughter that would come up with Vestron, a portmanteau of combining the name of the Roman goddess of the heart, Vesta, with Tron, the Greek word for instrument. Remember, the movie Tron would not be released for another year at this point.   At first, there were only two employees at Vestron: Furst himself, and Jon Pesinger, a fellow executive at Time-Life who, not unlike Dorothy Boyd in Jerry Maguire, was the only person who saw Furst's long-term vision for the future.   Outside of the titles they brought with them from Time-Life, Vestron's initial release of home video titles comprised of two mid-range movie hits where they were able to snag the home video rights instead of the companies that released the movies in theatres, either because those companies did not have a home video operation yet, or did not negotiate for home video rights when making the movie deal with the producers. Fort Apache, The Bronx, a crime drama with Paul Newman and Ed Asner, and Loving Couples, a Shirley MacLaine/James Coburn romantic comedy that was neither romantic nor comedic, were Time-Life productions, while the Burt Reynolds/Dom DeLuise comedy The Cannonball Run, was a pickup from the Hong Kong production company Golden Harvest, which financed the comedy to help break their local star, Jackie Chan, into the American market. They'd also make a deal with several Canadian production companies to get the American home video rights to titles like the Jack Lemmon drama Tribute and the George C. Scott horror film The Changeling.   The advantage that Vestron had over the major studios was their outlook on the mom and pop rental stores that were popping up in every city and town in the United States. The major studios hated the idea that they could sell a videotape for, say, $99.99, and then see someone else make a major profit by renting that tape out fifty or a hundred times at $4 or $5 per night. Of course, they would eventually see the light, but in 1982, they weren't there yet.   Now, let me sidetrack for a moment, as I am wont to do, to talk about mom and pop video stores in the early 1980s. If you're younger than, say, forty, you probably only know Blockbuster and/or Hollywood Video as your local video rental store, but in the early 80s, there were no national video store chains yet. The first Blockbuster wouldn't open until October 1985, in Dallas, and your neighborhood likely didn't get one until the late 1980s or early 1990s. The first video store I ever encountered, Telford Home Video in Belmont Shores, Long Beach in 1981, was operated by Bob Telford, an actor best known for playing the Station Master in both the original 1974 version of Where the Red Fern Grows and its 2003 remake. Bob was really cool, and I don't think it was just because the space for the video store was just below my dad's office in the real estate company that had built and operated the building. He genuinely took interest in this weird thirteen year old kid who had an encyclopedic knowledge of films and wanted to learn more. I wanted to watch every movie he had in the store that I hadn't seen yet, but there was one problem: we had a VHS machine, and most of Bob's inventory was RCA SelectaVision, a disc-based playback system using a special stylus and a groove-covered disc much like an LP record. After school each day, I'd hightail it over to Telford Home Video, and Bob and I would watch a movie while we waited for customers to come rent something. It was with Bob that I would watch Ordinary People and The Magnificent Seven, The Elephant Man and The Last Waltz, Bus Stop and Rebel Without a Cause and The French Connection and The Man Who Fell to Earth and a bunch of other movies that weren't yet available on VHS, and it was great.   Like many teenagers in the early 1980s, I spent some time working at a mom and pop video store, Seacliff Home Video in Aptos, CA. I worked on the weekends, it was a third of a mile walk from home, and even though I was only 16 years old at the time, my bosses would, every week, solicit my opinion about which upcoming videos we should acquire. Because, like Telford Home Video and Village Home Video, where my friends Dick and Michelle worked about two miles away, and most every video store at the time, space was extremely limited and there was only space for so many titles. Telford Home Video was about 500 square feet and had maybe 500 titles. Seacliff was about 750 square feet and around 800 titles, including about 50 in the tiny, curtained off room created to hold the porn. And the first location for Village Home Video had only 300 square feet of space and only 250 titles. The owner, Leone Keller, confirmed to me that until they moved into a larger location across from the original store, they were able to rent out every movie in the store every night.    For many, a store owner had to be very careful about what they ordered and what they replaced. But Vestron Home Video always seemed to have some of the better movies. Because of a spat between Warner Brothers and Orion Pictures, Vestron would end up with most of Orion's 1983 through 1985 theatrical releases, including Rodney Dangerfield's Easy Money, the Nick Nolte political thriller Under Fire, the William Hurt mystery Gorky Park, and Gene Wilder's The Woman in Red. They'd also make a deal with Roger Corman's old American Independent Pictures outfit, which would reap an unexpected bounty when George Miller's second Mad Max movie, The Road Warrior, became a surprise hit in 1982, and Vestron was holding the video rights to the first Mad Max movie. And they'd also find themselves with the laserdisc rights to several Brian DePalma movies including Dressed to Kill and Blow Out. And after Polygram Films decided to leave the movie business in 1984, they would sell the home video rights to An American Werewolf in London and Endless Love to Vestron.   They were doing pretty good.   And in 1984, Vestron ended up changing the home video industry forever.   When Michael Jackson and John Landis had trouble with Jackson's record company, Epic, getting their idea for a 14 minute short film built around the title song to Jackson's monster album Thriller financed, Vestron would put up a good portion of the nearly million dollar budget in order to release the movie on home video, after it played for a few weeks on MTV. In February 1984, Vestron would release a one-hour tape, The Making of Michael Jackson's Thriller, that included the mini-movie and a 45 minute Making of featurette. At $29.99, it would be one of the first sell-through titles released on home video.   It would become the second home videotape to sell a million copies, after Star Wars.   Suddenly, Vestron was flush with more cash than it knew what to do with.   In 1985, they would decide to expand their entertainment footprint by opening Vestron Pictures, which would finance a number of movies that could be exploited across a number of platforms, including theatrical, home video, cable and syndicated TV. In early January 1986, Vestron would announce they were pursuing projects with three producers, Steve Tisch, Larry Turman, and Gene Kirkwood, but no details on any specific titles or even a timeframe when any of those movies would be made.   Tisch, the son of Loews Entertainment co-owner Bob Tisch, had started producing films in 1977 with the Peter Fonda music drama Outlaw Blues, and had a big hit in 1983 with Risky Business. Turman, the Oscar-nominated producer of Mike Nichols' The Graduate, and Kirkwood, the producer of The Keep and The Pope of Greenwich Village, had seen better days as producers by 1986 but their names still carried a certain cache in Hollywood, and the announcement would certainly let the industry know Vestron was serious about making quality movies.   Well, maybe not all quality movies. They would also launch a sub-label for Vestron Pictures called Lightning Pictures, which would be utilized on B-movies and schlock that maybe wouldn't fit in the Vestron Pictures brand name they were trying to build.   But it costs money to build a movie production and theatrical distribution company.   Lots of money.   Thanks to the ever-growing roster of video titles and the success of releases like Thriller, Vestron would go public in the spring of 1985, selling enough shares on the first day of trading to bring in $440m to the company, $140m than they thought they would sell that day.   It would take them a while, but in 1986, they would start production on their first slate of films, as well as acquire several foreign titles for American distribution.   Vestron Pictures officially entered the theatrical distribution game on July 18th, 1986, when they released the Australian comedy Malcolm at the Cinema 2 on the Upper East Side of New York City. A modern attempt to create the Aussie version of a Jacques Tati-like absurdist comedy about modern life and our dependance on gadgetry, Malcolm follows, as one character describes him a 100 percent not there individual who is tricked into using some of his remote control inventions to pull of a bank robbery. While the film would be a minor hit in Australia, winning all eight of the Australian Film Institute Awards it was nominated for including Best Picture, Director, Screenplay and three acting awards, the film would only play for five weeks in New York, grossing less than $35,000, and would not open in Los Angeles until November 5th, where in its first week at the Cineplex Beverly Center and Samuel Goldwyn Pavilion Cinemas, it would gross a combined $37,000. Go figure.   Malcolm would open in a few more major markets, but Vestron would close the film at the end of the year with a gross under $200,000.   Their next film, Slaughter High, was a rather odd bird. A co-production between American and British-based production companies, the film followed a group of adults responsible for a prank gone wrong on April Fool's Day who are invited to a reunion at their defunct high school where a masked killer awaits inside.   And although the movie takes place in America, the film was shot in London and nearby Virginia Water, Surrey, in late 1984, under the title April Fool's Day. But even with Caroline Munro, the British sex symbol who had become a cult favorite with her appearances in a series of sci-fi and Hammer horror films with Peter Cushing and/or Christopher Lee, as well as her work in the Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me, April Fool's Day would sit on the proverbial shelf for nearly two years, until Vestron picked it up and changed its title, since Paramount Pictures had released their own horror film called April Fools Day earlier in the year.   Vestron would open Slaughter High on nine screens in Detroit on November 14th, 1986, but Vestron would not report grosses. Then they would open it on six screen in St. Louis on February 13th, 1987. At least this time they reported a gross. $12,400. Variety would simply call that number “grim.” They'd give the film one final rush on April 24th, sending it out to 38 screens in in New York City, where it would gross $90,000. There'd be no second week, as practically every theatre would replace it with Creepshow 2.   The third and final Vestron Pictures release for 1986 was Billy Galvin, a little remembered family drama featuring Karl Malden and Lenny von Dohlen, originally produced for the PBS anthology series American Playhouse but bumped up to a feature film as part of coordinated effort to promote the show by occasionally releasing feature films bearing the American Playhouse banner.   The film would open at the Cineplex Beverly Center on December 31st, not only the last day of the calendar year but the last day a film can be released into theatres in Los Angeles to have been considered for Academy Awards. The film would not get any major awards, from the Academy or anyone else, nor much attention from audiences, grossing just $4,000 in its first five days. They'd give the film a chance in New York on February 20th, at the 23rd Street West Triplex, but a $2,000 opening weekend gross would doom the film from ever opening in another theatre again.   In early 1987, Vestron announced eighteen films they would release during the year, and a partnership with AMC Theatres and General Cinema to have their films featured in those two companies' pilot specialized film programs in major markets like Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston and San Francisco.   Alpine Fire would be the first of those films, arriving at the Cinema Studio 1 in New York City on February 20th. A Swiss drama about a young deaf and mentally challenged teenager who gets his older sister pregnant, was that country's entry into the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar race. While the film would win the Golden Leopard Award at the 1985 Locarno Film Festival, the Academy would not select the film for a nomination, and the film would quickly disappear from theatres after a $2,000 opening weekend gross.   Personal Services, the first film to be directed by Terry Jones outside of his services with Monty Python, would arrive in American theatres on May 15th. The only Jones-directed film to not feature any other Python in the cast, Personal Services was a thinly-disguised telling of a 1970s—era London waitress who was running a brothel in her flat in order to make ends meet, and featured a standout performance by Julie Walters as the waitress turned madame. In England, Personal Services would be the second highest-grossing film of the year, behind The Living Daylights, the first Bond film featuring new 007 Timothy Dalton. In America, the film wouldn't be quite as successful, grossing $1.75m after 33 weeks in theatres, despite never playing on more than 31 screens in any given week.   It would be another three months before Vestron would release their second movie of the year, but it would be the one they'd become famous for.   Dirty Dancing.   Based in large part on screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein's own childhood, the screenplay would be written after the producers of the 1980 Michael Douglas/Jill Clayburgh dramedy It's My Turn asked the writer to remove a scene from the screenplay that involved an erotic dance sequence. She would take that scene and use it as a jumping off point for a new story about a Jewish teenager in the early 1960s who participated in secret “Dirty Dancing” competitions while she vacationed with her doctor father and stay-at-home mother while they vacationed in the Catskill Mountains. Baby, the young woman at the center of the story, would not only resemble the screenwriter as a character but share her childhood nickname.   Bergstein would pitch the story to every studio in Hollywood in 1984, and only get a nibble from MGM Pictures, whose name was synonymous with big-budget musicals decades before. They would option the screenplay and assign producer Linda Gottlieb, a veteran television producer making her first major foray into feature films, to the project. With Gottlieb, Bergstein would head back to the Catskills for the first time in two decades, as research for the script. It was while on this trip that the pair would meet Michael Terrace, a former Broadway dancer who had spent summers in the early 1960s teaching tourists how to mambo in the Catskills. Terrace and Bergstein didn't remember each other if they had met way back when, but his stories would help inform the lead male character of Johnny Castle.   But, as regularly happens in Hollywood, there was a regime change at MGM in late 1985, and one of the projects the new bosses cut loose was Dirty Dancing. Once again, the script would make the rounds in Hollywood, but nobody was biting… until Vestron Pictures got their chance to read it.   They loved it, and were ready to make it their first in-house production… but they would make the movie if the budget could be cut from $10m to $4.5m. That would mean some sacrifices. They wouldn't be able to hire a major director, nor bigger name actors, but that would end up being a blessing in disguise.   To direct, Gottlieb and Bergstein looked at a lot of up and coming feature directors, but the one person they had the best feeling about was Emile Ardolino, a former actor off-Broadway in the 1960s who began his filmmaking career as a documentarian for PBS in the 1970s. In 1983, Ardolino's documentary about National Dance Institute founder Jacques d'Amboise, He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin', would win both the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and the Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Entertainment Special.   Although Ardolino had never directed a movie, he would read the script twice in a week while serving on jury duty, and came back to Gottlieb and Bergstein with a number of ideas to help make the movie shine, even at half the budget.   For a movie about dancing, with a lot of dancing in it, they would need a creative choreographer to help train the actors and design the sequences. The filmmakers would chose Kenny Ortega, who in addition to choreographing the dance scenes in Pretty in Pink and Ferris Bueller's Day Off, had worked with Gene Kelly on the 1980 musical Xanadu. Well, more specifically, was molded by Gene Kelly to become the lead choreographer for the film. That's some good credentials.   Unlike movies like Flashdance, where the filmmakers would hire Jennifer Beals to play Alex and Marine Jahan to perform Alex's dance scenes, Emile Ardolino was insistent that the actors playing the dancers were actors who also dance. Having stand-ins would take extra time to set-up, and would suck up a portion of an already tight budget. Yet the first people he would meet for the lead role of Johnny were non-dancers Benecio del Toro, Val Kilmer, and Billy Zane. Zane would go so far as to do a screen test with one of the actresses being considered for the role of Baby, Jennifer Grey, but after screening the test, they realized Grey was right for Baby but Zane was not right for Johnny.   Someone suggested Patrick Swayze, a former dancer for the prestigious Joffrey Ballet who was making his way up the ranks of stardom thanks to his roles in The Outsiders and Grandview U.S.A. But Swayze had suffered a knee injury years before that put his dance career on hold, and there were concerns he would re-aggravate his injury, and there were concerns from Jennifer Grey because she and Swayze had not gotten along very well while working on Red Dawn. But that had been three years earlier, and when they screen tested together here, everyone was convinced this was the pairing that would bring magic to the role.   Baby's parents would be played by two Broadway veterans: Jerry Orbach, who is best known today as Detective Lenny Briscoe on Law and Order, and Kelly Bishop, who is best known today as Emily Gilmore from Gilmore Girls but had actually started out as a dancer, singer and actor, winning a Tony Award for her role in the original Broadway production of A Chorus Line. Although Bishop had originally been cast in a different role for the movie, another guest at the Catskills resort with the Housemans, but she would be bumped up when the original Mrs. Houseman, Lynne Lipton, would fall ill during the first week of filming.   Filming on Dirty Dancing would begin in North Carolina on September 5th, 1986, at a former Boy Scout camp that had been converted to a private residential community. This is where many of the iconic scenes from the film would be shot, including Baby carrying the watermelon and practicing her dance steps on the stairs, all the interior dance scenes, the log scene, and the golf course scene where Baby would ask her father for $250. It's also where Patrick Swayze almost ended his role in the film, when he would indeed re-injure his knee during the balancing scene on the log. He would be rushed to the hospital to have fluid drained from the swelling. Thankfully, there would be no lingering effects once he was released.   After filming in North Carolina was completed, the team would move to Virginia for two more weeks of filming, including the water lift scene, exteriors at Kellerman's Hotel and the Houseman family's cabin, before the film wrapped on October 27th.   Ardolino's first cut of the film would be completed in February 1987, and Vestron would begin the process of running a series of test screenings. At the first test screening, nearly 40% of the audience didn't realize there was an abortion subplot in the movie, even after completing the movie. A few weeks later, Vestron executives would screen the film for producer Aaron Russo, who had produced such movies as The Rose and Trading Places. His reaction to the film was to tell the executives to burn the negative and collect the insurance.   But, to be fair, one important element of the film was still not set.   The music.   Eleanor Bergstein had written into her script a number of songs that were popular in the early 1960s, when the movie was set, that she felt the final film needed. Except a number of the songs were a bit more expensive to license than Vestron would have preferred. The company was testing the film with different versions of those songs, other artists' renditions. The writer, with the support of her producer and director, fought back. She made a deal with the Vestron executives. They would play her the master tracks to ten of the songs she wanted, as well as the copycat versions. If she could identify six of the masters, she could have all ten songs in the film.   Vestron would spend another half a million dollars licensing the original recording.    The writer nailed all ten.   But even then, there was still one missing piece of the puzzle.   The closing song.   While Bergstein wanted another song to close the film, the team at Vestron were insistent on a new song that could be used to anchor a soundtrack album. The writer, producer, director and various members of the production team listened to dozens of submissions from songwriters, but none of them were right, until they got to literally the last submission left, written by Franke Previte, who had written another song that would appear on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack, “Hungry Eyes.”   Everybody loved the song, called “I've Had the Time of My Life,” and it would take some time to convince Previte that Dirty Dancing was not a porno. They showed him the film and he agreed to give them the song, but the production team and Vestron wanted to get a pair of more famous singers to record the final version.   The filmmakers originally approached disco queen Donna Summer and Joe Esposito, whose song “You're the Best” appeared on the Karate Kid soundtrack, but Summer would decline, not liking the title of the movie. They would then approach Daryl Hall from Hall and Oates and Kim Carnes, but they'd both decline, citing concerns about the title of the movie. Then they approached Bill Medley, one-half of The Righteous Brothers, who had enjoyed yet another career resurgence when You Lost That Lovin' Feeling became a hit in 1986 thanks to Top Gun, but at first, he would also decline. Not that he had any concerns about the title of the film, although he did have concerns about the title, but that his wife was about to give birth to their daughter, and he had promised he would be there.   While trying to figure who to get to sing the male part of the song, the music supervisor for the film approached Jennifer Warnes, who had sung the duet “Up Where We Belong” from the An Officer and a Gentleman soundtrack, which had won the 1983 Academy Award for Best Original Song, and sang the song “It Goes Like It Goes” from the Norma Rae soundtrack, which had won the 1980 Academy Award for Best Original Song. Warnes wasn't thrilled with the song, but she would be persuaded to record the song for the right price… and if Bill Medley would sing the other part. Medley, flattered that Warnes asked specifically to record with him, said he would do so, after his daughter was born, and if the song was recorded in his studio in Los Angeles. A few weeks later, Medley and Warnes would have their portion of the song completed in only one hour, including additional harmonies and flourishes decided on after finishing with the main vocals.   With all the songs added to the movie, audience test scores improved considerably.   RCA Records, who had been contracted to handle the release of the soundtrack, would set a July 17th release date for the album, to coincide with the release of the movie on the same day, with the lead single, I've Had the Time of My Life, released one week earlier. But then, Vestron moved the movie back from July 17th to August 21st… and forgot to tell RCA Records about the move. No big deal. The song would quickly rise up the charts, eventually hitting #1 on the Billboard charts.   When the movie finally did open in 975 theatres in August 21st, the film would open to fourth place with $3.9m in ticket sales, behind Can't Buy Me Love in third place and in its second week of release, the Cheech Marin comedy Born in East L.A., which opened in second place, and Stakeout, which was enjoying its third week atop the charts.   The reviews were okay, but not special. Gene Siskel would give the film a begrudging Thumbs Up, citing Jennifer Grey's performance and her character's arc as the thing that tipped the scale into the positive, while Roger Ebert would give the film a Thumbs Down, due to its idiot plot and tired and relentlessly predictable story of love between kids from different backgrounds.   But then a funny thing happened…   Instead of appealing to the teenagers they thought would see the film, the majority of the audience ended up becoming adults. Not just twenty and thirty somethings, but people who were teenagers themselves during the movie's timeframe. They would be drawn in to the film through the newfound sense of boomer nostalgia that helped make Stand By Me an unexpected hit the year before, both as a movie and as a soundtrack.   Its second week in theatre would only see the gross drop 6%, and the film would finish in third place.   In week three, the four day Labor Day weekend, it would gross nearly $5m, and move up to second place. And it would continue to play and continue to bring audiences in, only dropping out of the top ten once in early November for one weekend, from August to December. Even with all the new movies entering the marketplace for Christmas, Dirty Dancing would be retained by most of the theatres that were playing it. In the first weekend of 1988, Dirty Dancing was still playing in 855 theaters, only 120 fewer than who opened it five months earlier. Once it did started leaving first run theatres, dollar houses were eager to pick it up, and Dirty Dancing would make another $6m in ticket sales as it continued to play until Christmas 1988 at some theatres, finishing its incredible run with $63.5m in ticket sales.   Yet, despite its ubiquitousness in American pop culture, despite the soundtrack selling more than ten million copies in its first year, despite the uptick in attendance at dance schools from coast to coast, Dirty Dancing never once was the #1 film in America on any weekend it was in theatres. There would always be at least one other movie that would do just a bit better.   When awards season came around, the movie was practically ignored by critics groups. It would pick up an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature, and both the movie and Jennifer Grey would be nominated for Golden Globes, but it would be that song, I've Had the Time of My Life, that would be the driver for awards love. It would win the Academy Award and the Golden Globe for Best Original Song, and a Grammy for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. The song would anchor a soundtrack that would also include two other hit songs, Eric Carmen's “Hungry Eyes,” and “She's Like the Wind,” recorded for the movie by Patrick Swayze, making him the proto-Hugh Jackman of the 80s. I've seen Hugh Jackman do his one-man show at the Hollywood Bowl, and now I'm wishing Patrick Swayze could have had something like that thirty years ago.   On September 25th, they would release Abel Ferrera's Neo-noir romantic thriller China Girl. A modern adaptation of Romeo and Juliet written by regular Ferrera writer Nicholas St. John, the setting would be New York City's Lower East Side, when Tony, a teenager from Little Italy, falls for Tye, a teenager from Chinatown, as their older brothers vie for turf in a vicious gang war. While the stars of the film, Richard Panebianco and Sari Chang, would never become known actors, the supporting cast is as good as you'd expect from a post-Ms. .45 Ferrera film, including James Russo, Russell Wong, David Caruso and James Hong.   The $3.5m movie would open on 110 screens, including 70 in New York ti-state region and 18 in Los Angeles, grossing $531k. After a second weekend, where the gross dropped to $225k, Vestron would stop tracking the film, with a final reported gross of just $1.26m coming from a stockholder's report in early 1988.   Ironically, China Girl would open against another movie that Vestron had a hand in financing, but would not release in America: Rob Reiner's The Princess Bride. While the film would do okay in America, grossing $30m against its $15m, it wouldn't translate so easily to foreign markets.   Anna, from first time Polish filmmaker Yurek Bogayevicz, was an oddball little film from the start. The story, co-written with the legendary Polish writer/director Agnieszka Holland, was based on the real-life friendship of Polish actresses Joanna (Yo-ahn-nuh) Pacuła (Pa-tsu-wa) and Elżbieta (Elz-be-et-ah) Czyżewska (Chuh-zef-ska), and would find Czech supermodel Paulina Porizkova making her feature acting debut as Krystyna, an aspiring actress from Czechoslovakia who goes to New York City to find her idol, Anna, who had been imprisoned and then deported for speaking out against the new regime after the 1968 Communist invasion. Nearly twenty years later, the middle-aged Anna struggles to land any acting parts, in films, on television, or on the stage, who relishes the attention of this beautiful young waif who reminds her of herself back then.   Sally Kirkland, an American actress who got her start as part of Andy Warhol's Factory in the early 60s but could never break out of playing supporting roles in movies like The Way We Were, The Sting, A Star is Born, and Private Benjamin, would be cast as the faded Czech star whose life seemed to unintentionally mirror the actress's. Future Snakes on a Plane director David R. Ellis would be featured in a small supporting role, as would the then sixteen year old Sofia Coppola.   The $1m movie would shoot on location in New York City during the winter of late 1986 and early 1987, and would make its world premiere at the 1987 New York Film Festival in September, before opening at the 68th Street Playhouse on the Upper East Side on October 30th. Critics such as Bruce Williamson of Playboy, Molly Haskell of Vogue and Jami Bernard of the New York Post would sing the praises of the movie, and of Paulina Porizkova, but it would be Sally Kirkland whom practically every critic would gush over. “A performance of depth and clarity and power, easily one of the strongest female roles of the year,” wrote Mike McGrady of Newsday. Janet Maslim wasn't as impressed with the film as most critics, but she would note Ms. Kirkland's immensely dignified presence in the title role.   New York audiences responded well to the critical acclaim, buying more than $22,000 worth of tickets, often playing to sell out crowds for the afternoon and evening shows. In its second week, the film would see its gross increase 12%, and another 3% increase in its third week. Meanwhile, on November 13th, the film would open in Los Angeles at the AMC Century City 14, where it would bring in an additional $10,000, thanks in part to Sheila Benson's rave in the Los Angeles Times, calling the film “the best kind of surprise — a small, frequently funny, fine-boned film set in the worlds of the theater and movies which unexpectedly becomes a consummate study of love, alienation and loss,” while praising Kirkland's performance as a “blazing comet.”   Kirkland would make the rounds on the awards circuit, winning Best Actress awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, the Golden Globes, and the Independent Spirit Awards, culminating in an Academy Award nomination, although she would lose to Cher in Moonstruck.   But despite all these rave reviews and the early support for the film in New York and Los Angeles, the film got little traction outside these two major cities. Despite playing in theatres for nearly six months, Anna could only round up about $1.2m in ticket sales.   Vestron's penultimate new film of 1987 would be a movie that when it was shot in Namibia in late 1986 was titled Peacekeeper, then was changed to Desert Warrior when it was acquired by Jerry Weintraub's eponymously named distribution company, then saw it renamed again to Steel Dawn when Vestron overpaid to acquire the film from Weintraub, because they wanted the next film starring Patrick Swayze for themselves.   Swayze plays, and stop me if you've heard this one before, a warrior wandering through a post-apocalyptic desert who comes upon a group of settlers who are being menaced by the leader of a murderous gang who's after the water they control. Lisa Niemi, also known as Mrs. Patrick Swayze, would be his romantic interest in the film, which would also star AnthonY Zerbe, Brian James, and, in one of his very first acting roles, future Mummy co-star Arnold Vosloo.   The film would open to horrible reviews, and gross just $312k in 290 theatres. For comparison's sake, Dirty Dancing was in its eleventh week of release, was still playing 878 theatres, and would gross $1.7m. In its second week, Steel Dawn had lost nearly two thirds of its theatres, grossing only $60k from 107 theatres. After its third weekend, Vestron stopped reporting grosses. The film had only earned $562k in ticket sales.   And their final release for 1987 would be one of the most prestigious titles they'd ever be involved with. The Dead, based on a short story by James Joyce, would be the 37th and final film to be directed by John Huston. His son Tony would adapt the screenplay, while his daughter Anjelica, whom he had directed to a Best Supporting Actress Oscar two years earlier for Prizzi's Honor, would star as the matriarch of an Irish family circa 1904 whose husband discovers memoirs of a deceased lover of his wife's, an affair that preceded their meeting.   Originally scheduled to shoot in Dublin, Ireland, The Dead would end up being shot on soundstages in Valencia, CA, just north of Los Angeles, as the eighty year old filmmaker was in ill health. Huston, who was suffering from severe emphysema due to decades of smoking, would use video playback for the first and only time in his career in order to call the action, whirling around from set to set in a motorized wheelchair with an oxygen tank attached to it. In fact, the company insuring the film required the producers to have a backup director on set, just in case Huston was unable to continue to make the film. That stand-in was Czech-born British filmmaker Karel Reisz, who never once had to stand-in during the entire shoot.   One Huston who didn't work on the film was Danny Huston, who was supposed to shoot some second unit footage for the film in Dublin for his father, who could not make any trips overseas, as well as a documentary about the making of the film, but for whatever reason, Danny Huston would end up not doing either.   John Huston would turn in his final cut of the film to Vestron in July 1987, and would pass away in late August, a good four months before the film's scheduled release. He would live to see some of the best reviews of his entire career when the film was released on December 18th. At six theatres in Los Angeles and New York City, The Dead would earn $69k in its first three days during what was an amazing opening weekend for a number of movies. The Dead would open against exclusive runs of Broadcast News, Ironweed, Moonstruck and the newest Woody Allen film, September, as well as wide releases of Eddie Murphy: Raw, Batteries Not Included, Overboard, and the infamous Bill Cosby stinker Leonard Part 6.   The film would win the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Picture of the year, John Huston would win the Spirit Award and the London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director, Anjelica Huston would win a Spirit Award as well, for Best Supporting Actress, and Tony Huston would be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. But the little $3.5m film would only see modest returns at the box office, grossing just $4.4m after a four month run in theatres.   Vestron would also release two movies in 1987 through their genre Lightning Pictures label.   The first, Blood Diner, from writer/director Jackie Kong, was meant to be both a tribute and an indirect sequel to the infamous 1965 Herschell Gordon Lewis movie Blood Feast, often considered to be the first splatter slasher film. Released on four screens in Baltimore on July 10th, the film would gross just $6,400 in its one tracked week. The film would get a second chance at life when it opened at the 8th Street Playhouse in New York City on September 4th, but after a $5,000 opening week gross there, the film would have to wait until it was released on home video to become a cult film.   The other Lightning Pictures release for 1987, Street Trash, would become one of the most infamous horror comedy films of the year. An expansion of a short student film by then nineteen year old Jim Muro, Street Trash told the twin stories of a Greenpoint, Brooklyn shop owner who sell a case of cheap, long-expired hooch to local hobos, who hideously melt away shortly after drinking it, while two homeless brothers try to deal with their situation as best they can while all this weirdness is going on about them.   After playing several weeks of midnight shows at the Waverly Theatre near Washington Square, Street Trash would open for a regular run at the 8th Street Playhouse on September 18th, one week after Blood Diner left the same theatre. However, Street Trash would not replace Blood Diner, which was kicked to the curb after one week, but another long forgotten movie, the Christopher Walken-starrer Deadline. Street Trash would do a bit better than Blood Diner, $9,000 in its first three days, enough to get the film a full two week run at the Playhouse. But its second week gross of $5,000 would not be enough to give it a longer playdate, or get another New York theatre to pick it up. The film would get other playdates, including one in my secondary hometown of Santa Cruz starting, ironically, on Thanksgiving Day, but the film would barely make $100k in its theatrical run.   While this would be the only film Jim Muro would direct, he would become an in demand cinematographer and Steadicam operator, working on such films as Field of Dreams, Dances with Wolves, Sneakers, L.A. Confidential, the first Fast and Furious movie, and on The Abyss, Terminator 2, True Lies and Titanic for James Cameron. And should you ever watch the film and sit through the credits, yes, it's that Bryan Singer who worked as a grip and production assistant on the film. It would be his very first film credit, which he worked on during a break from going to USC film school.   People who know me know I am not the biggest fan of horror films. I may have mentioned it once or twice on this podcast. But I have a soft spot for Troma Films and Troma-like films, and Street Trash is probably the best Troma movie not made or released by Troma. There's a reason why Lloyd Kaufman is not a fan of the movie. A number of people who have seen the movie think it is a Troma movie, not helped by the fact that a number of people who did work on The Toxic Avenger went to work on Street Trash afterwards, and some even tell Lloyd at conventions that Street Trash is their favorite Troma movie. It's looks like a Troma movie. It feels like a Troma movie. And to be honest, at least to me, that's one hell of a compliment. It's one of the reasons I even went to see Street Trash, the favorable comparison to Troma. And while I, for lack of a better word, enjoyed Street Trash when I saw it, as much as one can say they enjoyed a movie where a bunch of bums playing hot potato with a man's severed Johnson is a major set piece, but I've never really felt the need to watch it again over the past thirty-five years.   Like several of the movies on this episode, Street Trash is not available for streaming on any service in the United States. And outside of Dirty Dancing, the ones you can stream, China Girl, Personal Services, Slaughter High and Steel Dawn, are mostly available for free with ads on Tubi, which made a huge splash last week with a confounding Super Bowl commercial that sent millions of people to figure what a Tubi was.   Now, if you were counting, that was only nine films released in 1987, and not the eighteen they had promised at the start of the year. Despite the fact they had a smash hit in Dirty Dancing, they decided to push most of their planned 1987 movies to 1988. Not necessarily by choice, though. Many of the films just weren't ready in time for a 1987 release, and then the unexpected long term success of Dirty Dancing kept them occupied for most of the rest of the year. But that only meant that 1988 would be a stellar year for them, right?   We'll find out next episode, when we continue the Vestron Pictures story.   Thank you for joining us. We'll talk again next week.   Remember to visit this episode's page on our website, The80sMoviePodcast.com, for extra materials about the movies we covered this episode.   The 80s Movies Podcast has been researched, written, narrated and edited by Edward Havens for Idiosyncratic Entertainment.   Thank you again.   Good night.

christmas united states america tv american new york director time california world new york city australia babies hollywood earth los angeles england woman law super bowl dreams british star wars san francisco canadian ms australian north carolina ireland detroit jewish irish greek hbo dead field academy grammy hotels epic wind broadway hong kong baltimore tribute bond cinema michael jackson mtv titanic academy awards released wolves pope emmy awards dublin pbs labor day hammer usc golden globes bronx aussie plane terminator pictures thriller officer swiss deadline sting vogue polish factory april fools billboard vhs outsiders top gun critics blockbuster variety fast and furious lp graduate playboy mummy bill cosby james cameron toro mad max time magazine gentleman communists jacques los angeles times santa cruz thanksgiving day long beach sneakers best picture abyss hugh jackman my life orion python neo boy scouts new york post chinatown karate kid monty python tron warner brothers lenny czech woody allen mgm blu duo andy warhol gothic blow out day off princess bride val kilmer dressed alpine namibia surrey jackie chan gilmore girls confidential dances czy tony award christopher walken tubi dirty dancing april fools day ordinary people oates kirkland vocals patrick swayze ferris bueller risky business paul newman george miller playhouse changelings medley christopher lee james joyce best actress brian de palma roger corman magnificent seven best director roger ebert jerry maguire paramount pictures creepshow newsday sofia coppola american werewolf in london donna summer greenwich village gene wilder trading places screenplay true lies overboard czechoslovakia catskills gottlieb hollywood bowl lower east side stand by me french connection terrace rodney dangerfield john landis toxic avenger thumbs up xanadu road warrior troma pretty in pink red dawn elephant man gene kelly huston upper east side billy zane bryan singer nick nolte easy money amc theaters little italy mike nichols john huston moonstruck swayze flashdance william hurt vesta kirkwood timothy dalton best supporting actress peter cushing walter hill ed asner bus stop national society peacekeepers terry jones jack lemmon george c scott daryl hall chorus line columbia pictures cannonball run weintraub chud ken russell tye peter fonda thumbs down greenpoint aptos independent spirit awards rebel without rip torn lloyd kaufman last waltz anjelica huston james hong best original song cheech marin rca records best adapted screenplay jennifer grey buy me love broadcast news living daylights time life street trash endless love stakeout kellerman catskill mountains righteous brothers new york film festival spirit award batteries not included kenny ortega jacques tati jennifer beals best documentary feature movies podcast east l man who fell blood feast ferrera agnieszka holland washington square powers boothe eric carmen david caruso way we were turman blood diner bill medley my turn danny huston furst gene siskel brian james hungry eyes steadicam kim carnes anjelica arnold vosloo jerry orbach houseman norma rae orion pictures paulina porizkova elz under fire julie walters jennifer warnes herschell gordon lewis slaughter high hollywood video joe esposito red fern grows joffrey ballet pacu karl malden previte extreme prejudice caroline munro golden harvest china girl fort apache gorky park private benjamin neo western kelly bishop warnes leonard part bergstein johnny castle sally kirkland emile ardolino lionsgate films emily gilmore troma films steel dawn jackie kong entertainment capital james russo up where we belong vestron sea cliff prizzi best first feature jerry weintraub los angeles film critics association dohlen ironweed david r ellis molly haskell best supporting actress oscar aaron russo i've had benecio karel reisz best foreign language film oscar street playhouse amc century city
The 80s Movie Podcast
Vestron Pictures - Part One

The 80s Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 47:30


The first of a two-part series on the short-lived 80s American distribution company responsible for Dirty Dancing. ----more---- The movies covered on this episode: Alpine (1987, Fredi M. Murer) Anna (1987, Yurek Bogayevicz) Billy Galvin (1986, John Grey) Blood Diner (1987, Jackie Kong) China Girl (1987, Abel Ferrera) The Dead (1987, John Huston) Dirty Dancing (1987, Emile Ardolino) Malcolm (1986, Nadia Tess) Personal Services (1987, Terry Jones) Slaughter High (1986, Mark Ezra and Peter Litten and George Dugdale) Steel Dawn (1987, Lance Hook) Street Trash (1987, Jim Muro)   TRANSCRIPT From Los Angeles, California, the Entertainment Capital of the World, it's The 80s Movies Podcast. I am your host, Edward Havens. Thank you for listening today.   Have you ever thought “I should do this thing” but then you never get around to it, until something completely random happens that reminds you that you were going to do this thing a long time ago?   For this week's episode, that kick in the keister was a post on Twitter from someone I don't follow being retweeted by the great film critic and essayist Walter Chaw, someone I do follow, that showed a Blu-ray cover of the 1987 Walter Hill film Extreme Prejudice. You see, Walter Chaw has recently released a book about the life and career of Walter Hill, and this other person was showing off their new purchase. That in and of itself wasn't the kick in the butt.   That was the logo of the disc's distributor.   Vestron Video.   A company that went out of business more than thirty years before, that unbeknownst to me had been resurrected by the current owner of the trademark, Lionsgate Films, as a specialty label for a certain kind of film like Ken Russell's Gothic, Beyond Re-Animator, CHUD 2, and, for some reason, Walter Hill's Neo-Western featuring Nick Nolte, Powers Boothe and Rip Torn. For those of you from the 80s, you remember at least one of Vestron Pictures' movies. I guarantee it.   But before we get there, we, as always, must go back a little further back in time.   The year is 1981. Time Magazine is amongst the most popular magazines in the world, while their sister publication, Life, was renowned for their stunning photographs printed on glossy color paper of a larger size than most magazines. In the late 1970s, Time-Life added a video production and distribution company to ever-growing media empire that also included television stations, cable channels, book clubs, and compilation record box sets. But Time Life Home Video didn't quite take off the way the company had expected, and they decided to concentrate its lucrative cable businesses like HBO. The company would move Austin Furst, an executive from HBO, over to dismantle the assets of Time-Life Films. And while Furst would sell off the production and distribution parts of the company to Fox, and the television department to Columbia Pictures, he couldn't find a party interested in the home video department. Recognizing that home video was an emerging market that would need a visionary like himself willing to take big risks for the chance to have big rewards, Furst purchased the home video rights to the film and video library for himself, starting up his home entertainment company.   But what to call the company?   It would be his daughter that would come up with Vestron, a portmanteau of combining the name of the Roman goddess of the heart, Vesta, with Tron, the Greek word for instrument. Remember, the movie Tron would not be released for another year at this point.   At first, there were only two employees at Vestron: Furst himself, and Jon Pesinger, a fellow executive at Time-Life who, not unlike Dorothy Boyd in Jerry Maguire, was the only person who saw Furst's long-term vision for the future.   Outside of the titles they brought with them from Time-Life, Vestron's initial release of home video titles comprised of two mid-range movie hits where they were able to snag the home video rights instead of the companies that released the movies in theatres, either because those companies did not have a home video operation yet, or did not negotiate for home video rights when making the movie deal with the producers. Fort Apache, The Bronx, a crime drama with Paul Newman and Ed Asner, and Loving Couples, a Shirley MacLaine/James Coburn romantic comedy that was neither romantic nor comedic, were Time-Life productions, while the Burt Reynolds/Dom DeLuise comedy The Cannonball Run, was a pickup from the Hong Kong production company Golden Harvest, which financed the comedy to help break their local star, Jackie Chan, into the American market. They'd also make a deal with several Canadian production companies to get the American home video rights to titles like the Jack Lemmon drama Tribute and the George C. Scott horror film The Changeling.   The advantage that Vestron had over the major studios was their outlook on the mom and pop rental stores that were popping up in every city and town in the United States. The major studios hated the idea that they could sell a videotape for, say, $99.99, and then see someone else make a major profit by renting that tape out fifty or a hundred times at $4 or $5 per night. Of course, they would eventually see the light, but in 1982, they weren't there yet.   Now, let me sidetrack for a moment, as I am wont to do, to talk about mom and pop video stores in the early 1980s. If you're younger than, say, forty, you probably only know Blockbuster and/or Hollywood Video as your local video rental store, but in the early 80s, there were no national video store chains yet. The first Blockbuster wouldn't open until October 1985, in Dallas, and your neighborhood likely didn't get one until the late 1980s or early 1990s. The first video store I ever encountered, Telford Home Video in Belmont Shores, Long Beach in 1981, was operated by Bob Telford, an actor best known for playing the Station Master in both the original 1974 version of Where the Red Fern Grows and its 2003 remake. Bob was really cool, and I don't think it was just because the space for the video store was just below my dad's office in the real estate company that had built and operated the building. He genuinely took interest in this weird thirteen year old kid who had an encyclopedic knowledge of films and wanted to learn more. I wanted to watch every movie he had in the store that I hadn't seen yet, but there was one problem: we had a VHS machine, and most of Bob's inventory was RCA SelectaVision, a disc-based playback system using a special stylus and a groove-covered disc much like an LP record. After school each day, I'd hightail it over to Telford Home Video, and Bob and I would watch a movie while we waited for customers to come rent something. It was with Bob that I would watch Ordinary People and The Magnificent Seven, The Elephant Man and The Last Waltz, Bus Stop and Rebel Without a Cause and The French Connection and The Man Who Fell to Earth and a bunch of other movies that weren't yet available on VHS, and it was great.   Like many teenagers in the early 1980s, I spent some time working at a mom and pop video store, Seacliff Home Video in Aptos, CA. I worked on the weekends, it was a third of a mile walk from home, and even though I was only 16 years old at the time, my bosses would, every week, solicit my opinion about which upcoming videos we should acquire. Because, like Telford Home Video and Village Home Video, where my friends Dick and Michelle worked about two miles away, and most every video store at the time, space was extremely limited and there was only space for so many titles. Telford Home Video was about 500 square feet and had maybe 500 titles. Seacliff was about 750 square feet and around 800 titles, including about 50 in the tiny, curtained off room created to hold the porn. And the first location for Village Home Video had only 300 square feet of space and only 250 titles. The owner, Leone Keller, confirmed to me that until they moved into a larger location across from the original store, they were able to rent out every movie in the store every night.    For many, a store owner had to be very careful about what they ordered and what they replaced. But Vestron Home Video always seemed to have some of the better movies. Because of a spat between Warner Brothers and Orion Pictures, Vestron would end up with most of Orion's 1983 through 1985 theatrical releases, including Rodney Dangerfield's Easy Money, the Nick Nolte political thriller Under Fire, the William Hurt mystery Gorky Park, and Gene Wilder's The Woman in Red. They'd also make a deal with Roger Corman's old American Independent Pictures outfit, which would reap an unexpected bounty when George Miller's second Mad Max movie, The Road Warrior, became a surprise hit in 1982, and Vestron was holding the video rights to the first Mad Max movie. And they'd also find themselves with the laserdisc rights to several Brian DePalma movies including Dressed to Kill and Blow Out. And after Polygram Films decided to leave the movie business in 1984, they would sell the home video rights to An American Werewolf in London and Endless Love to Vestron.   They were doing pretty good.   And in 1984, Vestron ended up changing the home video industry forever.   When Michael Jackson and John Landis had trouble with Jackson's record company, Epic, getting their idea for a 14 minute short film built around the title song to Jackson's monster album Thriller financed, Vestron would put up a good portion of the nearly million dollar budget in order to release the movie on home video, after it played for a few weeks on MTV. In February 1984, Vestron would release a one-hour tape, The Making of Michael Jackson's Thriller, that included the mini-movie and a 45 minute Making of featurette. At $29.99, it would be one of the first sell-through titles released on home video.   It would become the second home videotape to sell a million copies, after Star Wars.   Suddenly, Vestron was flush with more cash than it knew what to do with.   In 1985, they would decide to expand their entertainment footprint by opening Vestron Pictures, which would finance a number of movies that could be exploited across a number of platforms, including theatrical, home video, cable and syndicated TV. In early January 1986, Vestron would announce they were pursuing projects with three producers, Steve Tisch, Larry Turman, and Gene Kirkwood, but no details on any specific titles or even a timeframe when any of those movies would be made.   Tisch, the son of Loews Entertainment co-owner Bob Tisch, had started producing films in 1977 with the Peter Fonda music drama Outlaw Blues, and had a big hit in 1983 with Risky Business. Turman, the Oscar-nominated producer of Mike Nichols' The Graduate, and Kirkwood, the producer of The Keep and The Pope of Greenwich Village, had seen better days as producers by 1986 but their names still carried a certain cache in Hollywood, and the announcement would certainly let the industry know Vestron was serious about making quality movies.   Well, maybe not all quality movies. They would also launch a sub-label for Vestron Pictures called Lightning Pictures, which would be utilized on B-movies and schlock that maybe wouldn't fit in the Vestron Pictures brand name they were trying to build.   But it costs money to build a movie production and theatrical distribution company.   Lots of money.   Thanks to the ever-growing roster of video titles and the success of releases like Thriller, Vestron would go public in the spring of 1985, selling enough shares on the first day of trading to bring in $440m to the company, $140m than they thought they would sell that day.   It would take them a while, but in 1986, they would start production on their first slate of films, as well as acquire several foreign titles for American distribution.   Vestron Pictures officially entered the theatrical distribution game on July 18th, 1986, when they released the Australian comedy Malcolm at the Cinema 2 on the Upper East Side of New York City. A modern attempt to create the Aussie version of a Jacques Tati-like absurdist comedy about modern life and our dependance on gadgetry, Malcolm follows, as one character describes him a 100 percent not there individual who is tricked into using some of his remote control inventions to pull of a bank robbery. While the film would be a minor hit in Australia, winning all eight of the Australian Film Institute Awards it was nominated for including Best Picture, Director, Screenplay and three acting awards, the film would only play for five weeks in New York, grossing less than $35,000, and would not open in Los Angeles until November 5th, where in its first week at the Cineplex Beverly Center and Samuel Goldwyn Pavilion Cinemas, it would gross a combined $37,000. Go figure.   Malcolm would open in a few more major markets, but Vestron would close the film at the end of the year with a gross under $200,000.   Their next film, Slaughter High, was a rather odd bird. A co-production between American and British-based production companies, the film followed a group of adults responsible for a prank gone wrong on April Fool's Day who are invited to a reunion at their defunct high school where a masked killer awaits inside.   And although the movie takes place in America, the film was shot in London and nearby Virginia Water, Surrey, in late 1984, under the title April Fool's Day. But even with Caroline Munro, the British sex symbol who had become a cult favorite with her appearances in a series of sci-fi and Hammer horror films with Peter Cushing and/or Christopher Lee, as well as her work in the Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me, April Fool's Day would sit on the proverbial shelf for nearly two years, until Vestron picked it up and changed its title, since Paramount Pictures had released their own horror film called April Fools Day earlier in the year.   Vestron would open Slaughter High on nine screens in Detroit on November 14th, 1986, but Vestron would not report grosses. Then they would open it on six screen in St. Louis on February 13th, 1987. At least this time they reported a gross. $12,400. Variety would simply call that number “grim.” They'd give the film one final rush on April 24th, sending it out to 38 screens in in New York City, where it would gross $90,000. There'd be no second week, as practically every theatre would replace it with Creepshow 2.   The third and final Vestron Pictures release for 1986 was Billy Galvin, a little remembered family drama featuring Karl Malden and Lenny von Dohlen, originally produced for the PBS anthology series American Playhouse but bumped up to a feature film as part of coordinated effort to promote the show by occasionally releasing feature films bearing the American Playhouse banner.   The film would open at the Cineplex Beverly Center on December 31st, not only the last day of the calendar year but the last day a film can be released into theatres in Los Angeles to have been considered for Academy Awards. The film would not get any major awards, from the Academy or anyone else, nor much attention from audiences, grossing just $4,000 in its first five days. They'd give the film a chance in New York on February 20th, at the 23rd Street West Triplex, but a $2,000 opening weekend gross would doom the film from ever opening in another theatre again.   In early 1987, Vestron announced eighteen films they would release during the year, and a partnership with AMC Theatres and General Cinema to have their films featured in those two companies' pilot specialized film programs in major markets like Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston and San Francisco.   Alpine Fire would be the first of those films, arriving at the Cinema Studio 1 in New York City on February 20th. A Swiss drama about a young deaf and mentally challenged teenager who gets his older sister pregnant, was that country's entry into the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar race. While the film would win the Golden Leopard Award at the 1985 Locarno Film Festival, the Academy would not select the film for a nomination, and the film would quickly disappear from theatres after a $2,000 opening weekend gross.   Personal Services, the first film to be directed by Terry Jones outside of his services with Monty Python, would arrive in American theatres on May 15th. The only Jones-directed film to not feature any other Python in the cast, Personal Services was a thinly-disguised telling of a 1970s—era London waitress who was running a brothel in her flat in order to make ends meet, and featured a standout performance by Julie Walters as the waitress turned madame. In England, Personal Services would be the second highest-grossing film of the year, behind The Living Daylights, the first Bond film featuring new 007 Timothy Dalton. In America, the film wouldn't be quite as successful, grossing $1.75m after 33 weeks in theatres, despite never playing on more than 31 screens in any given week.   It would be another three months before Vestron would release their second movie of the year, but it would be the one they'd become famous for.   Dirty Dancing.   Based in large part on screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein's own childhood, the screenplay would be written after the producers of the 1980 Michael Douglas/Jill Clayburgh dramedy It's My Turn asked the writer to remove a scene from the screenplay that involved an erotic dance sequence. She would take that scene and use it as a jumping off point for a new story about a Jewish teenager in the early 1960s who participated in secret “Dirty Dancing” competitions while she vacationed with her doctor father and stay-at-home mother while they vacationed in the Catskill Mountains. Baby, the young woman at the center of the story, would not only resemble the screenwriter as a character but share her childhood nickname.   Bergstein would pitch the story to every studio in Hollywood in 1984, and only get a nibble from MGM Pictures, whose name was synonymous with big-budget musicals decades before. They would option the screenplay and assign producer Linda Gottlieb, a veteran television producer making her first major foray into feature films, to the project. With Gottlieb, Bergstein would head back to the Catskills for the first time in two decades, as research for the script. It was while on this trip that the pair would meet Michael Terrace, a former Broadway dancer who had spent summers in the early 1960s teaching tourists how to mambo in the Catskills. Terrace and Bergstein didn't remember each other if they had met way back when, but his stories would help inform the lead male character of Johnny Castle.   But, as regularly happens in Hollywood, there was a regime change at MGM in late 1985, and one of the projects the new bosses cut loose was Dirty Dancing. Once again, the script would make the rounds in Hollywood, but nobody was biting… until Vestron Pictures got their chance to read it.   They loved it, and were ready to make it their first in-house production… but they would make the movie if the budget could be cut from $10m to $4.5m. That would mean some sacrifices. They wouldn't be able to hire a major director, nor bigger name actors, but that would end up being a blessing in disguise.   To direct, Gottlieb and Bergstein looked at a lot of up and coming feature directors, but the one person they had the best feeling about was Emile Ardolino, a former actor off-Broadway in the 1960s who began his filmmaking career as a documentarian for PBS in the 1970s. In 1983, Ardolino's documentary about National Dance Institute founder Jacques d'Amboise, He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin', would win both the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and the Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Entertainment Special.   Although Ardolino had never directed a movie, he would read the script twice in a week while serving on jury duty, and came back to Gottlieb and Bergstein with a number of ideas to help make the movie shine, even at half the budget.   For a movie about dancing, with a lot of dancing in it, they would need a creative choreographer to help train the actors and design the sequences. The filmmakers would chose Kenny Ortega, who in addition to choreographing the dance scenes in Pretty in Pink and Ferris Bueller's Day Off, had worked with Gene Kelly on the 1980 musical Xanadu. Well, more specifically, was molded by Gene Kelly to become the lead choreographer for the film. That's some good credentials.   Unlike movies like Flashdance, where the filmmakers would hire Jennifer Beals to play Alex and Marine Jahan to perform Alex's dance scenes, Emile Ardolino was insistent that the actors playing the dancers were actors who also dance. Having stand-ins would take extra time to set-up, and would suck up a portion of an already tight budget. Yet the first people he would meet for the lead role of Johnny were non-dancers Benecio del Toro, Val Kilmer, and Billy Zane. Zane would go so far as to do a screen test with one of the actresses being considered for the role of Baby, Jennifer Grey, but after screening the test, they realized Grey was right for Baby but Zane was not right for Johnny.   Someone suggested Patrick Swayze, a former dancer for the prestigious Joffrey Ballet who was making his way up the ranks of stardom thanks to his roles in The Outsiders and Grandview U.S.A. But Swayze had suffered a knee injury years before that put his dance career on hold, and there were concerns he would re-aggravate his injury, and there were concerns from Jennifer Grey because she and Swayze had not gotten along very well while working on Red Dawn. But that had been three years earlier, and when they screen tested together here, everyone was convinced this was the pairing that would bring magic to the role.   Baby's parents would be played by two Broadway veterans: Jerry Orbach, who is best known today as Detective Lenny Briscoe on Law and Order, and Kelly Bishop, who is best known today as Emily Gilmore from Gilmore Girls but had actually started out as a dancer, singer and actor, winning a Tony Award for her role in the original Broadway production of A Chorus Line. Although Bishop had originally been cast in a different role for the movie, another guest at the Catskills resort with the Housemans, but she would be bumped up when the original Mrs. Houseman, Lynne Lipton, would fall ill during the first week of filming.   Filming on Dirty Dancing would begin in North Carolina on September 5th, 1986, at a former Boy Scout camp that had been converted to a private residential community. This is where many of the iconic scenes from the film would be shot, including Baby carrying the watermelon and practicing her dance steps on the stairs, all the interior dance scenes, the log scene, and the golf course scene where Baby would ask her father for $250. It's also where Patrick Swayze almost ended his role in the film, when he would indeed re-injure his knee during the balancing scene on the log. He would be rushed to the hospital to have fluid drained from the swelling. Thankfully, there would be no lingering effects once he was released.   After filming in North Carolina was completed, the team would move to Virginia for two more weeks of filming, including the water lift scene, exteriors at Kellerman's Hotel and the Houseman family's cabin, before the film wrapped on October 27th.   Ardolino's first cut of the film would be completed in February 1987, and Vestron would begin the process of running a series of test screenings. At the first test screening, nearly 40% of the audience didn't realize there was an abortion subplot in the movie, even after completing the movie. A few weeks later, Vestron executives would screen the film for producer Aaron Russo, who had produced such movies as The Rose and Trading Places. His reaction to the film was to tell the executives to burn the negative and collect the insurance.   But, to be fair, one important element of the film was still not set.   The music.   Eleanor Bergstein had written into her script a number of songs that were popular in the early 1960s, when the movie was set, that she felt the final film needed. Except a number of the songs were a bit more expensive to license than Vestron would have preferred. The company was testing the film with different versions of those songs, other artists' renditions. The writer, with the support of her producer and director, fought back. She made a deal with the Vestron executives. They would play her the master tracks to ten of the songs she wanted, as well as the copycat versions. If she could identify six of the masters, she could have all ten songs in the film.   Vestron would spend another half a million dollars licensing the original recording.    The writer nailed all ten.   But even then, there was still one missing piece of the puzzle.   The closing song.   While Bergstein wanted another song to close the film, the team at Vestron were insistent on a new song that could be used to anchor a soundtrack album. The writer, producer, director and various members of the production team listened to dozens of submissions from songwriters, but none of them were right, until they got to literally the last submission left, written by Franke Previte, who had written another song that would appear on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack, “Hungry Eyes.”   Everybody loved the song, called “I've Had the Time of My Life,” and it would take some time to convince Previte that Dirty Dancing was not a porno. They showed him the film and he agreed to give them the song, but the production team and Vestron wanted to get a pair of more famous singers to record the final version.   The filmmakers originally approached disco queen Donna Summer and Joe Esposito, whose song “You're the Best” appeared on the Karate Kid soundtrack, but Summer would decline, not liking the title of the movie. They would then approach Daryl Hall from Hall and Oates and Kim Carnes, but they'd both decline, citing concerns about the title of the movie. Then they approached Bill Medley, one-half of The Righteous Brothers, who had enjoyed yet another career resurgence when You Lost That Lovin' Feeling became a hit in 1986 thanks to Top Gun, but at first, he would also decline. Not that he had any concerns about the title of the film, although he did have concerns about the title, but that his wife was about to give birth to their daughter, and he had promised he would be there.   While trying to figure who to get to sing the male part of the song, the music supervisor for the film approached Jennifer Warnes, who had sung the duet “Up Where We Belong” from the An Officer and a Gentleman soundtrack, which had won the 1983 Academy Award for Best Original Song, and sang the song “It Goes Like It Goes” from the Norma Rae soundtrack, which had won the 1980 Academy Award for Best Original Song. Warnes wasn't thrilled with the song, but she would be persuaded to record the song for the right price… and if Bill Medley would sing the other part. Medley, flattered that Warnes asked specifically to record with him, said he would do so, after his daughter was born, and if the song was recorded in his studio in Los Angeles. A few weeks later, Medley and Warnes would have their portion of the song completed in only one hour, including additional harmonies and flourishes decided on after finishing with the main vocals.   With all the songs added to the movie, audience test scores improved considerably.   RCA Records, who had been contracted to handle the release of the soundtrack, would set a July 17th release date for the album, to coincide with the release of the movie on the same day, with the lead single, I've Had the Time of My Life, released one week earlier. But then, Vestron moved the movie back from July 17th to August 21st… and forgot to tell RCA Records about the move. No big deal. The song would quickly rise up the charts, eventually hitting #1 on the Billboard charts.   When the movie finally did open in 975 theatres in August 21st, the film would open to fourth place with $3.9m in ticket sales, behind Can't Buy Me Love in third place and in its second week of release, the Cheech Marin comedy Born in East L.A., which opened in second place, and Stakeout, which was enjoying its third week atop the charts.   The reviews were okay, but not special. Gene Siskel would give the film a begrudging Thumbs Up, citing Jennifer Grey's performance and her character's arc as the thing that tipped the scale into the positive, while Roger Ebert would give the film a Thumbs Down, due to its idiot plot and tired and relentlessly predictable story of love between kids from different backgrounds.   But then a funny thing happened…   Instead of appealing to the teenagers they thought would see the film, the majority of the audience ended up becoming adults. Not just twenty and thirty somethings, but people who were teenagers themselves during the movie's timeframe. They would be drawn in to the film through the newfound sense of boomer nostalgia that helped make Stand By Me an unexpected hit the year before, both as a movie and as a soundtrack.   Its second week in theatre would only see the gross drop 6%, and the film would finish in third place.   In week three, the four day Labor Day weekend, it would gross nearly $5m, and move up to second place. And it would continue to play and continue to bring audiences in, only dropping out of the top ten once in early November for one weekend, from August to December. Even with all the new movies entering the marketplace for Christmas, Dirty Dancing would be retained by most of the theatres that were playing it. In the first weekend of 1988, Dirty Dancing was still playing in 855 theaters, only 120 fewer than who opened it five months earlier. Once it did started leaving first run theatres, dollar houses were eager to pick it up, and Dirty Dancing would make another $6m in ticket sales as it continued to play until Christmas 1988 at some theatres, finishing its incredible run with $63.5m in ticket sales.   Yet, despite its ubiquitousness in American pop culture, despite the soundtrack selling more than ten million copies in its first year, despite the uptick in attendance at dance schools from coast to coast, Dirty Dancing never once was the #1 film in America on any weekend it was in theatres. There would always be at least one other movie that would do just a bit better.   When awards season came around, the movie was practically ignored by critics groups. It would pick up an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature, and both the movie and Jennifer Grey would be nominated for Golden Globes, but it would be that song, I've Had the Time of My Life, that would be the driver for awards love. It would win the Academy Award and the Golden Globe for Best Original Song, and a Grammy for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. The song would anchor a soundtrack that would also include two other hit songs, Eric Carmen's “Hungry Eyes,” and “She's Like the Wind,” recorded for the movie by Patrick Swayze, making him the proto-Hugh Jackman of the 80s. I've seen Hugh Jackman do his one-man show at the Hollywood Bowl, and now I'm wishing Patrick Swayze could have had something like that thirty years ago.   On September 25th, they would release Abel Ferrera's Neo-noir romantic thriller China Girl. A modern adaptation of Romeo and Juliet written by regular Ferrera writer Nicholas St. John, the setting would be New York City's Lower East Side, when Tony, a teenager from Little Italy, falls for Tye, a teenager from Chinatown, as their older brothers vie for turf in a vicious gang war. While the stars of the film, Richard Panebianco and Sari Chang, would never become known actors, the supporting cast is as good as you'd expect from a post-Ms. .45 Ferrera film, including James Russo, Russell Wong, David Caruso and James Hong.   The $3.5m movie would open on 110 screens, including 70 in New York ti-state region and 18 in Los Angeles, grossing $531k. After a second weekend, where the gross dropped to $225k, Vestron would stop tracking the film, with a final reported gross of just $1.26m coming from a stockholder's report in early 1988.   Ironically, China Girl would open against another movie that Vestron had a hand in financing, but would not release in America: Rob Reiner's The Princess Bride. While the film would do okay in America, grossing $30m against its $15m, it wouldn't translate so easily to foreign markets.   Anna, from first time Polish filmmaker Yurek Bogayevicz, was an oddball little film from the start. The story, co-written with the legendary Polish writer/director Agnieszka Holland, was based on the real-life friendship of Polish actresses Joanna (Yo-ahn-nuh) Pacuła (Pa-tsu-wa) and Elżbieta (Elz-be-et-ah) Czyżewska (Chuh-zef-ska), and would find Czech supermodel Paulina Porizkova making her feature acting debut as Krystyna, an aspiring actress from Czechoslovakia who goes to New York City to find her idol, Anna, who had been imprisoned and then deported for speaking out against the new regime after the 1968 Communist invasion. Nearly twenty years later, the middle-aged Anna struggles to land any acting parts, in films, on television, or on the stage, who relishes the attention of this beautiful young waif who reminds her of herself back then.   Sally Kirkland, an American actress who got her start as part of Andy Warhol's Factory in the early 60s but could never break out of playing supporting roles in movies like The Way We Were, The Sting, A Star is Born, and Private Benjamin, would be cast as the faded Czech star whose life seemed to unintentionally mirror the actress's. Future Snakes on a Plane director David R. Ellis would be featured in a small supporting role, as would the then sixteen year old Sofia Coppola.   The $1m movie would shoot on location in New York City during the winter of late 1986 and early 1987, and would make its world premiere at the 1987 New York Film Festival in September, before opening at the 68th Street Playhouse on the Upper East Side on October 30th. Critics such as Bruce Williamson of Playboy, Molly Haskell of Vogue and Jami Bernard of the New York Post would sing the praises of the movie, and of Paulina Porizkova, but it would be Sally Kirkland whom practically every critic would gush over. “A performance of depth and clarity and power, easily one of the strongest female roles of the year,” wrote Mike McGrady of Newsday. Janet Maslim wasn't as impressed with the film as most critics, but she would note Ms. Kirkland's immensely dignified presence in the title role.   New York audiences responded well to the critical acclaim, buying more than $22,000 worth of tickets, often playing to sell out crowds for the afternoon and evening shows. In its second week, the film would see its gross increase 12%, and another 3% increase in its third week. Meanwhile, on November 13th, the film would open in Los Angeles at the AMC Century City 14, where it would bring in an additional $10,000, thanks in part to Sheila Benson's rave in the Los Angeles Times, calling the film “the best kind of surprise — a small, frequently funny, fine-boned film set in the worlds of the theater and movies which unexpectedly becomes a consummate study of love, alienation and loss,” while praising Kirkland's performance as a “blazing comet.”   Kirkland would make the rounds on the awards circuit, winning Best Actress awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, the Golden Globes, and the Independent Spirit Awards, culminating in an Academy Award nomination, although she would lose to Cher in Moonstruck.   But despite all these rave reviews and the early support for the film in New York and Los Angeles, the film got little traction outside these two major cities. Despite playing in theatres for nearly six months, Anna could only round up about $1.2m in ticket sales.   Vestron's penultimate new film of 1987 would be a movie that when it was shot in Namibia in late 1986 was titled Peacekeeper, then was changed to Desert Warrior when it was acquired by Jerry Weintraub's eponymously named distribution company, then saw it renamed again to Steel Dawn when Vestron overpaid to acquire the film from Weintraub, because they wanted the next film starring Patrick Swayze for themselves.   Swayze plays, and stop me if you've heard this one before, a warrior wandering through a post-apocalyptic desert who comes upon a group of settlers who are being menaced by the leader of a murderous gang who's after the water they control. Lisa Niemi, also known as Mrs. Patrick Swayze, would be his romantic interest in the film, which would also star AnthonY Zerbe, Brian James, and, in one of his very first acting roles, future Mummy co-star Arnold Vosloo.   The film would open to horrible reviews, and gross just $312k in 290 theatres. For comparison's sake, Dirty Dancing was in its eleventh week of release, was still playing 878 theatres, and would gross $1.7m. In its second week, Steel Dawn had lost nearly two thirds of its theatres, grossing only $60k from 107 theatres. After its third weekend, Vestron stopped reporting grosses. The film had only earned $562k in ticket sales.   And their final release for 1987 would be one of the most prestigious titles they'd ever be involved with. The Dead, based on a short story by James Joyce, would be the 37th and final film to be directed by John Huston. His son Tony would adapt the screenplay, while his daughter Anjelica, whom he had directed to a Best Supporting Actress Oscar two years earlier for Prizzi's Honor, would star as the matriarch of an Irish family circa 1904 whose husband discovers memoirs of a deceased lover of his wife's, an affair that preceded their meeting.   Originally scheduled to shoot in Dublin, Ireland, The Dead would end up being shot on soundstages in Valencia, CA, just north of Los Angeles, as the eighty year old filmmaker was in ill health. Huston, who was suffering from severe emphysema due to decades of smoking, would use video playback for the first and only time in his career in order to call the action, whirling around from set to set in a motorized wheelchair with an oxygen tank attached to it. In fact, the company insuring the film required the producers to have a backup director on set, just in case Huston was unable to continue to make the film. That stand-in was Czech-born British filmmaker Karel Reisz, who never once had to stand-in during the entire shoot.   One Huston who didn't work on the film was Danny Huston, who was supposed to shoot some second unit footage for the film in Dublin for his father, who could not make any trips overseas, as well as a documentary about the making of the film, but for whatever reason, Danny Huston would end up not doing either.   John Huston would turn in his final cut of the film to Vestron in July 1987, and would pass away in late August, a good four months before the film's scheduled release. He would live to see some of the best reviews of his entire career when the film was released on December 18th. At six theatres in Los Angeles and New York City, The Dead would earn $69k in its first three days during what was an amazing opening weekend for a number of movies. The Dead would open against exclusive runs of Broadcast News, Ironweed, Moonstruck and the newest Woody Allen film, September, as well as wide releases of Eddie Murphy: Raw, Batteries Not Included, Overboard, and the infamous Bill Cosby stinker Leonard Part 6.   The film would win the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Picture of the year, John Huston would win the Spirit Award and the London Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director, Anjelica Huston would win a Spirit Award as well, for Best Supporting Actress, and Tony Huston would be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. But the little $3.5m film would only see modest returns at the box office, grossing just $4.4m after a four month run in theatres.   Vestron would also release two movies in 1987 through their genre Lightning Pictures label.   The first, Blood Diner, from writer/director Jackie Kong, was meant to be both a tribute and an indirect sequel to the infamous 1965 Herschell Gordon Lewis movie Blood Feast, often considered to be the first splatter slasher film. Released on four screens in Baltimore on July 10th, the film would gross just $6,400 in its one tracked week. The film would get a second chance at life when it opened at the 8th Street Playhouse in New York City on September 4th, but after a $5,000 opening week gross there, the film would have to wait until it was released on home video to become a cult film.   The other Lightning Pictures release for 1987, Street Trash, would become one of the most infamous horror comedy films of the year. An expansion of a short student film by then nineteen year old Jim Muro, Street Trash told the twin stories of a Greenpoint, Brooklyn shop owner who sell a case of cheap, long-expired hooch to local hobos, who hideously melt away shortly after drinking it, while two homeless brothers try to deal with their situation as best they can while all this weirdness is going on about them.   After playing several weeks of midnight shows at the Waverly Theatre near Washington Square, Street Trash would open for a regular run at the 8th Street Playhouse on September 18th, one week after Blood Diner left the same theatre. However, Street Trash would not replace Blood Diner, which was kicked to the curb after one week, but another long forgotten movie, the Christopher Walken-starrer Deadline. Street Trash would do a bit better than Blood Diner, $9,000 in its first three days, enough to get the film a full two week run at the Playhouse. But its second week gross of $5,000 would not be enough to give it a longer playdate, or get another New York theatre to pick it up. The film would get other playdates, including one in my secondary hometown of Santa Cruz starting, ironically, on Thanksgiving Day, but the film would barely make $100k in its theatrical run.   While this would be the only film Jim Muro would direct, he would become an in demand cinematographer and Steadicam operator, working on such films as Field of Dreams, Dances with Wolves, Sneakers, L.A. Confidential, the first Fast and Furious movie, and on The Abyss, Terminator 2, True Lies and Titanic for James Cameron. And should you ever watch the film and sit through the credits, yes, it's that Bryan Singer who worked as a grip and production assistant on the film. It would be his very first film credit, which he worked on during a break from going to USC film school.   People who know me know I am not the biggest fan of horror films. I may have mentioned it once or twice on this podcast. But I have a soft spot for Troma Films and Troma-like films, and Street Trash is probably the best Troma movie not made or released by Troma. There's a reason why Lloyd Kaufman is not a fan of the movie. A number of people who have seen the movie think it is a Troma movie, not helped by the fact that a number of people who did work on The Toxic Avenger went to work on Street Trash afterwards, and some even tell Lloyd at conventions that Street Trash is their favorite Troma movie. It's looks like a Troma movie. It feels like a Troma movie. And to be honest, at least to me, that's one hell of a compliment. It's one of the reasons I even went to see Street Trash, the favorable comparison to Troma. And while I, for lack of a better word, enjoyed Street Trash when I saw it, as much as one can say they enjoyed a movie where a bunch of bums playing hot potato with a man's severed Johnson is a major set piece, but I've never really felt the need to watch it again over the past thirty-five years.   Like several of the movies on this episode, Street Trash is not available for streaming on any service in the United States. And outside of Dirty Dancing, the ones you can stream, China Girl, Personal Services, Slaughter High and Steel Dawn, are mostly available for free with ads on Tubi, which made a huge splash last week with a confounding Super Bowl commercial that sent millions of people to figure what a Tubi was.   Now, if you were counting, that was only nine films released in 1987, and not the eighteen they had promised at the start of the year. Despite the fact they had a smash hit in Dirty Dancing, they decided to push most of their planned 1987 movies to 1988. Not necessarily by choice, though. Many of the films just weren't ready in time for a 1987 release, and then the unexpected long term success of Dirty Dancing kept them occupied for most of the rest of the year. But that only meant that 1988 would be a stellar year for them, right?   We'll find out next episode, when we continue the Vestron Pictures story.   Thank you for joining us. We'll talk again next week.   Remember to visit this episode's page on our website, The80sMoviePodcast.com, for extra materials about the movies we covered this episode.   The 80s Movies Podcast has been researched, written, narrated and edited by Edward Havens for Idiosyncratic Entertainment.   Thank you again.   Good night.

christmas united states america tv american new york director time california world new york city australia babies hollywood earth los angeles england woman law super bowl dreams british star wars san francisco canadian ms australian north carolina ireland detroit jewish irish greek hbo dead field academy grammy hotels epic wind broadway hong kong baltimore tribute bond cinema michael jackson mtv titanic academy awards released wolves pope emmy awards dublin pbs labor day hammer usc golden globes bronx aussie plane terminator pictures thriller officer swiss deadline sting vogue polish factory april fools billboard vhs outsiders top gun critics blockbuster variety fast and furious lp graduate playboy mummy bill cosby james cameron toro mad max time magazine gentleman communists jacques los angeles times santa cruz thanksgiving day long beach sneakers best picture abyss hugh jackman my life orion python neo boy scouts new york post chinatown karate kid monty python tron warner brothers lenny czech woody allen mgm blu duo andy warhol gothic blow out day off princess bride val kilmer dressed alpine namibia surrey jackie chan gilmore girls confidential dances czy tony award christopher walken tubi dirty dancing april fools day ordinary people oates kirkland vocals patrick swayze ferris bueller risky business paul newman george miller playhouse changelings medley christopher lee james joyce best actress brian de palma roger corman magnificent seven best director roger ebert jerry maguire paramount pictures creepshow newsday sofia coppola american werewolf in london donna summer greenwich village gene wilder trading places screenplay true lies overboard czechoslovakia catskills gottlieb hollywood bowl lower east side stand by me french connection terrace rodney dangerfield john landis toxic avenger thumbs up xanadu road warrior troma pretty in pink red dawn elephant man gene kelly huston upper east side billy zane bryan singer nick nolte easy money amc theaters little italy mike nichols john huston moonstruck swayze flashdance william hurt vesta kirkwood timothy dalton best supporting actress peter cushing walter hill ed asner bus stop national society peacekeepers terry jones jack lemmon george c scott daryl hall chorus line columbia pictures cannonball run weintraub chud ken russell tye peter fonda thumbs down greenpoint aptos independent spirit awards rebel without rip torn lloyd kaufman last waltz anjelica huston james hong best original song cheech marin rca records best adapted screenplay jennifer grey buy me love broadcast news living daylights time life street trash endless love stakeout kellerman catskill mountains righteous brothers new york film festival spirit award batteries not included kenny ortega jacques tati jennifer beals best documentary feature movies podcast east l man who fell blood feast ferrera agnieszka holland washington square powers boothe eric carmen david caruso way we were turman blood diner bill medley my turn danny huston furst gene siskel brian james hungry eyes steadicam kim carnes anjelica arnold vosloo jerry orbach houseman norma rae orion pictures paulina porizkova elz under fire julie walters jennifer warnes herschell gordon lewis slaughter high hollywood video joe esposito red fern grows joffrey ballet pacu karl malden previte extreme prejudice caroline munro golden harvest china girl fort apache gorky park private benjamin neo western kelly bishop warnes leonard part bergstein johnny castle sally kirkland emile ardolino lionsgate films emily gilmore troma films steel dawn jackie kong entertainment capital james russo up where we belong vestron sea cliff prizzi best first feature jerry weintraub los angeles film critics association dohlen ironweed david r ellis molly haskell best supporting actress oscar aaron russo i've had benecio karel reisz best foreign language film oscar street playhouse amc century city
Arts & Ideas
Morgan - A Suitable Case for Treatment

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 44:41


A smouldering gorilla suited man racing through London on a motorbike is one of many striking images from Karel Reisz's 1966 film that starred David Warner (who had just played Hamlet at the RSC) alongside Vanessa Redgrave and Robert Stephens. Matthew Sweet is joined by Stephen Frears who worked as assistant director on the film, the director's son Matthew Reisz and film historian Lucy Bolton to look back at the talents of both Karel Reisz (21 July 1926 - 25 November 2002) and David Warner (29 July 1941 – 24 July 2022). Producer: Torquil MacLeod You can find other episodes of Free Thinking focused on key films and TV programmes in a collection called Landmarks on the Free Thinking programme website including discussions of Enter the Dragon and Bruce Lee, Asta Nielsen and a silent Hamlet, Dirk Bogarde and The Servant, Glenda Jackson and Sunday Bloody Sunday https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01jwn44

We Made This
22. The Crusades & Kingdom of Heaven (2005)

We Made This

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 73:08


Welcome back to PARTISAN, a podcast exploring politics and history in film and entertainment. Join your host, Tony Black, this time joined by Illumination Above All co-host Ian Buckley, in an episode first aired on the REEL TALK podcast, to discuss the Crusades and Ridley Scott's 2005 epic, KINGDOM OF HEAVEN... Next time on Partisan, guest Carl Sweeney joins Tony to discuss the angry young men of the 1950s with Karel Reisz's 1960 film SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING... Host / Editor Tony Black Guest Ian Buckley Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/partisanpod Follow us on Twitter: @partisanpod_ @yhbwwatchingpod Support the We Made This podcast network on Patreon: www.patreon.com/wemadethis We Made This on Twitter: @we_madethis wemadethisnetwork.com Title music: Progressive Progress (c) Howard Harper-Barnes via epidemicsound.com

Partisan: Politics & History in Film
22. The Crusades & Kingdom of Heaven (2005)

Partisan: Politics & History in Film

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 73:08


Welcome back to PARTISAN, a podcast exploring politics and history in film and entertainment.Join your host, Tony Black, this time joined by Illumination Above All co-host Ian Buckley, in an episode first aired on the REEL TALK podcast, to discuss the Crusades and Ridley Scott's 2005 epic, KINGDOM OF HEAVEN...Next time on Partisan, guest Carl Sweeney joins Tony to discuss the angry young men of the 1950s with Karel Reisz's 1960 film SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING...Host / EditorTony BlackGuestIan BuckleyLike our Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/partisanpodFollow us on Twitter:@partisanpod_@yhbwwatchingpodSupport the We Made This podcast network on Patreon:www.patreon.com/wemadethisWe Made This on Twitter: @we_madethiswemadethisnetwork.comTitle music: Progressive Progress (c) Howard Harper-Barnes via epidemicsound.com

The Gentlemens Guide To Midnite Cinema
Episode #591: The Gambler

The Gentlemens Guide To Midnite Cinema

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 77:48


Welcome back to the GGtMC!!! This week Sammy and Will discuss the loss of James Caan and cover his film The Gambler (1974) directed by Karel Reisz!!! Emails to midnitecinema@gmail.com Adios!!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ggtmc/message

emails gambler james caan karel reisz ggtmc
Full Cast And Crew
127. An Appreciation of James Caan & 'The Gambler' (1974)

Full Cast And Crew

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 39:28


When James Caan died last week at 82 it was cause for a pause of appreciation for the work he left behind. I went searching for a 70's Caan film I hadn't yet seen, having done most of his ouvre at one time or another.  I settled on Czech filmmaker Karel Reisz' brilliant 1974 film 'The Gambler', based on a James Toback script and I'm so glad I did. Before jumping into that film, this episode offers a brief re-appraisal of Caan's work in 'The Godfather' and in Michael Mann's 'Thief' (Caan's favorite film role), and a consideration of the relationship audiences end up having with actors with long careers onscreen and in the public eye, human flaws and imperfections all.

Doubled Feature
The Gambler Split - The Gambler/California Split

Doubled Feature

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 108:40


New guest to the pod Nick stops by to make a few wagers and talk about 1970s gambling movies The Gambler and California Split. The Gambler(1974) Directed by Karel Reisz. Starring James Caan, Paul Sorvino and Lauren Hutton. Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veTaDgOd48Y&ab_channel=HDRetroTrailers California Split(1974) Directed by Robert Altman. Starring Elliot Gould, George Segal, Ann Prentiss and Gwen Welles. Scene: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMM3YjKfGoo&ab_channel=thousandcardstare Twitter: @DoubledFeature Instagram: DoubledFeature Email: DoubledFeaturePodcast@Gmail.com Dan's Twitter: @DannyJenkem Dan's Letterboxd: @DannyJenkem Max's Twitter: @Mac_Dead Max's Letterboxd: @Mac_Dead Executive Producer: Koolaid --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/doubledfeature/message

Great Lives
Brian Cox on Lindsay Anderson

Great Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 27:40 Very Popular


Actor Brian Cox chooses his one-time mentor and fellow Scot, Lindsay Anderson. "His effect is still on me to this day, and I can't throw him off. He taught me how to think. He triggered something off in me that nobody else had previously done." A critic, an outsider, a provocateur, Anderson founded the Free Cinema movement in the 1950s with fellow documentary makers Tony Richardson, Karel Reisz and Lorenza Mazzetti. His films include This Sporting Life and If… which won the Palm d'or in 1969 and helped launch the career of Malcolm MacDowell. Lindsay Anderson's international reputation surpassed his fame in Britain, where his uncompromisingly anti-establishment stance failed to win him mainstream admirers, but he made several more provocative films and is remembered fondly by his friends and collaborators as an extremely funny, loyal and principled man. Brian Cox, star of Rushmore, The Bourne Identity and Succession, is joined by Karl Magee from the Lindsay Anderson Archive at the University of Stirling. Presented by Matthew Parris and produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Ellie Richold. Future programmes in this series include journalist Donald McIntyre on the editor of Picture Post, Tom Hopkinson; Janet Ellis on the founder of the Puffin Club, Kaye Webb; and Terry Christian on Mr Manchester, Tony Wilson, along with author Paul Morley who wrote From Manchester With Love.

Film Chatter Podcast
British Films

Film Chatter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 123:03


Aric and Marisa travel across the pond to explore the films of the United Kingdom, specifically during the '60s and with a little detour into the '90s. They look at how the perspectives of these films are shaped by the social and economical circumstances of everyday people, and how these perspectives have much to illuminate about today's prevalent issues.The six films this episode highlights are a mix of heavy hitters and tender stories of identity: SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING (1960), a Karel Reisz picture studying the attitude of a man who plays by the rules during the week, then lets loose on the weekends, VICTIM (1961), the suspenseful story of a man blackmailed by his homosexuality and his fight to be himself against the law, THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG DISTANCE RUNNER (1962), a character study about a talented young runner who questions discipline and the authority behind it, THIS SPORTING LIFE (1963), a story of a man who wins everything except his unrequited love, THE LEATHER BOYS (1964), a film about a newlywed couple in crisis when the husband develops feelings for a member of a rival biker gang, and LIFE IS SWEET (1990), a Mike Leigh film about a working class family enduring the mundanities of life while hanging onto their personal dreams. Please consider supporting this show through our Patreon!Keep up with us on Instagram and Twitter: @filmchatterpod.Check out the films mentioned in this episode on our Letterboxd.Thanks for tuning in!Powered and distributed by Simplecast

Closed Set w/ Themistoklis Alexis

This week, we revisit the life and work of the great Czech-British filmmaker Karel Reisz (1926-2002). A seminal figure of England's Free Cinema movement and the British New Wave, Reisz announced his arrival with the 1960 "kitchen sink" classic Saturday Night and Sunday Morning before directing memorable films like Morgan - A Suitable Case for Treatment, Isadora, The Gambler, and The French Lieutenant's Woman. Join us as we celebrate the work of a reserved and unassuming man who deftly examined some of the darker sides of human behaviour. Kisses many.

The Suspense is Killing Us
Ep. 69: ABRACADEBRA

The Suspense is Killing Us

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 157:12


We catch a very broad spectrum of Winger here, from full-on greatness to embarrassing weirdness. Next episode we'll be covering the work of Debra Warrant! This is a bad joke, no such person exists. MIKE'S MURDER (1984, James Bridges) 13:00 BLACK WIDOW (1987, Bob Rafelson) 1:07:30 EVERYBODY WINS (1990, Karel Reisz) 1:56:40

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Sophie's Choice : Episode 50 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2020 70:37


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss 1982's "Sophie's Choice", which co-stars Kevin Kline and Peter MacNicol. This film was directed and screenplay by Alan J. Pakula, based on the novel by William Styron.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. sophie's choice2. silkwood3. a cry in the dark4. postcards from the edge5. the post6. big little lies season 27. julie and julia8. the hours9. devil wears prada10. adaptation11. kramer vs kramer12. manchurian candidate13. into the woods14. the laundromat15. the river wild16. doubt17. music of the heart18. it's complicated19. ricki and the flash20. mamma mia 221. florence foster jenkins22. out of africa23. death becomes her24. the french lieutenant's woman25. ironweed26. deer hunter27. mamma mia 28. falling in love29. plenty30. little women31. defending your life32. heartburn33. first do no harm34. still of the night35. before and after36. she-devil37. mary poppins returns38. house of the spirits39. the homesman40. manhattan41. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. a cry in the dark6. kramer vs kramer7. adaptation8. sophie's choice9. out of africa10. the deer hunter11. doubt 12. big little lies season 213. into the woods14. the laundromat15. postcards from the edge16. julie and julia17. the devil wears prada18. it's complicated19. mary poppins returns20. the river wild21. manchurian candidate22. music of the heart23. death becomes her24. the french lieutenant's woman25. falling in love26. ironweed27. ricki and the flash28. florence foster jenkins29. defending your life30. plenty31. manhattan32. mamma mia33. heartburn34. still of the night35. mamma mia 236. first do no harm37. she-devil38. julia39. the homesman40. house of the spirits41. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

movies babies ai disney star wars oscars taylor swift actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts borat wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda little women natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges aaron sorkin tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns saoirse ronan dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate great british baking show renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider frank langella rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett alan j pakula hope springs pakula billie lourd sophie's choice bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after simon helberg robert benton melvyn douglas peter macnicol barbara harris william styron homesman robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Plenty with Special Guest Erin Carlson (Author of "Queen Meryl") : Episode 49 of Meryl Streep and The Movies

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2020 80:14


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally are joined by repeat guest Erin Carlson, author of the fantastic "Queen Meryl" book ( https://www.amazon.com/Queen-Meryl-Iconic-Heroic-Legendary/dp/0316485276/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=queen+meryl&qid=1606082367&sr=8-2 ) for a discussion on 1985's "Plenty", which co-stars Sam Neill, Charles Dance, John Gielgud, Tracey Ullman, Sting, Ian McKellen and even Hugh Laurie. This film was directed by Fred Schepisi and written by David Hare, based on his own play.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. a cry in the dark10. kramer vs kramer11. manchurian candidate12. into the woods13. the laundromat14. the river wild15. doubt16. music of the heart17. it's complicated18. ricki and the flash19. mamma mia 220. florence foster jenkins21. out of africa22. death becomes her23. ironweed24. deer hunter25. mamma mia 26. falling in love27. plenty28. little women29. defending your life30. heartburn31. first do no harm32. still of the night33. before and after34. she-devil35. mary poppins returns36. house of the spirits37. the homesman38. manhattan39. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. a cry in the dark13. the laundromat14. postcards from the edge15. julie and julia16. the devil wears prada17. it's complicated18. mary poppins returns19. the river wild20. manchurian candidate21. music of the heart22. death becomes her23. falling in love24. ironweed25. ricki and the flash26. florence foster jenkins27. defending your life28. plenty29. manhattan30. mamma mia31. heartburn32. still of the night33. mamma mia 234. first do no harm35. she-devil36. julia37. the homesman38. house of the spirits39. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

covid-19 movies babies ai disney star wars black lives matter oscars taylor swift actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant james corden jane fonda kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds ian mckellen william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate great british baking show renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange hugh laurie lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs david hare john gielgud billie lourd bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge jane alexander phyllida lloyd aidan quinn justin henry before and after susan seidelman simon helberg robert benton melvyn douglas peter macnicol barbara harris homesman robert zemekis stuck on you erin carlson out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz eden sher lions for lambs mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Falling In Love : Episode 48 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2020 73:13


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss 1984's "Falling In Love", which co-stars Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel, Jane Kaczmarek, Dianne Wiest, David Clennon, George Martin and Frances Conroy. This film was directed by Ulu Grosbard and written by Michael Cristofer.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. a cry in the dark10. kramer vs kramer11. manchurian candidate12. into the woods13. the laundromat14. the river wild15. doubt16. music of the heart17. it's complicated18. ricki and the flash19. mamma mia 220. florence foster jenkins21. out of africa22. death becomes her23. ironweed24. deer hunter25. mamma mia 26. falling in love27. plenty28. little women29. defending your life30. heartburn31. first do no harm32. still of the night33. before and after34. she-devil35. mary poppins returns36. house of the spirits37. the homesman38. manhattan39. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. a cry in the dark13. the laundromat14. postcards from the edge15. julie and julia16. the devil wears prada17. it's complicated18. mary poppins returns19. the river wild20. manchurian candidate21. music of the heart22. death becomes her23. falling in love24. ironweed25. ricki and the flash26. florence foster jenkins27. defending your life28. plenty29. manhattan30. mamma mia31. heartburn32. still of the night33. mamma mia 234. first do no harm35. she-devil36. julia37. the homesman38. house of the spirits39. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

movies babies ai disney star wars oscars taylor swift actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards stranger things prime godzilla emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen will ferrell steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill downhill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones enola holmes rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris millie bobby brown angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld julia louis dreyfus keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine george martin kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent dianne wiest prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker silkwood margo martindale john patrick shanley simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs billie lourd bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after frances conroy simon helberg robert benton peter macnicol melvyn douglas barbara harris homesman robert zemekis stuck on you jane kaczmarek out of africa david clennon web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
The French Lieutenant's Woman : Episode 47 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2020 85:12


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss 1981's "The French Lieutenant's Woman", which co-stars Jeremy Irons. This film was directed by Karel Reisz and written by Harold Pinter, based on the novel by John Fowles.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. a cry in the dark10. kramer vs kramer11. manchurian candidate12. into the woods13. the laundromat14. the river wild15. doubt16. music of the heart17. it's complicated18. ricki and the flash19. mamma mia 220. florence foster jenkins21. out of africa22. death becomes her23. ironweed24. deer hunter25. mamma mia 26. falling in love27. plenty28. little women29. defending your life30. heartburn31. first do no harm32. still of the night33. before and after34. she-devil35. mary poppins returns36. house of the spirits37. the homesman38. manhattan39. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. a cry in the dark13. the laundromat14. postcards from the edge15. julie and julia16. the devil wears prada17. it's complicated18. mary poppins returns19. the river wild20. manchurian candidate21. music of the heart22. death becomes her23. falling in love24. ironweed25. ricki and the flash26. florence foster jenkins27. defending your life28. plenty29. manhattan30. mamma mia31. heartburn32. still of the night33. mamma mia 234. first do no harm35. she-devil36. julia37. the homesman38. house of the spirits39. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

movies babies ai disney woman star wars french oscars taylor swift actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey bette midler sigourney weaver buff issa rae barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns saoirse ronan dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks dan levy series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack harold pinter garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave kaitlyn dever jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs billie lourd bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after simon helberg robert benton peter macnicol melvyn douglas barbara harris john fowles homesman robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
A Cry In The Dark : Episode 46 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 73:04


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss 1988's "A Cry In The Dark", which co-stars Sam Neill. This film was directed by Fred Schepisi and written by Fred Schepisi and Robert Caswell, based on the novel "Evil Angels" by John Bryson.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performancesZach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. a cry in the dark10. kramer vs kramer11. manchurian candidate12. into the woods13. the laundromat14. the river wild15. doubt16. music of the heart17. it's complicated18. ricki and the flash19. mamma mia 220. florence foster jenkins21. out of africa22. death becomes her23. ironweed24. deer hunter25. mamma mia 26. falling in love27. plenty28. little women29. defending your life30. heartburn31. first do no harm32. still of the night33. before and after34. she-devil35. mary poppins returns36. house of the spirits37. the homesman38. manhattan39. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. a cry in the dark13. the laundromat14. postcards from the edge15. julie and julia16. the devil wears prada17. it's complicated18. mary poppins returns19. the river wild20. manchurian candidate21. music of the heart22. death becomes her23. falling in love24. ironweed25. ricki and the flash26. florence foster jenkins27. defending your life28. plenty29. manhattan30. mamma mia31. heartburn32. still of the night33. mamma mia 234. first do no harm35. she-devil36. julia37. the homesman38. house of the spirits39. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

covid-19 movies australia babies ai disney star wars oscars taylor swift gender actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise equality holocaust actress golden globes simpsons jurassic park sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda drew barrymore natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix meg ryan helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld jeffrey wright keira knightley jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks santa clarita diet series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs lindy chamberlain billie lourd bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after simon helberg robert benton peter macnicol melvyn douglas barbara harris homesman robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco grace gummer ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher john bryson mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Ironweed : Episode 45 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 80:17


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss 1987's "Ironweed", which co-stars Jack Nicholson, Tom Waits, Carroll Baker, Michael O'Keefe, Diane Venora, Fred Gwynne and Nathan Lane. This film was directed by Hector Babenco and written by William Kennedy, based on his own Pulitzer Prize winning novel.Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. kramer vs kramer10. manchurian candidate11. into the woods12. the laundromat13. the river wild14. doubt15. music of the heart16. it's complicated17. ricki and the flash18. mamma mia 219. florence foster jenkins20. out of africa21. death becomes her22. deer hunter23. mamma mia 24. little women25. defending your life26. heartburn27. first do no harm28. still of the night29. before and after30. she-devil31. mary poppins returns32. house of the spirits33. the homesman34. manhattan35. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. the laundromat13. postcards from the edge14. julie and julia15. the devil wears prada16. it's complicated17. mary poppins returns18. the river wild19. manchurian candidate20. music of the heart21. death becomes her22. ricki and the flash23. florence foster jenkins24. defending your life25. manhattan26. mamma mia27. heartburn28. still of the night29. mamma mia 230. first do no harm31. she-devil32. julia33. the homesman34. house of the spirits35. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

music movies babies ai disney star wars depression oscars taylor swift gender actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise equality holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards pulitzer prize paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld jeffrey wright keira knightley jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns saoirse ronan dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate nathan lane renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox 1987 edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs billie lourd fred gwynne bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after simon helberg robert benton peter macnicol melvyn douglas diane venora barbara harris homesman william kennedy robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Interview with Fred Schepisi, Director of "Plenty" and "A Cry In The Dark" : Episode 44 of Meryl Streep and the Movies

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 78:51


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally interview Fred Schepisi, who has directed Meryl in "Plenty" and "A Cry In The Dark". Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. kramer vs kramer10. manchurian candidate11. into the woods12. the laundromat13. the river wild14. doubt15. music of the heart16. it's complicated17. ricki and the flash18. mamma mia 219. florence foster jenkins20. out of africa21. death becomes her22. deer hunter23. mamma mia 24. little women25. defending your life26. heartburn27. first do no harm28. still of the night29. before and after30. she-devil31. mary poppins returns32. house of the spirits33. the homesman34. manhattan35. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. the laundromat13. postcards from the edge14. julie and julia15. the devil wears prada16. it's complicated17. mary poppins returns18. the river wild19. manchurian candidate20. music of the heart21. death becomes her22. ricki and the flash23. florence foster jenkins24. defending your life25. manhattan26. mamma mia27. heartburn28. still of the night29. mamma mia 230. first do no harm31. she-devil32. julia33. the homesman34. house of the spirits35. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

director movies babies ai disney star wars oscars taylor swift actor doubt manhattan films falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime iq grammy awards paul mccartney nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close anna kendrick susan sarandon angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley clive owen claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker margo martindale john patrick shanley silkwood simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs john gielgud billie lourd bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge jane alexander phyllida lloyd aidan quinn justin henry before and after susan seidelman simon helberg robert benton melvyn douglas peter macnicol barbara harris homesman empire falls robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing alan pakula justin kirk ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi hector babenco jerry schatzberg ricki and the flash karel reisz fierce creatures eden sher lions for lambs mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally
Angela Bassett Tribute : Episode 43 of Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Meryl Streep and The Movies with Zachary Scot Johnson and Maryl McNally

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 96:20


Longtime friends and Meryl Streep fans Zachary Scot Johnson ( www.youtube.com/user/thesongadayproject/about ) and Maryl McNally discuss and pay tribute to the career of the legendary Angela Bassett. Email the hosts at MerylStreepPodcast@gmail.com and please remember to rate, review and subscribe to this podcast.Zach's ranking of Meryl's performances1. silkwood2. postcards from the edge3. the post4. big little lies season 25. julie and julia6. the hours7. devil wears prada8. adaptation9. kramer vs kramer10. manchurian candidate11. into the woods12. the laundromat13. the river wild14. doubt15. music of the heart16. it's complicated17. ricki and the flash18. mamma mia 219. florence foster jenkins20. out of africa21. death becomes her22. deer hunter23. mamma mia 24. little women25. defending your life26. heartburn27. first do no harm28. still of the night29. before and after30. she-devil31. mary poppins returns32. house of the spirits33. the homesman34. manhattan35. juliaZach's ranking of Meryl's films1. the post2. the hours3. silkwood4. little women5. kramer vs kramer6. adaptation7. out of africa8. the deer hunter9. doubt 10. big little lies season 211. into the woods12. the laundromat13. postcards from the edge14. julie and julia15. the devil wears prada16. it's complicated17. mary poppins returns18. the river wild19. manchurian candidate20. music of the heart21. death becomes her22. ricki and the flash23. florence foster jenkins24. defending your life25. manhattan26. mamma mia27. heartburn28. still of the night29. mamma mia 230. first do no harm31. she-devil32. julia33. the homesman34. house of the spirits35. before and afterMaryl's ranking of Meryl's performances1. the post2. julie and julia3. devil wears prada4. postcards from the edge5. adaptation6. big little lies season 27. out of africa8. kramer vs kramer9. the hours10. manchurian candidate11. river wild12. mamma mia 213. florence foster jenkins14. mamma mia15. silkwood16. music of the heart17. into the woods18. it's complicated19. little women20. heartburn21. deer hunter22. death becomes her23. ricki & the flash24. doubt25. first do no harm26. she-devil27. the laundromat28. house of the spirits29. mary poppins returns30. defending your life31. manhattan32. before and after33. still of the night34. julia35. the homesmanMaryl's ranking of Meryl's films1. the hours2. little women3. postcards from the edge4. kramer vs kramer5. the post6. adaptation7. florence foster jenkins8. doubt9. silkwood10. out of africa11. the deer hunter12. big little lies season 213. devil wears prada14. mamma mia 15. mary poppins returns16. into the woods17. julie & julia18. mamma mia 219. river wild20. manchurian candidate21. it's complicated22. death becomes her23 music of the heart24. defending your25. the laundromat26. house of the spirits27. heartburn28. first do no harm29. ricki & the flash30. julia31. she-devil32. still of the night33. before and after34. the homesman35. manhattan

movies babies ai disney soul star wars marvel er oscars taylor swift september 11th actor doubt manhattan tribute films avengers black panther falling in love masterclass academy awards prime emmy awards tom cruise holocaust actress golden globes simpsons sting steven spielberg hillary clinton longtime grammy awards paul mccartney mission impossible nicolas cage bruce willis adaptation leonardo dicaprio robert de niro jim carrey alec baldwin giver greatest kevin smith matt damon clint eastwood tina turner denzel washington al pacino liam neeson meryl streep nicole kidman woody allen steve martin kevin bacon julia roberts wes craven jack nicholson lin manuel miranda natalie portman emma stone reese witherspoon jennifer lawrence mamma mia joni mitchell american horror story anne hathaway lindsay lohan kurt russell dark matter halle berry scot christopher walken gene hackman carrie fisher woody harrelson hugh grant jane fonda james corden kate winslet viola davis chris pine tom waits jeff bridges tina fey sigourney weaver buff ryan murphy barbra streisand robert redford amy adams pierce brosnan king of the hill dustin hoffman dennis quaid tommy lee jones rob reiner emma watson tony awards julianne moore jessica chastain devil wears prada laura dern emma thompson nix helen mirren glenn close susan sarandon anna kendrick angela bassett toni collette uma thurman ed harris angela lansbury colin firth roseanne barr paul giamatti heartburn jeff daniels sam neill carey mulligan spike jonze nora ephron robert altman kathy bates amanda seyfried richard dreyfuss goldie hawn philip seymour hoffman naomi watts john c reilly dick van dyke hailee steinfeld keira knightley jeffrey wright jeremy irons warren beatty deer hunter diane keaton mary poppins returns dingo rebecca ferguson harvey keitel mcnally helena bonham carter jonathan demme lily tomlin mike nichols judi dench suffragettes debbie reynolds william hurt shirley maclaine kevin kline lisa kudrow manchurian candidate renee zellweger alan alda shailene woodley claire danes death becomes her sissy spacek chris cooper steve carrell albert brooks series of unfortunate events angels in america liev schreiber annette bening jessica lange lily collins cloris leachman roy scheider rendition felicity jones isabelle huppert into the woods rip torn craig t nelson iron lady fantastic mr fox edward furlong fred ward charles dance sydney pollack garrison keillor michael gambon stephen frears tony kushner vanessa redgrave jim broadbent prairie home companion michael cimino christine baranski shawn colvin hillary swank defending your life david strathairn florence foster jenkins jim abrahams curtis hanson leonard maltin tracey ullman sarah hyland john cazale mariel hemingway mary louise parker silkwood margo martindale john patrick shanley simon callow john savage jessica tandy first do no harm haley bennett hope springs billie lourd otherhood bridges of madison county stephen daldry gwen verdon postcards from the edge phyllida lloyd jane alexander aidan quinn justin henry susan seidelman before and after simon helberg robert benton peter macnicol melvyn douglas barbara harris homesman robert zemekis stuck on you out of africa web therapy jerry zaks maureen stapleton one true thing justin kirk alan pakula ironweed julie and julia fred schepisi jerry schatzberg hector babenco ricki and the flash karel reisz lions for lambs eden sher mamie gummer jake gylenhall
Call Sheet Podcast
05. Three Key Skills For Working On Set - Ana Maria Quintana, Script Supervisor

Call Sheet Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 31:38


Veteran script supervisor Ana Maria Quintana talks about building trust with directors, actors, and department heads. The key, she says, is learning what to say, when to say it, and how to say it. Over her 40+ years in the industry, she’s worked side by side with Steven Spielberg, Cameron Crowe, Ridley Scott, Clint Eastwood, Rodrigo Prieto, and many more. No matter what department you’re in, you’ll learn how to strengthen relationships and maximize your contributions on set. Show notes from this episode: -BONUS SEGMENT, Supervising Multiple Monitors At Once - Ana Maria Island: www.callsheetshow.com/bonus -Ana Maria Quintana on Imdb: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0704088/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1 -Send us questions and comments for future episodes: callsheetpodcast@gmail.com -Follow Call Sheet on Social: @callsheetshow -Who’ll Stop the Rain, directed by Karel Reisz: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078490/?ref_=nm_flmg_dr_6 -Golden Age of Mexican Cinema, article in NY Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/22/movies/golden-age-of-mexican-cinema.html -Duties of Script Supervisor on Studio Binder: https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/script-supervisor-forms-template/ www.callsheetshow.com

Podcast de La Gran Evasión
244-Nieve que Quema -Karel Reisz- La Gran Evasión

Podcast de La Gran Evasión

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 57:28


Emprendemos una huida desesperada, cargando dos kilos de heroína y toda la miseria existencial de la América de finales de los sesenta. Karel Reisz dirigió en 1978 Who´ll Stop the rain, titulada en España “Nieve que quema”. Adaptación de la gran novela de Robert Stone, "Dog Soldiers". Reisz, emigrante Checo, venía de formar parte activa del Free Cinema inglés, aquella generación de jóvenes airados (Angry Young Men), comprometidos socialmente y a rebosar de talento. Nieve que quema recoge la devastación interna que la guerra provoca, un conflicto prohibido para los medios, que empezaba a analizarse a finales de los setenta. El Final de una época rezuma en la película, Reisz explora las ruinas morales y espirituales de América, la maldita guerra del Vietnam, con sus miserias políticas y económicas. La Creedence Clearwater Revival y su icónico Who'll Stop the Rain, como referencia cronológica e hilo musical. Todo arranca con el agotamiento mental de un reportero de Guerra, John Converse (Michael Moriarty), sumido en una crisis existencial, ha descubierto la manera perfecta para escapar, la heroína; un hombre al que siempre utilizan los poderes superiores. Su mujer es frágil y también está desamparada (Tuesday Weld), Marge lo espera en un San Francisco Hippie desalmado, su forma de soportar el día a día son también las drogas, en forma de pastillas, pero con el mismo fin. El tercero en discordia es el amigo del reportero, Ray (Nick Nolte) un marine, duro, brusco, idealista, noble, que sabe muy bien lo que es la guerra y asume el control cuando se destapa que han usado al inocente John para traer la droga a los EE.UU Gran Interpretación de Nick Nolte, intensa y tormentosa, un veterano que no se puede adaptar a la vida civil, cansado de que gente inferior le dé ordenes. Nietzsche de fondo, la soledad, las armas, la promesa de un amor imposible…            Apareciendo la droga llegan los perros que se enriquecen con ella. Un agente federal corrupto, Antheil, interpretado por el magnifico Anthony Zerbe y dos sicarios siniestros, mitad cómicos mitad aterradores. Tarantino, o los mismos Cohen, podrían haber descrito a estos tipos. Hay una escena de tortura que lo atestigua, igual de inquietante es aquella en la que Ray prepara unos “picos” para unos pijos que no se enteran de nada, otros desertores morales a los que castigar. Reisz narrar la historia de manera eficaz, no hay excesos ni adornos….esa imagen final del desierto y el agente corrupto del gobierno arrastrándose para salvar un poco de la Heroína derramada es otro ejemplo de hacia dónde iba aquella sociedad. Un viaje de sueños rotos y desesperación, de traiciones y amistad, un triangulo amoroso de nieve que quema….Errores que dejan heridas. Nos vamos con Gimme some Lovin, interpretda por The Spencer Davis Group y como Bonus Tracks, os dejamos Put a little love in your heart de Jackie Deshannon. Atrincherados en la Torre de Radiopolis, mientras la Creedence suena a todo volumen y las explosiones emocionales hacen retumbar el estudio, defendemos el alijo del Cine…. Zacarías Cotán, Raúl Gallego, José Miguel Moreno y Gervi Navío. Gervi Navío.

Hot Date
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Episode 79) - Hot Date with Dan and Vicky

Hot Date

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 77:37


Karel Reisz had never directed a feature before and was committed to capturing the gritty reality of living in working class Nottingham, England.  Not only did he shoot the film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning in actual Nottingham locations but he arrived several weeks before shooting with a small film crew to become acquainted with the town and it's denizens.  When famed cinematographer Freddie Francis and stars Albert Finney, Rachel Roberts, and Shirley Ann Field added their talents to the film, what emerged was the 14th greatest British film of all time out of 100 according to the British Film Institute. Dan and Vicky discuss this seminal film in British history, their second starring Albert Finney (Under the Volcano).  They also catch us up on holiday plans, Christmas office parties, and the end of Dan's off-Broadway play.  Recently seen movies and TV include Bad Moms Christmas, 1959's Terror is a Man, Netflix documentary Gaga: Five Foot Two, Spanish horror film Veronica, 1977's Rolling Thunder and The Lodgers.   Everybody's working for the weekend because Hot Date 79: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning is here.  Listen and leave us some feedback.   

The Prestige
3.37 - DOWN TERRACE (2009) and Family

The Prestige

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2018 34:21


The first film in our Ben Wheatley season is his cinematic debut, DOWN TERRACE. We offer contrasting reviews in perhaps surprising directions (given our PP form), and then spend time talking about different attitudes to masculinity, what it means to be part of a family unit, and how this film — for all its apparent parochialism — could in fact be a comment on the political situation in 2008.Next WeekOur next film is the *incredibly* brutal KILL LIST (2011). If you're prepared to give it a go (and please do skip it if you're at all averse to...hard-hitting movies), then watch it here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Kill-List-Neil-Maskell/dp/B00FFIN2TS. This Week's MediaMILLION-POUND MENU (2018): Fred Sirieix, Atul Kochhar, Scott Collins THE CHURCH (1989): Michele Soavi, Hugh Quarshie, Tomas AranaRecommendations W1A (2014–): John Morton, Hugh Bonneville, Monica Dolan FRIDAY NIGHT DINNER (2011–): Martin Dennis, Tamsin Greig, Simon BirdTHE JOB LOT (2013–): Luke Snellin, Sarah Hadland, Russell ToveyEDGE OF TOMORROW (2014): Doug Liman, Tom Cruise, Emily BluntSATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING (1960): Karel Reisz, Albert Finney, Shirley Anne FieldFootnotesFirst of all, here are links to Ben Wheatley's bios: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Wheatley and https://m.imdb.com/name/nm1296554. Rob mentions the Oedipus complex; while there's lots available on that online, this book is a good — and short — introduction: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=F7REVY8I_fQC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false. ‘Saving the cat' gets a good treatment from TV Tropes, where it's also known as ‘petting the dog': http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/PetTheDog. Finally, for more on the idea of British social realism (including ‘kitchen-sink dramas') on TV or film, see this book: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=QdN0mhkEmK4C&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false.

The Essay
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 13:40


Simon Heffer continues his highly-authored and deeply-informed exploration of British cinema by viewing five New Wave or so-called "Kitchen Sink" films of the late 1950s and 1960s. Having explored the stereotyping of working class characters in his previous series of Essays on British film, Simon Heffer turns his gaze upon the films written and directed by a new generation of grammar school-educated young men, whose gritty depiction of the lives of ordinary working men and women was to shock and delight the cinema-going public in the 1960s.2.Saturday Night and Sunday Morning Simon Heffer reveals how Alan Sillitoe's novel was turned into a stunning film, directed by Karel Reisz, produced by Tony Richardson, and starring Albert Finney as Arthur Seaton, the anti-hero whose motto is "Don't Let the bastards grind you down". Producer: Beaty Rubens.

The Next Reel by The Next Reel Film Podcasts
The French Lieutenant's Woman • The Next Reel

The Next Reel by The Next Reel Film Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2015 83:16


“You have planted a dagger in me, and your damned freedom gives you license to twist it in my heart!" Meryl Streep received her first nomination for Best Actress in a film that one would think had been lost in time if not for the recent Criterion Collection release — Karel Reisz's 1981 film “The French Lieutenant's Woman.” She lost to Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond,” which makes sense, but Streep's performance is still a fascinating one. Join us — Pete Wright and Andy Nelson — as we continue our Meryl Streep series with Reisz's film. We talk about how the film worked for us — Pete found it painfully boring and Andy, while appreciating it, ultimately didn't really connect with it. We discuss the intricacies of the script and how Harold Pinter adapted the ‘unfilmmable' novel by John Fowles upon which it was based, enjoying the design of the screenplay structure quite a bit. We chat about the strengths in what is going on in the two parallel stories and what keeps us from completely connecting with it. We talk about the actors — notably Streep and Jeremy Irons — and what they bring to the table in these two roles. And we deliberate on the proper way to pronounce ‘lieutenant.' It's an interesting film that ultimately didn't click with either of us, even if we could appreciate some of the work in it. And it brings our total number of films discussed on the regular show to 200! So check out the movie then tune in — we have a great chat about it! Film Sundries Script Transcript Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork Original Material Flickchart Trailers of the Week Andy's Trailer: Uncle John — “The trailer is haunting and creepy, and John Ashton seems to come out of left field to play the titular character. I have a hard time figuring out what this is about, but the trailer makes me want to see it. Now THAT'S what a good trailer should do." Pete's Trailer: The Lobster — “I love the cultural reflection here, that if you don't find traditional love, you're turned into an animal and sent into the woods. Perhaps the metaphor is too on the nose, but the mood and experience of this trailer bring me a big smile." Hey! You know what would be awesome? If you would drop us a positive rating on iTunes! If you like what we're doing here on TNR, it really is the best way to make sure that this show appears when others search for it, plus, it's just a nice thing to do. Thanks!! The Next Reel on iTunes The Next Reel on Facebook The Next Reel on Twitter The Next Reel on Flickchart The Next Reel on Letterboxd Guess the Movie with The Next Reel on Instagram Check out the Posters with The Next Reel on Pinterest And for anyone interested in our fine bouquet of show hosts: Follow Andy Nelson on Twitter Follow Pete Wright on Twitter Follow Steve Sarmento on Twitter Check out Tom Metz on IMDB Justin "JJ" Jaeger Chadd Stoops Follow Steven Smart on Letterboxd

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed
The French Lieutenant's Woman • The Next Reel

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2015 83:16


“You have planted a dagger in me, and your damned freedom gives you license to twist it in my heart!" Meryl Streep received her first nomination for Best Actress in a film that one would think had been lost in time if not for the recent Criterion Collection release — Karel Reisz’s 1981 film “The French Lieutenant’s Woman.” She lost to Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond,” which makes sense, but Streep’s performance is still a fascinating one. Join us — Pete Wright and Andy Nelson — as we continue our Meryl Streep series with Reisz’s film. We talk about how the film worked for us — Pete found it painfully boring and Andy, while appreciating it, ultimately didn’t really connect with it. We discuss the intricacies of the script and how Harold Pinter adapted the ‘unfilmmable’ novel by John Fowles upon which it was based, enjoying the design of the screenplay structure quite a bit. We chat about the strengths in what is going on in the two parallel stories and what keeps us from completely connecting with it. We talk about the actors — notably Streep and Jeremy Irons — and what they bring to the table in these two roles. And we deliberate on the proper way to pronounce ‘lieutenant.’ It’s an interesting film that ultimately didn’t click with either of us, even if we could appreciate some of the work in it. And it brings our total number of films discussed on the regular show to 200! So check out the movie then tune in — we have a great chat about it! Film Sundries Script Transcript Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork Original Material Flickchart Trailers of the Week Andy’s Trailer: Uncle John — “The trailer is haunting and creepy, and John Ashton seems to come out of left field to play the titular character. I have a hard time figuring out what this is about, but the trailer makes me want to see it. Now THAT’S what a good trailer should do." Pete’s Trailer: The Lobster — “I love the cultural reflection here, that if you don’t find traditional love, you’re turned into an animal and sent into the woods. Perhaps the metaphor is too on the nose, but the mood and experience of this trailer bring me a big smile." Hey! You know what would be awesome? If you would drop us a positive rating on iTunes! If you like what we’re doing here on TNR, it really is the best way to make sure that this show appears when others search for it, plus, it’s just a nice thing to do. Thanks!! The Next Reel on iTunes The Next Reel on Facebook The Next Reel on Twitter The Next Reel on Flickchart The Next Reel on Letterboxd Guess the Movie with The Next Reel on Instagram Check out the Posters with The Next Reel on Pinterest And for anyone interested in our fine bouquet of show hosts: Follow Andy Nelson on Twitter Follow Pete Wright on Twitter Follow Steve Sarmento on Twitter Check out Tom Metz on IMDB Justin "JJ" Jaeger Chadd Stoops Follow Steven Smart on Letterboxd

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed
The Next Reel Film Podcast The French Lieutenant's Woman • The Next Reel

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2015 83:16


Meryl Streep received her first nomination for Best Actress in a film that one would think had been lost in time if not for the recent Criterion Collection release — Karel Reisz's 1981 film “The French Lieutenant's Woman.” She lost to Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond,” which makes sense, but Streep's performance is still a fascinating one. Join us — Pete Wright and Andy Nelson — as we continue our Meryl Streep series with Reisz's film. We talk about how the film worked for us — Pete found it painfully boring and Andy, while appreciating it, ultimately didn't really connect with it. We discuss the intricacies of the script and how Harold Pinter adapted the ‘unfilmmable' novel by John Fowles upon which it was based, enjoying the design of the screenplay structure quite a bit. We chat about the strengths in what is going on in the two parallel stories and what keeps us from completely connecting with it. We talk about the actors — notably Streep and Jeremy Irons — and what they bring to the table in these two roles. And we deliberate on the proper way to pronounce ‘lieutenant.' It's an interesting film that ultimately didn't click with either of us, even if we could appreciate some of the work in it. And it brings our total number of films discussed on the regular show to 200! So check out the movie then tune in — we have a great chat about it!

The Next Reel by The Next Reel Film Podcasts
The French Lieutenant's Woman • The Next Reel

The Next Reel by The Next Reel Film Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2015 83:16


Meryl Streep received her first nomination for Best Actress in a film that one would think had been lost in time if not for the recent Criterion Collection release — Karel Reisz's 1981 film “The French Lieutenant's Woman.” She lost to Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond,” which makes sense, but Streep's performance is still a fascinating one. Join us — Pete Wright and Andy Nelson — as we continue our Meryl Streep series with Reisz's film. We talk about how the film worked for us — Pete found it painfully boring and Andy, while appreciating it, ultimately didn't really connect with it. We discuss the intricacies of the script and how Harold Pinter adapted the ‘unfilmmable' novel by John Fowles upon which it was based, enjoying the design of the screenplay structure quite a bit. We chat about the strengths in what is going on in the two parallel stories and what keeps us from completely connecting with it. We talk about the actors — notably Streep and Jeremy Irons — and what they bring to the table in these two roles. And we deliberate on the proper way to pronounce ‘lieutenant.' It's an interesting film that ultimately didn't click with either of us, even if we could appreciate some of the work in it. And it brings our total number of films discussed on the regular show to 200! So check out the movie then tune in — we have a great chat about it!

Great Lives
Karel Reisz

Great Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2012 28:04


Film director Stephen Frears discusses the life of his mentor, Czech-born director, Karel Reisz, with the help of critic and Reisz's friend, John Lahr. Frears is one of Britain's most successful directors, responsible for "My Beautiful Laundrette", "Dangerous Liaisons", and "Dirty Pretty Things", among many others. Reisz is probably best known for "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning", and "The French Lieutenant's Woman". "Karel took me into his life and into his family and he took on the business of turning me into whatever it is I've become," Frears has said. "Without him, I wouldn't have become a film director". Matthew Parris chairs the discussion.

Desert Island Discs
Betsy Blair

Desert Island Discs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2005 35:55


Sue Lawley's castaway this week is Betsy Blair. She was an actress in Hollywood during its heyday and is best known for her role in Marty, the Oscar-winning tale of a shy butcher and lonely teacher who, against the advice of friends and family, fall in love. She was barely 16 when she began her career as a dancer and it was while she was on her way to an early audition that she met Gene Kelly. She was still a teenager and he was 12 years her senior, but they were married and the couple set up home in one of Hollywood's most glamorous addresses - Rodeo Drive. They were known for throwing open their doors on Saturday night for star-studded parties; their guests included Tyrone Power, Judy Garland and Greta Garbo. After 16 years, the marriage broke up and Betsy moved first to France then England where she met and married Karel Reisz, director of The French Lieutenant's Woman. She embraced a career in European films, working with celebrated directors including Juan Antonio Bardem and Michelangelo Antonioni. Her 1955 film Marty was shown again as one of the classic films at this year's Cannes Film Festival.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: There's a Boat dat's Leaving Soon for New York by George Gershwin Book: Reading Lyrics - American Songs 1900-1975 Luxury: An ice cream maker

Desert Island Discs: Archive 2005-2010

Sue Lawley's castaway this week is Betsy Blair. She was an actress in Hollywood during its heyday and is best known for her role in Marty, the Oscar-winning tale of a shy butcher and lonely teacher who, against the advice of friends and family, fall in love. She was barely 16 when she began her career as a dancer and it was while she was on her way to an early audition that she met Gene Kelly. She was still a teenager and he was 12 years her senior, but they were married and the couple set up home in one of Hollywood's most glamorous addresses - Rodeo Drive. They were known for throwing open their doors on Saturday night for star-studded parties; their guests included Tyrone Power, Judy Garland and Greta Garbo. After 16 years, the marriage broke up and Betsy moved first to France then England where she met and married Karel Reisz, director of The French Lieutenant's Woman. She embraced a career in European films, working with celebrated directors including Juan Antonio Bardem and Michelangelo Antonioni. Her 1955 film Marty was shown again as one of the classic films at this year's Cannes Film Festival. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: There's a Boat dat's Leaving Soon for New York by George Gershwin Book: Reading Lyrics - American Songs 1900-1975 Luxury: An ice cream maker

London Review Bookshop Podcasts
Betsy Blair - The Memory of All That

London Review Bookshop Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2005 67:58


The actress and political activist Betsy Blair discusses Hollywood in the 1950s, her marriages to Gene Kelly and Karel Reisz, her tangles with the Blacklist, her adventures in Europe and the writing of her memoir, The Memory of All That. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Desert Island Discs
Stephen Frears

Desert Island Discs

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2004 44:41


This week Sue Lawley's castaway is the film director Stephen Frears. His film credits include My Beautiful Launderette, When Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, Dangerous Liaisons, High Fidelity and, most recently, Dirty Pretty Things. He is one of Britain's most talented and well-known directors, achieving success with his Hollywood work as much as for low budget, British productions. He was born in Leicester in 1941 and, despite studying law at Cambridge, was not tempted to train to be a lawyer, and instead sought employment at the ground-breaking Royal Court Theatre in London. He left the Royal Court in the 1960s to work with the highly acclaimed Czech film-maker Karel Reisz. His television work has included many collaborations with Alan Bennett, but it wasn't until the 1980s that he became famous with a film that was initially destined for television, which was so successful it was released to cinemas. It was 'My Beautiful Launderette' - starring a then unknown Daniel Day Lewis and examining the racial and sexual tensions of Thatcher's Britain.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: I'm Against It by Grouch Marx Book: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon Luxury: A painting by his wife

Desert Island Discs: Archive 2000-2005

This week Sue Lawley's castaway is the film director Stephen Frears. His film credits include My Beautiful Launderette, When Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, Dangerous Liaisons, High Fidelity and, most recently, Dirty Pretty Things. He is one of Britain's most talented and well-known directors, achieving success with his Hollywood work as much as for low budget, British productions. He was born in Leicester in 1941 and, despite studying law at Cambridge, was not tempted to train to be a lawyer, and instead sought employment at the ground-breaking Royal Court Theatre in London. He left the Royal Court in the 1960s to work with the highly acclaimed Czech film-maker Karel Reisz. His television work has included many collaborations with Alan Bennett, but it wasn't until the 1980s that he became famous with a film that was initially destined for television, which was so successful it was released to cinemas. It was 'My Beautiful Launderette' - starring a then unknown Daniel Day Lewis and examining the racial and sexual tensions of Thatcher's Britain. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: I'm Against It by Grouch Marx Book: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon Luxury: A painting by his wife