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This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.politix.fmThis week, Matt and Brian examine the quadrennial liberal October panic, and think through practical ways for Democrats to close strong:* Is it possible to increase the salience of Democrats' top issues (abortion, democracy, and health care) when Trump is hoovering up attention to his fascist freakshow?* Might the fascist freakshow, for perverse reasons, be helping Trump keep the race close?* To what extent should working the media refs to focus on Trump outrages fit into the plan?SPOILERS: Matt answers those questions: Yes, maybe, and very little. Brian answers them: Maybe, no, quite a bit.Then, behind the paywall, a granular look at why Democrats shouldn't fear racial depolarization. Have Democrats (wrongly) convinced themselves that they can't increase their share of the white vote? Does it matter if homing in on issues like abortion and anti-fascism makes the Democratic coalition a little less rainbow? Are these issues resonant enough to deliver Kamala Harris a victory if Trump and his corrupt allies stage a rat fuck late in October?All that, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed. Further reading:* The Our Brand Is Crisis documentary. * Brian on Barack Obama doing asking the Joseph Welch question of our generation.* Matt on how Harris can, should, and does appeal to Trump-curious male voters.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.politix.fmThis week, Matt and Brian examine the quadrennial liberal October panic, and think through practical ways for Democrats to close strong:* Is it possible to increase the salience of Democrats' top issues (abortion, democracy, and health care) when Trump is hoovering up attention to his fascist freakshow?* Might the fascist freakshow, for perverse reasons, be helping Trump keep the race close?* To what extent should working the media refs to focus on Trump outrages fit into the plan?SPOILERS: Matt answers those questions: Yes, maybe, and very little. Brian answers them: Maybe, no, quite a bit.Then, behind the paywall, a granular look at why Democrats shouldn't fear racial depolarization. Have Democrats (wrongly) convinced themselves that they can't increase their share of the white vote? Does it matter if homing in on issues like abortion and anti-fascism makes the Democratic coalition a little less rainbow? Are these issues resonant enough to deliver Kamala Harris a victory if Trump and his corrupt allies stage a rat fuck late in October?All that, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed. Further reading:* The Our Brand Is Crisis documentary. * Brian on Barack Obama doing asking the Joseph Welch question of our generation.* Matt on how Harris can, should, and does appeal to Trump-curious male voters.
We begin a new year of the show this week, and kick off the campaign by welcoming These Estates and Oiseaux musician and Briarpatch publisher John Cameron for an unseen selection from his collection, a prescient political satire that is now 52 years old but could release today with few alterations and still feel timely. It's 1972's The Candidate, directed by Michael Ritchie, and starring Robert Redford, Peter Boyle, Melvyn Douglas, Don Porter, Allen Garfield, Karen Carlson and Michael Lerner. It's a comedy without any jokes that still manages to be fairly funny, at least when its bleak political outlook doesn't feel equal parts harrowing and deadly accurate. Plus: J Mo's hooked on Pocket Card Jockey, while Hayley and John are willing to die for Casino Regina. Other works discussed on this episode include Oppenheimer, Dune: Part Two, Aquaman & The Last Kingdom, Beau Is Afraid, The Devils, Go, Ocean's Eleven, Bulworth, Fletch, Fletch Lives, season 6 of The West Wing, Parks & Recreation, The Thick of It, In The Loop, Death of Stalin, The Newsroom (CBC), The Ides of March, Our Brand Is Crisis, and Lions For Lambs among many more. If you'd like to watch The Candidate before listening to our discussion, some maniac has posted the entire movie for free on YouTube. And we thank them. We'll be back next week as Year 2 on the pod continues with a shot at redemption for two top stars who have recently wronged us on the pod by being in movies we watched that were not good. Yes, Kurt Russell and Val Kilmer can completely redeem themselves as we'll be back to watch 1994's Tombstone, a 90s VHS classic that somehow both hosts have never seen before. It's currently streaming on Disney+ if you want to watch it, and of course we're wrapping up the month the week after with our monthly canon submission, Christopher Nolan's TENET. Until then, we'll see you at the movies!!
Welcome to The B-Side, from The Film Stage. Here we talk about movie stars! Not the movies that made them famous or kept them famous, but the ones they made in between. Today we discuss one of our biggest, most enduring movie stars: Sandra Bullock! To do this, we've brought our good friend and the co-host of the great Almost Major podcast: Kevin Tudor! Our B-Sides today include: Love Potion No. 9, 28 Days, The Lake House, and Our Brand Is Crisis. We dig into Bullock's peaks and valleys as a star, her humble beginnings on TV (she played Tess on the TV adaptation of Working Girl!), and her breakout mid-90s. We marvel at the incredible misogyny-tinged criticism she endured early on in her career, wonder if we'll ever see the short film she directed, and discuss why we love (or don't love!) The Lake House. Trust us, our brands are most assuredly…crisis. Be sure to give us a follow on Twitter and Facebook at @TFSBSide. Also enter our giveaways, get access to our private Slack channel, and support new episodes by becoming a Patreon contributor. We are also now on Spotify and Stitcher. Enjoy!
Did you know Sandra Bullock has bee in TWO movies set in Bolivia? In today's episode, we'll be reviewing both!Fire on the Amazon, released in 1993, finds Sandra Bullock alongside Craig Sheffer investigating a murder with a rainforest preservation group. This movie has an intriguing description, but the execution fell way flat. Our Brand is Crisis is a 2015 film based on the true story of a seasoned campaign strategist who's lured out of retirement to work for an unlikable senator running for president of Bolivia. In this movie, Sandra Bullock plays the campaign manager alongside Anthony Mackie, Ann Dowd, and Billy Bob Thornton. This movie was much better than Fire on the Amazon, & had a great balance of a serious, engaging plot with some moments of levity sprinkled in. Tune in to hear all the details on these two movies & where they fall in our rankings! More about Girl Crush:Website: www.girlcrushpodcast.comSocial: https://www.instagram.com/girlcrush_pod/Merch: https://www.bonfire.com/store/girlcrushpodcast/
First podcast under ELVNTWNTYSVN Media It's a short and sweet show where I take a look at movies I've found at dollar stores and see how they hold up. This week I talk about Our Brand Is Crisis with both Academy Award winners Sandra Bullock & Billy Bob Thorton. Email at elvntwntysvn@gmail.com Tweet us at www.twitter.com/elvntwntysvn --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The life and times of the fabulous Sandra Bullock, retold through her movie roles. The list of all the movies referenced in the episode, in alphabetical order:28 Days;A fool and his money;A Time to Kill;All About Steve;Bird Box;Crash;Demolition Man;Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood;Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close;Forces of Nature;Gravity;Gun Shy;Hangman;Hope Floats;In Love and War;Infamous;Lake House;Love Potion No. 9;Minions;Miss Congeniality;Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous;Murder By Numbers;Oceans 8;Our Brand Is Crisis;Practical Magic;Premonition;Speed;Speed 2: Cruise Control;The Blind Side;The Heat;The Net;The Thing called Love;The Prince of Egypt;The Proposal;The Vanishing;Two if by Sea;Two Weeks Notice;When the Party’s Over;While you Were Sleeping;Who Shot Patakango?;Who you Gotta Kill?;Wrestling Ernest Hemingway;Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pg/Reeel-Lives-100496091297383Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reeellives/Electric Intro Music by Anoop Hariharan - https://soundcloud.com/anoophariharan/intro-music-creative-commons
STILL LIKE MOVIES??? It's another mega-sode this week as Dave and Tom catch up on a bunch of 2016 films before reviewing the origin story of McDonald's starring Michael Keaton, The Founder. Also: The Infiltrator, Alice Through The Looking Glass, Free State of Jones, Our Brand Is Crisis, Zoolander 2, Maggie's Plan, Sisters, Demolition, Tale of Tales, Son of Saul, Zootopia, Don't Think Twice, The Neon Demon, Bone Tomahawk, Anthropoid, Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, The Invitation, De Palma, 13th and Amanda Knox.
Mon, 30 May 2016 16:42:42 +0000 https://pengcast.podigee.io/99-pengcast-104-x-men-apocalypse-midnight-special-preacher 91c0ff5f0eaaca4a3d15798f2d9854c6 Wir sprechen über "X-Men: Apocalypse", das Indie-Sci-Fi-Mystery-Roadmovie „Midnight Special“ mit Adam Driver und Kirsten Dunst und die neue AMC Serie "Preacher". Musik: Leif and the Future 00:00:00 Haben wir noch Casts? 00:01:30 Intro 00:04:05 Hörerpost 00:07:14 X-Men: Apocalypse 00:24:15 Midnight Special 00:35:24 Preacher 00:45:20 Abschlussrunde: The Apartment, Oldboy, Game of Thrones, The Hotelier - Goodness, Project Almanac, The Fifth Wave, Our Brand Is Crisis 99 full no Filme, Film, Filmpodcast, aktuell, aktuelle, Comedy, deutsch, Rezensionen, Reviews, Pengcast, Christian Eichler, Lukas Diestel, Malte Springer, Max von Raison, Off Duty, witzig, lustig, intelligent, Hintergrund Christian Eichler, Lukas Diestel, Malte Springer, Max-Ole von Raison
Settle down with your favourite fuds as we give you the skinny on The 5th Wave, Jane Got A Gun, Bone Tomahawk, Our Brand Is Crisis, The Assassin, and Zootropolis. For once we even have divergent opinions on most of them. It's truly exhilarating.
To celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Canon 5D(which began shipping in August 2005), Canon U.S.A. hosted a screening and in-depth Q&A fittingly titled "A Decade of DSLRs: Creative Minds Talk the Evolution of Hand-Held Filmmaking." As the author of The DSLR Cinematography Guide Ryan Koo was asked to host the event and we are happy to release the panel as an episode of The No Film School Podcast. The event featured a who's-who of cinematographers and directors with DSLR successes under their belt, including Joe Passarelli (Director of Photography, Anomalisa), Bryce Fortner (Director of Photography, Too Legit, Portlandia, W/ Bob & David), Lauren Greenfield (Director, The Queen of Versailles), Tom Hurwitz, ASC (Director of Photography, The Queen of Versailles, Ghosts of Abu Ghraib, Our Brand Is Crisis), and Tim Smith (Senior Film and Television Advisor, Canon).
With the Oscar nominations announced, Kase and Van look at banking dramedy The Big Short, comedy sequel Ride Along 2, spin flick Our Brand Is Crisis, YA sci-fi tale The 5th Wave, Gillian Flynn adaptation Dark Places, and Chinese drama The Assassin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Michael Caine talks to Simon about his new film Youth. Plus the UK Box Office Top 10 and Mark's reviews of the week's new films including The Big Short, Ride Along 2 and Our Brand Is Crisis. Download the Kermode and Mayo podcast at bbc.co.uk/podcasts/5live.
Tyler and David talk about what they've seen lately, including The Big Short, In the Heart of the Sea, Concussion, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, A Christmas Carol, Entertainment, Tusk, Room, A Very Murray Christmas, Joy, Lawrence of Arabia, The Hateful Eight, 3:10 to Yuma, The Martian, Brewster's Millions, Brooklyn, The Peanuts Movie, Chasing Tyson, My Darling Clementine, Red River, Days of Thunder, The Forest, Our Brand Is Crisis, Mistress America, Tangerine, Experimenter, The Revenant, Queen of Earth, Listen to Me Marlon, Cobain: Montage of Heck, Dope, Spy, Black Mass, The Pearl Button, 45 Years, Chi-Raq, Cartel Land, Padre Padrone, The Last Man on Earth, The Amazing Race and Jessica Jones.
Paul and Erin review two '90s classics about aimless young men, police intimidation, and urban violence: John Singleton's 1991 melodrama BOYZ N THE HOOD, and Mathieu Kassovitz's 1995 drama LA HAINE. Plus: our quick takes on MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO, OUR BRAND IS CRISIS, AMERICAN ULTRA, AMOUR FOU, and BEST OF ENEMIES.
We get right into it with the movie this week, as there have been a LOT to talk about: new releases go really to Jack and Andrew talks some horror (as Jack does too, this was covering the last week of October, after all), but then some animation (of varying qualities), a documentary about a making-of movie, the weirdest time travel movie ever, two or three French films (viva la France!) including one more dip into Luis Bunuel, and Jack and Andrew share their thoughts on one of the biggest bombs in recent memory. And Jack opens the show with a botched rendition of Mockingbird, which you've been (mostly) spared... visit us on facebook,com/wagesofcinema and Twitter @wagesofcinema plus email wagesofcinema@gmail.com 1) STEVE JOBS (2015) 2) MEET DAVE (2008) 3) HALLOWEEN (1978) 4) THE SENTINEL (1977) 5) THE PEANUTS MOVIE (2015) 6) LITTLE NEMO IN SLUMBERLAND (1989) 7) A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (1969) 8) THE PHANTOM OF LIBERTY (1974) 9) SPECTRE (2015) 10) PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK (1975) 11) OUR BRAND IS CRISIS (2015) 12) OSS 117: LOST IN RIO (2009) 13) THE LEOPARD MAN/THE SEVENTH VICTIM (1943) (also the Daily Double) 14)THE BEYOND (1981) 15) DEADLY BLESSING (1981) 16) THE RAID: REDEMPTION (2011) 17) STEVE MCQUEEN: THE MAN & LE MANS (2015) 18) THE BIG EASY (1988) 19) PREDESTINATION (2014) 20) THE INTOUCHABLES (2011) 21) DEAD OF NIGHT (1945) 22) THE FLY/RETURN OF THE FLY (58/59) 23) LAST DAYS OF CONEY ISLAND (2015) 24) JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS (2015) (Songs: Duke Ellington's "Jubilee Stomp" and The Misfits' "Return of the Fly")
In this, our 30th podcast, I welcome back a couple of Gold Rush Gang members (one current, one former) to talk about the most recent box office flops (Steve Jobs, Our Brand Is Crisis, Freeheld) and the three new Oscar hopefuls that debuted this weekend: Spotlight, Brooklyn and Trumbo. We also dig into our Screen Actors Guild nomination predictions which finds Long Pham defending his handful of sole predictions (like Joel Edgerton in Black Mass) and Dennis Kelly coming in with some smart stats as he always does.
This week on the BIG show, writer/director Spike Lee's upcoming film, Chiraq gets the star treatment one month before it's release. We'll introduce the trailer and our thoughts on Lee's latest "joint." Plus, in anticipation of the 24th film from British super-spy, James Bond, we'll take a look back at our favorite Bond actors and Top Five Bond Films. In addition, we'll also have reviews on a slew of new and currently in theater releases including Spectre, Burnt, I Smile Back and Our Brand Is Crisis, all on Episode 279 of Keeping It Reel With FilmGordon.
This week on the BIG show, writer/director Spike Lee's upcoming film, Chiraq gets the star treatment one month before it's release. We'll introduce the trailer and our thoughts on Lee's latest "joint." Plus, in anticipation of the 24th film from British super-spy, James Bond, we'll take a look back at our favorite Bond actors and Top Five Bond Films. In addition, we'll also have reviews on a slew of new and currently in theater releases including Spectre, Burnt, I Smile Back and Our Brand Is Crisis, all on Episode 279 of Keeping It Reel With FilmGordon.
This week's episode of Out Now with Aaron and Abe is a bit of a different step, as Abe and Aaron keep it pretty focused. No other guest this week, as it is just the guys discussing a number of new trailers (5:31), some recent film releases including Our Brand Is Crisis (53:03) and Beasts of No Nation (70:02), among others, and then dive into some movie-related news items (78:02). It's a looser discussion, but a good one for those looking for a change in pace for a week. So now, if you've got an hour or so to kill... #OurBrandIsCrisis #SandraBullock #XFiles #BeastsOfNoNation #CaryFukunaga #HotlineBling #MovieReview #OutNowPodcast #AaronAndAbe #Ridiculous6 #Oceans11
Hollister and O’Toole cast their ballots on Our Brand Is Crisis, inspired by Rachel Boynton’s 2005 documentary of the same name. One thinks it’s the best of Sandra Bullock to date; the other thinks the screenplay (written by Oscar nominee Peter Straughan, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) hit an Act II speed bump. Starring Sandra Bullock, Billy Bob Thornton, Ann Dowd, Anthony Mackie, Joaquim de Almeida, and Zoe Kazan. Produced by George Clooney and Grant Heslov (who brought us the Oscar-winning Argo). Incidentally, Happy Election Day. Don’t forget to vote.
Our Brand Is Crisis is meant to be a fictional version of Rachel Boynton's 2005 documentary of the same name...
On this week's episode of The Daily Texan Newscast, we cover the Safe Campus Act, a “supermouse” and changes to the university shuttle buses. Listen to a recap of the third GOP presidential debate and get some insight on the upcoming Fisher vs. University of Texas Supreme Court hearing. We also breakdown the apparel deal between UT and Nike. Tune in for reviews of Fuzz's new album "II" and the new movie “Our Brand Is Crisis.” A special guest joins us for a chilling edition of Crime Corner.
iTalk movies is a long-form interview series featuring leading members of the film community. In this episode, host Fern Ronay interviews Dominic Flores from Our Brand Is Crisis in studio on the Popcorn Talk Network. Dominic Flores is a film and television actor from Dana Point California. Born and raised in the beach cities of Southern California, Dominic's mother was a school teacher and his father was a famous Latin trumpet player from Bolivia in South America. Dominic toured and played a Latin hip hop fusion with his father until 1996 when he began training to be a professional actor at the prestigious South Coast Repertory theater in Costa Mesa. After being cast on both their main stage and second stage productions he moved to Los Angeles and was cast on his first audition in the film "Starmaps" the debut feature from Miguel Arteta which went on to much success at the Sundance film festival where it was purchased and theatrically released from Fox Searchlight in 1997. Dominic did --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Patches and Katey broadcast from the thick of the Bolivian presidential campaign trail to review Our Brand Is Crisis, the new film from David Gordon Green and Sandra Bullock. They also answer your lightning round questions about which male-starring movies Bullock should remake. Take a listen, embed and/or download below; for more from […]
In which we debate JEM AND THE HOLOGRAMS' loyalty to the cartoon, reluctantly confirm Brie Larson's Oscar-frontrunner status for ROOM, talk Sandra Bullock's mooning scene in OUR BRAND IS CRISIS, and let Jason mansplain white feminism to Rebecca while discussing SUFFRAGETTE.
Following a brief Eddy mix up, the guys review movies new to old. First up is Evan with BURNT, a Bradley Cooper film about disgraced chef who does not pee in soup. It’s a super predictable picture where there are gratuitous montages that focus on mundane things and everyone is waiting around for him to get better. Kris is next to discuss OUR BRAND IS CRISIS, a political film that’s reminiscent of PCU, but without George Clinton to bring everyone together. The director doesn’t belong and it’s so uneven, although when it’s cynical it does have points to make. Finally, Evan has seen Dave’s favorite movie, HIDING OUT, starring John Cryer, so the two of them give it the full spoilerpiece treatment. Dave can “quote the motherfucker backwards and forwards,” and Evan reveals his surprise about how part of it takes place in Boston, while pausing to analyze its 80s yuppie mentality.
0:00 - Introduction; Dylan turned 3 2:55 - "Our Brand Is Crisis" review 12:30 - "Burnt" review 21:00 - "Truth" review 30:30 - "Bone Tomahawk" review 36:30 - "Room" review (Snider only) 41:15 - QOTW (scariest movie theater moments) 55:50 - Hey, What'd You Watch? ("Grandma," the Hunger Gameses) 58:55 - Recap and goodbye QOTW: What comic strip should be made into a movie? REVIEWS: Our Brand Is Crisis: B- 7/10 Burnt: C 7/10 Truth: C+ 7/10 Bone Tomahawk: B 8/10 Room: B+ n/a
Burnt Burnt is a remarkably funny and emotional story about the love of food, the love between two people, and the power of second chances. Our Brand in Crisis An American woman, well-versed in political campaigns, is sent to the war-torn lands of South America to help install a new leader but is threatened to be thwarted by a long-term rival.
We have been talking about doing a Ridley Scott vs Tony Scott special since the earliest episodes of the show, and we're finally doing it now for this year's Halloween special. And due to the scope of the thing, it's longer than Steven Wright reading the unexpurgated bible aloud to DJ Screw. Today's show is part 1, please check out part 2 available this Friday. Here are career retrospective video interviews with Tony and Ridley Scott, please check these out. They've informed how we talk about each director going into the show. THE SEGMENTS On this special episode your hosts Alternate Memphis Mafia Timeline Sean Witzke and Tucker Sayonara Stone are joined by the voice talents of: 0:00:00 - 3:26:09 - Roundtable Brother Vs Brother bracket, featuring 32 movies from the brothers with our brothers in arms Devil Brothers and Wet Donut In Aliens. Brothers? Brothers. 0:13:06 - 0:42:55 - The Duellists and The Hunger with John Keogh's 's Shadow Burned Into a Wall. 1:06:22 - 1:55:15 - The Counselor and Prometheus with Mater SuSarahia. 2:09:09 - 2:30:48 - Days of Thunder with Spawn of Mork. THE GUESTS Morgan Jeske's latest comic is ●●●● Vol. I and it can be purchased here. He is also the co-host of this show, dummy. David Brothers is the host of the Image Comics podcast The I Word, and hosted more panels at comic conventions this year than any human ought to. John Keogh's webcomic is The Pillars of Fear, read it and taste the chain. He is also co-runner of SCRENSHOS. Sarah Horrocks is co-host of the Trash Twins podcast with Katie Skelly (Sean edits that), and you can read her latest comic, The Leopard, here. John Schork's writing can be read at Village Machine. THE MOVIES The films of Tony Scott The Hunger (1983), starring David Bowie, Susan Sarandon, Catharine Denueve, Cliff De Young, Beth Ehlers, and Dan Hedeya. Written by Ian Davis, Michael Thomas, and Whitley Streiber. Music by Danny Jaeger and Michael Rubini. Cinematography by Stephen Goldblatt. Editing by Pamela Power. Production design by Brian Morris. Costume design by Milena Canonero. Special makeup effects by Dick Smith. Top Gun (1986), starring Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, Kelly McGillis, Anthony Edwards, Tom Skerrrit, Michael Ironsides, and John Stockwell. Written by Jim Cash and Jack Epps Jr. Music by Harold Faltermeyer. Cinematography by Jeffrey Kimball. Editing by Chris Lebenzon and Billy Weber. Beverly Hills Cop 2 (1987), starring Eddie Murphy, Judge Reinhold, Jurgen Pronchow, Ronny Cox, John Ashton, Brigitte Neilsen, Allen Garfield, Dean Stockwell, Paul Reiser, Gilbert R. Hill, Chris Rock, and Paul Guilfoyle. Written by Larry Ferguson, Warren Skaaren, David Giler, and Dennis Klein. Music by Harold Faltermeyer. Cinematography by Jeffrey Kimball. Editing by Chris Lebenzon, Michael Tronick, and Billy Weber. Revenge (1990), starring Kevin Costner, Madeline Stowe, Anthony Quinn, Tomas Milian, Sally Kirkland, Miguel Ferrer, and John Leguizamo. Written by Jim Harrison and Jeffrey Fiskin. Music by Jack Nitzsche. Cinematography by Jeffrey Kimball. Editing by Chris Lebenzon and Michael Tronick. Days of Thunder (1990), starring Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman, Robert Duvall, Randy Quaid, Cary Elwes, John C. Reilly, Fred Thompson, and Michael Rooker. Written by Robert Towne. Editing by Chris Lebenzon, Michael Tronick, Robert C Jones, Bert Lovitz, Stuart Waks, and Billy Weber. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by Ward Russell. The Last Boy Scout (1991), starring Bruce Willis, Damon Wayans, Taylor Negron, Danielle Harris, Chelsea Field, Noble Willingham, Halle Berry, Kim Coates, and Bruce McGill. Written by Shane Black and Greg Hicks. Music by Michael Kamen. Editing by Stuart Baird, Mark Helfrich, and Mark Goldblatt. Cinematography by Ward Russell. True Romance (1993), starring Christian Slater, Patricia Arquette, Dennis Hopper, Christopher Walken, Val Kilmer, Gary Oldman, Brad Pitt, Sam Jackson, Bronson Pinchot, Chris Penn, Michael Rappaport, Saul Rubinek, James Gandolfini, Victor Argo, Kevin Corrigan, Paul Ben-Victor, and Ed Lauter. Written by Quentin Tarantino. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by Jeffrey Kimball. Editing by Michael Tronick and Christian Wagner. Crimson Tide (1995), starring Denzel Washington, Gene Hackman, Matt Craven, Viggo Mortensen, George Dzundza, Jason Robards, and James Gandolfini. Written by Michael Schiffer and Quentin Tarantino. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. Editing by Chris Lebenzon. The Fan (1996), starring Robert Deniro, Wesley Snipes, Ellen Barkin, John Leguizamo, and Benicio Del Toro. Written by Phoef Sutton. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. Music by Hans Zimmer. Editing by Claire Simpson and Christian Wagner. Enemy of the State (1998), starring Will Smith, Gene Hackman, Jon Voight, Lisa Bonet, Regina King, Barry Pepper, Stuart Wilson, Ian Hart, Scott Caan, Jake Busey, Jason Lee, Gabriel Byrne, Dan Butler, Jack Black, Jamie Kennedy, Seth Green, Anna Gunn, Tom Sizemore, and Jason Robards. Written by David Marconi. Music by Harry Gregson Williams and Trevor Williams. Cinematography by Daniel Mendel. Editing by Chris Lebenzon. Spy Game (2001), starring Brad Pitt, Robert Redford, Catharine McCormack, Stephen Dillane, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, David Hemmings, Benedict Wong, and Charlotte Rampling. Written by Michael Frost Beckner and David Arata. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Cinematography by Daniel Mendel. Editing by Christian Wagner. Man on Fire (2004), starring Denzel Washingston, Dakota Fanning, Christopher Walken, Radha Mitchell, Marc Anthony, Giancarlo Gianini, Mickey Rourke, Rachel Ticotin, and Jesus Ochoa. Written by Brian Hegeland. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Editing by Christian Wagner. Cinematography by Paul Cameron. Domino (2005), starring Keira Knightley, Mickey Rourke, Edgar Ramirez, Delroy Lindo, Monique, Mena Suvari, Christopher Walken, Lew Temple, Macy Gray, Jacqueline Bissett, Dabney Coleman, Ian Zering, Brian Austin Green, T.K. Carter, and Lucy Liu. Written by Richard Kelly and Steve Barancik. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Editing by Christian Wagner and William Goldenberg. Cinematography by Daniel Mendel. Deja Vu (2006), starring Denzel Washington, Paula Patton, Val Kilmer, Jim Caviezel, Adam Goldberg, Erika Alexander, Elle Fanning, and Bruce Greenwood. Written by Terry Rossio and Bill Marsili. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Cinematography by Paul Cameron. Editing by Chris Lebenzon and Jason Hellman. Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (2009), starring Denzel Washington, John Travolta, Luis Guzman, John Tutturo, and James Gandolfini. Written by Brian Hegeland. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Editing by Chris Lebenzon. Cinematography by Tobias A. Schliessler. Unstoppable (2010), starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pine, Rosario Dawson, Ethan Suplee, TJ Miller, Kevin Dunn. Lew Temple, Kevin Corrigan, and Kevin Chapman. Written by Mark Bomback. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Editing by Chris Lebenzon and Robert Duffy. Cinematography by Ben Seresin. The films of Ridley Scott The Duellists (1977), starring Keith Carradine, Harvey Keitel, Albert Finney, Cristina Raines, Edward Fox, Tom Conti, Stacey Keach and Diana Quick. Written by Gerald Vaughn Hughes, cinematography by Frank Tidy, edited by Pamela Power. Music by Howard Blake. Alien (1979), starring Sigourney Weaver, Yaphet Kotto, Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, John Hurt, Harry Dean Stanton, and Ian Holm. Written by Walter Hill, David Giler, Dan O'Bannon & Ron Shussett. Cinematography by Vanlint. Design work by HR Giger, Moebius, Ron Cobb, Chris Foss, Carlo Rambaldi, Roger Christian, and Michael Seymour. Music by Jerry Goldsmith. Editing by Terry Rawlings and Peter Weatherly. Blade Runner (1982), starring Harrison Ford, Sean Young, Rutger Hauer, Edward James Olmos, M. Emmet Walsh, Daryl Hannah, William Sanderson, Brion James, Joe Turkel, Joanna Cassidy, and James Hong. Music by Vangelis. Cinematography by Jordan Cronenweth. Editing by Terry Rawlings and Marsha Nakashima. Design work by Syd Mead and David Synder. Screenplay by Hampton Fancher and David Peoples. Legend (1985), starring Tom Cruise, Mia Sara, Tim Curry, David Bennent, Alice Playten, Billy Barty, and Annabelle Lanyon. Written by William Hjortsburg. Produced by Arnon Milchan. Music by (depending on which cut) Jerry Goldsmith and Tangerine Dream. Cinematography by Alex Thomson. Editing by Terry Rawlings. Design work by Assheton Gordon, Les Dilley, Norman Dorme, Ann Mollo, and Charles Knode. Special Makeup Effects by Rob Bottin. Someone To Watch Over Me (1987), starring Tom Berenger, Mimi Rogers, Lorraine Bracco, Jerry Orbach, and John Rubenstein. Written by Howard Franklin. Music by Michael Kamen. Edited by Claire Simpson. Produced by Ridley Scott, Thierry De Ganay, and Harold Schneider. Black Rain (1989), starring Michael Douglas, Andy Garcia, Ken Takakura, Kate Capshaw, Yusaku Matsuda, Shigero Koyama, Stephen Root, Jun Kumimura, Al Leong, and Luis Guzman. Written by Craig Bolotin and Warren Lewis. Produced by Craig Bolotin, Stanley R. Jaffe, Julie Kirkham, and Sherry Lansing. Edited by Tom Rolf. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by Jan De Bont. Production design by Norris Spencer. Thelma & Louise (1991), starring Susan Sarandon, Geena Davis, Harvey Keitel, Christopher McDonald, Brad Pitt, Stephen Tobolowsky, Michael Madsen, and Jason Beghe. Written by Callie Khouri. Produced by Ridley Scott and Mimi Polk Gitlin. Music by Hans Zimmer. Editing by Thom Noble. Cinematography by Adrian Biddle. Production Design by Norris Spencer. 1492: The Conquest of Paradise (1992), starring Gerard Depardiu, Armand Assante, Ridley Scot, Fernando Rey, Frank Langella, Tcheky Kayro, Angela Molina, and Arnold Vosloo. Written by Rose Bosch. Cinematography by Adrian Biddle. Music by Vangelis. Production design by Norris Spencer. White Squall (1996), starring Jeff Bridges, Caroline Goodall, Scott Wolf, Ryan Phillipe, Jeremy Sisto, Balthazar Getty, Zeljko Ivanek, and Ethan Embry. Written by Todd Robinson. Cinematography by Hugh Johnson. Music by Jeff Rona. Editing by Gerry Hambling. G.I. Jane (1997), starring Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen, Jim Caviezel, Anne Bancroft, Jason Beghe, John Michael Higgins, and Morris Chestnut. Written by Danielle Alexandra andDavid Twohy. Cinematography by Hugh Johnson. Edited by Pietro Scalia. Music by Trevor Jones. Production design by Arthur Max. Gladiator (2000), starring Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix, Connie Neilsen, Oliver Reed, Richard Harris, Djimon Honsou, David Hemmings, Tommy Flanagan, and Sven Ole Thorson. Written by David Franzioni, John Logan, and William Nicholson. Music by Hans Zimmer and Lisa Gerard. Cinematography by John Mathieson. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Hannibal (2001), starring Anthony Hopkins, Julienne Moore, Gary Oldman, Ray Liotta, Zeljko Ivanek, Frankie Faison, Giancarlo Giannini, and Francesca Niri. Written by David Mamet and Steve Zaillian. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by John Mathieson. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Norris Spencer. Black Hawk Down (2001), starring Eric Bana, Josh Hartnett, Ewan McGregor, Tom Sizemore, Orlando Bloom, Sam Shepard, William Fichtner, Ewan Bremmer, Kim Coates, Hugh Dancey, Ron Eldard, Ioan Grufford, Zeljko Ivanek, Jeremy Piven, and Tom Hardy. Written by Mark Bowden and Ken Nolan. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by Slawomir Idziak. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production Design by Arthur Max. Matchstick Men (2003), starring Nicholas Cage, Sam Rockwell, Alison Lohman, Bruce McGill, Bruce Altman, and Melora Waters. Written by Nicholas and Ted Griffin. Music by Hans Zimmer. Cinematography by John Mathieson. Editing by Dody Dorn. Production design by Tom Foden. Kingdom of Heaven (2005), starring Orlando Bloom, Michael Sheen, David Thewlis, Liam Neeson, Eva Green, Edward Norton, Kevin McKidd, Martin Csokas, Brendan Gleeson, Jeremy Irons, and Ghasan Massoud. Written by William Monahan. Music by Harry Gregson Williams. Cinematography by John Mathieson. Editing by Dody Dorn. Production design by Arthur Max. A Good Year (2006), starring Russell Crowe, Marion Cottilard, Albert Finney, Freddie Highmore, Rafe Spall, Archie Panjabi, and Richard Coyle. Written by Marc Klein. Music by Martin Streitenfeld. Cinematography by Phillipe Le Sourd. Editing by Dody Dorn and Robb Sullivan. Production design by Sonja Klaus. American Gangster (2007), starring Denzel Washington, Russell Crowe, Cuba Gooding Jr., Chewitel Ejifor, Idris Elba, Josh Brolin, John Hawks, Lymari Nadal, Ted Levine, Rza, Yul Vazquez, Ruby Dee, Carla Gugino, John Ortiz, Joe Morton, T.I., Armand Assante, John Polito, Kevin Corrigan, Norman Reedus, and Anthony Hamilton. Written by Steve Zaillian. Cinematography by Harris Savides. Music by Martin Streitenfeld. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Body of Lies (2008), starring Leonardo Dicaprio, Russell Crowe, Mark Strong, Golshifteh Farahani, Oscar Isaac, Ali Suliman, and Simon McBurney. Written by William Monahan. Cinematography by Alexander Witt. Music by Martin Streitenfeld. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Robin Hood (2010), starring Russell Crowe, Cate Blanchett, Max Von Sydow, William Hurt, Mark Strong, Oscar Isaac, Danny Huston, Eiileen Atkins, Mark Addy, Scott Grimes, and Lea Seydoux. Written by Brian Hegeland. Music by Martin Streitenfeld. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Cinematography by John Mathieson. Prometheus (2012), starring Noomi Rapace, Charlize Theron, Michael Fassbender, Idris Elba, Guy Pearce, Rafe Spall, Logan Marshall-Green, Sean Harris, and Benedict Wong. Written by John Spaihts and Damon Lindelof. Music by Martin Streitenfeld. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. The Counselor (2013), starring Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, Penelope Cruz, Cameron Diaz, Javier Bardem, Bruno Ganz, Rosie Perez, Dean Norris, John Leguizamo, Rueben Blades, Edgar Ramirez, Goran Visnjic, and Sam Spruell. Written by Cormac McCarthy. Music by Daniel Pemberton. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. Exodus: Gods and Kings (2014), starring Christian Bale, Joel Edgerton, Sigourney Weaver, John Tutturo, Aaron Paul, Ben Mendelsohn, Maria Valverde, and Ben Kingsly. Music by Alberto Iglesias. Editing by Billy Rich. Production design by Arthur Max. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. Written by Adam Cooper, Bill Collage, Steve Zaillian, and Jeffrey Caine. The Martian (2015), starring Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig, Jeff Daniels, Michael Pena, Sean Bean, Kate Mara, Sebastian Stan, Aksel Hennie, Chewitel Ejifor, and Benedict Wong. Written by Drew Goddard. Music by Harry Gregson-Williams. Editing by Pietro Scalia. Production design by Arthur Max. Cinematography by Dariusz Wolski. Also discussed on this episode: The Hardy Boys Case Files, Commando, Nancy Drew, King of New York, The Babysitters Club, Joe Dirt, Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Idris Elba, The Open Curtain, Chuck Palahniuk, Tom Cruise, Mimi Rogers, 1984 Apple Commercial, Beyond the Sea, In the Heart of the Sea, James Spader, Kevin Spacey, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, Boy and Bicycle, Takashi Miike, Woody Allen, Happiness of the Katakuris, Deadwood, Bad Lieutenant, Bride Wars, Barry Lyndon, Singer Sargent, Bad Timing, Mean Streets, Fingers, Taxi Driver, Reservoir Dogs, Joseph Conrad, There Will Be Blood, The Prestige, Nashville, The Long Riders, John Woo, Stanley Kubrick, D.A. Pennebaker, the Maysles Brothers, Sade, Bauhaus, Nicolas Roeg, The Man Who Fell To Earth, Performance, xXx, Michael Bay, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, Alan Parker, The Wall, Angel Heart, Henry Rollins, Columbo, Blood Simple, To Live and Die In LA, The Loveless, Near Dark, Night Gallery, Alien Vs Predator, Quentin Tarantino, Robert Deniro, Andrew Dice Clay, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Russell Mulcahy, Blue Jasmine, Armageddon, Adrian Lyne, Terrence Malick, John Wayne Gacy, Sunshine, Kristen Wiig on SNL, Marco Polo, Kenny Loggins, Daniel Tiger, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Predator, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Exit Wounds, Michael Jai White, DMX, Steven Seagal, Tom Arnold, Anthony Anderson, Brett Ratner, Audition, Shadow of a Doubt, Wait Until Dark, Paul Thomas Anderson, Aliens, Star Wars, Trauma, Tom Savini, Dario Argento, No Country For Old Men, All the Pretty Horses, Shame, The Long Tomorrow, The Big Sleep, William Faulkner, Tom Cruise, Daniel Craig, Layer Cake, Paycheck, Vanilla, Sky, Steve McQueen, The Getaway, Keanu Reeves, A Most Violent Year, Breaking Bad, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Das Boot, The Cotton Club, Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, Steven Soderbergh, Walter Murch's edit of Touch of Evil, Blood Meridian, Moon, HR Giger, Moebius, Ron Cobb, Ingmar Bergman, Luis Bunuel, The Seventh Seal, James Cameron, Dune, Alien 3, Neil Blomkamp, Pacific Rim, 2001 A Space Odyssey, Wally Wood, Short Circuit 2, Chris Cunningham, Sylvester Stallone, Paul Schrader, Rolling Thunder, Inside Llewyn Davis, Fight Club, Monty Python, Show Me A Hero, The Wire, Treme, Steve Zahn, Sicario, Fargo, Justified, Our Brand Is Crisis, Jackie Chan, Thunderbolt, Chinatown, The Terror, J. Edgar, Nashville, The Americans, Talladega Nights: The Legend of Ricky Bobby, Cross of Iron, Tone Loc, Without Limits, Friend of the show Abhay Khosla talking Tony Scott, Oliver and Company, Lethal Weapon, Always Sunny does Lethal Weapon, Richard Donner, Richard Lester, St. Elmos Fire, The Island, Hot Fuzz, Burn After Reading, Django Unchained, Le Mans, Henry Portrait of a Serial Killer, Dead Calm, Malice, BMX Bandits, John Romita Jr., The Karate Kid, Transformers 4, Goodfellas, Big, The French Connection, Norman Rockwell, Silence of the Lambs, Silver Surfer, Modesty Blaise, Krazy Kat, Run Silent Run Deep, Apocalypse Now, Bourne Supremacy, Aphex Twin, Nine Inch Nails, Walton Goggins in Bourne Identity, United 93, The Conversation, Person of Interest, 24, Numbers, Heat, Mission Impossible, Woodlawn, Ali, Signs, Scarface, Game of Thrones, John Wick, Sergio Corbucci, Virtuosity, The Insider, Romper Stomper, Jax from Mortal Kombat, Traci Lords, Throwing Copper, The Long Kiss Goodnight, The Piano, Johnny Suede, Cool World, Career Opportunities, Jennifer Connelly, Jennifer Garner, Timothy Dalton, The Rocketeer, David Lee Roth, Akira, Wolverine, The Yakuza, Crazy Thunder Road, The November Man, The Cell, Labyrinth, The Dark Crystal, Cecil Taylor, Southland Tales, Grand Theft Auto, and Kenneth Branagh. Music Delphine Seyrig's introduction of Mr. Freedom. Ladies and Gentlemen, you've been living like pigs. The Simpsons singing "A Chorus Line" from Treehouse of Horror V. Jerry Goldsmith - music from the 2nd Alien trailer. Jamie Lee Curtis - "Prison Introduction" from Escape From New York (our intro, as always). Bauhaus - "Bela Lugosi's Dead (original single mix)" from The Hunger. Hans Zimmer - "The Steel Plant - part 1" from Black Rain. Tangerine Dream - "Unicorn Theme" from Legend. Hans Zimmer - "Main Title" from Days of Thunder. The Spencer Davis Group - "Gimme Some Lovin" from Days of Thunder. David Bowie - "Starman" from The Martian COMING UP IN PART TWO: Please come back this Friday to hear part 2 of our Ridley Vs. Tony Halloween special with special guests Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, Sloane Leong, Graeme McMillan, and Jeff Lester.
Main Review: True Story Main Review: The Age of Adaline Main Review: Unfriended What Else We Watched (Blue Velvet, Castle In the Sky, Time Lapse, Predestination) News Pre-Judgement Day (Jessica Jones, Youth, Demolition, Krampus, Our Brand Is Crisis, Concussion, Knock Knock, The Danish Girl) Next Week Preview (Love & Mercy, The Overnight, Cinderella)
Tyler and David look at the upcoming fall movies and David discusses his potential new nemesis.
Det går meget meget hurtigt, når vi hiver fat i en klassisk '90er duologi, og Dennis ser dokumentarfilm. Så gør vi Madonna kavalkaden færdig, og Dennis ser dokumentarfilm. Der er også spansk science fiction på programmet, og sidst men ikke mindst ser Dennis dokumentarfilm. Følgende titler omtales: 0:10:16 Speed Bluray 0:23:04 Speed 2: Cruise Control Bluray 0:42:06 Comic Con Episode IV: A Fan's Hope 0:52:53 Who's That Girl 1:04:26 Craigslist Joe 1:12:10 Our Brand Is Crisis (2005) 1:23:07 No Place On Earth 1:30:02 The Last Days