Podcasts about Pelle Hvenegaard

Danish actor and writer

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Best podcasts about Pelle Hvenegaard

Latest podcast episodes about Pelle Hvenegaard

Stines søndag
Pelle Hvenegaard, forfatter og vært

Stines søndag

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2024 115:00


Som barn blev Pelle Hvenegaard katapulteret ind i berømmelse og en karrierevej som skuespiller, men uden ro til at overveje, hvad han egentlig selv gerne ville. Som ung kæmpede han med sit selvværd, som voksen kæmpede han med barnløshed - igennem det hele flød en længsel efter at blive far, der både gav sorg og styrke. Gæst: Pelle Hvenegaard, forfatter og vært. Gæstevært: Benedikte Granvig.

forfatter pelle hvenegaard benedikte granvig
RADIO4 MORGEN
Fredag d. 11. oktober kl. 6-7

RADIO4 MORGEN

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2024 55:09


(02:00): Anders Kronborg træder på gymnasielærerne. Medvirkende: Tomas Kepler, formand for Gymnasieskolernes Lærerforening. (15:00): HVIS Bob Woodward taler sandt, er Trump i store problemer. Medvirkende: Rasmus Brun Pedersen, lektor i International Politik ved Institut for Statskundskab på Aarhus Universitet. (29:00): Drengene i folkeskolen går for første gang mindre ind for ligestilling - end tidligere. De ved ikke, hvem de skal se op til. Medvirkende: Jonas Lieberkind, lektor ved DPU, Aarhuus Universitet. (42:00): Fixerummet: "Candy" har prostitueret sig siden hun var 14 år gammel. Medvirkende: "Candy", anonym misbruger og prostitueret og Pelle Hvenegaard, vært på "Fixerummet". Værter: Anne Phillipsen og Mathias Wissing See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Ugen der gik
Sammendrag af Hovedet og Halen - Mette Frisk og Pelle Hvenegaard

Ugen der gik

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 55:56


Et sammendrag af højdepunkterne i uge 14. Denne episode er med Mette Frisk og Pelle Hvenegaard.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Kulturen på P1
Pilou Asbæks kamp for børnene og nøgenbilleder af Taylor Swift

Kulturen på P1

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 57:12


Skuespiller Pilou Asbæk har ikke selv spillet skuespil som barn. Men i filmen 'Når befrielsen kommer' fra sidste år skulle han spille tæt sammen med 11-årige Lasse Peter Larsen. Pilou Asbæk kastede sig ind i kampen for at forbedre børneskuespilleres vilkår efter en samtale med Pelle Hvenegaard, der selv var på skærmen som barn. De seneste dage har falske nøgenbilleder af den amerikanske sanger Taylor Swift floreret på internettet. Billederne er såkaldte deepfakes - manipulerede, fremstillede billeder, der er skabt gennem kunstig intelligens. Ét af nøgenbillederne blev set mere end 47 millioner gange, før det blev fjernet. Og nu har X blokeret, at man helt generelt kan søge efter Taylor Swift på det sociale medie. Vi ser nærmere på, hvordan det kan ske - og hvad det siger om vores forhold til kendte mennesker i dag. Værter: Linnea Albinus Lande & Chris Pedersen.

Tsunami
Gustav Salinas: "Jeg er 27 år på Tinder, 29 år på Facebook og 33 år i virkeligheden"

Tsunami

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2024 53:57


Dagens gæst har lige så mange muskler som han har ekskærester. De fleste kender ham nok som ham den flotte homoseksuelle fyr fra tv-programmet “Dagens Mand”, som ikke er Pelle Hvenegaard. Han kan få dig til at smide 30 kg, for kun 6 kr om dagen, han gir dig lov til at spise slik hvis du selvfølgelig køber det af ham, og så er han virkelig stærk. Nej, dagens gæst er ikke en græsk gud, men han ligner fandeme en. Dagens mand er Gustav Salinas!I dag skal vi finde ud af om der er forskellige udgaver af Gustav, vi skal snakke om at spille dum, og så skal vi selvfølgelig spise en masse slik. Tsunami lærte: Lidt om forskellige typer sukkerNoget om Gustavs første gang Vi har samme holdning til Numse-Rasmus Pelle Hvenegaard er uskyldig #FreePelle Sebastian kan tage flest armbøjningerPrins Christian er homofob - tror vi. _____________________Til-rette-lækker: Bo Sallysen Værtski: Chanski & Sebski Musik: Upright Music og BlivIkkeForelsket

The 80s Movies Podcast
Miramax Films - Part Four

The 80s Movies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2023 42:19


We continue our miniseries on the 1980s movies distributed by Miramax Films, with a look at the films released in 1988. ----more---- 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.   On this episode, we finally continue with the next part of our look back at the 1980s movies distributed by Miramax Films, specifically looking at 1988.   But before we get there, I must issue another mea culpa. In our episode on the 1987 movies from Miramax, I mentioned that a Kiefer Sutherland movie called Crazy Moon never played in another theatre after its disastrous one week Oscar qualifying run in Los Angeles in December 1987.   I was wrong.   While doing research on this episode, I found one New York City playdate for the film, in early February 1988. It grossed a very dismal $3200 at the 545 seat Festival Theatre during its first weekend, and would be gone after seven days.   Sorry for the misinformation.   1988 would be a watershed year for the company, as one of the movies they acquired for distribution would change the course of documentary filmmaking as we knew it, and another would give a much beloved actor his first Academy Award nomination while giving the company its first Oscar win.   But before we get to those two movies, there's a whole bunch of others to talk about first.   Of the twelve movies Miramax would release in 1988, only four were from America. The rest would be a from a mixture of mostly Anglo-Saxon countries like the UK, Canada, France and Sweden, although there would be one Spanish film in there.   Their first release of the new year, Le Grand Chemin, told the story of a timid nine-year-old boy from Paris who spends one summer vacation in a small town in Brittany. His mother has lodged the boy with her friend and her friend's husband while Mom has another baby. The boy makes friends with a slightly older girl next door, and learns about life from her.   Richard Bohringer, who plays the friend's husband, and Anémone, who plays the pregnant mother, both won Cesars, the French equivalent to the Oscars, in their respective lead categories, and the film would be nominated for Best Foreign Language Film of 1987 by the National Board of Review. Miramax, who had picked up the film at Cannes several months earlier, waited until January 22nd, 1988, to release it in America, first at the Paris Theatre in midtown Manhattan, where it would gross a very impressive $41k in its first three days. In its second week, it would drop less than 25% of its opening weekend audience, bringing in another $31k. But shortly after that, the expected Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film did not come, and business on the film slowed to a trickle. But it kept chugging on, and by the time the film finished its run in early June, it had grossed $541k.   A week later, on January 29th, Miramax would open another French film, Light Years. An animated science fiction film written and directed by René Laloux, best known for directing the 1973 animated head trip film Fantastic Planet, Light Years was the story of an evil force from a thousand years in the future who begins to destroy an idyllic paradise where the citizens are in perfect harmony with nature.   In its first three days at two screens in Los Angeles and five screens in the San Francisco Bay Area, Light Years would gross a decent $48,665. Miramax would print a self-congratulating ad in that week's Variety touting the film's success, and thanking Isaac Asimov, who helped to write the English translation, and many of the actors who lent their vocal talents to the new dub, including Glenn Close, Bridget Fonda, Jennifer Grey, Christopher Plummer, and Penn and Teller. Yes, Teller speaks. The ad was a message to both the theatre operators and the major players in the industry. Miramax was here. Get used to it.   But that ad may have been a bit premature.   While the film would do well in major markets during its initial week in theatres, audience interest would drop outside of its opening week in big cities, and be practically non-existent in college towns and other smaller cities. Its final box office total would be just over $370k.   March 18th saw the release of a truly unique film.    Imagine a film directed by Robert Altman and Bruce Beresford and Jean-Luc Godard and Derek Jarman and Franc Roddam and Nicolas Roeg and Ken Russell and Charles Sturridge and Julien Temple. Imagine a film that starred Beverly D'Angelo, Bridget Fonda in her first movie, Julie Hagerty, Buck Henry, Elizabeth Hurley and John Hurt and Theresa Russell and Tilda Swinton. Imagine a film that brought together ten of the most eclectic filmmakers in the world doing four to fourteen minute short films featuring the arias of some of the most famous and beloved operas ever written, often taken out of their original context and placed into strange new places. Like, for example, the aria for Verdi's Rigoletto set at the kitschy Madonna Inn in San Luis Obispo, where a movie producer is cheating on his wife while she is in a nearby room with a hunky man who is not her husband. Imagine that there's almost no dialogue in the film. Just the arias to set the moments.   That is Aria.   If you are unfamiliar with opera in general, and these arias specifically, that's not a problem. When I saw the film at the Nickelodeon Theatre in Santa Cruz in June 1988, I knew some Wagner, some Puccini, and some Verdi, through other movies that used the music as punctuation for a scene. I think the first time I had heard Nessun Dorma was in The Killing Fields. Vesti La Giubba in The Untouchables. But this would be the first time I would hear these arias as they were meant to be performed, even if they were out of context within their original stories. Certainly, Wagner didn't intend the aria from Tristan und Isolde to be used to highlight a suicide pact between a young couple killing themselves in a Las Vegas hotel bathroom.   Aria definitely split critics when it premiered at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, when it competed for the festival's main prize, the Palme D'Or. Roger Ebert would call it the first MTV opera and felt the filmmakers were poking fun at their own styles, while Leonard Maltin felt most of the endeavor was a waste of time. In the review for the New York Times, Janet Maslin would also make a reference to MTV but not in a positive way, and would note the two best parts of the film were the photo montage that is seen over the end credits, and the clever licensing of Chuck Jones's classic Bugs Bunny cartoon What's Opera, Doc, to play with the film, at least during its New York run. In the Los Angeles Times, the newspaper chose one of its music critics to review the film. They too would compare the film to MTV, but also to Fantasia, neither reference meant to be positive.   It's easy to see what might have attracted Harvey Weinstein to acquire the film.   Nudity.   And lots of it.   Including from a 21 year old Hurley, and a 22 year old Fonda.   Open at the 420 seat Ridgemont Theatre in Seattle on March 18th, 1988, Aria would gross a respectable $10,600. It would be the second highest grossing theatre in the city, only behind The Unbearable Lightness of Being, which grossed $16,600 in its fifth week at the 850 seat Cinerama Theatre, which was and still is the single best theatre in Seattle. It would continue to do well in Seattle, but it would not open until April 15th in Los Angeles and May 20th in New York City.   But despite some decent notices and the presence of some big name directors, Aria would stiff at the box office, grossing just $1.03m after seven months in theatres.   As we discussed on our previous episode, there was a Dennis Hopper movie called Riders on the Storm that supposedly opened in November 1987, but didn't. It did open in theatres in May of 1988, and now we're here to talk about it.   Riders on the Storm would open in eleven theatres in the New York City area on May 7th, including three theatres in Manhattan. Since Miramax did not screen the film for critics before release, never a good sign, the first reviews wouldn't show up until the following day, since the critics would actually have to go see the film with a regular audience. Vincent Canby's review for the New York Times would arrive first, and surprisingly, he didn't completely hate the film. But audiences didn't care. In its first weekend in New York City, Riders on the Storm would gross an anemic $25k. The following Friday, Miramax would open the film at two theatres in Baltimore, four theatres in Fort Worth TX (but surprisingly none in Dallas), one theatre in Los Angeles and one theatre in Springfield OH, while continuing on only one screen in New York. No reported grosses from Fort Worth, LA or Springfield, but the New York theatre reported ticket sales of $3k for the weekend, a 57% drop from its previous week, while the two in Baltimore combined for $5k.   There would be more single playdates for a few months. Tampa the same week as New York. Atlanta, Charlotte, Des Moines and Memphis in late May. Cincinnati in late June. Boston, Calgary, Ottawa and Philadelphia in early July. Greenville SC in late August. Evansville IL, Ithaca NY and San Francisco in early September. Chicago in late September. It just kept popping up in random places for months, always a one week playdate before heading off to the next location. And in all that time, Miramax never reported grosses. What little numbers we do have is from the theatres that Variety was tracking, and those numbers totaled up to less than $30k.   Another mostly lost and forgotten Miramax release from 1988 is Caribe, a Canadian production that shot in Belize about an amateur illegal arms trader to Central American terrorists who must go on the run after a deal goes down bad, because who wants to see a Canadian movie about an amateur illegal arms trader to Canadian terrorists who must go on the run in the Canadian tundra after a deal goes down bad?   Kara Glover would play Helen, the arms dealer, and John Savage as Jeff, a British intelligence agent who helps Helen.   Caribe would first open in Detroit on May 20th, 1988. Can you guess what I'm going to say next?   Yep.   No reported grosses, no theatres playing the film tracked by Variety.   The following week, Caribe opens in the San Francisco Bay Area, at the 300 seat United Artists Theatre in San Francisco, and three theatres in the South Bay. While Miramax once again did not report grosses, the combined gross for the four theatres, according to Variety, was a weak $3,700. Compare that to Aria, which was playing at the Opera Plaza Cinemas in its third week in San Francisco, in an auditorium 40% smaller than the United Artist, grossing $5,300 on its own.   On June 3rd, Caribe would open at the AMC Fountain Square 14 in Nashville. One show only on Friday and Saturday at 11:45pm. Miramax did not report grosses. Probably because people we going to see Willie Tyler and Lester at Zanie's down the street.   And again, it kept cycling around the country, one or two new playdates in each city it played in. Philadelphia in mid-June. Indianapolis in mid-July. Jersey City in late August. Always for one week, grosses never reported.   Miramax's first Swedish release of the year was called Mio, but this was truly an international production. The $4m film was co-produced by Swedish, Norwegian and Russian production companies, directed by a Russian, adapted from a Swedish book by an American screenwriter, scored by one of the members of ABBA, and starring actors from England, Finland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.   Mio tells the story of a boy from Stockholm who travels to an otherworldly fantasy realm and frees the land from an evil knight's oppression. What makes this movie memorable today is that Mio's best friend is played by none other than Christian Bale, in his very first film.   The movie was shot in Moscow, Stockholm, the Crimea, Scotland, and outside Pripyat in the Northern part of what is now Ukraine, between March and July 1986. In fact, the cast and crew were shooting outside Pripyat on April 26th, when they got the call they needed to evacuate the area. It would be hours later when they would discover there had been a reactor core meltdown at the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. They would have to scramble to shoot in other locations away from Ukraine for a month, and when they were finally allowed to return, the area they were shooting in deemed to have not been adversely affected by the worst nuclear power plant accident in human history,, Geiger counters would be placed all over the sets, and every meal served by craft services would need to be read to make sure it wasn't contaminated.   After premiering at the Moscow Film Festival in July 1987 and the Norwegian Film Festival in August, Mio would open in Sweden on October 16th, 1987. The local critics would tear the film apart. They hated that the filmmakers had Anglicized the movie with British actors like Christopher Lee, Susannah York, Christian Bale and Nicholas Pickard, an eleven year old boy also making his film debut. They also hated how the filmmakers adapted the novel by the legendary Astrid Lindgren, whose Pippi Longstocking novels made her and her works world famous. Overall, they hated pretty much everything about it outside of Christopher Lee's performance and the production's design in the fantasy world.   Miramax most likely picked it up trying to emulate the success of The Neverending Story, which had opened to great success in most of the world in 1984. So it might seem kinda odd that when they would open the now titled The Land of Faraway in theatres, they wouldn't go wide but instead open it on one screen in Atlanta GA on June 10th, 1988. And, once again, Miramax did not report grosses, and Variety did not track Atlanta theatres that week. Two weeks later, they would open the film in Miami. How many theatres? Can't tell you. Miramax did not report grosses, and Variety was not tracking any of the theatres in Miami playing the film. But hey, Bull Durham did pretty good in Miami that week.   The film would next open in theatres in Los Angeles. This time, Miramax bought a quarter page ad in the Los Angeles Times on opening day to let people know the film existed. So we know it was playing on 18 screens that weekend. And, once again, Miramax did not report grosses for the film. But on the two screens it played on that Variety was tracking, the combined gross was just $2,500.   There'd be other playdates. Kansas City and Minneapolis in mid-September. Vancouver, BC in early October. Palm Beach FL in mid October. Calgary AB and Fort Lauderdale in late October. Phoenix in mid November. And never once did Miramax report any grosses for it.   One week after Mio, Miramax would release a comedy called Going Undercover.   Now, if you listened to our March 2021 episode on Some Kind of Wonderful, you may remember be mentioning Lea Thompson taking the role of Amanda Jones in that film, a role she had turned down twice before, the week after Howard the Duck opened, because she was afraid she'd never get cast in a movie again. And while Some Kind of Wonderful wasn't as big a film as you'd expect from a John Hughes production, Thompson did indeed continue to work, and is still working to this day.   So if you were looking at a newspaper ad in several cities in June 1988 and saw her latest movie and wonder why she went back to making weird little movies.   She hadn't.   This was a movie she had made just before Back to the Future, in August and September 1984.   Originally titled Yellow Pages, the film starred film legend Jean Simmons as Maxine, a rich woman who has hired Chris Lemmon's private investigator Henry Brilliant to protect her stepdaughter Marigold during her trip to Copenhagen.   The director, James Clarke, had written the script specifically for Lemmon, tailoring his role to mimic various roles played by his famous father, Jack Lemmon, over the decades, and for Simmons. But Thompson was just one of a number of young actresses they looked at before making their casting choice.   Half of the $6m budget would come from a first-time British film producer, while the other half from a group of Danish investors wanting to lure more Hollywood productions to their area.   The shoot would be plagued by a number of problems. The shoot in Los Angeles coincided with the final days of the 1984 Summer Olympics, which would cut out using some of the best and most regularly used locations in the city, and a long-lasting heat wave that would make outdoor shoots unbearable for cast and crew. When they arrived in Copenhagen at the end of August, Denmark was going through an unusually heavy storm front that hung around for weeks.   Clarke would spend several months editing the film, longer than usual for a smaller production like this, but he in part was waiting to see how Back to the Future would do at the box office. If the film was a hit, and his leading actress was a major part of that, it could make it easier to sell his film to a distributor.   Or that was line of thinking.   Of course, Back to the Future was a hit, and Thompson received much praise for her comedic work on the film.   But that didn't make it any easier to sell his film.   The producer would set the first screenings for the film at the February 1986 American Film Market in Santa Monica, which caters not only to foreign distributors looking to acquire American movies for their markets, but helps independent filmmakers get their movies seen by American distributors.   As these screenings were for buyers by invitation only, there would be no reviews from the screenings, but one could guess that no one would hear about the film again until Miramax bought the American distribution rights to it in March 1988 tells us that maybe those screenings didn't go so well.   The film would get retitled Going Undercover, and would open in single screen playdates in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Dallas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Nashville, Orlando, St. Louis and Tampa on June 17th. And as I've said too many times already, no reported grosses from Miramax, and only one theatre playing the film was being tracked by Variety, with Going Undercover earning $3,000 during its one week at the Century City 14 in Los Angeles.   In the June 22nd, 1988 issue of Variety, there was an article about Miramax securing a $25m line of credit in order to start producing their own films. Going Undercover is mentioned in the article about being one of Miramax's releases, without noting it had just been released that week or how well it did or did not do.   The Thin Blue Line would be Miramax's first non-music based documentary, and one that would truly change how documentaries were made.   Errol Morris had already made two bizarre but entertaining documentaries in the late 70s and early 80s. Gates of Heaven was shot in 1977, about a man who operated a failing pet cemetery in Northern California's Napa Valley. When Morris told his famous German filmmaking supporter Werner Herzog about the film, Herzog vowed to eat one of the shoes he was wearing that day if Morris could actually complete the film and have it shown in a public theatre. In April 1979, just before the documentary had its world premiere at UC Theatre in Berkeley, where Morris had studied philosophy, Herzog would spend the morning at Chez Pannise, the creators of the California Cuisine cooking style, boiling his shoes for five hours in garlic, herbs and stock. This event itself would be commemorated in a documentary short called, naturally, Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe, by Les Blank, which is a must watch on its own.   Because of the success of Gates of Heaven, Morris was able to quickly find financing for his next film, Nub City, which was originally supposed to be about the number of Vernon, Florida's citizens who have “accidentally” cut off their limbs, in order to collect the insurance money. But after several of those citizens threatened to kill Morris, and one of them tried to run down his cinematographer with their truck, Morris would rework the documentary, dropping the limb angle, no pun intended, and focus on the numerous eccentric people in the town. It would premiere at the 1981 New York Film Festival, and become a hit, for a documentary, when it was released in theatres in 1982.   But it would take Morris another six years after completing Vernon, Florida, to make another film. Part of it was having trouble lining up full funding to work on his next proposed movie, about James Grigson, a Texas forensic psychiatrist whose was nicknamed Doctor Death for being an expert witness for the prosecution in death penalty cases in Texas. Morris had gotten seed money for the documentary from PBS and the Endowment for Public Arts, but there was little else coming in while he worked on the film. In fact, Morris would get a PI license in New York and work cases for two years, using every penny he earned that wasn't going towards living expenses to keep the film afloat.   One of Morris's major problems for the film was that Grigson would not sit on camera for an interview, but would meet with Morris face to face to talk about the cases. During that meeting, the good doctor suggested to the filmmaker that he should research the killers he helped put away. And during that research, Morris would come across the case of one Randall Dale Adams, who was convicted of killing Dallas police officer Robert Wood in 1976, even though another man, David Harris, was the police's initial suspect. For two years, Morris would fly back and forth between New York City and Texas, talking to and filming interviews with Adams and more than two hundred other people connected to the shooting and the trial. Morris had become convinced Adams was indeed innocent, and dropped the idea about Dr. Grigson to solely focus on the Robert Wood murder.   After showing the producers of PBS's American Playhouse some of the footage he had put together of the new direction of the film, they kicked in more funds so that Morris could shoot some re-enactment sequences outside New York City, as well as commission composer Phillip Glass to create a score for the film once it was completed. Documentaries at that time did not regularly use re-enactments, but Morris felt it was important to show how different personal accounts of the same moment can be misinterpreted or misremembered or outright manipulated to suppress the truth.   After the film completed its post-production in March 1988, The Thin Blue Line would have its world premiere at the San Francisco Film Festival on March 18th, and word quickly spread Morris had something truly unique and special on his hands. The critic for Variety would note in the very first paragraph of his write up that the film employed “strikingly original formal devices to pull together diverse interviews, film clips, photo collages, and” and this is where it broke ground, “recreations of the crime from many points of view.”   Miramax would put together a full court press in order to get the rights to the film, which was announced during the opening days of the 1988 Cannes Film Festival in early May. An early hint on how the company was going to sell the film was by calling it a “non-fiction feature” instead of a documentary.   Miramax would send Morris out on a cross-country press tour in the weeks leading up to the film's August 26th opening date, but Morris, like many documentary filmmakers, was not used to being in the spotlight themselves, and was not as articulate about talking up his movies as the more seasoned directors and actors who've been on the promotion circuit for a while. After one interview, Harvey Weinstein would send Errol Morris a note.   “Heard your NPR interview and you were boring.”   Harvey would offer up several suggestions to help the filmmaker, including hyping the movie up as a real life mystery thriller rather than a documentary, and using shorter and clearer sentences when answering a question.   It was a clear gamble to release The Thin Blue Line in the final week of summer, and the film would need a lot of good will to stand out.   And it would get it.   The New York Times was so enthralled with the film, it would not only run a review from Janet Maslin, who would heap great praise on the film, but would also run a lengthy interview with Errol Morris right next to the review. The quarter page ad in the New York Times, several pages back, would tout positive quotes from Roger Ebert, J. Hoberman, who had left The Village Voice for the then-new Premiere Magazine, Peter Travers, writing for People Magazine instead of Rolling Stone, and critics from the San Francisco Chronicle and, interestingly enough, the Dallas Morning News. The top of the ad was tagged with an intriguing tease: solving this mystery is going to be murder, with a second tag line underneath the key art and title, which called the film “a new kind of movie mystery.” Of the 15 New York area-based film critics for local newspapers, television and national magazines, 14 of them gave favorable reviews, while 1, Stephen Schiff of Vanity Fair, was ambivalent about it. Not one critic gave it a bad review.   New York audiences were hooked.   Opening in the 240 seat main house at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, the movie grossed $30,945 its first three days. In its second weekend, the gross at the Lincoln Plaza would jump to $31k, and adding another $27,500 from its two theatre opening in Los Angeles and $15,800 from a single DC theatre that week. Third week in New York was a still good $21k, but the second week in Los Angeles fell to $10,500 and DC to $10k. And that's how it rolled out for several months, mostly single screen bookings in major cities not called Los Angeles or New York City, racking up some of the best reviews Miramax would receive to date, but never breaking out much outside the major cities. When it looked like Santa Cruz wasn't going to play the film, I drove to San Francisco to see it, just as my friends and I had for the opening day of Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ in mid-August. That's 75 miles each way, plus parking in San Francisco, just to see a movie. That's when you know you no longer just like movies but have developed a serious case of cinephilea. So when The Nickelodeon did open the film in late November, I did something I had never done with any documentary before.   I went and saw it again.   Second time around, I was still pissed off at the outrageous injustice heaped upon Randall Dale Adams for nothing more than being with and trusting the wrong person at the wrong time. But, thankfully, things would turn around for Adams in the coming weeks. On December 1st, it was reported that David Harris had recanted his testimony at Adams' trial, admitting he was alone when Officer Wood stopped his car. And on March 1st, 1989, after more than 15,000 people had signed the film's petition to revisit the decision, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturned Adams's conviction “based largely” on facts presented in the film.   The film would also find itself in several more controversies.   Despite being named The Best Documentary of the Year by a number of critics groups, the Documentary Branch of the  Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences would not nominate the film, due in large part to the numerous reenactments presented throughout the film. Filmmaker Michael Apted, a member of the Directors Branch of the Academy, noted that the failure to acknowledge The Thin Blue Line was “one of the most outrageous things in the modern history of the Academy,” while Roger Ebert added the slight was “the worst non-nomination of the year.” Despite the lack of a nomination, Errol Morris would attend the Oscars ceremony in March 1989, as a protest for his film being snubbed.   Morris would also, several months after Adams' release, find himself being sued by Adams, but not because of how he was portrayed in the film. During the making of the film, Morris had Adams sign a contract giving Morris the exclusive right to tell Adams's story, and Adams wanted, essentially, the right to tell his own story now that he was a free man. Morris and Adams would settle out of court, and Adams would regain his life rights.   Once the movie was played out in theatres, it had grossed $1.2m, which on the surface sounds like not a whole lot of money. Adjusted for inflation, that would only be $3.08m. But even unadjusted for inflation, it's still one of the 100 highest grossing documentaries of the past forty years. And it is one of just a handful of documentaries to become a part of the National Film Registry, for being a culturally, historically or aesthetically significant film.”   Adams would live a quiet life after his release, working as an anti-death penalty advocate and marrying the sister of one of the death row inmates he was helping to exonerate. He would pass away from a brain tumor in October 2010 at a courthouse in Ohio not half an hour from where he was born and still lived, but he would so disappear from the spotlight after the movie was released that his passing wasn't even reported until June 2011.   Errol Morris would become one of the most celebrated documentarians of his generation, finally getting nominated for, and winning, an Oscar in 2003, for The Fog of War, about the life and times of Robert McNamara, Richard Nixon's Secretary of Defense during the Vietnam War era. The Fog of War would also be added to the National Film Registry in 2019. Morris would become only the third documentarian, after D.A. Pennebaker and Les Blank, to have two films on the Registry.   In 1973, the senseless killings of five members of the Alday family in Donalsonville GA made international headlines. Four years later, Canadian documentarian Tex Fuller made an award-winning documentary about the case, called Murder One. For years, Fuller shopped around a screenplay telling the same story, but it would take nearly a decade for it to finally be sold, in part because Fuller was insistent that he also be the director. A small Canadian production company would fund the $1m CAD production, which would star Henry Thomas of E.T. fame as the fifteen year old narrator of the story, Billy Isaacs.   The shoot began in early October 1987 outside Toronto, but after a week of shooting, Fuller was fired, and was replaced by Graeme Campbell, a young and energetic filmmaker for whom Murder One would be his fourth movie directing gig of the year. Details are sketchy as to why Fuller was fired, but Thomas and his mother Carolyn would voice concerns with the producers about the new direction the film was taking under its new director.   The film would premiere in Canada in May 1988. When the film did well up North, Miramax took notice and purchased the American distribution rights.   Murder One would first open in America on two screens in Los Angeles on September 9th, 1988. Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times noted that while the film itself wasn't very good, that it still sprung from the disturbing insight about the crazy reasons people cross of what should be impassable moral lines.   “No movie studio could have invented it!,” screamed the tagline on the poster and newspaper key art. “No writer could have imagined it! Because what happened that night became the most controversial in American history.”   That would draw limited interest from filmgoers in Tinseltown. The two theatres would gross a combined $7k in its first three days. Not great but far better than several other recent Miramax releases in the area.   Two weeks later, on September 23rd, Miramax would book Murder One into 20 theatres in the New York City metro region, as well as in Akron, Atlanta, Charlotte, Indianpolis, Nashville, and Tampa-St. Petersburg. In New York, the film would actually get some good reviews from the Times and the Post as well as Peter Travers of People Magazine, but once again, Miramax would not report grosses for the film. Variety would note the combined gross for the film in New York City was only $25k.   In early October, the film would fall out of Variety's internal list of the 50 Top Grossing Films within the twenty markets they regularly tracked, with a final gross of just $87k. One market that Miramax deliberately did not book the film was anywhere near southwest Georgia, where the murders took place. The closest theatre that did play the film was more than 200 miles away.   Miramax would finish 1988 with two releases.   The first was Dakota, which would mark star Lou Diamond Phillips first time as a producer. He would star as a troubled teenager who takes a job on a Texas horse ranch to help pay of his debts, who becomes a sorta big brother to the ranch owner's young son, who has recently lost a leg to cancer, as he also falls for the rancher's daughter.   When the $1.1m budgeted film began production in Texas in June 1987, Phillips had already made La Bamba and Stand and Deliver, but neither had yet to be released into theatres. By the time filming ended five weeks later, La Bamba had just opened, and Phillips was on his way to becoming a star.   The main producers wanted director Fred Holmes to get the film through post-production as quickly as possible, to get it into theatres in the early part of 1988 to capitalize on the newfound success of their young star.    But that wouldn't happen.   Holmes wouldn't have the film ready until the end of February 1988, which was deemed acceptable because of the impending release of Stand and Deliver. In fact, the producers would schedule their first distributor screening of the film on March 14th, the Monday after Stand and Delivered opened, in the hopes that good box office for the film and good notices for Phillips would translate to higher distributor interest in their film, which sorta worked. None of the major studios would show for the screening, but a number of Indies would, including Miramax. Phillips would not attend the screening, as he was on location in New Mexico shooting Young Guns.   I can't find any reason why Miramax waited nearly nine months after they acquired Dakota to get it into theatres. It certainly wasn't Oscar bait, and screen availability would be scarce during the busy holiday movie season, which would see a number of popular, high profile releases like Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Ernest Saves Christmas, The Naked Gun, Rain Man, Scrooged, Tequila Sunrise, Twins and Working Girl. Which might explain why, when Miramax released the film into 18 theatres in the New York City area on December 2nd, they could only get three screens in all of Manhattan, the best being the nice but hardly first-rate Embassy 4 at Broadway and 47th. Or of the 22 screens in Los Angeles opening the film the same day, the best would be the tiny Westwood 4 next to UCLA or the Paramount in Hollywood, whose best days were back in the Eisenhower administration.   And, yet again, Miramax did not report grosses, and none of the theatres playing the film was tracked by Variety that week. The film would be gone after just one week. The Paramount, which would open Dirty Rotten Scoundrels on the 14th, opted to instead play a double feature of Clara's Heart, with Whoopi Goldberg and Neil Patrick Harris, and the River Phoenix drama Running on Empty, even though neither film had been much of a hit.   Miramax's last film of the year would be the one that changed everything for them.   Pelle the Conquerer.   Adapted from a 1910 Danish book and directed by Billie August, whose previous film Twist and Shout had been released by Miramax in 1986, Pelle the Conquerer would be the first Danish or Swedish movie to star Max von Sydow in almost 15 years, having spent most of the 70s and 80s in Hollywood and London starring in a number of major movies including The Exorcist, Three Days of the Condor, Flash Gordon,Conan the Barbarian, Never Say Never Again, and David Lynch's Dune. But because von Sydow would be making his return to his native cinema, August was able to secure $4.5m to make the film, one of the highest budgeted Scandinavian films to be made to date.   In the late 1850s, an elderly emigrant Lasse and his son Pelle leave their home in Sweden after the death of the boy's mother, wanting to build a new life on the Danish island of Bornholm. Lasse finds it difficult to find work, given his age and his son's youth. The pair are forced to work at a large farm, where they are generally mistreated by the managers for being foreigners. The father falls into depression and alcoholism, the young boy befriends one of the bastard children of the farm owner as well as another Swedish farm worker, who dreams of conquering the world.   For the title character of Pelle, Billie August saw more than 3,000 Swedish boys before deciding to cast 11 year old Pelle Hvenegaard, who, like many boys in Sweden, had been named for the character he was now going to play on screen.   After six months of filming in the summer and fall of 1986, Billie August would finish editing Pelle the Conquerer in time for it to make its intended Christmas Day 1987 release date in Denmark and Sweden, where the film would be one of the biggest releases in either country for the entire decade. It would make its debut outside Scandinavia at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1988, where it had been invited to compete for the Palme D'Or. It would compete against a number of talented filmmakers who had come with some of the best films they would ever make, including Clint Eastwood with Bird, Claire Denis' Chocolat, István Szabó's Hanussen, Vincent Ward's The Navigator, and A Short Film About Killing, an expanded movie version of the fifth episode in Krzysztof Kieślowski's masterful miniseries Dekalog. Pelle would conquer them all, taking home the top prize from one of cinema's most revered film festivals.   Reviews for the film out of Cannes were almost universally excellent. Vincent Canby, the lead film critic for the New York Times for nearly twenty years by this point, wouldn't file his review until the end of the festival, in which he pointed out that a number of people at the festival were scandalized von Sydow had not also won the award for Best Actor.   Having previously worked with the company on his previous film's American release, August felt that Miramax would have what it took to make the film a success in the States.   Their first moves would be to schedule the film for a late December release, while securing a slot at that September's New York Film Festival. And once again, the critical consensus was highly positive, with only a small sampling of distractors.   The film would open first on two screens at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas in midtown Manhattan on Wednesday, December 21st, following by exclusive engagements in nine other cities including Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington DC, on the 23rd. But the opening week numbers weren't very good, just $46k from ten screens. And you can't really blame the film's two hour and forty-five minute running time. Little Dorrit, the two-part, four hour adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel, had been out nine weeks at this point and was still making nearly 50% more per screen.   But after the new year, when more and more awards were hurled the film's way, including the National Board of Review naming it one of the best foreign films of the year and the Golden Globes awarding it their Best Foreign Language trophy, ticket sales would pick up.   Well, for a foreign film.   The week after the Motion Picture Academy awarded Pelle their award for Best Foreign Language Film, business for the film would pick up 35%, and a third of its $2m American gross would come after that win.   One of the things that surprised me while doing the research for this episode was learning that Max von Sydow had never been nominated for an Oscar until he was nominated for Best Actor for Pelle the Conquerer. You look at his credits over the years, and it's just mind blowing. The Seventh Seal. Wild Strawberries. The Virgin Spring. The Greatest Story Ever Told. The Emigrants. The Exorcist. The Three Days of the Condor. Surely there was one performance amongst those that deserved recognition.   I hate to keep going back to A24, but there's something about a company's first Oscar win that sends that company into the next level. A24 didn't really become A24 until 2016, when three of their movies won Oscars, including Brie Larson for Best Actress in Room. And Miramax didn't really become the Miramax we knew and once loved until its win for Pelle.   Thank you for joining us. We'll talk again soon, when Episode 117, the fifth and final part of our miniseries on Miramax Films, is released.     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.

united states america jesus christ american new york california death texas canada world new york city chicago english hollywood uk los angeles france las vegas england running british land french stand san francisco new york times canadian war miami russia ukraine ohio heart washington dc philadelphia seattle toronto german russian spanish dc nashville mom detroit oscars north scotland academy defense broadway states baltimore sweden heard manhattan documentary vancouver minneapolis kansas city npr cincinnati ucla rolling stones new mexico mtv tampa thompson academy awards dune norway adams denmark swedish finland empty indianapolis secretary bc christmas day opera back to the future pbs twins deliver golden globes berkeley moscow stockholm pi morris wagner phillips ottawa duck calgary sciences twist doc nickelodeon simmons variety danish northern california norwegian abba compare paramount northern cannes exorcist delivered martin scorsese vietnam war springfield copenhagen conan penn los angeles times santa cruz harvey weinstein david lynch fort worth texas vanity fair clint eastwood san francisco bay area charles dickens santa monica barbarian whoopi goldberg fuller petersburg summer olympics scandinavian vernon christian bale riders akron lester richard nixon dwight eisenhower fog fantasia far away a24 belize des moines embassies scandinavia john hughes caribe teller lasse people magazine cad fort lauderdale hurley crimea san francisco chronicle cannes film festival navigator atlanta georgia brie larson mio verdi three days best actor neverending story indies herzog napa valley werner herzog bugs bunny jersey city christopher lee flash gordon isaac asimov best actress roger ebert tilda swinton central american young guns registry glenn close condor dennis hopper geiger anglo saxons chocolat national board westwood neil patrick harris pelle untouchables scrooged rain man tinseltown dallas morning news san luis obispo village voice kiefer sutherland christopher plummer robert altman adjusted jean luc godard endowments puccini naked gun south bay john hurt astrid lindgren seventh seal greatest story ever told fonda yellow pages sydow thin blue line bull durham river phoenix best documentary jack lemmon last temptation istv miramax lea thompson la bamba working girls killing fields szab david harris bornholm ken russell light years isolde lou diamond phillips claire denis errol morris jennifer grey dirty rotten scoundrels henry thomas rigoletto elizabeth hurley lemmon greenville south carolina new york film festival nicolas roeg conquerer chuck jones bridget fonda national film registry movies podcast tequila sunrise best foreign language film ernest saves christmas leonard maltin unbearable lightness never say never again century city pennebaker fantastic planet pripyat derek jarman john savage pippi longstocking criminal appeals zanie robert mcnamara phillip glass nessun dorma amanda jones emigrants texas court buck henry robert wood going undercover ithaca new york motion pictures arts wild strawberries james clarke palm beach florida krzysztof kie jean simmons hoberman murder one bruce beresford motion picture academy julien temple chernobyl nuclear power plant miramax films dekalog calgary ab les blank tampa st madonna inn vincent ward american film market entertainment capital susannah york indianpolis grigson anglicized cesars little dorrit theresa russell best foreign language peter travers willie tyler festival theatre janet maslin pelle hvenegaard virgin spring california cuisine chris lemmon premiere magazine stephen schiff franc roddam top grossing films vincent canby charles sturridge randall dale adams
The 80s Movie Podcast
Miramax Films - Part Four

The 80s Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2023 42:19


We continue our miniseries on the 1980s movies distributed by Miramax Films, with a look at the films released in 1988. ----more---- 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.   On this episode, we finally continue with the next part of our look back at the 1980s movies distributed by Miramax Films, specifically looking at 1988.   But before we get there, I must issue another mea culpa. In our episode on the 1987 movies from Miramax, I mentioned that a Kiefer Sutherland movie called Crazy Moon never played in another theatre after its disastrous one week Oscar qualifying run in Los Angeles in December 1987.   I was wrong.   While doing research on this episode, I found one New York City playdate for the film, in early February 1988. It grossed a very dismal $3200 at the 545 seat Festival Theatre during its first weekend, and would be gone after seven days.   Sorry for the misinformation.   1988 would be a watershed year for the company, as one of the movies they acquired for distribution would change the course of documentary filmmaking as we knew it, and another would give a much beloved actor his first Academy Award nomination while giving the company its first Oscar win.   But before we get to those two movies, there's a whole bunch of others to talk about first.   Of the twelve movies Miramax would release in 1988, only four were from America. The rest would be a from a mixture of mostly Anglo-Saxon countries like the UK, Canada, France and Sweden, although there would be one Spanish film in there.   Their first release of the new year, Le Grand Chemin, told the story of a timid nine-year-old boy from Paris who spends one summer vacation in a small town in Brittany. His mother has lodged the boy with her friend and her friend's husband while Mom has another baby. The boy makes friends with a slightly older girl next door, and learns about life from her.   Richard Bohringer, who plays the friend's husband, and Anémone, who plays the pregnant mother, both won Cesars, the French equivalent to the Oscars, in their respective lead categories, and the film would be nominated for Best Foreign Language Film of 1987 by the National Board of Review. Miramax, who had picked up the film at Cannes several months earlier, waited until January 22nd, 1988, to release it in America, first at the Paris Theatre in midtown Manhattan, where it would gross a very impressive $41k in its first three days. In its second week, it would drop less than 25% of its opening weekend audience, bringing in another $31k. But shortly after that, the expected Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film did not come, and business on the film slowed to a trickle. But it kept chugging on, and by the time the film finished its run in early June, it had grossed $541k.   A week later, on January 29th, Miramax would open another French film, Light Years. An animated science fiction film written and directed by René Laloux, best known for directing the 1973 animated head trip film Fantastic Planet, Light Years was the story of an evil force from a thousand years in the future who begins to destroy an idyllic paradise where the citizens are in perfect harmony with nature.   In its first three days at two screens in Los Angeles and five screens in the San Francisco Bay Area, Light Years would gross a decent $48,665. Miramax would print a self-congratulating ad in that week's Variety touting the film's success, and thanking Isaac Asimov, who helped to write the English translation, and many of the actors who lent their vocal talents to the new dub, including Glenn Close, Bridget Fonda, Jennifer Grey, Christopher Plummer, and Penn and Teller. Yes, Teller speaks. The ad was a message to both the theatre operators and the major players in the industry. Miramax was here. Get used to it.   But that ad may have been a bit premature.   While the film would do well in major markets during its initial week in theatres, audience interest would drop outside of its opening week in big cities, and be practically non-existent in college towns and other smaller cities. Its final box office total would be just over $370k.   March 18th saw the release of a truly unique film.    Imagine a film directed by Robert Altman and Bruce Beresford and Jean-Luc Godard and Derek Jarman and Franc Roddam and Nicolas Roeg and Ken Russell and Charles Sturridge and Julien Temple. Imagine a film that starred Beverly D'Angelo, Bridget Fonda in her first movie, Julie Hagerty, Buck Henry, Elizabeth Hurley and John Hurt and Theresa Russell and Tilda Swinton. Imagine a film that brought together ten of the most eclectic filmmakers in the world doing four to fourteen minute short films featuring the arias of some of the most famous and beloved operas ever written, often taken out of their original context and placed into strange new places. Like, for example, the aria for Verdi's Rigoletto set at the kitschy Madonna Inn in San Luis Obispo, where a movie producer is cheating on his wife while she is in a nearby room with a hunky man who is not her husband. Imagine that there's almost no dialogue in the film. Just the arias to set the moments.   That is Aria.   If you are unfamiliar with opera in general, and these arias specifically, that's not a problem. When I saw the film at the Nickelodeon Theatre in Santa Cruz in June 1988, I knew some Wagner, some Puccini, and some Verdi, through other movies that used the music as punctuation for a scene. I think the first time I had heard Nessun Dorma was in The Killing Fields. Vesti La Giubba in The Untouchables. But this would be the first time I would hear these arias as they were meant to be performed, even if they were out of context within their original stories. Certainly, Wagner didn't intend the aria from Tristan und Isolde to be used to highlight a suicide pact between a young couple killing themselves in a Las Vegas hotel bathroom.   Aria definitely split critics when it premiered at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, when it competed for the festival's main prize, the Palme D'Or. Roger Ebert would call it the first MTV opera and felt the filmmakers were poking fun at their own styles, while Leonard Maltin felt most of the endeavor was a waste of time. In the review for the New York Times, Janet Maslin would also make a reference to MTV but not in a positive way, and would note the two best parts of the film were the photo montage that is seen over the end credits, and the clever licensing of Chuck Jones's classic Bugs Bunny cartoon What's Opera, Doc, to play with the film, at least during its New York run. In the Los Angeles Times, the newspaper chose one of its music critics to review the film. They too would compare the film to MTV, but also to Fantasia, neither reference meant to be positive.   It's easy to see what might have attracted Harvey Weinstein to acquire the film.   Nudity.   And lots of it.   Including from a 21 year old Hurley, and a 22 year old Fonda.   Open at the 420 seat Ridgemont Theatre in Seattle on March 18th, 1988, Aria would gross a respectable $10,600. It would be the second highest grossing theatre in the city, only behind The Unbearable Lightness of Being, which grossed $16,600 in its fifth week at the 850 seat Cinerama Theatre, which was and still is the single best theatre in Seattle. It would continue to do well in Seattle, but it would not open until April 15th in Los Angeles and May 20th in New York City.   But despite some decent notices and the presence of some big name directors, Aria would stiff at the box office, grossing just $1.03m after seven months in theatres.   As we discussed on our previous episode, there was a Dennis Hopper movie called Riders on the Storm that supposedly opened in November 1987, but didn't. It did open in theatres in May of 1988, and now we're here to talk about it.   Riders on the Storm would open in eleven theatres in the New York City area on May 7th, including three theatres in Manhattan. Since Miramax did not screen the film for critics before release, never a good sign, the first reviews wouldn't show up until the following day, since the critics would actually have to go see the film with a regular audience. Vincent Canby's review for the New York Times would arrive first, and surprisingly, he didn't completely hate the film. But audiences didn't care. In its first weekend in New York City, Riders on the Storm would gross an anemic $25k. The following Friday, Miramax would open the film at two theatres in Baltimore, four theatres in Fort Worth TX (but surprisingly none in Dallas), one theatre in Los Angeles and one theatre in Springfield OH, while continuing on only one screen in New York. No reported grosses from Fort Worth, LA or Springfield, but the New York theatre reported ticket sales of $3k for the weekend, a 57% drop from its previous week, while the two in Baltimore combined for $5k.   There would be more single playdates for a few months. Tampa the same week as New York. Atlanta, Charlotte, Des Moines and Memphis in late May. Cincinnati in late June. Boston, Calgary, Ottawa and Philadelphia in early July. Greenville SC in late August. Evansville IL, Ithaca NY and San Francisco in early September. Chicago in late September. It just kept popping up in random places for months, always a one week playdate before heading off to the next location. And in all that time, Miramax never reported grosses. What little numbers we do have is from the theatres that Variety was tracking, and those numbers totaled up to less than $30k.   Another mostly lost and forgotten Miramax release from 1988 is Caribe, a Canadian production that shot in Belize about an amateur illegal arms trader to Central American terrorists who must go on the run after a deal goes down bad, because who wants to see a Canadian movie about an amateur illegal arms trader to Canadian terrorists who must go on the run in the Canadian tundra after a deal goes down bad?   Kara Glover would play Helen, the arms dealer, and John Savage as Jeff, a British intelligence agent who helps Helen.   Caribe would first open in Detroit on May 20th, 1988. Can you guess what I'm going to say next?   Yep.   No reported grosses, no theatres playing the film tracked by Variety.   The following week, Caribe opens in the San Francisco Bay Area, at the 300 seat United Artists Theatre in San Francisco, and three theatres in the South Bay. While Miramax once again did not report grosses, the combined gross for the four theatres, according to Variety, was a weak $3,700. Compare that to Aria, which was playing at the Opera Plaza Cinemas in its third week in San Francisco, in an auditorium 40% smaller than the United Artist, grossing $5,300 on its own.   On June 3rd, Caribe would open at the AMC Fountain Square 14 in Nashville. One show only on Friday and Saturday at 11:45pm. Miramax did not report grosses. Probably because people we going to see Willie Tyler and Lester at Zanie's down the street.   And again, it kept cycling around the country, one or two new playdates in each city it played in. Philadelphia in mid-June. Indianapolis in mid-July. Jersey City in late August. Always for one week, grosses never reported.   Miramax's first Swedish release of the year was called Mio, but this was truly an international production. The $4m film was co-produced by Swedish, Norwegian and Russian production companies, directed by a Russian, adapted from a Swedish book by an American screenwriter, scored by one of the members of ABBA, and starring actors from England, Finland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.   Mio tells the story of a boy from Stockholm who travels to an otherworldly fantasy realm and frees the land from an evil knight's oppression. What makes this movie memorable today is that Mio's best friend is played by none other than Christian Bale, in his very first film.   The movie was shot in Moscow, Stockholm, the Crimea, Scotland, and outside Pripyat in the Northern part of what is now Ukraine, between March and July 1986. In fact, the cast and crew were shooting outside Pripyat on April 26th, when they got the call they needed to evacuate the area. It would be hours later when they would discover there had been a reactor core meltdown at the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. They would have to scramble to shoot in other locations away from Ukraine for a month, and when they were finally allowed to return, the area they were shooting in deemed to have not been adversely affected by the worst nuclear power plant accident in human history,, Geiger counters would be placed all over the sets, and every meal served by craft services would need to be read to make sure it wasn't contaminated.   After premiering at the Moscow Film Festival in July 1987 and the Norwegian Film Festival in August, Mio would open in Sweden on October 16th, 1987. The local critics would tear the film apart. They hated that the filmmakers had Anglicized the movie with British actors like Christopher Lee, Susannah York, Christian Bale and Nicholas Pickard, an eleven year old boy also making his film debut. They also hated how the filmmakers adapted the novel by the legendary Astrid Lindgren, whose Pippi Longstocking novels made her and her works world famous. Overall, they hated pretty much everything about it outside of Christopher Lee's performance and the production's design in the fantasy world.   Miramax most likely picked it up trying to emulate the success of The Neverending Story, which had opened to great success in most of the world in 1984. So it might seem kinda odd that when they would open the now titled The Land of Faraway in theatres, they wouldn't go wide but instead open it on one screen in Atlanta GA on June 10th, 1988. And, once again, Miramax did not report grosses, and Variety did not track Atlanta theatres that week. Two weeks later, they would open the film in Miami. How many theatres? Can't tell you. Miramax did not report grosses, and Variety was not tracking any of the theatres in Miami playing the film. But hey, Bull Durham did pretty good in Miami that week.   The film would next open in theatres in Los Angeles. This time, Miramax bought a quarter page ad in the Los Angeles Times on opening day to let people know the film existed. So we know it was playing on 18 screens that weekend. And, once again, Miramax did not report grosses for the film. But on the two screens it played on that Variety was tracking, the combined gross was just $2,500.   There'd be other playdates. Kansas City and Minneapolis in mid-September. Vancouver, BC in early October. Palm Beach FL in mid October. Calgary AB and Fort Lauderdale in late October. Phoenix in mid November. And never once did Miramax report any grosses for it.   One week after Mio, Miramax would release a comedy called Going Undercover.   Now, if you listened to our March 2021 episode on Some Kind of Wonderful, you may remember be mentioning Lea Thompson taking the role of Amanda Jones in that film, a role she had turned down twice before, the week after Howard the Duck opened, because she was afraid she'd never get cast in a movie again. And while Some Kind of Wonderful wasn't as big a film as you'd expect from a John Hughes production, Thompson did indeed continue to work, and is still working to this day.   So if you were looking at a newspaper ad in several cities in June 1988 and saw her latest movie and wonder why she went back to making weird little movies.   She hadn't.   This was a movie she had made just before Back to the Future, in August and September 1984.   Originally titled Yellow Pages, the film starred film legend Jean Simmons as Maxine, a rich woman who has hired Chris Lemmon's private investigator Henry Brilliant to protect her stepdaughter Marigold during her trip to Copenhagen.   The director, James Clarke, had written the script specifically for Lemmon, tailoring his role to mimic various roles played by his famous father, Jack Lemmon, over the decades, and for Simmons. But Thompson was just one of a number of young actresses they looked at before making their casting choice.   Half of the $6m budget would come from a first-time British film producer, while the other half from a group of Danish investors wanting to lure more Hollywood productions to their area.   The shoot would be plagued by a number of problems. The shoot in Los Angeles coincided with the final days of the 1984 Summer Olympics, which would cut out using some of the best and most regularly used locations in the city, and a long-lasting heat wave that would make outdoor shoots unbearable for cast and crew. When they arrived in Copenhagen at the end of August, Denmark was going through an unusually heavy storm front that hung around for weeks.   Clarke would spend several months editing the film, longer than usual for a smaller production like this, but he in part was waiting to see how Back to the Future would do at the box office. If the film was a hit, and his leading actress was a major part of that, it could make it easier to sell his film to a distributor.   Or that was line of thinking.   Of course, Back to the Future was a hit, and Thompson received much praise for her comedic work on the film.   But that didn't make it any easier to sell his film.   The producer would set the first screenings for the film at the February 1986 American Film Market in Santa Monica, which caters not only to foreign distributors looking to acquire American movies for their markets, but helps independent filmmakers get their movies seen by American distributors.   As these screenings were for buyers by invitation only, there would be no reviews from the screenings, but one could guess that no one would hear about the film again until Miramax bought the American distribution rights to it in March 1988 tells us that maybe those screenings didn't go so well.   The film would get retitled Going Undercover, and would open in single screen playdates in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Dallas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Nashville, Orlando, St. Louis and Tampa on June 17th. And as I've said too many times already, no reported grosses from Miramax, and only one theatre playing the film was being tracked by Variety, with Going Undercover earning $3,000 during its one week at the Century City 14 in Los Angeles.   In the June 22nd, 1988 issue of Variety, there was an article about Miramax securing a $25m line of credit in order to start producing their own films. Going Undercover is mentioned in the article about being one of Miramax's releases, without noting it had just been released that week or how well it did or did not do.   The Thin Blue Line would be Miramax's first non-music based documentary, and one that would truly change how documentaries were made.   Errol Morris had already made two bizarre but entertaining documentaries in the late 70s and early 80s. Gates of Heaven was shot in 1977, about a man who operated a failing pet cemetery in Northern California's Napa Valley. When Morris told his famous German filmmaking supporter Werner Herzog about the film, Herzog vowed to eat one of the shoes he was wearing that day if Morris could actually complete the film and have it shown in a public theatre. In April 1979, just before the documentary had its world premiere at UC Theatre in Berkeley, where Morris had studied philosophy, Herzog would spend the morning at Chez Pannise, the creators of the California Cuisine cooking style, boiling his shoes for five hours in garlic, herbs and stock. This event itself would be commemorated in a documentary short called, naturally, Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe, by Les Blank, which is a must watch on its own.   Because of the success of Gates of Heaven, Morris was able to quickly find financing for his next film, Nub City, which was originally supposed to be about the number of Vernon, Florida's citizens who have “accidentally” cut off their limbs, in order to collect the insurance money. But after several of those citizens threatened to kill Morris, and one of them tried to run down his cinematographer with their truck, Morris would rework the documentary, dropping the limb angle, no pun intended, and focus on the numerous eccentric people in the town. It would premiere at the 1981 New York Film Festival, and become a hit, for a documentary, when it was released in theatres in 1982.   But it would take Morris another six years after completing Vernon, Florida, to make another film. Part of it was having trouble lining up full funding to work on his next proposed movie, about James Grigson, a Texas forensic psychiatrist whose was nicknamed Doctor Death for being an expert witness for the prosecution in death penalty cases in Texas. Morris had gotten seed money for the documentary from PBS and the Endowment for Public Arts, but there was little else coming in while he worked on the film. In fact, Morris would get a PI license in New York and work cases for two years, using every penny he earned that wasn't going towards living expenses to keep the film afloat.   One of Morris's major problems for the film was that Grigson would not sit on camera for an interview, but would meet with Morris face to face to talk about the cases. During that meeting, the good doctor suggested to the filmmaker that he should research the killers he helped put away. And during that research, Morris would come across the case of one Randall Dale Adams, who was convicted of killing Dallas police officer Robert Wood in 1976, even though another man, David Harris, was the police's initial suspect. For two years, Morris would fly back and forth between New York City and Texas, talking to and filming interviews with Adams and more than two hundred other people connected to the shooting and the trial. Morris had become convinced Adams was indeed innocent, and dropped the idea about Dr. Grigson to solely focus on the Robert Wood murder.   After showing the producers of PBS's American Playhouse some of the footage he had put together of the new direction of the film, they kicked in more funds so that Morris could shoot some re-enactment sequences outside New York City, as well as commission composer Phillip Glass to create a score for the film once it was completed. Documentaries at that time did not regularly use re-enactments, but Morris felt it was important to show how different personal accounts of the same moment can be misinterpreted or misremembered or outright manipulated to suppress the truth.   After the film completed its post-production in March 1988, The Thin Blue Line would have its world premiere at the San Francisco Film Festival on March 18th, and word quickly spread Morris had something truly unique and special on his hands. The critic for Variety would note in the very first paragraph of his write up that the film employed “strikingly original formal devices to pull together diverse interviews, film clips, photo collages, and” and this is where it broke ground, “recreations of the crime from many points of view.”   Miramax would put together a full court press in order to get the rights to the film, which was announced during the opening days of the 1988 Cannes Film Festival in early May. An early hint on how the company was going to sell the film was by calling it a “non-fiction feature” instead of a documentary.   Miramax would send Morris out on a cross-country press tour in the weeks leading up to the film's August 26th opening date, but Morris, like many documentary filmmakers, was not used to being in the spotlight themselves, and was not as articulate about talking up his movies as the more seasoned directors and actors who've been on the promotion circuit for a while. After one interview, Harvey Weinstein would send Errol Morris a note.   “Heard your NPR interview and you were boring.”   Harvey would offer up several suggestions to help the filmmaker, including hyping the movie up as a real life mystery thriller rather than a documentary, and using shorter and clearer sentences when answering a question.   It was a clear gamble to release The Thin Blue Line in the final week of summer, and the film would need a lot of good will to stand out.   And it would get it.   The New York Times was so enthralled with the film, it would not only run a review from Janet Maslin, who would heap great praise on the film, but would also run a lengthy interview with Errol Morris right next to the review. The quarter page ad in the New York Times, several pages back, would tout positive quotes from Roger Ebert, J. Hoberman, who had left The Village Voice for the then-new Premiere Magazine, Peter Travers, writing for People Magazine instead of Rolling Stone, and critics from the San Francisco Chronicle and, interestingly enough, the Dallas Morning News. The top of the ad was tagged with an intriguing tease: solving this mystery is going to be murder, with a second tag line underneath the key art and title, which called the film “a new kind of movie mystery.” Of the 15 New York area-based film critics for local newspapers, television and national magazines, 14 of them gave favorable reviews, while 1, Stephen Schiff of Vanity Fair, was ambivalent about it. Not one critic gave it a bad review.   New York audiences were hooked.   Opening in the 240 seat main house at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, the movie grossed $30,945 its first three days. In its second weekend, the gross at the Lincoln Plaza would jump to $31k, and adding another $27,500 from its two theatre opening in Los Angeles and $15,800 from a single DC theatre that week. Third week in New York was a still good $21k, but the second week in Los Angeles fell to $10,500 and DC to $10k. And that's how it rolled out for several months, mostly single screen bookings in major cities not called Los Angeles or New York City, racking up some of the best reviews Miramax would receive to date, but never breaking out much outside the major cities. When it looked like Santa Cruz wasn't going to play the film, I drove to San Francisco to see it, just as my friends and I had for the opening day of Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ in mid-August. That's 75 miles each way, plus parking in San Francisco, just to see a movie. That's when you know you no longer just like movies but have developed a serious case of cinephilea. So when The Nickelodeon did open the film in late November, I did something I had never done with any documentary before.   I went and saw it again.   Second time around, I was still pissed off at the outrageous injustice heaped upon Randall Dale Adams for nothing more than being with and trusting the wrong person at the wrong time. But, thankfully, things would turn around for Adams in the coming weeks. On December 1st, it was reported that David Harris had recanted his testimony at Adams' trial, admitting he was alone when Officer Wood stopped his car. And on March 1st, 1989, after more than 15,000 people had signed the film's petition to revisit the decision, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturned Adams's conviction “based largely” on facts presented in the film.   The film would also find itself in several more controversies.   Despite being named The Best Documentary of the Year by a number of critics groups, the Documentary Branch of the  Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences would not nominate the film, due in large part to the numerous reenactments presented throughout the film. Filmmaker Michael Apted, a member of the Directors Branch of the Academy, noted that the failure to acknowledge The Thin Blue Line was “one of the most outrageous things in the modern history of the Academy,” while Roger Ebert added the slight was “the worst non-nomination of the year.” Despite the lack of a nomination, Errol Morris would attend the Oscars ceremony in March 1989, as a protest for his film being snubbed.   Morris would also, several months after Adams' release, find himself being sued by Adams, but not because of how he was portrayed in the film. During the making of the film, Morris had Adams sign a contract giving Morris the exclusive right to tell Adams's story, and Adams wanted, essentially, the right to tell his own story now that he was a free man. Morris and Adams would settle out of court, and Adams would regain his life rights.   Once the movie was played out in theatres, it had grossed $1.2m, which on the surface sounds like not a whole lot of money. Adjusted for inflation, that would only be $3.08m. But even unadjusted for inflation, it's still one of the 100 highest grossing documentaries of the past forty years. And it is one of just a handful of documentaries to become a part of the National Film Registry, for being a culturally, historically or aesthetically significant film.”   Adams would live a quiet life after his release, working as an anti-death penalty advocate and marrying the sister of one of the death row inmates he was helping to exonerate. He would pass away from a brain tumor in October 2010 at a courthouse in Ohio not half an hour from where he was born and still lived, but he would so disappear from the spotlight after the movie was released that his passing wasn't even reported until June 2011.   Errol Morris would become one of the most celebrated documentarians of his generation, finally getting nominated for, and winning, an Oscar in 2003, for The Fog of War, about the life and times of Robert McNamara, Richard Nixon's Secretary of Defense during the Vietnam War era. The Fog of War would also be added to the National Film Registry in 2019. Morris would become only the third documentarian, after D.A. Pennebaker and Les Blank, to have two films on the Registry.   In 1973, the senseless killings of five members of the Alday family in Donalsonville GA made international headlines. Four years later, Canadian documentarian Tex Fuller made an award-winning documentary about the case, called Murder One. For years, Fuller shopped around a screenplay telling the same story, but it would take nearly a decade for it to finally be sold, in part because Fuller was insistent that he also be the director. A small Canadian production company would fund the $1m CAD production, which would star Henry Thomas of E.T. fame as the fifteen year old narrator of the story, Billy Isaacs.   The shoot began in early October 1987 outside Toronto, but after a week of shooting, Fuller was fired, and was replaced by Graeme Campbell, a young and energetic filmmaker for whom Murder One would be his fourth movie directing gig of the year. Details are sketchy as to why Fuller was fired, but Thomas and his mother Carolyn would voice concerns with the producers about the new direction the film was taking under its new director.   The film would premiere in Canada in May 1988. When the film did well up North, Miramax took notice and purchased the American distribution rights.   Murder One would first open in America on two screens in Los Angeles on September 9th, 1988. Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times noted that while the film itself wasn't very good, that it still sprung from the disturbing insight about the crazy reasons people cross of what should be impassable moral lines.   “No movie studio could have invented it!,” screamed the tagline on the poster and newspaper key art. “No writer could have imagined it! Because what happened that night became the most controversial in American history.”   That would draw limited interest from filmgoers in Tinseltown. The two theatres would gross a combined $7k in its first three days. Not great but far better than several other recent Miramax releases in the area.   Two weeks later, on September 23rd, Miramax would book Murder One into 20 theatres in the New York City metro region, as well as in Akron, Atlanta, Charlotte, Indianpolis, Nashville, and Tampa-St. Petersburg. In New York, the film would actually get some good reviews from the Times and the Post as well as Peter Travers of People Magazine, but once again, Miramax would not report grosses for the film. Variety would note the combined gross for the film in New York City was only $25k.   In early October, the film would fall out of Variety's internal list of the 50 Top Grossing Films within the twenty markets they regularly tracked, with a final gross of just $87k. One market that Miramax deliberately did not book the film was anywhere near southwest Georgia, where the murders took place. The closest theatre that did play the film was more than 200 miles away.   Miramax would finish 1988 with two releases.   The first was Dakota, which would mark star Lou Diamond Phillips first time as a producer. He would star as a troubled teenager who takes a job on a Texas horse ranch to help pay of his debts, who becomes a sorta big brother to the ranch owner's young son, who has recently lost a leg to cancer, as he also falls for the rancher's daughter.   When the $1.1m budgeted film began production in Texas in June 1987, Phillips had already made La Bamba and Stand and Deliver, but neither had yet to be released into theatres. By the time filming ended five weeks later, La Bamba had just opened, and Phillips was on his way to becoming a star.   The main producers wanted director Fred Holmes to get the film through post-production as quickly as possible, to get it into theatres in the early part of 1988 to capitalize on the newfound success of their young star.    But that wouldn't happen.   Holmes wouldn't have the film ready until the end of February 1988, which was deemed acceptable because of the impending release of Stand and Deliver. In fact, the producers would schedule their first distributor screening of the film on March 14th, the Monday after Stand and Delivered opened, in the hopes that good box office for the film and good notices for Phillips would translate to higher distributor interest in their film, which sorta worked. None of the major studios would show for the screening, but a number of Indies would, including Miramax. Phillips would not attend the screening, as he was on location in New Mexico shooting Young Guns.   I can't find any reason why Miramax waited nearly nine months after they acquired Dakota to get it into theatres. It certainly wasn't Oscar bait, and screen availability would be scarce during the busy holiday movie season, which would see a number of popular, high profile releases like Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Ernest Saves Christmas, The Naked Gun, Rain Man, Scrooged, Tequila Sunrise, Twins and Working Girl. Which might explain why, when Miramax released the film into 18 theatres in the New York City area on December 2nd, they could only get three screens in all of Manhattan, the best being the nice but hardly first-rate Embassy 4 at Broadway and 47th. Or of the 22 screens in Los Angeles opening the film the same day, the best would be the tiny Westwood 4 next to UCLA or the Paramount in Hollywood, whose best days were back in the Eisenhower administration.   And, yet again, Miramax did not report grosses, and none of the theatres playing the film was tracked by Variety that week. The film would be gone after just one week. The Paramount, which would open Dirty Rotten Scoundrels on the 14th, opted to instead play a double feature of Clara's Heart, with Whoopi Goldberg and Neil Patrick Harris, and the River Phoenix drama Running on Empty, even though neither film had been much of a hit.   Miramax's last film of the year would be the one that changed everything for them.   Pelle the Conquerer.   Adapted from a 1910 Danish book and directed by Billie August, whose previous film Twist and Shout had been released by Miramax in 1986, Pelle the Conquerer would be the first Danish or Swedish movie to star Max von Sydow in almost 15 years, having spent most of the 70s and 80s in Hollywood and London starring in a number of major movies including The Exorcist, Three Days of the Condor, Flash Gordon,Conan the Barbarian, Never Say Never Again, and David Lynch's Dune. But because von Sydow would be making his return to his native cinema, August was able to secure $4.5m to make the film, one of the highest budgeted Scandinavian films to be made to date.   In the late 1850s, an elderly emigrant Lasse and his son Pelle leave their home in Sweden after the death of the boy's mother, wanting to build a new life on the Danish island of Bornholm. Lasse finds it difficult to find work, given his age and his son's youth. The pair are forced to work at a large farm, where they are generally mistreated by the managers for being foreigners. The father falls into depression and alcoholism, the young boy befriends one of the bastard children of the farm owner as well as another Swedish farm worker, who dreams of conquering the world.   For the title character of Pelle, Billie August saw more than 3,000 Swedish boys before deciding to cast 11 year old Pelle Hvenegaard, who, like many boys in Sweden, had been named for the character he was now going to play on screen.   After six months of filming in the summer and fall of 1986, Billie August would finish editing Pelle the Conquerer in time for it to make its intended Christmas Day 1987 release date in Denmark and Sweden, where the film would be one of the biggest releases in either country for the entire decade. It would make its debut outside Scandinavia at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1988, where it had been invited to compete for the Palme D'Or. It would compete against a number of talented filmmakers who had come with some of the best films they would ever make, including Clint Eastwood with Bird, Claire Denis' Chocolat, István Szabó's Hanussen, Vincent Ward's The Navigator, and A Short Film About Killing, an expanded movie version of the fifth episode in Krzysztof Kieślowski's masterful miniseries Dekalog. Pelle would conquer them all, taking home the top prize from one of cinema's most revered film festivals.   Reviews for the film out of Cannes were almost universally excellent. Vincent Canby, the lead film critic for the New York Times for nearly twenty years by this point, wouldn't file his review until the end of the festival, in which he pointed out that a number of people at the festival were scandalized von Sydow had not also won the award for Best Actor.   Having previously worked with the company on his previous film's American release, August felt that Miramax would have what it took to make the film a success in the States.   Their first moves would be to schedule the film for a late December release, while securing a slot at that September's New York Film Festival. And once again, the critical consensus was highly positive, with only a small sampling of distractors.   The film would open first on two screens at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas in midtown Manhattan on Wednesday, December 21st, following by exclusive engagements in nine other cities including Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington DC, on the 23rd. But the opening week numbers weren't very good, just $46k from ten screens. And you can't really blame the film's two hour and forty-five minute running time. Little Dorrit, the two-part, four hour adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel, had been out nine weeks at this point and was still making nearly 50% more per screen.   But after the new year, when more and more awards were hurled the film's way, including the National Board of Review naming it one of the best foreign films of the year and the Golden Globes awarding it their Best Foreign Language trophy, ticket sales would pick up.   Well, for a foreign film.   The week after the Motion Picture Academy awarded Pelle their award for Best Foreign Language Film, business for the film would pick up 35%, and a third of its $2m American gross would come after that win.   One of the things that surprised me while doing the research for this episode was learning that Max von Sydow had never been nominated for an Oscar until he was nominated for Best Actor for Pelle the Conquerer. You look at his credits over the years, and it's just mind blowing. The Seventh Seal. Wild Strawberries. The Virgin Spring. The Greatest Story Ever Told. The Emigrants. The Exorcist. The Three Days of the Condor. Surely there was one performance amongst those that deserved recognition.   I hate to keep going back to A24, but there's something about a company's first Oscar win that sends that company into the next level. A24 didn't really become A24 until 2016, when three of their movies won Oscars, including Brie Larson for Best Actress in Room. And Miramax didn't really become the Miramax we knew and once loved until its win for Pelle.   Thank you for joining us. We'll talk again soon, when Episode 117, the fifth and final part of our miniseries on Miramax Films, is released.     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.

united states america jesus christ american new york california death texas canada world new york city chicago english hollywood uk los angeles france las vegas england running british land french stand san francisco new york times canadian war miami russia ukraine ohio heart washington dc philadelphia seattle toronto german russian spanish dc nashville mom open detroit oscars north scotland academy defense broadway states baltimore sweden heard manhattan documentary vancouver minneapolis kansas city npr cincinnati ucla rolling stones new mexico mtv tampa thompson academy awards dune norway adams denmark swedish finland empty indianapolis secretary bc christmas day opera back to the future pbs twins deliver golden globes berkeley moscow stockholm pi morris wagner phillips ottawa duck holmes calgary sciences twist doc nickelodeon simmons variety danish northern california norwegian abba compare paramount northern clarke cannes exorcist delivered martin scorsese vietnam war springfield copenhagen conan penn los angeles times santa cruz harvey weinstein david lynch fort worth texas vanity fair clint eastwood san francisco bay area charles dickens santa monica barbarian whoopi goldberg fuller petersburg summer olympics scandinavian vernon christian bale riders akron lester richard nixon dwight eisenhower fog fantasia far away a24 belize des moines embassies scandinavia john hughes caribe teller lasse people magazine cad fort lauderdale hurley crimea adapted san francisco chronicle cannes film festival navigator atlanta georgia brie larson mio verdi three days best actor neverending story indies herzog nudity napa valley werner herzog bugs bunny jersey city christopher lee flash gordon isaac asimov best actress roger ebert tilda swinton central american young guns registry glenn close condor dennis hopper geiger anglo saxons chocolat national board westwood neil patrick harris pelle untouchables scrooged rain man tinseltown dallas morning news san luis obispo village voice kiefer sutherland christopher plummer robert altman adjusted jean luc godard endowments puccini naked gun south bay john hurt astrid lindgren seventh seal greatest story ever told fonda yellow pages sydow thin blue line bull durham river phoenix best documentary jack lemmon last temptation istv miramax lea thompson la bamba working girls killing fields szab david harris bornholm ken russell light years isolde lou diamond phillips claire denis errol morris jennifer grey dirty rotten scoundrels henry thomas rigoletto elizabeth hurley lemmon greenville south carolina new york film festival nicolas roeg conquerer chuck jones bridget fonda national film registry movies podcast tequila sunrise best foreign language film leonard maltin ernest saves christmas unbearable lightness never say never again century city pennebaker fantastic planet pripyat derek jarman john savage pippi longstocking criminal appeals zanie robert mcnamara phillip glass nessun dorma amanda jones emigrants texas court buck henry robert wood going undercover james clarke ithaca new york motion pictures arts wild strawberries palm beach florida krzysztof kie jean simmons hoberman murder one bruce beresford motion picture academy julien temple chernobyl nuclear power plant miramax films dekalog calgary ab les blank tampa st madonna inn vincent ward american film market entertainment capital susannah york indianpolis grigson anglicized cesars little dorrit theresa russell best foreign language peter travers willie tyler festival theatre janet maslin pelle hvenegaard virgin spring california cuisine chris lemmon premiere magazine stephen schiff franc roddam top grossing films vincent canby charles sturridge randall dale adams
Hemmeligheder
Jeg lader som om, jeg har et job

Hemmeligheder

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2023 56:09


En lytter udgiver sig for at være sekretær, selvom hun er på sygepension, og en anden lytter kan drømme om at ophæve sin adoption. Sådan lyder det, når Sanne Cigale Benmouyal går bagom overfaldespillet sammen med Pelle Hvenegaard, der har haft tendens til at holde sit følelsesliv hemmeligt. Ring med din hemmelighed på 28 54 40 00. Vært: Sanne Cigale Benmouyal. Producer: Sarah Schwab Randeris.

ring lader pelle hvenegaard
Go Tur Hjem
#105 Pelle Hvenegaard

Go Tur Hjem

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2023 65:34


Pelle Hvenegaard er blandt andet skuespiller, tv-vært og forfatter, men frem for alt er han far. Du kender ham måske fra Dagens Mand, Pelle Erobreren eller 2900 Happiness, men i dag er han gæst i Go' Tur Hjem, hvor du kan glæde dig til en virkeligt spændende samtale om blandt andet fordomme og hvad vi giver videre til vores børn.Go' lytter!Husk at du stadig kan se Kronisk Sjov på YouTube: https://youtu.be/lUtZ_0RKAScVært: Oliver StanescuKlip: Martin Riise Nielsen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

happiness acast husk pelle hvenegaard dagens mand
Tsunami
Torben Chris: "Der kommer aldrig en MeToo-sag mod mig, hvis ikke den kommer indenfor de næste seks år"

Tsunami

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 53:35


Han elsker at gå i bad med børn, han er jyde, og så går han altid i tøj med Simpsons på. Så som du nok kan høre er dagens gæst en vaskeægte freak. Thomas Hartmann har skabt ham, Uffe Holm har promoveret ham, og Pelle Hvenegaard har ikke lavet sin egen datter.Velkommen til komikernes boomer nr 1, Torben ChrisI dag skal vi finde ud af om Torben Chris bare er en vanvittig karakter, vi skal snakke om meningen med Torbens karriere, og så skal vi selvfølgelig anmelde Thomas Hartmann for vold. Tsunami lærte: - Torben Chris er en rigtig person- Han ser ikke Simpsons mere- Han fik fyret en DR2-vært- Han har en klam tand- Hans bedste joke er noget med dyresex _________________________________________________________________________________Gæster: Sebastian Peebles & Chano Jørgensen Vært: Torben Chris Musik: Upright-Music

Lasses Brevkasse
Egne veje med Pelle Hvenegaard

Lasses Brevkasse

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 75:50


At sidde fast i hamsterhjulet: En lidt uklar størrelse, men det er vidst noget med en ensformig hverdag med arbejde og trummerum, man ikke rigtigt har lyst til, men der skal jo penge i kassen. Måske dækker det også over, at man valgte hjerteblodet fra. At man er gået på kompromis med drømmen, fordi man godt ved, at det at leve af hjerteblod ofte er et hårdt og svært liv - noget man ikke vil udsætte sig selv for og da slet ikke sine børn. I dag skal jeg tale med forfatter og TV- og podcastmand, Pelle Hvenegaard: Om at bryde med hamsterhjulet og prøve at gå sine egne veje. Om at være sammensat og den ene dag lave “Dagens Mand” og den næste diskutere dybe sager med Sørine Gotfredsen. Om at være barnestjerne, have et mørkt sind og blive far. 

tv egne gotfredsen pelle hvenegaard dagens mand
Vores Mentale Sundhed - En Mind Care Collective Podcast
33. PERONSLIG BERETNING: Caroline Hvenegaard om hvad det 
gør ved os (indeni), når mor drikker

Vores Mentale Sundhed - En Mind Care Collective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2022 70:55


I dette afsnit taler jeg med Caroline Hvenegaard. Caroline er gift med Pelle Hvenegaard, og sammen har de en skøn datter og nyder livet. Trods Carolines dejlige voksenliv, bærer hun på en barndom præget af alkoholisme. I afsnittet åbner Caroline op for, hvordan hendes mors alkoholisme har påvirket hende gennem livet. Derudover deler jeg i afsnittet mine personlige erfaringer med alkoholisme i familien, og vi taler om, hvordan det påvirker vores tanker, vaner og glæder i det voksne liv at have eller at have haft en alkoholiseret forælder.Formålet med afsnittet er at dele både viden, erfaring og sårbarheder omkring emnet 'alkoholisme' - især med fokus på pårørende.I afsnittet taler vi bl.a. om:Hvordan alkoholisme påvirkede Carolines barndom.Hvordan Caroline har håndteret sin mors alkoholisme gennem livet.Hvad Caroline har taget med sig i livet pga. sin mors alkoholisme.Hvor utolig mange ting det påvirker (i hele familien) at have et alkoholiseret familiemedlem.Hvilke vaner, tanker og handlinger alkoholisme i familien ofte fører med sig.Min egen historie om at være mor i 30'erne og at bære et sorgfuldt ønske om at få en ædru mor og mormor til sine børn (tilbage)Vil du gerne støtte podcasten her? Så kan du gøre det med et valgfrit beløb via Mind Care Collectives MobilePay: 155503.Dette afsnit er sponsoreret af Alfa. Alfa alkohol- og anden misbrugsbehandling. I Alfa kan du altid få gratis råd, vejledning og behandling som både afhængig og pårørende. Find Alfa på www.alfarehab.dk Musik: Max Ulver Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sørine & Kærligheden
Sørine & Kærligheden: Meningsløshed

Sørine & Kærligheden

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 60:40


Med udsigten til berømmelse og rigdom som de meningsgivende elementer i livet, kan tomhedsfølelsen lure meget tæt på. I helt bogstavelig forstand, kan man fristes til at trykke på speederen og køre sin nye, lækre Cadillac gennem autoværnet og ud i intetheden. Gæst: Pelle Hvenegaard. Vært: Sørine Gotfredsen. Redaktør: Christoffer Emil Bruun. Tilrettelægger: Mikkel Clausen.

Du kender typen
Du kender typen: Pelle Hvenegaard

Du kender typen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 67:17


Som elsker at rejse, men skærer ned nu, hvor hans datter begynder i skole.

typen kender pelle hvenegaard
Tsunami
Pelle Hvenegaard: "Folk spørger mig stadig, om de kan være med i Dagens Mand"

Tsunami

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 53:47


Dagens gæst er af Amalie Szigethy blevet beskrevet som “lidt for gammel og en fissekarl”. Men helt ærligt, det er man vel også hvis man har haft hovedrollen i oscar-vindende film. Han blev kendt som barn, har været Ugens Brandert i Se og Hør, har vundet Zulu Djævleræs, og så offentlig gjorde han i 2009, at han er til piger.I dag skal vi finde ud af, hvorfor han var den eneste fra 2900 Happiness, der spillede sig selv, vi skal høre om da han næsten var i byen med Kronprins Frederik, og så skal vi selvfølgelig puste æg.Dagens gæst er dagens mand, Pelle Hvenegaard.Tsunami lærte:- Alt hvad Pelle drømmer om går i opfyldelse- Han spillede 1:1 sig selv i 2900 Happiness- Han ville aldrig reklamere for sædbanker- Der kommer ikke en kæmpe MeToo-sag imod ham- Han drikker for lidt_____________________________________________________________Værter: Sebastian Peebles & Chano Jørgensen Producer: Josephine Romby Gæst: Pelle HvenegaardMusik: Upright-Music

Forældreskabet
Pelle Hvenegaard

Forældreskabet

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 59:54


Far til Zoe Ukhona, 6 år. Om ufrivillig barnløshed, om at have skrevet bogen »Kære Zoe Ukhona« for at gøre en forskel for andre i deres fertilitets- og adoptionsproces, og om aldrig at ville fortryde ikke at have prioriteret sin familie. Podcasten er bragt af Viavolo.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

podcasten pelle hvenegaard
Hjerteflimmer for voksne
Hjerteflimmer for voksne: Adoption og en gusband (gay husband)

Hjerteflimmer for voksne

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 88:19


Sofie har været single i over 10 år, men hun er i tvivl, om hun ikke vil have tosomheden og være et vi, eller om det er, fordi hun er bange for det, hun ved jo slet ikke, hvad det går ud på? Pelle har sammen med sin kone kæmpet i 6 år med fertilitetsbehandlinger og adoptionsproces for at endelig at blive forældre til Ukhona, og nu hvor de har været en familie i snart 6 år, så spørger Pelle, hvordan de finder tid til hinanden som ægtepar, når de bare elsker at være sammen med deres datter? Gæster: Sofie Torp, Pelle Hvenegaard og parterapeut Jytte Vikkelsøe. Vært: Sara Bro. Klipper: Sara Bro. Redaktion: Sara Bro. Musik: Hold Up med Beyonce. Redaktør: Karen Straarup. Programansvarlig: Søren Bygbjerg.

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Buffeten
Buffeten på P3: Vi er pårørende til folk med hårtab

Buffeten

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 58:25


Måske er du vågnet med et stort fedt forkølelsessår på læben, men det skal ik' ødelægge dit gode humør! Kathrine og Mathias tager den kollektive ja-hat på som vanen tro, for dårligt humør er ikke godt for nogen. Medova-the, mamelukker, quilt-tæppe og carmen curlers er også hevet frem, for vi bladrer gennem de kulørte blade. Inspireret af Pelle Hvenegaard og hans familie snakker vi om mega nuttede familie-tatoveringer. Mathias overvejer fx at få en vase og Prince Light tatoveret som et symbol på hans egen skønne mor. Lyt med for flere vilde kendisafsløringer, far-jokes og dagens vigtigste overskrifter serveret til tonerne af I en kælder sort som kul.

folk lyt rende med h inspireret pelle hvenegaard buffeten
dk4 podcast
Hånden på hjertet – Finn Nørbygaard i langsom samtale med Pelle Hvenegaard

dk4 podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 58:28


Åbenhed og indsigt i følelseslivet er fundamentet for mental sundhed. I programserien ”Hånden på hjertet – Finn Nørbygaard i langsom samtale” inviterer samtaleterapeuten Finn Nørbygaard gæster i studiet for at tale med dem om deres[...]

samtale hjertet pelle hvenegaard finn n
KRÆS
Britney Spears dokumentar, kritik af frivillige anmeldere og nyt teaterkoncept

KRÆS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 55:00


Jo tidligere du bliver kendt, desto værre er det. Sådan lyder det fra en psykolog efter han har set den nye Britney Spears dokumentar. Kræs får også besøg af med Pelle Hvenegaard, der blev barnestjerne, da han var med i Pelle Erobreren. Der bliver flere og flere frivillige anmeldere på blogs og instagram. Og det er et problem, mener formand for Forenede kritikere. Du kan også høre om teaterstykker, hvor du bestemmer hovedpersonens skæbne og om en dokumentar om Robbie Williams.

Hankøn
'Hankøn' med Pelle Hvenegaard

Hankøn

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2020 57:59


Lyt med til en samtale med en mand, der i mange år følte sig rod- og retningsløs. Og om hvordan et brændende ønske om at blive far skabte den mening og retning der måtte til, for at han endeligt kunne finde hjem i sig selv.

lyt samfund pelle hvenegaard
Venterummet
Manden

Venterummet

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2020 111:49


I dette afsnit taler vi med Pelle Hvenegaard om vigtigheden af at være klar til børn, og hvordan man bedst lever i ventetiden. Vi har nogle fantastiske, rørende beretninger fra nogle mænd der helt ærligt fortæller hvordan ventetiden er for dem..

manden pelle hvenegaard
Shitstorm
Shitstorm: Pelle Hvenegaard, Fie Sommer og Nyt fra Facebokkøbing - 26. sep 2020

Shitstorm

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2020 45:00


Pelle Hvenegaard aktiverede store dele af se sociale medier i jagt på en bippende lyd, der holdt ham vågen om natten. Til sidst fik han - med flere fremmedes hjælp - løst sit mærkværdige problem. I denne udgave af Shitstorm på P1 tager Hvenegaard os med på en digital detektivjagt, der nærmest endte på et politisk niveau. Desuden besøg af frigørelsesaktivist Fie Sommer, der endte i ugens lovestorm efter et intermezzo med ordensmagten ved en badebro i Skive. Endelig nyt fra Facebookkøbing og en hilsen fra en kommende barselsvikar, ved navn Adina Ren. Vært: Anna Olrik.

bing shitstorm endelig desuden skive pelle hvenegaard fie sommer
Fårking Far - en podcast
Pelle Hvenegaard & kampen for Ukhona

Fårking Far - en podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2019 43:04


I seks år kæmpede Pelle og Caroline for det, som de godt vidste var meningen med deres liv: at blive forældre. Og endelig en dag så ringede telefonen: Der var en lille pige i Sydafrika, som ventede på dem. Pelle fortæller om sin inspirerende rejse fra natklubber & datingshows – og frem til at finde sin indre ro og plads i livet. Om at være far med hud og hår. Og om hvor ubamhjertig en proces man skal igennem, før man få lov til at adoptere. Vært & teknik: Mattias Hundebøll Speak: Carl-Egon

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RADIO4 WEEKENDMORGEN
Radio4 Weekendmorgen - lørdag d. 23. november 9-10

RADIO4 WEEKENDMORGEN

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2019 55:00


Weekendgæsten: Pelle Hvenegaard - skuespiller og forfatter - gæster i denne time Weekendmorgen, og sammen med Svenne Lund-Jensen drøfter de to ugens store historier set med Hvenegaards briller.

radio4 pelle hvenegaard
Wulffmorgenthaler Podcast
#45 Wulffmorgenthaler vælter BogForum - en føljeton i to hæsblæsende afsnit

Wulffmorgenthaler Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2019 32:36


Ligesom alle andre, der pludselig har en masse på hjerte op til julesalget, er Wulff og Morgenthaler lige nu aktuelle med en ny udgivelse: Wulffmorgenthaler kalenderen 2020. Derfor er vi rykket ud af studiet til fordel for en tur i Bella Centeret, hvor årets store bogmesse er i fuld gang. Udover at finde på striber om et ubehageligt visit på toilettet, en crossfitters begravelse og udviklingen af dating app'en Tinder, får Wulff og Morgenthaler besøg af Pelle Hvenegaard og John Kenn Mortensen, der hver især byder ind med vittigheder om henholdsvis en døende morfar og blowjobs.

Diva & Dario
Diva & Dario - 2. nov 2019

Diva & Dario

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2019 116:59


Et radio-talkshow med både sjov og alvor, hvor værterne Sara Otte og Dennis Johannesson kommer længere ind, og endnu tættere på deres gæster. Programmet tager revolverjournalistikken til nye højder med spørgsmål hentet i 'Den Russiske Roulette', ladt med spørgsmål fra tidligere gæster. Denne lørdag er der besøg af: Jan Hellesøe - en af landets fremmeste manipulationseksperter. Har bevist det i Tv-programmer som 'Manipulator' og 'Fuckr med dn hjrne' og tager nu sine evner med på landevejen i sit nye show: 'FORFØRT'. Pelle Hvenegaard - siden 'Pelle Erobreren' et kendt ansigt i Danmark. Et ansigt vi også har kunnet se i Tv-programmer som 'Dagens Mand' og 'Comedy Fight Club'. Nu er han aktuel med en bog om sig selv: 'Bare stik ham en'. Jørgen Klubien - uløseligt forbundet med gruppen 'Danseorkestret' dannet i 1984. Men også en stor tegneseriekunstner hos Disney og i Hollywood. Nu er 50-års jubilaren aktuel med dobbelt-albummet: 'Family vol. 1 & 2'.

Mellem ørerne med Cecilie Frøkjær
Mellem ørerne 6 - Mit liv, min stemme

Mellem ørerne med Cecilie Frøkjær

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2019 74:52


Cecilie Frøkjær har denne gang besøg af to meget populære herrer, som har lagt både deres liv og stemme frem for os andre. Nemlig skuespiller Preben Kristensen, som er første gæst med sin erindringsbog ”Husk at være glad”. Den anden gæst er tidligere tv-vært Pelle Hvenegaard, som med bogen ”Kære Zoe Ukona” åbner op for den lange, svære - og lykkelige proces med at adoptere datteren Zoe. I flere selvbiografier læser hovedpersonen selv bogen ind, og dermed får vi andre både deres ord og tanker, men i tillæg også deres stemme. Hvad betyder det for dem at gennemgå deres liv én gang til, når de skal læse det højt for alle os andre? Hvilke passager måtte de læse om flest gange, fordi de blev for berørte? Og opdagede de nye sider af deres liv, når der kom lyd på? Og så er der boganbefalinger fra Tyge Brink – hør, hvad manden med de mange kilometer bøger i benene vil servere for dig denne gang – sidst i podcasten.

hvad hvilke husk mellem nemlig stemme pelle hvenegaard cecilie fr
Anden til Venstre
Caroline Hvenegaard: “Vi er en symbiose på en eller anden måde - og har det bare bedst med at være sammen”

Anden til Venstre

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2019 68:05


Caroline Hvenegaard er gift med tv-vært og skuespiller Pelle Hvenegaard. Caroline og Stephanie tager en snak om at droppe prævention allerede efter første date, men alligevel vente mange år på at få sit barn i armene, om at være i fertilitetsbehandling i seks år, om at adoptere og om at få det forløsende, livsændrende og “healende” opkald. De taler om at komme stærkere ud på den anden side af en fælles modgang, om tanker omkring at have en anden etnisk baggrund end dansk i dagens Danmark, om at rode i fremmede menneskers hår og om ikke helt at føle sig voksen og stadig have brug for en mere “voksen” voksen.

AFTENKLUBBEN
Året der gik med Pelle Hvenegaard og Torben C. Bohnart

AFTENKLUBBEN

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2018 12:58


Lyt med når Daniel Cesar, Anne Lavendt og Emma Sejdenfaden taler om året der gik.

lyt torben pelle hvenegaard daniel cesar anne lavendt
Den Gravide Far Podcast
Den Gravide Far Podcast Speciel - Pelle Hvenegaard

Den Gravide Far Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 13:08


Interview med Pelle Hvenegaard om fertilitetsbehandling og adoption fra tirsdag d. 20/11 2018. dengravidefar.dk facebook.com/dengravidefar instagram.dom/dengravidefar

Næstekaffe
Pelle Hvenegaard: MENING

Næstekaffe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 27:29


Pelle Hvenegaard måtte igennem seks års “fertilitetshelvede”, før han endelig blev far til en lille pige fra Sydafrika. Først da fandt han den mening med livet, som vi alle konstant søger, bevidst eller ubevidst. Men hvad hvis man ikke får børn, er livet så meningsløst? Kan man overhovedet lægge sin egen mening over på et andet menneske? Det vender Pelle Hvenegaard godt og grundigt med Pernille Østrem, der er sognepræst på Nørrebro og ganske frivilligt barnløs. Musik: Maibritt Sommerlund

Den sorte boks - podcast
Den sorte boks - podcast: Pelle Hvenegaard - 10. aug 2018

Den sorte boks - podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2018 53:46


Pelle Hvenegaard er aktuel med sin første bog, bestselleren "Kære Zoe Ukhona", der handler om han og hans kones kamp for at få et barn. Dét taler vi om i Den Sorte Boks og vi hører også om hvordan Pelle har besluttet at tage sin datter af de sociale medier, på trods af stor popularitet på Instagram. Derudover hører vi om hvordan Pelle skal give den gas som 80-årig og hvordan man kan undgå at få tæsk af en bande. Værter: Frederik Dirks Gottlieb og Kasper Lundberg. Produceret af Munck Studios København.

Det, vi taler om
Claus Hjelmbak skylder penge, Mia Farrows adoptivsøn sviner sin mor og Pelle...

Det, vi taler om

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2018 55:00


I første time taler vi om Hollywood-stjernernes ven og 'celebrity broker' Claus Hjelmbak, som skylder penge til højre og venstre. Pelle Hvenegaard, som har trukket sin datter fra sociale medier – hvorefter han en måned senere udgiver en bog om selv samme datter. Kim Larsen er blevet så frisk, at han er tilbage i musikstudiet. Mia Farrows adoptivsøn, Moses Farrow, sviner sin mor til i et åbent brev, hvor han beskriver hende som nærmest sindssyg og skyld i tre af adoptivbørnenes død. Ditte Okman er vært, og i panelet sidder nyhedschef på ugebladet TÆT PÅ, Nikolaj Vraa, teaterredaktør på Berlingske, Jakob Steen Olsen, kommunikationsrådgiver, Anne Kirstine Cramon, og direktør i Impact Tv, Thomas Heurlin. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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AFTENKLUBBEN
BESØG: Pelle Hvenegaard - Kære Zoe Ukhona

AFTENKLUBBEN

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2018 32:09


De fleste par drømmer nok om at få børn. Dog er drømmen ikke altid lige udførlig for alle. Men hvordan håndterer man det egentlig, når man ikke kan få barn på den naturlige måde? Det har journalist og tv-vært Pelle Hvenegaard skrevet en meget personlig bog om, og i den anledning kiggede han forbi Aftenklubben til en snak med Daniel Cesar.

men dogs pelle hvenegaard daniel cesar aftenklubben
Diva & Dario
Diva & Dario - 1. jul 2017

Diva & Dario

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2017 117:00


Et radiotalkshow med både sjov og alvor, hvor værterne Julie Bundgaard og Dennis Johannesson kommer længere ind og tættere på deres gæster. Programmet tager revolverjournalistikken til nye højder med spørgsmål hentet i 'Den Russiske Roulette'. Alle holder vejret - undtagen når de synger. Denne lørdag lukker vi ned for sæsonen, men det kommer ikke til at gå stille af. I et sandt inferno af highlights fra sæsonen, der er gået, kan du blandt andre møde: Signe Lindkvist og Pelle Hvenegaard. Ole Stephensen og Lina Rafn. Peter Sommer og Peter AG. Huxi Bach og Stig Rossen. Og mange flere. Glæd dig til et program, hvor vi for en gangs skyld IKKE synger.

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Det bedste fra Anders og Karsten
Pelle Hvenegaard på besøg i Morgenshowet

Det bedste fra Anders og Karsten

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2015 5:16


Pelle er forbi for at tale om Ninja Warrior, men Christiane Schaumburg-Müller skulle også have været med, så hende forsøger vi at ringe til. Derudover bliver der også talt om japanske figurer og Morgenshowet giver sit første legetøjsdyr væk.

pelle ninja warrior derudover pelle hvenegaard christiane schaumburg m morgenshowet
Chriz & Heino
"Pelle Hvenegaard og den bryske svigermor"

Chriz & Heino

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2015 56:54


ogden svigermor pelle hvenegaard