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Randy's pick comes from “Out of the Blue”, Clark catches up on one of the Texas Chainsaw sequels and Russ defends the heavily maligned, “Choose or Die”. And the TBR report is back! Kind of. You'll see. Films: Godforsaken (2020), Out of the Blue (1980), Lux Æterna (2019), Vortex (2021), Trust No One: The Hunt for the Crypto King (2022), Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation (1994), Windfall (2022), Choose or Die (2022), Virtuosity (1995), Bullet Train (2022), Night's End (2022), Thirst Street (2017), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986) Hey, we're on YouTube! Listening on an iPhone? Don't forget to rate us on iTunes! Fill our fe-mailbag by emailing us at OverlookHour@gmail.com Reach us on Instagram (@theoverlooktheatre) Facebook (@theoverlookhour) Twitter (@OverlookHour)
In the 6th bonus episode of the series, Jim Penola sits down for an extended talk with prolific indie actor Lindsay Burdge (A Teacher, Easy, Thirst Street, Black Bear) who of course plays Sadie. During their conversation from December 2020, Lindsay and Jim discuss (among many other things) their shared struggle to uphold small talk and social decorum during the best of times, let alone during a pandemic. Additionally, Lindsay describes the uniquely sensitive and adaptive directing style of Karyn Kusama. Enjoy. | Shout-out to some of my lovely & amazing patrons: Rupa dasGupta, John Penola, Stephanie Pavlick, and Jane Penola. | Receive exclusive/uncut content, early access, and more at Patreon.com/jimpenola | Original Score by John Penola | Follow us on Twitter: @AnInvitation and Instagram: @Invitation2Invitation | Email us: Invitation2Invitation@gmail.com |
Nathan Silver graduated from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in 2005. Since then, the filmmaker has written and directed four short films and seven features: THE BLIND (2009), EXIT ELENA (2012), SOFT IN THE HEAD (2013), UNCERTAIN TERMS (2014), STINKING HEAVEN (2015), ACTOR MARTINEZ (2016, co-directed with Mike Ott), and THIRST STREET (2017). His films have played festivals and venues around the world, including New York Film Festival, Venice, Tribeca, Mar del Plata, AFI, Locarno, Rotterdam, Viennale, MoMA and the Cineteca Nacional, Mexico. The New Yorker recently called Silver "a modernistic master of melodrama," and the New York Times did a profile on him.
Nathan Silver graduated from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts in 2005. Since then, the filmmaker has written and directed four short films and seven feature films: THE BLIND (2009), ELENA (2012), SOFT IN THE HEAD (2013), UNCERTAIN TERMS (2014), STINKING HEAVEN (2015), ACTOR MARTINEZ (2016, co-directed with Mike Ott), and THIRST STREET (2017). His films have played festivals and venues around the world, including New York Film Festival, Venice, Tribeca, Mar del Plata, AFI, Locarno, Rotterdam, Viennale, MoMA and the Cineteca Nacional, Mexico. The New Yorker recently called Silver “a modernistic master of melodrama,” Produced by: Chris Sopko, Molly Jenkins and Nicolas Cimino ABOUT FILM FORUM EXTRAS: It's a student produced and hosted podcast with filmmakers and special guests of The Film Institute at Montclair State University. The podcast is a collaboration between WMSC FM and The Film Institute.
After a failed Twitter poll response, the boys sit down for another family dinner episode. Justin catches up with a film from 2017, Randy quenches Thirst Street, Russell talks Vampires, Solo and gets Revenge while Clark incoherently talks about a movie no one has ever heard of. If you'd like to get in contact with us, you can reach us at Podcast@TheOverlookTheatre.com, on Instagram (@theoverlooktheatre), Facebook (theoverlookhour/theoverlooktheatre), or Twitter (@OverlookTheatre/@OverlookHour).
Actress Lindsay Burdge (Easy, The Invitation, 6 Years, A Teacher) joins Alexi for a tangential conversation about her latest film Thirst Street and so much more!
Episode 82 of One Week Only! This week's key film is "Loving Vincent," which is the first painted feature animated film, created with over 65,000 frames of hand-crafted oil paintings. A loving tribute to Vincent Van Gogh, as well a introspective drama about the circumstances of his death and the painful legacy he left behind, the film celebrates artistic genius while also reckoning with the struggles and hardships faced by the artist and their loved ones. Directed by Dorota Kobiela and Hugh Welchman, the immaculate recreations of Van Gogh's paintings, rippling with the fingerprints and life of each animator, are truly a sight to behold. Now Playing in New York and Los Angeles, with more cities to come. (49:55) We also review the lovely, poetic animated gem "Window Horses" directed by Anne Marie Fleming (8:20); the compelling PTSD soldier drama "Blood Stripe" directed by Remy Auberjonois (19:05); the powerful immigration soldier drama "Soy Nero" directed by Rafi Pitts (27:35); and the stylish obsession thriller "Thirst Street" directed by Nathan Silver (40:10). Hosted by Carlos Aguilar & Conor Holt. Music by Kevin MacLeod at www.incompetech.com
This week on the show, Adam and Kevin review Nathan Silver's Thirst Street alongside David Lowery's A Ghost Story. Other films discussed include 30 Years of Garbage, Bug, The Shining, and Surreal Estate. 00:06:34 - Thirst Street review 00:20:55 - A Ghost Story review 00:41:43 - Watch list 00:53:19 - New releases Please consider supporting Film Pulse by contributing to our Patreon for just $1 per month! http://patreon.com/filmpulse web: http://filmpulse.net twitter: http://twitter.com/filmpulsenet facebook: http://facebook.com/filmpulse
We decide to do a bit of traveling with new release THIRST STREET, which has us discussing home invasion films of a different sort. One involves the perpetually anxious Hugh Grant having his routine put upon by a beautiful and successful movie star, and the other involves this podcast's personal sex icon of Mike White. If that's not a strange enough mashup for you... well, come back next episode! But you'll miss Dan from Get Reel Movies as he reacts to the trailer for this new sex thriller, as well as the usual "obnoxious Americans." Which one can only presume will be the words used in our very first iTunes review. ALSO: Sexy obnoxious Americans. Just wanted to reiterate that for the SEO results we are after with this film podcast. Facebook/Twitter/Instagram: @projectingfilm Hosts: Chris @Following_Films Mike @warmachinehorse
No Film School's Emily Buder sits down with prolific indie filmmaker Nathan Silver and the stars of his latest movie, Thirst Street, Lindsay Burdge and Damien Bonnard. Silver has made a movie every year for the past 8 years. Last year, he had the film Actor Martinez at Tribeca. Needless to say, Silver is a staple in the New York indie film scene. In their conversation, they discuss how Silver manages to get his micro-budget projects off the ground, some tips for shooting with limited resources, Thirst Street's distinctive '70s psychodrama aesthetic, and the extreme emotional risks some of the main actors had to take for their roles.