Thursday, August 14, 2008

Episode 53 - Days of Thunder

Episode 53 - Days of Thunder


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click here!

Spokespeople for the mentally disabled are up in arms over Ben Stiller's star-studded new comedy, Tropic Thunder, in which Stiller plays an action star who makes an ill-advised attempt at Oscar gold by starring in Simple Jack, whose tagline reads: "Once upon a time...there was a
retard." Paramount's been forced to remove promotional materials that refer to the film-within-a-film, and some have even called for the movie to be re-edited. When all the hoopla is set aside, however, is there a decent comedy to be found here? As we ponder this, we'll also take a look back at Inglorious Bastards, Enzo Castellari's breezy war film about a motley crew of army rejects who find redemption on the battlefield. Quentin Tarantino is mounting a major remake of the film - but will it be worth your time?

Play list
Intro
Tropic Thunder trailer
Ricky D & Simon intro
Tropic Thunder trailer
Tropic Thunder review
Director Ben Stiller interview clip
Buffalo Springfield - For What It`s Worth
Tropic Thunder SPOILER review
The Temptations - Ball of Confusion
Inglorious Bastards trailer
Inglorious Bastards review
Inglorious Bastards sound clip
Our Life is not A Movie


Monday, August 11, 2008

Episode 52 - Season 1 wrap u

Episode 52 - Season 1 wrap up.

With not only the summer coming to an end but also our first season, Simon and I decided to sort out our top 10 films of the year ``so far``. We sat down and quickly gave our audience a break down of each pick while we reminisced on the long and bumpy road that brought us to 52 shows!

Unfortunately if you did not tune in live Thursday August 7th, you missed our season 1 finale. We regret to inform you that due to technical problems and a break in electricity, the show's recording was lost. However we did decide to post our list for anyone interested. Feel free to read through it and send us some feedback. Hopefully at least one of our listeners will find this helpful.

Ricky's top 10

10 - My Winnipeg

Directed by Guy Maddin

Guy Maddin's weird, beautiful, funny and entertaining look at his hometown.

It's a re-creation of Maddin's childhood with actors playing his family, including the legendary Ann Savage (Detour) as his mom! Maddin narrates providing a documentary-like background look on Winnipeg and its history. If you don`t want to take my word than how about that of Roger Ebert who says ...

If you love movies in the very sinews of your imagination, you should experience the work of Guy Maddin


9- Stuck

One of the best B movies in years. It gets under your skin, makes you laugh, look away, grip your seat and scream. Based on a real event in 2001 in which a woman in Fort Worth, Texas, was believed to be driving drunk when she struck Gregory Biggs, a homeless man, who became lodged in her car's windshield. She returned home, locked the car in the garage, and left the man to die. Directed by Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator) and starring Mena Suvari and Stephen Rea.


8- Tout Est Parfait

Reminissant of the works of Larry Clark and Gus Van Sant. This film builds a convincing portrait of a teenage boy living in a ghetto neighborhood in Quebec as he tries to come to terms with his best friend`s suicides. When all four of the kids kill themselves on the very same day, the family, friends and townspeople try to unravel the reasoning behind the suicides. Everything is Fine is the first time feature by French Canadian director Yves Christian Fournier. A killer soundtrack, some great photography and a vary talented cast across the board make this film worthy of a second or third viewing. And the director still manages to throw in a twist to the tail which makes sense of the preceding actions.


7- Rec

A brilliant horror / thriller which may start slow but eventually speeds up to a fever pitch of complete and utter terror and hysteria.The second act, is heart-stopping and caused many viewers in Spain's theatres to pass out when the set pieces begin to explode from nowhere at an incredibly fast pace. But it's the third act that will truly test your courage. The final fifteen minutes had the girl behind us crying and begging for the movie to end. It is now remade and titled Quarantine. The Remake is set for release sometime in the fall.

If anything this is a must see - horror fan or not simply for the experience.


6- Wall- E

How could you not love Walle-E?

The first two acts are the best thing Pixas has ever made. If not for the final third act it would be my favorite Pixar film. However I still stand by my words when I say this will be a film that will not only stand the test of time but will be mentioned along side the words Masterpiece in decades to come. Beautiful, energetic, intelligent and with the touches of Kubrick, Charlie Chaplin and Phillip K. Dick. This is one of the greatest love stories brought to screen in years.


5- Paranoid Park

The photography by cinematographer Christopher Dolye is worth the price of admission alone. Great stedi cam shots, long takes and some wonderful use of slo motion. The wolrd that Van Sant creates is poetic and hypnotic. He takes us into the head of a teenage boy and let's us run with it giving us a real sense of place and time. In some ways it feels like voyeurism. As if we are actually looking into someone's life.


4- In Bruges

In Bruges is directed by award winning play write Martin Mcdonagh. It stars Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson as hitmen in hiding, with Ralph Fiennes as their gangster boss. The brilliance of the acting of the three leads would be enough to make the film worthwhile but as the film reveals its surprising depths and its deep sense of irony, you realize that you're in the presence of something great. Martin Mcdonagh is a director to look out for.

Keep track of what is going on. Nothing is without a point in what makes for the best screenplay of the year. Especially take a note of the principles that govern the main characters. Those very principles combined with their weakness are what dictate how the drama will play out.


3- The Dark Knight

Hollywood hasn't been this good in decades when delivering a summer blockbuster. What more can be said about The Dark Knight that I didn't already say in our one hour review of the film back on Episode 48. Simply brilliant. It had me return to the box office three times in three weeks.


2- Let The Right One In

Simply the best vampire film in decades. One of the best horror films of all time. A masterpiece. Mitch Davis (program director of the Fantasia Film Festival) put it best. He called it subversive, shocking, dreamlike touching, hypnotic and horrific. I say it is all this and more.

The film follows the classical rules of vampire mythology, updating each of them in startling new ways, while hitting hard as both an outsider coming-of-age film and a mysterious love story that explores the darker side of adolescent alienation.


1-There Will Be Blood

Although technically released in 2007 to secure an Oscar nomination, There Will Be Blood only made it Canadian premiere on the 4th of January 2008. The very same day I lay my eyes on this incredible motion picture by one of my favorite film makers alive today.

Between the sheer ambition of Paul Thomas Anderson's historical epic and Robert Elswit's dazzling cinematography, this is a must-see movie. There Will Be Blood will be dissected and revered 75 years from now. Film teachers will use this in their classrooms and future generations will appreciate it more than those now. "There Will Be Blood" is a true American epic in every sense of the word and it automatically launches Paul Thomas Anderson from his position as one of the best filmmakers working today

Simon's top 10

10. Forgetting Sarah Marshall

Jason Segal nails it in his first starring role for a film he also co-wrote - it also turns out to be the year's funniest film so far, and it's been a crowded field. Featuring delightful turns from Segal, TV stars Mila Kunis and Kristen Bell, as well as a very funny turn by British comedian Russell Brand. I'll be shocked if it gets bested in the comedy realm this year - though it must be said, Tropic Thunder came close.

09. Stuck

Stuart Gordon's uproarious, take-no-prisoners exploitation satire might be the purest fun I've had at the movies this year - just as funny as it is grisly. Mena Suvari does her career-best work here as a seemingly good-natured nurse who exhibits a sociopathic streak when she runs over a homless man with her car, leaving him lodged in her front windshield - alive. It probably didn't reach your loca multiplex, so look for it on DVD in the coming months.

08. I Think We're Alone Now

An incisive doc about the patterns of obsession and social isolation, as viewed in the lives of two subjects whose only commonality (beyond their eccentricity) is their shared profound love for 80's pop star Tiffany. Touching and often deeply painful, with very few of its rough edges taken off, this is documentary filmmaking at its most focused and emotionally intense.

07. The Edge of Heaven

Turkey's Fatih Akin finally scores a winner after the overrated Head-On by beating Paul Haggis at his own game - here, Akin brings together seemingly disparate characters together in a complex plot that defies conventional structuring, opting instead for a rigidly "chaptered" approach which could've been disastrous but instead somehow heightens our emotional involvement.

06. Wall-E

Not Pixar's best film ever - I'd give that honor to Ratatouille, believe it or not - but a wonderful film nonetheless, one whose first act is among the most memorable sequences of the decade. Though it's unreasonable to expect Disney to try and market a whole film about a robot who lives in isolation on a destroyed Earth, it's tha tportion of the film which will resonate with viewers for years to come.

05. Let the Right One In

Fantasia Fest favorite and a possible target for a Hollywood remake, this devilish but beguiling Swedish vampire film is both touching and brutal, employing European arthouse techniques to frame its surprisingly graphic, almost Grand Guignol-esque scenes of bloodshed. See it, somehow, before Hollywood gets its grimy hands all over it.

04. Standard Operating Procedure

Errol Morris' most intense documentary yet explores the abuses committed at the Abu Ghraib detention center in Iraq - but more specifically, it focuses in on the infamous pictures that found their way into the hands of the press and allowed the U.S. military to single out a few "bad apples" as the source of the foul play at hand. Infuriating, tragic, and an abolute must-see - even if you're suffering from Iraq fatigue.

03. The Dark Knight

Christopher Nolan's incredibly ambitious and indeed very dark film about the Caped Crusader is both the year's biggest hit and the strongest refutation yet of the classically structured superhero movie - Nolan is in love with moral dilemmas and impossible situations (see Memento, The Prestige) and he (along with his brother, screenwriter Jonathan) and he injects them into a big0name summer blockbuster, thus changing the game for years to come.

02. Paranoid Park

Gus Van Sant's best film in ages is also the most evocative film with a high-school setting since Rian Johnson's Brick - casting almost exclusively through MySpace, Van Sant has assembled an incredible band of young actors, led by Gabe Nevins, whose awkward narration sets the tone for the entire film. The apex of Van Sant's recent obsession with slow, tragically inclined art films.

01. The Band's Visit*

Technically a 2007 release, it was denied Oscar consideration because of its frequent use of English. As a result, it only made it to many theaters in 2008, and it's just seen release on DVD. Eran Kolirin's modest but immensely touching film about a stranded Israeli army band is a priceless gem, worthy of placement in any year's best-list. Rent it now if you haven't yet had the pleasure.


Monday, August 4, 2008

Episode 51 - David Gordon Green special pt.1

Episode 51 - David Gordon Green special

a

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Episode 51: Green in Any Other Genre Would Be As Sweet

What's going on with David Gordon Green? First he directs a line of stellar, intense art films, beginning with the coming-of-age drama George Washington and the woozy, lovesick All the Real Girls, then eventually does a complete 180 to helm the Apatow-produced stoner-action-comedy Pineapple Express (starring Seth Rogen, who Rick might have a personal beef with...). Word is he wants to do a dragon movie next. But is this apparent wunderkind really all he's made out to be? Find out when Rick, Simon and special guest Derek discuss these films - as well as a few "bonus" cinematic atrocities that Simon and Rick were subjected to over the course of the week - to cap off The Naked Lunch's first season!



Playlist!

Pineapple Express Intro
David Gordon Green bio
Pineapple Express trailer
Pineapple Express review
Pineapple Express sound byte
Pineapple Express review
Pineapple Express sound byte
M.I.A. - Paper Planes
Seth Rogen interview clip
The Wackness trailer
Sic Ric`s Wackness review
Craig Mack - Flavor in Your Ear
George Washington trailer
George Washington review
George Washington review
Wu Tang Clan - Tearz
Step Brothers Trailer
Simon`s review on Step Brothers
Step Brothers sound byte
All The Real Girls trailer
All The Real Girls review
All The Real Girls sound byte
Mogwai - Fear Satan
outro

Episode 50 - Hot Docs pt.1

Episode 50 - Hot Docs pt.1

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Beginning our newfound pledge to cover more documentary features, we present a full hour of docs we've recently taken in - two from the Fantasia festival and one just for the fun of it, and we've invited documentary fanatic Derek Gladu to chip in. I Think We're Alone Now follows two very different social misfits (one a severe Asperger's case, the other a medical hermaphrodite) who share one common quirk: their love of (and subsequent obsession over) 80's pop star Tiffany. We've got an interview with director Sean Donnelly. Meanwhile, Second Skin is an ambitious look at the world of MMORPG addicts and the ways in which virtual worlds can both wreak havoc upon and occasionally improve reality. Finally, just for kicks, we'll discuss one of Rick's favorite recent docs, The Nomi Song, which explores the exploits of legendary German counter-tenor / pop star Klaus Nomi.

playlist!

iNTRO

I Think We`re Alone Now trailer

I Think We`re Alone Now review

interview with Sean Donnelly

I Think We`re Alone now wrap up

Tommy James & The Shondells - I Think We`re Alone Now

Second Skin trailer

Second Skin review

Klous Nomi - Simple Man

Klous Nomi Bio

Nomi Song trailer

Nomi Song review

Nomi Song sound byte

Klous Nomi - Total Eclipse

wrap up

Nomi Song sound byte

Klous Nomi - Cold Song

Outro

Episode 49 - Bloody Radical part 3

Episode 49 - Bloody Radical part 3
Listen now - (Hour 1) 
Listen now (Hour 2) 

All kinds of exciting things happen to human flesh in our final show on Fantasia's new wave of American horror films. It's harvested in harsh socioeconomic conditions in Darren Lynn Bousman's passion project Repo! The Genetic Opera. It's hung up on hooks and stripped like cattle in the much-anticipated Clive Barker adaptation The Midnight Meat Train. (Those last two were both world premieres, folks.) It's devoured and processed in all kinds of nasty ways in teen zombie comedy Dance of the Dead. Redneck flesh gets an especially grotesque treatment in the exploitation flick Trailer Park of Terror. Finally, it's dispatched through a number of inventive methods in the suicide cult thriller From Within. Even the Aussies aren't immune - their new thriller Dying Breed centers around an isolated camp of forest-dwelling cannibals! Much like tofu, however, all of this goremongering isn't worth much without the right chemistry - do any of these stand up to Ricky and Simon's high standards? Well, at least one of them doesn't. Find out which!

Repo The Genetic Opera trailer!
Playlist
Repo The Genetic Opera music intro
Intro
Repo The Genetic Opera review
Making of Repo The Genetic Opera
Repo The Genetic Opera review
Music from the motion picture - Repo The Genetic Opera
Midnight Meat Train trailer
Midnight Meat Train review
The Smiths - Meat is Murder
From Within sound byte
From Within review
Music from the motion picture From Within
Fantasia 2008 Awards
Dying Breed Trailer
Dying Breed review
The Drones - Words To The Executioner of Alexander Pearce
Dance of The Dead review
The Cramps - Zombie Dance
Trailer Park of Terror trailer
Trailer Park of Terror review
Trailer Park of Terror sound byte
Trailer Park of Terror sound byte
Closing comments
Tom Waits - Downtown Train
The Cramps - Return of The Living Dead 25Title: Outro

Episode 48 - The Killing Joke

Episode 48 - The Killing Joke

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The Dark Knight

It's the year's most anticipated film, so accordingly we've got an extended look at The Dark Knight, Christopher Nolan's latest Bat-opus. We're going to look in-depth at Nolan's work on the series, as well as getting into the nitty-gritty on the film itself, both in spoiler and non-spoiler segments. If you haven't seen it yet (and why not?) come for the first part, then stay and join the cool kids for the spoiler section once you've had the pleasure. Same Bat-time...you get the picture.

Playlist
 
The Dark Knight sound byte 
Batman TV Theme sound byte
History of Batman part 1
Ricky & Simon intro
The Dark Knight trailer
The Dark Knight review
Vote for Harvey Dent TV spot
The Dark Knight review
Vote for Harvey Dent TV spot 
The Dark Knight Review
The Joker sound byte
The Dark Knight review
The Dark Knight sound byte
The Dark Knight review
Christian Bale interview clip
Prince – Batdance
History of Batman part 2
Batman sound byte
Batman Begins review
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman Begins review
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman Begins review
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman Begins review
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman Begins review
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman Begins closing comments
Batman Begins sound byte
Batman TV Theme song
Batman Begins sound byte
Dark Knight review (Spoilers)
Interview with Berge Garabedian AKA JoBlo
Jack Nicholson sound byte
Steve Miller Band – Joker
Jack Nicholson sound byte
Interview with Berge Garabedian AKA JoBlo
Comic book talk with Josh
Jack Nicholson sound byte
Interview with Berge Garabedian AKA JoBlo
History of Batman part 3
The Dark outro

Episode 47 - Tokyo Shock, Japanese Rock! (part 2)

Episode 47 - Tokyo Shock, Japanese Rock part 2

Download it now!

When it comes to madness and mayhem, nobody can deliver it quite like the Japanese, and we've recently been exposed to a series of hyperactive Japanese flicks so action-packed (though not, of course, always actually good) that we've put together a follow-up to our previous Japanese spotlight. This time, we're tackling "Machine Girl," Takashi Miike's spaghetti western throwback "Sukiyaki Western Django," and the much-touted splatterfest "Tokyo Gore Police."

Episode 46 - Bloody Radical part 2

Episode 46 - Bloody Radical part 2

Download it now!
 

U.S. horror has taken a beating oer the last few years, with most of the most prominent genre films coming out of Asia - principally Japan and Korea. At this year's Fantasia, however, several new U.S. films are being touted as part of a new U.S. rennaisance - Jonathan Devine's teen-angst thriller "All the Boys Love Mandy Lane," actor Christopher Denham's directorial debut "Home Movie," and Stuart Gordon's latest work, "Stuck." But do any of them actually deliver the goods?

Naked Lunch intro
All The Boys Love Mandy Lane trailer
All The Boys Love Mandy Lane review
Bobby Vinton - Sealed with A Kiss
All The Boys Love Mandy Lane sound byte
Fantasia add
Home Movie review
The Gogo`s - Our Lips Are Sealed
Movieland add
Stuck trailer
Stuck review
Stuck trailer 2
MGMT - Pieces of what?
Jack Brook's Monster Slayer Trailer
Jack Brook's Monster Slayer review
Outr0

Episode 45 – Fantasia 2008

Episode 45 - Fantasia 2008

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Our coverage on the Fantasia Film Festival continues. In this broadcast we are pleased to be among the first to review several films here in North America. To kick things off is the new film from director Ole Bornedal entitled The Substitute, a stellar teen coming-of-age story and a ripping sci-fi adventure.

To wrap it all up `Rule of Three`, a feature debut from multiple award-winning cult author Eric Shapiro (Days of Allison) along with an interview with the director himself.

  
 
Playlist
Hobo with a shotgun sound byte
Intro
Fantasia review
Hobo with a Shotgun sound byte
MGMT - Time to Pretend
Fantasia add
Hobo with a Shotgun sound byte
The Substitute review
MGMY -Weekend Wars
Movieland add
Rule of Three review -WATCH THE TRAILER HERE !
Interview with Eric Shapiro
MGMT - Electric Feel
Otis review
Making of Otis
MGMT - Kids
Making of Otis
MGMT - The Handshake
Outro
 

Episode 44 - The Spanish Inquisition

Episode 44: The Spanish Inquisition

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Episode 44: The Spanish InquisitionIn a nice bit of synchronicity, Fantasia has offered us a slate of new Spanish fantasy and horror films - specifically, the much-hyped "verité" thriller [rec], silent throwback La Antena, apocalyptic thriller Before the Fall, and the time-travel black comedy Timecrimes. Meanwhile, over in Hollywood, Spanish wizard Guillermo del Toro is finally ready to unleash his latest opus, Hellboy II: The Golden Army. Lucky for you, we were able to catch all of these films over the past week, and we're going to tell you which to seek out and which to ignore, not forgetting to take a quick look back at the first Hellboy.

Movies Reviewed
Hellboy
Hellboy2
Rec
Timecrimes
La Antena
Before The Fall


Episode 43 - Bloody Radical Part 1

Episode 43 - Bloody Radical Part 1

Listen now! Download it now!

Tune in as we begin our month long look into The Fantasia Film Festival. Our first review will focus on what Sic Ric is calling the must see film of the year, "Let The Right One In." This Swedish vampire film is without a doubt, stunning. A vampire film that follows the rules of the vampire mythology while mixing in a rare coming of age story that is both powerful and touching. Dare we say Masterpiece?

Also a look back at last year's festival and a complete break down on what not to miss.

Movies Reviewed
Let The Right One Die
Mulberry Street
The Tripper                              
Hatchet
The Signal
13 Beloved

Playlist

Ricky & Simon Intro
Let The Right One In review
Vampire Weekend - The Kids Don`t Stand A Chance 
Mulberry Street Trailer
Mulberry Street review
Bob Marley - Rat Race
The Tripper trailer
The Tripper review
Movieland add 
Hatchet Trailer
Hatchet review
Quiet Village - Circus of Horror 
The Signal Trailer
The Signal review
Bauhaus - The Man With The X Ray Eyes
13 Beloved review
 

Episode 42 - WallE & Johnny 5

Episode 42 - WallE & Johnny 5

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Playlist
1- Buzz Lightyear and Woody talk WallE
2- Naked Lunch Intro
3- Sic Ric & Simon Intro
4- Wall E Trailer
5- Walle E review
6- Louis Armstrong - Hello Dolly
7- Short Circuit Trailer
8- Short Circuit review
9- Short Circuit review
10- John Bradham interview clip
11- Short Circuit sound byte
12- Daft Punk - Short Circuit

Episode 41 - Crossing Heaven Head On (The Fatih Atkin special)

Episode 41 - Crossing Heaven Head On (The Fatih Atkin special)

Download it now! Listen now!
 

Born in Germany as the son of Turkish parents, the 30-year-old director is a child of globalization: like the musician Manu Chao, he samples and remixes elements from a diversity of cultures, material easily available to his generation for the first time. «We grew up with the video recorder - and my great role models were not from Europe. Neo-Realism or Film Noir, that didn't come until later. In the beginning I was really keen on American cinema: love, violence, action, simply good stories!» And making films enabled him to approach his own roots and arrive at the insight that tradition need not mean just raking in the ashes: «I was lucky, I had the opportunity to work in Turkey and to get to know the country in that way. We German-Turks are like aliens for those over there in Turkey. So we have to keep on going over there and examining our own history. We can learn a lot and then make it into something new.»

Play List
1-Half Time Intro
2-Fadih Atkin bio
3-Edge of Heaven trailer
4-Edge of Heaven review
5-Mercan Dede - AB-I Haya
6-Crossing The Bridge review
7-Ceza - Holocaust
8-Head On review
9-Wrap up
10-Brenna Maccrimmon - Dilala 
11-Outro

Episode 40 - Hollywood blacklists (The Jules Dassin special pt.1)

Episode 40 - Hollywood blacklists

(The Jules Dassin special)

 
 listen now! Download the show!
(scroll down for the play list) 

One of the most defiantly visible survivors of the Hollywood Blacklist was American director Jules Dassin. Following high school in the Bronx and drama school in Europe, Dassin made his stage debut at age 25 with the Yiddish Theatre in New York. In Hollywood, Dassin worked his way up to a directorial spot at MGM's short subjects unit, where he handled a brilliant 20-minute adaptation of Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart (1941). This led to a promotion to features like Nazi Agent (1942), Reunion in France (1942) and The Canterville Ghost (1944). From MGM, Dassin went to work for producer Mark Hellinger at Universal Studios, where he turned out two full-blooded crime classics: Brute Force (1947) and The Naked City (1948). Unfortunately, the late 1940s were difficult times for anyone with even the slightest leftist political leanings. After being identified as a communist by director Ed Dmytryk during a House UnAmerican Activities Committee hearing, Dassin found himself completely shut out by Hollywood. The last 1950s film which Dassin directed for a major studio was 20th Century-Fox's Night and the City, which was shot in London. Then he moved to France, where he helmed one of the most influential "crime caper" movies ever made, Rififi (1954). So successful was this melodrama that it spawned numerous rip-offs (Rififi in Tokyo was one of the most blatant) and parodies, including Dassin's own Topkapi (1964). Operating in Greece by 1959, Dassin directed his second wife Melina Mercouri in Never On Sunday (1960), a robust comedy about a joyous prostitute; Mercouri's performance was superb enough for viewers to forgive Dassin's own lackluster performance as a stuffy American moralist. Permitted back in the U.S.-studio system in the mid-1960s, Dassin directed Uptight (1968), a black-oriented remake of The Informer which proved beyond doubt that Dassin's alleged "communistic" tendencies were just a bit old hat. Not many of Jules Dassin's later, more personal films (notably an indictment of the Greek junta leaders, The Rehearsal [1974]) were seen in America, but the director's reputation, so idiotically maligned in the early 1950s, had been completely restored so far as Hollywood was concerned--even though the man himself chose to shun the U.S. for self-imposed Swiss exile.

  
Playlist
Intro
Persepolis Trailer
Persepolis review
Brigitte Bardot - Làppareil a sous
Jules Dasin Bio
Brute Force Trailer
Brute Force review
Brute Force sound byte
Joe Dassin - Aux Champs Elysses
Brute Force sound byte
Naked City review
Naked City sound byte
Joe Dassin - Salut Les Amoureux
Naked City sound byte
Rififi review
Jules Dassin interview
Rififi sound byte
Jules Dassin interview
Brute Force sound byte
Brigitte Bardot - Moi Je Joue

Episode 39 - The Happening

Episode 39 - The Happening

( M Night Shyamalan special pt. 2)

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The second of out two part special on director M. Night Shyamalan. Will Ricky continue to defend the film maker and his three previous films and more importantly will Simon deliver the havoc he promised last week, and tear them all apart?

What is the real cause of The Happening? Was there a side message commenting on how we as a society have problems in communicating amongst each other?

Tune and get ready to send us some feedback.

WARNING: The following episode may further cause high blood pressure amongst some listeners.

Play List:
Intro
The Village Trailer
The Village review
Making of the ``original score`` to the Village
My Morning Jacket Bio
My Morning Jacket - The Bear
Lady In The Water Trailer
Lady In The Water review
M Night interview clip
The Happening Trailer
The Happening review
My Morning Jacket - Heartbreak man

Episode 38 - Be Kind Rewind! (Director Michel Gondry special)

Episode 38 - Be Kind Rewind!

(Director Michel Gondry special)

Download The Show - Listen Now! 

There are many ways to crack a Rubik's Cube. Michel Gondry did it with his toes. A year ago, the film director posted a short video on YouTube showing this skill.

Things aren't always as they appear in a Gondry film.

Tune into our special on director Michel Gondry. a French Academy Award-winning screenwriter, film, commercial and music video director. He is noted for his inventive visual style and manipulation of mise en scène.

Play List
Intro
Michel Gondry bio
Be Kind Rewind Trailer
Be Kind Rewind review
Be Kind Rewind sound byte
Polyphonic Spree - The Sun
Be Kind Rewind sound byte
Science of Sleep trailer
Science of Sleep review
Polyphonic Spree - Light and Day
Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind review
Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind sound byte
Beck - Everybody's Gotta Learn Sometime
Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind sound byte
Block Party review
Talib Kweli - The Blast
Outro