Blank Check with Griffin & David - A Star Is Born (1976) with Rachel Zegler
Episode Date: January 14, 2024Hello Gorgeous! We’re kicking off our Barbra Streisand series (titled “Podcastl,” naturally) with a look at her version of the classic Hollywood cautionary tale - 1976’s A STAR IS BORN. And wh...o better to join us than our own songbird superstar - the lovely Rachel Zegler! While Babs didn’t technically direct this one, she and her partner Jon Peters (Bradley Cooper in LICORICE PIZZA, duh) exacted supreme creative control over the project - to mixed results. Join us as we trace the beginning of Streisand’s career, go down several rabbit holes of who else was considered for this movie (Elvis, Sonny and Cher), and speak fondly about Mariah Carey’s GLITTER. Because, why not?! This episode is sponsored by: ExpressVPN (ExpressVPN.com/check) Burrow (Burrow.com/check) The Late Show Pod Show Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
Transcript
Discussion (0)
podcast closely now.
Podcast closely now.
Oh, dear.
You got more?
I mean, the song's pretty much those two lyrics.
Yeah.
Well, it's closely now.
I thought it was great.
I mean, because it was the podcast, soft as an easy chair.
That's all right.
A podcast, fresh as the morning air.
I feel very embarrassed doing this in front of you.
Love is said a lot in this song.
You could sub in the word podcast for love.
No, what I was going to do was just,
you can trash your podcast, but you're not going to trash mine.
Okay. I was going to do mine okay i was gonna do that
but all that life that's pretty good yeah yeah i feel like that's the big line that is kind of the
big line in 1976 as a star is born a third out of four films in the storied stars born franchise
sure yeah i guess so franchise whatever i'm to call it a franchise. Okay. Yes.
A-S-I-B-C-U.
The A-S-I-B-C-U.
I want like Pixar theory and...
The Starbirth-C-U.
The Starbirth Cinematic Universe.
I want a Pixar theory and argue that they all take place in the same universe.
In a way.
Like this is a curse that gets passed on.
Well, that's the thing.
Judy Garland exists in the Lady Gaga one
because she sings
somewhere over the rainbow.
Right.
That's true.
That's fascinating.
So, you know,
she was never Esther.
She was Judy.
Yeah.
Right.
I had never seen
this film before.
Oh.
We cover...
You'd never seen this one before.
We cover the Bradley Cooper
movie on this podcast,
Blank Check with Griffin and David.
I'm Griffin.
I'm David.
Podcast about filmography is directed to have massive success early on in their careers
and have given a series of blank checks to make whatever crazy passion projects they
want.
And sometimes those checks clear.
Sometimes they bounce, baby.
We covered Bradley Cooper's A Star is Born because we felt like that was a director's
career being born.
Yes.
Yeah.
A hundred percent.
I think we don't really do as much anymore, but we'd be like, well, let's find more new
release films to put on the schedule.
Yeah.
And now we're like,
less new release films.
Less stuff in general.
Although,
we'll have done Maestro
at this point.
Yes.
Are you excited?
Have you seen it?
I am.
No, I have not seen it,
but my dog is named
after Leonard Bernstein.
Your dog,
who's here in the studio today,
the second ever dog guest
on Blank Check.
Yeah, and he's doing a good job.
He's doing a great job.
And I will say,
I know those kids. I know the Bernstein kids very well. And they're just lovely. guest on blank check yeah and he's doing a good job he's doing a great job and i will say i know
those kids i know the bernstein kids very well and they're just lovely and so seeing all these
videos of them it is funny that we call them kids because they are all they are they're like 60s and
70s children and and maybe grandchildren as well yeah but yeah it is just one of those things I'm particularly in
Communication with Alex Bernstein
And he's the son
The only son
And they're just the most delightful people
It makes me happy to see them
Celebrating
Having fun man
I'm not looking to start a controversy
And I wasn't going to bring it up
OG me controversy I wasn't going to bring it up. Oh, gee. Me, controversy?
I wasn't going to bring it up.
Okay.
It's the last thing I want to do.
All right.
But I do have to ask now.
It looks like your dog is wearing a fake nose.
Your dog, Lenny Bernstein.
He does have a nice big nose.
Right, but Steven Spielberg
was there.
Okay.
And it's not a problem.
That's all I'm asking.
If your buddy Steve signed off
on it, I'm okay with it.
I will say the Bernstein kids,
at least Alex, did sign off on his name being Lenny.
I was like, I just want to make sure you don't think it's weird.
But he is the specific, you know, he's named after Mr. Bernstein.
Yes, yes. Can you imagine if you saw a dog that was wearing a prosthetic nose?
Either version of that.
Either wearing a rubber human nose.
Or a big dog nose.
Or you're like like that snout looks
a little exaggerated
yeah
sometimes I want to
put him in like
those sunglasses
like the big
like chunky glasses
yeah they want
like with the mustache
and everything
my sister's dog
one of the all time
great dog scruffing
women
dearly departed
she
when she was a little girl
she described
she said to me
he's the kind of dog where he'd look smart
if you put glasses on him.
Isn't there, there's this Disney
movie called Meet the Robinsons.
Oh, yeah. Where he's like,
Absolutely. He asked why the dog
is wearing glasses and he says, because his insurance won't pay for
contacts. It's a good ass joke.
Meet the Robinsons is one of many movies
that will come up sometimes in like box office
games on this podcast.
Yeah.
And David says like a movie I will never see.
And I'm like, my friend, you got a one and a half year old.
I'm gonna be honest.
You're getting to meet the Robinsons.
She's two and a half now.
Oh, Jesus.
You're right.
She's my daughter.
Fucking Christ.
She's two and a half years old.
Oh, yeah. She's two and a half.
Yeah.
She's talking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's some really good Tom Selleck jokes in it.
Cool.
Great, great, great movie. The frogs are fun. It's a fun movie. The frogs are fun. Yeah. I'll see it sometime. There's some really good Tom Selleck jokes in it Very cool Great movie
The frogs are fun
The frogs are fun
You'll get to the end of Disney Plus at some point
Yeah
And I have the DVD
And I was at the cinema when it opened
So part of those box office numbers
I was there
You must have been 2007
I was 6 years old
I have yet to see it We just watched Bluey and Ponyo there you must have been okay 2007 right you were six you were six years old okay there you go uh
i have yet to see it uh we just watched bluey and panio over and over and over again that's all we
watched and you watch musical numbers you watch yeah we watched like youtube clips of seven brides
for seven brothers yes exactly and i'm like this the plot of this movie is what you need to pay
attention to but it's russ tamblyn that we're really watching right now let me let me finish
table setting here yes Yes, please.
This is the start of a new miniseries.
That's right.
Lenny's starting to doze off, so just be quiet.
He is.
Don't disturb Lenny.
This is the start.
I'm going to go Alec Barlin.
Go pull Chris Christopherson.
This is the start of a new miniseries.
Do you think that's what Christopherson thinks?
A new miniseries. Do you think that's what Christofferson thinks? A new miniseries is born.
Blade, you need to go kill the vampire. I've never seen a dog with his eyes open my whole life.
I walk into a room, they snooze.
This is a new miniseries on the films of Barbra Streisand.
Amazing.
It sure is.
We have not discussed what the name of this miniseries is.
Oh my gosh. That's a good point.
Wait, you guys haven't or you haven't told anybody
what it is? We haven't discussed. I feel like we had
one conversation. I have my pitch.
The podcast has two faces? Because let's say, our
guests today return to the show. And first
time IRL. First time IRL, thank God.
There's no dang pandemic.
It's definitely over. Well, I was also, I was in London
last time. You were in London. I just never would have
been able to make it.
You were making
Snow White?
I was making a movie.
A movie.
Oh, right,
we can't talk about it.
I don't think I can name it.
You were working on Struggle.
But our guests
say return to the show,
dang ass movie star,
Rachel Zagler.
Hi, everybody.
Now, we are recording this
very far in advance
of when it will come out
because you're a busy movie star.
It's true.
There is currently
two strikes going on. So I'm a not so busy busy movie star. It's true. There is currently two strikes going on.
So I'm a not so busy,
busy movie star.
Right, so we said,
let's get this recorded
while we can.
Who knows when
the Hollywood factory
starts up again.
But it means
because we're recording
this further in advance,
we have not really discussed
the name of the miniseries.
Sure.
Now, Barbra Streisand,
the person we're talking about,
Angel,
only directed three proper movies.
We're including this, A Star is Born, as the first in the series because she was kind of the main authorial verse in this film.
She had final cut.
Producer, I mean, she was everything.
It is one of the only cases where final cut was granted to someone who was not the director.
Sure.
And we're never...
Look, I like Frank Pearson as a director, actually.
You like him as a director?
I do.
I like him as a writer.
Obviously, I like him as a writer as well.
But he directed a lot of good TV movies in the 90s and 2000s.
But yeah, we're never doing a Frank Pearson series.
No.
And he infamously, when this movie came out, like a couple weeks before it came out,
wrote an article
for New York Magazine
just trashing the movie
and talking about
what a nightmare
he had working with her
and what a control freak
she was.
And she kind of was,
she went nuclear on him,
unsurprisingly.
Good for her.
But his article
was sort of like,
they wouldn't let me direct.
And she,
her response was like,
because you didn't know
what the fuck you were doing.
You can't direct yourself
out of a paper bag.
And even now still,
when this movie gets re-released
or the rep screening,
she is the one
who goes and talks about it.
And she talks about it
very much
with the voice
of someone who directed it.
Which I think she
kind of largely did.
Well, it's very telling
that she and Kristofferson
are still
very good friends.
She considers him
like one of the best people
she's ever shared screen with.
And I think in 2019,
they like,
they sang Evergreen together.
Aww.
Oh, look, here they are.
Still, like, on stage.
Yeah.
It's like a real thing
that they're still
buddy-buddy.
And I think that's really telling.
Yes.
In the grand scheme of something
is that if your,
if your co-lead
is still,
then yeah.
Yeah. I have a feeling
they probably see eye to eye
about the Frank Pearson situation.
This was the first
John Peters production
so it's her coming in
with a lot more power
because they have this
united front
the two of them together.
I hear you
but what's the name
of the miniseries?
So here's the point.
I'm going to say
I think it can't be called
a pod as cast
because she didn't
technically direct it.
It's also a little broad.
Right.
So then we're down to three.
Okay.
You can't do anything with Yentl.
Well.
What?
Well.
Of course you can.
Can I pitch it?
All right.
Go ahead.
Podcastle.
I like it.
I'm all in on that.
Honestly, I love that.
Yes.
I'm totally into that.
Because the other two options are.
Podbabs.
Podbabs. Podbabs. pod babs pod bra strice cast we used to do
barb pod cast
that used to be our structure
Rachel the first like year that's what we
would do we'd be like we'll fit into the name of the
person because we what was the Fosse one
Fosse was called
pod that jazz cast
yeah pod that jazz cast which was really good but we used to be Fosse was called Pod That Jazz Cast yeah Pod That Jazz Cast
yeah
that's good
which was really good
but we used to be like
Pod Night Shama Cast
yeah
the Wachowski Podcast
yeah
and then we gave up on it
the Podchowski Casters
yeah
then we gave up on that
okay so yeah
no our only other options
are the
Prince of
or the
the Podcast of Tides
yeah something like that
or the Podcast Has Two Faces Podcastle's good Podcastle I say do it Prince of... The Podcast of Tides? Yeah, something like that. Or the podcast has two faces.
Podcastle's good.
Podcastle.
I say do it.
No, I'm into it.
Here's the only other argument.
No.
Don't talk me out of it.
You talk me into it.
The podcast has two friends.
Yeah, but then we're kind of far
from whatever we were doing, right?
Sure.
People call us the two friends, Rachel.
Well, yeah, I was going to say.
It's a competitive advantage.
We're the only friends
who host a podcast together.
That's true. And I like the insinuation that we are not part of Rachel. Well, yeah, I was going to say. It's a competitive advantage. We're the only friends who host a podcast together. That's true.
And I like the insinuation that we are not part of friendship at all.
Well, Ben's a producer.
You're a guest.
You're a guest.
You're both friends.
Let's talk about titles.
Podcastal.
We're the two friends.
We're the two best friends that anyone can have.
Exactly.
Honestly, Lenny and I are now the two new friends.
Okay, so now I'm the one who gets completely egged out.
Rachel, you're a dear friend. And thank you for coming on the show. I'm very happy two new friends. Okay, so now I'm the one who gets completely egged up. Rachel, you're a dear friend.
And thank you for coming on the show.
I'm very happy to be here.
I'm so happy to have you here.
Are you comfortable telling me the thing you texted me the other day?
What did I text you the other day?
About a connection you forgot you had.
Oh, yes.
To the subject.
Oh, yes.
And I brought a picture of it.
Did I send it to you?
Or did I just text you about it?
You texted me about it.
You didn't send it to me.
So when I was out in Atlanta
and I was shooting a movie in 2021.
Will not be named.
The movie will not be named.
Not that anybody saw it anyways.
Solidarity or Strike?
Solidarity, baby.
Hopefully it's ended by the time this episode comes out.
I know, right?
Jesus.
That would be great.
I was shooting a movie in atlanta
and uh i got a box in the mail that was from it was you know it said it was from barbara
streisand it just said it it was just like yeah it said like streisand something on it and i was
like okay one two three barbara lane yeah exactly and i was like oh this is interesting she had come
out with an album.
It came with like a little notebook that had her face on it and like the actual album and a hoodie that had like very Andy Warhol-esque pictures of her face.
So at this point, opening the box, you just think maybe like I'm on a list of like an influencer PR list.
It's probably like whatever label she's with.
Sure.
Has a list of people because I would get boxes from, you know, my friend. Is it this kind of cover? It she's with. Sure. Has a list of people.
Because I would get boxes from, you know, my friend.
Is it this kind of cover?
It is that cover.
Yeah.
Release me too.
Yes. And there was this little note card.
A little note card, David.
In the notebook.
Okay.
And it said R dash.
And then in like a gold embossed said with compliments from B like in handwriting.
Very classy to just do initials.
Oh, I and I there was a video that I took of me being like, there's no way there's no way.
And then it was like on the Today Show because I tweeted it out.
People were like, watch Rachel Zegler lose her goddamn mind over Barbara Johnson but this this is it it says with compliments look at that do you have it like
framed it is in yeah it is framed in my uh my childhood home in Jersey right now because I'm
in the middle of moving but uh yeah this is the craziest fucking thing that's ever happened to me
genuinely and I've had some crazy shit happen to me. But this is like, I don't even know how she knows who I, genuinely.
Right, that's the question.
How do you even get on this list, whatever it is?
What happened?
The note is in and of itself an omission of like, I'm aware.
Yeah.
It's her saying, I'm noticing, I'm watching.
I will say, the only thing I could think of was that there was like a video of me during the pandemic that went semi-viral.
Oh, right, oh right viral before the
movie had come out the movie my first movie had never come out it had not come out yet it had
gotten pushed because of the pandemic so this really is crazy it was really wild and the only
thing i could think of was i had a video of me singing my man from funny girl sure on twitter
yeah that didn't do crazy it didn't do my stars born numbers but it was that's the one where you're
showing like yelling to the back of the room that's shallow that's shallow okay that's stars That didn't do crazy. It didn't do my A Star Is Born numbers, but it was... Is that the one where you're showing,
like yelling to the back of the room?
That's Shallow.
That's Shallow. That's A Star Is Born, yeah.
That's A Star Is Born.
I did like my man sitting in my bathroom
wearing like leggings and a t-shirt
and I was just singing in my bathroom,
which I always was doing,
but that was the only thing...
I feel like I saw you do that like a month ago.
I'm still doing it.
Yeah, yeah.
The strike has been long.
Yeah.
So it's just
It was so crazy
And I remember going over to my friend's houses
That night and nobody cared as much as I did
I was like guys
You don't understand
It's Barbara
She's one of the more famous people of the 20th century
She's still with us obviously
But it's like as a musical theater kid
Yeah exactly She's the top of the more famous people. But it's like, as a musical theater kid.
Yeah, exactly.
That's nuts.
She's the top of the pyramid.
I didn't want to stereotype, right?
But I texted you and I was just like, FYI, we're doing Barbra Streisand.
I feel like you might be interested.
I think I was.
Jumped on it.
Right.
We were in the room when you texted her and you replied in like five seconds.
Yes.
Done.
That's just how I replied to Griffin. But she's like, she's particularly important for you.
Absolutely.
And I would say to everyone who grew up the way I did, she was very important.
And she was, I mean, and that's why it was really nice to, I've obviously seen this movie in particular so many times.
Interesting.
But I hadn't revisited it in a while.
And watching it being like i can't
believe this woman knows who i am was crazy that is also lenny was not a fan of the movie i will
say lenny would bark at the whenever she sang oh okay i was gonna say and i was gonna say
plausible yeah maybe not i have a video of it that I will show you guys of him just being
absolutely angry
at Barbra Streisand
being on screen.
No, son of mine.
Let me tell you.
Maybe he was angry
because he wanted
Kristofferson back.
He was like,
I'm tired.
He's a guy's guy.
He has curly hair.
True.
And Barbra has curly hair.
True.
In this movie,
maybe he was just like,
yeah, agitated.
Like, who's this?
Yeah.
You know?
This curly hair friend.
But also he wants
to walk closer down there. Like, who's this? You know? This curly-haired friend. But also, he wants to walk closer.
Gosh.
Okay.
Podcastle.
A miniseries on the films of Barbra Streisand
that starts out with this film.
I'd say the experience of making this film
is the thing that pushes her to say,
I need to start directing my own stuff.
Which is just not something that someone like her did back then.
That's why she's such a
classic blank check candidate, obviously,
and just a major auteur, even though she didn't
direct a lot of movies.
And she's, you know, much like
Warren Beatty, she's one of those people where she
continues to threaten to make another film.
We would love to see it.
The word threaten is funny.
Well, Warren finally did make Rules Don't Apply,
a film to which no rules applied.
Yeah.
Barbara, every, like, five years,
will be like,
I'm actually pretty close to doing this.
And it'll be similar where it's like,
I'm doing readings of this.
I've been talking to this actor about doing stuff.
I actually want to film this in six months.
Guys, maybe the note that she sent me
was just her saying she's really interested
in me being the star of her next film.
I mean, do you remember like 10 years ago she got the rights to Gypsy?
Yeah.
And was like, I'm going to make it soon.
Which she would have to.
She would be good.
Which I guess Stephen did the same thing with.
Yeah.
With a certain movie.
With a different movie.
Yes.
And with a lot of his movies.
He sits on stuff. 10 years different movie. Yes. And with a lot of his movies. Yeah. He sits on stuff.
Ten years is soon. Yeah.
So we have to get the
biggest thing out of the way. We have to.
Okay. Barbra Streisand has
my birthday. We have the same birthday. What?
She's my celebrity birthday.
She's kind of the only one. And when is this birthday?
April 24th. Oh my god, a Taurus.
I am a Taurus. Me too.
Oh really? May 3rd, baby.
Hello.
Hello.
Yes, best star sign.
Here we go.
Not a lot of celebrities have my birthday.
Barbara's really the only big one I have.
Jaimon Honsu.
That's good.
That was good.
I just Googled.
The wizard himself.
Jaimon's the best.
The wizard himself.
We love Jaimon.
Wait a second.
Cedric the entertainer
What the fuck
You talking shit
About your own birthday
You got a great birthday
Oh this one's good
I didn't know this one
Kelly Clarkson
Oh my gosh
Legend
Yeah
Waiting for her Broadway debut
I can
My birthday is
Benicio Del Toro
Nice
Jeff Daniels
Nice
Seal
Nice
Victoria Justice
Okay
Who you were once in a movie with.
I was.
Whoa.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't actually know who has the best thing.
He was on a no kiss list.
Oh my God.
Right?
That's the movie you were in with.
No, the joke is that I'm not on the list because they're like, who even cares about him?
Oh, you don't even make the no kiss list.
No, she kisses me and that turns out to be a prank.
May 3rd.
That is so evil.
It was.
May 3rd?
Yeah.
Who's May 3rd?
Looks like you've got Bobby Cannavale.
Oh, I'm'm in Frankie Valli
She's a Jersey legend
Christina Hendricks
That's cool
James Brown that's cool
Bing Crosby
Amy Ryan
I love Amy Ryan
Tiffany Amber Thiessen
I don't like that I didn't come up when I googled
Yeah you should be coming up
What the hell is this junk list
I need everybody listening to go boost me on famous birthdays
Oh but you're number one on the website famous birthdays
Am I actually
Yes look look at you there you are
Oh my god everybody did boost me
You're way ahead of You know YouTube star
Danny Aaron
This is weird
I'm looking this up
Ben
Producer Ben
Shares a birthday with mud
Yeah
Who knew?
When is that birthday?
Crime
Crime?
Oh my god
Yeah what else?
The sound of motorcycle tires
Shot lifting
Yeah
Oh my god
Okay No way Oh my god Do y'all know where Barbara Streisand was Sound of motorcycle tires. Shock lifting? Yeah. Oh, my God.
Okay.
No way. Oh, my God.
Do y'all know where
Barbara Streisand was born?
Brooklyn.
Brooklyn, New York.
She's a Brooklyn girl.
No way.
She went to...
She's from East Flatbush.
Erasmus High School,
where my grandmother went.
No way.
My grandmother always points out
that, of course,
Barbara's much younger than her,
which is
big growth
on my grandmother's part.
Nice.
Did she not always do that?
No.
She had false documents
for a very long time.
You're lying.
And so was she.
Her passport was full of lies.
Oh my God.
The highest level of document.
But she now finally admits
whenever I say,
well, of course,
you and Barbara
high schooled again.
But I was there years before her.
Erasmus, of course,
no longer exists.
The building still exists.
Oh my goodness.
But yeah. She's a Brooklyn my goodness She's a Brooklyn gal
She's a Brooklyn gal from East Flatbush
And then I think when she was quite young
Her parents left Brooklyn
And her father died
On like a hike
He like fell on a hike
And hit his head and died
When she was like one year old
This is why I stay in New York City.
That's why you don't hike.
I don't go on no hikes.
So she, then they have to move back to Brooklyn.
They live in Williamsburg.
Hey now.
Pretty cool.
Okay, I just really, I'm sorry.
I just need to say this.
The building that I lived in in Crown Heights,
it was the formerly known as the Brooklyn Jewish Hospital.
That is the hospital that Barbra Streisand was born.
Also the hospital my grandmother and great-aunt were born in.
And it was built on your birthday.
And it was built on my damn birthday.
My grandmother.
Ben's building.
Your birthday.
My grandma.
Rachel's no card.
My best friend.
Yes.
My, yeah, we recorded at least one blank check
At the Brooklyn Jewish Hospital
A few remember
Remember when your girlfriend would just
Sit in the bed and watch us
Because there was nowhere to go
It was a studio
You gotta do what you gotta do
So they moved to Williamsburg
They moved back to Williamsburg
Apparently she was sort of in
Barbara was in poor health
When she was a kid
Underweight, a lot of ear infections, bronchitis
She was sent to a health camp
In upstate New York
When she was a kid
And then
That sounds like the most depressing thing
It seems like it was traumatic
I'm going to health camp
Where they probably just like scrub you
I don't know what they did
And when she returned from health camp. Where they probably just like scrub you or I don't know what they did. And when she returned from health camp, her mother, Diana, had met her next husband, Louis Kind.
Okay.
This is from the dossier.
So this is JJ's judgment of her.
The financially unsound son of a tailor.
Okay.
Who veered into real estate, selling used cars, gambling and other vices.
So Barbara has a bunch of half
siblings, you know,
from this second marriage
and doesn't like him.
He's bad. He eventually abandons the family
when she's 14 years old. Was she the only child of
her parents? Yes. Okay.
So, you know, just try and think of, like,
young Jewish girl in Brooklyn,
kind of a shitty life, right?
Dreaming of musicals.
Like, it's like,
it's very storybook in a way.
Like, she loves, like,
singing in the rain, right?
She just wants to be in movies.
Same.
Yes.
You know, or...
In a way, we are all Barbara.
Yeah.
Well, Barbara's just got that thing
where it's like,
I didn't know any of this information,
right?
But everything you're saying
just fits into my conception of her,
where it's just like, she is one of those people you can point to
in the history of popular entertainment,
where you're just like, inevitable.
Yeah.
Destined.
And yet, you know, she's quote unquote, like, not conventionally attractive, right?
Like, you know, like, people make fun of her.
She's got a big nose.
But that's so much of it, where it was just like, on paper,
you know,
this is not the thing
that the studios go for.
She doesn't fit the particular mode.
But just like undeniable,
touched with greatness,
talent,
and just this sense of like purpose
and clarity of what she was working towards.
Went to Erasmus High,
was in the choral club,
never did the school plays.
Her justification,
quote,
why go out for an amateurish
high school production
when you can do the real thing?
This is what I'm saying.
Like, she knew.
That's a real quote
from her biography.
My senior quote.
Yeah.
You did high school plays.
Except I was in all four years
of my high school musicals.
Wait, what were your
four high school musicals?
I was in,
I was Belle in Beauty and the Beast.
Hell yeah.
I was Ariel in The Little Mermaid.
Jesus.
I was Dorothy Brock
in 42nd Street. Oh, that's a show. And then I was Fiona in Shrek theermaid I was Dorothy Brock in 42nd Street
and then I was Fiona in Shrek the Musical
famously
that made it onto Graham Norton
God I was so embarrassed
no that's what you mean
that's what Graham Norton was there for
they just showed the picture of me with the big fucking
green nose on in front of Kenneth Branagh
no Rachel
I felt a little great
you've never been on the show
the pointing is very good
there's some like British esteemed legend
of theater
Kenneth fucking Branagh
that's pretty cool
and then Vicky McClure who's like
I don't know how to say that she's like the
equivalent of something in the states besides like
Ellen Pompeo because she's like big equivalent of something in the States besides like Ellen Pompeo. Because she's like,
big TV star.
She's on every TV show.
Line of duty.
She's on that line of duty.
She always plays like a cop or a doctor or a doctor cop.
You're nicked,
mate.
Yeah.
You're nicked.
And I'm going to take out your appendix.
Officer doctor.
Doc cop,
babes.
Yeah.
That's a DJ Catrona idea.
I've got a drinking problem.
No one can steal that.
Cop babes.
DJ Catrona wants doc cop to be his thing. That's a DJ Catrona idea. I've got a drinking problem. No one can steal that. Cop babes? DJ Catrona wants
Doc Cop to be his
thing.
That seems like,
yeah, slam dunk.
Networks are
desperate right now.
Come on.
Syndication, baby.
Here we come.
Because we always joke
about like unknown
British TV shows
where it's like a
blank who moonlights
as a detective on
the side.
To make it a cop
who moonlights as a
doctor or vice versa
is really funny.
I love that.
Now, if somebody was
moonlighting as something
and a star is born
in the 70s,
who would be doing what?
Someone's moonlighting.
Okay, so...
Is Esther moonlighting as,
you know, like...
What, a detective?
Yeah, I don't know.
Maybe she's actually
just trying to get
to the bottom of
how does Chris Christopherson
get all this coke? I think Chris Christopherson... Right. How do to get To the bottom of how does Chris Christopherson Get all this coke
How do you pay for this house man
Chris Christopherson is moonlighting as the Lorax
I think
Save the trees
I speak for the truffler trees
Okay look
I just need to tell you that
Get out of my fucking face Onceler
Who is the Onceler of A Star is Born?
It's the mean agent.
Paul Mazurski.
Yeah, Paul Mazurski.
David?
Yep.
The economy.
No!
I know, that's...
It's actually more robust than the press would have you think.
But you know what?
What?
It's hard talking about the economy in this economy.
It ain't cheap talking about the economy.
Hard doing an ad read in this economy? In this economy. It ain't cheap talking about the economy. Or doing an ad read
in this economy?
In this economy.
Look,
I used to spend
over $100 a month
on streaming services.
Yeah.
Same bro.
Big same.
Disney Plus.
All of them.
Prime.
You name it.
But since I started
using ExpressVPN,
I've been able to cut back
and save so much
every month.
You know why?
Why?
Well,
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like Netflix
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because if you switch
to another country,
they got a completely
different library.
Basically hidden behind a door.
There are whole other rooms
you never knew about.
Check out that Italian Netflix, okay?
It's got nice ciabatta.
Yeah.
Right?
Mozzarella.
We did the legal movie draft
for the big picture.
We sure did.
I was having a hard time
finding all the Grishams.
And I went, let me check ExpressVPN.
They're all on Disney Plus in the UK.
There you go.
It was one-stop shopping.
Ran through them.
Because you just have to use the ExpressVPN app to change your online location.
That's all I got.
You've got 90 countries to choose from.
Yeah.
Every time you run out of stuff to watch, switch to another country, unlock some new shows.
It's incredibly simple.
I will say my mother and my brother both live in Europe now.
I didn't want to sign up for all these new fangled European streaming services while they have these old American subscriptions.
Express VPN.
Gave them the promo code.
They do it.
It changed their lives.
On top of that, you can even use it to get discounts.
Some services cost less
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Maybe you buy
Netflix from Argentina,
costs a fraction of the price.
We love our
Argentinian Netflix.
We love it.
The beef.
It's so cheap there.
The olives.
And I don't mean
Netflix's beef,
but maybe I do.
Yeah.
Possibly.
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It's my link too.
It's a shared link.
And joint custody. Okay's my link too. It's a shared link.
Joint custody.
Okay.
Okay, buddy.
Okay, so when Barbara's a teen, she goes
on Broadway, she sees the Diary of Anne Frank.
Yes. This is when she's like,
I am going to be an actress.
This is a quote from her.
It was a thrilling experience sitting in the last row of the balcony.
The ticket was $2.85.
$2.85.
God.
You couldn't sit very close
because when you sit,
but you know,
you couldn't afford it.
But when you sit far away
from the whole stage,
you know,
you don't see the reality
of the actor's pores.
You don't see the makeup.
You get swept along
with the illusion.
Her mother decides
that this idea is terrible.
She'll be humiliated
and it'll be a total fiasco.
But Barbara starts working at a Chinese restaurant,
starts saving up money,
starts going to the Cherry Lane Theater,
meets Anita Miller and Alan Miller,
who worked under Lee Strasberg,
starts auditioning for stuff,
moves into their house when she's 16 years old.
No way.
This is kind of cool.
And she's like a cool beatnik.
This is like late 50s, I imagine, right?
Mm-hmm.
And does a little play in 1958
called Seawood opposite Joan Rivers.
Wow.
No one goes to see it.
And then does a couple other shows
and decides to do a talent show
at a club called The Lion.
Okay.
And she writes her name on the edition sheet as B-A-R-B-R-A,
because there were too many Barbaras.
Of course, Barbara Streisand spells her name wrong.
Barbara.
She dropped the A.
Right.
Dropped the middle A.
Yeah, it's cleaner.
As legend has it, she blows the competition out of the water,
kicks off her career as a nightclub singer,
and then she's discovered
by Peter Daniels,
her first sort of arranger.
And she does an 11-week
engagement at the Bon Soir.
I don't know what that is.
Did a double bill
with Phyllis Diller,
and then does a tour
and does an appearance
on The Tonight Show
with Jack Parr.
Streisand.
This is like, kind of like...
Must have been an unbelievable evening of entertainment.
In the young Streisand, too.
Yeah, and Phyllis Diller was probably very young at that point,
like 90, 95.
It was early in her career.
What's the show she meets Ellie Gould on?
I Can Get It For You Wholesale.
Okay, right.
The Arthur Lawrencez directed play.
Yes.
The greatest Jewish couple of all time.
Like the true Jewish relationship goals.
This could be us, but you're playing.
Yes.
Yeah.
You've seen the photo of them in the pool, right?
Yeah.
It's just the greatest picture anyone's ever taken.
Yeah.
Then, I mean, they did it for Barbie promo.
Yeah. They recreated that without saying they were recreating taken. Yeah, then, I mean, they did it for Barbie promo. Yeah.
They recreated that
without saying
they were recreating that.
Yeah.
But those who know, know.
Yeah.
It's the hottest photo
of Elliot Gould ever taken.
Number two is obviously
Elliot Gould and Grover
on the cover of TV Cut.
Exactly.
Yes.
They know exactly
what you're talking about.
In 1963,
she releases an album
called The Barbra Streisand Album.
Uh-huh.
It is a huge hit.
Uh, and then she becomes pretty much the most successful female singer in, like, in America until, like, Mariah Carey, basically.
Uh-huh.
Right?
You know, it's like, that's it.
Yeah.
Really, like, all of her early fame, obviously, is in, is in singing, but she desperately wants to act more and all that.
And she gets Funny Girl, you know, when is that?
Like 60...
68 is when it's released.
68 is the movie.
The movie, yeah.
Right.
The show is 64.
Yeah, I was going to say, she did it earlier.
How long did she do the show for?
Hmm?
How long was she in the show on Broadway?
At least a year, probably.
Back then, you had to do a year.
Yeah. Now you do a year. Yeah.
Now you do six months.
I don't know about you guys.
I liked Funny Girl.
I thought it was good.
What, like the movie?
Yeah.
Ben, over the course of doing this podcast,
has secretly been growing a huge Burbastrae Sand fandom.
I love that.
He watched What's Up, Doc?
Oh, great movie.
Several years ago,
and that was the movie where he went i believe your
letterbox review was oh shit maybe old movies are good that's true i love that and then quietly
since then ben's just been filling in the strice and filmography and getting babs pill i'm starting
to get it i love funny girl too yeah i got funny girl as a Christmas present when I was a kid. The movie or the record?
No, I got the DVD with Omar
Sharif and I was just
I was shocked at how long
that is a long movie
and it makes sense that they
cut so much of it for
the stage. Like my man is not in the
stage show, which is a sin
by the way. She would sometimes sing
at the end of the night
which i think which leah michelle just did the other that's all and uh she looks like she did
it for about a year year and a half then she reprised the role on the west end uh in 1966
but then she got pregnant and had to drop out. Some other people who played that role, though,
Lainey Kazan,
Gene Stapleton,
Kay Medford.
So, you know,
so that's like,
you know, that's the big,
and that show is like,
we could do a whole fucking thing on that show.
Like, Bob Fosse was involved briefly.
Sidney Lumet was involved.
Wow.
Like, Carol Burnett.
Like, all kinds of crazy things
happened with that show.
But obviously, that's what, she wins the Tony, right? Yes. And she wins the Oscar. like Carol Burnett like all kinds of crazy things happened with that show but obviously
that's what
she wins the Tony
right?
Yes
and she wins the Oscar
No
she loses the Tony
I knew this was
Oh
Yes
I have to look this up
Alright
Sorry
No she
She shared the Oscar
didn't she?
She did
With Catherine Hepburn
For Line and Winter?
For Line and Winter
But Hepburn doesn't show up
so she just accepts it. She accepts it.
But you know she's bad.
Oh, yeah. You know she's fucking
bad. Well, they also only gave her the bottom half.
Oh, my gosh.
That's not true. She got her own statue. She lost
to Carol Channing for Hello, Dolly.
Right. And then she fucking snipes
Channing later. Yes.
That's just a nice looking movie you got there.
Be a shame if someone else played the part. Oh, my God. The Julie Andrews later. Yes. Yes. That's just a nice looking movie you got there. Be a shame if someone else
played the part.
Oh my God.
The Julie Andrews effect.
Yep.
Yes.
A hundred percent.
But yeah,
I guess,
I mean,
it's also like that thing
like the Tonys,
they do it just like
the Oscars do it
where they're like,
well,
you're young,
you'll be back.
Like,
we got to give it
to Carol Channing.
Versus Funny Girl,
she's in.
She's never really,
you know,
given another shot at a Tony.
Funny Girl's the limited
pantheon of
acting Oscars
for first performance
ever.
And it happens
so much more
rarely
with the lead categories.
The couple of times
it's happened,
it's more often supporting.
Yes.
For lead,
it's like her and Marlee Matlin
are maybe the only.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I can't.
I can't summon that
for you right now. OK, but the point is she wins an Oscar for her first movie ever I don't know. I don't know. I can't sum that up for you right now.
Okay, but the point is
she wins an Oscar
for her first movie ever.
Crazy.
Yes, they do the movie,
she wins the Oscar.
She does Ty,
which is bizarre.
Immediately a huge star.
Yes.
Her star has gotten even bigger.
So then she does
Hello, Dolly.
Yeah.
Which is kind of
an infamous flop.
Kind of a flop.
What do you think?
Have you seen Hello, Dolly?
Which having revisited...
Yeah, I've seen Hello, Dolly.
Having revisited it,
I don't really understand
why it was such,
I don't know.
I guess.
It's a little like slow
and kind of bloated.
For sure,
but we could make that argument
for so many movie musicals
of that era.
I find it very charming.
I think it's super charming as well.
It's just,
it's lush.
It's literally the music man.
It's got the same charm as the music man
and the same
color palette
and everything like that
I imagine that they
thought it was a
surefire hit
on their hands
I think it's just
that that kind of movie
was going out of style
at that time
that's what I was gonna say
it's like the shift
from 68 to 69
does Dolly come out
69 or 70
Dolly is 69
yeah
it's just already
the like wheels
were falling off
the old Hollywood musical.
Yeah.
Such a shame.
She makes a movie called
On a Clear Day
You Can See Forever
which I've never seen.
A Chantilly Manali movie.
Which is another adaptation
of a musical.
On set she has an affair
with Pierre Trudeau
the Prime Minister of Canada.
Okay.
Which is a big scandal.
Then she makes The Ow and the pussycat.
Split up at that point?
When did she split up with Gould?
Was it a two-way affair?
They divorced in 1971.
Okay.
So, I don't know.
It's around there.
And she has a child at this point.
Yes.
Yes.
Because she gets pregnant during the West End Run.
During the West End Run, a funny girl.
And that is...
Is that her only kid?
How many kids does she have?
I think, am I wrong?
I think that's her only kid.
Many dogs.
Many cloned dogs.
But yeah.
Many, many cloned dogs.
Yes.
God, she has dated some
incredible people.
Andre Agassi.
Really?
Clint Eastwood.
I mean, that's...
James Newton Howard.
Ooh.
That's such a list.
Peter Jennings.
Yeah.
Liam Neeson. Liam Neeson.
Liam Neeson.
Robocop.
Peter Weller.
Oh, oh, oh.
Yeah.
I thought they were listing Robocop as a character.
She did Peter Weller?
Yeah.
That's wild.
All right.
She's in The Owl and the Pussycat, the movie with George Segal.
Yeah.
That movie's pretty fun.
Yeah.
That movie was a hit.
Yeah.
She's in What's Up, Doc?
What's Up, Doc?
One of the best movies ever made. Huge, great movie.
Funny. She's so funny.
But this is what's interesting is like
after Hello Dolly, right?
She does, and on A Clear Day
You Can See Forever, which also did not
have as big a response.
She just kind of goes like, I guess I need to pivot.
Right? Like I was
a movie musical star
yeah but if that's going out of fashion i'm going into comedies and dramas maybe i still have my
place to sing but like i'll shift have any of you seen up the sandbox it is one of the greatest
posters look at this weird poster so this she makes in 1972 you's tied to a giant baby bottle
yeah she's tied to a giant baby bottle
it's about a mom
who's bored in New York City
and starts having crazy fantasies
such as Fidel Castro
sweeping her off her feet
or like
you know blowing up the Statue of Liberty
shit like that
never seen it, it's an Irving Kirshner movie,
but what's important about it is it's the first
movie produced by First Artists,
which is going to produce
A Star is Born as well,
which is this sort
of like, these actors would
take lesser fees who were involved with it
to get more creative control.
Paul Newman and Steve McQueen
and Dustin Hoff and other actors at the time are using first artists as well.
I just think what's interesting about her is that there are many interesting things about her.
But a thing I think is interesting about her is that she's sort of a young star in the old Hollywood mold.
Hitting right as the old Hollywood studio system is breaking down and the old genres are breaking down,
and she, like, adapts immediately.
Like, she just, like, jumps over to the 70s
and is totally carried over as, like, new Hollywood star.
She's going to work with the stars of the moment.
She's not trying to, like, hold on to the traditions
of the things she grew up with, you know?
That's true.
She just...
She evolves as she needs to.
She evolves, and it's like,
I'm now going to represent the modern woman. But she still does, like, big, you know,'s true she just she evolves she evolves and it's like I'm now going to represent the modern woman
but she still does like big
you know epic movies
the way we were obviously is her next
giant hit with
Redford sort of a
I don't know like a TV classic when I was a kid
I've never seen it always on yeah
I mean it's kind of dumb but it kind of
I'm going to use this series to fill
in some Barbara gaps.
Then she did a couple of movies that don't really work.
Something called For Pete's Sake, which is sort of a What's Up Doc type thing, like a comedy.
That's how she meets John Peters, because she wanted a specific hairstyle for the movie.
And he is a hairdresser.
He was, of course, notoriously.
Her hairdresser.
And then she does Funny Lady.
Right.
The sequel to Funny Girl that is less good.
The long-awaited sequel to Funny Girl.
Yes.
And John Peters says to her, and this is from her biography,
you need to do hotter and sexier and younger roles because you have a great ass.
Yes.
And she takes this to heart and makes a star as born.
Right.
Aren't they dating at this point?
I don't know.
The lines are a little blurry
on their relationship
and when they were officially dating
and when they weren't
because I think oftentimes
there were other people.
And he was married to Leslie Ann Warren.
Yes.
John Peters is one of the most
like canonically insane people
to ever work in Hollywood.
He's amazing.
He's terrible.
You can read all about him.
Look, I am such a fiend for his interviews.
He's one of the most fascinating interview subjects,
the way he speaks.
You just go like,
and you read stories about him,
the way people talk about the way he behaved and talk.
And you go like,
I cannot imagine this existing in the real world.
And Bradley Cooper's performance in La Grish Pizza,
which I wax poetic about many times on this podcast,
is astounding because
you're just like
within 10 minutes
this guy has actually
conjured up what it
must have felt like
to talk to this guy
yes in his peak
yeah have you
interacted with john
peters no i just
he's out there in
the wilderness right
from the from what
you're talking about
with the interviews
and everything that
when bradley came
on screen in
licorice pizza i knew
exactly what was about to happen.
It's astonishing. I rewatched all of his
scenes. It was so wonderful. He's so good in that
movie. Rudely ignored by
the Oscars. He should have won.
But yes,
he still today
in modern interviews will basically
phrase things the exact same way.
And it's like a bragging point.
He'll say like, I was the first person to point the
barber and go, you got a great ass. You need to be hot
in movies now. You're like, oh, thank you.
No. Thanks.
Let's get you back to bed. It's pretty crass,
but he did
to some degree,
I think, help transition a new era
of her career in her
deciding to take ownership of things, right?
To be fair, that advice from the right person.
Yes.
Is life changing.
Absolutely.
Out of context,
it sounds like we should all embrace our hotness.
But yes,
we should all embrace our great asses.
And I think so much of her persona.
I mean,
this is all the weird,
the kind of like the ego of Barbra Streisand.
Right.
What is so fascinating about her as a movie star is like her ego and her insecurity at the same time.
That is constantly balancing itself out.
And all this sort of legend about how controlling she is and how like protective she is of her image.
But also her things are all about her sort of like not feeling good enough or whatever.
And most of her movies up until Star is Born are playing on the like, I don't know, I'm just some goofy girl from Brooklyn.
Yeah.
You know, I'm trying to make people give me respect to like one degree or another.
And Star is Born is obviously like it starts with that point.
But so much of it is about her cocooning out of that.
Right.
Into fully owning the kind of stardom that she obviously had.
But was always in conversation with this sort of
sheepish, well, I don't look like the other
girls, I'm too loud, I'm too this.
I'm an ugly duckling type,
but obviously
great, beautiful talent within
all of that. It was oddly the reality for every
woman that ended up playing
that part in the version. Janet Gaynor,
Judy Garland, they called Judy Garland
a hunchback, tried to change her face. They actually put that in the movie. Janet Gaynor, Judy Garland. They called Judy Garland a hunchback, tried to change her face.
They actually put that in the movie.
It's wild that all four movies
star people who were already megastars
at that point
and yet needed
some transition, transformation
into the next stage of their career.
Like, it was all of them.
It's not like they had hit the end.
No.
But all of them were like,
I need to find the next thing. I need to fully
enter a new phase. And that's why the Judy
Garland one is so particularly heartbreaking
because she should have won for it.
And she didn't get to ride out the success.
Rachel, you watched all the stars are
born. Let's talk about it now. Let's talk about
a star is born. We're at a star is born.
The first two before we did our
Bradley Cooper episode years ago.
Right.
And then I'd never seen this one.
You'd never seen this one.
I'd never seen this one, watched this one.
It's so funny because so much of Bradley's is taken from this one.
It is a direct comic.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is wild.
I'm astonished people don't talk about it more.
There are so many things.
Obviously, not just the first two are in Hollywood.
They are movie stars.
It's for winning an Oscar, whatever.
just the first two are in hollywood they are movie stars it's for winning an oscar whatever but like the characterization of jackson main is so similar to this guy the the transmuting it into
the music world yeah but even like it has the tracing of the nose it basically has the i just
want to take another look at you right with him saying That's in all of them. Yeah. The way it manifests in this
is so many elements.
You just feel like Bradley Cooper
watched this movie and was like,
someone could make this like 20% better.
20%.
Exactly.
Because it's just,
it gives her a bit more autonomy.
Yeah.
And a lot of things are a bit more earned
than in the 70s one.
I feel.
This movie is shaggy.
Yeah. To the extreme.
I know its reputation is
really crappy
and I enjoyed it a lot
more than I thought I would. Maybe
just because I went in with such
guarded expectations.
This movie feels like someone
like people were high when they made this
and edited this.
This is a movie that was executive produced by cocaine. movie feels like someone like people were high when they made this and they 100% were.
This is a movie that was executive produced by
cocaine. Yeah. But then there were
some co-exec producers from like
grass and pills and acid
and whatever. You know, everything.
Gary Busey.
There's that opening credit that says a drugs production.
In association with
Warner Brothers. In association with boo Brothers in association with
booze
yeah
because
like
the Cooper movie
obviously
it's very like
booze soaked
but in this very authentic way
where you're like
you're like with a guy
who's like you know
got five minutes left
right
he's like really like
you know in it
it's obviously the thing
Bradley Cooper's been very open
about his struggles with sobriety
and his battle to get there
and everything
that's the big value that movie has it's like it's being made by someone who's playing the character who's been
through hell yeah and is really working through his experience the character is given a lot more
of yes an effort where he's actually trying to get better yeah because that character is always
doomed but he's the only one who feels like a real guy in a way i like all the guys and
all the stars i feel like the judy garland one he's really he's amazing he goes to a you know
he goes to a facility it's like with with this one chris christopherson's just kind of like hey
and then we'll get married and we'll disappear into the desert and i'll forget about my drug
problem let's build a house let's build a house right here. Let's build a house right here. And also we're going to have sex right here in the desert.
I don't know what shirts are.
I'm allergic to them.
They just fly right off me.
Kind of incredible.
He's amazing.
He is.
He's so good.
I don't know if it's a good performance.
It's very natural.
It's like an incredible energy performance.
The characterization is.
I love him.
I love him too.
I'm pretty much always in the bag for him.
If he shows up in any fucking thing, I'm like, great.
The first note I took when I was watching it was
Chris Christopherson is daddying all over the place.
Yes.
That's the note I took.
Exactly.
It's also so funny because like, I mean,
Have you seen Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore?
Yes.
Like he's amazing in that.
Like he's such a natural actor.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
He can play like one of three types,
but like he's really good at it.
Yeah. No, I agree. He can play like one of three types, but like he's really good at it. Yeah.
No, I agree.
He can play Blade's assistant.
Yes.
I found this out
just like reading a little bit of his history.
I had no idea.
Yeah.
Here's some steaks.
Hilarious.
Sorry.
You were saying about Chris.
No, I think,
you know,
and correct me if I'm wrong in the dossier,
but my understanding of the cultural reputation of this movie was always like, you know and correct me if I'm wrong in the dossier but my understanding of the cultural reputation
of this movie
was always like
you know
Star is Born
they've remade the movie
the second one
was even better
right
Barbara at the time
her star is huge
she's sort of like
in the press
you know
it feels like they make
a Star is Born
every 20 years
it's one of those stories
that needs to get told
every 20 years
as the industry changes
as the reference points
change whatever we're overdue she decides this is her big passion project she's teamed up stories that needs to get told every 20 years as the industry changes, as the reference points change, whatever.
We're overdue. She decides this is her big
passion project. She's teamed up with John
Peters now. They're going to produce this thing and handpick
the writer and the director and everything.
And they go through these different versions of the leading
men that we'll talk about.
And they land on Kristofferson. And people
are like, why the fuck are you casting
Kris Kristofferson, the singer,
to be... That's like a dramatic
part. That guy can't carry this weight.
And the movie comes out and he's
the thing that people were the most
positive about.
I mean, obviously, the soundtrack's humongous,
right? And the film's a really big hit.
It's the second biggest movie of the year. Yeah, but you read the
reviews and people are like, Christopherson's the good
thing. Because he's new.
I mean,bara was
sort of he's a shock he's exactly you're like dang there's a lot more here than i i would have
guessed yeah um but the characterization is very thin it does not go deeper and the character
comes oh for both absolutely the character comes off as very dumb like whereas as you said it's
like really trying and you believe like this guy has
like he had something
yeah he had something
he has baggage
he's got a past
he's got a reason
for filling the way
he's got Sam Elliot
it's like
there's just a lot more
where I
you know
this movie lacks
a Sam Elliot
that's the thing
when I was first watching it
I really thought
they were amping up
Gary Busey
to be the Sam Elliot
type character
and it just didn't happen
no
and it kind of left something to be desired look Elliott type character and it just didn't happen. No. And it kind of left
something to be desired. Look, he's in the air.
He's helping to contribute to the atmosphere
of the film. Which I have to say,
the calmest I've ever seen Gary Busey in a movie.
He was calmer back then. He's oddly shocking.
It's wild. I think I wrote... He's like a
steady presence. I said,
Gary Busey is to A Star is Born what Joe
Pesci was to The Irishman. Unhinged
playing hinged. Yeah.
Yeah.
Great.
And that's my analogy for the whole film.
He's still done.
I think he's still this sort of like interesting up and coming actor.
Like he'd been in Thunderball and Lightfoot.
He gets the Oscar nomination like a couple of years after this.
Right.
Like Buddy Holly is after this.
And it's like, yeah.
Oh, well, look out. Very Busey. He Buddy Holly is after this. And it's like, yeah, oh,
well,
look out.
Very Busey.
He was supposed
to do Nashville.
Okay,
sure.
Was he supposed
to be the Keith Carradine?
I think he was.
Wasn't he supposed
to do that?
Because he writes
a couple of the songs
that end up
in the film.
Oh.
Not I'm Easy
because Carradine
obviously wrote that.
But there are
one or two songs
since you've gone,
which is the song
The Trio Sings
is written by Gary Busey
because he was in
the rehearsal process
for that.
That's crazy.
But yeah,
he was in this sort of like
the guy's a good musician.
He's a good songwriter.
I had no idea.
He's sort of like
he's tall
and he's interesting looking.
Like, you know,
he's a presence.
But like put in both worlds
and then Buddy Holly
is the one where it's like,
well, now we've totally crystallized
lightning in a bottle.
This guy's...
I've seen that movie.
You've never seen it, right?
No, no, we should watch it.
Yeah, let's just watch it.
Yeah, let's have a friend date and watch it.
Okay, so...
All right, so, no, Stars Born.
Okay, so this is the 1937 Stars Born
with Janet Gaynor, which is good.
David O. Sells' production.
There's the 54 one with Garland,
which is amazing. Amazing. as you say so you're just
sort of like oh god it's so like mixed up with reality too like you know the whole time you
cannot stop thinking i mean i couldn't stop thinking knowing everything that i know about
judy garland it's so heartbreaking to watch and then to just think like because i think what the
reality of that was everybody thought she was going to win yes there were cameras in her hospital room after she gave birth is that not a true story yes no i
thought it is yes exactly yeah and then she lost to grace kelly for doing something so similar
like grace kelly just did something a little bit different she did a d glam yeah it's one of those
like truly tragic like it feels like a moment out of a Star is Born. Yeah. Where it's like she's there in a hospital room.
Yeah, with her freshly born child.
Right, holding a baby, getting ready to grab an Oscar, you know.
And she loses.
Yeah, and then there's just that moment where it's like the camera crew all just like disassembling and just being like, well, I'll smell you later.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're just immediately trashed, you know.
Congrats on the child.
Like the highest high, the lowest low.
They immediately just make you feel like
we have no interest
in you anymore
well yeah
and I remember
I think it was
George Cukor
talked about it
where he said that
you know
they were doing that
he was directing her
in this scene
where she talks about
how she
she can't help
but love her husband
and wants to support him
through it
and it's
and she feels like
she's failed him too
and it was just so true
to her life
at that point in time
it's devastating to watch
because she was having
such a problem and struggling with her addiction.
It's an incredible performance.
It's why she's so good in it.
Do you feel part of the controversy with the missing footage on that movie?
Oh, my God.
I love the version of it with just the stills and the sound.
Yes.
Have you watched it like that?
Yes.
That's how I had seen it.
And there was like, because it was one of those movies where there was a roadshow cut and then they cut it down like 40 minutes.
Yeah.
And then Warner Brothers
had been trying to restore it forever
and they got close,
but they were still
a little bit missing.
Yeah.
So in its current incarnation,
you watch it with like
still photos over audio.
Yeah.
A couple parts.
It's kind of amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then it turns out,
I'm going to get the specifics
of this wrong,
but there was like a guy
who's like a kind of
archivist,
film preservationist
who like took on
like finding elements
of films that the studios
had abandoned
and holding onto them himself.
Yeah.
And there was some movie,
maybe it was
Streetcar Named Desire,
A Road Without a Cause.
Some other film
that Warner Brothers had
where he gave them
the elements
to help their restoration
and they didn't credit him properly.
And he's the one who
has the missing footage from Star is
Born. And he basically refuses
to give it to them. Out of spite.
Until Warner Brothers, like,
kind of steal it. Kind of good for him.
No, let's go get it. Isn't that wild?
Well, yeah. Maybe he'll show it to us.
He'll show it to us. Yeah, we just gave him credit.
Nicely. Yeah. We think you're great.
We love you. Whatever your name is we'll start
crediting you in every episode yeah yeah
all right so john gregory
dunn and joan didion are driving down
the road i have to i'm so sorry i have
to say this is how i found out joan didion wrote scripts
had no idea this is she had her period
classic like
you're you're a celebrated
you know writer raconteur move to hollywood
baby writer some scripts yeah right um and Like, you're a celebrated writer-reconteur, moved to Hollywood, baby,
writing some scripts.
Is this her Barton thing?
Yeah.
Right.
And she said,
sorry, John Gregory Dunn,
who's no longer with us,
says, well, neither of them are with us anymore,
who says,
I can pinpoint the exact moment it was conceived.
It was at one o'clock in the afternoon,
July 1973.
I turned to my wife
while passing the Aloha Tower
in downtown Honolulu
on our way to the airport
and I said 16 words
I would later regret. James Taylor and Carly
Simon in a rock and roll version of A Star is Born.
I mean, it's a good pitch. Sounds pretty good.
It's a good pitch. They just were
sort of like, neither of them had seen
the original two movies.
But they were just like a rock and roll
version of that. Just cultural osmosis.
Even though they don't know what that is.
Exactly.
They write a script.
They take it to Warner's.
They think maybe Warren Beatty or Mike Nichols can direct this.
Warner's wants Peter Bogdanovich, who is very hot stuff.
Mark Rydell is eventually hired.
Sure.
Carly Simon and James Taylor passed.
Interesting.
Mike and Bianca Jagger
passed. Sonny and Cher passed.
So they went to real couples.
Liza Minnelli, Diana Ross, Elvis
Presley, we'll talk about in a second, obviously,
but he was a big, you know.
Christopherson. Wait, I'm sorry, are you telling me I could have
had a Sonny and Cher?
Kind of fun to think about. It would have been unbelievable.
Cher would have been amazing.
Holy shit. Now, I don't know how Sonny would have been.
No clue.
Hey, hey, hey.
Sonny would have been fine.
You think he would have sold the...
Look closely now.
Mick and Bianca Jagger is kind of fun to think about.
Yeah.
It is.
But I don't know if Bianca can, like, shoulder, you know, the star weight.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
Rydell gets fired.
Jerry Schatzberg comes on board.
Then it makes it to Streisand.
Peters claims, I discovered this project.
I found it for Barbara.
I convinced her to do it.
The character in my movie is a guy who's fighting all the time and hitting all the time and he can't relate.
It's a macho guy, which is very much like me.
He's talking about, you know, he's crazy.
He is.
I mean, look,
I think there's a lot of Peters.
Dreysand takes it over with Peters.
They bring it to first artist,
and now it's like their thing.
Peters loves to take credit
for every single element
of every movie
that he had any involvement with.
But this is the one
where I'm like,
he's a pretty strong
authorial voice
in this thing.
Yeah.
You know?
Like, you feel a lot of Peters
in this. For better and for thing. You know? Like, you feel a lot of Peters in this.
For better and for worse.
You know, Joan and John leave at this point.
You know, they're off.
Peter and Streisand take over.
Peters and Streisand take over.
And they're basically like,
yes, this will be our first creative project,
you know, where we're in charge.
She says... And I'm going to be sexy now. Right. Yeah. But also, as Barbara says, first creative project you know where we're in charge she says
and I'm going to be sexy now right
but also as Barbara says like there's a
change of women's roles every 20 years I want
to make this character personal
I think this film will have a lot to say about the changing
roles of men and women
women are no longer afraid to confront
male society in the wedding
scene I'll be wearing a man's suit I think that
says a lot you know
that's why there should be a 90
star is born there should I know
it should be canonically in every 20 years
should be and who would have done it though
do you have I Whitney
this is the question the question is did
bodyguard slide in
yeah did it make because it like
probably should have been Costner Mariah
Carey could have done it though
Costner and Whitney would have been perfect
But that's what glitter is
Glitter literally is
It literally is
And I have to say
I really like glitter
Can you come back on the
Patreon and we'll do
Hey Vondie Curtis Hall is a good director
Vondie Curtis Hall and I have worked together Reallyondie Curtis Hall is a good director Vondie Curtis Hall and I have worked together
really
really
yeah we did like
readings of the
Notebook musical together
wow
yeah
and it was so crazy
was he acting in it
or directing
he was acting in it
so he's directed
playing the Garner part
playing the
yeah
he's an amazing
he's an amazing actor
he is
I love him as an actor
but he directed Gridlocked
which I've always maintained
is a really good movie
the Tupac Tim Roth movie I think you mean Glitter he he directed Gridlocked, which I've always maintained is a really good movie. The Tupac, Tim Roth movie.
I think you mean Glitter.
He also directed Glitter.
Glitter.
Which I have never seen.
No!
Stop.
So I would happily
check out Glitter.
Glitter?
But when I tell you
that Glitter is quite literally
Mariah Carey as Star is Born,
in every sense of the word,
it is.
I do think, like,
Costner and Houston are who it probably should have been if we're looking at cultural power of the word it is. I do think like Costner and Houston
are who it probably should have been
if we're looking at
cultural power of the 90s.
And when they passed,
it would have been Mariah Carey.
Well, that's,
I think there's some other movies
in the 90s and early 2000s
like Glitter
that are like someone being like,
can I kind of make my Star is Born
without doing Star is Born?
Yeah.
They avoided the real thing.
Which I get.
Yes.
Because as somebody who's done the remake, prequel, sequel train,
it's a lot of fucking pressure
and people are really mean.
There's a lot on your shoulders.
People are mean.
Yeah.
People have a certain idea
of how things are supposed to go.
Unfortunately, Glitter came out
like right after 9-11
and there was nothing else
for anybody to make fun of,
so they just made fun of Glitter.
Glitter was a moment
of national healing for the country.
They really were.
But I have to say, havingited glitter which this isn't this
podcast is not about maybe we're gonna maybe it should be episode eventually yeah i have to say
it's she has a very strong performance in it and i would have loved to stars born with mariah carey
she's a good actor she really is great like a batman movie she's great in a precious i'm trying
to think she's incredible impression i'm trying to think what else she's even in like a Batman movie She's great in Precious She's incredible in Precious I'm trying to think what else she's even in
Wait it wasn't a cameo she had in Precious
No she's got a real ass role
She had a cameo in another Oscar movie though
Wasn't it like
What was her cameo
She's in The Butler
Maybe it was The Butler
Cause she works with Lee Daniels
You guys had a harmonic we did
there's a you're right
she's in pop star not never stop never stopping
I mean yeah should have won Oscars
anytime yeah she parodies herself she's funny
she's I
she's good I like her
Bonnie Curtis Hall's other movies that movie waist deep
with Tyrese and Megan Good and I like
Tyrese and Megan Good I've never seen it
more like Meganrese and Megan Good. I've never seen it. More like
Megan Great. Truly. Megan Best.
Hey, you're right. And I just
rewatched all the Saw movies and Megan Good is in
five? Really? Yeah.
She's in one of them.
David. Yes.
I co-host a podcast.
I don't know if you are aware of it.
You actually,
you are the other host on. Yeah, don't know what to say or to expect. All you need to know is the name aware of this. Blank Check, Griffin and David. You actually, you are the other host on.
Yeah, don't know what to say or to expect.
All you need to know is the name of the show is Blank Check.
People think it must be real cushy being a podcast host.
Sure.
Get to watch movies and talk about them.
Oh, what a nice existence you got.
But?
They're not considering how much I worry.
About?
Everything.
Well, you do.
Are my takes hot enough?
Are they too hot? Uh-huh.
Am I entering the discourse?
Am I leaving out? I forget to mention
some important piece of context.
And? Did I not consider that
one movie I dislike was another
person's favorite movie and that was rude
of them to hear me say that. And?
One thing I never have to worry about when I host
is whether my guests will find
their sleeping accommodations up to scratch.
Oh, interesting.
Why? Well, I'm realizing now that this copy
is about hosting people at your
home. Uh-huh. Like hosting guests.
Something you never do. Right.
And I just read this as if they were obviously asking
me to talk about being a host of a podcast.
I'm just realizing this in real time
and we're not taking this over.
This is the ad.
100%.
You're talking about Burrow's new shift sleeper sofa.
Exactly.
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That's a nice surface.
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I've got a burrow. Oh, you do?
I do. I don't have the sleeper
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I do have the nomad sofa plus
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The best thing about burrow, I live in New York City.
It's hard to get couches through doors and upstairs and so on and so good. The best thing about Borough, I live in New York City. It's hard to get couches
through doors and upstairs
and so on and so forth. The Borough
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it in your house. It's easy to get in.
It's easy to get out. I had a Borough at my old apartment.
I miss it, actually.
Go get it. Well, maybe.
But I'll tell you, here's another thing I like. I know this
isn't the one they specifically bought
a couple garbage bags to talk about.
You could bring it over one piece at a time.
You could. It's easy to assemble. It's easy
to disassemble. I recently moved and I said
to the movers, I said, this couch comes apart.
He's like, oh, believe me, I'm very
familiar with burrows. They are great for moving.
You want movers to like you? Yes. Buy some
burrows. Here's the other thing. You hear that
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oh it must be junky
it must be junky
no
you could fool anyone
you could
anyone but a mover
the thing I was gonna say
my burrow
I had in my old apartment
a feature I really like
even though they didn't
put this in the copy
they put like a charging cable
yeah
you know what I'm saying
there's like USB ports
in between the cushions
yeah
it's pretty clever
so that you can plug your couch
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they got a lot of stuff like that.
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Now, I want to restate, I myself, as a podcast host,
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Yeah.
But this ad is about making sure
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Okay there, buddy.
Okay, so a star is born.
Star is born.
No, it's totally
What about like an indie 90s star like Bjork
You know
Courtney Love
Do Bjork, Lars von Trier
Skarsgård
Yeah
I'm too fucked up
I can't get these pants on
I have to be bottomless For another scene fucked up. I can't get these pants on.
I have to be bottomless for another scene.
But the whole thing
with this movie is Frank Pearson's one of
the best screenwriters in Hollywood.
They're struggling to find
a director. Sidney Pollack was almost
going to do it. They'd obviously worked together
on The Way We Were.
And they go to Frank Pearson and they're like,
can we get you to do a rewrite on this?
And Pearson so badly wants
to kickstart his directing career that
he's like, I will rewrite the script
if you let me direct. He was the 14th
rewriter. Yes.
So they brought in a ton of other writers.
And they were like, just bring it home, Frank. They're so
desperate that they agree to give him the
director chair. Did you also know that she wanted Robert Altman to direct at one point?
Would have been wild.
He was making Nationals, a very different movie.
She wanted Christofferson.
Barbara wanted Christofferson for the lead role.
John Peters wanted Mick Jagger probably because he thinks Mick Jagger is cool.
So Alice Doesn't Live Here has already happened at this point no no this is this his first movie this is like because alice is 74
and oh no wait maybe it is right yeah so yeah yeah so he's done alice he's done like pat garrett
and okay he's done that as well okay yeah so he's acted yeah um and obviously they got their big
reaches to elvis which is such a cool idea i mean mean, it just wouldn't. Did you know this?
Elvis Presley.
Well,
I assumed.
Not Elvis Costello,
although I'd watch that too. I would also watch that.
Elvis Presley.
What about Sharon Elvis Costello?
What about Sharon Elvis Presley?
Wait a second.
Yeah.
No,
the Elvis of it,
like him having that Judy Garland weight to him.
Would it be?
Like the thematic way exactly now he
hadn't done a movie in a couple years apparently tom parker asked well he'd done a movie called
change of habit and yeah 69 yeah yeah uh he's on tour he's making tons of money so tom parker is
apparently like you know well i'll only do it for one million dollars or whatever his other thing by
all accounts was that in the movie the guy's
obviously washed up right right and he's like i don't want you to position yourself yeah yeah
in that way i'm making money hand over fist which i'm then uh piling directly into debt
converting into debt yeah uh but i you on doing your residency at Vegas. Yeah. People might be making jokes about you being sweaty or puffy or whatever, but you're the biggest act.
I don't want a movie out there that's billboarding you as drunk, circling the drain.
And it's interesting because you wonder what it could have done to change the trajectory.
There's the scene in the Baz Luhrmann movie that I find very heartbreaking
where he's talking to Priscilla
and he's like, I think I got more to
give. Like, I can do this
movie and I can show people the things I've never
gotten to do. And it's
an imagined scene, you know,
simplified dramatic scene. Right. But you
just have to imagine that was his feeling at
the time. And you do feel like he would
have brought a lot
to it probably would have crushed would have been entirely different movie incredibly interesting
movie yes if it had even been made yes barbara does learn to play guitar for the film and uh
works on the melody that becomes evergreen which wins her her second oscar for original song comes
one of the best song songs of the 70s She was handed that
Oscar by Neil Diamond
For some reason
And he was also
Someone had been bandied
About for the part at some point
Makes sense
He's in the other ill-advised
Remake jazz singer in which he does blackface
No one ever talks about it
Oh, gee, I wonder why Should I cut that out? That which he does blackface no one ever talks about it oh i wonder why
uh cut that out that neil diamond did blackface in uh uh the jazz singer cut it out of the jazz
singer yeah rip a copy of the jazz singer we can go find that guy who's doing archive work and see
if he can keep it in the episode come on true but cut it out of the fucking movie also Laurence Olivier is wearing
12 fake noses
in that film
yes she is
that's an insane performance
yes
look
the highlight of production is
they have a 55,000
person concert
at the Sun Devil Stadium
in Arizona
it is astounding
and Streisand is singing
and everyone's going crazy
I was gonna say
is it
was it a
concert
like I always wonder
with scenes like that especially now that I've made movies you, was it a concert? I always wonder with scenes like that,
especially now that I've made movies,
you wonder, is it a concert?
And then they were like,
this is also going to be a filming day?
Or did they say, show up filming,
Streisand's going to sing?
I think it's more the latter.
Like, Cooper, Star is Born, I think they mostly...
They're running on stage.
They used Gaga concerts for one of the scenes.
And they'd go to like music festivals or whatever.
And what they were mostly doing was with Willie Nelson's son.
What's his name?
Trying for the Real is the name of the band.
You know, like they would be doing shows.
Promise of the Real.
And then, right.
Bradley Cooper would run on stage for a bit and go like, you know,
Black and red, red, white.
And they'd be like, whoo!
It's that.
You get like five minutes.
Some of their friends with.
And they're like, can we hijack your audience for 10 minutes and film a performance? It's like the idol. like five minutes. Someone they're friends with and they're like, can we hijack your audience
for 10 minutes
and film a performance?
Oh my God, it's like The Idol.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very realistic show, right?
Very realistic.
That's what it's like.
Ripped from the headlines.
That's exactly what it's like.
But that sequence,
because at first
you're getting mostly shots
focusing on the stage.
Yeah.
They'll cut out to the audience
and I'm like,
maybe this is like stock footage.
Maybe they went and got this B-roll at some real concert. Yeah, maybe, yeah. It's a second unit. And then we're just close up on the stage. Yeah. They'll cut out to the audience and I'm like, maybe this is like stock footage. Maybe they went and got this B-roll
at some real concert.
Yeah, maybe, yeah.
It's a second unit.
And then we're just close up
on the performance.
And then there are moments
where the camera like moves
from the stage to the crowd.
Yeah.
And you just,
viewed through a modern lens,
cannot imagine
having that many people on camera.
In both versions.
They just never do that
for real anymore.
It's wild, yeah.
Yeah.
In both versions of,
like the 70s and the, you know, the Bradley Cooper version.
There are some wild shots with a real crowd.
Right.
And it's like, it's rules.
I love the bit in this version of this movie, this rise in version with, where it kind of turns into a pseudo documentary at one point to kind of document her meteoric rise into stardom.
I love that.
Like, it cuts oddly seamlessly,
but it's also so out of place.
But I subscribe.
Yeah.
I think it's great.
I do too.
Do you want me to tell you what Barbara Streisand told the crowd
when they started filming that day?
Oh no.
Yes, I do.
We're going to do rock and roll today.
And we're going to be in a movie.
In our movie, we're real.
We fight, scream, yell.
We talk dirty.
We smoke grass.
So listen, what we're going to do now is meet my co-star, Chris Christopherson.
And when he comes on, I know you'll love him anyway, but you have to love him even more,
you know, so we won't have any problems.
In the lingo of our movie, I say, all you motherfuckers have a great time.
Imagine Barbra Streisand yelling at that at you while you're on grass.
I love it.
So can we talk about the thing now?
Yeah, please.
What's the thing?
Is Barbra Streisand ever, for a moment, convincing as a rock star in this film?
I think this is like the crux of any conversation around this movie, right?
Which is like, I think she is good in it.
Sure.
Anytime she is singing.
I think she's such an arresting performer.
It is undeniable.
She's not really like bad.
No.
And that's like, you read Ebert's review from the time.
He gives us two out of four, right?
And he's like,
she never once is convincing
in this role as they position her.
It feels like a misframing of who she is
and how she reads on camera.
And yet, anytime she's singing,
you are reminded that she is,
his term he uses is undeniably
one of the great elemental movie stars.
One of the best people to ever be on screen.
And there is that thing where it's
like, anytime the movie needs to sell,
she's singing and people cannot deny
what she's doing. It works
other than the
framing of what type
of star she is. And it feels
odd because it's like 10 degrees
off of, I have no doubt that she would have a meteoric Right. And it feels odd because it's like 10 degrees off of,
I have no doubt
that she would have
a meteoric success.
But it feels odd
the kind of star
they're trying to
pretend she is
versus Chris Christopherson
who is obviously just
really this guy.
Right.
What do you think,
It's interesting
because I feel like
when I was watching it,
I didn't even put
her in the rock star box when I was watching it. was i was just kind of like oh she's a famous
singer sure i didn't go like oh right she's a rock star because i mean it's a good point
it's like when we meet her she's in like a smoky club right in her band the oreos the oreos
jesus christ yeah i was like you couldn't do that now she's the cream filling
i really just could not believe that and then that and that's the kind of music she kind of
goes off to sing but then she just gets like these very 70s right ballads nightclub like and much
more more in line with who barbara streisand was a as a recording artist at that moment yeah for
sure yes so i guess i guess, I guess I agree.
I mean, I do agree.
You can't tell
what kind of star she is.
Just the fact that
she's a really good singer
and she's singing
for many, many people
and getting very famous.
But that attitude
of how she's like
prepping the crowd.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right?
Feels like the thing
she was doing of like,
you know,
and it's part of this
John Peter's like,
I want you to be like sexy.
I want you to be cool.
None of this like sheepish, you know, like Wilting Willow kind of stuff, you know, and it's part of this John Peter's like, I want you to be like sexy. I want you to be cool. None of this like sheepish,
you know, like wilting willow
kind of stuff, whatever.
She's not a hard edge performer
in that way.
No, no.
And I think the Cooper movie
has a better framing of Gaga
of like,
this is what she'd like
to be singing.
This is sort of the pop mold
she's getting put into
because that's what you need to do in this industry.
But you understand underlying
what her dream would be as a performer.
Yeah.
And the only, and like,
even in the script to screen of that movie in particular,
the star isn't born until the very end
where she goes back to that type of singing,
that lyrical ballad singing and not,
why did you do that? You know?
And Evergreen is like such a classical
ballad. Exactly. And it's weird
that it's in a movie that's like, and this is the
fucking pills and weed rock star version.
Right. And the industry's gonna ruin you.
Yeah. She doesn't get really affected
by the industry at all in that movie.
Well, she doesn't sing about her genes.
And Alec Baldwin introduces her on SNL. Oh, well, no i'm yeah i'm sorry no in this no the industry definitely
affects gaga yeah yeah in this movie i don't really have a sense of her really struggling at
all no she's just like i'm going on tour right she was incredibly stable the whole film because
you're like yeah you're barbara streisand which is the problem with this movie you're like yeah
you're you've been doing this for 20 years, girl.
You're great.
Like, I'm not worried about Barbra Streisand.
And it's so funny because I had the same thought I had
when we were doing our cabaret episode,
where I was like,
Liza Minnelli would never be trapped in this nightclub.
Right.
Which is obviously the...
Right.
This is the point.
But I think that was like something I wrote down as an O.
I was like, none of these women
in every version of A Star is Born
would ever be waiting
for some dude.
No.
To come discover them.
And this is exactly what Barbara did with her life.
But here's the thing.
Like as much as this is the movie that makes her realize I should be
directing my own films.
Right.
Which is a positive,
a net positive takeaway from this experience.
I do think this is the movie where you're like,
it could have benefited from her having a really good director
who could have pushed her to break her habits as an actress a little bit.
Because what would have been really shocking
is to see a certain vulnerability that she had never put on screen before.
For how much Streisand would be
sort of like low status,
who me,
the ugly duckling thing we're talking about.
There's the sort of like raw,
uncomfortable vulnerability
of Liza and Cabaret
that's so striking where you're like,
there's something a little desperate here.
Yeah.
The longing,
the sort of like,
you know,
whatever it is.
Yeah.
It would have been astounding to see
Streisand let a little
bit of that out in this.
I know.
And I think she's too
poised to do it.
And the only time you
ever really see
beyond that curtain
is like in every
version of the movie,
the conversation with
the manager.
Yes.
Being like,
but I still love him
and he's my problem
and I love him.
Yeah.
Got that one line reading
that I think is the
most affecting part of the entire film where she goes like, when he's my problem and I love him. Got that one line reading that I think is the most affecting part
of the entire film
where she goes like,
when he's sleeping,
he's so beautiful.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just all the hurt and pains
like gone from his face.
You know?
And it's like,
it's the best single line,
I think,
across these four
versions of this story
at conveying
why she's still with him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, that's a good call.
Because
the other ones, it's more,
well, the Mason-Garland romance
is maybe the weirdest.
Like, they are the most ill-matched.
Although Mason's really good.
Gaga and Cooper, you're just like,
yeah, they have like
some kind of natural
sexual chemistry.
They sell the magnetism more.
I do think
Christopherson and Streisand
sell being deeply in love.
Yeah.
Because they're both crazy.
God bless them.
They're crazy.
And, you know,
Streisand is just so exciting to see in a movie.
Yeah.
Basically always.
Yeah.
That even though I feel like she's kind of lost
in most of this movie,
I do think she's kind of lost in this movie this movie, I do think she's kind of lost
in this movie.
I agree.
Like,
I don't really,
like,
if she's on screen,
I'm not,
I don't,
maybe lost is the wrong word
because I'm still,
like,
noticing her.
I'm still,
like,
so invested in what she's doing.
She's working through,
it's an awkward transitional stage
for her
because there's even,
like,
the early courtship stuff,
it feels like she's playing it
very,
like, Fanny Bryce. Yeah. Like, why don't you come up to mom and make me breakfast? You know, feels like she's playing it very like Fanny Bryce
yeah like why don't you come up to mom make me breakfast
you know like everything's a little like
with her in a way
that's fascinating that's like out of tone
with the movie out of tone with Christopherson
yeah that's it that's the thing I felt the entire
film is just stakes out the window
I don't care yeah right
and it is a lot of hanging out yeah
like a lot of hanging out. Yeah. Like a lot of hanging out.
Yeah.
In just vibes.
2.30.
Yeah.
It's a long film.
Did you folks watch the special edition or the regular edition?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think I just watched whatever.
I watched whatever they gave me.
So I bought this on iTunes.
And I saw there was a special edition listed.
Yeah.
And I went like, what the fuck is this? What's so special
about it? And then I dug into it
in 2019
before... After.
Yes. You know what? It tied to the release
of the new one. I think it was 2018. It wasn't even... That was
semi-coincidental. She did
a new special for Netflix.
And as part of that
she sold like
six of her things to Netflix.
Netflix had a whole Barbara section
that now is gone.
Of course.
Only the one special she made for Netflix is up there.
I forget which one that is,
but like all of her old TV specials were up there,
a couple of her concert specials,
and she sold them Star Is Born,
but she recut it just for Netflix.
Okay.
And was like,
there are a couple of decisions I made that have been bugging me for the last 40 years.
And I just went back in and I fixed them.
Okay.
And I think it's really only two major changes.
But both of them are, I would argue, really positive.
Okay.
One of them is they include a scene earlier where she plays Evergreen for him on the piano.
That makes sense to get that song in earlier.
Yes.
Where he's like, do you play?
And she's like, yeah.
And she's just playing it.
And he goes like, what's that?
And she's like, it's like a symphony I'm working on, but I never have words to it.
So it's the parking lot.
It is.
It's fascinating because it is that exact scene.
Yeah.
Which is like a crucial scene.
She's playing it, but she doesn't have any lyrics.
And she's just sort of like humming along and playing on the piano.
And then he's like, I can come up with something.
And he starts improvising Evergreen.
I think I did see that scene, so I must have watched this version.
Yeah.
Yeah, that does ring a bell.
It does seem.
It's a good scene and it sells like their artistic collaboration, which I think is big for later her wanting so badly him to be on tour and all of that. Right. And then the other difference is the final number as theatrically released was one
seven minute unbroken close up shot for the whole thing. Right. And what's the final song she does?
What's the last thing now? Right. She did, I think, a more plaintive ballad type version of that.
Yeah. More of a Barbara version.
Right.
And in the special edition, it cuts out to a wider shot and she does more of a rock and roll performance of it that I think is the only point in the movie in which she sells being a rock star, quote unquote.
Right.
But she said she cut the evergreen piano scene because she was only worried about pacing at the time.
Okay.
The movie had to be shorter.
And she said that was like a force through the trees.
It really helped the movie later on
if you kept that in. That was a mistake.
And she wanted the rock performance
of Watch Closely Now,
Look Closely Now.
But people were impressed
by the skill of the seven-minute
unbroken take.
And she lost that argument of just everyone saying
just keep it that way which is sort of
a fair call in a way yeah
yeah I think so
okay Chris Christopherson got
drunk to play all the drunk scenes got high to play all
the high scenes he says the
film was the worst thing he'd been through since ranger
school
at one point John Peters said
he Chris Christopherson snapped told
Streisand to fuck off
because she was telling him
what to do.
And Peters said,
you owe my little lady
an apology.
And Christopherson said,
if I want some shit out of you,
I'll squeeze your head.
Funny.
Which is fun.
Looking back,
he says that has to be
one of the all-time great lines.
So he's praising himself.
When Peters,
when this movie was coming out,
Peters kept on saying like,
yeah,
that guy's kind of based on me. I this character on me he's really christopherson's
playing me and then there was some interview with christopherson they said is it true you're
playing john peters and he went no i'm playing me yeah that's the thing he then watches the movie
and is like i need to get sober yeah he's like i that he's like i'm seeing myself like i'm watching
the twilight zone you know and it's like i'm watching my myself. Like, I'm watching the Twilight Zone. You know, and it's like, I'm watching my own, like, death approach
if I keep behaving this way.
Wow.
Yes.
Pearson does make an initial cut.
His ass gets kicked into a swimming pool
and they take over.
And then they, as you said,
basically, you know, did the rest themselves.
And they had
notes for the projectionists
when they presented the reels to them.
Make sure that reels one and two
are as loud as possible.
Love that. It's a loud movie.
It is a loud movie. It is a loud movie.
I mean, it's the same with the
Cooper movie, which is
when we saw it at TIFF, we had to see it at the
lightbox because that had Dolby.
Sure.
And they fucking blasted it.
Yeah.
And it was part,
yeah.
And we,
it was kind of one of these things
where we were,
and we'd seen the trailer
at this point,
like we knew,
but still where you were like,
damn,
this movie's like going hard.
Like,
you know,
this like Lady Gaga
Star is Born movie
is like,
you know?
So, and this movie too, it's like, Bradley Cooper Jackson main has board movie is like, you know?
And this movie, too, it's like.
Bradley Cooper Jackson main has that sort of, like, broken poet thing, right?
Of, like, there's this guy can't get out from under his own demons, but there's genius there.
There's feeling there.
There's all of this.
It is fascinating.
Remind me what Kristofferson's character's name is.
And she says it eight million times.
Oh, he is, of course, John Norman Howard.
John Norman Howard.
Oh, yeah.
I forgot.
He's not a main.
I find it fascinating in a, not a successful way, but it is interesting that he's basically like an idiot savant in this movie.
Yes.
Right?
A little bit.
Yeah.
Like everyone treats it like they're just like, well, this guy's a moron.
Yeah.
He is undeniably compelling on stage.
He's probably going to kill himself at some point. Yeah. Just keep loading him full of drugs to get him to finish moron. Yeah. He is undeniably compelling on stage. He's probably going to kill himself
at some point.
Yeah.
Just keep loading him full of drugs
to get him to finish the concert.
Yeah.
So weird.
And he keeps on saying like,
I'm working on new stuff.
It's good.
It's better.
But you like never hear his new songs
really, right?
No.
No.
No.
And then like,
we forget he ever had a career to start with.
Right.
And there's this attitude from everyone when he's like, I'm going back to basics.
I'm writing new songs.
They're like, maybe accept your careers over.
Like, they don't even want to hear his shit.
Nothing.
They're like, your moment's passed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What are some other things we can talk about from this movie?
I'm trying to think.
Why is she not more enraged by him quite literally cheating on her?
Cheating on her.
That scene is kind of amazing.
In their bed.
In their bed.
You've got, what's her name?
Quentin.
Yeah, Quentin.
Who's a naked woman in his pool and he didn't call the cops.
This is the 70s.
This is very, it feels so 70s though.
It's like, some naked hit me on the pool.
All right, I guess, should we have sex?
And she's like, can I interview Esther?
Can I interview your wife?
Yeah, baby, I can make that happen for you.
And then when she shows up.
She has keys to his place
because she used to fuck the pool guy years ago.
Right, sure.
Baller.
Right.
Either that or she just vaulted a fence.
I mean, who knows?
Right.
She's a journalist.
We never see the keys.
Right.
Yeah, right.
We don't see her come in.
Right.
And this is coming right off of,
is it after the Grammy win?
It's off of a love moment.
It's post the Grammy win.
Yeah.
Right.
Like he's already kind of in the doghouse.
He's completely fucked.
And he's like,
I'm going to fuck the interviewer.
Yeah.
And then when she walks in on them,
he's like,
oh,
she's got some questions for you.
Yeah.
She wants an interview.
My favorite part is that,
right,
he's like,
and she's like,
oh,
yeah,
yeah,
yeah.
Like tits out.
Just like,
can I,
I'll just go get my tape recorder or something.
And Barbara's like, first question, do you know your husband can't get it up?
Yeah.
Is basically what she said.
And then I feel like Christopherson actually gives her shit for me.
Come on, my friend needs an interview.
Like, doesn't he kind of?
Yeah, he does.
He's like pissed at her for not wanting to talk to the other woman.
The audacity of man.
There's the thing where he's trying to kiss
and make up
and Stray Sans starts
biting his lip
that is genuinely very hot.
And then they start having
like angry makeup sex
while it feels like
the reporter is just
so slowly being like,
where's the exit?
I'm gonna go.
Where's my,
yeah,
I gotta be in the pool house.
Where's my top?
Yeah, who knows?
It's okay.
Yes.
The scene, directed to the room but i
feel like ben most of all
uh where he discovers uh
strice and at the club
performing and he gets
into the fight with the
guy who wants to see him
performing and wants his
autograph wants him on
stage did any of you
recognize who that actor
was i don't think so did
you not recognize who it
was david no what i'm
talking about the goofy guy.
Yeah, of course.
Who's just like, hey, we pay your bills.
You better get up on their performance.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is Robert Anglin, Freddy Krueger himself.
You're kidding.
An early performance from Freddy Krueger.
Interesting.
No, I didn't crack that at all.
Who mostly played that, played like goofy hicks and stuff in movies.
Yeah, because he's got the big kind of forehead and like, yeah, yeah, yeah. He played a lot of like
sleazy G-Shucks guys
until they put, once they put the hat
on him, everything changed. Wow.
Yeah. That's incredible.
I was happy to see him. I mean, that's the thing.
Like, it's like very interesting to see
Gary Busey. I think that first sequence
is
really compelling in that way.
Yeah, well, these stories you hear about, like,
people where it's like,
how the fuck did that guy make it through a concert?
You know?
It's like the audience is cheering.
Everyone backstage is like,
he's fucking doing it again.
He shows up.
He's incoherent.
Gary Busey shoves four things up his nose.
He gets on stage wearing, like, a Halloween mask
and just growls.
And you're like, it is compelling.
I would pay to watch this.
Well, shit.
Yeah, no, it really is that moment.
The music industry and like just like concerts and just it was very different.
Yeah.
Like what was acceptable?
Behavioral wise.
There was less to do back then.
You know, you go to a show and Christopherson comes out in a Halloween mask.
You're like, yeah, well, what else was I going to do?
I'll watch this.
Right.
I don't have a phone.
My phone's at home.
Well, that's the thing now.
I feel like there's just like this.
What am I going to do?
Sit at home?
Look at the red redial?
I did play Pac-Man on it.
Sorry.
No, no.
Nowadays, there's this idea of eras and a persona and all of these things.
I mean, you can even use Lady Gaga as an example of like the way she burst onto the scene was,
yeah, she would get on stage and do something weird.
Like nobody thought that about Christofferson's character because they didn't fucking know who he was.
It's unbridled in.
Yeah.
It's this guy might puke on me tonight.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, the scene.
But that was the whole early Lady Gaga thing.
It was like, you won't believe what this woman does sitting at a piano
like that was like
that early vibe
but she always talked
about that much
in this kind of way
of like
I knew the kind of music
I wanted to do
that music didn't sell
I need to play the game
of the industry
and slowly start
working in
stripping it down
getting it back to basics
I love the way
she talks about it now
and where she's just
kind of like
I was doing my thing
you know
and that's exactly what got her sometimes all it takes is one person in a room yeah I love the way she talks about it now. And where she's just kind of like, I was doing my thing. You know?
Yeah.
And that's exactly what got her.
Sometimes all it takes is one person in a room.
I was there. To one.
Look, we, the Critics Circle, gave her Best Actress for House of Gooch.
And I was there for what was essentially her Oscar speech that she didn't get to deliver anywhere else.
And it was a tour de force.
It was 20 minutes.
It was amazing.
I know she won the Song Oscar. force. It was 20 minutes. It was amazing. I know she won
the song Oscar.
But it's like more than anything
I want to see her win Best Actress eventually
so she can get that speech.
The speech will be better than whatever performance she gives.
Not to diminish her. I think she's
a really good actress and movie star.
She's so strong. And I really do think she'll get
her chance to accept that
Best Actress Oscar one day.
And I think she's building her career in a very interesting way in terms of what she's taking on.
She takes on good projects.
And it's so funny because she's somebody who you can tell she cares so much.
But she's also just genuinely having such a good time while doing it that it's really admirable.
She's like a real star.
She doesn't need us.
That's the thing.
She doesn't need us.
She doesn't need the stupid industry
she needs just one person
she just needs one person in that room
I love her so much
she's my mom
I think this movie
because there are moments where you're like
this movie is like hitting something good
right
the Gary Busey character
I like that he is not
nefarious right
he's not trying to I like that he is not nefarious, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's not trying to get anything out of anybody.
No.
He's just genuinely
the working man
trying to make a living
and he's pissed off
at what's getting in his way.
He's genuinely kind of
his best friend.
Yes.
But the thing it speaks to
really well is like
a guy like this
who's trapped in an
absolute cycle
of like self-destruction,
right?
There's that line
Streisand has
when she goes to his house for the first time
and she goes,
so what are you,
were you really rich or really poor?
Yeah.
Where she can't figure out
what was your central trauma?
Yeah.
What broke you when you were growing up?
Yeah, and what got you here?
Right, and they never answer it.
I actually really like the lack of backstory.
Yeah.
Of just like,
this guy's undeniably got something,
but like, why can't he get out of his own way?
Why can't he figure it out?
Right.
My brother's character actor, Sam Elliott.
Right.
And it just feels like Gary Busey is like genuinely kind of trying his best.
Yeah.
And it's just like, here you go.
Here are the four things I know you need to make it through the next 45 minutes.
And then every time he, you know, does a motorcycle
wheelie off the stage
or like pukes on people or pisses himself
or any of these fucking things, he's just
trashes his own house, spray paints
the walls. Who do I need to call now? Like,
everyone's stuck in the routine of the thing.
In this way that like, when you are
an industry, when you're making money for people
and you've built like an organization
around yourself, right? And a staff
and whatever. Even when people can
see like writing's on the wall, this isn't going to end
good. They're just sort of like, we need
to just do whatever we can do to keep the machines running.
Like if you shoot a helicopter,
someone will just call 911
and be like, there's a sniper
afoot. And I like that none of them
are like positioned as being like
inherently duplicitous.
No.
Evil.
Because I think the agent character in the Cooper movie is the biggest mistake of that film where he is like.
It really sucks.
It's oddly.
Too mustache twirly.
It doesn't fit.
It's very nefarious.
And this is like all these people.
The scene with Mazursky where he's like, I'll listen.
I'll listen to the tapes.
I really will is kind of touching where he's just like there's no future for you but I'm really listening
to what you're saying and I feel bad for you and they have that moment in the Garland one with you
know the head of the studio comes to visit her on set and she says he says would it help if we
put him in something yeah and she's like oh God, would you do that? And really thinks
that that's going to
turn it all around.
Yes.
And the dramatic irony of it
is that we know
that it's not.
Right.
It's a story that's been
told a million times,
but those moments matter
in movies like this.
Esther wanting him
to be on the tour
is like 50%
I want the accountability of.
I need him in my sight.
Right?
And I need to be the one
providing him structure
and whatever. But I think she also
thinks like it's why
putting the evergreen scene in is
really valuable for the movie is like
if we could recapture that on stage every
night yeah that's the version of
him that I love and if I could
show that to some people he has a future
and that's and I wonder if Cooper was tipped off
about that or something
because yeah that shall you know she's singing shallow at her fucking chrome piano that she brought on the Joanne tour.
I know I was there.
And she's singing it and she wanted to sing it with him.
And that's why she wanted to bring him on tours to capture the magic of why they fell in love and why she became a star and why he's the reason.
And it makes me wonder if he knew that that evergreen scene
had been cut.
Why?
I just think, like...
I imagine he knew
in some capacity.
I don't know.
This movie is
quietly smart
about how complicit
everyone is
in his self-destruction
without being sinister.
You know?
And they're all in this position
where they're like,
this guy makes my life
so fucking difficult.
Right.
The way Mazursky's like,
I gotta fucking call the cops
and pretend,
or Busey's the one
who pretends it was a sniper
when he was the one
shooting a pistol
at the helicopter.
He's like,
I gotta do this fucking again.
Yeah.
Like, why does this guy
make my life a living hell?
But they're also all
only doing what he needs
to keep making money
rather than really trying to help him at any
moment right yeah right i don't know i like the agent character in the cooper one i think
the industry's like that now they just fucking they're like this guy's gotta go yeah history's
bad but yeah mazurski's a match well mazurski's all right in this one but this one that feels
more 70s right where it's like yeah i guess just i'll just die in this castle of ours i guess right
we'll just keep doing drugs and like in my in my head it's like if you, I guess I'll just die in this castle of ours, I guess, right? We'll just keep doing drugs.
And like, in my head,
it's like if you're a rock star like that,
you live in a house
and then they just keep adding layers
to your house
until you can't even leave.
You don't even know where the exit is, you know?
That house though is incredible.
I know.
Yes.
Yeah.
Like, how would you describe the design?
Like, what era is that?
Like Wayne Manor?
No, like, is it like... I can't think of the name.
I'll have to look it up.
Yeah.
I like the pagoda, too.
The pagoda ranch.
The one they build?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
That one's cool, too.
That place looks relaxing.
Like, I like their little loft weekend.
Yeah.
It's nice.
And he just kind of builds that in like,
I don't know,
like a day.
Yeah.
Is that like what we're
That's how it's depicted.
Yeah.
Do you mean the ranch house
where they have the honeymoon?
Like which house?
Yeah, his mansion.
It's like LA mansion.
I know.
I'm trying to think.
I can't think of,
there's like a very
particular name for it.
Whatever.
It doesn't matter.
I want to see it.
Because most of the stuff
is about their honeymoon house, which is cool. total maximalist design in it which is you know like the decoration is there's
so many mirrors so much curtain you're a big star so like every wall in your house is a mirror right
i i actually don't think i own a single mirror that isn't in a bathroom you live in a sphere
uh no you need to yeah you need to wear a suit of armor that's made of mirrors at all times.
So everybody can look at themselves
when they're looking at you.
Exactly.
It's a commentary.
Yeah.
Because actors are just reflections
of other people.
Exactly, Rachel.
Thank you.
Exactly.
Yeah.
You should take pictures
of the paparazzi.
Yeah.
And I do.
Yeah.
Well, what was the thing
I was going to say?
Stars Born.
Chris Christopherson
is in the movie
with Barbra Streisand.
Oh, it's one of the things that's
just very... It did help me.
That worked.
It's one of the things that makes this story
so sticky,
right? Is that you
enter in mostly
through the eyes of
the young woman
who's just like, I cannot imagine this
world you live in. Look at these people around you,
this house that seems to go on forever.
You just get to walk on stage and people love you.
Even when you're fucking up.
Yeah.
Everything is like supported for you.
And then the moment she hits,
the energy changes so much where your perspective,
you go like,
oh,
this guy is slipping.
I know the guy was slipping psychologically,
but like almost immediately her star is so much bigger than we've ever seen him be yeah and you can fill in the blanks and go maybe he was there at some point or maybe she's already eclipsed the
height of where he was but it's like the scene where meserski is just kind of like he's already
done yeah we've known he's been done for a year.
We've been riding out on the fumes.
Mm-hmm.
There's nothing left there.
Yeah.
There's not a...
Well, it's like that scene
where he goes to visit the studio
and Busey's there
and they're just recording
with other people,
new music.
And he's like,
yeah, we're just,
we like this sound.
It's really nice.
It's a good sound
that they've got going.
Like, he never even existed.
Yeah.
But he was missing for like six weeks and they were like, well, this is actually've got going. Like he never even existed. Yeah. But he was missing
for like six weeks
and they were like
well this is actually
kind of healthier.
Just move on.
Yeah.
And we don't really see
though the effect
that that genuinely
has on him
because we don't see
him ever on the up and up.
And Busey when he's
giving him the bad news
in that scene
is also still giving him
bumps off the little spoon.
Yeah.
You really gotta keep him
you know stable.
Yeah.
Yeah. He said hey remember this? you know, stable. Yeah. He said, hey, remember this?
Keep this guy level. Yeah, right.
There's the Grammys scene,
obviously, which is crucial
to any Star is Born movie is
man makes a scene at
award ceremony. Yeah.
Which is good and embarrassing.
The
Cooper one is so brutal that it's almost hard to watch.
This one is more classic, just like...
The Grammy is when he pisses himself.
Yes.
It's a little much.
I'll say the Garland one's kind of hard to watch, too.
Yeah, the Garland one's really brutal.
Yeah.
James Mason's so good.
Because doesn't he accidentally hit her in the face in that one, too?
Yeah.
That's tough.
But it's,
it's what works about,
um,
how do I put this?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I was watching this movie through the prism of getting ready to talk about
Babs for a bit,
a bit of Babs we have.
A bit of Babs,
a babble about Babs.
A sprinkling of Babs.
Yeah.
Babs babbling.
Babs babbling.
Yeah.
Um,
that,
that thing I was saying earlier of her being one of those people
where you're just like
inevitable,
undeniable.
Yeah.
Right?
It was just like
sheer force of will and talent.
She was going to be
Barbra Streisand
no matter what.
Yeah.
And I feel like
all these stars born movies
have that element
of like
the woman at the center
at the beginning
is sort of like
who me?
I don't know.
Everyone's told me I'll never make it.
I like doing this.
I've accepted my position in all of this.
Yeah.
Right.
I don't really want all of this necessarily.
I'm kind of fine with where I am.
And then someone pushes them onto the bigger stage and they just not only
immediately explode,
but kind of take to it immediately.
Yeah.
We're much in the same way where when she hits, you realize how much bigger she immediately is than he ever was.
That she is so much better adjusted than he is.
That's the thing.
Like, it's another thing I think this movie gets right is after that first concert where he forces her to perform, she's so nervous.
It feels like she's going to bomb.
And then over the course of three songs she just destroys and then when everyone's hoarding her outside
mobbing her and all the press are putting the microphones in her face she has like funny quips
for every question and you're like barbara right her whole life has been ready for this moment
right but i mean this is sort of my problem with movies i'm like she's too famous there's no
struggle right because she's barbara stre Whereas like, again, the Cooper one somehow gets away
with it. Like I buy Lady Gaga's, you know, a nobody in that movie, which is surprising.
Yeah.
Well, yeah. And I think it worked because you'd never seen her stripped down before.
I get it. And you'd never really seen her act.
You had to be like a diehard fan to know like when she came up with the album Joanne, she really stripped herself down vocally and great album.
And, you know, as somebody who was there for all of that, I was not shocked to see her be so real and grounded and look like a person.
Most people are like, oh, it's poker face, you know, paparazzi.
And they have no idea but that's that's what's amazing about
these movies though is that it stripped back the the the for lack of a better term the glitter
of the of the women who were at the forefront of these films and stripped them down to a way that
nobody had ever seen them before it's really nice that the movie's called glitter like why had no
one ever called a movie glitter before yeah? Yeah, it's a good title.
Terrence Howard's in it, right?
Yes. So is Padma Lakshi, I'm pretty sure.
Yep.
Apparently she plays a character called Silk.
Yeah, she's... A famous singer.
Yeah, she's in it. I think
Mariah Carey does background
vocals for her in the opening, and
she's apparently a hack.
She's lip-syncingcing and Mariah's like I can
do that oh she can like right you don't
need this lip syncing yeah
Debrat is in it one of the great hip hop artists
in the 90s why not yeah
I had it saved before
but the Frank Pearson article
so I can read there's like a particularly damning
quote I mean go ahead
I mean certainly I have some quotes which was
he was he was very mean.
Really?
This is a month before the movie comes out.
That's that's the thing.
That's what's why it's sort of impressive where he's like, I'm kneecapping you.
That's the thing.
It's one of those like Josh Trank levels of self-sabotage where you're just like, wait until the movies come out.
Yeah.
And if it's something to be celebrated, don't you want to be celebrated?
Totally.
If it bombs,
then you can sort of
like vindicate yourself
after the fact.
I wonder if he was
kind of like prepping himself
for a possible backlash
that would come
if it were really successful
and everybody was giving him credit
and Babs was going to get up there
and be like,
actually, it was all me.
Right, I took this movie over.
And then he wanted to kind of like...
Possibly.
I think it was a mistake, though,
because I feel like that just kills your career.
Totally.
Like, he's never a major director
because of this movie.
No, but I think his attitude...
Even though this was a hit.
I think you're right, Rachel,
that strategically his attitude was,
if I position myself as...
Or if I give everyone the story of my struggle
to get my voice through in this movie,
then anything they do like
in the movie, they'll credit to me. And anything they don't
like, they'll say, well, it was out of his control.
Yeah. That's what I think. It was some kind of
strategy to just
safeguard himself, not knowing
what the response was going to be.
To write like an eight-page article for New York
Magazine, like a big outlet. It's not
like a string of tweets in the modern era.
And if he had just stayed quiet yeah the movie
comes out it's a big hit that gets kind of middling reviews a few oscar noms nothing major
and he had just been like yeah so i was the director of that everyone probably would have
been chill about it yeah you know he would have been like yeah you know barbara obviously strong
force of personality but you know yeah and then he gets to make some other movie. You made a big hit, buddy.
But she basically just now,
like it has taken the,
I don't even think about you route,
where for the last 40 years,
she just talks about the movie
without mentioning him.
She does the director's commentary.
She does the like retrospective press.
And she just says like,
when John and I were making Star is Born.
She can knock directors and actors
clear out of the practice of their profession with 10% of her energy, says Frank Pearson of Barbra Streisand.
Wow.
You know, apparently they fought the whole time.
She said, I don't feel you really want to love me.
All my directors have wanted to make me beautiful.
I feel like you're holding something back.
There's something you don't tell me.
You never talk to me.
Now, this is Frank quoting Barbara.
Sure.
So, I don't know. And Frank says, I love love you but i'm not the demonstrative type okay i don't know um every
rehearsal barbara can never settle on a final reading nothing ever gets done i this is again
his telling of things uh you know the dailies are good but they're not good enough uh barbara and
john can't see how they go together
They convince the movie's a disaster
They yell that he's ruined it
I've never been so tired not since World War II
Both he and Chris Christopherson comparing this movie
To serving in the military
Yeah that is a yikes
You know back in the day fucking 70s directors
Could be like look man I was in Germany
Yeah and I preferred that
Yeah and I'd go back um uh and you know i
guess like it does kind of seem like that classic like barbara and john have the idea of the movie
and they're watching dailies and being like you're fucking up whatever our idea of this movie is yeah
right like you know and they're probably he's probably not yeah like i don't know that he was
really to blame for anything but you know there's no there probably not. Yeah. Like, I don't know that he was really to blame for anything.
But, you know, there's no sense of collaboration.
They see him as a roadblock.
I don't know if it's just that the bones of Star is Born hit on something so primal and fascinating.
Where, like, yeah, every 20 years we want the fame machine to, like, look inwards and tell this tragedy about like how we dispose of people
and and also how we like dehumanize people in the process of i mean that's what's so
poignant about it is the sort of like one person on the way out one person walking in kind of thing
where this movie always leaves you with this note of like how's she gonna look in 30 years
exactly she seems to have a better head on her shoulders. But like, who knows? What price Hollywood, you could say.
But I had always been led to believe like, well, they made three great stars, Bourne's,
and obviously there's the turd from the 70s that we all went to see.
And I think it's like there's enough here.
It's a sloppy ass movie.
Yeah.
But I think it does have some juice to it.
Yeah. I think there's definitely a reason people still watch it
you know yeah it's because she's in it
it's because he's in it
and it's because everybody
knows the song Evergreen
you know it's a really upsetting scene although it's a little
it almost feels like a family guy gag
or something
when
I mean he does
I like that his suicide is him
just racing the car in this
yeah you know that drives
like the wind and then you never see him again
spiritual about it
it's almost
it is yeah
could be unintentional
right
right because you have the same moment
that you have of like,
you're dragging her down, man.
Yeah.
Her career is hamstrung by you.
Yeah.
And when it becomes like
a deliberate suicide
by your own hand,
then it sort of feels
like this thing of like,
martyrdom,
he's sacrificing himself
versus this where it's like,
it's just a whole ball of emotions.
Yeah.
And it's, yeah,
it's kind of mythical. He emotions yeah and it's yeah it's
kind of mythical he drives off and then the next thing you see him in his motorcycle the crane
raising lowering down from the sky and her they're talking to his dead body and begging for blankets
and whatever which is the one scene where i think she kind of has that vulnerability i wanted to
see in some other places in the movie um and then you have the scene where she's like tossing and turning in the bed in their mansion,
hears his voice,
starts running down the stairs.
You think she's hallucinating.
You see that they're already movers
moving shit out of the house.
Like she doesn't even have time to grieve
before they're dismantling her home.
Before they're moving her, yeah.
Right.
And then the guy walks in and goes like,
hey, I can't figure it out.
Turn this tape recorder off.
Oh, yeah.
Really?
You're right.
It does read
as a gag a little bit.
I think it's a nice
idea for a scene.
And if that scene
is she walks in
and a giant reel-to-reel
recorder is playing
and some guy's like,
yeah, sorry,
I turned that on by accident.
But you think
the guy's too hammy.
Yeah, the guy walks in
holding a boombox and it's like, how do you, I turned that on by accident. But you think the guy's too hammy. Yeah, the guy walks in holding a boombox
and it's like, how do you turn off
this button?
How do you turn off this teeny lady?
You think I should try it?
But I like the idea that she
thinks she's hearing him.
She's not imagining it. And it is
the tapes of him, including him
answering the phone when he's trying
to record his demos.
Hey, everybody.
Stephen Colbert here.
I have my own.
The show has a podcast, The Late Show Pod Show.
And I'm here with the producer, Becca.
Becca, what are we doing?
What is this?
So, The Late Show Pod Show, it's everything you love about The Late Show.
The monologue, the lead guest.
Am I correct about this? That you actually get things in the podcast often that aren't on the show because we had to cut things for time?
And so you'll get more guests, or you might even get some jokes or some more meanwhiles or something like that we didn't get a chance,
or certainly conversations with Lewis and the band that you don't get.
So you get more stuff.
If you don't listen to the podcast, you're losing money.
It's true.
It's true.
TV, you can only put so much. You got to get those commercial breaks in,
but the podcast, we can keep going. That's the great thing about podcasts is that the real estate is enormously cheap. And so you can just shovel anything in there. People go, thank you. Listen
to The Late Show Pod Show with Stephen Colbert, wherever you get your podcasts. I use the internet.
to The Late Show Pod Show with Stephen Colbert
wherever you get
your podcasts.
I use the internet.
Do you want to pull up
Box Office Game?
I got it ready, baby.
Okay.
This movie came out
Christmastime
in 1976.
The number one movie
of 1976, of course.
We recorded,
the other thing
we recorded today, Rachel,
was a Patreon episode
on Alien vs. Predator. Oh. Of course. Yeah, of course. Perfect double, was a Patreon episode on Alien vs. Predator.
Oh.
Of course.
Yeah, of course.
Perfect doubleheader.
But the second Alien vs. Predator movie also came out on Christmas Day.
It sure did.
Did it?
Not in the same year.
Not in the same year, no.
This film lost, the big movie of 1976 is Rocky.
That is the, this is the second biggest movie of the year.
Set up for failure.
This is the Rocky Network.
All the President's Men. Bound for Glory. Taxi Driver is the five biggest movie of the year. Set up for failure. This is the Rocky Network. All the President's Men.
Bound for Glory.
Taxi Driver is the five nominees for Best Director.
Wow.
And you look at some of the stuff that doesn't even make sense.
I mean, Scorsese gets bumped out of Best Director.
He sure does.
This is one of the best Oscar fields ever.
Scorsese gets bumped out.
Scorsese and who did Bound for Glory?
Fucking Hal Ashby.
Hal Ashby got knocked out.
Is this Paulini Satyricon?
No.
For Lena Vertmuller for Seven Dirties
and Ingmar Bergman for Face to Face.
Wow.
All kinds of cool people are nominated this year.
Obviously, Network kind of sweeps the acting awards.
This movie, unsurprisingly, wins five Golden Globes.
You're right.
Hey-oh.
The most expected thing ever.
It wins a song.
Hell yeah.
It wins a song. Absolutely. Take pride. Take pride. it wins a song absolutely
take pride it wins a song
Oscar that's it's only Oscar
but it was nominated for cinematography
as well I will say some of the
shots in this movie had me saying
out loud what a great shot
it's Roger Ortiz who's like an old Hollywood guy
this is a movie that uses shadows very well
as opposed to
Alien vs. Predator Requiem.
The darkest movie ever made.
Rachel, you would not believe
how bad this thing looks.
When you have to like squint
and be like,
what are they looking at?
This movie truly looks like
the brightness is down
on your phone.
Oh, no.
Which is as it was meant
to be viewed, right?
On your phone?
Yes.
Watching these two movies
within a couple of days of each other,
this is, you're just like,
right, this is like what an expert cinematographer
knows how to do.
Right.
So this film's coming out Christmas time,
and number one,
it's kind of opening at number five.
Number one, you know,
it's back in the day.
But it ends up making 80-something?
Second biggest hit of the year
makes $80 million.
What was the budget?
The budget was only
$6 million.
That's a huge hit.
Yeah.
I mean,
and the song builds
several houses.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
For many different people.
And this is kind of
the beginning of Barbara
really just not making
a lot more movies.
Like now it's like
when she makes the movie,
it's like a rare thing.
This is her word
bitty transition
where she's like
I'm getting super selective.
I'm in the business
of being famous.
We're beginning with her.
Like we're beginning with that.
Number one of the box office
is another sort of famous
overpriced remake of 1976.
That does like well
but probably could have done better.
Does well but probably could have done better. Seems does well, but probably could have done better.
Seems a little bit of a boondoggle.
Yeah,
but it's another movie
that people keep remaking.
It's another movie
that people keep remaking.
In what genre?
Action,
adventure.
In 76?
Yeah.
76,
and it's a remake of something earlier
and they do it again.
They keep doing it. When was the original? 1933. 76. And it's a remake of something earlier. And they do it again. They keep doing it.
When was the original?
1933.
It's a 1933 movie.
Kind of a famous movie.
This one or the 33 one?
The 33 one.
Right.
They're all pretty famous.
But this 33 one's real famous.
It's real famous.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's one of the more famous movies.
And I probably seen it.
Action adventure film.
Why the fuck?
This is like going to be glaringly obvious, right?
Yeah.
They remade it again in 2005.
And then they remade it again in 2017 as part of a cinematic universe.
Planet of the Apes.
Very close.
I'm going to take that.
Oh, it's King Kong.
King Kong.
It's the Jessica Lange, Dino De Laurentiis King Kong.
Jessica Lange and Jeff Bridges in King Kong.
And Charles Gurdon.
And Charles Gurdon.
Was a huge hit at the time.
Big hit, but still an underwhelming based on...
I feel like it has like the exact same reputation as this movie, which is everyone in the world went to see it.
Right.
Everyone agreed it was kind of shitty.
Right.
And the versions before and after all have
better reputations yes but we will still watch it yeah still watch this it's still in the world
yeah still in the air number two at the box office is the third in a series of films okay
in 1976 crime film it's is it a dirty harry film. But which one? Third one is called... I always get this wrong.
I tell you, Tyne Daly's in this one. Magniforce?
Nope.
That's two.
It's not The Enforcer, right?
The Enforcer! It is. Okay.
His third film, James Fargo's The Enforcer.
And then it's The Deadpool?
That's the last one. What's the other one I'm forgetting?
Sudden Impact, which is the one Clint Eastwood directed,
which is bananas. Any which way I lose is bananas. Well, that's the last one what's the other one I'm forgetting Sudden Impact which is the one Clint Eastwood directed which is bananas yeah
uh if no anyone
loses bananas well that's true
um number three at the box office
another sequel people
say sequels have taken over
uh but in 1976
this is um
a famously
uh this is the last uh
film of this series it's the fifth uh it's the last where the lead is still with us so this is the last uh film of this series it's the fifth uh it's the last where
the lead is still with us so this is a pink panther is it yes see he's good he's very good
trail is the one after he died right the really weird one that's after is this curse no that's um
the that's the the one after trail that he's not even in with David Niven
and someone else.
Jesus, what a weird franchise that is.
It's not
Strikes Again or Returns, is it?
It's Strikes Again. The Pink Panther
Strikes Again, 1976. This is the last
Peter Sellers movie and they use footage from this
in Trail of the Pink Panther.
Do you know about Trail, Rachel? I don't.
He died. Okay. Famously. Sad. And then they were Trail, Rachel? I don't. He died. Okay.
Famously.
Sad.
And then they were like,
we're going to make a movie
where we take all the outtakes
we have left over.
And the movie is
new footage of actors being like,
has anyone seen Clouseau in a while?
Does anyone know where he is?
And they're like,
I heard he was doing this.
And then they cut to some scraps.
I kind of love that.
From the previous movie.
I kind of love that.
And the whole movie is like,
we just can't find
Clouseau anywhere
where is he
yeah
that's really funny
did it turn out as funny
as it's been described
no I think it's
widely despised
people hate him
oh cool cool cool
they essentially
released a clip show
in theaters
I love it
and it wasn't even
a best of
it was like
rejected
b-roll
yeah
it was b-roll
yeah
but everyone's just like
that Clouseau guy
yeah
where is he what What happened to him?
Wow.
Number four at the box office,
a famous documentary.
Remember, you may know this,
that back in the day,
they would just put documentaries
in theaters that were just fake.
Yes.
That would just say made up shit.
And this is one of the most famous.
In Search of Noah's Ark?
In Search of Noah's Ark.
Do you know about this movie?
I don't.
They bought out
crazy television advertisements
at a time where people were not, you know,
just like full marketing blitz when marketing was more reserved.
Right.
And films got word of mouth platform releases.
I kicked my head over again.
And they just did all these TV ads.
They blitz it.
You can watch like old Siskel and Ebert where they complain about this thing incessantly.
Oh, my God.
A decade later, they still complain about like.
This movie, In Search of Noah's Ark,
which yes.
Right.
They bought these TV ads
and they were like,
we're putting a movie in theaters.
We found Noah's Ark.
You have to go to theaters
to find the answer.
They found Noah's Ark.
Right.
And it was bullshit in Turkey.
You guys all made up.
Yeah.
Oh, gee.
But they were just like,
scoop of the century.
You gotta go to theaters
to see it.
You have to go to theaters
to see where it is.
Number five is A Star is Born.
You've also got something called The Shaggy D.A.
Now, is that a shaggy dog sequel?
Yes, that's the sequel.
Yes, he goes to court.
He's a district attorney.
So, Dean Jones and Suzanne Cush.
Yes.
Lenny's got big shaggy dogs.
What if that became your star demand where you're like,
I demand a vehicle for me and my dog.
Like, that is what I want.
I'll be honest, guys.
I think I'm going to get there
to that point
where I'm like,
the dog goes first.
Right.
Dog gets first billing.
But you're also like,
I don't want him in my movies
because I don't want him
to upstage me.
I'm just a package deal.
You have to green light
one of his pictures.
I would rather he upstage me.
That's very,
see,
this is how I know.
No ego.
No ego.
Because also like,
then this might sound
shitty parenting of me,
but like,
what's he going to do
with the money?
It'll be mine.
That's true.
And I'll just use it
to get him more things.
No Jackie Coogan law for dogs.
Yeah, no.
Is there a Coogan account
for a dog?
I don't think so.
I can't imagine.
Is there a Renton 10 law?
Yeah, exactly.
But it would be nice
if you used all of his money
to get him things.
And that's what I do
all the time.
I use all my money to get him things. He's's what I do all the time. He's all my money to get him things.
He's the most spoiled brat in the world.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
As a new parent, I can attest.
She's two and a half years old, man.
And I ain't that new.
And I know exactly how old she is.
You just found out?
Nah, I knew.
I always knew.
I was being really funny earlier.
She likes to play with the pillows on the sofa.
And she just pointed at one and said,
that's Ponyo, that's Sosuke.
The pillows.
That's how deep Ponyo is in her brain right now.
Which is, Ponyo's great.
How many times has she watched it now?
What do you guess?
40? I don't know.
Like, endlessly.
She watches it usually in sort of three stages.
The second stage is when Ponyo goes to sleep on the couch.
That's when we're always like,
okay, Ponyo's asleep.
Like, you're gonna be.
Smart. That's really smart. Silver Streak is on the couch. That's what we're always like. Okay, Ponyo's asleep. Like, you're going to be. Smart.
That's really smart.
Silver Streak is on the top 10.
Wilder.
Weird bad movie.
Kind of a bad movie.
Yeah, that one I actually have seen.
And it's only got 10 minutes of the two of them.
Yeah, that's the one where they realize.
The marketing is.
It's like Zendaya and Timmy Chalamet in Dune.
Yes.
It's really just shitty North by Northwest with 10 minutes of those guys riffing off each other
I love Dune to death
I think it's incredible
but it is funny
how that movie ends
with her being like
oh hey what's up
and he's like
nice to meet you
and the whole press tour
was them
palling around
I was like
they know what they're doing
those marketing teams
but also the whole movie
is him being like
I had a dream
that Zendaya
is going to have
a bigger part
in the second one hot stuff everywhere I had a dream that Zendaya is going to have a bigger part in the second one.
Hot stuff is everywhere.
I had a dream Zendaya was in the sand.
Sure, she's always in the sand.
We only have her for five days on this one,
but the next one she'll be a much larger role.
I had a dream of her multi-tiered contract.
Okay.
Marathon Man is in the top 10.
Network is in the top 10.
And then a film called The Monkey Hustle,
a blaxploitation film with Yafik Kado and Rudy Mary Moore,
which looks pretty fun,
about Chicago con men.
It ain't legal and it sure ain't safe,
but it do seem worthwhile.
That was the tagline.
That was the tag.
I love it.
Good tagline for Daily vs. Predators.
Roger Ebert said
it was a good-hearted model,
but they must have left
half a script back in Hollywood.
Oh.
Pow.
Pow, pow.
But Michael J. White says
one of the best movies
he's ever seen.
Huge influence on Black Dynamite.
Rachel, now that Lenny
has been wrangled,
I want to reopen the floor for you
if you have any general
final thoughts.
Oh.
Stars Born, Barbara, etc.
I mean, I just... Thoughts to leave us with for this miniseries any general final thoughts. Oh. Stars Born, Barbara, etc. I mean, I just.
Thoughts to leave us with
for this miniseries.
It's oddly like my,
it's, I love her so much.
It's my least favorite
of Stars Born.
Yeah.
And I hate that
because I love her so much.
And I love Chris Jefferson
so much.
And I love Gary Busey in it.
I love the aesthetic
of the film is so great.
The music is,
is wonderful.
But for some reason,
it just doesn't have what it needs.
We can acknowledge its influence.
Absolutely.
And I do think it's fair to acknowledge,
like, yeah,
the Cooper movie's pulling from this
in some ways, you know?
It's in the air.
If the Cooper movie was, like,
all about Broadway,
you'd be like...
Wait a second.
That sounds good.
Yeah.
But you'd be like,
oh, that weird 70s Star is Born
that was kind of a misfire.
Yeah, they did a rock and roll version.
But that movie feels like him saying, like, I want to take another look at you. And he, like, that weird 70s Star is Born that was kind of a misfire. But that movie feels like him
saying, like, I want to take another look at you.
And he, like, cleans it up a little.
And it's not just that. It's like,
you know, they tried to do it with Beyonce.
It feels like after this movie, it was like, yes,
this should be a music thing from now on.
Right. Yeah.
There was going to be the Clint Eastwood, DiCaprio, Beyonce
one that was more traditionally back to the music
industry. Right. And Cooper was the one who came in after 10 years of that movie getting redeveloped and said, like, make a drunk country music star.
Yeah.
And it just made a lot more sense and it expanded upon the things that needed to be expanded upon.
I agree with your commentary about the manager character in that one because he doesn't really exist in the rest of them.
And the only reason he really comes in
is to be like,
you got to stay away from her.
Little nudge.
You got to stay away from her.
I think shitty guys exist like that in the industry.
I can tell you right now they do.
They do.
But it's one of those things that it's,
like you said,
it's a bit to,
I'm twirling my evil wiry mustache
and you need to die.
For a movie where the inner demons are always going to be the greatest conflict.
The biggest evil.
It's man versus himself.
It really is.
And then I think Cooper brought an authenticity to it.
The Sam Elliott character is amazing and an amazing performance from him.
And I think people tend to only really remember the one scene when he's pulling out of the
driveway.
It's one of the most astonishing.
It is.
But he's his scene when he, you know, is talking about, I have to fucking clean up your shit.
And then the very end, when he talks about how she sees the notes on the scale, it's
a beautiful character.
It's a beautiful performance.
And I think that's what this movie was lacking, is that
emotional grounding of
somebody who's loved him in spite of everything
before the
female character comes in.
It's also smart to add that character in
and redistribute some of the
Christofferson growl over to that guy
and make Cooper a little softer.
Exactly. It just gives the
character a humanity because you realize that he's been loved before. and make Cooper a little softer. It just gives the character
a humanity
because you realize
that he's been loved before
and he neglected that too.
100%.
And so...
That's great.
Elliot is an incredible addition.
You're right.
Yeah.
And I just think that
I think every version
has people that are
sort of nice to him
but that does not like...
Yeah.
But they're nice to him
for their own personal gain
because like
we were talking about it's like this is how i make my money so you need to get your ass on stage i'm
gonna give you the coke to do it the universe they all orbit around exactly yeah elliot an
incredible example of just uh award seasons being way too long where everyone was like this guy's
gonna cruise all the way to a fucking oscar win And then by the time the show happened, it was like old news.
We all got over this five rotations ago.
Who won?
I remember looking.
Mahershala wins for Green Book.
Which is like, it's a lead performance, A,
and he just won an Oscar, and it's Green Book.
Is that the seniors Richard E. Grant, too?
Yes.
So you had two guys who've been so good
and so underappreciated for so long.
Long-running, great character actors.
Perfect supporting actor performances. Yeah. And then Mah for so long. Right, long-running, great character actors. Giving, like, perfect supporting actor performances.
Yeah.
And then Mahershala, yes, is the lead, and he had just won.
Look, it's one of the weirdest Oscars ever.
Green Book was a weird Oscar.
It was a weird Oscar.
We can't deny it was the best movie ever made.
We can't deny the Green Book was the best film ever made.
Pizza.
Spike Lee is somewhere just cursing.
Not my cup of tea.
You said it's not his cup of tea.
Not my cup of tea.
It's one of the funniest things.
Are you British?
Are you British? that's what makes it
and then him going
like he literally
dances around like it's so funny
what I like this attitude is like I'm not bitter
I've done this fucking dance before I know
how they work I'm not surprised
I love it
it was my cup of tea
such a weird Oscars
I saw Stars Born at TIFF and was like well yeah and this is gonna be a sensation I love it it wouldn't wake up for days such a weird Oscars you British
I saw Stars Born
at TIFF
and was like
well yeah
and this is gonna be
a sensation
and made a zillion dollars
and the Oscars were like
I think it's Green Book
versus Roma this year
I was just like
what are you guys doing
but that's the thing
the director category
was stacked
but I do feel like
Cooper deserved to be in it
yeah
but you had McKay
for Vice
you had
Cuaron for Roma you had McKay for Vice. You had Cuaron
for Roma.
You had...
Oh, my God.
Fairley is also
not nominated.
He's also snubbed.
It's Spike Lee
for Black Klansman.
Yorgos for The Favorite,
which is a fun nom.
And Pavel Pawelowski
for The Cold War,
which is a really nice nom.
Yeah, it's an amazing movie.
And he's one of the hottest
people I ever interviewed.
I fell in love with him
when I interviewed him
for Ida. So hot. I don't think i've ever seen his wife is rachel i will show you
he's very dashing rachel they are a couple that makes you angry yeah when you look at him and his
wife together i gotta look at it yeah um but um you know just a weird year a weird year anyway
but uh yeah barbara didn't win for this and we will discuss future Oscar snubs Of course, in her career
Oh, he is handsome, sorry
Yeah, he's very handsome
I don't lie
He has a new movie coming, I think
Does he?
I think he does
Doesn't he have a new movie coming out soon-ish?
The Island
Right, Joaquin and Rooney are making a movie with him
Right
But is that the one that got shut down?
Yes, but hopefully it can come back.
Let's hope so.
Did you see that Joaquin finished a movie with Lin-Ramsey?
That they quietly just got it done?
More like Joaquin finished.
Well, that's what...
Didn't Emma Stone do one with Yorgos as well?
They did another one or something?
They're obsessed with making movies together.
Yeah, I love that.
Lin-Ramsey goes so long not getting movies made. I know, yeah. That I was just so happy where I'm like, making movies together. Yeah, I love that. I just, when Ramsey goes so long not getting movies made,
I know, yeah.
That I was just so happy
where I'm like,
we got one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We got one in the can.
But now it's like,
what's gonna happen?
Let's see what happens.
But I just,
I'm happy something has been committed.
But I like this like theme of
we're just gonna quietly make shit
and not tell anybody anything.
So good.
Because the only reason I knew about
the one that just
Yeah.
debuted was because I know Nadia Stacey who did the makeup it, because she does makeup for all of Emily's stuff.
And it was, I just loved.
There's another one.
Yeah.
Right.
Him and Emma Stone did two movies together.
They just keep popping out.
Yes.
There's another one that still won't come out for who knows how long.
Yeah.
Rachel, you have nothing to plug because we're currently on strike.
You have nothing to plug.
This episode will come out in several months
if the strike is ended by then
I will ask you to send in a voice memo
done
it's 2024 post strike Rachel Zegler
you can
actually get the ballad of songbirds
and snakes on demand
which is pretty cool
it was the number one movie in the world for a couple weekends
that was pretty fun
it's really good.
This is my dog, Lenny.
Do you have any input?
Did you hear that?
Did you get that, guys?
Anyways, I believe it's also still in theaters.
So you can see it in theaters.
You can see it at home.
As long as you see it, you'll see Peter Dinklage, which is pretty cool.
I'm also there.
Love you guys.
Oh, do you have any resolutions?
Do you want to sort of... Oh, yeah. New Year's resolutions. Oh, my God. This is so there. Love you guys. Oh, do you have any resolutions? Do you want to sort of
put them out there? Oh my god, this is so
funny to record in September. To be like, what are
you gonna... I'm just
gonna be so... My New Year's
resolution is to not take everything
so personally.
Because it's just hard right now. But
probably to just disappear a bit more.
Amen. I'm gonna become more
enigmatic in 2024.
I don't want people...
People know where I live right now,
and that's a problem.
It's no good, man.
I will say this.
Rachel's very chill.
She walked in here chill as hell,
but she's getting hassled.
It's true.
You're getting hassled.
And my poor dog is part of it.
People give me the business.
I don't like it.
No, Rachel, I will say genuinely,
it's not like I know you tremendously well,
but I've known you in this weird way
for a couple years now.
Yeah, isn't that wild?
We met doing Zooms together during the pandemic
before any of your movies had come out.
Yeah.
But, you know, when I was young,
I was friends with a lot of people
whose stars took off a lot faster
and more aggressively than mine did.
Yeah.
And I was like adjacent to a lot of people watching them get pushed through the thing
that's happened with you in your career very quickly, deservingly so.
Thank you.
You have that sort of stress and it's just undeniable kind of thing.
Very kind.
Thank you.
But I have never seen anyone handle it with as much grace that I have had any sort of adjacent view to.
You're regular.
As you have.
You are so regular.
You are an astonishingly regular person
for how...
Regular as hell.
Without being oblivious.
Like, that's the other thing.
Sure, right.
A lot of people I know who I'm like,
how did you remain so normal
or somehow have a cognitive dissonance
where they're not even thinking about the other shit?
It's true.
They have some ability to compartmentalize it.
Which I kind of, I envy for sure.
I do too.
Because I wish I could just not think about
the things that are abnormal.
But you are so intelligent and knowledgeable
about all this stuff and such a student
of the history of art and entertainment and everything
in a way that should make you collapse
under the pressure of everything
you're constantly going through.
And I have no idea how you do it,
but you're very impressive.
Thank you.
I appreciate that a lot.
Keep being a movie star.
If they'll let me, I will.
I will be there to star in the movies.
Okay.
And I just want to say, Lenny,
I think what you do as far as just being a dog
is incredible.
You're so cute.
You sort of seem to smile.
Keep doing it like you do.
He's nudging the mic.
And Ben's known some bad dogs in his day.
Oh, I've known some real bad dogs,
but you're one of the top dogs for sure.
No poops in the studio.
He's licking the mic.
Oh, he's doing a yawn on mic.
Wow.
Baby.
He's a good dog.
Good boy, honey.
He's a good boy.
Thank you for being here, Rachel.
Lenny, thank you for being here Rachel Lenny thank you for being here
I will always be here
as long as you guys
want me to come back
you're the best
I have so much fun
doing this show
because I love talking
about movies
so thank you guys
we built an entire
career out of it
thank you again
for coming
yeah
of course
thanks for letting
my dog come too
of course
not the first dog
nope
but
Earl beat him
he's always welcome
Earl Hines
Mizlani
thank you all
for listening
I think it's gonna be
a fun little month
with Barbara
yeah
oh it's so fun
I can't wait to listen
to everybody else's
yes
hopefully
well next week is Yentl
oh yeah
we'll see who's this guest
we'll see
you podcast-al
we got someone penciled
we got someone penciled
hopefully he's coming through
yeah
oh I'm gonna ask
when we're done
yeah
but tune in next week for the titular episode podcast-al someone penciled in. We got someone penciled in. Hopefully he's coming through. Yeah. Oh, I'm going to ask when we're done. Yeah. Okay.
But tune in next week
for the titular episode
podcast-al.
Thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate,
review, and subscribe.
Thank you to Marie Barty
for our social media
and helping to produce
this show.
Thank you to
JJ Birch
for our research,
AJ McKeon,
Alex Barron
for our editing,
Joe Bone,
Pat Rollins
for our artwork, Lane Montgomery and the Great American for our theme. AJ McKee and Alex Barron for our editing. Joe Bone, Pat Rollins for our artwork.
Lane Montgomery and the Great American Owl for our theme
song. You can go to blankcheckpod.com
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including our Patreon, Blank Check Special Features
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And we're also, of course,
we have the free membership on our Patreon where every 10 days we unlock an episode
from three years earlier for free.
So you can check out those hot early 2021 episodes,
whatever the fuck we were doing.
Excuse me.
How dare you?
I'm sure it was something great.
I can't remember what it was.
Neither can I.
No idea.
Wait, was that when we kicked off with Crocodile Dundee?
Oh, fuck.
If we're unlocking Croc Dundee.
That's a big deal.
That's some of the best shit we've ever done.
Yes, it is.
Please enjoy for free our Crocodile Dundee episode.
We're giving it back to the public.
Yes.
Probably the best six hours of podcasting.
Be horny for Paul Hogan in the first one.
Turn on him so hard in the second one
right
be fairly defeated
by the third one
I think we're just
kind of like whatever
he's in Los Angeles
I order a hotback
steakhouse delivery
and then it turns out
the guy who made
my order was a blankie
yes
was listening to the podcast
while he was making it
not that episode
he didn't have a live
yeah but he messaged me later
anyway listen to all that
for free
and as always
very good
thank you
Lenny
what are you making friends?
tongue kissing
yeah
dogs usually love to lick me
so don't be alarmed
okay
my boyfriend's the same way
we do call him the dog
that's David's nickname
is that really?
David the dog Sims
David the dog Sims are you serious? yeah if I'm being silly they say the dog. That's David's nickname. Is that really? David the dog Sims. David the dog Sims.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
If I'm being silly, they say the dog's off the leash.
And he gets really hyped up about it.
The dog's off the leash.
Well, bark, bark.
Yeah, well, Lenny's off leash right now.
Yes, you are.
You shall too.
We've got Mr. Leonard Bernstein in the studio today.
Okay.
Are we good to go, Ben?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, ready?
Fantastic.
Are you going to sing?
No.
No?
No. I can't sing Fantastic. Are you going to sing? No. No?
No.
I can't sing in front of you, Rachel.
You did for the cabaret episode.
I know.
I mean, it is Chris Christopherson.
He's not... Yeah, you can kind of growl.
He's not very, you know...
Yeah, yeah.
He's not known for his voice.
Okay.
Well...
But as somebody who did get famous
because I sang a song from the 2018 The Star is Born, I'm expecting something here.
Okay.
Ben, all of this, put this at the end of the episode.
Great.
Okay.
This is the bonus leading up to what people will have heard as the opening.
Okay.
Ready?
All right.
Okay.