Blank Check with Griffin & David - Speed Racer with Emily Yoshida and J.D. Amato
Episode Date: May 16, 2016Guests Emily Yoshida (The Verge) and J.D. Amato (The Chris Gethard Show) make their return to Blank Check to examine 2008’s Speed Racer. But why does everyone on the panel love this movie and disagr...ee with the criticism it received? How was this film ahead of its time? Should racing involve the financial world? Together, they discuss Spritle and Chim-Chim antics, watching sunday morning cartoons, irony, the amazing special effects and so much more!
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Discussion (0)
Your son seems to be interested in only one thing.
All he talks about, all he seems capable of thinking about, is podcasting!
Hi.
Hi.
Good job. Was that the one?
No.
Okay.
Fascinating.
Didn't blow up my spot.
Emily was taking bets on which line I was going to destroy for the introduction of the show.
My name is Griffin Newman.
I'm David Sims.
For the introduction of the show.
My name is Griffin Newman.
I'm David Sims.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David, and this is a mini-series we are doing called The Pachowski Casters.
Good.
Yeah.
You still trip over it.
I trip over it, too.
I trip over it, too.
Pachowski Casters.
Pachowski Casters.
Why not just the Podcaskies?
This was serious, heavy debate.
It's actually a heavy subject.
Yeah. There was a lot of debate over. It's actually a heavy subject.
There was a lot of debate over whether we could be just the Podchowskis,
which is now how the Wachowskis brand themselves.
Right.
But the casting has always been in our miniseries titles.
People got to know that we're casting.
We're not just potters, we're casters, you know? And this was brought up to us by my friend Alex Chris,
who you've met, in fact.
And so we are the Pachowski casters.
This is a podcast where we talk about filmmakers.
We go over filmographies.
We do miniseries devoted to directors and go through their career.
And what we're fascinated in is when someone has a massive success early on
and gets these sort of blank check opportunities to do crazy stuff.
This is definitely, we've hit the ultimate blank check in their career, I would say.
Yes, you would say.
We're talking about the Wachowskis.
We're talking about the Wachowskis.
This is their big blank check, and then yet the next one maybe even more so.
So I don't know.
And then the next one maybe even more so.
Yeah.
But you'd think this is it.
You'd think this is the apex.
They make Bound, solid, solid debut.
Sure.
They make The Matrix. The, solid debut. Sure. They make The Matrix.
The entire world changes.
Sure.
Then they have total carte blanche to make two Matrix sequels that people don't like at the time.
And then they don't make a film for...
Five years.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they return with this.
Although they do, like, make V for Vendetta.
Yeah.
That's very much...
I think of that as being a Wachowski's film.
Yeah.
Even though they didn't direct.
Like, I mean, it's just got them all over it. They kind of shadow direct it. Yeah. Yeah. We's very much, I think of that as being a Wachowski's film, even though they didn't direct. Like, I mean, it's just got them all over it.
They kind of shadow direct it.
Yeah.
We have two guests.
I should introduce them quickly because one of our guests is only here for a limited period
of time.
Yes.
Both of our guests, like-
Friends of the show.
Friends of the show, past guests, returning guests, both, you know, deep thinkers on this
film, Speed Racer.
Both months out tapped this-
Yeah. We're like, hey, if you're talking about this,
they did a little tapping.
Had combos with us when we were still in, like, George Lucas land.
Yeah.
Yeah, they were, like, because we were, like, floating out the idea.
From The Verge.
You may know her better from The Podcast Awakens.
Yes.
Or The Podcast Reawakens.
That's my most famous podcast I've ever been on.
Yes.
That's your top credit.
Emily Yoshida.
Emily Yoshida.
Hello.
Thank you for having me back.
We're very excited
to have you back.
Is here and
there's four people
from the Chris Gathard show.
Yeah.
Director show runner.
You may also know him
from Attack of the Podcast
episode
six or seven
six or something digital filmmaking. Yeah. J.D. Episode six or seven.
Six or something.
Digital filmmaking.
Yeah.
J.D. Amato is here.
Hey, guys.
I'm so glad to be here.
Thank you for being here, J.D.
A fan favorite episode, that one.
A couple people have told me.
Oh, that's great.
That's because I still own that movie on my iPhone.
Because of our podcast?
Yeah, because of your podcast.
You'll own it forever.
Because that was the only way to get a copy of it.
Yeah. I had to buy it, and now I have it. Did you own it forever. Because that was the only way to get a copy of it. Yeah.
I had to buy it and now I have it. Did you watch it on your phone or did you Apple TV it? No, I watched
it on my, but then now it's just
beamed over to my phone. So every now and then I'm like,
oh, I'm going to watch a few seconds of it.
Yeah, exactly. I'm going to watch
the Japanese
serving spoon scene of the clone
people. Oh my god.
Oh, you mean with their chairs or Japanese
serving spoons? Yes, right, of course.
Yeah, but
we're not here to talk about Japanese serving
spoons. No, we're here to talk about Speed
motherfucking Racer.
The fifth film?
Yeah, the fifth
Wachowski's film. Directed and written.
Correct? Yeah.
They're direct follow-up written. Correct. And produced.
They sort of oversaw V for Vendetta
and then they also, I believe,
when Oliver Hirschberg, or whatever
his name was, was fired off of The Invasion.
Oh, did they do some shadow directing on The Invasion?
I believe they did a lot of shadow directing on that.
Oh yeah, no, that's true.
I didn't know that. That's why some rando tweeted at me
about The Invasion. Yeah, we're not gonna fucking
cover that. This was all some rando tweeted at me about the invasion. Yeah, we're not going to fucking cover that.
This was all four Wachowski hands on deck in the thick of it,
making a Wachowski film. Yeah, this is the shooting of vision.
Yes, right, right.
They're finally like, yeah, they're blank checking it.
And this was, I think this is the first,
you mentioned that they had several blank checks in a row, theoretically.
Yeah.
This was the first one that quote unquote bounced, I would say, first this you mentioned that they had several blank checks in a row theoretically yeah this was
the first one that quote-unquote bounced i would say where they were like this is where film is
going to be this is what's going to happen here it is and the world was like we're not ready for
this but it made back a quite a bit of its budget not all of it but it was a huge budget so yeah
yeah big budget and and there were big it did basically make it back worldwide, which is not great, but you know, yeah.
But I mean, I think JD is right that no one was quite ready, right?
Well, you just have to put this in context for a little.
Going into this movie, they made four films.
Three of those movies were The Matrix, right?
Yeah, but two of them were Matrix movies that nobody liked.
It's true.
Agreed, but you still look at the bigger picture and it's like, okay, so three out of four times at bat, these folks had a huge cultural impact.
And this was before I think people got sequel-itis where it was just like if you made three bad movies, you could be like, oh, these aren't good.
Where the idea of sequels being these amazing things in their own right wasn't as normal as it is now.
Yes. Whereas now you're like, no, the third, right, wasn't as normal as it is now. Yes.
Whereas now you're like, no, the third, fourth, fifth movie in a series
should be amazing.
In fact, then you're like, ah, it's sequels, you know.
Right, sequels are crappy.
They're going to get worse, yeah.
In a way, I feel like this is the first film, though,
to actually pick up fans who may be dropped off for Reloaded.
Because they were, you know, it's like, okay, I liked what they did with Matrix.
I was into that.
Wasn't so into the second or third movies, but here they're going to do a whole different thing.
Right, yeah, but that was all more Matrix.
So, yeah, I want to see them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And their MO for almost every Matrix film was we're going to do something in cinema that has not been done before and
you guys are going to rip this off rest of
cinema for the next 10-15
years but we're going to do it first. We're going to invent
this stuff. And so when Speed Race was
coming out I remember thinking
what's the new thing? What are they going to do?
What are they doing?
I'm going to go on mic again as a throwback
because I forgot to eat breakfast. The other
aspect to think about here
is like...
Are you eating dry Cheerios?
Yeah.
Emily was talking about how
this film had like
a crazy torture development cycle
because, you know,
Speed Racer was big in the 70s
and then it started re-airing
in the 90s
and it became this sort of
Gen X thing
that was like hitting
two generations at once
because 70s kids
who had grown up with it
were now watching it again
and there suddenly was like a lot of merchandising and everything.
And then also a new generation of kids were watching it.
And Warner Brothers was like, oh, we should buy the rights to this thing, try to make a movie out of it.
I want to bring up one indication.
I texted this to David this morning.
There was a 1996 Volkswagen GTI commercial.
It's weird.
It's so good. That's a live action speed race? No, it's a speed race. It's a little short. It's weird. It's so good.
That's a live action
speed race?
No, it's a speed race.
It's a little short.
It's a speed racer short.
Oh, I remember this.
And it's like
the Mach 5 gets
hijacked or something
and then
so he drives a GTI instead.
And I remember
that commercial to me
now looks like
okay, Volkswagens were cool
and like hipster as shit
and also Speed Racer
was just hot
in 96. Did you guys
grow up watching Speed Racer at all?
It was in the air, yes. Yeah, casually. I wasn't
a huge fan, but I definitely watched it.
I loved Speed Racer growing up.
I did not watch Speed Racer. Where were you guys watching
it on? It was like a Saturday morning.
I don't remember.
It kind of just passed me by.
I mean, I knew of it, but I remember even at the time in like the 2000s when it was always like oh speed racer movie like and i was like who's who's into a speed
racer movie like why are they putting so much effort into making this thing at the time warner
brothers bought the rights it was definitely like 92 i think is when they re re they did
they reboot of the series and then i think that they started showing that one.
Because the original 60s or 70s series,
they had that,
and then there was another 90s reboot.
Right.
And I think both were playing sort of simultaneously.
I feel like they had a 90s reboot,
and then someone else started airing the originals.
Well, that's also when cable became sort of more ubiquitous.
Right, and I just got the Cartoon Network.
Right, right.
And so there was a lot of kids' channels that needed programming,
so that's why a lot of 70s shows got re-licensed because they were cheap.
And it was like, well, we need to fill time for the first time.
And real, like, C-level kid shows from, like, the 70s.
Like, Richie Rich.
Like, I remember watching that for some reason.
I would watch, like, Johnny Quest and all these, like, Centurions,
all these, like, totally random, right,
like this, like, garbage that they kind of collected. Actual Space Ghost, not the these like centurions, all these like totally random, right, like this like garbage that they kind of collected.
Actual Space Ghost, not the like comedy version.
Actual Space Ghost and actual Birdman
and all like the old stuff like that.
I do think that's a weird thing where,
I mean, even with Netflix and like a greater
sort of accessibility to all these old cartoons,
I do feel like, and maybe I'm wrong about this,
but I feel like kids today don't have the same sense of older cartoons.
Like my sister's like nine years younger than me, right?
And when the Yogi Bear movie came out, she was like,
what the fuck is Yogi Bear?
And I was like, he's like a bear and he steals picnic baskets.
And she's like, that's the entire premise of the show?
And I was like, you know, when we were like, you know, children, and like the i was like you know when we were like you know
children and like the flintstones movie came out we were fully versed in flintstones we were watching
the flintstones all the time and that show was 40 years old at that point well you get so much more
stuff by osmosis instead of like specifically seeking it out on demand yes it's like i don't
want to watch speed racer it was on it was on And I feel like this, you know, I mean, all the nostalgia things that are being made right
now are like mid-90s at the earliest.
Yeah.
Because before that, if it's like a children's type property, it doesn't really have any
value.
Other than Alvin and the Chipmunks, because apparently helium voices will always be funny.
Is the entire Chipmunks legacy, like not the films films, but what people know of the original cartoon,
is it just the Christmas Time Is Here song?
I feel like that's the only thing that still...
Chipmunk Punk is their best album, I would say.
Cool.
I still have Memorize in my head.
Do you remember they have the commercials for the albums?
Yeah.
And I don't know their full songs, but I remember there was a moment where it's like,
another song, such as,
Uptown Girl.
Do you, does she love me?
And that switch from Uptown Girl to Do You Love Me?
That's ingrained in your brain?
It's stuck in my head.
When we were kids, we would watch old animated shows,
and we would watch countless ads for compilation albums
where the titles are all scrolling by, made of shows and we would watch countless ads for compilation albums where like cool rock where
where the the titles are all scrolling by and then the one in yellow is the one that's playing
i mean how many of those did i watch now that's what i call music blue and then that like blue
screen with all the credit card information that to me was just like i was like oh this is
a grown-up thing yes right like this is where you get your parents into the room.
Google will tell me what this means one day.
You freeze in the headlights of adulthood of like, I can't do anything if I touch
a phone or something could go wrong.
I remember doing fake radio shows when I was a kid
and doing ads like that and always
stopping, making sure to specify
no CODs, which I didn't even know what that was.
Right, exactly.
There's a weird phenomenon that you're getting at, though, JD, where it's like there are
certain songs that I still think of as being combined with other songs.
Like there was like a pure love songs compilation that the ad used to always play.
And they'd go like, why do birds suddenly appear every time you are near?
Loving you.
And like for me, that's one song.
That's continuous, you know?
Much like for me, now the Speed Racer theme is forever a dual Spanish-English hip-hop, techno-fueled romp.
And no longer can the original theme song ever play in my head without hearing them go,
Go, Speed Racer, go!
And then they go into Spanish, which I won't do because I don't know the actual words,
but just the syllables that they're saying.
They also, don't they have like a lot of little samples from the English language
on running throughout, which is like a very 90s techno thing.
Yeah.
Like I feel like original Speed Racer, the dub, would have been sampled in like,
I don't know, what, an Uncle Jack or something like that.
It reminds me of like when they first made Mortal Kombat movie and it was like the theme
song had the like, test your might, test your might.
And this was like, go Speed Racer, go.
Okay, so that's one of the really weird phenomenons to this movie that like Speed Racer, what
it originally started airing in the 70s was one of the first Japanese cartoons to air in America.
Yes. It was kind of badly
dubbed sort of like a...
It was jank as shit.
So that was like the dual aspects to sort of
why it stuck in
the craw culturally is
one, it was like this new
introduction to this sort of different type of storytelling
style, this different animation style
That was very different than what we were used to you know in Western animation
Especially if you compare it's like Hanna-Barbera
I mean it's very dense plotting the way the action sequences were designed the movements all that sort of stuff
And then these shitty translations on top of it. Yeah, so much like you know the shitty kung fu movie
Translations became a thing for kids growing up. It was like why are the voices weird on speed racer why don't their mouths
sync up
why isn't there more than two frames of animation
it would be like a fade from speed in the car
to speed in the air
and when pops would get mad he would just sort of like shift
grumpy positions without like in between
it was kind of like early video games
to us too we were growing up on these
like pixelated video games
but we should we'll get to this,
but the pan
is the ultimate tool
of low-budget anime.
Yes.
The pan is what makes you feel
like you're watching
something active.
The pan is a constant
throughout this movie,
which I think is brilliant.
I love it so much.
Just to expound upon that.
I really love this movie.
This is going to be
a very academic episode
because we all love this movie
and are trying to break down
why other people don't like it
instead of
because those people are dumb
what Emily's describing
is instead of
animating any of these things
they would just draw
what would be like
imagine like
a three foot wide painting
of a scene
it's like a comics panel
exactly
it's like a long comics panel
and then they would animate
the camera move
which you could automate across
and then they'd maybe switch out one or two things in it,
and that meant they could get 30 seconds of animation out of one drawing.
Yeah, like just the mouth would move, but it would feel cinematic.
And I will say—
It's kind of like a Garfield cartoon.
Yes.
Carry on.
I believe that you can lay out all of Speed Racer the movie into one singular image.
I bet you could do it. I bet you could do it.
I think you could do it.
You mean like every
frame?
I think the
end composition, like the digital comp
that you're looking at,
arguably, I mean they didn't do it this way, but
you could combine them all to be like one camera
that just moves from connected
video to connected video.
Yeah, it's like a collage.
So, yeah.
It announces itself with that opening like 20-minute sequence or whatever.
Like this is what this movie is going to be like where it's like he's racing, but here's his backstory, and here's what's going on with his family, and here's what's going on like in his childhood.
We have to get in depth with that opening because it's brilliant i just want to say just to sort of set the stage
quickly so they like in the 90s it sort of comes back it's re-airing kids are getting into it and
i think it was sort of this like common touchstone for kids who had grown up with it were like
remember how weird speed racer was the plotting was strange the animation was so bizarre the
voices were over the top it's being repurposed into like commercials and stuff warner brothers
buys the rights
and for 15 years
is aggressively trying
to make a movie
and can never figure it out.
Johnny Depp and Julian Temple
almost do it.
Then Alfonso Cuaron
and Michelle Gondry
both, I think,
almost made their
big American debuts on it.
There were ideas
to make it a more serious,
gritty film.
There were ideas
to make it a Brady Bunch
style parody.
Then Vince Vaughn
bought the rights in the early 2000s. Vince Vaughn bought the rights in the early 2000s.
Vince Vaughn bought the rights?
And he wanted to play Racer X,
and he was like, he wanted to make it very character-based.
Wait, was it...
But serious?
Wait, like...
Henry Rollins was offered the role.
Henry Rollins was supposed to be Speed Racer at one point.
No, no, it was supposed to be Racer X.
Oh, Racer X?
I thought it was supposed to be Speed Racer.
I think in the Julian Temple version,
it was going to be Johnny Depp and Henry Rollins
were going to be the two leads. Of course.
And then, like, you know, post-Matrix,
even though the movies weren't very well liked, they did
make money for Warner Brothers, at least Reloaded did.
Oh, sure, yeah. And they sort of had Caché do
whatever they wanted, because everyone's like, what's the next
Wachowski thing going to be? And they team up
with Joel Silver, and they were like, we grew up on
Speed Racer, we loved it,
we'd like to make something that had broader appeal, you know, that isn't R-rated.
Right.
So if they go to Warner Brothers, they go, we want to make something that's more accessible
than The Matrix.
Warner Brothers is going to be like, yeah, you want to make something that's more successful
than The Matrix?
Do that.
And they sort of left it to their own devices.
And they made the weirdest creative choice they could have made, which was directly adapting
the American translation of Speed Racer.
It is not an adaptation of the Japanese version at all.
It is not Macho Go-Go-Go, the movie.
Right.
That's something I don't understand.
Someone should probably just explain that to me.
What's the difference?
I mean, apart from the language, obviously.
No, I mean just the names and stuff.
And Macho Go-Go-Go is the Japanese word for five, obviously. Well, no, I mean, just like the names and stuff. And like, Mak,
Go,
Go,
Go,
Go is the Japanese word for five.
So it's Mak five,
but it is a pun because it's like,
Go,
Go,
Go.
Okay.
And his name is Go Mifune.
Which means just like,
just like we love Shiro Mifune and we're going to name every single character after him.
And I forget.
Yeah, they all have different names.
Like,
I don't think it's Pops race.
That's right.
I think you're right.
I think I looked that up and it's not.
I think the energy of the show very much,
the weird specific energy that the American version has
comes out of how, like, large and stilted
and out of sync the vocal performances are,
which I think the film very much replicates that energy.
You know, it's this weird tonal thing.
It's very loud.
JD has a limited amount of time, so I want to
throw the soapbox over to you.
Yeah, you got 10 minutes, JD.
I want to set the stage
for things a little bit.
Why I'm here is because I think whenever
Speed Racer comes up to conversation,
I say a pretty
outrageous statement, and then I have to describe my experience of watching Speed Racer. I believe that Speed Racer comes up to conversation. I say a pretty outrageous statement, and then I have to describe my experience
of watching Speed Racer.
So I believe that Speed Racer is the most underrated,
under-respected for its additions to cinema film
in the past, I want to say, 20 years.
I don't know.
That's a rant.
I'm trying to think why I say 20 years
because I would assume that 20 years ago
there was some movie that was...
1996, baby.
English Patient.
Yeah.
Something wasn't...
English Patient changed the game and Speed Racer changed it again.
Maybe it's more than that.
Maybe it's more than that.
I get your overall...
Speed Racer does pick up.
My focus fades...
It leaves off.
Yeah, exactly.
My focus fades out 20 years before and I go, okay, there's probably something.
Right.
So Speed Racer to me is a unique film.
Like, okay, there's probably something.
So Speed Racer to me is a unique film.
If you watch it today, I think you might watch it and not be as impressed or as overwhelmed as I think people were when it first came out.
Right. Because I believe that Speed Racer set the tone of the hyper-pop overstimulation, like hyper-pop culture aesthetic that we now live in and that mainstream has adapted.
And I think it's become softened,
but I think Speed Racer
was like this explosion up top
that then created all of these films,
including films like Draft Day.
Yeah, that's your big point
is that Draft Day
has the exact same editing style
as Speed Racer.
Yeah, all those weird pans.
And it's true.
And the crazy, crazy, crazy
triple, double screens.
And Costner walks
through frames
and transitions
but also that movie
is made for dads
like that movie
is made for an audience
that doesn't want
to be challenged
and anime fans
yeah
well it's based off
of course the classic
anime called
Draft Go Go
right
exactly
yeah
your character name
was not
originally
Jake the Intern
Go Go Football
Go Go Intern Go Go Go Football.
Go Go Intern.
Go Go Coffee.
Exactly.
Intern Mifune.
Intern Mifune.
But I think you can look at movies like Scott Pilgrim, which then people are like, oh, wow,
this is such a new thing.
And it's like, no, no, no, no.
Scott Pilgrim, all these films were in the wake of Speed Racer.
But Scott Pilgrim also didn't do that well.
People didn't quite get that one either.
Absolutely.
But I think people were like, look at this, doing new stuff.
They're refining this tech.
To me, it was like, no, no, no, no, no.
Speed Racer got there first.
JD pops up.
He's like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Finger wag.
So let me describe my experience of watching Speed Racer.
I was a Speed Racer fan.
Growing up, watching the cartoon series, got super excited.
One of my dream things was, I'd love to make a speed racer movie
and then when it was like what Chelsea's doing I was like
alright they're gonna go for it I respect this
let's see it all the advertising
was all over the place
this was a crazily heavily advertised movie
they also clearly had no idea how to sell the movie
they didn't know how to sell it because there were trailers that were
like for kids and it was like funny
goofy family fun there's a monkey
go speed racer like the music was really prominent and then there were trailers that were like four kids and it was like funny goofy family fun there's a monkey go speed racer like
the music was really exactly yeah and then there were trailers that were like super intense this
is dark drama and it was like all over the house speed underneath it exactly but it was like dark
drama with still the same imagery which made you watch the trailer and go what the fuck is this
movie well and like it would focus a lot on the actions a lot of cars like flipping over each
other like racer x dialogue like no he's gonna be the best like the's a lot of cars flipping over each other. And they'd use racer X dialogue like, no, he's gonna be the best.
Yeah, sure, sure.
The lines that,
out of context,
put into that sort of trailer
made it look like,
does this movie think
that it's the Matrix?
Or does it think
that it's like Rocky
or something?
Or a superhero movie.
Yeah.
Another superhero movie.
So then I go to see it.
I go to see it at
Lincoln Center,
which has the IMAX screens.
The for real IMAX.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The for real IMAX.
2D. Big point.
2D. This is before 3D
was a ubiquitous thing.
That's my favorite way to see a movie,
by the way. IMAX 2D.
It's so hard to do these things.
Rarely play them in 2D. It's very annoying.
And real IMAX, too.
Of course, not LIMAX. So I'm in there
in an audience. The theater is packed.
I'm sitting right in the middle with a bunch of other film school people. We're all
watching this film unfold. And as it
goes, something starts happening that I
have only seen at that time in a movie
and I have not seen since.
As visuals unfold, the audience
begins cheering and clapping
and screaming as things happen.
Not because of their story or plot
elements, but because of the visual
exposure is crazy.
And then there is a moment at the end of the film.
So the film goes, like people are wrapped up in it.
And the entire time everyone's looking around like,
this is crazy.
What are we watching?
I've heard JD tell the story like five times
and I still get chills every time he tells it.
And it's growing and the whole audience feels like,
what are we watching?
Like, what is this thing?
Because it doesn't stop.
There's no edit.
There's no breath.
And when there is a breath,
it's like you've been tricked into taking a breath
and suddenly you're like oh wait it's slow now but it's not
and then something happens and then
the climax of the film happens
the final race which is very emotional
it's amazing and it's
the editing and all the stuff and it's all
this imagery and they've built this foundation of like
things coming in and you being used
to the fact that like someone's going to be talking
and a scene's going to be happening while action's happening
it's like all these layers
on top of each other
and in the final moment
um
Speed's car
jumps over the
the finish line
and the finish line
wraps around the screen
and forms
it's like a checkerboard
kaleidoscope
and it turns into like a tunnel
yeah
and it's in super HD
so you can see every checker
and everything
and it's spinning
the car's spinning one way and the checkerboard's spinning another way.
And I've never seen this happen in a theater before.
Since, like, before then.
And never again have I seen this happen.
A 2D movie.
This is not a 3D movie.
The entire audience, in unison, screamed in terror and delight.
And put their hands in front of their face to block their eyes from what was
images and colors and lights and sounds that were so overwhelming.
And so just like it was like seeing a new color that everyone screamed and it happened
and that everyone laughed and giggled and like clapped with each other of just like
what just happened to our eyes and ears.
It was amazing.
We're also all crying because Speed Racer wins
the race. Spoiler alert.
It's the most cathartic.
I think it's hacky to talk about
climaxes this way, but it is
orgasm on top of orgasm, the end of this
movie. It just keeps coming and coming
and coming.
To me, I saw that and I said
the Wachowskis are
the most talented, ahead of the curve.
Their only fault is that they're ahead of where people are.
Right.
They're always five years ahead or whatever.
Exactly.
And while there are, I think there's so many flaws you can talk about at Speed Racer and
so many places where the film is not strong or where elements of the filmmaking process
were not fully realized.
Right.
But as a whole, it is a film that is like, like, it's like Hodorovsky.
It's like, it's like ahead of its time from another planet.
It's films from another planet.
And this is one of them.
And I think people thought that it was just like a, like gone in 60 seconds, some just
like action movie with cars and stuff like this.
Or that it was like Alvin and the Chipmunks.
There's just some silly kids.
And it's not sure.
No, this was, this was the full force of force of wachowski's these people who were pushing filmmaking forward and they just
happened to take this property at a time when also it wasn't totally as hip and understood that like
maybe it's its lowest point of relevance 15 years out of date at this point exactly from the revival
like 15 years from the second wind.
But even now,
I think rebooting properties
that aren't as popular
is something people are like,
oh, cool, that's fine.
Let's see what it is.
And this was a point
where that was not in vogue
and people are like,
why the fuck?
Why are you doing Speed Racer?
And the question is still
why Speed Racer?
But what they did with it
and the technology
they put behind it
and the imagery
and all this stuff
was so ahead of its time
and I do think
completely impacted
the superhero genre we see today
of this like pop infused,
super like sort of like
the kind of living cartoon.
Saturated image
sort of mixed with reality.
And like cinematic excess.
Yeah, exactly.
And like having this like
super cartoony, fun, crazy,
all this stuff happening,
mixing it with like
super melodrama at the same time
that really hadn't been done
in that way.
And then movies like Guardians,
all these things that come out now that probably
have found the middle ground a little bit more than that.
But I think Speed Racer set the stage
and I think people need to respect that and go back and
watch Speed Racer and see what it did
and just turn off the part of your brain that
thinks that you knew what it was and just watch it
and let it wash over you. Well, I want to see an
IMAX 2D now. Yeah, yeah.
Let's have a little round of applause.
JD, well done.
It is noon,
so you might have to mic drop there.
Yeah.
I mean, you did it, I would say.
I might be able to buy myself some more minutes,
but I'll have to step outside for a minute.
These are a couple of things
I'm going to say in response to what you just said.
One, when you tell that story
and you talk about the reaction,
the thing it reminds me of
is when you hear about people
seeing the Lumiere Brothers film
of the train entering the station
and they were like, I don't understand.
Is a train about to hit me?
Yes.
And I do think the I mean, there were very few critics who stood up for this movie when
it came out.
And I don't remember who it was, but whoever was writing for Time Out New York at the time
made this plea that it was like, you know, all these other critics are looking at and
thinking the story is melodramatic or that the physics of the movie don't make sense
or this or that.
And they were like, the Wachowskis are working on such a pure level, actually redefining
what cinema is.
This is getting back to the essence of like things moving like the early camera test where
it's about watching a horse run, you know?
Well, the end of that movie is also like 2001.
I mean, it just becomes completely abstract color and emotion and like somebody just doing
something that nobody else has ever done before and
everybody's just like freaking out like it keeps
usually in that kind of thing it would be distracting
if you keep cutting back to like Susan Sarandon
and Christina Ricci clapping but you're like
no it's me it's me
narratively this film is super
abstract because it's like every scene
is also about everything that's happening after
and before that yeah yeah yeah
yeah and there's also
the other thing I was going to say,
JD, is like,
a lot of the idea of this
series that we do, David...
I need a cigarette right now.
It's very warm in here.
I got worked up and I was
running into the wall.
Speakers are the greatest
film ever made.
Watching it this time... I can think of a few things that Speakers are the greatest film ever made. You know what?
I mean, watching it this time.
I can think of a few things
that make it not the greatest film ever made.
Yes, absolutely.
There are flaws.
We can backfellows.
We'll dig in.
Flaws are also kind of what make it incredible.
Well, that's kind of the Wachowski experience.
It's like you do have to kind of buy in
no matter what.
That's fucking filmmaking.
That's cinema.
The whole idea is that you create this thing,
these series of images,
these 24 images a second,
screaming by your face,
and in doing so, you can combine
enough of them with enough things going on
that at the end, the audience watching it
has this visceral reaction, this feeling
they've never felt before. They can't really pin down.
Their only reaction that they can
think to have is just to
scream and laugh
and clap
and that's what
that's what filmmaking should be
is just like
we're gonna throw these things together
and see what it can make you feel
and Speed Racer did that
and I think people
do not respect that
and do not realize
that it did that
because they
wrote it off
never watched it
maybe they watched the first five minutes
on fucking YouTube or something
I had a listener
of this podcast
who I
respect a lot
I won't call him out
because I think he's gonna to rewatch the movie.
But he was telling me that he tried to watch it knowing that we were going to do it and was like, I watched the first five minutes.
I just couldn't handle it.
And I was like, you need to understand that the first five minutes are so overwhelming.
The first 10 minutes of that film are so overwhelming because you've never seen a movie structured like this before where you're watching one race but also processing every moment of this kid's life yeah simultaneous with the race and i was like it's
overwhelming but then it settles into itself and also the language they establish in that opening
scene sets up the final race that is so cathartic and such a path and they can only get to if you
like understand this sort of vernacular they've set up but oh the thing i was gonna say is i i
think our sort of like our mission statement to
this podcast is we're interested when someone has massive success and then they sort of
lose it.
Right.
They can't figure out how to get back into the thing.
And someone like Shyamalan or Lucas.
Yeah.
They like never.
Shyamalan's always scrambling to like get the get the lightning back in the bottle or
whatever.
Right.
Especially.
And you and I like all the Wachowski films.
Yeah.
Like, and I think what we were interested,
what interested us in covering them
was that it was a different angle of not like,
why did they lose it,
but why did the public stop following them?
Right, yeah.
Because The Matrix, everyone loved,
and then they sort of lost the audience.
And we think these films are brilliant,
but they didn't really connect.
And I think there are two factors.
One of them, you know,
two major factors in this disconnect with the Wachowskis since
you know Matrix
the first Matrix really
one is that they kept on looking six steps
ahead of everyone else so there's a speed
you can move at because you even look at something like Avatar
where people are like this was a breakthrough this was never done
before 3D had been back for like
four or five years but hadn't really worked yet
Zemeckis had been doing his shitty motion
captured movies like That's true.
Zemeckis had been doing it.
Like people had a sense
of the poor version
of what Cameron was trying to do
and then he was like
here's the good version.
The Polar Express
is the most underrated
under-
I'm just kidding.
Wouldn't that kill everything
if that was like
I was like
I want to go to Bad Heart
for the Polar Express.
Polar Express
from Mars Needs Moms.
Yeah.
A film that lives
in the uncanny valley.
It's made a home there.
I don't...
I have to step out real quick.
I'll try to come back in like 15 minutes or so.
Okay.
I remember I tried to make the term polar expressive a thing for like weird uncanny valley expressionless monster people.
Yeah.
I think there's this two-pronged thing.
One of them is that like, you know, the Wachowskis were looking four steps ahead when the audience is maybe only ready to see one step ahead.
Right. Yeah. And I remember I saw this movie with my sister Romley.
So she must have been she was like 10 at the time.
She was not a Speed Racer fan. She had no context for what was happening.
The movie flopped really hard, was very quickly out of theaters domestically, at least.
And we went to what was literally the last showing in New York City. The movie flopped really hard, was very quickly out of theaters, domestically at least.
And we went to what was literally the last showing in New York City.
It was like the Union Square Theater on like a Thursday at five o'clock.
And it was the last theater playing it.
And afterwards she said, what did you think?
And I was like, I think I liked it. But I also think we don't necessarily have the frame of reference to judge this movie because it's so many steps ahead of what other movies are doing right now that we might live in a world 10 years from now where all movies look like this to a degree.
But I think the other element to why people have had a hard time connecting with their work, and this is where everything shifted with Speed Racer, is this movie is achingly sincere.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
There's no irony whatsoever. It's 100% about how capitalism is bad and how artists should be sincere. Yeah. Absolutely. It's 100. There's no irony whatsoever.
It's 100% about how capitalism is bad
and how artists should be independent.
And how family is good. Emily has a great
read on this movie as a reaction to the
Wachowski's experience making The Matrix.
Okay, so I have a similar read. But I want to go back
to two things, okay?
I just think we have to acknowledge the sincerity
early on because it's a present, but we have
to talk about everything else. But the thing about your sister going in without any context.
You don't need context for it.
It's fucking Speed Racer.
It's a dumb cartoon.
I mean, it's silly.
His literal last name is Racer.
Yes.
And his first name is Speed.
His first name is Speed.
His dad's name is Pops.
When he was a baby, his parents named him Pops.
That's because he did come out a mini John Goodman with a mustache.
Let's be honest.
That name is so crazy, so insane.
That's like if in the real world there was an actor who starred in car movies whose name was Vin Diesel.
Could you imagine how insane that would be?
So the one thing is like, and that's I think to the film's credit, it that like we do not need to treat Speed Racer as the sacred text we can take the themes that the Speed Racer was constantly
dealing with which is like oh is he going to sign with the big capitalist bad guys or is he going
to stay loyal to his family that is all that Speed Racer is about they just take that and make it
into a Wachowski's narrative of that which like makes a lot of sense so that's great uh they don't
try to overly mythologize it the way that we're really used to now as superhero movies you just have to take it as it is yeah yeah the other the thing
about the visuals and the thing about them being ahead of the time that i think is like weirdly
tragic because i watched this um i watched this on my roku uh streamed from amazon uh and you know
internet speeds vary and this does not stand
up well to on-demand streaming.
You would need to watch this on a Blu-ray or
on an actual production of it.
You cannot have buffering going on
with this. Or even just that thing
where it kind of will pixelate.
Because all of those backgrounds that are all
completely digital and
fabulous and detailed,
but you will lose all that and it'll
just look like a weird neon cloud yeah like clarity is sort of the big visual idea that
one of the big ideas they had in this movie and um you know they talked a lot about like even the
scenes that are shot on sets where there's very little you know sort of obvious digital effects
like the stuff in the house yeah the big house, yeah. The big idea they had was A, shooting all on digital cameras, which was still pretty
fresh at that time, and B, making this like insane depth of field so that all the images
were very flat.
Yeah.
And a lot of the other shots, they do composite shots.
So they'd like film the background and focus, they film the actors and focus, and they composite
them together so it looked like a cartoon where it's just an image on top of an image.
Right.
Which is like another very, very literal translation of an anime aesthetic like a super flat like it's just that's the way that
like they made that work on film in a way that nobody has ever done before or pulled off
i would also argue we were talking about this earlier i don't think anybody else should ever
attempt like yeah i don't trust anyone else no No, I don't. I think it works
both to the film's detriment
and to its success.
I mean, it looks
unlike anything else,
which is why
I think it's special.
Yeah, and I think,
I mean, I honestly think
that look,
which was so bizarre
against the landscape
of other movies,
especially in this sort of space
of big summer blockbusters,
which are mostly very concerned
with trying to seem cool. And The Matrix, you know, was sort of space of big summer blockbusters, which are mostly very concerned with trying to seem cool.
And The Matrix, you know, was
sort of misinterpreted as a very cool
movie. Because it is a cool movie,
but it's not a posturing movie.
No, but it did set cool aesthetics
for the next few years. I just watched
all three of those movies this weekend.
And it...
You guys, like, the sunglasses.
I mean, it just reminds me of every single stoner guy I knew in my freshman and sophomore year of high school.
Right.
Well, that's the thing.
It did have a coolness posturing to it, I think.
I think it's very specific to them.
I think in hindsight, we can recognize it as being like a actually kind of geeky version of coolness.
Exactly.
That's the sort of point I was going gonna make is that like at the time it was
looked at as this very cool movie but it's actually like a nerd's idea of what's cool
and by dumb luck it's like a larper's idea yeah right and by dumb luck that conception
linked up at the moment culturally with some idea of what cool actually was right and it was like oh
these guys are hip they're edgy snake skin right but then you look back and it's like
no they're just very sincere nerds and somehow their thing hit a nerve you know yeah like this
was just a pure expression of what they were interested in aesthetically emotionally psychologically
philosophically and speed racers the same thing but the culture was like pass yeah you know and
um you look at like when the trailers were happening the aesthetics made no
fucking sense if you were imagining seeing that like in between trailers for like the incredible
hulk and and fucking you know like wanted or whatever you know i'm trying to think of 08
movies wasn't indiana jones yeah crystal skull was that iron man kung fu panda no iron man
ruined this movie yes because this movie came out a week after Iron Man.
It was completely crushed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's right.
Yeah.
But I think like if you watch the film, there's sort of an immersion therapy thing where the
movie teaches you how to watch it and sort of those visuals make sense to you.
But if you're just seeing a trailer, you're like, is this movie supposed to look shitty?
Like a lot of people were like, why are the effects so bad?
So in that way,
I would say that's the way
that you would need to be primed.
Like not in the mythology
of Speed Racer necessarily.
Which is not really a thing anyway.
But in the grammar of anime.
Like I think that's what,
you will get so much more satisfaction
out of this film
seeing those really subtle translations
from animation to live action.
Even using the source material of a pretty crappily animated show just seeing how they interpret that in like a
very very much higher budget production uh is really interesting and like even when the film
is kind of lagging that is something to chew on i mean there was just such a especially post like
star wars prequels and stuff there was was such an even mainstream rejection of green screen.
I don't like it when things look like they're on a green screen.
I don't like it when I can tell that there's a seam or anything like that.
And Speed Racer was doubling down on that.
It's a deliberately artificial movie in the same way that the MGM musicals embrace the fact that they were shot on sets.
Rather than trying to make it look like a real apartment, you did the end of, you know, An American in Paris,
where it's like this, you know,
super heightened artificial fantasy dream sequence.
And this movie is like that.
Like it's using digital technology.
I mean, there's even something very simple in,
you look at their complete disregard of like real world physics
in the racing sequences.
The way the cars spin and the way they jump up.
There's no effort to explain like how these things can happen.
Right.
And aside from the fact that like, okay, the technology is impossible.
You can't have like a car on like spring stilts that can like spin over like that and land perfectly.
Right.
But even beyond that, the way they animate those movements that would be impossible,
rather than trying to have them be dictated by any sort of well if this could then it
would go like this the cars move
like kids playing on a fucking Hot Wheels
track it's like you lift the car up on
your hand and you spin it around six times
because that'd be cool and then you drop it straight down
or they'll like crash into each other
you know but it's just like it's gonna
spin an extra time because that's awesome
a lot of people die in this film
yeah it's interesting because you do once in a while see to spend an extra time because that's awesome. Yeah. A lot of people die in this film. Yeah. Yeah.
It's interesting because you do once in a while see that shot of somebody like being
encased in like bubble wrap or whatever when they get out of their car.
Like there's some sort of safety feature.
But you only see it once or twice.
A lot of times people just blow up.
Yeah.
No.
Anytime you see a car explode, we are meant to understand that that person died.
Right.
This is a blood sport.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And like the world of this, I mean the world makes, it seems to be only racing, right?
Like the world that this is in.
Everyone loves racing.
Racing is like America's favorite art form.
Which is why, like why is this teacher so down on him then?
Like, of course, isn't everybody really into racing?
Like, it seems like that.
Yeah.
I, oh, should I share my theory about this film?
It's not a theory.
It's just like theory it's just like
it's like dumb armchair
psychology but
I might imagine
we specialize in
dumb armchair psychology
should we go through
the plot a little bit
just because
the point you want to get to
is set up in the first
like 30 minutes
right absolutely
so the opening 10 minutes
of this movie
are a fucking masterpiece
they're amazing
so fun
it's basically speed
on the racetrack
the opening shot
is speed in a
in like a locker room.
Oh, yeah, and tapping his foot.
From behind.
He's getting ready for the race.
Even before that, the fucking studio logo's on this film.
Michael Giacchino did the score, which is amazing.
And you just have these very poetic, quiet, subdued notes of the theme
starting to creep in in a very subtle way.
And the logos, the Silver Studios logo,
Village Roadshow, Warner Brothers,
are done with this kaleidoscopic,
I mean, sort of what JD was talking about
at the end of the film,
but priming you for the color palette of the film,
the movement of the film,
and then hard cut to Emile Hirsch
in a real physical location, right?
Yeah.
Like a set, tapping his leg,
nervous before the race,
you don't see his face,
and then boom, the movie
goes straight into like 70 things at
once. His childhood, his
adolescence, his family,
the race itself. His girlfriend.
His girlfriend. You set up every
character, you set up the entire history
and this is all intercut with a
race that we're seeing. A race we're seeing where
we eventually understand that he is
racing against the ghost of
his older brother who died
in a fiery car
accident and he's racing him like
he's fucking doing a Mario Kart time trial
where we see like... That's actually the second
race. No, no, it's the first race.
It's the first race. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The spectral ghost. Oh no, the second one is
the one his brother died on. Yes, exactly.
The rally. But we see like this sort of spectral image
Of his brother's car like doing the opposite
Moves of his car and like the people
Are like is he going to break a record and then at the end
He doesn't so he like slides
Into the image of his brother's car
This movie also could have just been a Mario Kart
Movie
Oh that would be great
Make a Mario Kart movie Wachowski
They already did it's like everything is Rainbow Road in this.
It's amazing.
Good call.
It's also, this is how a lot of Speed Racer,
this is how a lot of filmmakers would have ended their Speed Racer movie.
Yeah, sure.
With him making this emotional decision to let his brother have his legacy or whatever.
Yeah, and the stuff they're intercutting with the race would be like the first hour of the movie.
They'd play all that stuff out chronologically in real time.
I mean, you see Speed Racer as a little boy.
You see his relationship with Rex.
You see after Rex dies.
You see him meeting Trixie, his girlfriend,
that relationship developing.
You see all of this stuff.
And like most films would be like,
okay, that's act one, you know?
And then act two is him getting ready for this race
and act three is the race.
Yeah.
And this film just gives you all this
in the first 10 minutes
and it gets at this idea.
I think there are two big sort of ideas to this film.
I mean, it's all this sort of battle.
I mean, I think this is what you're getting at,
but it's like this battle of commerce versus art.
Right.
And I think there's this,
one of the central ideas they're getting at
is that any great art is the product of every single life experience you've had up until that
point. You know, like it's not just about being talented. It's not just about being hardworking.
If you're making great, true, genuine art, it's everything has taken you to this one moment.
Right. And that's the thing they keep on getting at is like in the races, you're going back to
everything that's happened in Speed Racer's life, relevant or irrelevant.
You know, the big moments and the little moments.
And he's all he's entirely a product of his entire experience.
Well, the races are interesting the way that they're shown, especially the last one, because
while there is like some conflict with the other racers and there's some, you know, dirty
tricks and stuff in one of them. It really, they are personal experiences.
They are cathartic, like, modes of expression,
more so than battles or conflicts.
Like, that is happening on the surface,
but the real thing that that scene is about is, like,
what's he going through?
Yeah, one thing I like about this movie
is that there is no rival on the track per se.
This isn't a movie about Speed Racer versus Racer X or anyone else.
Like there are lots of rivals who are like just kind of bad guys or whatever.
But there's never any kind of dynamic playing out between like the drama is as you say is much more in his head and in like the film story at large than it is about like oh, he has to finish ahead of Bloddy Bloth,
the guy with the mustache.
So here's my read on this film.
So it starts out with him doing this race
and doing very, very well at it,
beating everybody.
Sure.
It's sort of his breakout star moment
where people take notice.
It's his breakout star moment.
And yeah,
and the big time comes the calling.
Royalton. Yeah, Royalton. Oh comes the calling. Royalton.
Yeah, Royalton.
Oh, so good, so good.
Roger Allum.
Roger Allum.
He's also in V for Vendetta.
The villain in V for Vendetta.
And he's a great British theater actor.
He, yeah, so he kind of gets introduced or whisked away into this world of like oh we could take really good
care of you like we live you know this is
this is what the big time looks like
you know very very like we see
this kind of thing in all sorts of movies
but done in the craziest way
possible where like I mean not just
there's a private jet with candy yeah the language
of the film right
not just the language of the film where it's
like no hard cuts and it's all these weird,
like, I mean, the images change behind the characters' heads and we're moving forward
in time.
But also like as they're giving the tour, it's not just like, oh, here's a massage room.
Here's a candy room.
It's like, here's a ninja training facility.
Yeah.
And the ninjas are being held up by robot arms.
Like, it's like such an expansive imagination.
And also tonally already this film is getting to this thing where like the candy thing,
don't they play Hallelujah?
I think so.
Yeah.
Because Spidle goes in and like sneaks into the plane and eats so much candy that he passes
out.
And I have to say that is hilarious to me.
That is so funny.
I love when people eat too much of something and get sick and regret it.
That's a really funny thing.
They essentially tweak out on candy at one point and have a speed ramped chase through
Royalton's office to Freeburg.
We should say that the C plot of this film is that Speed's youngest brother, Spridle,
and his chimpanzee friend, Chim Chim, want to eat candy.
It's like A-plot speed racer dealing with his legacy and his future.
Like B-plot, like, you know, the capitalism and like the world of race.
C-plot, candy.
Does he get candy at the end?
I feel like maybe they don't resolve it well enough.
I mean, he gets candy in the middle when they sneak onto the plane.
He gets plenty of candy then.
I love a goal that is candy-oriented.
It's very real to me.
Yeah, so basically—
Or else he gives them this big spiel.
Yes.
Well, first he gives them the soft sell, which is like, oh, it's great.
You know, you'll be served in this wonderful way.
Here's a suit.
Oh, you look great in it, Speed.
Don't you look great?
The hard sell is, don't you know, this entire game is rigged and garbage.
And the thing that you have projected all of your dreams are on romanticize.
It's your favorite thing.
It is dirty and corrupt.
It's all business.
Yeah.
There's no actual, like, nobody is actually realizing their dreams through this mode of expression.
Because, right, exactly.
Because Speed gives this speech about, like, I remember when I was a kid watching this famous race with my dad,
and we were cheering this guy, and he pulled it off, and it was such a...
And he's like, we rigged that race so that X chrome stock would go up and X engine stock would go down.
You don't know what you're talking about.
And as you're saying, right, this is a capitalist world.
There is no pleasure to be found here.
It's the equivalent of a kid going into a film school interview and being like,
I remember seeing Star Wars with my dad and my world changing.
And them being like, Star Wars was made by a bunch of cokeheads.
Yeah, right.
It was a fucking tax shelter.
They made sequels to that because, yeah, of profit margin.
And yeah, that was an economic decision made by CEOs.
Yeah.
Like each of those characters was was Margaret Research.
Right. Yeah. And that's only more and more true.
Yeah. Yeah. And basically it works up towards this big final race that I would argue is
represents a chapter of the Wachowski's career that has not yet been realized, where they are able to overcome all of these outsider,
these corrupt outsider influences,
realize their dream, and everybody loves it.
Yeah, I agree.
I mean, I think the ending of the film is really fascinating
because it's sort of them calling their own shot
that didn't come true.
Yeah.
I think they hoped that people would react to Speed Racer
in a way that would prove their ending
yeah correct you know it feels like the whole middle part where it's like getting exposed to
just how how corrupt that the business is feels like the experience of working on something like
V for Vendetta or working on something where they didn't have total control but are like being
like their talents have been recognized and they've been brought in to work on something and it's like oh like we got to make this this first thing that
was major success and was totally our vision and like that's what filmmaking is right and then
it's not at all sorry guys yeah not except till you get your netflix show this is
but this is that's why this is the ultimate blank check movie
because it is them being like,
we have a blank check, right?
And they're being told like,
no, there's like all this fine print
on the other side of the blank check
that you forgot to read.
This movie's about the very notion
of blank checks.
But then of course,
they did make it.
So, I mean, they are kind of, yeah.
But their thesis sort of became like,
everything has to be a blank check.
Like, we can't worry about
that other stuff.
I mean, I do think, you know,
they were these outsiders.
They were these Chicago boys.
They wrote some spec scripts.
They made deals quickly.
They wrote a spec script
that they thought got messed up
and screwed over by Hollywood assassins.
You know, like they had had
like the kind of bad Hollywood experience in the 90s.
Even like when they went into the Matrix,
they were very much outsiders.
Joel Silver was their big sort of protector.
He was their Pops racer, if you will will he was this big gruff guy who sort of fought
he really is a bit of a pop racer and we should i mean like you know you read these i read these
stories at least about like you know the bound script when like when the bound script had the
the sex scene in the first 30 minutes like apparently in block text it said like you're
gonna ask us to cut this scene out and we will not be cutting this scene out no matter what you say
and like the matrix was the same way
where the script would say,
everything needs to be exactly as we're describing it.
You can't fuck with this.
Right.
They're very prickly.
We are artists and this is what we want to do.
They also are notoriously very, very press shy.
Right.
I mean, they've done more interviews
since both of them have come out
than they did before.
And they were always sort of like a mystery.
I never saw an interview with them.
Except for like on like extras DVDs once, you know, there would be like one interview with them.
Like where there were these like weird reclusive sort of guys who were just like, yeah, we like like animation and we like Kung Fu.
And you're like, wow, these two are a bunch of.
But I think Joel Silver was like they'rechested Greco-Roman wrestling protector.
Who could read the Hollywood system for them and interface for them.
Yeah, and they sort of were guarded from all that.
And bully a budget, basically, out of a bigger studio for them.
I do think you're onto something, Emily, which is that the first race, which would be the victory victory the final act of most other films is
them making the matrix yeah and just having this amazing success right right and it's like you've
done it you've accomplished the thing and they're like no you have no idea so you've hit it once
and you did it on your own terms that means we own you now yeah like we're not gonna let you
make a mistake good or bad on your own terms again if you succeed it's because of us and if
you fail it's because of us we want our claws fail, it's because of us. We want our claws in you.
And the movie is them trying to figure out what to do.
I think the second act is the Matrix sequels,
which is them being like really overloaded by everything.
You know, all this ambition,
teaming up with people,
not being sure of exactly what to do.
And the third act is what they hoped Speed Racer
would do for their careers.
I think that's another reason why the climax
is like, makes you want to cry.
Because it's not, that movie was not that.
And you're watching it at the same time that you're realizing that it's not that.
Like, oh, God.
This is great stuff, guys.
We're really digging in.
Yeah.
I mean, there's no time for bits on this episode just because there's so much to break apart in this movie.
Go ahead.
Oh, no, no.
No, go ahead.
Well, I would say if the movie, you know, where the movie sags the most is that second act.
Yeah.
Where it's throwing a lot of stuff at the audience.
It's ostensibly a kid's movie.
I believe this movie is rated PG.
Correct.
Which when you make a movie that's rated PG, you better want kids to see it because that's how the Hollywood economy works.
Like, you know, this is going to have to be a movie that appeals to it.
movie that appeals to it.
And, you know, the second act basically begins with a CEO explaining the stock market and like, you know, and how like those machinations influence the sports industry.
And then you go all onto this sort of B-plot about Rain.
There's this B-plot about Rain.
Rain.
Shout out to Rain.
Is that, is he a character at all?
Is that based on a character from the anime at all?
Yeah, I don't know.
But then there's.
Yeah, I think.
Well, it's a very international cast, as was The Matrix.
Yes, of course.
I have a few thoughts on Rain in this,
but I do think at least it was a move in the right direction
to have somebody actually Asian in the film.
Yeah, he's like a Korean K-pop star, right?
He acts as well.
He was the star of Ninja Assassin.
Yeah, he was the hottest of Ninja Assassin. Yeah, he was the hottest thing
in like 2007.
Right.
And to the point
where like, you know,
you would read
a New York Times article
about him maybe.
Right.
But like, not that
he would be mainstream
or anything.
Colbert would always
have him on the show
as like a joke.
Colbert used to put
Rain on the,
well, I mean,
I think he used to
reference him a lot
and then eventually
Rain started making
appearances,
but it was the idea
of this guy who's like
super famous
in another part of the world who we have no awareness yeah yeah um watching those
sort of phenomenons from the outside is always fascinating so it was like the idea that like
girls will scream and faint when he walks by if you're in america he's anonymous right right right
so there's the rain thing but there's also there's there's the inspector guy inspector
detective inspector he must be in the anime oh Oh, yeah. I have never seen it.
And then there's Hiroyuki Sanada, who's a great actor,
who had just been in The Twilight Samurai,
as the CEO of a rival company who's doing some sort of economic battle with Royalton,
and you don't really get what the implications are of that.
He's Rain's guy.
What's Rain's character's name?
Tejo.
Oh, Taijo.
Togo Khan. Yeah, the Togo
Khans who have the Ferrari logo.
Sonata's also weirdly
seventh build in this film.
He's got maybe two scenes. He's another huge star.
I know he's a huge star. The billing on this film is really
weird. Shaft shows up for two scenes and Richard Roundtree shows up.
Who's also fucking billed above Roger Allum.
Roger Allum is disrespected in the credits for this movie.
It would be my biggest criticism of the film.
Agreed.
Roger Allum's billing.
Agreed.
Very low.
Yeah.
It's quite annoying, but whatever.
He gives a great performance anyway.
Good job, Roger.
But Richard Roundtree plays one of the guys in the fixed race.
Yes.
He plays Burns and at the end he one of the guys in the fixed race. Yes. He plays Burns.
And at the end, he's a commentator on the final race.
And it's like he's seeing, even though the movie only kind of implies that that's why
he's so delighted by Speed, like sort of beating the system at the end of the movie.
Yeah.
But it's right, like that's sort of the implication.
It's part like he's sort of, Speed has done what he couldn't do, which is like transcending
all this, you know, match match fixing and industry meddling.
Yeah, there's a scene...
Guys, I'm gesturing.
This movie's incredible.
There's a scene with
Speed and Trixie.
This movie's so fucking sincere.
Very sincere. Christina Ricci plays
Trixie. We haven't mentioned her.
And Ariel Winter of
Modern Family plays a young Trixie
in a couple scenes there. I think Christina Ricci is excellently great actually all the cast
her look is great her look is great I mean actually I mean Emile Hirsch is great in this
like he looks perfect he is such a good actor and it is such a bummer that he is apparently
a jerk and like doesn't make movies a lady A lady strangler? Yeah, I mean.
Look at this picture.
Look at how they lightened both their hair for the premiere.
Yeah, I know. They both
were blondies. This movie is premiered at
Tribeca in, yeah,
so Tribeca of 08.
Yeah, Tribeca 08, yeah. I love the
fact that...
He looks just like him. I know, it's weird.
It's weird how much he looks like the cartoon.
Especially with the eyebrows.
Yeah, he's got a good brow,
which I think is necessary
for a role like this.
Well, like 50% of his performance
in this movie
is being determined
behind the wheel of a car.
Sort of gritting his teeth in there.
Right.
And looking over...
And every once in a while
I'll have a line
where he actually has to say something
instead of just looking
and that's when it kind of
falls apart
because he's just like
oh no
what must the script
of this film look like
what can only imagine
I mean
the craziest thing is like
everyone who made this movie
was like so locked in
you read about
like Emile Hirsch
and Susan Sarandon
and John Goodman
were all just like
let
Sarandon sorry
I do that all the time
and Christina Ricci no I think it's just a mispronunciation I do that all the time. Is that the British pronunciation? And Christina Ricci,
no, I think it's just a mispronunciation.
I do it all the time.
We're just like,
let's make a sequel now.
They gave all these interviews,
we're like,
we want to make so many of these movies.
So it must have been fun to make.
And the Wachowskis had them plowed it out.
I also,
I've heard from anonymous sources
who worked on the film
that John Goodman was struggling with alcoholism
during the making of this film
and was really fighting for his sobriety.
He's so good in this movie.
Me and Emily had a long conversation about him.
He really should constantly be in the conversation
with the best living actors.
Talk about guys we undervalue.
Talk about an underrated guy.
And everyone loves John Goodman,
but we don't take him seriously enough.
He's a character actor.
He's always going to play that guy in some movie,
but he will also define roles
and make them, like,
transcend his part in them.
He's a type onto himself,
and absolutely, he's, yeah.
He can literally do anything.
He fits into any genre,
any size of project,
any size of role,
and he never has a false moment.
Yeah.
And one of the things
that he does so well,
I mean, and look,
I mean, someone like
Tan Cloverfield Lane uses this to fight the audience's expectations, is he is able to project this really, really innate sense of decency.
Sure.
And this movie is all about sort of integrity, you know, like moral certainty and decency about like knowing what you stand for and fighting for that and not at the expense of anyone else.
I mean, this is what we're talking about.
This film has no irony.
That's the thing about Goodman's performance.
It's like this isn't some weird pastiche.
And I think that's one of the things that makes,
I mean, there were a lot of adaptations.
Over a span of 20 years or something,
there have been adaptations of cartoons of this level of depth.
You know, like the scooby-doo movies
or something and those are all completely ironic productions because it's like why would we make
this like like you know the 60s were weird and cheesy and corny and like whatever making jokes
about the fact that shaggy is clearly a stoner yeah it seems like a lesbian like you're calling
out all the adult readings of the cartoon yeah i mean and it's not
that like it's not that the speed racer cartoon itself is like very very maudlin or anything it's
just straightforward that's it like that's it's not jokey but so many other versions of this movie
would have a character go like oh no speed racer he's gonna win the race and someone else going
like uh why are you talking like that yeah like they'd make those jokes i mean i don't think
there's a better example
than the fact that like
this film
like the cuts to
the Spritele and the monkey
and the chimpanzee
like those
that's not for
a cutaway gag.
Like they have
they have their own
plot in the movie.
Like they are being used
as they are used
in the cartoon
which is for comic relief.
Right.
But straight comic relief.
And also
arch comic relief.
Like the idea of
I mean it's sort of like
what Bollywood does
where it's like
why not put every genre
in there
just because we're
taking the races seriously
doesn't mean we can't
have a kid and a monkey
trying to be candy
if you like both of these
things individually
and we're charging you
the same amount
for a ticket
then watch both of them
you know like
let's have cool races
let's have like
serious family drama
and let's just have like I mean this fucking scene where they're riding around in like a go-kart inside of a fucking like massive like company factory.
And it's like in fast motion, like sped up playing air guitar while Freebird plays.
They were like, why wouldn't we do this?
Like you need something to break it up.
You've just had like your dream shattered by Royalton.
It's mid-speech.
They're cutting in the middle of him getting the speech on, like,
we went up 72 points in the stock market,
and then they cut back to, like,
I think Chim Chim eating a fucking Hershey's Kiss.
I guess that's when I was saying, like, the PG thing.
I mean, like, it's kind of the argument, like,
no, this is a family movie in that there's stuff for everybody.
Yeah.
Rather than like this is pitched at a 10 year old.
Like there is stuff for everyone in the film to enjoy.
Maybe the kid zones out during the Roger Allen speech.
But he's got he's got candy antics to worry about.
Yeah.
Ironically, in aiming to do that, most of America was like, who's this movie for?
Like nobody.
Absolutely.
I mean, Americans are.
You know, something that I kind of this movie kind of reminds, nobody. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, Americans are... You know, something that I kind of...
This movie kind of reminds me of...
And didactic, I think.
Literal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, totally this movie...
And not...
No, not totally.
I don't know what the word...
Just, like, spiritually,
it reminds me of Snowpiercer a lot.
Ooh, yeah.
Ooh, yeah.
And that there's just...
There's so many things going on.
It's, like, pretty straightforward and earnest.
There's a serious singularity of vision and like
it is taking itself seriously. This is
not like a weird arch thing at all. Yeah.
And it's like this sort of
not American,
not Asian, not any
one nationality production. The sensibility
reflects that. Like it's not, it does
not feel like a
American Hollywood action
film. It like has the budget of one. It has the budget of one
and it has the stars of one
but it does not feel...
Emile Hirsch, he's a young star.
At that time we thought he was going to
really... I didn't mean to step on you.
Only like eight years later it's pretty crazy
to think there was a $150 million temple
where the two leads were Emile Hirsch and Christina Ricci.
But I mean
Susan Sarandon and John Goodman were both like,
yes, we are there.
We want to do this and we're going to do this with utmost sincerity.
I mean, that feels, for lack of a better word, it feels foreign.
Like, it feels like something that would never happen
through any kind of traditional,
we have this property and we better do something with it, means.
I don't know. There's inclusiveness inclusiveness i think to all their films and i think um there's even just a
fact that they don't call out the differences between people i mean a lot of this cast is
australian and i assumed it was because they filmed this movie in australia they didn't they
filmed it in germany yeah but they had it was they made buddies yeah right and they brought
the people over and there's no one
going like
hey wait
why is
like most other
movies like this
would have a scene
explaining how
what's his name
Sparky
Sparky
like joined up
with the family
why is this Australian
guy with us
and the film is just
this melting pot
where it's like
you know
think about the amount
of movies you've seen
who is that
Kit Gurry
what do I know him from
he's so familiar
oh he's in Edge of Tomorrow?
He plays?
He's one of the ensemble in Edge of Tomorrow.
I'll tell you which member of the ensemble he is.
He's the one who makes the joke at the beginning of every, right?
Well, go ahead.
His name's Griff.
Oh, his name is Griff, huh?
That's why I remember.
Oh, you know the name of the original creator of Speed Racer?
Shoot.
Yoshida.
Ah.
Ah.
Is there anything for me in this?
I think there's a David in there somewhere.
There's probably a David in there somewhere.
There's probably a David.
It's a common name.
Hey, cinematography David Tattersall.
Oh, yeah.
There we go.
Tattersall.
Yeah.
Oh, that wasn't.
Oh, I thought that.
It was the guy who shot all the Star Wars prequels.
Oh.
Oh, very interesting.
I thought that it was a Bill Pope.
It's not a Bill Pope joint.
He was busy on other,
he was making Spider-Man 3 probably.
You know,
Bill Pope had been snapped up
by Raimi again.
Sidebar,
Ryan Reynolds' character
in the movie Criminal,
the Kevin Costner movie,
is named Bill Pope
and it's very distracting
because the whole idea
is that Bill Pope is dead
and they're trying to inject
his memories into Kevin Costner's brain. so they keep on going like you are bill pope
who is bill pope is kevin costner want to be a brilliant cinematographer or something maybe yeah
i don't know a criminal an odd movie um just so this isn't a hanging thread before i forget uh
the the thing i was getting up with john goodman's alcoholism not just to like throw under a bus and
be like oh he was a drunkard.
What I have heard is that the family, the racer family in the film, the actors playing them, really sort of became a family unit bonded around John Goodman to help him through this time.
That is fucking beautiful.
The word is beautiful.
See, I knew I had to finish that one.
They all apparently kept in touch and checked in with him and were like, we're going to get you through this.
This film meant a lot to everyone emotionally working on it.
And this is the major case for like, okay, maybe the problem with movies that are 100% CGI where everything's shot on a green screen isn't necessarily the technique.
Maybe it's the fact that they're made like things on a conveyor belt.
Right, right.
a conveyor belt.
Like, it's not... Right, right.
Like, if the cast...
You can tell when the cast is invested,
when the people who are making the film
and shooting the film
and making the props and everything
are invested.
Connected is also a good word.
Yeah, yeah.
Because they, like, have something
to tether onto.
Yeah, connected.
Like, another actor
or whatever their reference points they are
that they're being given.
And the fact they all wanted
to make another one.
Like, I think that there were...
There could have been a lot of versions
of this movie
where everybody just, like,
peaces out afterwards
and never sees each other again.
Because they're like, well, we got that one in the can.
Most like prospective franchise starters, when you see the actors making the press rounds
and they're like, so you signed up for more sequels?
There's always a sort of tone of like, uh, right.
If my agent says I am contractually obliged to be in a sequel.
We'll see what happens.
You know, but this one they were like, oh God, we want to do it so badly.
We want to get back to Germany.
So,
yeah,
it's really,
really amazing
how much this syncs up
with the actual text
of the film.
Like,
it's crazy.
I also think,
again,
I need another cigarette.
I really just,
we're having a great time.
There's another point to that
I want to build up to,
but I think,
talk about Emile Hirsch's performance
and how good he is
behind the wheel of the car. And the lines, the times where he has to throw out lines in the car don't work that well, talk about Emile Hirsch's performance and how good he is behind the wheel of the car.
And the lines,
the times where he has to
throw out lines in the car
don't work that well,
but it's also,
that's a weird thing.
I think all the emotional scenes
where he's grounded
with another actor
in conversation,
that's a really tough thing to play
is just like a dude
who's just so optimistic.
Total sincerity.
It's very hard to play
uncomplicated people.
Because like,
playing a bad guy,
there's like a lot of tics
he can jump onto and you like, you know, you express your sort of like inner evil or whatever it is.
But to just play a guy who's just like, racism's all I know, so I got to do something.
It's like it's tough to do that and not seem corny.
And he has no there seems to be no internal checker of him in him of like, is this going to sound stupid?
Yeah.
Like he's just so there's so much conviction behind everything
he's saying he sells all those speeches
the other guy in the film who I think does that
super super well is Matthew
Fox I was waiting for us to get to Matthew Fox
maybe my favorite performance in the film another
notorious jerk we should say yeah
Matthew Fox is a reprehensible human being
who beats women is that true
oh fuck what didn't he like beat up
some lady I didn't know that that sucks ugh I fucking hate? Didn't he beat up some ladies? I didn't know that.
That sucks.
I fucking hate that.
All those lost people
are kind of like,
I don't know.
I get a bad vibe.
But this is the line
I thought you were
going to open with.
He's going to be good.
No, he's not going to.
No, he's going to be the best
if they don't destroy him first.
I couldn't figure out
how to put podcasting.
If they don't podcast him.
Just so we don't get sued.
Because I am making scurrilous
accusations against Matthew Fox.
Who is a big fan of the show. Huge fan of the show.
He was reported to have punched a female bus
driver in the chest and pelvic area after
attempting to board a party bus reserved for
a private bachelor party. Yes, I remember the party bus.
Now, I don't think this was ever
resolved. He said he didn't do it and like you know, it's one of those things where it's all allegedly, allegedly.
But I do remember Dominic Monaghan years later giving some interview where he was asked,
oh, do you stay in touch with Matthew Fox?
And Dominic Monaghan was like, that guy beats up women.
Fuck him.
I don't hang out with that guy.
Which is interesting about the Lost guys, because I think they almost never hung out,
because Lost was this weird tapestry of stories
where people would rarely
cross over on set.
But anyway, so Matthew Fox, weird reputation.
So good in the movie. Watching this movie
I'm a big Matthew Fox acting fan.
Same here. I mean, it definitely felt
like when Lost was at its peak, like this guy
is going to have a big movie career when this ends.
And this was one of maybe two or three projects
that didn't connect and then he wiped out, which maybe
it's because of him being difficult to work
with as a person. I think he's somewhat of a challenge.
What do you think of Matthew Fox?
I don't have it. I was never a Lost
fan, so I don't have a connection to him.
Huge Lost fan. Yeah, I don't. I mean, I'm
actually, if we're going to talk about Racer
X slash Rex,
I'm more interested in Scott
Porter. Oh, yeah.
Street.
I mean, Friday Night Lights.
I mean, this is.
This is also when like peak Friday Night Lights.
Friday Night Lights is probably in its second season.
It's in its second season.
But this he probably was cast off of the first season.
Off of the pilot, basically.
And for being another pure, completely unassailable, positive beam of sunshine.
He is perfectly cast.
Is that who he is?
I've never seen an episode of Friday Night Lights.
Oh, my God.
That's his character.
Friday Night Lights,
one of the greatest TV shows
of this sort of golden age of TV or whatever.
But he is so like the golden boy in Friday Night Lights
and he is so perfect for the golden boy here, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that's completely why I was,
he didn't have to do that much.
I just like the idea of Scott Porter
getting plastic surgery
and turning into Matthew Fox.
Yo, give me some Matthew Fox up here.
I need to turn dark.
I want like a B-list famous face though.
Also, he is a great casting for Emile Hirsch's brother.
Those two have a very similar look.
I remember finding the plastic surgery plot funny
because they're both sort of like,
they don't look the same, but they're also both sort of like very generically handsome white guys.
Yeah, they're both strong-jawed men.
Give me strong-jawed B instead of strong-jawed C.
Right.
Yeah, it's like they went into the video game and they sort of just swapped out a few features.
Swapped the me feature.
The biggest difference between the two of them is that Matthew Fox's face is longer, which you wouldn't be able to achieve with plastic surgery.
That's your complaint?
No, I'm not complaining about this. Cars exploded to pink fairy dust in this movie. I'm not complaining about this.
I'm saying I like this. It's all part of the film that's so
fantastical and so unconcerned with reality
but it's not like one of them has a very specific
nose and it's like, give me that nose.
It's just like one candle to
another.
I think Matthew Fox for me threads this
needle where the scenes where he
like has to be proud of speed i think emotionally he's like very there but also i think he's doing
a perfect impression of the acting style of the actors the american actors who dub speed racer
like even the staccato rhythms of the dialogue he's going to be very good yeah um love this movie
i forgot i tweeted out this screenshot which is one of my favorites oh yeah when i think it of the dialogue. It's going to be very good. Yeah. Love this movie.
I forgot,
I tweeted out this screenshot which is one of my favorites.
Oh, yeah.
Which is when,
I think it's during the
It's the amazing montage.
The montage is incredible.
During the,
I mean,
For the,
with the Casa Cristo.
Yeah,
it's sort of like
an off-road
like kind of
like subterranean race,
right?
And it's like
Speed is doing this
to qualify for the Grand Prix
yeah
but there's also a lot
of other stuff going on
it's like a notorious
well it's the
that's the one that
that Rex died on
right
it's the one that Rex died on
where you go through
like the ice
but anyway
and Speed is being attacked
by all these people
and every time he gets
attacked by a new person
we get a flashback to
like them being bought off
yeah
and there's these like
I don't know
army people.
Like, I mean, it's very Wacky Racers where everyone has a gimmick.
It's totally Wacky Racers.
Yeah.
Everyone's car is a gimmick.
It's like, we're the Western car.
Or it's like Warriors or something.
Yeah, like the Warriors.
Yeah, no, it's like there's a crew of, like, girl racers who get bought off with diamonds.
Yes, yes.
And they throw diamonds at people.
Yes.
And then there's, like, Viking racers that like have like huge legs
of like mutton being brought out to them
to like bribe.
It's so bananas.
It's so weird.
And there's these army guys
who are shown like a briefcase
full of money or whatever
and we see the dollar signs in their eyes
as they look
and then they become the horizon of the race
as the cars are like racing around
just because you didn't get
that this movie is like a treatise on capitalism like it's the best can we talk about that like intercut with
royalton's speech about how everything works sure which is already intercut with uh sprital and
looking for candy right and fucking tweaking out yeah they're also showing you the race that hasn't
happened yet.
Yes.
With Royalton calling what's going to happen.
He's like,
okay,
you want to play
by your own rules?
Sure.
Here's how the next race
is going to go.
And they like,
show you Royalton's
projection of that race
and then when the film
narratively gets to that race
in real time,
like 10,
15 minutes later,
they don't really show it to us.
They show us the beginning
and the end
and it's like,
yep,
what he called
like just happened. No, and that whole, and the end, and it's like, yep, what he called just happened.
No, and that whole, when he projects it,
it's in-depth enough and long enough
that you actually think we've just transitioned
to watching the race.
Yeah.
But then, I mean, it's clear enough by the end of it,
but it's just like, it's another one of the ways
that this film just plays with time
in a way that's unconventional,
but you can actually totally follow along with.
It's not confusing.
Every moment in your life
is like directly connected to the moments
that have happened
and the moments that are yet to happen.
Like it's all sort of this
time's a flat circle.
Fuck me, bullshit, stupid.
Griffin, negative five comedy points.
Negative 500.
Yeah, but it is.
True Detective season three.
No, go ahead.
It is that kind of thing.
The balance between art and commerce,
because they're not just saying it's bad.
There is this thing where it's like,
there's this line I just want to pull up
where it's the scene with a trick scene speed in the car
when they drive to lover's point or whatever it is.
And then, of course, they find out that Sprite, Ol' and Chim Chim
are in the backseat because they knew that they were going to go get ice cream
and they want ice cream.
They changed priorities.
There's an implication that they were in the
trunk for a whole race or something.
They should be dead.
They weren't in the whole race, just when they went out.
But even then, you know.
They should be dead.
The reason they find out they're in the trunk is because when Speed and
Trixie are about to kiss, they go like,
Oh, gross! They hear the sound of kissing
and they get so disgusted.
And they interrupt a kiss scene
at the end very very end yeah it's saying like we need cootie shots to watch the scene or whatever
like if you're cootie uh sensitive i forget let's make this clear at this moment in the film
speed racer is like if i win the race in front of all the flash bulbs i'm gonna dip you and then
kiss you which is the most romantic thing in the world, right? Spritele and Trim Trim are like fucking gross.
At the end of the film, this cathartic moment,
like orgasm upon orgasm, like everything's happened
and you're like, oh shit, he's going to do it now.
Like you see the shot of the flashbulbs
from his perspective.
You see Trixie's there.
He's holding up the trophy.
He turns to Trixie.
He grabs her.
He dips her.
And you're like, oh my God, oh my God.
The film stops.
Spritele and Trim Trim are superimposed over the images wearing doctor's coats.
And they go, warning.
Yeah, they cut the headband thing.
Like, it's not like they interrupt the scene.
Why do doctors have that silver thing on their heads?
Is that for listening to?
No, no, that's the stuff.
Oh, yeah.
But like, you know what?
Whatever.
So you can see yourself and make sure you don't have anything in your teeth when the
doctor's operating on you.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
It's a satellite dish.
But it's not like, oh, Spidle and Chim Chim interrupt the scene dramatically.
Spidle and Chim Chim suddenly become the authors of the film.
Yeah.
Like, they're like telling you how to watch the movie.
Yeah.
But in that scene before Spidle and Chim Chim so rudely interrupt them, there's this dialogue
exchange I think is really great, where
Speed's talking about, like, I just want to win
this race, this and that. And this is before the Royalton
scene, so he's just excited about
the fact that he's now qualified for the
next race. And Trixie says, since
when did winning become so important? And
Speed says, it is important. You gotta win
if you want to keep driving, and that's what I want to do.
It's the only thing I really know how to do.
And I think that line, you gotta win if you want to keep driving, and that's what I want to do. It's the only thing I really know how to do. And I think that line,
you got to win if you want to keep driving,
is like such a concise explanation
of the way the film industry works
because it is such a high stakes,
money driven business
that like,
it's not that they care about success
in and of itself,
but they want to keep on operating on this level.
They're race car drivers.
They need a track.
They need a car.
The Wachowskis aren't going to go and make another bound.
They're not going to like slink back
into the indie film world or whatever.
Right.
And they're two of the filmmakers
who have consistently made an argument
that they should exclusively be working on this scale
because they know how to use it
and they have big ideas
and they want to cross genres.
They're innovators.
They need that many different colors on their palette.
And so the balance of this film is like Speed wants to stick to his guns.
He doesn't want to get bought out.
But he also wants to win the race.
He wants to beat everyone because he needs to keep racing.
He wants to do the Grand Prix.
He wants to do the biggest race.
He wants the same amount of opportunities that they're getting.
He just doesn't want to have to sacrifice anything for it.
And it's this whole battle of like, can I do everything I want to do exactly my way?
Is it possible?
And it's not just because like,
it's because I think the Wachowskis are saying
if they won playing someone else's game,
it wouldn't really feel like a victory to them.
That would be hollow.
They need to try to like pull off the grand,
like, you know, scheme of like winning on our terms.
They've also been cursed with the knowledge that this is possible.
Yeah. But like. Sure. Right. One in a million shot.
Which is the first race. Yeah. First race. Yeah. And no one interferes at all. Yeah.
And that's the Matrix. Yep. Now, Merchandise Spotlight, this film had one of the most extreme merchandising advertising complaints in history.
For like the first film of a franchise, for a franchise starter.
Let me find this article here.
They talked about, so this article was from like six months, right?
Before the film came out.
Stupid internet.
before the film came out.
Yep.
Stupid internet.
They had like one of the largest collections
of like licensing partners,
products,
tie-ins.
Just give us the abridged version.
Yeah.
So the studio has enlisted
a lengthy lineup
of promotional partners
who will point up
at least $80 million
in additional marketing support
around the film.
General Mills, McDonald's, Target, Mattel, Lego, Tops, e-surance.
Like, they were going from, like, all aspects.
Right.
Making Speed Racer products, e-surance going to adults, McDonald's going to Happy Meals.
They even did the thing where, like, you know.
E-surance is the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
But they were, like, covering all bases.
Yeah.
And you know the way that like you know very much gender binary
McDonald's would do
like the Happy Meals
where it's like oh do
you want the girls toy
or the boys toy.
And it would often be
like do you want Hot
Wheels or do you want
Barbie.
The Speed Racer
campaign was do you
want Speed Racer or do
you want Trixie.
Like they had like two
parallel lines and the
girls toys quote unquote
that month were just
like Trixie stuff.
And the boys toys were
Speed Racer.
Like they were like Trixie does get a fun action' toys were Speed Racer. Like, they were like.
Trixie does get a fun action.
She gets to be in the car.
She gets to race, which is awesome.
It's a little.
It's.
It's a little cheesy.
It's a little shoehorned in.
Where they're like, look, Trixie gets to be in the car.
For like, like a mile of track.
Right.
And she's like, okay, back to you.
I have my fun.
Yeah.
Like, she does have a helicopter, so that's.
I do like her cool visor.
Yeah.
I like her look.
Yeah. I like Christine Ricci's look in this movie from start to finish.
It's also, like, I was going back and looking...
I think Annalie Newitz on io9 made the case that this is, like, a massively underrated film.
And just pointed out the fact that Christina Ricci as Trixie is, like, super, super girly,
but also, like, is a gearhead and that's
that actually feels more interesting
to me than if she would have just been like a cool
tomboy or whatever yeah yeah
or like doing the whole yeah like
being a fellow racer or something
this film also gets at this very optimistic idea
that you can like meet your best gal
when you're like six oh yeah
and you're just like best friends and lovers forever I also like the idea that you can like meet your best gal when you're like six. Oh yeah. And you're just like best friends and lovers forever.
I also like the idea that
like she is not like
scared for Speed Racer or like
afraid of racing or anything like that.
It's not like she's on the sidelines going like oh no.
Like yeah. No she's like jazz.
She's always like grinning ear to ear watching.
Smash those people. And that she's part of the
family. Like she's accepted by all of
them. Can we also call out,
because I think this had to be conscious,
and I don't know if it was just them commenting
on the animation style and similar face types,
but Christina Ricci and Susan Sarandon
look identical in this film.
Really?
I think they look so similar in this movie.
And I don't think they usually do.
I think something about how they're styled,
the film, I think they have very similar looks.
She looks a lot like Susan right there, I'll say that.
Yeah.
In that picture from the Tribeca Film Festival.
I think they have similar smiles.
Yeah.
They put all this money into it.
They had all these partners,
and then the film bombed like really, really hard.
Yeah, we'll talk about that in a second.
Yeah, and they, you know,
I have this Variety article here that was published the week after the film came out where warner brothers was trying to
do all this spin being like i still think we're going to be the most successful marketing campaign
of the merchandising campaign of the summer like we're going to be one of the big sellers because
it was just like cars and shit right but they just made like fucking everything for this film i mean
every flavor of every food,
every car and every version,
every racer, all this stuff.
And then it didn't really connect at all.
There's one item, if I can spotlight,
which I'm now trying to find for a reasonable price on eBay,
which I think is so beautiful.
They made, not a high-end replica version,
but a kid's Toys R Us version
of the Speed Racer helmet
that had all the sounds in the helmet.
So like you could wear the helmet and like be a kid on playground, pretend to be Speed Racer.
And if you turned, it would like make it sound like you were like turning, which I think the whole idea of this movie is that like Speed Racer races the way little boys like little girls imagine being behind the wheel of a car and just going like.
behind the wheel of a car and just going like
vroom, vroom,
vroom, vroom, vroom.
Well, there's that amazing scene
at the beginning
where he's like drawing
pictures of race cars
and he starts to imagine himself
in his drawings.
Oh, yeah,
and the animation
like starts moving.
Yeah, it's like a payola.
Yeah.
And it's also like
really, really low frame rate animation
which I totally connected
to the original
even though it's like
kid's style drawing
where it's just like
you can fill in the blanks
of like this being
thrilling and exciting
even though it's not like super high res the way this film is like it doesn't really matter like
if it's exciting to you it will be exciting so this is this idea i want to get at um despite
the fact that they were given i think full creative freedom to make this movie exactly
how they want because this is a phone absolutely smells like zero studio interference because it's
very risky in a number of ways and no one
would approve it other than if they
like part of the deal was we get to do exactly
what we want you guys have to fucking bone out
and they
had sort of Joel Silver as their
protector. Yeah and Viva Vendetta had
been a surprise hit for an R-rated
like wacky dystopian movie
so that even though the Matrix movies
maybe had bombed a little bit but they still made money,
you know,
that was,
you know,
that helped them get along
I think to this.
Disney Pixar's Cars
came out two years before this
and was one of the most
and remains to this day
one of the most successful
merchandising films in history.
Like within a year of its release.
But what is your point?
So they were like,
that's our end.
We got fucking cars and stuff.
Warner Brothers still was their Royalton.
Warner Brothers was signing the checks.
They'd made all the Matrix movies, yeah.
And what Warner Brothers tried to do with this film is Royalton the audiences into liking it.
Right.
You know, in the same way that Royalton like fixes the races, they were like, if we promote it this way, this aggressively, if we have the merchandising everywhere.
I think they were freaked out by this film, but they were like, we didn't get the Matrix and it worked with people.
So if we merchandise it and present it like it's any franchise that kids already like and we make it like just so existent around us, we'll like fix the race.
And there is this aspect to like a lot of movies do well just because they promote them like they're going to do well.
Yeah, they retcon the fact that you already love it.
Right.
Yeah, they at least do okay.
Maybe they're not.
I mean, sort of Batman versus Superman is kind of an example of that where it kind of couldn't not at least make money.
I would argue that Captain American Civil War is an example of everybody just already deciding they liked it before.
Totally.
I mean, but that's, I mean, of course, Speed Racer got curb stomped by Iron Man.
We'll talk about that in a second. There's a great Mr.
Show sketch. Yeah. Coupon the movie
in which they make this movie because they're
like, everyone loves coupons. Why wouldn't they like a
movie about coupons? And the movie bombs
and the scene is all these executives trying to figure
out who greenlit the movie. Right. There was no
creative inspiration. It was just people love coupons.
They're using the coupon. Why aren't they seeing the movie?
And the sketch turns into a court hearing
where they have to bring
every single American citizen on trial
to question them why they didn't go see Coupon the
Movie. And it ends with the judge
decreeing that everyone legally is mandated
to go see Coupon the Movie. And the trailer
at the end has these like pull quotes that are like
a required romp.
You know, a mandatory thrill ride.
And that was what they were trying to pull out there.
There is a perfunctory sort of predestined attitude
to a lot of, I think, marketing campaigns
and merchandising campaigns for movies,
especially Batman v Superman, where it's like,
it doesn't matter whether or not you think this looks good.
We know you're going to see it, you fucking assholes.
Just go buy the ticket.
And I think Royalton, like Warner Brothers,
was going like, if we sell it like it's a movie that everyone wants to see confidently everyone will want to
see it and it didn't work no like usually this works to some degree well i think a lot of people
went to go see it first weekend and it totally dropped off the next opening weekend was small
and then it just got smaller oh really yeah well we'll talk about that in a second but first i want
to run some things by you guys.
Please.
Okay.
One, other options for Speed Racer were Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Shia LaBeouf.
The other one I heard.
What do you think about that?
Nope.
The other guy I heard got close.
Not long enough eyelashes.
Sorry.
The other guy I heard got close and was the front runner briefly, but then proved himself
to be difficult, wanted too much money for, was my boy, Zac Efron.
Oh, yeah.
He would have been good.
Yeah, Efron would have been good.
He has the right vibe.
He was in that pocket right then.
But it was High School Musical 2, and he thought he was hot shit and apparently came in with too many demands.
Other options for Trixie were Elisha Cuthbert and Kate Mara.
But it was going to be Christina Ricci.
There's no way it's not Christina Ricci. She's the only person who could have been Trixie were Elisha Cuthbert and Kate Mara. But it was going to be Christina Ricci. No way it's not Christina
Ricci.
She's the only person who
could have been Trixie.
And like I mean we briefly
talked about the torture
development process but I
mean like you know yeah it
was originally optioned by
Warner Brothers in 92.
Johnny Depp was going to be
in it with Henry Rollins as
Racer X.
Johnny Depp would have been
the weirdest speeder.
Like he would.
Oh yeah.
I mean Julian Temple the
like famous British kind of like punk filmmaker who made like
the, you know, great rock and roll swindle and all those like sex business.
Earth Girls Are Easy.
Father Of.
God knows what that was.
I'm looking forward to you getting to the one where Hype Williams was going to direct it.
Hype Williams was going to direct it.
Well, so just some other ideas.
Gus Van Sant came in and then he left.
Alfonso Cuaron came in in the late 90s and left.
I know Gondry was developing it at one point.
Was that with Gondry and Cuaron were going to do it together,
or what was the deal?
I don't know.
Those were separate versions.
I think that's when Johnny Depp was still loosely attached.
Lauren Shuler Donner, who is the Warner Brothers maven at the time,
hires Hype Williams.
That falls through.
Vince Vaughn wants to play Racer X, as you say.
That falls through.
And then in 06, they bring in the Wachowskis.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
It's crazy how hard they tried to make this movie.
How long had it been since the Wachowskis had wrapped on Matrix?
I mean, so 06 would have been three years after Re-
It came out.
Yeah, Re-Revolution came out.
So it's probably four plus years since they wrapped filming.
And so that's just when they were doing V for Vendetta.
Right.
I'm not sure why they didn't direct V for Vendetta.
I don't know.
James McTeague, who's their first AD, directed it.
But for some reason, they just sort of creatively oversaw V for Vendetta.
And I guess they had their fingers in a lot of pies because didn't they produce like
another action? I can't remember. I can't get into this.
Ninja Assassin came out after. Ninja Assassin, that's what I'm thinking of.
Yeah, but there was
because they discovered Rain on this and then built a vehicle around him.
They were spinning a lot of plates. But they also
were doing all the sort of like supplemental
extended Matrix stuff.
So they had the Matrix Online, which was this like
MMO that they were writing.
You know, I mean, Paul Chadwick was the main writer for it, but they were overseeing that.
They shaped the story of Matrix Online.
They started their own comic book imprint.
Their own.
I think they weren't even controlled by anyone else.
And they had like three original titles going.
They were writing comic books.
I mean, they were trying to do all these different sort of multimedia things.
All right.
I want to talk about the box office.
Yes, please.
This is my favorite part.
Can you give me the five?
I think I might be able to nail this one.
So it's the second week of May
2008, right? It's the
weekend of May 9th.
I had just moved to the United
States. Wow!
The first film I saw when I moved here was
Smart People with Ellen Page and Dennis Quaid.
Who remembers that one? But then, like, Iron Man.
Yeah. Okay, so Iron Man's the number one film.
It came out the week before
it was a massive
massive success
yes and its second weekend
it made 51 million dollars
right
and it crested
past 100 million
the first weekend
right
so it's like
do people just not think
that Iron Man was gonna be
that big of a deal
because why
nobody thought it was gonna be big
why would you release Speed Race
in the same week is it
nobody thought it was gonna be big
it was starred
an unproven
you know
box office draw not that RDJ's not the greatest but I know that's the only reason same week is it like nobody thought it was going to be big it was starred a unproven you know box
office draw not that rdj is not the greatest but i know that's the only reason i went to go see it
though i didn't give a shit about iron man i wanted to see rob downey jr it was about marvel's
it was about marvel's what like 12th most famous superhero like nobody knows iron man iron man
you're just like oh that's the guy ghostface kill is obsessed with, right? It's like sort of like a...
It was their first one
that they were independently financing.
No, of course.
They had not been bought
by a company yet,
so they had gotten like
a $1 billion loan
from Merrill Lynch.
And the whole thing was like,
if these movies flops,
then Merrill Lynch will own Marvel.
And it was viewed as this
like stupid gamble.
It was directed by Jon Favreau,
who was, you know,
had just come off of Zathura.
Which we love,
but was a massive flop.
Zathura? Zathura! Oh my God. With Dax Shepard andathura. Which we love, but was a massive flop. Zathura!
Zathura!
Oh my God.
With Dax Shepard and Kristen Stewart.
Even when people, and Joss Hutcherson.
Yep.
Even when people thought that film was going to be big,
when the trailer started getting good response,
I don't think anyone thought it was going to be that big.
Yeah.
And then it was so well-liked that it was like,
oh, this is going to hold well second weekend.
It's not a film where they royal-tinned audiences
into showing up.
It was like people wanted to see it again. No, it was a genuine
hit. So number one with a bullet.
Number two I remember because people were like, okay
Iron Man's going to be number one.
Speed Racer might do 30, 40 million dollars
and Iron Man will do like
50, 60. Number two I remember this distinctly
was what happens in Vegas.
With the kutch.
And Cameron Diaz and Zach Galifianakis.
Lake Bell, Rob Corddry.
Weird cast.
Opened to 20 mil.
Right.
So that was like the big, like, oh, fuck.
They couldn't even outgross What Happens in Vegas.
What Happens in Vegas, which grossed $219 million worldwide.
More than double what Speed Racer made worldwide.
That is horrible.
Does anyone remember anything about that movie?
I saw that movie in theaters.
No, but do you remember anything about it?
Zach Galifianakis' character I believe is named The Bear.
Great.
Did that come out before
or after The Hangover?
Before.
Before?
Yeah.
The Hangover comes out
later this year
or is it 09?
09.
Oh, it's 09.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was in France
when it came out.
I'm just trying to
place my mind
in the moment.
Emily, where are you
when Speed Racer comes out?
I am finishing up
my last year film school.
Nice.
But I did not see it that weekend because I saw Iron Man.
I didn't see it until later.
But I was, yeah, I mean, one of the reasons that this film is, I have a soft spot for it also,
is that I had just, you know, had a firsthand experience trying to make an anime-style live-action thing.
Like, very against all advice from any teacher that I had.
They were like, you should not do this.
You do not have enough money to do this.
I tried to do it anyway.
And so I respected the game.
The effort.
The endeavor.
Yeah.
But yeah, I don't think I saw it until a couple weeks later.
Okay, so the top three is Iron Man,
What Happens in Vegas, and then Speed Racer.
Speed Racer opens to 18.5 mil, finishes domestic 43, which is pretty terrible.
Yeah.
And internationally makes another 50 million.
Yeah, 43 is disastrous.
And it finishes with 93 million worldwide.
Yeah.
It's kind of crazy.
They claim that the merchandising did well enough that they sort of didn't lose that much money on the movie,
but I think that was spin.
They all have money.
Yeah.
We all fucking talk about box office, but they're all multi-billion dollar companies.
Sometimes we just have to, they're all fine.
It's not like Warner Brothers is going to be like, no movies this year, out of money.
Also, when their movies do very well, they do sneaky accounting to make it look like they didn't do well,
so they don't have to pay out people.
I remember when my, anyway, it doesn't matter.
Can you guess number four?
That's what I'm trying to think.
So these would have been April holdovers, four or five or April holdovers.
Number four is only the second.
It was number four was released as counter programming to Iron Man.
It's only the second week in theaters.
I saw it in theaters.
It was based on a trend that does not exist.
I worked for People Magazine at the time when it was announced.
And I remember my boss saying like, hey, can you find some real life examples of this?
And I said,
I fucking rooted through the LexisNexis and found nothing.
You're not going to get it.
Is it a horror film?
No, it's a romantic comedy.
It's a romantic comedy
based on a trend that doesn't exist.
Nope.
The Lake House.
But that's a good joke.
It's a good joke.
Thank you.
Maid of Honor,
starring Patrick Dempsey and Michelle Monaghan.
Jesus Christ.
About the male maid of honor trend.
Remember that thing where it's like, ah, women are having guys be the maid of honor.
This is a real, real hot season for just awful romantic comedy.
For just gutter trash romantic comedy.
Yeah.
Like, 05 to the latter half of that decade, I feel like.
Just everything Katherine Heigl. Well, that that decade. I feel like just everything,
everything,
Catherine Heigl.
Well,
that's the thing I was going to say Heigl.
Cause it's when Hollywood scrambling for like,
who's the,
at the top of this heap and they don't,
and they're like,
is it Catherine Heigl?
Like they're kind of trying to like,
is it this person?
They were scooping through grays.
Yeah.
They were going Dempsey.
Nah.
Heigl.
Nah.
Hudson.
Uh, number,
so made of honor.
Yeah.
It's number four. Yeah. With $8 million. So, Maid of Honor, yeah. Is number four.
Yeah, with $8 million.
Number five.
Give me a hint.
This is an April holdover.
I thought that you were talking about this trend.
Oh, yeah, sure.
This is a real trend.
This is a real thing.
Yeah, this is a real thing.
It's another comedy.
You wouldn't call it a rom-com, would you?
It's more just a com.
It's a com.
This is an April holdover?
Yeah, it's a two-hander.
It's a two-hander. So, it's an April holdover? Yeah, it's a two-hander. It's a two-hander, so it's an
April holdover, which means it would have... A beloved
comic duo. If it's still
number five, it means that
it was probably doing very well
in April, right? This was the top... It did okay.
It was fine. It did fine.
Fine. And it's a beloved comic duo. Yeah, but
not a beloved movie. No. But is
it a male-female pairing?
Female-female. Oh, Baby Mama. Thank you.
Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. I like that movie. You
hate it. We've talked about this. That movie ends with
Tina Fey being like, it's
okay. I don't have to get pregnant to
have value as a person. And then she's like, I'm pregnant!
And the movie ends. It's the worst.
I still like that movie. It's a disgusting movie. No, it's bad.
Steve Martin's great.
It's kind of like dating. You have to realize
that you're fine on your own before you can have a boyfriend.
Oh, I finally have achieved true independence.
Oh, who's this?
Yeah.
I did recently interview Jeff Richman, who did the music for Baby Mama and does all the
music for all of Tina Fey's shows and stuff.
And he wrote all the music for Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.
And he was very nice.
Did he say anything about Baby Mama?
Did not get into Baby Mama.
That is one of those rare comedies that is scored all the way through originally every
episode.
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Richmond, man.
I mean.
There's not cues.
That's the thing.
I would say I have this whole grand theory about how every sitcom needs a laugh track
even if it doesn't have a laugh track.
And I would say that the face shows the music is the laugh track.
For sure.
You know, like where it's like The Office or whatever, Modern Family, it's the, you know, the talking heads are the laugh track for sure you know like where it's like The Office or whatever Modern Family
it's the you know
the talking heads
are the laugh track
yeah I agree
other movies
forgetting Sarah Marshall
is sticking around
right
you've got Harold and Kumar
Escape from Guantanamo Bay
the best of the trilogy
oh I so strongly disagree with that
oh I go 2-1-3
I think that movie is terrible
I think that movie is great
we'll argue about that some other time I think that movie is very smart you've that movie is great. We'll argue about that some other time.
I think that movie's very smart.
You've got The Forbidden Kingdom.
What's that?
Jet Li versus Jackie Chan with Michael Añorano.
I've never seen it.
He's a white boy who gets stuck in the middle of Monkey King fighting.
You've got Nims Island.
Nims Island.
What's that?
It's a Jodie Foster.
It's a Jodie Foster.
It's a Jodie Foster joint.
Abigail Breslin and gerard butler
holy shit she plays like a fantasy children's writer who then abigail breslin ends up in her
book yeah abigail breslin is like the heroine i never saw this it's like it's like inkheart
it's this weird trend of like people want just weirdo fantasy about authors stranger than fiction
stranger than fiction horrible i hate that movie. Horrible.
So, oh, yeah.
I was,
one of my friends
at the time
who was an actor
who was a little younger
than me
was very close
to getting
one of the lead roles
in Nim's Island
that then they cast
Gerard Butler in.
He was like,
he must have been
16 at the time.
Oh my God.
And the character
was written as a 16 year old and then like 300 came out and they were like, ah, fuck it, Gerard Butler.. He was like, he must have been 16 at the time. Oh my God. And the character was
written as a 16 year old
and then like 300 came out
and they were like,
ah fuck it,
Gerard Butler.
Oh my God.
And they rewrote the character
to make him 30 years older.
Which like told me
everything I need to know
about that movie.
It's a fixed rate,
they royal tinned it.
Yeah.
Did you guys see
Gods of Egypt?
No, I know you love it.
Butler's great in it.
Anyway,
some of the movies.
Stop.
He's so good. I'm sorry I did. Butler rides, fuck it anyway some of the movies stop he's so good
I'm sorry I did
Butler rides
fuck it
no it doesn't matter
you can't just
casually mention
that Gerard Butler
is great in Gods of Egypt
and not be prepared
to expound on that
it's just
yeah no that's like
irresponsible
that's like leaving
a bomb in a room
and then like walking out
it's a dialed in performance
he rides a chariot
that is pulled
by giant beetles.
At one point, he kills Jeffrey Rush, who is Ra, the sun god, on his chariot.
You're complimenting his performance on things that the character does.
I know.
I just like to say those two things.
But no, I can't describe.
He just understands what the movie is, and not everyone in that movie understands what the movie is.
I'll see it.
He's very funny.
I think it's a great performance.
I like Gerard Butler. Emily's wincing. I'll see it. He's very funny. I think it's a great performance. I like Gerard Butler.
Emily's wincing.
I don't either.
I don't know.
Of all the weird things to go to the mat for, I don't know.
Definitely go to the mat for him.
He's one of your guys?
Yeah, but then I hate Olympus Has Fallen, which I know you like.
I think that movie's awful.
Yeah, I like that movie maybe because of its awfulness.
I like how misanthropic that film is.
Some other movies.
Prom Night.
Was that like a remake of an old horror movie?
Prom Night had Scott Porter in it.
Hey!
Interesting.
He had two openings.
Good for him.
When did that come out that week?
No, Prom Night's been lingering for five weeks on the air,
so it was an April release.
You've got Red Belt,
the David Mamet martial arts,
underground Chiwetel Ejiofor.
A film I like a lot.
I've never seen it.
Tim Allen's very good in that movie.
We're saying a lot of things right now.
You've got 21,
the card counting movie that turned all the Asian people into white people.
Yeah.
Starring one of the leads of next week's subject.
Jim Sturgis.
Yeah.
Cloud Atlas.
You've got The Visitor.
You've got.
Yeah.
The Visitor.
The Richard Jenkins movie.
Yeah.
2008.
Bad.
Bad year.
I think 2008 is a
pretty junky year.
2007 was so phenomenal.
I feel like we had to
take a breather after that.
But later this summer
we had a lot of huge films.
I mean not great films
but like big box office.
I mean Indiana Jones comes out a couple weeks later. Then you had Kung Fu Panda and WALL-E, not great films, but like big box office. I mean, Indiana Jones comes out
a couple weeks later. Then you had Kung Fu Panda
and WALL-E were both huge. WALL-E was big.
WALL-E's a masterpiece. And of course you got The Dark Knight that year.
Right, right, which is one of the biggest
films of all time. So it was a big year
for like franchise studio films
because you have Iron Man too, of course.
But I think for film, I don't
know. I don't remember anything. Yeah, you've got
Rachel Getting Married
is pretty good
yeah you've got Milk
you've got
Synecdoche
lots of downers
Synecdoche
a lot of downers
you've got WALL-E
which you love
you know let the right one in
Cadillac Records
which I think is an underrated
I agree
yeah
Cloverfield
right at the start of the year
one of my favorite films
that year
best picture that year
is really
some fun movies
shitty though
best picture that year
is like
Slumdog
The Reader,
Slumdog, Milk Which Is Great,
Benjamin Button, Frost Nixon.
Oh, right. That's putrid.
And that's the year where the Academy is like
let's have ten nominees. That's why they add it because
everyone was like Dark Knight,
WALL-E, Gran Torino.
There were like five movies that were like big commercial
successes that didn't make it.
That didn't make the cut. And then like five movies that no one really gave a that didn't make it that didn't make the cut and then they
like five movies
that no one really
gave a shit about
was that the year though
was that
Catherine Bigelow
no that's the year
after
that's 09
because that's versus Avatar
that's versus Avatar
oh no that's right
okay yeah
I'm missing
because I remember
where I was
when I watched that Oscars
and I was with like
people that I went
to school with
and all these girls
were like hugging each other
because it was very
a good moment.
Oh, because Bigelow
took the stage.
Three of the terrible
prestige movies in 08
are Doubt, The Reader
and Revolutionary Road.
They're right at the bottom
of my list.
Three movies that really
made my skin crawl.
I think Doubt,
I think the other two
I despise.
I despise Doubt
almost as much
as the other two
but I do despise
the other two more.
I like the performances
in Doubt enough that it carries it
for me but the movie I just felt whatever
I feel like that's like a genre of movie like superhero
movies that I just don't see like like
Kate Winslet movies
I don't know I
think the last movie like that I saw was probably
Little Children and it was so upsetting to me
I used to love her
so much and I like her
but that was sort of a fulcrum year
I felt like before 2008
she wasn't as much of a genre
like now when I see Kate Winslet movies
I'm like I don't want this movie
to exist and before that she was just
in movies
yeah
I think we did well guys
yeah there's a lot to talk about in this movie
I mean
everybody just needs to
like if you haven't seen this movie and you're wondering whether or not
you should see it I know that this was like a very
hyped up podcast and we were very
very like we were the energy
in this room was high we really wanted
to get a lot of our like really
really positive sincere feelings out I don't want people
to go straight from this podcast and go watch
it and then be like,
wait, what the fuck?
This is like really,
like parts of this are incredibly boring
and indecisive.
This movie is two hours and 15 minutes long.
It's really long.
Which is a little too long.
And it's about race fixing.
And it's about race fixing in depth.
Yeah, and the plot,
especially in the middle there,
which I was like with the race fixing
and the inspector and all that,
you know, doesn't make any sense
and the whole
like how
yeah they team up
to like race direct
and then they double cross
each other
yeah it's like
they win the race
but then it turns out
they were just trying
like he was
he had been racing
for TogoCon
and it was just like
it doesn't matter
but the important thing
and I realized this
when I was writing this down
when I was running
on the train here
is that
so all these
corrupt things and forces are happening
in a lot of films there would be
a beat of the film where Speed Racer
gets corrupted and he like gives
in and he tastes the forbidden fruit
and then he has to like
never happens. Speed Racer
is never corrupted in this
film. The closest he comes to
being corrupted is unwittingly participating in
a race that was fixed for
Togo Khan when he was racing with two other guys.
Like that is the
but that was he didn't know. He had no idea
and he was so mad about it afterwards.
Yeah in a more traditional
Hollywood thing he would sign on to
Royalton at the beginning of the second act and
then it would take longer but he would realize
like oh this is all corrupt and then he'd
break free and like his indie like
it'd be like Talladega Nights another great
racing movie. Another subversion that this
film doesn't do and I know we usually go through the plot in narrative
order but I also think for a movie like this
that is everything at the same time it's better
just to talk about everything at the same time. This is a four
dimensional movie. Yeah really truly
but the
the Racer X subplot is that you know he was
speed racers brother that he saw what was going on going on he faked his own death right but before
that he walks away and pops racer says to him like if you walk out that door you're never coming back
in this house and it sort of was the tragedy that like broke this family and there's the moment
where you realize oh speed racers gotten pushed to the same point you know he wins the race he helps rain rain turns
out to be part of the system he's like this whole thing's fucked i didn't qualify no one is pure in
this thing i can't do it anymore and he's so burnt out on the sport that you recreate the same scene
where he's saying goodbye to sprital and you know walking out the door and pops is there and you're
like this is going to be the same scene again and one of the three moments in this film that like brings me very close to
tears if not actual tears is the speech that John Goodman gives where he's like I know you're going
to walk out that door and there's nothing I can do about it but before you walk out can you just
sit down and have a word with your old man for a second oh and he gives him this speech that's like
I made this mistake and I'm not going to make make it again you're gonna do what you have to do
but i want you to know that this door is always open like i want you to know there's nothing you
can do that will stop me from loving you essentially and that's another scene where
you feel like it would be repeating the same thing and having pops yell at him yeah he has
to learn the same lesson that the the one who came before him learned.
No, but he's learned his lesson.
Yeah.
And the moment in this film
that hits me the hardest emotionally
isn't even Speed winning the race.
It's the moment when, like, he's doing it, right?
I mean, there's also that beautiful moment
where the car slows down
and the engine gets blown out.
Well, the end of it where it ends on its nose.
When the car skid sets end on its nose.
That's, I feel like, when you start laughing in the theater
because you're like, what am I watching?
What is happening?
It's a Hot Wheels moment.
Like, if you were doing a Hot Wheels race with your friends,
why wouldn't you have the car do that?
But there's the moment where, like, the engine blows out
and he's stuck on the side after he's, like, taken out another guy.
And John Goodman's like, oh, this happened.
He's going to need to remember to do this to restart his car.
No, go ahead.
And Sarandon's like,
will he know to do that?
Yeah.
What, Emily?
It's just,
that part is one of the only parts
I roll my eyes at.
Okay.
Because it's so
use the force, Luke.
Sure.
Right, sure.
He has to listen to the car.
It's very good use the force, Luke.
Yeah.
But the moment in the race,
he's like taking these guys
out one by one.
He's making good time.
All of this shit's happening.
The moment that gets me is the moment in the race, he's like taking these guys at one by one. He's making good time. All of this shit's happening. The moment that gets me is the moment when Spritell stands up and he sort of has the Spielberg shot, you know, the wide open, the high angle.
And he goes, he's going to do it.
And I just get shivers even repeating it.
Yeah.
And film Crit Hulk, a writer I like a lot, considers Speed Racer one of his favorite films of all time.
And film Crit Hulk, a writer I like a lot, considers Speed Racer one of his favorite films of all time.
He's written two pieces on it that you can find on Birth Movies Death that I highly recommend reading.
But I just think he writes it very succinctly, so I want to read this thing that he wrote.
Oh, yeah, whatever. No, he's fine.
But he's talking about how there's a friend who doesn't like Speed Racer, who he's arguing with about it, and saying, like, look, obviously the scene is boring if they had to in post edit it
with all the flashbacks to the stuff
earlier from the race,
which is a total misinterpretation of it
rather than that being baked into the pie,
like part of the writing from the get-go.
And Hulk's point, Hulk's point,
this is a guy who writes anonymously
as the Hulk doing film reviews.
David doesn't like him as much as I do.
I love it when people write in all caps.
He's the baby mama of people
in our eyes.
Wait, I don't get it. I like it
and you think it's testable.
No disrespect to
film critic Hulk, but I think he sucks.
I think I'm the Harold and Kumar.
He's the Harold and Kumar.
I think he's very smart and you think it's ugly.
Yep.
But the point this guy's making
is that like
to have that happen
cuts the tension of the scene.
And he says like
he'd argue the tension
is even the goal of the scene.
The second speed slams
on the gas pedal.
His younger sibling
literally tells us
he's going to do it.
It's all a foregone conclusion.
Instead the scene becomes
a visual representation of the artist's
catharsis, and in that process, the film finally
subverts and recontextualizes the somewhat
gross idea that some people are born
artists. The guy's literal
name is Speed Racer. By highlighting
how every choice you make along your life
brings you into a place, a moment where you're finally able to
do what you've wanted, where you're finally ready to create.
As such, we see how much of this moment of racing
is really about the people around him.
These are his collaborators, his family, the community of people
that enable him to do his very best.
He's not alone. He's anything but alone.
So unlike every sports movie ever, he's not proving people wrong.
He's proving people right.
Which I think is a cool point, because most movies,
it's like, are they going to pull it out at the last minute?
And this moment's about the catharsis of everyone else around him
realizing he's going to do it.
This is the moment.
This is his life.
And for the final chunk of the race, when you're flashing back to all these moments,
there is no tension because that's not what they're going for.
They're going for the emotional release of, like, everyone has been putting all their hopes and dreams onto speed.
It's not a film about an underdog who nobody believes in.
It's a film about a proven winner that needs to prove that it wasn't a fluke.
That he's winning the right way. Yeah.
I think we said it better than film Crit Hulk.
Sorry.
Sorry about it. It was an alley-oop.
Alley-ooped his ball in the air so we could dunk it.
I'm interested to see
what people, like, what people
feedback you get from this film. Yeah, me too.
Because I think, you know, I think
it's interesting that we're all
so high on it,
but I think like maybe
some people might not be.
No, and I think it's a tough sell.
A lot of people don't like it.
I think what you said about like,
if you do want to watch the movie,
do try to see it
in the best quality possible
because it really does all hinge on that.
Unless you have the most amazing
internet connection in your house,
I would not recommend streaming it.
Yeah, like don't watch this
on a MacBook Air or what,
you know, like, you know, try to, if you, you know,
and like don't rush to see it if you can't.
Like, you know, it's a fun movie to experience
whenever you kind of have the time.
And I'll throw out, because I rented it off of Amazon,
which was a mistake.
I streamed it on my TV, so it was pretty high res.
JD coming back in for the very end of the episode.
But when I was looking on Amazon at the options,
renting in HD on Amazon is like $4.
The Blu-ray, I think think is like $5.86 right now
brand new
if you have $5 plunk it down
watch it once
you guys I've been on the phone for
a long time
an hour and a half maybe
and you guys are still going
final thoughts J.D.?
we're done I think we've said everything.
We're done.
Emily, do you have anything else to say?
Anything to plug?
Anything to shout out?
No, I don't have anything to plug.
I would just, I'm much more, I will say as a listener of the podcast,
I'm much more into the Wachowski land than I am.
Into Shyamalan land. I think we are, too.
And even having, I never had seen Revolutions
and I watched it this weekend,
hated it,
but I still find it more interesting
to talk about than Shyamalan.
But that's me.
I mean, I like these weirdo geeks
that are so, so specific
and passionate about what they do.
It's always more fun
to talk about somebody like that.
Yes.
Well, thank you for being
on the podcast, Emily.
It was so great to have you back.
People can find you
writing on The Verge. Yeah, I write on The Ver, Emily. It was so great to have you back. People can find you writing on The Verge.
Yeah, I write on The Verge sometimes.
Anything else you want to plug?
I have a podcast called Verge ESP that is up also on The Verge.
Great podcast.
It's been taken some time off because of many, many external factors,
but we are back this week.
Or I don't know when this is going out, but we will be back.
This will go out sometime in the middle of May.
I can't do dates anymore.
Yeah, we're recording a bunch of episodes in advance.
Griffin's about to go make the tech.
Because I'm going to be a superhero.
Yeah.
Anyway, by the time you listen to this, I'll probably already be done,
but we're having to record this in advance.
JD, the Chris Gethard Show.
Before you give your final thoughts on getting your plugs in.
Everybody watch the TCGS.
Chris Gethard Show, currently on Fusion.
We're having the best season we've ever had.
I agree with that.
It really is terrific
and you guys are in a groove.
Wait to see these final episodes.
This will be dropping
around the time of the finale.
So yeah.
The finale's gonna be great.
Tune in.
On Fusion,
but also all episodes
available on YouTube.
Yeah.
And watch Cop Show
starring Griffin Newman.
Oh, Cop Show's the best.
Have you ever seen Cop Show?
No, I have not
okay
JD
I just want to say
I echo
everything Emily said
all of her thoughts
have been
exactly
I've been sitting here
quietly just listening
nodding
it's because I'm shouting
so loudly
you can hear it
through the door
but guys
give it a chance
listen
here's the thing
about filmmakers
artists that you like.
They don't change.
They don't get worse.
They just get weirder opportunities
and things get messed up in their life.
The Wachowskis are still great.
Their brains are still the same brains
that were there from the beginning.
It's very true.
Don't doubt it just because money and politics
and the industry gets involved.
Maybe they stray from their path,
but they're still the geniuses you once loved.
So give it a chance.
Give all of them a chance.
Watch Speed Racer.
Watch whatever weird new thing they come out with next
that will be five years ahead of its time
that you won't totally love,
but then looking back, you'll be like, whoa.
That was unlike anything else I saw.
Exactly.
I really struggled with saying that sentence.
It's hot in here.
It's very hot.
Give everyone a chance.
Give Wachowskis a chance, guys.
J.D.
Thank you for being here.
Thanks for dropping by.
I hope those phone calls went well.
They did.
I quote your line a lot that you said on this podcast.
You say a lot in Life 2 that you believe that all films are about their filmmakers.
Yes.
And I think, you know, people were thrown off when this film came out because it was so different than The Matrix.
But if you really look at it, there's a very clear line between the people who made both of these films.
Oh, yeah.
And if you're angry that's not like The Matrix, maybe you need to take another look at The Matrix.
Yeah.
Sure.
And realize what the actual through lines are between these things.
Well, thank you both for being here.
Yep.
Two of our favorite people. Two of our favorite people.
Can we shout out Ben?
He's like unwell.
Ben is sick with strep throat,
so he is in the booth, but he's silent.
I didn't realize he had strep.
Otherwise, I would have added another two feet of strep.
Oh, yeah.
We're keeping a wide berth.
He can't be on the mic today.
He's quarantined because I can't get sick
because I got to wear a suit.
Yep.
I can't wait to come back to do the episode about Barry Levinson's toys with all of you guys.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
We're mapping that out.
We'll get there.
As if that is something that will ever occur.
Yeah.
Barry Levinson miniseries.
We're going to do it, man.
His Baltimore trilogy.
We're going to dig into Levinson.
Toys might be a one-off.
I don't know if the other films are. I'll just be back when you guys get the camera in. His Baltimore trilogy. We're going to dig into Levinson. Toys might be a one. I don't know if the other films are.
I'll just be back for
when you guys get the
camera.
Oh yeah.
I have specifically
requested Titanic many
many times.
Oh not Ghost of the
Abyss.
You want to dive into
that abyss with us?
But he's a blank check
that paid.
That's a different one.
It's a different set of
issues.
A lot of things in the
future.
Thank you both for being here.
Yeah.
Thanks to all you out there in listener land for listening.
Yep.
Thank you, listener land.
Thank you, blankies.
Subscribe and rate and review.
Emily, who coined blankies.
I did coin blankies.
I will take credit for that.
Totally.
Thank you, blankies.
Thank you, blankies.
Hosshogs.
David Dogs.
Griff Heads.
I need to pee so bad.
David needs to pee.
So, as always.
And, as always, get well, Ben. A.K. to pee so bad. David needs to pee. So, as always. And as always,
get well, Ben.
AKA producer Ben.
AKA producer Ben.
AKA the Ben-dooser.
AKA the poet laureate.
AKA the Haas.
AKA Mr. Positive.
AKA birthday Benny.
AKA the tiebreaker.
We are taking out the headphones.
AKA the fuckmaster.
He is not Professor Crispy.
He is Ben Night Shyamalan.
He is old Ben Kenobi.
He is Kylo Ben.
And he told me that he cried at the end of Speed Race.
Bye, guys.
Bye.
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